Archive for 3 Oil & Gas

Obama’s Risky Oil Threat to China

Abstract When it comes to China policy, is the Obama administration leaping from the frying pan directly into the fire? In an attempt to turn the page on two disastrous wars in the Greater Middle East, it may have just launched a new Cold War in Asia — once again, viewing oil as the key to global supremacy. For decades, the United States has been heavily dependent on imported oil, much of it obtained from the Middle East and Africa, while China was largely self-sufficient in oil output. In 2001, the United States consumed 19.6 million barrels of oil per day, while producing only nine million barrels itself. The dependency on foreign suppliers for that 10.6 million-barrel shortfall proved a source of enormous concern for Washington policymakers. They responded by forging ever closer, more militarized ties with Middle Eastern oil producers and going to war on occasion to ensure the safety of U.S. supply lines. In 2001, China, on the other hand, consumed only five million barrels per day and so, with a domestic output of 3.3 million barrels, needed to import only 1.7 million barrels. Those cold, hard numbers made its leadership far less concerned about the reliability of the country’s major overseas providers — and so it did not need to duplicate the same sort of foreign policy entanglements that Washington had long been involved in. Now, so the Obama administration has concluded, the tables are beginning to turn.
Date 2011 12 07
Author Michael T. Klare
Publisher
Link http://www.zcommunications.org/obama-s-risky-oil-threat-to-china-by-michael-t-klare
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3 Oil & Gas, 3.4 China's International Oil Relations

A Cry for Justice: The Voices of Chinese Workers

Abstract The accounts in this book, told in workers’ voices from inside China, include reports about strikes in the oil and coal industries, as well as in the energy intensive sectors.
Date 2008 03
Author
Publisher The Albert Shanker Institute,
Link http://www.shankerinstitute.org/publications/cry-for-justice/
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3.5 Workers in the Oil Industry

Conversation with a Retrenched Oil Worker in Daqing

Abstract Protests by retrenched oil workers in the city of Daqing have been continuing for over six weeks. Thousands – and on occasions, tens of thousands – of former oil workers have been gathering in Daqing’s Iron Man Square on a daily basis. In this broadcast, I ask why? At the time of the retrenchment, workers voluntarily applied for compensated redundancy, so what was the background to these agreements? How has the Daqing Petroleum Administration Bureau (DPAB) and the Daqing government reacted to protests from workers who dedicated their working lives to developing the Daqing oilfield? How have these workers been treated by the authorities? Over the next few programmes, we will use our broadcast to give the retrenched Daqing oil workers an opportunity to tell their side of the story.
Author 2012 04 2002
Publisher
Link http://www.clb.org.hk/en/node/1960
Series China Labour Bulletin
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3 Oil & Gas, 3.5 Workers in the Oil Industry

Daqing Workers’ Movement Continues: Two Workers Arrested in Guangyuan

Abstract The Daqing oil workers’ demonstration has already entered its fourth week. On 21 March, I called the Petroleum Administration Bureau’s (PAB) duty office to get an update on the latest developments of the workers’ demonstrations.
Date 2002 03 22
Author
Publisher
Link http://www.clb.org.hk/en/node/1798
Series China Labour Bulletin
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3 Oil & Gas, 3.5 Workers in the Oil Industry

Paying the Price: Worker Unrest in Northeast China

Abstract From March through May 2002, well-organized workers’ protests in three cities in northeastern China brought unprecedented numbers of disaffected, laid-off, and unemployed workers into the streets. In an area of high unemployment, extensive poverty, conspicuous wealth, and what is widely viewed as endemic corruption, workers protested non-payment of back wages and pensions, loss of benefits, insufficient severance pay, maneuvers intended to bypass elected workers congresses, and unfulfilled government promises to help the unemployed find jobs. Like previous demonstrations in other areas of the northeastern “rust-belt,” the protests emerged from several years of privatization, down-sizing, and bankruptcies of state-owned enterprises in which workers had been promised lifetime employment and broad benefits. The protests in 2002, however, involved tens of thousands of workers from dozens of factories and mines, and lasted longer than any protests since the violent suppression of the 1989 Democracy Movement. This included protests in Daqing in the oil sector, as well as energy intensive sectors.
Date 2012 08
Author
Publisher Human Rights Watch
Link http://www.hrw.org/reports/2002/chinalbr02/chinalbr0802.pdf
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3 Oil & Gas, 3.5 Workers in the Oil Industry

Through the Lens: The Dalian Oil Spill

Abstract In July 2010, Chinese photographer Lu Guang documented the oil spill at the city of Dalian for Greenpeace. The pictures he took portraying the death of firefighter Zhang Liang won a World Press Photo award in 2011 (third prize, spot news stories).
Date 2011 03 04
Author
Publisher Greenpeace
Link http://www.greenpeace.org/new-zealand/en/Multimedia/Videos/Through-the-Lens-the-Dalian-Oil-Spill-/
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3 Oil & Gas, 3.6 Oil and the Environment

The Influence of Entering into WTO on Domestic Refineries and Our Countermeasures. Petrochemical Industry Trends

Abstract According to the basic legal principle of WTO,on the basis of the analysis of status of domestic refining industry,this article predicts that our country will be faced with severe challenge and rare chance after entering WTO,and puts forth six pieces of countermeasures to ensure the survival and development of domestic refining industry.
Author Yao Guoxin
Publisher SINOPEC Information Center
Link http://en.cnki.com.cn/Article_en/CJFDTotal-SYGD199905000.htm
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3 Oil & Gas, 3.7 Oil Miscellaneous

The Science and Technology Museum of Daqing Oilfield

Abstract The Science and Technology Museum of Daqing Oilfield is located in Ranghulu District of Daqing, subordinated to Exploration and Development Research Institute of Daqing Oilfield Company Ltd. It was formerly The Development Tests Exhibition Hall of Daqing Oilfield (alias Underground Palace) built in 1960, and opened to the public on September 16, 1995.
Author
Publisher
Link http://wikimapia.org/23374384/Daqing-Oil-Field-History-Museum
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3.7 Oil Miscellaneous

Will There Be a Shale Gas Revolution in China by 2020?

Abstract This paper, by Fan Gao, assesses the extent to which China is likely to achieve levels of shale gas production by 2020 which would make a meaningful difference to its growing need for imports of pipeline gas and LNG. The study suggests that given the rather disappointing progress on Coal Bed Methane production since exploration and development work started some 25 years ago, a cautionary approach is needed in anticipating the outlook for shale gas for the remainder of this decade.  The specific challenges include water availability and population density demographics as well as the need to stimulate an innovative competitive dynamic in the Chinese upstream service sector and an appropriate upstream investment framework with foreign participants for the transfer and application of technology. The paper provides a rare appreciation of the dynamics of the onshore Chinese upstream industry and from that basis a better understanding of what will be required, on a number of policy levels, for Chinese shale gas development to succeed.
Date 2012 04 18
Author Fan Gao
Publisher Oxford Institute for Energy Studies
Link http://www.oxfordenergy.org/wpcms/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/NG-61.pdf
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3.8 Gas

Testimony: China’s Prospects for Shale Gas and Implications for the U.S.

Abstract In this testimony, Senior Associate Sarah Forbes describes the state of China’s shale gas industry; governmental policies that will drive its future development in China; the implications of U.S.-China business-to-business partnerships and government-to-government cooperation; and how shale gas development in China and the United States changes the global dynamics of energy security.
Date 2012 01 26
Author Sarah Forbes
Publisher World Resources Institute
Link http://pdf.wri.org/testimony/forbes_testimony_china_shale_gas_2012-01-26.pdf
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3 Oil & Gas, 3.8 Gas