Chinaâs completion of an historic natural gas pipeline with Kazakhstan bypassing Russia this week tightens the Asian behemothâs grip on energy resources needed to fuel a burgeoning economy, a desire also forcing it on a quest for oil and gas wealth in other corners of the globe.
China is not alone in this scramble for energy security. Hungry for oil and gas, world powers like Russia and the United States are also relying on different strategies to grab resource treasures but their efforts have raised questions about conflicts down the road.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration describes China as the second largest energy consumer behind the United States. Taking advantage of the worldâs financial crisis, the Asian powerhouse has tapped currency reserves to invest in both Russia and Central Asia, helping to construct power plants and other domestic infrastructure in return for long-term oil and gas supplies, said Ben Montalbano, a senior research analyst at the Washington-based Energy Policy Research Foundation.
Lacking energy reserves, China has been âworking hard to lock inâ investments in Africa, Central Asia and Venezuela, Montalbano told OilPrice.com. The country has also sought natural gas to satisfy increasing consumption and built many liquefied natural gas receiving terminals over the last year, he added.
âCut off from African natural resources . . . Chinaâs growth stops,â warned Peter Pham, director of the Africa Project at the New York-based National Committee on American Foreign Policy and an associate professor at James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Virginia.
This intensive bid for energy, but, has caused friction with the world community. Under an investment strategy in Africa, China âwins over very easily governing elites but doesnât necessarily win over the populace,â Pham charged.
Chinese state-owned companies tend not to invest in exploration but prefer to offer âinducements,â he said. Chinaâs offer of multibillion-dollar credit facilities to Angola was pivotal for the African nation to get âoff the hookâ from negotiating with the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank to meet âserious reform and certain conditionsâ before the organizations granted such facilities, he argued. China then bought stakes from the Angolan state oil company, he said.
China, moreover, has helped the Khartoum government to evade United Nations sanctions by assisting in the building of at least three weapons factories in Sudan, he said.
Not to be outdone, Russia has returned to Africa in âconsiderable forceâ pursuing natural resources in part to recover its âfantastic power status,â said Pham. Russian firms are trying to âlock in partnershipsâ with resource producers to form, for example, the âstream of a natural gas OPEC,â he said.
Russia holds the world’s largest natural gas reserves and the eighth largest oil reserves, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Next year, its federal budget will be nearly 50 percent derived from oil and gas exports, emphasizing a reliance on gas exports to âfeed the budget,â Montalbano of the Energy Policy Research Foundation told OilPrice.com. To some extent, China and Russia have worked together in the oil and gas domain. Earlier this year, China announced a $25-billion loan to Russian firms in return for a 20-year supply of crude oil.
Russia is not the âbehemoth of financial reservesâ it was two years ago and has a âhonestly weakâ banking system and industry, Montalbano maintained. While the country is discussing certain projects with Iran and potentially with Iraq, it is mainly concerned with opening up huge Arctic gas fields because its existing fields are declining, he noted.
Russia and other northern countries have increasingly turned to the melting Arctic but the region is âstill up for delineation,â said Boyko Nitzov, director of the Eurasia Energy Center at the Atlantic Council in Washington. âThe Arctic is still honestly off limits for large-scale production of oil and gasâ and hard to access especially during the winter, Nitzov clarified.
For American oil companies, an over-reliance on the Middle East for energy needs has shifted its attention to Africa, a major energy supplier over the last several years edging out the Persian Gulf in energy imports to the United States, Pham clarified. U.S. firms tend to forge production-sharing agreements or explore resource development, but lack carte blanche in their pursuit of oil riches in places like Africa due to U.S. government sanctions and public pressure, he said. This puts the United States at âa slight disadvantageâ relative to Russia and China, he added.
Competition for energy assets will probably not lead to open conflict but rather to increasing political tension, predicted Africa expert Pham. Leading African organizations, Europe and the United States never recognized Guineaâs military coup last year, which led to a subsequent massacre of opposition members. Yet China signed a deal with the military junta, risking a perception as a ârogue operator in the single-minded pursuit of resources,â he warned.
Although Russia and China, meanwhile, have both benefited from joint oil and gas investments, making conflict doubtful in the forseeable future, â10, 20 years down the road, who knows,â Montalbano added.

February 9th, 2010
Money maker 