Analysis of Market-oriented Reform of Natural Gas and Low-cost Gas Sources for China's "Big Three Oil Companies"
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Based on the latest searched information, I will systematically analyze the market-oriented reform and low-cost gas source issues of China’s “Big Three Oil Companies” against the backdrop of high gas costs.
On December 6, 2019,
| Reform Content | Before Reform | After Reform |
|---|---|---|
| Pipeline Assets | Operated independently by the “Big Three Oil Companies” | Unified operation by PipeChina |
| Pricing Mechanism | Integrated upstream and downstream pricing | Gradual establishment of market-oriented pricing mechanism |
| Profit Model | Pipeline fees subsidize gas prices | Independent accounting for transmission and distribution business |
According to the bond prospectus of PipeChina, as of the end of 2024, the company’s in-service oil and gas pipeline totaled
After the reform, the natural gas industry chain has undergone fundamental changes:
- Upstream Production Segment: The “Big Three Oil Companies” (CNPC, Sinopec, CNOOC) focus on natural gas exploration and development
- Midstream Transmission Segment: PipeChina is responsible for pipeline construction and operation
- Downstream Sales Segment: City gas companies are responsible for terminal distribution and sales
In 2025, China’s natural gas output exceeded
- Conventional Natural Gas: Traditional producing areas such as the Sichuan Basin and Ordos Basin
- Unconventional Natural Gas: Accelerated development of shale gas, coalbed methane, etc.
- Offshore Natural Gas: Deepwater development by CNOOC in areas such as the South China Sea
According to the latest data,
| Supplier Country | Price Advantage | Market Share Change |
|---|---|---|
| Russia | About 10% lower than the average price | Significantly increased |
| Qatar | Stable supply | Remains the first |
| Australia | Traditional main supplier | Surpassed by Russia |
Russia’s LNG price advantage mainly stems from:
- Voluntary price concessions to develop the Asian market
- Need to find alternative markets due to Western sanctions
- Relatively low transportation costs (compared to US LNG)
China has built multiple cross-border natural gas pipelines:
- China-Russia Eastern Route Natural Gas Pipeline: Designed annual transmission capacity of 38 billion cubic meters
- Central Asia-China Natural Gas Pipeline: Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan
- China-Myanmar Oil and Gas Pipeline: Natural gas transmission capacity of 12 billion cubic meters per year
According to data from the Shanghai Petroleum and Natural Gas Exchange, the China LNG Comprehensive Import CIF Price Index was
There are structural obstacles in the price transmission of the natural gas industry chain:
[Upstream] Big Three Oil Companies → Rising costs of imported/domestic gas → Price pass-through sales
↓
[Midstream] PipeChina → Pipeline transportation fees
↓
[Downstream] City Gas Companies → Rising gas procurement prices → Unable to pass on price increases to residents
↓
[Terminal] Residential Users → Enjoy low-cost gas → City gas companies suffer losses
From January to November 2022, the average price of China’s imported natural gas reached
After the market-oriented reform, the role of the “Big Three Oil Companies” has fundamentally changed:
| Function | Before Reform | After Reform |
|---|---|---|
| Pipeline Operation | Own pipelines, able to cross-subsidize | Pipelines stripped, focus on upstream |
| Gas Price Regulation | Able to use pipeline profits to cover losses | Unable to be responsible for gas price inversion |
| Market Responsibility | Full industrial chain guarantee | Only responsible for production and supply |
As the analysis points out:
China adopts a strategy of “long-term contracts as the mainstay, spot procurement as supplement” for LNG imports:
- Medium- and Long-term Contracts: Lock in prices, avoid spot price fluctuation risks
- Spot Procurement: Flexible supplement, allocate according to demand
- Resale Operations: Some enterprises attempt to resell contracted LNG to optimize costs
Benefiting from a large number of medium- and long-term LNG purchase and sales agreements signed by importers including the “Big Three Oil Companies”, as well as a large amount of imported pipeline gas, China’s demand for spot LNG imports is not high at this stage, and the impact of international spot prices on the overall Chinese market is limited [3].
To ensure low-cost gas supply, China is actively promoting diversified import sources:
| Direction | Progress | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Russia | Increased LNG and pipeline gas | Obtain low-cost resources |
| Middle East | Qatar, Iran, etc. | Stable supply |
| Southeast Asia | Indonesia, Malaysia | Short-distance transportation advantage |
| United States | Long-term contracts (partially suspended) | Price hedging |
In 2025, China’s domestic natural gas output was approximately
- Increase development of unconventional oil and gas (shale gas, coalbed methane)
- Promote stable and increased production of old oil and gas fields
- Accelerate development of deep-sea resources
The construction of major projects such as the second phase of the Sichuan-East Gas Transmission Pipeline will optimize resource allocation:
- Total length of approximately 4,269 kilometers, designed annual transmission capacity of14 billion cubic meters
- It is expected to complete over 1,000 kilometersof pipeline welding in 2026
- Helps allocate natural gas from different sources to achieve the optimal price combination
- Market-oriented reform has changed the natural gas supply pattern: After the establishment of PipeChina, the “Big Three Oil Companies” focus on upstream production and can no longer subsidize downstream gas prices through pipeline businesses.
- Low-cost gas sources show a diversified trend: Domestic natural gas, Russian LNG, Central Asian pipeline gas, etc., jointly form the low-cost gas supply system.
- The problem of gas price inversion remains to be solved: As an intermediate link, city gas companies face the dual dilemma of upstream cost pressure and downstream price regulation.
- Fading policy subsidies exacerbate contradictions: The “coal-to-gas” subsidy in areas such as Hebei has been reduced from 1 yuan per cubic meter to about 0.2 yuan per cubic meter, significantly increasing the burden on users.
China’s natural gas market-oriented reform is still in the process of deepening. To solve the problem of low-cost gas supply, it is necessary to:
- Improve the natural gas price formation mechanism: Gradually straighten out the price transmission chain
- Strengthen the construction of the reserve system: Improve peak-shaving capacity and stabilize price fluctuations
- Promote fair opening of LNG receiving terminals: Introduce more market entities for competition
- Strengthen international cooperation: Ensure the stability and economy of diversified import channels
[0] Bond Prospectus of National Oil and Gas Pipeline Network Group Co., Ltd. (http://static.sse.com.cn/disclosure/bond/announcement/company/c/new/2025-08-20/243667_20250820_MINN.pdf)
[1] Economic Daily - “Feeling the Surge of China’s Energy Transition Momentum” (http://www.ce.cn/xwzx/gnsz/gdxw/202601/t20260117_2707599.shtml)
[2] Yahoo Finance - “Russia’s LNG Exports to China Hit Record High in November, Price Temptation Overrides Sanction Risks” (https://hk.finance.yahoo.com/news/俄羅斯11月對中國出口lng規模創紀錄-價格誘惑蓋過刲裁風險-071218876.html)
[3] Shanghai Petroleum and Natural Gas Exchange - “China LNG Comprehensive Import CIF Price Index was 127.53 Points from January 5 to 11” (https://www.shpgx.com/html/xyzx/20260115/8646.html)
[4] Caifuhao/Eastmoney - “Dilemma of Hebei’s ‘Coal-to-Gas’: Instead of Being Stuck, It’s Better to Make a Flexible U-turn” (https://caifuhao.eastmoney.com/news/20260120090951397864780)
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Insights are generated using AI models and historical data for informational purposes only. They do not constitute investment advice or recommendations. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
About us: Ginlix AI is the AI Investment Copilot powered by real data, bridging advanced AI with professional financial databases to provide verifiable, truth-based answers. Please use the chat box below to ask any financial question.