China builds mega deep-sea oil rig - China.org.cn
China has inaugurated its most advanced deep-sea oil platform capable of operating at up to 3,000 meters under the surface of the ocean.
This move boosts the country's offshore tapping capabilities and enhances its leverage in securing marine resources often contested by other regional players.
The announcement, seen as a major technology breakthrough, will serve a national energy ambition as authorities now look to the high seas for answers to soaring energy demands.
The oil rig, named CNOOC981, was launched Monday in Shanghai, where it was delivered to China National Offshore Oil Corp (CNOOC), the State-owned oil company with exclusive rights to exploit offshore oil and gas fields.
CNOOC spent 6 billion yuan ($922.37 million) in developing the rig, which was specially designed to drill deep sea oil fields. It was built over the course of three years by China State Shipbuilding Corp (CSSC).
The rig weighs 31,000 tons with a deck the size of a standard football field. It is able to undertake offshore operations at up to 3,000 meters under the ocean and extract for oil at a depth of 12,000 meters, according to CSSC. This is a massive increase to China whose previous oil extraction capacity was limited to 500-meter-deep seas.
The oil rig will start its voyage from Shanghai on Thursday for a trial cruise before starting drilling in the South China Sea in July, according to a report by the People's Daily.
This will help China establish a more important presence in the largely untapped southern part of the South China Sea.
Energy-thirsty countries around the South China Sea have been tapping its oil resources for years, but this will mark the first instance of China's influence spreading to its southern tides.
China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs has repeatedly condemned oil drilling in the area by some Southeast Asian nations as Beijing holds it has indisputable sovereignty over the Nansha Islands and its adjacent waters.
Surrounding countries have increased oil drilling from the sea in recent years, resulting in a loss equivalent to 20 million tons of oil annually for China, Song Enlai, chairman of CNOOC's board of supervisors, told Oriental Outlook magazine. The total output of China's offshore oil and natural gas stood at 50 million tons of oil last year, CNOOC reported.
The CNOOC981 oil rig is "undoubtedly a milestone in China's oil drilling industry," Lin Boqiang, director of the Center for Energy Economics Research at Xiamen University, told the Global Times. "It is always a first-come-first-served game when vying for non-renewable resources in disputed sea areas, as the resources are not infinite."
The capability to drill so far down is a differentiating factor that countries like Vietnam and the Philippines have not yet acquired, Lin added.
By mid-2010, 180 oil and natural gas fields and more than 200 oil-gas-bearing strata had been detected in the South China Sea, with most located at between 500 and 2,000 meters. Though large oil fields have been found in the area, exploitation by Chinese oil drillers seems to have been slow.
In 2009, China inaugurated a project to drill its biggest and deepest offshore natural gas field, the Liwan 3-1 field, at a cost of 35 billion yuan and which will begin production in 2013.
Zhao Ying, a scholar with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, told the Global Times that the new drilling platform is strategically important.
"The value of the South China Sea natural resources is immense. Now that technologies are available for China to tap resources there, efforts to guard its operations and deter foreign illegal explorations become meaningful and necessary," Zhao said.
China has stepped up efforts to explore and materialize offshore resources. The CNOOC981 oil rig is only part of a 15-billion-yuan project to ramp up the deep sea exploration fleet, the Oriental Outlook reported. Following the giant rig, more oil exploitation facilities will be put to use.
The country is seeking more dependence of the marine industries as a strategic development move. The 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-2015) advocates more scientific and systematic utilization of marine resources and coastal areas as energy demand soars and inland resources drop.
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China to deploy oil rig to Spratlys in July - Salceda - Interaksyon.com
MANILA, Philippines Notwithstanding a diplomatic protest filed by the Philippines, China will deploy a giant oil rig and begin drilling in the disputed Spratly Islands in the West Philippine Sea/South China Sea, Albay Governor Joey Salceda said on Tuesday.
Salceda said the platform Marine Oil 981 is owned by the China National Offshore Oil Corp., that countrys s largest offshore oil producer.
According to a Xinhua news report dated May 24, 2011, Marine Oil 981 is a giant deepwater oil drilling platform that carries out oil explorations up to a depth of 3,000 meters and is equipped with a drill that can go as deep as 12,000 meters.
Marine Oil 981 was built at the cost of 6 Billion Yuan or US$923 million, weighs more than 31,000 tons, and can withstand the rough conditions of the South China Sea.
The Xinhua report said it took more than three years for the China State Shipbuilding Corporation to build the giant rig, which was delivered to CNOOC on May 23, 2011 and is currently undergoing sea trials before its July deployment.
While the report did not mention where Marine Oil 981 will be drilling, it is widely believed it will be in the disputed Spratly Islands.
Salceda said he was disturbed by the drift of news on the West Philippine Sea especially with the six intrusions and the unusually abrasive, almost intolerant, statements of China.
Now my fears have found their origin: China will put up its huge oil rig in the disputed waters by July 2001 the next three weeks, Salceda pointed out in an email.
Salceda had earlier proposed a boycott of China-made products, which he now believes is no longer as radical as it first seemed and would even be disproportionately inadequate to address the evolving dynamics.
To paraphrase Recto: it is foolish to love your country and ill-advised to fight for its honor and defend its national sovereignty, Salceda added.
In the Xinhua report, it quoted CNOOC Chairman Wang Yilin as saying Marine Oil 981 will be a good opportunity to strengthen its efforts in deepwater oil exploration and ensure energy security of China. The Xinhua report also said, quoting CNOOC, that the rig will be installed in the waters of the South China sea and begin oil and gas prospecting in July.
Marine Oil 981 was dubbed the Aircraft Carrier because of size and was specifically designed to deal with the rough waves of the South China Sea.
A China Central Television (CCTV) report, dated May 22, 2011, said Marine Oil 981 is equipped with modern navigation and an advanced underwater anti-blowout safety system.
Marine Oil 981 is also equipped with dynamic global positioning systems that will enable it to keep its positions even if it is buffeted by a massive typhoon.
The CCTV story featured an interview with Wang Qi, manager of Shanghai Waigaoqiao Shipbuilding Company, where he said: This drilling platform is specially designed for the bad sea conditions of the South Sea, so it can work well under that condition. It is equipped by the most advanced international devices and can drill 12,000 meters under water of 3,000 meters deep.
Marine Oil 981 is the sixth generation drilling platform which meets Chinas need for deepwater drilling equipment. The CCTV report said Marine Oil 981 is a key component of Chinas 2020 Deepwater Daqing referring to the exploration and exploitation of deepwater oil and gas reserves in the West Philippine Sea / South China Sea.
The Xinhua report said CNOOC plans to invest 200 billion yuan and drill 800 deepwater wells which they expect to have an output of an equivalent 500 million barrels of oil by the year 2020. CNOOC believes the South China Sea holds major oil and gas deposits.
Presently Chinas oil and fuel requirements come from imports and Beijing aims to reduce this dependence by exploring and exploiting energy resources on land and deepwater drilling.
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I believe this is very genius movement from China. It peacefully deploys the rig and peacefully sucks the oil, perhaps from other nearby oil field as well, because it has more advanced technologies.
China has inaugurated its most advanced deep-sea oil platform capable of operating at up to 3,000 meters under the surface of the ocean.
This move boosts the country's offshore tapping capabilities and enhances its leverage in securing marine resources often contested by other regional players.
The announcement, seen as a major technology breakthrough, will serve a national energy ambition as authorities now look to the high seas for answers to soaring energy demands.
The oil rig, named CNOOC981, was launched Monday in Shanghai, where it was delivered to China National Offshore Oil Corp (CNOOC), the State-owned oil company with exclusive rights to exploit offshore oil and gas fields.
CNOOC spent 6 billion yuan ($922.37 million) in developing the rig, which was specially designed to drill deep sea oil fields. It was built over the course of three years by China State Shipbuilding Corp (CSSC).
The rig weighs 31,000 tons with a deck the size of a standard football field. It is able to undertake offshore operations at up to 3,000 meters under the ocean and extract for oil at a depth of 12,000 meters, according to CSSC. This is a massive increase to China whose previous oil extraction capacity was limited to 500-meter-deep seas.
The oil rig will start its voyage from Shanghai on Thursday for a trial cruise before starting drilling in the South China Sea in July, according to a report by the People's Daily.
This will help China establish a more important presence in the largely untapped southern part of the South China Sea.
Energy-thirsty countries around the South China Sea have been tapping its oil resources for years, but this will mark the first instance of China's influence spreading to its southern tides.
China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs has repeatedly condemned oil drilling in the area by some Southeast Asian nations as Beijing holds it has indisputable sovereignty over the Nansha Islands and its adjacent waters.
Surrounding countries have increased oil drilling from the sea in recent years, resulting in a loss equivalent to 20 million tons of oil annually for China, Song Enlai, chairman of CNOOC's board of supervisors, told Oriental Outlook magazine. The total output of China's offshore oil and natural gas stood at 50 million tons of oil last year, CNOOC reported.
The CNOOC981 oil rig is "undoubtedly a milestone in China's oil drilling industry," Lin Boqiang, director of the Center for Energy Economics Research at Xiamen University, told the Global Times. "It is always a first-come-first-served game when vying for non-renewable resources in disputed sea areas, as the resources are not infinite."
The capability to drill so far down is a differentiating factor that countries like Vietnam and the Philippines have not yet acquired, Lin added.
By mid-2010, 180 oil and natural gas fields and more than 200 oil-gas-bearing strata had been detected in the South China Sea, with most located at between 500 and 2,000 meters. Though large oil fields have been found in the area, exploitation by Chinese oil drillers seems to have been slow.
In 2009, China inaugurated a project to drill its biggest and deepest offshore natural gas field, the Liwan 3-1 field, at a cost of 35 billion yuan and which will begin production in 2013.
Zhao Ying, a scholar with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, told the Global Times that the new drilling platform is strategically important.
"The value of the South China Sea natural resources is immense. Now that technologies are available for China to tap resources there, efforts to guard its operations and deter foreign illegal explorations become meaningful and necessary," Zhao said.
China has stepped up efforts to explore and materialize offshore resources. The CNOOC981 oil rig is only part of a 15-billion-yuan project to ramp up the deep sea exploration fleet, the Oriental Outlook reported. Following the giant rig, more oil exploitation facilities will be put to use.
The country is seeking more dependence of the marine industries as a strategic development move. The 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-2015) advocates more scientific and systematic utilization of marine resources and coastal areas as energy demand soars and inland resources drop.
--------------------
China to deploy oil rig to Spratlys in July - Salceda - Interaksyon.com
MANILA, Philippines Notwithstanding a diplomatic protest filed by the Philippines, China will deploy a giant oil rig and begin drilling in the disputed Spratly Islands in the West Philippine Sea/South China Sea, Albay Governor Joey Salceda said on Tuesday.
Salceda said the platform Marine Oil 981 is owned by the China National Offshore Oil Corp., that countrys s largest offshore oil producer.
According to a Xinhua news report dated May 24, 2011, Marine Oil 981 is a giant deepwater oil drilling platform that carries out oil explorations up to a depth of 3,000 meters and is equipped with a drill that can go as deep as 12,000 meters.
Marine Oil 981 was built at the cost of 6 Billion Yuan or US$923 million, weighs more than 31,000 tons, and can withstand the rough conditions of the South China Sea.
The Xinhua report said it took more than three years for the China State Shipbuilding Corporation to build the giant rig, which was delivered to CNOOC on May 23, 2011 and is currently undergoing sea trials before its July deployment.
While the report did not mention where Marine Oil 981 will be drilling, it is widely believed it will be in the disputed Spratly Islands.
Salceda said he was disturbed by the drift of news on the West Philippine Sea especially with the six intrusions and the unusually abrasive, almost intolerant, statements of China.
Now my fears have found their origin: China will put up its huge oil rig in the disputed waters by July 2001 the next three weeks, Salceda pointed out in an email.
Salceda had earlier proposed a boycott of China-made products, which he now believes is no longer as radical as it first seemed and would even be disproportionately inadequate to address the evolving dynamics.
To paraphrase Recto: it is foolish to love your country and ill-advised to fight for its honor and defend its national sovereignty, Salceda added.
In the Xinhua report, it quoted CNOOC Chairman Wang Yilin as saying Marine Oil 981 will be a good opportunity to strengthen its efforts in deepwater oil exploration and ensure energy security of China. The Xinhua report also said, quoting CNOOC, that the rig will be installed in the waters of the South China sea and begin oil and gas prospecting in July.
Marine Oil 981 was dubbed the Aircraft Carrier because of size and was specifically designed to deal with the rough waves of the South China Sea.
A China Central Television (CCTV) report, dated May 22, 2011, said Marine Oil 981 is equipped with modern navigation and an advanced underwater anti-blowout safety system.
Marine Oil 981 is also equipped with dynamic global positioning systems that will enable it to keep its positions even if it is buffeted by a massive typhoon.
The CCTV story featured an interview with Wang Qi, manager of Shanghai Waigaoqiao Shipbuilding Company, where he said: This drilling platform is specially designed for the bad sea conditions of the South Sea, so it can work well under that condition. It is equipped by the most advanced international devices and can drill 12,000 meters under water of 3,000 meters deep.
Marine Oil 981 is the sixth generation drilling platform which meets Chinas need for deepwater drilling equipment. The CCTV report said Marine Oil 981 is a key component of Chinas 2020 Deepwater Daqing referring to the exploration and exploitation of deepwater oil and gas reserves in the West Philippine Sea / South China Sea.
The Xinhua report said CNOOC plans to invest 200 billion yuan and drill 800 deepwater wells which they expect to have an output of an equivalent 500 million barrels of oil by the year 2020. CNOOC believes the South China Sea holds major oil and gas deposits.
Presently Chinas oil and fuel requirements come from imports and Beijing aims to reduce this dependence by exploring and exploiting energy resources on land and deepwater drilling.
----
I believe this is very genius movement from China. It peacefully deploys the rig and peacefully sucks the oil, perhaps from other nearby oil field as well, because it has more advanced technologies.