Space Travel News  
Japan, China to settle gas row by splitting profit: report

Flares burn off excess gas at a Chinese gas drilling rig at the Tianwaitian field near Japan and China's disputed East China Sea border.
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Feb 4, 2008
Japan and China are considering settling their long-standing dispute over gas fields by evenly splitting profits from joint development in the East China Sea, a Japanese newspaper said Monday.

A trade ministry official here denied the report, but both countries have said they want a breakthrough before a rare visit to Tokyo by Chinese President Hu Jintao.

Japan and China, two of the world's largest energy importers, have failed in 11 rounds of talks since 2004 to reach any breakthrough on sharing lucrative gas resources in the East China Sea.

In a proposal under discussion, Beijing and Tokyo would jointly develop the gas fields and set a formula for taking profits based on each country's investment and geographical proximity, the Nikkei business daily said.

The overall goal would be for the two countries to split the profits evenly, said the newspaper, which did not identify its sources.

A trade ministry official in charge of the matter denied the report, saying: "Negotiations have not yet reached the level of discussing those details as reported in the paper Monday."

"We are still in the process of determining the areas which can be explored jointly," the official, Takehiko Nagai, told AFP.

However, high-level negotiations are expected to resume later this month as both sides hope to have a basic agreement in place before Hu's visit to Japan, he said.

Hu is due to visit Japan in the spring, in only the second visit by a Chinese head of state to Tokyo and the first such trip in a decade. The exact date has not been set.

Relations between the two countries remain uneasy over their wartime history. China refused all high-level contact with Japan during the 2001-2006 premiership of Junichiro Koizumi due to his visits to a shrine venerating Japanese war dead, including war criminals.

Tensions have also been high over the gas dispute. China started drilling in 2003 and Japan has charged that Beijing may be siphoning off what it considers its own gas reserves.

Food safety has also become an issue between the Asian powers with hundreds of Japanese last week saying they had fallen ill from dumplings made in China.

Related Links
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Analysis: China beats West in Africa
Brussels (UPI) Feb 1, 2008
China's growth and close economic ties with Africa are affecting the ability of the United States and the European Union to influence politics on the continent, experts say.







  • Companies Team Up For Advanced Airbag Landing And Flotation System For Orion Vehicle
  • Russia May Build New Shuttle Spacecraft By 2015
  • SPACEX Conducts First Multi-Engine Firing Of Falcon 9 Rocket
  • Virgin's Branson presents new space ship

  • Khrunichev Center Signs New Contract For Proton-M Launches
  • ILS To Launch Yahsat Satellite On Proton
  • TEXUS Research Rockets To Launch On 31 January And 7 February 2008
  • Russian space center to launch boosters

  • Crew Arrives For Atlantis Launch
  • Columbus Set For February 7 Launch Aboard Atlantis
  • Shuttle Atlantis due to launch February 7
  • NASA to televise Columbia remembrance

  • ISS astronauts repair solar array during 7-hr spacewalk
  • Crew Oxygen For ISS Loaded On Jules Verne
  • Station Crew Ready For Wednesday's Spacewalk
  • Europe sets launch window for maiden mission of space freighter

  • NASA Unveils New Budget Request For 2009
  • Iran opens its first space centre, riling the US
  • India, U.S. sign space agreement
  • Beatles song directed into deep space

  • China May Broadcast First Taikonaut Spacewalk Live
  • Chinese Taikonaut Dismisses Environment Worries About New Space Launch Center
  • China To Boost Civil Industrialization With Xian Base
  • China Set To Launch Manned Space Mission In 2008

  • Can A Robot Draw A Map
  • Meet Blob The Robot
  • Russian Fuel Flows Into Jules Verne Automated Transfer Vehicle
  • ESA Training Team ATV

  • Mars In Their Sights
  • Lyell Panorama Inside Victoria Crater Mars Four Years On Mars
  • Traces Of The Martian Past In The Terby Crater
  • HiRISE Camera Details Dynamic Wind Action On Mars

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement