China in $5 billion drive to develop disputed East China Sea gas
Chinese state-run oil companies hope to develop seven new
gas fields in the East China Sea, possibly siphoning gas from the seabed
beneath waters claimed by Japan, a move that could further inflame tensions
with Tokyo over the disputed area. China is already working on Huangyan I which
has two fields approved. The Huangyan project is expected to cost more than 30
billion yuan ($4.9 billion), including 11 production platforms now under
construction at Chinese shipyards. The greater issue is the political risk if
Beijing approves the new gas fields. Tensions over the East China Sea have
escalated this year, with Beijing and Tokyo scrambling fighter jets and
ordering patrol ships to shadow each other, raising the fear that a
miscalculation could lead to a broader clash. China and Japan in 2008 agreed to
jointly develop hydrocarbons in the area, but Tokyo wishes to settle the issue
of maritime boundaries before developing the gas fields.
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