China beats India to buy Myanmar's gas

   Date:2007/12/06     Source:
CHINA won the rights to buy natural gas from Myanmar's biggest field, beating stakeholder India in the race for resources among the world's two-fastest growing major economies.

Daewoo International Corp, the operator of the field, said it picked a Chinese company as the preferred bidder. State-owned Indian companies own 30 percent in the area, which holds as much as 7.7 trillion cubic feet of gas.

India has lost out to China in more than US$10 billion of oil and gas assets in Nigeria, Kazakhstan and Canada in the last two years. China's planned construction of a pipeline underscored its commitment to win the latest contest, Bloomberg News said.

"The Indians showed interest but they haven't been so aggressive," said Tony Regan, a consultant for United States Nexant Ltd based in Singapore. "The Chinese were showing much more interest and they were looking at how to get it to China and they got a pre-approval from Beijing for a pipeline to China."

China, India, Thailand, South Korea and Japan are competing for a share of Myanmar's gas supply as discoveries increase. The Southeast Asian country had about 19 trillion cubic feet of reserves last year, BP Plc said in its annual energy report.

The gas will be sent via pipelines, Daewoo said in a regulatory filing in Seoul yesterday, without identifying the buyer.

The Korean company is the operator of the A-1 and A-3 offshore blocks, in which it has a 60-percent stake. Korea Gas Corp owns 10 percent of the areas, GAIL India (Ltd), the nation's biggest gas distributor, holds 10 percent and Oil & Natural Gas Corp, the biggest explorer, owns 20 percent.

"Gas from the field has to be sold and if Daewoo has chosen China, in principle, I see nothing wrong with it," said R.S. Sharma, chairman of Oil & Natural Gas.
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