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Saudi has 'every intention' of meeting oil demand: prince

China's CNPC to boost oil and gas output in Xinjiang
Shanghai (AFP) July 20, 2010 - State-owned China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC) said Tuesday it planned to build Xinjiang province in the country's remote northwest into the nation's top oil and gas production base by 2020. The move comes in response to the government's call to "promote leapfrog development and lasting stability" in Xinjiang, which was rocked by deadly ethnic violence in July 2009, CNPC said on its website. The company said it planned to raise its oil and gas production capacity in Xinjiang to the oil equivalent of 60 million tonnes per year by 2020.

CNPC currently has 18 million tonnes of oil production capacity and 23 billion cubic metres of natural gas capacity in Xinjiang. Annual crude oil refining capacity in the region will be boosted to 30.5 million tonnes by 2020, CNPC said, up from current levels which now exceed 21 million tonnes, according to company figures. CNPC, which runs most of its business via listed unit PetroChina, also plans to build six petroleum reserve depots in the region. Early this month Xinjiang marked the first anniversary of violence between the region's mainly Muslim Uighur minority and members of China's dominant Han ethnic group that left nearly 200 dead and 1,700 injured.

Many Uighurs angrily accuse China of political, religious and cultural oppression and claim Xinjiang's rich energy resources are being siphoned off with little economic benefit to them. In June, the government introduced a five-percent resources tax in the energy-rich region, boosting local fiscal revenues as part of a drive to foster stability via greater development and prosperity. State media reported in May that Beijing would pour around 10 billion yuan in economic aid into Xinjiang in coming years in a bid to raise Uighur living standards.
by Staff Writers
Riyadh (AFP) July 20, 2010
Saudi Arabia fully plans to meet the growing demand for oil driven by China and India, a senior prince and former national intelligence chief said on Tuesday.

"As the demand for oil continues to rise, especially from China and India, the kingdom has every intention of meeting that demand," Prince Turki al-Faisal said in a speech to the Oxford Energy Seminar in Britain.

Saudi Arabia, which holds the world's largest proven oil reserves, is pushing to diversify its own energy production and consumption away from oil in part to ensure it has enough to supply the global oil thirst, Turki said.

"One of the most important things the kingdom will be doing to make sure it can meet that demand will also help meet a different demand rising more strongly every day. I am speaking of the development of alternative energy sources," he said in the speech, the text of which was emailed to AFP.

He foresaw the possibility of Saudi Arabia exporting natural gas, solar-powered and wind-powered energy to the world one day as well as crude oil.

"Saudi Arabia wants to sell energy, and it very much understands that there are two kinds of businesses in this world -- those that sell things people want, and those that don't. Saudi Arabia wants to sell what people want," he said.

Turki, who heads Riyadh's King Faisal Centre for Research and Islamic Studies, also dismissed recent claims by Hugo Chavez who said Venezuela might have more than Saudi Arabia's proven reserves of 264 billion barrels of oil.

"We have recently heard mention from other countries of having oil in the ground that exceeds what can be found in Saudi Arabia," he said.

"However, these claims are entirely about unproven reserves, so they are completely hypothetical and, in my opinion, entirely unfounded.

"Were Saudi Arabia to go down the path of claiming unproven reserves, there would still be no competition," he added, saying the desert kingdom might have over 700 billion barrels underground.

"Leave it at this: No other country can claim anywhere near the quantity of proven or unproven oil reserves as Saudi Arabia."



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