Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- The Contributors
- 1 Overview of Singapore's Energy Situation
- 2 Singapore's Changing Landscapes in Energy
- 3 Singapore's Role as a Key Oil Trading Centre in Asia
- 4 Large-Scale Solar PV Power Generation in Urban High-Rise Buildings in Singapore
- 5 The High-Carbon Story of Urban Development in Southeast Asia
- 6 Renewable Energy and the Environment: Technology and Economic Perspectives
- 7 Delivering Results in a Booming Rig Market
- 8 The Success Story of Rig Building in Singapore
- 9 The Singapore Oil Situation
- 10 Singapore Petroleum Company: Adding Value to the Singapore Oil Industry
- 11 Oil Storage: The Singapore Story
- REGIONAL and INTERNATIONAL
- 12 The Outlook for Energy: A View to 2030
- 13 India's Energy Situation: The Need to Secure Energy Resources in an Increasingly Competitive Environment
- 14 The Implications and Impacts of China's Oil Demand on the Asia Pacific
- 15 Energy Security Cooperation in Asia: An ASEAN-SCO Energy Partnership?
- 16 China's Energy Security: Geo-politics versus Interdependence
- 17 The Strategic Challenges for the United States and China in Global Energy Supply
- 18 China's Coal: Curse or Blessing
- 19 Japan's New Energy Strategy
- 20 Who Wins in the Asian Scramble for Oil?
- 21 New Horizons for Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) East of Suez
- 22 Bio and Synthetic Fuels: An Alternative for Sustainable Mobility
- 23 Price Discovery for Middle East Refined Product Exports: A Natural Role for Dubai
- 24 The Outlook for Gas in Southeast Asia
- 25 Sakhalin-2 Project, a New Energy Source for the Asia Pacific: History in the Making
- Index
16 - China's Energy Security: Geo-politics versus Interdependence
from REGIONAL and INTERNATIONAL
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2015
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- The Contributors
- 1 Overview of Singapore's Energy Situation
- 2 Singapore's Changing Landscapes in Energy
- 3 Singapore's Role as a Key Oil Trading Centre in Asia
- 4 Large-Scale Solar PV Power Generation in Urban High-Rise Buildings in Singapore
- 5 The High-Carbon Story of Urban Development in Southeast Asia
- 6 Renewable Energy and the Environment: Technology and Economic Perspectives
- 7 Delivering Results in a Booming Rig Market
- 8 The Success Story of Rig Building in Singapore
- 9 The Singapore Oil Situation
- 10 Singapore Petroleum Company: Adding Value to the Singapore Oil Industry
- 11 Oil Storage: The Singapore Story
- REGIONAL and INTERNATIONAL
- 12 The Outlook for Energy: A View to 2030
- 13 India's Energy Situation: The Need to Secure Energy Resources in an Increasingly Competitive Environment
- 14 The Implications and Impacts of China's Oil Demand on the Asia Pacific
- 15 Energy Security Cooperation in Asia: An ASEAN-SCO Energy Partnership?
- 16 China's Energy Security: Geo-politics versus Interdependence
- 17 The Strategic Challenges for the United States and China in Global Energy Supply
- 18 China's Coal: Curse or Blessing
- 19 Japan's New Energy Strategy
- 20 Who Wins in the Asian Scramble for Oil?
- 21 New Horizons for Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) East of Suez
- 22 Bio and Synthetic Fuels: An Alternative for Sustainable Mobility
- 23 Price Discovery for Middle East Refined Product Exports: A Natural Role for Dubai
- 24 The Outlook for Gas in Southeast Asia
- 25 Sakhalin-2 Project, a New Energy Source for the Asia Pacific: History in the Making
- Index
Summary
China has followed the rules of international oil market in its oil interactions and that China has no intention to scramble for world energy supply with other countries.
— Chinese President Hu Jintao (People's Daily, 31 August 2005)INTRODUCTION
Since the loss of its energy self-sufficiency in 1993, China's thinking and practice of energy security has evolved from one of primarily unilateral acquisition of oil to one of greater inter-dependence on the global energy market, characterized by bilateral and multilateral cooperation and the increasing emphasis, domestically, on sustainable energy usage and efficiency. This chapter examines this shift in Chinese energy thinking by analysing three related sets of development. First, the constraint and limitations that China face in its oil diplomacy of domestic petroleum exploration and equity purchase overseas. Second, the domestic pressures in China that are influencing the government to align its energy policy in line with the practices of more established economies. Third, arising from the influences of the two sets of forces, China has become increasingly more receptive towards greater cooperation bilaterally and multilaterally, as evidenced in various initiatives towards sustainable energy development.
GROWING DEMAND, STAGNATING SUPPLY
China is an energy-thirsty and an energy-dependent country. Its rapid economic growth during the past two decades has fuelled an insatiable demand for energy that has outstripped domestic sources of supply. As Michael Klare (2004, p. 161) notes, “China is a rising power, and its surging economy is generating an ever-expanding thirst for imported energy.” China is the world's sixth largest economy with a GDP of US$1,932 million in 2005, surpassing the economies of Italy and Spain, and will overtake France and the United Kingdom in the near term (World Bank 2005). In 1993, China reached a turning point when it lost its self- sufficiency in energy to become the second largest net oil importer after the United States. China's communist leadership has already sought to maximize the country's economic self-reliance.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Energy Perspectives on Singapore and the Region , pp. 176 - 196Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2007