Eight coal-to-oil projects in pipeline  By Wang Ying (China Daily)  Updated: 2006-06-16 08:57  Despite the hefty investment, Zhang said CTL is still a very lucrative 
business, as crude oil prices are not expected to fall much in the near 
term.
  "If crude oil prices stay above US$40 a barrel, we will see our 
investment returned within eight years," Zhang said. 
  Crude oil reached a 
record US$75.35 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange last month, the 
highest price since trading began in 1983.
  Beijing-based Shenhua will 
start production at its first coal-to-liquid project at the end of next year in 
the northwestern Ordos Basin.
  The project will supply 1 million tons of 
oil products a year to North China, Zhang told China Daily in a March 
interview.
  The company has also signed a memorandum of understanding with 
Shell to develop another coal liquefaction project in Ningxia.
  CTL 
projects require large amounts of water to turn coal into oil.
  Producing 
10,000 tons of oil from coal will need about 100,000 tons of water, Zhang 
said.
  Shenhua's CTL projects will use water from the Yellow River in the 
north, the second-biggest river in China, he added.
  It will use a total 
of 1 per cent of the river's total water.
  Coal now supplies more than 70 
per cent of China's energy demands, and the country's proven coal reserves 
amount to about 1 trillion tons, Zhang said.
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