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中国石油天然气行业报告(2018-2022年)
China’s oil and gas sector has been dominated by three state-owned enterprise groups – China
National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), China Petrochemical Corporation (Sinopec Group) and China
National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) – for decades. The three majors, all engaging in oil and gas
production, have predominant positions in different subsegments, with CNPC mainly focusing on
onshore exploration and extraction, Sinopec Group excelling at refining and petrochemicals, and
CNOOC in charge of offshore oil and gas assets. In response to the government’s call for SOE reform
in the 1990s, the three giants established their own listed arms, restructured business units for better
asset integration, and introduced market entities to participate in oil field management. The Chinese
government has also encouraged independent domestic players as well as foreign companies to enter
the sector.
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非洲石油和天然气行业报告(2019-2020年)
A home to 7.5% of the world’s oil reserves and 7.1% of the global natural gas reserves, Africa is an
important player in the hydrocarbon industry. The continent’s share in global oil production stood at
8.7% in 2017, slightly up from 8.4% in the previous year. Africa’s contribution to the global natural gas
production was smaller, with the continent accounting for a share of 6.1% in 2017, up from 5.8% in
2016.
After declining for four straight years, Africa’s crude oil production increased by 5% y/y to 8,072
mbbl/d in 2017, according to data published in the 2018 edition of BP Statistical Review of World
Energy. The annual growth was the strongest among all oil producing regions and well above the
global oil production increase of just 0.7% y/y. The major contributors were Nigeria and Libya, which
were the only ones among Africa’s top five oil producers to register higher production than in 2016.
The others witnessed a decline, mostly in line with production cuts agreed to by OPEC members.
Nigeria, Africa’s largest oil producer, registered a 4.5% rise in production to 1,988 mbbl/d in 2017. Libya
more than doubled oil supply to 865 mbbl/d, helping it become Africa’s fourth largest oil producer in
2017, moving Egypt to the fifth position. Tunisia experienced the steepest drop of 11.8% y/y, pumping
53 mbbl/d of crude oil in 2017. South Sudan witnessed another decline in oil production in 2017 but as
the country emerged from a five-year civil war with the peace deal agreed in August 2018, prospects
for the oil sector look encouraging.
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液化石油气汽化器市场分析和分段预测到2025年
The LPG vaporizer market is segmented based on four parameters, namely product, capacity,
end-use and region.
The first level segmentation of market includes product type into the following categories:
direct-fired vaporizer, electric vaporizer and steam bath vaporizer. The second segment is
bifurcated on the basis of different LPG vaporizer capacities in gallons/hour.
On the basis of end-use, the market has been divided into commercial, residential, industrial
and agricultural applications.
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新加坡石化报告-2019年
Singapore has distinguished itself as one of the leading oil refining and petrochemicals players in Asia. Despite lacking
indigenous hydrocarbons resources, it boasts thriving upstream as well as downstream sectors. Petrochemicals and refining remain
the lifeblood of Singapore, with strong regional demand growth meaning there is potential for capacity expansion - although
investment in countries such as China and Vietnam has led to increasingly fierce competition.
With dedicated government backing, the chemicals industry as a whole has proved to be one of the largest contributors to the
country's manufacturing output. A strong base in refining, availability of world-class infrastructure, cost-effective logistics and a
location at the crossroads of Asia, with ready market access to the Asia-Pacific region, the US, the Middle East and Africa, set the
pace for the development of a world-class petrochemicals industry. Major players include US-based ExxonMobil, Netherlandsheadquartered
Royal Dutch Shell, Japanese Mitsui, Sumitomo Chemical Singapore (a wholly owned subsidiary of Japan's
Sumitomo Chemical Company) and Eastman Chemical Singapore.