China's Sinopec plans to spend US$4.6b on hydrogen energy by 2025
Beijing
CHINA'S Sinopec Corp plans to spend 30 billion yuan (S$6.24 billion) on hydrogen energy by 2025, as the state oil and gas major pivots to producing natural gas and hydrogen as part of becoming a carbon-neutral energy provider by 2050.
Asia's biggest oil refiner said on Monday it plans to become China's largest company to produce hydrogen for use as a transportation fuel, targeting annual capacity of 200,000 tonnes of hydrogen refuelling by 2025.
"Sinopec will expand forcefully into making hydrogen from renewable energy, and zero in on hydrogen for transportation fuel and using green hydrogen for refining," acting chairman Ma Yongsheng said.
The company aims to produce more than one million tonnes of so-called green hydrogen from renewable energy sources between 2021 and 2025, as well as add 400 megawatts of solar power generation capacity for supplying electricity to charge vehicles.
Sinopec has so far built 20 hydrogen filling stations, with another 60 under construction or in the planning and approval stage.
The company produces about three million tonnes per year of hydrogen from non-renewable energy sources that is mainly used in oil refinery and petrochemical processes.
The company on Sunday reported its highest first-half net profit since 2018, at US$6.05 billion, on rebounding oil and gas prices, as well as steady domestic fuel demand.
China's natural gas consumption is expected to rise 13.3 per cent in 2021 amid a strong economic recovery and Beijing's push to replace coal with lower-carbon gas, Mr Ma said. That level of growth should continue over the next three years.
Like state-run peers PetroChina and CNOOC that are prioritising natural gas development over oil, Sinopec plans to boost gas output in the second half of 2021 by 13.5 per cent from a year earlier, compared with 13.7 per cent growth in the first six months.
Sinopec maximised its refinery operations in the first half, pushing throughput to 126.11 million tonnes of oil, or about 5.1 million barrels per day, up 13.7 per cent from a year earlier when demand was curtailed by the outbreak of Covid-19.
Domestic fuel sales in the period rose by 8.1 per cent on strong demand for petrol and other light fuels such as naphtha used as petrochemical feedstocks. REUTERS
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