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Russia-Chinese
Energy Partnership: One Proposal
Robert Dudley
The
Kovytka project – harnessing this untapped gas field as
a new source of supply – can serve as the foundation for
a mutually-beneficial Russian-Chinese energy
relationship.
Russia
has the supplies; China the demand.
China's
growing demand for natural gas for power and heating
needs, especially in Northern China, is outstripping the
country's domestic supplies. By the middle of this
decade, China will need to import gas. A similar window
is expected to open in South Korea as well. There is no
reason why both cannot import from Russia, tapping the
potential of the Kovytka fields.
With
some 1,472 billion cubic meters in reserves, Kovytka can
easily meet the energy needs of Eastern Siberia, leaving
plenty to spare for export. We conclude that Kovytka
could begin supplying gas to the Irkutsk region (and
onward to include Buratiya and Chita) in 2006, but
eastern Siberia is likely to consume only 4 billion
cubic meters on an annual basis. With the construction
of a gas pipeline to China (with an extension onward to
South Korea), northeastern China could start receiving
gas from Kovytka by 2008, just as the first shortages
begin to become apparent, and could easily absorb three
times as much gas annually as Irkutsk (approximately 12
billion cubic meters per year). South Korea could
account for a further 10 billion cubic meters every
year, and it would be possible to extend the line to the
rest of the north; we estimate that an additional 8
billion cubic meters per year could be absorbed by that
market.
There
are a number of real benefits for Russia if it
undertakes this project. Substituting gas for coal to
power electrical plants could vastly improve the
ecological situation in the Lake Baikal basin.
Construction and maintenance of the pipeline would
generate jobs and spill over to other local industries.
We estimate that the government itself would profit from
increased tax revenues (around $800 million).
Yet
this project is not sustainable without the Chinese
component. Domestic Russian demand in eastern
Siberia
is insufficient as a spur to develop the Kovytka field
on a large scale. Only by seeing Kovytka as a energy
source for
China
and Korea is there the incentive to pump the gas from
the ground.
And
there is a limited window of opportunity. Right now,
there is a potential alignment of interests between
Russia,
China and South Korea to develop the Kovytka field and
construct the pipeline.
Russia
needs to recognize that Kovytka is an asset that needs
to be monetized. Without guaranteed export markets in
China and Korea, the vast majority of the gas resource
will remain in the ground, unused for decades. It is not
economical to pipe the gas to other markets further
afield. Kovytka is also, realistically, the "anchor"
project for any North-East Asian Regional Energy
Corridor (NEAREC). Oil in sufficient quantities has not
yet been discovered that would justify an oil pipeline
from eastern
Siberia
to East Asian markets. The gas is there now and it is
ready to move. The Kovytka project could generate a
stable energy relationship between
Russia,
China and South Korea that would lay the basis for other
forms of cooperation in the future.
But
China and Korea cannot wait indefinitely for the Russian
view of this project to coalesce. China is looking at
other alternatives. If a project for gas from Kovytka
is not progressing,
China
will turn to other sources of supply--notably Liquefied
Natural Gas (LNG) imported from other sources into
Northeast China.
In
addition to Russian national interests, there are U.S.
and Japanese interests at stake with Kovytka. If not
exported to
Asia,
Kovytka gas will remain untapped and unused. If
successfully developed, Kovytka will increase the
overall amount of energy in world markets. Rather than
competing for LNG supplies,
China
and Korea can enjoy a more secure supply and the LNG
supplies can be diverted to other markets. This reduces
competition for scarcer supplies and we believe that
this also enhances America's and Japan's own energy
security in the long run.
Robert
Dudley is president and CEO of TNK-BP (www.tnk-bp.com)
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