China asks energy firms to cut gas supply to some industries by 15 MMcm per day
BEIJING (Reuters) — China's state planner on Monday said it had asked national energy majors CNPC, Sinopec and CNOOC to cut natural gas supplies to some industries by a total of about 15 MMcm per day.
The move comes amid a shortage of gas in the world's No. 2 economy after an unprecedented campaign to help clean up the environment by switching millions of households to natural gas from coal for heating.
The government has previously said that supply to industry would be curbed, but Monday's announcement—covering makers of products such as chemicals, methanol and fertilizer—gives an indication of the targeted size of such cuts.
Meng Wei, spokeswoman for the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), also said at a briefing on Monday that the government had coordinated with the three major energy companies to increase supplies by raising gas output, boosting imports and speeding up infrastructure construction.
She added that China planned to purchase 3.5 Bcm of LNG in overseas markets in addition to its original plan to import 24.5 Bcm over the winter.
The nation has also been sending 14 MMcm of gas per day to its frigid north from the south, with plans to boost that to around 19 MMt per day, said Meng.
CNOOC has rented a convoy of 100 trucks to ship LNG the length of the country to northern regions in the latest unusual, and costly, move to ease the deepening fuel crisis.
Reporting by Muyu Xu and Josephine Mason; Editing by Tom Hogue and Joseph Radford
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