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Shell signs contract for China shale gas
by Staff Writers
Beijing (UPI) Mar 21, 2012


Oil giant Royal Dutch Shell signed a production-sharing contract with state-controlled China National Petroleum Corp. to explore, develop and produce shale gas in China.

Shell, in an announcement Wednesday, said it will apply its technology and operational expertise to develop the Fushun-Yongchuan block in the Sichuan Basin. The area covers about 1,351 square miles.

"China has huge shale gas potential and we are committed to making a contribution in bringing that potential into reality," Royal Dutch Shell Chief Executive Officer Peter Voser said in a news release.

Ernst and Young says China has the largest shale reserves -- 19 percent of global resources.

Earlier this month, China's Ministry of Land and Resources estimated that China has 25 trillion cubic meters of recoverable shale gas.

As part of its latest five-year plan, China aims to produce 6.5 billion cubic meters of shale gas a year by the end of 2015.

Zhang Yuqing, head of the National Energy Administration's oil and gas department, told China Daily that if China has the necessary technology to better explore and recover shale gas, the country could produce as much as 100 billion cubic meters by 2020.

About 50 shale gas wells have been drilled in China but no commercial production has been announced.

China has invested heavily in North America's shale gas assets, giving Chinese companies a way to gain experience in the development of the gas.

Shell didn't disclose the commercial terms of the deal or the amount of the company's equity stake.

The agreement, subject to government approval, represents the first shale gas production-sharing contract signed in China, Shell said. Other foreign oil companies involved in Chinese shale gas development, such as Exxon Mobil and Chevron, are working under joint assessment agreements, Shell said.

In 2010, Shell had signed a joint assessment with CNPC for the same block to evaluate and assess the shale reserves. Last year, Shell began exploration drilling of at least three wells, with some gas shows, the Platts news service said.

"I think the terms of this latest PSC are probably unique to the block and negotiated between Shell and CNPC, in order to give Shell the confidence to commit to investing in the block. It is probably a more formal agreement in order for it to cover its costs," Platts quoted an upstream analyst based in Singapore as saying Wednesday.

China's Ministry of Land and Resources said that it would open the second or third shale-gas tenders this year but it didn't provide a timetable. The first shale-gas auction was last July.

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Shell signs shale gas deal with China energy firm
Beijing (AFP) March 21, 2012 - Royal Dutch Shell on Wednesday signed an agreement with Chinese state-run energy company CNPC to explore, develop and produce shale gas in southwest China, the Anglo-Dutch company said.

The production-sharing contract with China National Petroleum Corporation centres on a 3,500 square-kilometre (2,170 square-mile) area in Sichuan province, Shell said in a statement.

"We are delighted about this new milestone in our strategic cooperation with CNPC," the statement quoted Shell's chief executive Peter Voser as saying.

"China has huge shale gas potential and we are committed to making a contribution in bringing that potential into reality."

The oil giant did not provide a value for the agreement, which still needs government approval.

Shale gas, a cleaner alternative to coal and oil, comes from deep reserves that were thought inaccessible until the advent of new drilling methods, but extraction costs are high.

Beijing is investing billions of dollars to develop clean energy as it seeks to meet a target of generating 10 percent of its fuel needs from natural gas and 15 percent from renewable sources by 2020.

It has already been investing heavily in Canadian and US reserves of shale gas as it seeks to reduce its reliance on coal and oil imports.

But experts say China's lack of technical expertise in shale gas extraction poses a challenge to the industry's domestic development.



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