CNOOC Gas and Power Group
CNOOC Gas and Power Group is a wholly-owned subsidiary of China National Offshore Oil Corporation, its fully integrated natural gas business encompasses LNG terminal operation, natural gas plants, natural gas pipelines management, LNG trading and LNG bunkering globally.
See below for the Latest CNOOC Gas and Power Group News, Analysis, Profit Results, Share Price Information, and Commentary.
CNOOC’s production nearly 9% up in 9M
Exploration during the period resulted in nine new discoveries.
CNOOC’s production nearly 9% up in 9M
Exploration during the period resulted in nine new discoveries.
CNOOC’s Bozhong 19-2 oilfield project starts production
It is expected to reach a peak production of 18,800 barrels.
CNOOC starts production at Shenhai-1 Phase II natural gas project
It is expected to reach peak production of 162 million cubic feet.
CNOOC boosts oil output with Liuhua Oilfield Secondary Development
Peak production will reach 17,900 barrels per day.
CNOOC makes major discovery in ultra-deepwater Liwan 4-1 structure
This can produce 430,000 cubic metres daily.
CNOOC commences production in Wushi 17-2 oil field project
It is projected to have a peak production of about 9,900 barrels.
China discovers first large, ultra-shallow gas field in South China Sea
It has a capacity of 100 billion cubic metres.
CNOOC starts production of Bozhong 19-6 gas field phase 1 project
It is seen to produce 37,000 barrels of oil daily in 2024.
CNOOC Limited begins Enping 18-6 oilfield production
The oilfield project includes one wellhead platform and 15 development wells.
CNOOC Limited finds major coalbed methane field in southern China
The CBM field has reserves of over 100 billion cubic metres (BCM) of gas.
CNOOC Limited delivers Train 3 of Tangguh LNG Project in Indonesia
Train 3 has a plant capacity of 7.6 million tons per annum.
Pavilion Energy, Gasum, CNOOC tie up to reinforce globally LNG bunker supply network
They aim for a central link in the top three bunker regions including China and Singapore.
Commentary
Offshore wind power needs Singapore’s expertise as Asia’s reliance on fossil fuels rises