China's tired fields
China's output is continuing to slow, which is good news for exporters targeting the country
The Daqing field provides a fair illustration of why China's demand for imported crude should keep rising through 2017 and beyond. One of the country's biggest and oldest resources famed for the "Iron Man" legend, its production fell by about 3% in 2016 and further declines are likely. The operator, China National Petroleum Corporation, announced it will slash its exploration and engineering budget for Daqing by 20%. China's fundamental problem is tired fields and increasingly uneconomic costs of production at today's oil price. As Nomura's head of Asia-Pacific oil and gas research, Gordon Kwan, pointed out in a note earlier this year: "China's largest oilfields are ageing rapidly. Advanced
Also in this section
29 January 2026
Caught between LNG risks from across the Atlantic and the wounds from Russian gas dependence, Europe needs more than a simple diversification strategy
28 January 2026
The alliance looks to bolster market management credibility by bringing greater clarity and unity to output cuts and producer capacity later in 2026
23 January 2026
A strategic pivot away from Russian crude in recent weeks tees up the possibility of improved US-India trade relations
23 January 2026
The signing of a deal with a TotalEnergies-led consortium to explore for gas in a block adjoining Israel’s maritime area may breathe new life into the country’s gas ambitions






