PetroChina Joins Sinopec to Making Bullish Shale Gas Targets

China Petroleum & Chemical (Sinopec)'s discovery of the Fuling field in Chongqing may have set a milestone for the mainland oil and gas industry's "shale gas revolution", but the industry's success in meeting the nation's 2020 production target and emulating the success of the United States is not guaranteed.

This is because drilling completed at the Fuling project is not sufficient to prove that the initial drilling success will be replicated in a much wider area beyond the 200 square kilometre pilot zone, analysts said.

"The Fuling shale is unquestionably the best shale discovery in China to date and arguably one of the best outside North America," said American brokerage Sanford C. Bernstein senior analyst Neil Beveridge in a report. "[But] Fuling is relatively small and may not be representative of the Sichuan basin more broadly. China's shale revolution is still likely to be a long drawn out affair compared with the US."

Sinopec chairman Fu Chengyu late last month delivered at a press conference what investors like to hear: a timetable for Fuling's production capacity construction - five billion cubic metres (bcm) annually by the end of next year and 10 bcm by 2017. The firm had targeted two bcm by 2015 two years ago.

The new target is significant given Fuling is the nation's first commercial-scale shale gas project. Sinopec - the nation's second largest oil and gas producer - last year produced 18.7 bcm of gas from conventional methods.

"Fuling should be considered China's first large-scale shale gas field, marking the arrival of commercial shale gas development," Fu said.

"While the average well costs in [Fuling] is much higher than most shale wells in North America, the initial production rates appear to be higher," Beveridge said. "Bringing costs down will be a key challenge for shale development in China, which we think will ultimately be successful given the industry's scale and manufacturing capability."

(SCMP Edited by Topco)