Showing posts with label china. Show all posts
Showing posts with label china. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Morgan Stanley Backed Atlantis Targets India China for Tidal Power Plants

Bloomberg has a report on the ambitions of one time Australian tidal power company Atlantis - Morgan Stanley-Backed Atlantis Targets India, China for Tidal Power Plants.
Atlantis Resources Corp., an ocean- current turbine maker backed by Morgan Stanley, plans to expand in China, India and South Korea after winning a bid in the U.K. to build the world’s largest tidal-power project.

Atlantis Resources may start building a 50 megawatt tidal farm by 2012 in Gujarat, a western Indian state, and conduct commercial-scale trials in South Korea, Timothy Cornelius, the chief executive officer, said an interview today.

“China’s the next big market for tidal energy,” Cornelius, 34, said in Singapore at the Clean Energy conference. “It has the most natural tidal resources in the world and can be home to more than 1,000 megawatts of tidal energy.”

Global production of electricity harnessing the ocean waves may climb ten-fold to as much as 300 megawatts in the next couple of years, said Cornelius, a former submersible engineer who splits his time between Singapore and London. The potential to produce marine power economically is about 24,000 megawatts, he said. It costs 2.5 million pounds ($4.01 million) per megawatt for a minimum 200 megawatt-tidal project, he said.
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Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Coal seam gas exports to China in pipeline

The Australian has an article on speculation about possible coal seam gas developments in South Australia that are eyeing the Chinese export market - Coal-seam gas exports to China in pipeline.
PLANS are proceeding for a new export-oriented coal-seam gas area on the Queensland-South Australia border, with processing plants at South Australias Port Bonython.

Gold Coast-based Icon Energy has a memorandum of understanding with Chinese gas company Shantou SinoEnergy to buy 40 million tonnes of liquid natural gas (LNG) converted from coal- seam gas (CSG), over 20 years.

Icon, along with South Australia-based Beach Energy, is drilling for CSG in the Nappamerri trough of the Cooper Basin.

Icons plan is to take CSG from this field and pipe it to Port Bonython near Whyalla in South Australia and then export it to Shantou in China, where it will be re-gased and used commercially.

This is similar to the model being adopted in Queensland, where three projects now have state and federal government approval to take coal-seam gas from southern and western Queensland and liquefier it at Gladstone before exporting it to Asia.

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Many of the Gladstone projects plan for eventual capacity of up to 9 million tonnes a year, but the Icon/South Australian project is only aiming for 2 million tonnes a year.

Beach already exports liquefied petroleum gas through the Port Bonython terminal operated by Santos, and Icon plans to build up this terminal.

While the Queensland CSG project is the most advanced at the moment, a similar opportunity is being pursued in the Gunnedah Basin in NSW with processing at Newcastle.

Icon managing director Ray James told the Coal Seam Methane world conference in Brisbane yesterday that while the big projects in Gladstone and southern Queensland were attracting most attention, there was plenty of activity among smaller operators such as Icon. "The first challenge for the medium-sized operators is to get a market, and thats what weve done both through micro-LNG and signing an MOU with Shantou," he said.

"Our next challenge is to upgrade that MOU into something far more tangible, and thats something that well be working on in the next couple of months.

"But in the meantime, for us smaller companies, theres still a big market in Australia in micro-LNG. Diesel fuel is one, but anywhere in Australia that currently uses LPG, theres an opportunity there for LNG."

The obvious problem for the Cooper Basin is that its remote location makes development more difficult, an issue exacerbated at the moment because much of the area is flooded.

Even though roads are cut off at the moment, Mr James sees the isolation of the Cooper Basin as a plus.

"All of the sorts of problems theyre having now around Dalby you just wouldnt get out in the Cooper Basin, because so few people live out there," he said.
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