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UHV Transmission 中国建设者:特高压输电

UHV Transmission from Yunnan to Guangdong

China has the leading technology in the UHV transmission in the world. The world's highest voltage transmission is from Hami 哈密 in eastern Xinjiang to Xuancheng 宣城 in the southeast of Anhui, 1.1 million volts direct current.
This documentary is about the 800,000 volt direct current from northwest Yunnan to Guangdong.


特高压输电是中国领先世界的科技,世界电压等级最高的是新疆哈密到安徽宣城110万伏直流。这部纪录片里是滇西北到广东80万伏直流。
 
China's Three Gorges Dam hits full capacity
New China TV
Published on Oct 23, 2017

World's largest hydropower project hits full capacity. The Three Gorges Dam in China's Hubei meets water storage goals after the summer flooding season, restoring water level to its highest designed mark of 175 meters.

The Three Gorges project is a multi-functional water control system, consisting of a dam 2,309 meters long and 185 meters high, a five-tier ship lock and 26 hydropower turbo-generators.

The project generates electricity, controls flooding by storing excess water and helps regulate the river's shipping capacity.
 
Pipeline to boost crude imports
By Zheng Xin | China Daily | Updated: 2017-11-14 07:20
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China's crude oil imports from Russia are expected to double from next year with necessary infrastructure work on the second Sino-Russian crude oil transmission pipeline being completed on Sunday.

The pipeline, which will play a significant part in China's overall energy strategy, will help China increase annual crude imports from Russia to 30 million metric tons, and secure the country's energy security, said Zhang Xinjia, deputy head of the PetroChina Pipeline Co, a subsidiary under the China National Petroleum Corp, the country's largest oil and gas supplier and producer.

The 942-kilometer oil pipeline, from Mohe at the China-Russia border to the city of Daqing, is the China leg of the second East Siberia Pacific Ocean pipeline project pumping Russian crude oil to China.

The first 1,000-km East Siberia Pacific Ocean pipeline that originates in the Russian town of Skovorodino in the Amur region has been sending 15 million tons of crude oil from Russia each year to China since January 2011, delivering more than 104.92 million tons of crude oil by September this year, according to Heilongjiang Entry-Exit Inspection and Quarantine Bureau.

Analysts said the two countries, one being the world's second-largest energy consumer, and the other the world's top oil producer, have always complemented each other as producers and exporters.

Li Li, energy research director at ICIS China, a consulting company providing energy market analysis, said the step will further guarantee China's energy diversification.

"The pipeline transmission will ensure the convenience of crude imports in China's northeastern province and ease the tension of offshore and port transportation," she said.

"The pipeline ensures a more stable energy transmission to China, and security of pipeline transportation is better than that of shipments by sea."

Li said the China-Russia crude oil pipeline, together with the China-Myanmar oil pipeline and the China-Kazakhstan oil pipeline, will help diversify China's oil imports and ensure its energy security.
 
Carbon-trading system key to shifting nation's energy focus
By Wang Yanfei | China Daily | Updated: 2017-11-24 07:24
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A wind farm at Rudong in Jiangsu province. [Photo by Xu Congjun / for China Daily]

China's soon-to-be launched national emissions trading system will help the country achieve its carbon emission goals earlier than 2030, but it may take some time for the system to become "fully functional".
The nationwide trading system, which is expected to be rolled out by the end of this year, will serve as a key driver to help China achieve its carbon reduction pledges in the Paris Agreement earlier than expected, according to the 2017 China Carbon Pricing Survey published on Wednesday.

"As the world looks to China for leadership on climate change, the strong and consistent efforts to introduce carbon pricing nationwide provide hope that carbon emissions can peak and be brought down quickly," said Dimitri de Boer, leading author of the report.

The results of the report bolster confidence in China's efforts to meet carbon reduction emission goals earlier than 2030, as the nation shifts to renewable energy and curbs the use of coal in the power industry.

One key driver comes from market players of the soon-to-be launched carbon trading system, the report said, because enterprises, in particular highly polluting ones, will have to make greener investment decisions to lower carbon emission costs after the nationwide system becomes operational.

Survey respondents expect carbon emissions trading will affect investment decisions on a gradual basis in the coming years.

Around 38 percent of 260 respondents expect investment decisions to be strongly or moderately affected in 2017, and by 2025 this figure rises to 75 percent.

"China has decided to use carbon pricing as an important means of reducing carbon emissions, and the national trading system will provide enterprises with a clear signal that carbon emissions must be reduced," said Ma Aimin, deputy director-general of the National Center for Climate Change Strategy and International Cooperation.

The ever increasing impact comes together with the improving infrastructure construction of the national trading system.

Although current preparation is far from enough for the trading market to be "fully functional", when all of the key building blocks, including legislation, trading platforms, market oversight, are in place.

Nearly half of the 260 respondents expect China's national ETS to be fully functional, with all key building blocks in place, by 2020, and half of the respondents expect a fully functional carbon market between 2021 and 2025.

A large majority of respondents prefer a strong legal basis for the trading system in its initial phase, with at least State Council regulation in place, the report said.

China has started to prepare for legislation of carbon trade, but there is no specific timeline for its introduction.
 
China creates 270-billion-USD energy conglomerate by SOE merger
Source: Xinhua| 2017-11-28 17:18:42|Editor: Yamei



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The founding ceremony of China Energy Corporation is held in Beijing, capital of China, Nov. 28, 2017. Two Chinese state-owned enterprises (SOEs) have merged into an energy conglomerate with total assets worth 1.8 trillion yuan (272.96 billion U.S. dollars). The new company, China Energy Corporation, has become the world's largest in coal mining, thermal power, renewable energy and coal-to-liquid conversion, according to the founding ceremony held Tuesday. (Xinhua)

BEIJING, Nov. 28 (Xinhua) -- Two Chinese state-owned enterprises (SOEs) have merged into an energy conglomerate with total assets worth 1.8 trillion yuan (272.96 billion U.S. dollars).

The new company, China Energy Corporation, has become the world's largest in coal mining, thermal power, renewable energy and coal-to-liquid conversion, according to the founding ceremony held Tuesday.

It was formed by the reorganization of power generator China Guodian Corporation and coal miner Shenhua Group.

"It is the biggest consolidation among central SOEs in recent years," said Xiao Yaqing, chairman of the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission.

Xiao expects the deal to improve corporate profitability and help coordinate coal and electricity markets.

The merger is in line with the country's effort to push restructuring in state-owned companies. During the past five years, 34 central SOEs were reorganized to improve competitiveness, according to Xiao.

The total number of central SOEs has halved from 196 in 2003.

Qiao Baoping, chairman of China Energy, said the company would focus on coal mining and power generation, while making more effort to eliminate excess capacity, and speed up its drive to go global.

China Energy signed a memorandum of understanding with the government of West Virginia to cooperate on shale gas exploration at the beginning of the month. The deal, with total investment to reach 83.7 billion U.S. dollars in 20 years, will be the largest ever energy cooperation deal between China and the United States.
 
China invests 4 bln yuan in ITER project in decade
Source: Xinhua| 2017-11-28 23:46:29|Editor: Mu Xuequan



BEIJING, Nov. 28 (Xinhua) -- China has invested four billion yuan (about 600 million U.S. dollars) in the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER) project in the past 10 years, the Ministry of Science and Technology (MST) announced Tuesday.

The largest international scientific cooperation project in the world, the ITER is a France-based international nuclear fusion research and engineering project that explores commercial uses of fusion power.

It is jointly funded by China, the EU, India, Japan, Republic of Korea, Russia and the United States.

"Since 2008, China has carried out nearly 120 fusion power projects and has made leading achievements," said Luo Delong from the MST.

Chinese scientists set a record by achieving 101.2 seconds of steady-state H-mode operation of the tokamak in July, an experimental device designed to harness the energy of fusion.

China's Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak (EAST) -- the "artificial sun" -- was the first tokamak device to break the 100-second barrier.

According to the ITER's plan, the construction of the "artificial sun" will be completed by 2025, and the commercial uses of fusion power is expected to be available around 2050, said Pan Chuanhong from the MST.
 
China to step up oil, gas exploration to ease reliance on imports
Source: Xinhua| 2017-12-02 21:39:33|Editor: Yang Yi



BEIJING, Dec. 2 (Xinhua) -- China will step up exploration for oil and gas and develop unconventional resources to ease the country's reliance on imports, a research center said Saturday.

By 2035, China is likely to keep the dependence rates on oil, gas imports within 70 percent and 50 percent, respectively, according to a strategic research center under the Ministry of Land and Resources.

The share of oil-gas in China's primary energy structure would be 32 percent and 35 percent, respectively, by 2035 and 2050, the center said, predicting the ratio of oil consumption would peak at 2030.

China aims to increase domestic crude oil output to 200 million tonnes by 2020, while supply capacity for natural gas should exceed 360 billion cubic meters, according to the government's industry plan.

Major tasks for the oil industry include accelerating exploration to ensure domestic oil supply, speeding up construction of pipeline networks and developing clean alternatives.
 
Russia launches giant Yamal gas project in the Arctic
8 Dec 2017

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AFP/File / KIRILL KUDRYAVTSEV
Russia's gigantic Yamal LNG plant in Arctic Siberia is one of the most ambitious such projects in the world


Russia launches Friday its Yamal gas plant in Arctic Siberia, a gigantic project in one of the world's most remote areas, as the region becomes more accessible due to climate change.

Russia's privately owned gas producer Novatek has partnered with France's Total and China's CNPC at the helm of the project, which was scheduled to send its first shipment of liquefied natural gas (LNG) from the port of Sabetta on Friday.

The $27 billion site (23 billion euros) -- one of the most ambitious in the world -- is set to start with a production capacity of 5.5 million tonnes per year and increase this to 16.5 million tonnes by the start of 2019.

Yamal LNG, owned by Novatek (50.1 percent), Total (20 percent), China's CNPC (20 percent) and the Silk Road Fund (9.9 percent) has had its share of financial and technical hurdles over the years.

While the Yamal peninsula has considerable hydrocarbon reserves, it is an isolated region in the Arctic circle, about 2,500 kilometres (1,550 miles) from Moscow and covered by ice for most of the year, where temperatures dip as low as -50 degrees Celsius (-58 degrees Fahrenheit).

Since its inception in late 2013, an airport and a port have had to be constructed for the project, as well as gas reservoirs and the LNG plant itself.

"Despite challenging operating conditions, Yamal LNG was delivered on time and on budget," said Samuel Lussac, an oil and gas specialist at Wood Mackenzie. "That is unusual in the LNG industry."

"Novatek, once a domestic gas supplier, becomes a global LNG player" with the project, he said. It will also boost Total's existing strength in the LNG sector, where it is the second largest producer in the world.

Financing the project was tricky as US sanctions against Novatek made it impossible to borrow from Western banks. Eventually Chinese funds resolved the issue -- a relief for Moscow, for whom the project has strategic importance.

With Yamal LNG, Russia hopes to demonstrate its capacity to exploit considerable Arctic reserves despite major technological challenges and intends to strengthen its market presence in Asia. Its main gas market is still Europe via several pipelines.

- Northern Passage -

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POOL/AFP/File / OLGA MALTSEVA
The new Russian "Christophe de Margerie" Arctic LNG tanker is to carry the first shipment from the Yamal LNG terminal.


Despite the project's completion, Yamal LNG still faces risks, and the coming months will show "whether the plant can operate smoothly in the harsh Arctic environment", Lussac said.

Transportation through the Northern Sea Route also remains undeveloped, and "its feasibility as a major LNG delivery route is unclear", he said.

Russia wants the route to become a shorter, easier passage to coveted Asian markets and has built several massive icebreakers in recent years.

It is also hoped the project will contribute to understanding of how to navigate the Northern Route and "give more clarity into the potential development of the Arctic", said Sberbank-CIB analyst Valery Nesterov.

The route along the northern coast of Siberia allows ships to cut the journey to Asian ports by 15 days compared with the conventional route through the Suez Canal, according to Total.

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After beginning LNG production on Tuesday, the first cargo will be loaded Friday onto the tanker Christophe de Margerie, named after a former CEO of Total who died in an accident in a Moscow airport in 2014.

In August, the vessel became the first commercial gas tanker to traverse the Northern Route without assistance from an icebreaker.

After Yamal LNG, Novatek plans to develop a new giant project in the far north called Arctic-2 in the Kara Sea, with an output set to match that of Yamal.



Russia launches giant Yamal gas project in the Arctic | AFP.com
 
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Clean energy to exceed coal in China's power generation
Source: Xinhua| 2017-12-10 21:05:59|Editor: Lifang



BEIJING, Dec. 10 (Xinhua) -- Clean energy, including nuclear power and renewable energy, is expected to exceed coal in China's electricity generating capacity in about ten years, a senior official has said.

China's installed capacity of clean energy has reached 660 gigawatts (GW), while installed thermal power capacity stood at 900 GW, said Liu Baohua, deputy head of National Energy Administration (NEA).

"In the near future, clean energy will take a leading role in our electricity consumption," Liu said at a forum in Beijing Saturday.

China will cap its coal-fired power capacity at 1000 GW in 2020, and non-fossil fuel will account for half of the country's total power generation by 2030, Liu said.

China has been promoting green resources such as wind and solar in recent years to cope with pollution and boost the quality of its growth.

In the first nine months this year, China added 63 million kilowatts (KW) of installed capacity of renewable energy, accounting for about 67 percent of the country's total newly installed power capacity over the period, according to the NEA.
 
Arctic gas to ease winter shortage
2017-12-12 10:20 China Daily

China's annual imports from the Yamal natural gas project in the resource-rich Arctic region will further secure China's energy security with increasing supplies of the natural gas, which is currently experiencing a severe shortage especially in northern China, said an executive from China National Petroleum Corp.

China's imports from the Yamal project play a significant role in substantially boosting China's oil and gas reserves, ensuring a steady, long-term supply, said Jiang Qi, general manager of the CNPC Russia, a subsidiary of CNPC, the country's largest oil and gas producer by annual output.

China will take more than 4 million metric tons from Russia's Yamal liquefied natural gas project each year when it is fully operational, said CNPC, which is an investor in the project.

In September 2013, CNPC bought a 20 percent stake in Oao Novatek's $27 billion Yamal project for $5.4 billion.

Jiang said China and Russia have natural complementarities in energy cooperation.

"Long-term oil and gas cooperation framework has been established thorough the Sino-Russia crude oil transmission pipeline and the natural gas pipeline currently in construction," Jiang said.

"The project also promotes the construction of the Northeast Passage in the Arctic Ocean, a sea route directly linking China and Europe."

As many as 54 freight vessels have traveled through the passage. Once the project is expanded, there will be more LNG transported through the sea route, which will significantly lower freight costs between China and Europe, he said.

Many Chinese shipyards have participated in the project, which have accumulated technology and experience in oil and gas exploration in the Arctic region.

Russia's Yamal liquefied natural gas project loaded its first export cargo of 173,000 cubic meters of the super-chilled fuel from its Arctic terminal over the weekend.

Jiang said the Yamal project also helped Chinese enterprises in the manufacturing sector gain experience and technology to work in Arctic region.

Chinese enterprises are responsible for 85 percent of the project's module construction. They have built seven transport ships and are in charge of the operation of 14 out of the 15 LNG carriers, according to CNPC.

The contract amount for the project's construction totaled $7.8 billion, while the shipping contract amounted to $8.5 billion, it said.

China's drive for cleaner energy is leading to a gas shortage this winter, with a severe shortage of natural gas as Beijing curbs coal use.

To ease the rising demand for gas, Qu Guangxue, a CNPC spokesman, said that the company plans to continue negotiating with Central Asian nations for additional stocks to ensure adequate domestic natural gas supplies.
 
Construction of China-Russia natural gas pipeline gains steam
Source: Xinhua| 2017-12-13 20:45:41|Editor: ZD



BEIJING, Dec. 13 (Xinhua) -- The China National Petroleum Corporation said Wednesday that it had sped up laying natural gas pipelines connecting China and Russia, the largest energy cooperation between the two countries.

Welding of the northern part of the 3,371-kilometer east-route natural gas has begun, the company announced.

The east-route natural gas pipeline originates in northeast China's Heilongjiang Province and terminates in Shanghai in the east. Construction began in June 2015 and will be completed in 2020.

Upon completion, the pipeline will provide China with 38 billion cubic meters of natural gas from Russia annually. It will have far-reaching significance for optimizing China's energy structure, cutting emissions and improving air quality.

The Russian part of the pipeline began construction in eastern Siberia in 2014.

The rise of natural gas use is the result of the government promoting it as a cleaner alternative to coal.

China aims to raise the use of natural gas to 10 percent of the country's energy mix by 2020 and 15 percent by 2030, according to the National Development and Reform Commission.

China's demand for natural gas will continue to soar toward 2040, outstripping domestic output by around 43 percent, according to an International Energy Agency report published Tuesday.
 
Construction of China-Russia natural gas pipeline gains steam
Source: Xinhua| 2017-12-13 20:45:41|Editor: ZD



BEIJING, Dec. 13 (Xinhua) -- The China National Petroleum Corporation said Wednesday that it had sped up laying natural gas pipelines connecting China and Russia, the largest energy cooperation between the two countries.

Welding of the northern part of the 3,371-kilometer east-route natural gas has begun, the company announced.

The east-route natural gas pipeline originates in northeast China's Heilongjiang Province and terminates in Shanghai in the east. Construction began in June 2015 and will be completed in 2020.

Upon completion, the pipeline will provide China with 38 billion cubic meters of natural gas from Russia annually. It will have far-reaching significance for optimizing China's energy structure, cutting emissions and improving air quality.

The Russian part of the pipeline began construction in eastern Siberia in 2014.

The rise of natural gas use is the result of the government promoting it as a cleaner alternative to coal.

China aims to raise the use of natural gas to 10 percent of the country's energy mix by 2020 and 15 percent by 2030, according to the National Development and Reform Commission.

China's demand for natural gas will continue to soar toward 2040, outstripping domestic output by around 43 percent, according to an International Energy Agency report published Tuesday.

Seems like a bit of delay. I was expecting the pipeline to go online by the end of 2018. Nonetheless, better late than never.
 
2nd Massive Russia-China Gas Pipeline Starts Flowing - Payment in Ruble / Yuan

Pragmatic energy from Russia to China isn't just hot air.


Paul Goncharoff



Leading up to these 2018 New Year celebrations globally, with all the noisy colorful firework shows from world capitols, the second branch of the Russian-Chinese oil pipeline was quietly commissioned and put into operation. The CNPC announced the end of branch construction, fulfilling all agreement conditions and completing the pipeline prior to January 1, 2018.

Fifteen million tons of oil per annum is to be supplied to China through the Skovorodino pipeline (Amur Region) to the Mohe-Dacin (North-Eastern China), particularly from the large nearby Ivankovskoe deposit. It seems that payments will be Ruble-Yuan based.

The PRC has recently made serious changes to actively substitute coal with gas and other less polluting fuels. In consequence, there is a natural gas shortage after the government aggressively pushed a program to replace coal-fired heating with systems powered by natural gas, electricity or other cleaner fuels in the widely air polluted northern China.

China’s top three oil and natural gas suppliers Sinopec, China National Petroleum Corp. and China National Offshore Oil Corp. were also asked to quickly develop means to use natural gas extracted from coal beds, to support an environmentally friendly heating system and speed up imports of natural gas from Russia.

This new pipeline branch from Russia will no doubt help their efforts tremendously, and assist a bit in cleaning up the air for Northern China.

http://russia-insider.com/en/2nd-ma...ine-starts-flowing-payment-ruble-yuan/ri22070
 
2.47 bln cubic meters of shale gas produced in SW China area in 2017

2018-01-04 10:11Xinhua Editor: Gu Liping

The Changning-Weiyuan national shale gas demonstration zone developed by PetroChina Southwest Oil & Gas Field Company generated more than 2.4 billion cubic meters of shale gas in 2017, the company said Wednesday.

By 2017, the state-level demonstration zone had 163 shale gas wells in production, generating 8 million cubic meters of shale gas each day. Its output accounted for 98.9 percent of the company's total production of 3 billion cubic meters in Sichuan in 2017.

The shale gas-rich Sichuan Basin in southwest China produced about one-third of the country's total shale gas in 2017. The new industry also helped the region to improve its energy structure and shift away from traditional energy sources such as coal.

It is estimated that 3 billion cubic meters of shale gas is equivalent to burning 6 million tonnes of coal, reducing carbon dioxide emissions by 4.2 million tonnes.

China has made breakthroughs in shale gas exploration both in capacity and drilling techniques, making it one of the top shale gas suppliers in the world.

By 2020, proven reserves of shale gas will surpass 1.5 trillion cubic meters, according to plans released by authorities in 2017.

http://www.ecns.cn/business/2018/01-04/286931.shtml
 
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China's largest shale gas field production hits record high in 2017

2018-01-04 16:38 Xinhua Editor: Gu Liping

Fuling, China's largest shale gas field, generated more than 6 billion cubic meters of shale gas in 2017, according to its developer Sinopec.

The field's gas sales reached nearly 5.8 billion cubic meters last year, an increase of 20 percent year on year.

By 2017, the Fuling shale gas field, developed by China's leading oil refiner Sinopec in the southwest municipality of Chongqing, had produced more than 15 billion cubic meters.

The new industry has helped the region improve its energy structure and shift away from traditional energy sources such as coal in recent years.

It is estimated that 3 billion cubic meters of shale gas is equivalent to burning 6 million tonnes of coal, reducing carbon dioxide emissions by 4.2 million tonnes.

China has made breakthroughs in shale gas exploration both in capacity and drilling techniques, making it one of the top shale gas suppliers in the world.

By 2020, proven reserves of shale gas will surpass 1.5 trillion cubic meters, according to plans released by authorities in 2017.

http://www.ecns.cn/business/2018/01-04/287029.shtml
 
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