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Wednesday, November 10, 1999, updated at 14:37(GMT+8)
Business Natural Gas Imports to Supplement China's Energy Industry

China will continue to experiment with the use of imported natural gas, but will only use it as a supplement to the national energy supply, according to a chief economic official.

China's energy industry will be built upon a domestic supply of fuel, stressed Zhang Guobao, deputy minister in charge of the State Development Planning Commission (SDPC), in an address to the Sino-IEA Conference on Natural Gas Industry held in Beijng on November 10\.

Zhang was focusing on the prospects of China's natural gas industry, and the government's policy in this area.

He said he believed the nation's demand for natural gas will have a big rise in the next century, and the proportion of natural gas in China's total energy consumption will also increase.

China is formulating a plan on using natural gas and expanding exploration projects. The government is researching pricing, taxation and financing of the natural gas industry. Meanwhile, the development of coal bed methane is getting more attention, Zhang said.

He reiterated China's policy to widen overseas cooperation in the industry, and mentioned two projects --the imports of liquefied natural gas in the southeast coast areas, and the trans- national gas pipeline.

He stressed that China, which holds abundant coal and water resources, will emphasize the development of renewable energy such as water, nuclear and clean coal, he stressed.

Li Yongwu, director of the State Petroleum and Chemical Industry Bureau (SPCIB), also spoke to the group. He said China's proved natural gas is only about five percent of the estimated reserve and there is great potential for further development. China plans an output of 25 billion cubic meters of natural gas by 2000, and 80 billion cubic meters by 2010, he said.

It is estimated that China has a natural gas reserve of 38 trillion cubic meters, with 29.9 trillion onshore and 8.1 trillion inshore. Eighty percent of this reserve is in Sichuan, Chongqing, Shaanxi, Gansu, Ningxia, Qinghai, Xinjiang in west China and the East Sea.

Gas pipelines in the nation total 12,000 km, and networks exist in Sichuan province and Chongqing.

The conference, scheduled to close today, is jointly hosted by SDPC, SPCIB and the International Energy Agency (IEA). IEA Deputy Executive Director William Ramsay is also present. (Xinhua)

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