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Page added on July 16, 2014

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Chinese Oil Rig Near Vietnam to Be Moved

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A Chinese energy company announced Wednesday that a giant oil rig that was deployed in disputed waters off the coast of Vietnam two months ago had completed its exploration work and would be moved.

The China National Petroleum Corporation, a state-owned company, said the billion-dollar rig, known as HD 981, would be relocated to an area around the Qiongdongnan basin, closer to Hainan Island, a southern province of China, and apparently in undisputed waters.

The arrival of the rig off the Paracel Islands in the South China Sea in early May worsened China’s relations with Vietnam, a neighbor, and became a sticking point in the increasing tensions between Beijing and Washington.

The announcement, released by Xinhua, the state-run news agency, came a day after President Obama called President Xi Jinping to talk about what the White House called the “important progress” at meetings between the two countries in Beijing last week, although they did not settle any differences.
There was no indication that the movement of the rig away from the disputed waters with Vietnam was related to the telephone call.
When the rig was first deployed close to the Paracels, claimed by both China and Vietnam, Chinese officials said it would remain in place until mid-August, the normal start of the typhoon season.

There was no explanation why the rig was leaving earlier, but the statement by the China National Petroleum Corporation said the operation was ending as planned. During exploration, the rig found “signs of oil and gas,” and the company planned to assess the data and decide on its next steps, the statement said.

The arrival of the rig — more than 40 stories tall and the size of a football field — prompted daily clashes at sea between Chinese vessels sent to protect it and Vietnamese boats that tried to pierce the perimeter of about 12 miles the Chinese had established around it.

Chinese Coast Guard vessels rammed smaller Vietnamese boats, and the Chinese used powerful water cannons to keep the Vietnamese vessels at bay.

Both sides also stationed naval vessels in the distance, and Chinese fighter jets flew over the rig from time to time. In Vietnam, anti-Chinese protests turned violent as two Chinese workers were killed and factories run by Taiwanese and South Korean companies were destroyed.

China’s Foreign Ministry said Wednesday that the movement of the rig should not be seen as a retreat, emphasizing the position that the Paracel Islands were China’s territory and that the rig was operating in “undisputed coastal waters” of the islands.

China, though, could be moving the oil rig to ease relations with Vietnam, said Bonnie Glaser, a senior adviser for Asia at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. “It could be a face-saving way to end the over two-month-long standoff with Vietnam,” she said.

The Voice of Vietnam, a state-run news agency, said Wednesday that Vietnamese law enforcement officials saw the rig moving away from its position on Tuesday evening. The agency added that the move may have occurred because of the approaching Typhoon Rammasun.

But an influential Vietnamese military official, Maj. Gen. Le Ma Luong, said the Chinese were backing down and were moving the rig because of the “strong reactions”of Vietnam. In an interview in PetroTimes, a Vietnamese state-run news outlet, the general said the typhoon was “just an excuse.”

 

NY Times



4 Comments on "Chinese Oil Rig Near Vietnam to Be Moved"

  1. Makati1 on Wed, 16th Jul 2014 10:05 pm 

    They now have a good idea of the ‘reserves’ there. The decision is now, what cost do they want to expend to recover them, or do they just pass as not worth the effort? Why chance going to war over a drop in the bucket? It’s not going anywhere. Maybe in another decade or so, it will be worth the price. Or it may never be recovered. Time will tell.

  2. Bi Tan Tra on Thu, 17th Jul 2014 6:59 am 

    We also want china move out of Vietnam islands too.

  3. rockman on Thu, 17th Jul 2014 7:16 am 

    In reality this is how exploration is done around the world. Such rigs have no capability to produce oil/NG. They only drill to learn what’s down there. So hypothetically let’s assume they found major oil reserves they want to produce ASAP. Depending on the nature of the reservoirs and the water depth it could take 2+ years for a production facility to be built and arrive in the area and then another year or more to drill development wells. So it could be a minimum of 3 years before the begin producing oil.

    And that’s only if the initial drilling effort proved up enough reserves. So they might have found some oil/NG and now they send the rig to drill elsewhere while they incorporate the new info into their geologic database and plan for the next step. And that might be to come back in 6 months to a year to drill a second evaluation well. And then they might have enough proven reserves to justify development.

    Nothing new about this aspect. In the Deep Water GOM it typically takes 4 to 7 years from the date of the initial discovery to the first bbl of oil flowing.

  4. brichardi05 on Thu, 17th Jul 2014 3:26 pm 

    China should also get their people out of Vietnam. The Vietnamese are better of without any Chinese on their soil.

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