October 2014, Vol. 241, No. 10

Projects

Natural Gas Serves Small, But Growing, Portion Of Chinas Total Energy Demand

A recent U.S. Energy Information Administration report indices that China relies heavily on domestic coal (and to a lesser extent oil) to meet rising energy consumption. To reduce air pollution and carbon dioxide emissions, the Chinese government is attempting to replace some of the country’s coal and oil use with natural gas.

Natural gas accounted for only 4.9% of China’s total energy consumption in 2012, but large investments in domestic natural gas production and infrastructure, along with growing imports, are likely to underpin a significantly larger role in the future. China anticipates increasing its natural gas share of total energy consumption to 8% by the end of 2015 and 10% by 2020.

China more than tripled natural gas production since 2003, producing 3.8 Tcf in 2012, and is targeting production of 5.5 Tcf per year by the end of 2015. Gas consumption has outstripped domestic supply since 2007, triggering rising imports of LNG and pipeline gas. Consumption rose at an average annual rate of 17% from 2003-2013, reaching nearly 5.7 Tcf in 2013.

In 2013, China imported nearly 1.8 Tcf of LNG and pipeline gas to fill the growing gap between supply and demand. Imported natural gas met 32% of China’s demand in 2013, up from 2% in 2006. China is swiftly developing its LNG import capacity in the urban coastal areas and has 10 major regasification terminals with 1.7 Tcf/y of capacity. In 2013 China imported 870 Bcf of LNG. Estimates for the first half of 2014 show LNG imports growing at faster levels than in previous years.

China continues investing in natural gas pipelines that will link production areas in the western and northern regions to demand centers along the coast. This infrastructure will accommodate greater imports from neighboring countries. In 2010, the first pipeline imports flowed to China from Turkmenistan through the Central Asia Gas Pipeline (CAGP), and by 2013, natural gas supplies from Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Kazakhstan reached 974 Bcf.

In 2013, China added gas imports from Kazakhstan through the CAGP and Myanmar via a a new pipeline. China and Russia recently finalized a natural gas agreement that allows China to purchase and transport gas from eastern Russia through a proposed pipeline. The deal, valued at $400 billion, will supply China with up to 1.3 Tcf of natural gas per year starting in 2018.

China’s potential wealth of shale gas, coalbed methane, and coal-to-gas resources has spurred the government to invest and partner with foreign companies with technical expertise to unlock these reserves. According to EIA estimates, China holds the largest reserves of technically recoverable shale gas in the world, although investors face geological, technical and water resource challenges, regulatory hurdles, transportation constraints, and competition with other fuels.

For more information see EIA’s Country Analysis Brief on China. Principal contributor: Candace Dunn.

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