China National Petroleum Corp. said its Changqing oil field, the country’s biggest crude and gas producer, rebounded from losses earlier this year to post a first-half profit amid reduced spending.
Oil and gas equivalent output from the oilfield reached 26.5 million tons in the first six months of the year, on its way to meeting the 50-million-ton annual output target, CNPC said in a statement on its website on Tuesday. It said the oilfield had losses in January and February, without giving details.
China’s total crude production dropped 4.6 percent to 101.59 million tons in the first six months of the year, the lowest since 2012, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics. Brent, the global oil benchmark, averaged near $41 a barrel in the first half of this year, about 30 percent lower than the same period a year ago.
CNPC improved single-well output at Changqing and controlled production costs in the first half by investing the “lowest possible” amount in exploration for new reserves, the company said in the statement. Changqing is the biggest gas and oil contributor to PetroChina Co., CNPC’s flagship listed unit.
PetroChina may break even in the first half on one-off gains and higher oil prices in the second quarter, Citigroup Inc. analysts including Graham Cunningham wrote in a July 15 research note. PetroChina posted a 13.8 billion yuan loss in the January to March period, its first-ever quarterly loss since listing in 2000.