Oil workers in Karamay, Northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, prepare for drilling at an oil field on March 16, 2022. Photo: VCG
China's oil giant Sinopec discovered an oil field containing 1.7 billion tons of oil reserves during an exploration program in the Shunbei oil and gas field located in the Tarim Basin, Northwest China's Xinjiang region, according to media reports on Wednesday.
The reserves can meet about two years of domestic oil demand, as the country usually uses about 800 million tons of oil each year, Lin Boqiang, director of the China Center for Energy Economics Research at Xiamen University, told the Global Times on Wednesday, while noting that not all the oil that's been detected can be extracted.
The new oil field is one of the world's deepest commercial oil and gas fields, with an average depth reaching 7,300 meters, China Media Group reported.
The exploration program covers 41 wells at more than 8,000 meters in depth, 76 wells within 7,500 to 8,000 meters, and a 9,300-meter-depth directional well. These wells are known as "underground Qomolangmas."
According to Sinopec, the company has established four oil and gas fields of over 100 million tons each in the Tarim Basin, and it has commissioned 15 wells with daily output surpassing 1,000 tons and 8,000 meters in depth.
The Tarim Basin has abundant oil and gas reserves. The oil and natural gas resources located from 6,000 to 10,000 meters underground in the basin account for 83.2 percent and 63.9 percent, respectively, of China's overall oil and natural gas resources.
Lin said that the oil and gas resources from the basin can meet the country's demand over the next 10 years.
Global Times