Chavez: China, Venezuela to plan two refineries
OG JOURNAL
Eric Watkins
Oil Diplomacy Editor
LOS ANGELES, Sept. 23
-- Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said his country and China plan to
construct two refineries, one in each country, with a formal agreement
to be signed soon.
"Venezuela has enough oil to last for 200 years," Chavez said. "And
the Chinese are already working to tap that."
Chavez said the refinery to be built in Venezuela will be built in
the
Orinoco basin, but he did not provide details of where the Chinese
facility would be constructed.
China is a key link in Chavez's aim of developing new markets for
its
oil exports, and Chinese demand has been growing in the past year.
Earlier this month, China National Petroleum Corp. subsidiary
PetroChina Co. said it would need to import more Venezuelan crude to
feed its upgraded 180,740 b/d Liaoyang refinery in northern China.
PetroChina has completed upgrading a vacuum distillation unit at the
refinery that will enable it to process 70,290 b/d of Venezuelan
high-sulfur crude.
CNPC said the refinery had received 388,490 bbl of Venezuelan crude
for
a trial operation during August and will increase its runs in the
future.
In August, Petroleos de Venezuela SA Vice-Pres. Eulogio del Pino
said
the state firm is sending about 360,000 b/d of crude to China. Del Pino
said PDVSA aims to increase those shipments to 1 million b/d by 2012.
Venezuela's shipments to China have surged this year. In May alone,
Venezuela supplied 14.1% of China's product imports, up from 3.1% in
April, according to figures from the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries.
In the first 7 months of 2008, Venezuela exported 5.18 million tons,
or
38 million bbl, of crude to China—an increase of 93.8% over 2007.
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