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Chinese labor for oil drilling eyed in Colo.


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http://www.washtimes.com/business/20050710-115332-2183r.htm

By Andrea R. Mihailescu

UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL

July 11, 2005

Canadian oil giant EnCana is considering bringing in Chinese companies to construct and operate drilling rigs in the Colorado Rockies, as the region struggles to keep up with demand and rising energy prices.

EnCana, a major player in the Piceance Basin of western Colorado, said Chinese labor is cheap and the workers are well-educated. The move would be scrutinized in Washington, where politicians are uneasy about allowing Chinese workers to acquire access to U.S.-based oil and gas facilities.

"I am totally against the Chinese government running the jobs in our country," said Rep. John Salazar, Colorado Democrat, whose district is most affected by drilling. "With the Chinese government getting involved, it's not even a competitive business model."

Mr. Salazar and other U.S. lawmakers already are concerned about the China National Offshore Oil Corp.'s interest in buying the U.S. oil and gas conglomerate Unocal Corp.

The House voted June 30 to block China's cash bid of $18.5 billion. The 398-15 vote came hours after China cited U.S. "political interference" in what it called a purely commercial matter.

"Outsourcing has already claimed millions of jobs," Mr. Salazar said. "We cannot allow that to happen within our own borders. Rural communities have been hit hard enough. We need to keep American jobs in America."

EnCana is deciding whether to construct the drilling rigs in China and import them with Chinese workers to the United States.

"Some operators in that part of the world have explored the [Chinese] option," EnCana spokesman Alan Boras said. "It was mentioned [by EnCana executives to analysts] as a way to increase capacity of the rig fleet in the United States.

"It's our understanding the Chinese have the rigs and the crews and are trying to market that capacity. It's not imminent for EnCana, and we're not working on a specific deal."

The oil and gas well services sector in Colorado is struggling to meet demand for new rigs and to find enough workers to operate them. As consumption of oil and natural gas grows, the effects have been felt globally.

"If they were just talking about bringing in foreign workers for the sake of lowering costs, then I think it could be grounds for pretty substantial opposition. But it's because the industry is running pretty much flat out," Mr. Boras said.

Although China's increased participation in the U.S. oil and gas industry is a prickly issue in Washington, the EnCana spokesman predicted that U.S. policy-makers would concede because Chinese companies would fill a dire need.

With an eye on lower costs, EnCana is in a search to secure long-term contracts.

"We can manage costs better by locking in for longer terms," Mr. Boras said. "And given the life span of our resource, we should be able to lock in. As you adapt drilling technology, you learn. And if you can reduce drilling at a well from, say, 20 days to 15, then you can generate great economies of scale."

The western Colorado field is EnCana's most lucrative prospect and has a capacity of approximately 4.6 trillion cubic feet.

As Chinese workers gain access to U.S. oil and gas facilities, policy-makers worry about trading technology such as rig prototypes, whereby a Chinese manufacturer acquires know-how from EnCana's U.S.-based operations, Frederick Cedoz, vice president at GWEST LLC, told Canada's National Post. GWEST (Global Water & Energy Strategy Team) is a Washington energy policy consulting firm.

The cost of drilling in Colorado has nearly doubled since last year, EnCana officials said. Rates increased from $8,500 per day to $14,000 per day in one year.

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Guest serrae

How do these people get work permits.??? I thought green cards were difficult to get hold of.

This looks like the 'thin end of the wedge to me'.

Americans need to protect their own. China is the reason that the oil prices are going through the roof.

With over a billion of them plus the Indians and their 1.3 billion population one has to ask where all this is leading.

The USA already has unemployment. You need to address this before allowing foreign workers to take your jobs. :24:

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Surely Green Peace, PETA, the Sierra Club, The ALCU (to fight against cheap labor and the exploitation of the Chinese worker), The Democratic party and a host of enviromental, anti-oil, and other groups will step in to bog the Chinese down with enviromental studies as well as studies of the impact on small little animals that the drilling will create.

They came to our rescue in Alaska didn't they?

:24:

t.

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The USA already has unemployment. You need to address this before allowing foreign workers to take your jobs. 

I agree 150%. It took me some time to find a job, (Thanks to the prayers of many I found one) I am making what I was 12 years ago , but I'll tell ya, I am grateful and give praise to Jesus.

Doesnt America have any more people who know how to drill for our own oil? After all it is our country, lets put America back to work!

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Government over-regulation currently hampers any chance we have at economic recovery.

CAFTA is a great example. It's claimed to be a free-trade agreement but it is anything but.

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