Russia and China could soon sign another major contract on gas pipeline construction project after they signed a landmark 30-year gas deal in Shanghai during Russian President Vladimir Putin's state visit in May, a senior Russian official said Wednesday.
"Given the pace of Chinese economic growth ... with an agreement upon the compromise (gas) price formulas having been achieved, it is very likely that a contract could also be signed in the very near future for the construction of a western route ( gas pipeline) that will fully cross the Siberian Federal District, " Russian presidential administration chief Sergei Ivanov told reporters in the Siberian city of Novosibirsk.
He said the contract on the western route, also called the Altai natural gas pipeline, might be "less capital-intensive" than that of the eastern one, but "it's no doubt going to cost us tens of billions of U.S. dollars," Itar-Tass news agency reported.
The official said the project, like the eastern one, would create jobs and stimulate many economic industries, which will have "a cumulative effect."
The long-awaited gas deal in Shanghai ended a decade of natural gas supply talks between the two neighbors.
According to the 400-billion-dollar deal, Russia will deliver up to 38 billion cubic meters of natural gas annually to China from 2018 via the eastern route. The gas will come from Russia's Kovyktin and Chayandin gas fields in eastern Siberia and will be piped to China's northeast, the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei metropolitan area in the north and the Yangtze river delta in the east.
June 4 (Xinhua)
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5/6/14
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"Given the pace of Chinese economic growth ... with an agreement upon the compromise (gas) price formulas having been achieved, it is very likely that a contract could also be signed in the very near future for the construction of a western route ( gas pipeline) that will fully cross the Siberian Federal District, " Russian presidential administration chief Sergei Ivanov told reporters in the Siberian city of Novosibirsk.
He said the contract on the western route, also called the Altai natural gas pipeline, might be "less capital-intensive" than that of the eastern one, but "it's no doubt going to cost us tens of billions of U.S. dollars," Itar-Tass news agency reported.
The official said the project, like the eastern one, would create jobs and stimulate many economic industries, which will have "a cumulative effect."
The long-awaited gas deal in Shanghai ended a decade of natural gas supply talks between the two neighbors.
According to the 400-billion-dollar deal, Russia will deliver up to 38 billion cubic meters of natural gas annually to China from 2018 via the eastern route. The gas will come from Russia's Kovyktin and Chayandin gas fields in eastern Siberia and will be piped to China's northeast, the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei metropolitan area in the north and the Yangtze river delta in the east.
June 4 (Xinhua)
[cntv.cn]
5/6/14
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Related:
Just weeks after a historic $400-billion deal, Russia and China are now inching towards a second major gas project to build a pipeline to export natural gas from Russia's western Siberia to north-western China, Kremlin Chief of Staff Sergei Ivanov said Wednesday.....
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφή“Considering the pace of China’s economic growth and the agreed pricing formula I’d say it is very likely that we will soon conclude a contract to build a western [pipeline] before long that will run across the Siberian Federal District,” Ivanov said.
Putin’s chief of staff said the project to build the so-called Altai natural gas pipeline was a particularly “huge” endeavor. “It might be less capital-intensive than the eastern one, but it’s no doubt going to cost us tens of billions of dollars,” he explained.
“It translates into new jobs, and involves many economic industries, starting from metallurgy to pipeline production and so on. This process will have a cumulative effect,” Ivanov said.
Russian energy giant Gazprom and China’s CNPC sealed a historic deal for gas deliveries in mid-May of this year. The 30-year contract provides for the sale of 38 billion cubic meters of Russian natural gas to China per year, with delivery via a pipeline in the East.
The price tag of the entire contract is estimated at $400 billion, though the contract price for the natural gas has not yet been revealed. Under the deal, Russia’s overall investment is $55 billion, while China’s is estimated at around $22 billion.
The gas deal requires the two partners to run additional investment projects to develop the Chayandinskoye and Kovyktinskoye gas fields, build the Power of Siberia gas pipeline in eastern Siberia and an LNG plant in Amur Region.
The Altai project, or the western route, has been planned for over a decade, and will extend a new pipeline to the natural gas basins that feed Europe, allowing Russia to siphon some of that gas to China’s north-western provinces.
http://en.ria.ru/russia/20140604/190348883/Russia-China-Could-Agree-Upon-Altai-Gas-Pipeline.html
4/6/14