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Gas to play bigger role in global energy sector -- Khristenko


THE HAGUE, June 5 (Itar-Tass) -- Energy security is an inalienable part of any of the possible models of the future, Russian Industry and Energy Minister Viktor Khristenko said.

More than 80 percent of the world’s energy resources are fossil fuel (coal, oil, and natural gas). Despite the rapid development of atomic energy and the increasingly active use of alternative sources of energy, hydrocarbons will remain the basis of the global energy sector in the first half of the 21st century, he said.

The proportion of natural gas in the global energy sector will continue to grow, Khristenko said at the opening ceremony for the 23rd World Gas Conference in Amsterdam on Monday.

Khristenko, who is the chairman of the G8 Committee of Energy Ministers, is attending the conference together with CEOs and experts of major oil and gas companies from 66 countries.

Russia has a special view on energy security due to its geographical and economic position. “We are both a major exporter and a large consumer of energy resources. At the same time, Russia is an important state in terms of transit,” Khristenko said.

Russia is offering the world new products, he said, referring to liquefied gas. “In the east of our country we are designing a new gas transportation system. Together with the development of the Sakhalin offshore fields, it will bring oil and gas from Russian provinces in the east to the Asia Pacific region,” he said.

In 2020, the Asia Pacific region may increase the import of Russian gas to 30 percent and natural gas to 25 percent.

Work is under way to explore the possibility of transporting hydrocarbons from offshore fields in the Barents Sea to North America.

The world’s deepest gas pipeline, Blue Stream, has been built along the Black Sea bed and may be extended to southern Europe.

The North European Gas Pipeline will diversify gas exports and allow Russia to better manoeuvre them, increase gas supplies to Western Europe and fulfill its obligations under existing and future long-term gas contracts, and finally link the Russian gas transport network with the European network, Khritsneko said.

He stressed that Russia has been engaged over the past 10 years in an intensive energy dialogue with Europe, the European Union, the United States, OPEC, and Asia Pacific region.

Expert opinion

Halter Marek

02.12.06

Halter Marek
Le College de France
Olivier Giscard d’Estaing

02.12.06

Olivier Giscard d’Estaing
COPAM, France
Mika Ohbayashi

02.12.06

Mika Ohbayashi
Institute for Sustainable Energy Poliñy
Bill Pace

02.12.06

Bill Pace
World Federalist Movement - Institute for Global Policy
Peter I. Hajnal

01.12.06

Peter I. Hajnal
Toronto University, G8 Research Group


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