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ENERGY TECH
Myanmar-China gas pipeline starts flowing: company
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) July 29, 2013


Oil spill hits Thai tourist island
Bangkok (AFP) July 29, 2013 - Thai navy personnel battled Monday to clean up a major oil slick which coated a beach on a popular tourist island in a national park after a pipeline leak.

Roughly 50,000 litres of crude oil gushed into the sea on Saturday about 20 kilometres (12 miles) off the coast of the eastern province of Rayong, operator PTT Global Chemical said.

The oil reached Ao Phrao beach on the island of Ko Samet where hundreds of navy personnel, national park officials, company workers and villagers raced to remove it.

"It covers about 300 metres (990 feet) of the beach. That's a lot," Soomet Saitong, chief of the Khao Laem Ya National Park which includes Samet island, told AFP.

Some visitors were cutting short their holidays on the island, which is a popular destination for weekend breaks for Bangkok residents.

"There are oil stains right in front of the beach. Customers are starting to check out," a worker at the Ao Phrao Resort told AFP.

"There's oil all over on the beach," said a member of the front desk staff at another nearby hotel.

"We just have to accept it. It's chaotic right now. Many people and officials are on the beach dealing with it."

The pipeline operator -- part of state-owned giant PTT -- had said in a statement Sunday that 10 ships were involved in an urgent clean-up and it was confident of containing the spill.

PTT Global Chemical chief executive Anon Sirisaengtaksin apologised at a news conference Monday and said the company accepted responsibility for the leak.

The group said the spillage came as crude oil from an Omani tanker moored offshore was being transferred to the pipeline for delivery to a PTT refinery.

A local member of parliament suggested that the size of the leak might have been even worse than initially reported.

"If that (50,000 litres) was the real amount, they should have already eliminated it -- they should have solved the problem fast enough before it reached Samet island," said Sathit Pitutacha, a lawmaker from Rayong with the opposition Democrat Party.

Greenpeace urged Thailand to end oil drilling and exploration in the Gulf of Thailand in light of what it described as a "massive leak".

"The Gulf of Thailand, the nation's food basket, has long been under threat from oil spills along oil transport routes, at points of discharge and loading of oil carriers or from the several hundred oil drilling operations across the Gulf," said Greenpeace activist Ply Pirom.

The environmental group said there had been more than 200 oil spills in Thai waters during the past three decades.

"This is the biggest oil spill in the province," said Puchong Saritdeechaikul, director of the government's Marine and Coastal Resource Conservation Center in Rayong. "It's the first time it happened on Samet island."

Conservationists have voiced concern about the impact of both the oil and the chemicals used to disperse the spill.

"The main damage will be to corals and the fish food chain," said Srisuwan Janya, president of Thai environmental group The Stop Global Warming Association.

Another PTT subsidiary was involved in a huge oil spill off northwestern Australia in 2009 that was the country's worst ever offshore drilling accident.

Gas has started flowing to energy-hungry China through a pipeline from Myanmar, a Chinese state oil company said Monday, in a controversial project that highlights the countries' economic links even as their political ties come under pressure.

The 793-kilometre (492-mile) pipeline runs from Kyaukpyu on resource-rich Myanmar's west coast, close to the offshore Shwe gas fields, and across the country.

It enters southwest China at Ruili, near areas where heavy clashes between the rebel Kachin Independence Army and the Myanmar military were reported earlier this year.

As well as the risks associated with the pipeline passing through conflict zones, environmental and rights groups say land has been confiscated for it and people in Myanmar -- most of whom do not have electricity -- do not benefit sufficiently from its hydrocarbon assets.

The project is the fruit of Beijing's long allegiance with the military junta that ruled Myanmar for decades, a bond that is weakening as the reforming government opens up to the West.

It went into operation on Sunday at a ceremony in Mandalay, key investor China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), said in a report posted on its website.

"When torches flamed in the sky... a storm of applause and cheers broke out," China's official Xinhua news agency reported.

Construction began in June 2010, according to CNPC, and a parallel oil pipeline is also part of the project.

According to Xinhua, the gas pipeline will be able to carry 12 billion cubic metres annually, while the crude oil pipeline has a capacity of 22 million tonnes per year.

Under military rule, Myanmar -- which also counts tin and precious gems among its natural resources -- was a pariah state largely isolated from the rest of the world and subject to heavy international sanctions, but it maintained close economic links with China which for years was its major foreign influence.

But now that Myanmar is opening up politically and economically, more countries are setting up operations and seeking deals that sanctions had previously prevented.

"Myanmar used to be sanctioned by the West and China was its only friend," the Global Times newspaper, which is affiliated with the ruling Communist Party, acknowledged in an editorial. "Nowadays, it has opened more to the West. This will reduce its passion in cooperating with China, but does not mean it will set itself against China."

In a warning that Beijing expects its economic interests to be protected, the newspaper cautioned Myanmar that it must ensure agreements regarding the project are fulfilled, no matter who eventually leads the country, where democracy activist Aung San Suu Kyi has entered parliament.

"China should be determined to supervise Myanmar in doing so," the paper said. "Myanmar should hold a serious attitude toward China, and Chinese will take (the Myanmar) people's attitude toward the pipeline as a test of their stance on China."

The pipeline opens up a new route for China's fuel imports, and could help Beijing's attempts to promote economic growth in the vast and less developed west.

The Global Times editorial said: "This is another breakthrough in China's strategy of energy diversification and has obvious significance in reducing China's dependence on the Strait of Malacca for the import of oil and natural gas."

But the Shwe Gas Movement, a campaign group, says the project has sparked protests over issues including demands for higher salaries for local workers, and concerns among farmers about its environmental impacts.

Xinhua, in a commentary Monday, blasted what it described as "Western criticism" of the pipelines, saying they were part of Beijing's effort to ensure energy security and would simultaneously benefit the people of Myanmar by providing jobs.

"Why do some Western critics make irresponsible remarks on the project? It stems from their shady mentality," Xinhua said.

Chinese nervousness about investments in Myanmar comes after Myanmar said last week it had revised a controversial copper mine agreement with a Chinese company, after dozens of Buddhist monks and villagers were injured in a botched police raid.

Myanmar Minister of Mines Myint Aung told parliament that new terms gave the government 51 percent of the revenue, replacing a previous deal that was a joint venture between the Chinese firm and a holding company owned by the Myanmar military.

In 2011, Myanmar President Thein Sein stopped construction on the China-backed $3.6 billion Myitsone Dam on the Irrawaddy river amid public opposition to the project, a move that led Beijing to call for its companies' rights and interests to be protected.

Myanmar plans to renegotiate billions of dollars of natural resource deals as it imposes tougher environmental standards and clamps down on corruption, the US-based Asia Society said in a report last month.

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