Green Panel bars Chinese oil-refinery expansion

August 30, 2013 12:50 pm | Updated November 16, 2021 09:13 pm IST - Beijing

PetroChina and Sinopec failed to meet targets for reducing “chemical oxygen demand,” a measure of pollutants released into rivers and other bodies of water, the Chinese Ministry of Environment announced.  File Photo

PetroChina and Sinopec failed to meet targets for reducing “chemical oxygen demand,” a measure of pollutants released into rivers and other bodies of water, the Chinese Ministry of Environment announced. File Photo

Environmental regulators have taken the unusual step of blocking China’s two biggest oil producers from expanding their refining capacity after they failed to meet targets for reducing pollution.

The penalties for PetroChina and Sinopec are a fresh blow to China’s state-owned oil industry following this week’s announcements that four senior executives are under investigation for unspecified offenses.

Such penalties are unusual in China, where critics complain regulators ignore environmental violations by state-owned companies. But Chinese leaders face growing public pressure to curb industrial emissions that have made China’s major cities rank among some of the world’s most-polluted ones, and fouled water supplies and farmland.

PetroChina and Sinopec failed to meet targets for reducing “chemical oxygen demand,” a measure of pollutants released into rivers and other bodies of water, the Ministry of Environment announced.

“Approval for PetroChina and Sinopec Group Co. for new, rebuilt or expanded refinery projects is suspended,” said a ministry statement. It said projects that will improve gasoline quality or cut pollution and energy use can proceed.

PetroChina Ltd., the main operating unit of state-owned China National Petroleum Corp. (CNPC), is Asia’s biggest oil producer by volume and Sinopec, also called China Petroleum & Chemical Corp., is the region’s biggest refiner.

The government announced earlier this week that a CNPC vice president, two PetroChina vice presidents and the chief PetroChina geologist were under investigation on suspicion of “serious discipline violations.”

The announcements gave no details but that term often is used to describe embezzlement or other corruption.

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