The government is poised to ease its tight control over the gas
distribution business by allowing overseas companies to take
controlling stakes in local distribution networks along
long-distance gas transmission trunk lines.
China already made a breakthrough in this regard in July when it
started the construction of the US$8.5 billion west-to-east gas
pipeline across the country, said Xu Dingming, director-general of
the Industrial Development Department of the State Development
Planning Commission, yesterday.
"Other proposed gas pipelines will also follow the example of the
west-to-east gas pipeline," said Xu. "Overseas investors are
encouraged to invest in or take controlling shares in local gas
distribution networks along the trunk lines."
"There is no ceiling on the amount of shares overseas investors can
take, as long as the local governments agree," added Xu, who was
attending a press conference of the Paris-based International
Energy Agency (IEA) to release a research report on China's gas
market.
The move seems to be another bold step forward since the government
opened the sector to overseas investment for the first time in
April. Investment guidelines published in April stipulated that
domestic companies should hold controlling stakes in gas joint
ventures in large cities like Shanghai, Beijing or Guangzhou.
In
addition to the 4,000-kilometre west-east pipeline, China is
preparing for the construction of several long-distance gas
transmission trunk lines, including a pipeline in Northeast China
linking to Russia, a 700-kilometre pipeline in Central China, and
another from Northwest China's Shaanxi Province to Beijing.
"Local city governments along the pipelines are negotiating with
foreign companies to form local gas distribution joint ventures,"
said Xu. "Some have already signed the contracts."
Overseas gas companies, especially Hong Kong companies like Xin'ao
Gas Holding and Hong Kong and China Gas, have already struck
agreements with cities in the booming Shangdong, Jiangsu and
Guangdong provinces. Analysts said those companies are eager to tap
the Chinese mainland's gas distribution market, hoping to take
advantage of China's rapid gas consumption growth.
The government expects to curb pollution by using more gas to
replace some coal consumption, which now accounts for
three-quarters of total energy consumption.
Speaking at the conference, William C. Ramsay, deputy executive
director of the IEA, said China's natural gas demand is expected to
increase by more than 10 per cent annually to 200 billion cubic
meters a year by 2020.
To
promote gas use, Ramsay called upon the Chinese Government to
develop a strong and coherent national energy policy for natural
gas market development.
He
suggested the establishment of a specialist energy department for a
uniformed energy policy.
(China Daily December 10, 2002)
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