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China sets fines for Bohai oil spill
by Staff Writers
Beijing (UPI) Apr 30, 2012

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

China has ordered oil giant ConocoPhillips and China National Offshore Oil Corp. to pay $269 million for oil spills at a Bohai Bay oilfield run by Conoco.

The first of two leaks was detected last June at Penglai 19-3, China's biggest offshore oilfield, jointly owned by the two companies. Houston's ConocoPhillips has a 49 percent stake and CNOOC holds the other 51 percent.

The leaks released more than 700 barrels of crude oil into the water, resulting in marine pollution and environmental damage to a marine area of 2,400 square miles, says China's State Oceanic Administration.

SOA said Friday the $269 million would be used for environmental protection efforts in Bohai Bay, including habitat restoration, reducing the discharge of oil pollutants and monitoring and research on the impact of oil spills on the environment, state-run news agency Xinhua reports.

Last September, SOA ordered ConocoPhillips to suspend operation of the oilfield.

Since the 2010 Deepwater Horizon disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, Chinese regulators are taking a more serious approach to offshore oil pollution, says oil analyst Gordon Kwan of Mirae Asset Securities.

"They don't want that disaster to be repeated in China," Kwan told the Financial Times.

"China is becoming a first-world country and they realize that aggressive production of energy cannot come at the cost of the environment."

For its share, ConocoPhillips will pay $191 million of the $269 million fine.

That's in addition to the approximate $160 million ConocoPhillips, in a January agreement with China's Ministry of Agriculture, said it would pay for compensation to fishermen.

The latest fine "is higher than expected," said Lin Boqiang, director of the China Center for Energy Economic Research at Xiamen University, China Daily newspaper reports.

"But it's not a matter of capital. More importantly, it's a turning point for the oil producers that they will pay if they leave environmental protection behind in pursuit of profit."

In announcing its first quarter 2012 financial results last week, CNOOC said the company's net production had fallen 6.3 percent year-on-year, to 79.8 million barrels of oil equivalent, which it said was mainly due to the suspension of production at the Penglai 19-3 oilfield.

Bernstein Research said earlier this month that it expected full production to be restored at Penglai 19-3 "imminently," Platts news service reports.

The oilfield restarted last month under an "approved interim reservoir management plan," ConocoPhillips said April 5, with gross production at 40,000 barrels per day. Before last September's shutdown, it was producing 122,000 barrels per day.

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Progress in talks on China funding for refinery: Ecuador
Brasilia (AFP) April 30, 2012 - Negotiations on Chinese financing of a joint Ecuadoran-Venezuelan project to build a refinery in Ecuador are in their final stage, visiting Ecuadoran Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino said Monday.

"We are very hopeful that this Chinese participation will materialize and that we can begin construction in the coming months," he added after a meeting his Brazilian counterpart Antonio Patriota.

Patino said China had a great interest in oil byproducts.

The $10-billion refinery would go up in El Aromo, in Ecuador's coastal province of Manabi, and be ready possibly in 2013.

Patino said the project was open to participation by other countries and noted that Brazilian construction companies have shown interest.

The project, first unveiled in July 2008 by Ecuadoran President Rafael Correa and his Venezuelan counterpart Hugo Chavez, is expected to have a refining capacity of 300,000 barrels of crude daily.

It aims to export to the United States, Chile and Peru.



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OriginOil Technology Recovers 98% of Hydrocarbons in Oil and Gas Production Water
Los Angeles CA (SPX) Apr 30, 2012
OriginOil has announced that in recent independent third-party testing OriginOil's algae harvesting process was able to remove 98% of hydrocarbons from a sample of West Texas oil well 'frac flowback' water in the first stage alone. The results point to a potentially valuable application of the company's core water processing technology, originally invented for algae harvesting. Frac ... read more


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