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China Inc joins the big league in oil and gas services

Beidou2020

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(Reuters) - Global oil companies are increasingly turning to China for services and equipment, attracted by lower costs and a newly acquired expertise that is challenging more established rivals.

State-run and privately controlled Chinese rig makers, oil and gas services and engineering firms are showing up in the supply chain everywhere from the Middle East, the North Sea and North America to frontier areas like Mozambique.

Chinese yards, having come from nowhere in less than a decade, are building more jack-up rigs - the most common offshore rig used for shallow water drilling - than all the other yards in the world put together, data from industry consultants IHS Petrodata shows.

Helped by strong government support, plentiful labour and an abundant supply of raw materials like steel, China could become a major offshore oil equipment manufacturing hub in less than 10 years, industry executives say, just like Singapore and South Korea overtook the United States and Europe in the 1990s.

"The Chinese provide products with better value," said Scott Darling, Hong-Kong based head of Asia oil and gas research at JPMorgan, which hosted an investor tour of the Middle East last month to study the competitiveness of Chinese energy equipment and services suppliers. "And they are experts in managing supply chains, thanks to their domestic experiences."

The rise of Chinese energy equipment manufacturers and services firms overseas, partly fuelled by the rapid expansion of state energy giants, is putting pressure on established companies including Singapore oil rig makers Keppel Corp and Sembcorp Marine, and land drilling giant National-Oilwell Varco Inc (NOV).

To stay ahead, both Keppel and Sembcorp are increasingly building more sophisticated equipment, an area where Chinese firms still lack expertise.

GRAPHIC-China's offshore rig orders: link.reuters.com/cen38v

Leading the Chinese overseas expansion are state-controlled shipyards and units of state giants China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC) [CNPET.UL], parent of PetroChina, Sinopec Group and China National Offshore Oil Corp (CNOOC).

Chinese companies won over half the global orders for jackup rigs last year, up from around a third between 2008 and 2012, data from IHS Petrodata showed.

In the area of land drilling equipment, a number of privately run companies have emerged as major overseas players. These include Honghua Group Ltd, the second-largest land rig manufacturer globally with 80 percent of revenue driven by overseas orders, and Hilong Holding Ltd, which started its overseas foray in 2005 and is now the world's second-largest drill pipe maker after Houston-based NOV.

"Drill pipes are crucial to oil producers. Previously their drilling schedules were sort of dictated by just one company, NOV," Amy Zhang, Hilong's chief strategy officer, told Reuters.

"Now clients have more options. We filled in the gaps."


CRUDE AND CLUNKY

Manufacturing energy equipment is an expensive, labour-intensive and lengthy process, and with global energy firms trying to cut costs, the affordability of the services offered by Chinese firms has trumped their relative lack of experience.

Exxon Mobil Corp, Total SA, BP PLC and Royal Dutch Shell have all pledged to cap spending due to pressure from their shareholders, who want more generous payouts before cyclical oil prices start heading lower.

China's oil and petrochemical equipment exports were averaging at around $18 billion a year in the past few years, equivalent to the annual capital spending budget of a mid-sized international oil company, industry data showed.

Shell is currently the biggest buyer of equipment and services from China among its foreign rivals. Its China procurement jumped to $3 billion last year from $1.9 billion in 2012 and $1 billion a year earlier, Shell China spokesman Jiangtao Shi said, adding that one third of its 2013 China procurement was earmarked for projects outside China.

Lower costs appear to be one of the main attractions.

COSCO Corp, China State Shipbuilding Corp, China Shipbuilding Industry Corp, Yantai CIMC Raffles and Offshore Oil Engineering Corp can build a jack-up rig for $170-180 million, significantly lower than the $200-220 million price tag for the same rig built in Singapore.

Chinese manufacturers can also make land rigs, drilling pipes, bits, modules, pumps and valves at up to half the price of the same equipment made elsewhere. Prices are so competitive that the United States in 2012 slapped hefty anti-dumping duties on imports of Chinese seamless steel pipes, including pipes used for oil and gas drilling.

"We export a lot of petroleum and petrochemical gears. Most of them are crude and clunky stuff but we make money from them," Zhang Kang, senior consultant at Sinopec, told Reuters. "We also try to make more sophisticated equipment."


MADE IN CHINA, FOR THE WORLD

As relative newcomers, Chinese companies remain far behind in terms of making sophisticated tools like deepwater rigs and hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, equipment which is used to extract natural gas trapped in shale formations.

They also lag in building complicated petrochemical and liquefied natural gas plants, a business still dominated by Japanese, Korean and European firms.

The Chinese firms are rapidly gaining know-how, helped by global firms such as Shell which is working to improve the technical qualifications and standards of its Chinese suppliers to make them part of its global purchasing network.

Shell has started using robot hydraulic fracturing equipment made at its China joint venture with CNPC at projects in China and Australia, with the aim of deploying the kit to Canada later this year, Shell's Shi said.

"Our growing procurement spend in China is a reflection of the progress we are making in implementing one of our strategic priorities in China, which is taking Chinese enterprises overseas," he said.
 
Contrary to perceptions in the West, China is one of the most resource-rich countries on Earth. :china:

Even our Shale Gas reserves alone (largest in the world by far) are enough to fulfill Chinese energy consumption for thousands of years.

Not to mention our Shale Oil. Even in terms of regular oil we are already the 5th largest producers in the world.

Our coal reserves alone are also enough to last multiple lifetimes. Not to mention our reserves of virtually every other resource, from rare earths to lithium.

But the real prize is renewable energy, China has unbelievable geographic potential for all types of renewable energy production (hydro power, wind power, etc.) on a massive scale.

It is not inconceivable that China may once again become a large net exporter of energy resources, like we were before our recent economic boom (we were a large oil exporter several decades back).
 
We have to develop our own manufacturing, have our own large domestic consumer markets and have our own domestic brands in every sector of the economy. This gives China economic security.

Then we need to develop our own capital markets, commodity markets and make the Renminbi global. This gives China financial security.

Then we need to break the western monopoly on advanced technology. Core technology especially. This gives China technological security.

As the inevitable western sanctions are applied on China in the future, we have to depend on ourselves for everything. Technology can solve China's energy, raw materials, agricultural and water problems. Technology can rapidly advance China's military power too.

1. Economic security.
2. Financial security.
3. Technological security.

Those 3 will give China military power, political and diplomatic power.
 
We have to develop our own manufacturing, have our own large domestic consumer markets and have our own domestic brands in every sector of the economy. This gives China economic security.

Then we need to develop our own capital markets, commodity markets and make the Renminbi global. This gives China financial security.

Then we need to break the western monopoly on advanced technology. Core technology especially. This gives China technological security.

As the inevitable western sanctions are applied on China in the future, we have to depend on ourselves for everything. Technology can solve China's energy, raw materials, agricultural and water problems. Technology can rapidly advance China's military power too.

1. Economic security.
2. Financial security.
3. Technological security.

Those 3 will give China military power, political and diplomatic power.

We may also consider brain-drain a type of non-traditional security and China must develop more effective programs 1. not to lose brain capital to the West, 2. to reclaim the lost brain capital.

Population is power; it is an invaluable source of wealth for a fast developing, near-middle income economy not to suffer a middle income trap. So, two-child policy is a positive first step, but must further be broadened.
 
We may also consider brain-drain a type of non-traditional security and China must develop more effective programs 1. not to lose brain capital to the West, 2. to reclaim the lost brain capital.

Population is power; it is an invaluable source of wealth for a fast developing, near-middle income economy not to suffer a middle income trap. So, two-child policy is a positive first step, but must further be broadened.

Yes your right.
I think the population control policy should be abolished. People are much richer and the life quality is much better so people don't create 5 or 6 babies now days.
 
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