Sinopec Group, the largest shareholder of Sinopec Corp., is a giant petroleum and petrochemical group incorporated by the State in 1998 based on the former China Petrochemical Corporation. Funded by the State, it is a State authorized investment arm and State-owned controlling company.

Friday, July 16, 2010

China's Sinopec reports oil discovery in Nigeria

BEIJING, July 12th, 2010 - State-owned Chinese oil producer Sinopec said Monday its Addax subsidiary has struck oil offshore Nigeria after the unit was acquired last year to expand the company's African presence.

The UDELE-3 well of Block 137 in the Niger Delta showed a heavy oil flow of 3,365 barrels and 28,300 cubic meters of gas per day in a test, said a statement by the company, also known as China Petroleum & Chemical Corp.

"It showed the a huge oil exploration potential of the block in the future, and also greatly increased its value," the company said.

The well was Sinopec's first exploration in Nigeria this year.

Sinopec acquired Addax, a Geneva-based oil and gas explorer, last year for $7.2 billion to add reserves and production capacity in West Africa and the Middle East. It was the biggest foreign acquisition by a Chinese company to date.

Sinopec shares closed up 0.7 percent to 8.15 yuan on Monday in Shanghai. - The Associated Press

Sinopec, Marubeni join hands for petrochem projects

BEIJING, July 14th, 2010 - Asia's largest refiner Sinopec Corp has formed an alliance with Japanese trading company Marubeni Corp for overseas energy and petrochemical projects in regions like South America and Africa.

"We do not rule out the possibility to cooperate with Marubeni in overseas projects since the Japanese company has a very diversified business portfolio and is active in many fields," Huang Wensheng, spokesman of Sinopec told China Daily on Wednesday, adding that the two companies already have several cooperative projects in China.

Sinopec, or China Petroleum & Chemical Corp, has not disclosed any further details on the cooperation plan so far.

”The company is also looking for partners who are strong in marketing refinery and chemical products,” said Zhou Xiujie, an industry analyst with China Investment Consulting.

South America and Africa are not exactly the top destinations for energy producers, said Lin. Many Chinese energy companies are also in a weak position to jostle for global resources, as they were slow in entering the race.

But Zhou believes South America and Africa have a more stable political environment and are less competitive than the Middle East region from which China currently imports most of its oil.

"It's strategically important to diversify resource channels," Zhou said.

China, may add about 30 million tons of oil-refining capacity this year to cope up with the surging demand. That marks a 10 percent growth from a year earlier, according to a recent study from China Oil, Gas & Petrochemicals.

With the world's second-biggest energy consumer almost reaching the cap level of domestic energy output and demand continuing to go up, many of the companies have no choice but to seek more foreign resources.

The nation may rely on oil imports to satisfy 58 percent of its requirements by 2015. China relied on crude imports to satisfy more than half if its crude requirements in 2009.

Sinopec is internationalizing its business and currently has 47 overseas projects for oil and gas exploration and development. Sinopec bought Calgary-based Addax Petroleum Corp for C$8.3 billion last year to boost oil reserves.

The group's Hong Kong-listed unit, China Petroleum & Chemical Corp, said on March 29, it would pay $2.5 billion to buy a stake in an Angolan field from its parent to boost crude-oil output.

Earlier this year, the refiner paid US oil company ConocoPhillips $4.65 billion for a stake in Syncrude Canada Ltd, an oil-sands producer.

Sinopec is also planning to build a storage base for crude and refined oil in Singapore."After acquiring resources, Sinopec may also look for refinery opportunities abroad," said Zhou. – China Daily

Friday, July 2, 2010

Sinopec to downward adjust its base oil producer price from July 1

BEIJING, July 1st, 2010 - Sinopec may lower its base oil producer price by 150 to 200 yuan/metric ton, according to chem99.com., an energy portal website.

According to chem99, almost all Sinopec refineries, including the Ji'nan refinery, Jingmen Petrochemical, Gaoqiao Petrochemical, Yanshan Petrochemical, and Maoming Petrochemical, will reduce the base oil price from July 1.

Sinopec's move is a reaction to the base-oil market which entered a bleak season from late May with stockpiles in refineries and importer s mounting up.

Most market buyers are taking a wait-and-see attitude and base-oil sales have been in the doldrums.

It is observed that PetroChina and Sinopec are finding it hard to sell their base oil at a high price currently.

Against this gloomy background, PetroChina has put Dalian Petrochemical into overhaul and its Daqing Petrochemical will also enter maintenance in August to reduce stockpile pressure.

Sinopec's Jingmen Petrochemical also started maintenance in late May. - Xinhua News Agency