'Sinopec', or the 'China Petroleum and Chemical Corporation' (, , ) (, ), is one of the major
petroleum companies in
China. Sinopec's business includes oil and gas exploration, refining, and marketing; production and sales of
petrochemicals, chemical fibers, chemical fertilizers, and other chemical products; storage and pipeline transportation of crude oil and natural gas; import, export and import/export agency business of crude oil, natural gas, refined oil products, petrochemicals, and other chemicals. In 2006, it is ranked 23rd by
Fortune Global 500 in 2006, up from its rank of 31 in 2005,
[2]. In 2005 it ranked first in the
Top 500 Enterprises of China ranking
[3].
Since 2004, Sinopec has also been the title sponsors of China's largest sporting event, the
Formula One Sinopec
Chinese Grand Prix.
In early 2007 Sinopec opened China's first drive-thru petrol station and fast-food restaurant, in the Changping district of Beijing.
[4]
In February, 2007, Saudi Aramco and Exxon signed a deal with Sinopec to revamp the Fujian oil refinery and triple its capacity to 240,000 barrels per day by 2009. Aramco, Exxon and Sinopec also signed contracts for a fuel marketing venture that will manage 750 service stations and a network of terminals in Fujian province.
[5]
Sinopec in Gabon
Unipec, a subsidiary of Sinopec, signed a contract with French oil company Total Gabon in February 2002. Under the contract China, for the first time, bought Gabonese
crude oil.
[6]
In
Gabon, Sinopec's joint ventures in oil exploration have been accused of violating environmental conventions by the government of Gabon. Its activities in Gabon's national parks were suspended in September, 2006, by the Gabonese national parks council.
[ China's Sinopec 'illegally' destroying Gabon Philippe Alfoy ]
Sinopec signed an evaluation deal with
Gabon in 2004. During his African visit that year Chinese President
Hu Jintao signed a series of bilateral trade accords with his Gabonese counterpart
Omar Bongo, including a "memorandum of agreement aimed at showing the parties' desire to develop exploration, exploitation, refining and export activities of oil products".
Three onshore fields were to be explored. One of the three blocks, LT2000, is some 200 kilometers (120 miles) southeast of Gabon's economic hub,
Port Gentil, which lies south of the capital,
Libreville, on the Atlantic coast.
The other two - DR200 and GT2000 - are around 100 kilometres (60 miles) northeast of Port Gentil, according to the Gabonese oil ministry.
[7]
Earlier, in 2002, Gabon designated a quarter of its territory as nature reserve a move designed to protect 67 000km2 of rainforest.
Sinopec prospected for oil in the
Loango national park in southern Gabon and employed methods that critics said respected neither the law nor the environment.
[8]
Sinopec was accused of dynamiting and polluting the park by investigating teams from a US environmental organisation, the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS).
Professor Christophe Boesch, a primatologist performing field work in the park, said: "They're using dynamite, which is killing and scaring the wildlife, sending the gorillas deeper into the forest and outside the protection of the park where they risk becoming bushmeat. They're bulldozing roads through the park, polluting the waters with chemicals and slurry and hunting the wildlife to eat."
[9]
Gabonese law states that "if oil or mineral riches are discovered in the protected areas they can be exploited for the economic and social benefit of the country...nevertheless the operator concerned is obliged to rehabilitate the site," and Sinopec, despite being opposed by the Ministry of Forestry and the National parks administration, is backed by the Ministry of Mines.
[ ]
International donors to the nation, including the European Union, complained.
Gabon foreign minister Emile Doumba responded: "What Sinopec is doing is unacceptable. If we find a huge reserve under a park we're not going to ignore it, that's for sure. But I think it is better to favour the long term and the development of ecotourism, which has considerable potential in Gabon."
Sinopec's activities in Gabon's national parks were suspended in September, 2006, by the Gabonese national parks council.[ ]
Sinopec in Sudan
Sinopec Corporation is a partner in Petrodar Operating Company Ltd., a consortium whose partners also include China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC, the 90 per cent owner of PetroChina) and Sudapet (the Sudanese state-owned oil company), among others.
In August, 2005, Petrodar commenced production of oil in blocks 3 and 7 in South-east Sudan. In December, 2005, Petrodar announced that its first shipment of crude oil would be shipped from Sudan in January, 2006. Petrodar's operations represent a major increase in overall Sudanese oil production.
In November 2005, Sinopec Group announced plans to partner with CNPC to purchase an oil field in Sudan, and has reportedly indicated an interest in expanding its business in Sudan.
In eastern Ethiopia’s Ogaden Desert, a raid by an ethnic Somalian rebel group on a Sinopec drilling site left 74 dead including 9 Chinese oil workers, and 7 kidnapped on April 24th, 2007. The rebels, the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF), later released the seven abductees and warned foreign companies against working in the area. Sinopec said it had no plans to pull out of the resource-rich region despite the attack. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Liu Jianchao says that China strongly condemns the violent attack carried out by Somalian insurgents on the premises of the oil company Sinopec in Ethiopia.[10]
Harvard University divestment
In March, 2006, Harvard University withdrew its investments in Sinopec. It stated in a press release that it did not usually divest from stock for reasons unrelated to business but felt a problem arose over Sinopec's involvement in the mining of oil in Sudan. [11]
Harvard University argued that Sinopec Corporation is a publicly listed company in which a dominant (68 per cent) interest is held by China Petrochemical Corporation (Sinopec Group). Sinopec Group is wholly owned by the Chinese government, and Sinopec Corporation and Sinopec Group have substantially overlapping management.
Harvard said that its move was prompted because the Sudanese government had been found to be complicit in genocide in the Darfur region by the United Nations.
References
1. http://english.sinopec.com/en-ir/factsheet.pdf
2. [1]
3. [2]
4. [3]
5. [4]
6. http://www1.cei.gov.cn/ce/doc/cenm/200403171549.htm
7. Sinopec signs evaluation deal for three oil blocks in Gabon Agencies
8. Sinopec, Total Gabon sign deal
9. Oil prospecting in Gabon Chris Haslam
10. [5]
11. Statement on Sinopec divestment
External link
★ company website
★ [6] China's environmental footprint in Africa