Vietnam sends ship to track Chinese vessel patrolling Russian gas field
in EEZ -data
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[March 27, 2023]
By Francesco Guarascio
HANOI (Reuters) - A Vietnamese ship monitored a Chinese Coast Guard
vessel on Saturday in a Russian-operated gas field in Vietnam's South
China Sea exclusive economic zone (EEZ), data show - the latest Chinese
patrol in a pattern stretching more than a year.
Chinese coast guard ships have sailed directly into energy exploration
blocks operated or owned by Russian firms in Vietnam's EEZ about 40
times since January 2022, according to vessel-tracking data from
Vietnamese research organisation South China Sea Chronicle Initiative (SCSCI),
an independent non-profit.
China considers the area part of its expansive territorial claim in the
South China Sea marked by a "nine-dash line," a boundary the Permanent
Court of Arbitration found in 2016 to have no legal basis. It has built
artificial islands and airfields on some reefs and islets in the sea to
widespread concern in the region and in the United States.
Both Vietnam and Indonesia have asked China to avoid these areas in
their EEZs - although the zones are not territorial waters and do not
have sailing restrictions under international law. The patrols mirror
Chinese Coast Guard activity elsewhere in the South China Sea, where
such vessels have been used to assert territorial claims.
"China is asserting jurisdictional rights to seabed energy resources and
(has) used its coast guard to put pressure on regional states," said Ian
Storey, a senior fellow at Singapore's ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute.
Maps created by SCSCI and analysed by Reuters, using Automatic
Identification System (AIS) signals from those vessels, show Chinese
ships last year followed nearly identical routes at least 34 times from
Vanguard Bank, a submerged feature near the boundaries of Vietnamese and
Indonesian exclusive economic zones (EEZs), to two Russian-controlled
blocks 50 nautical miles (92 kilometres) away - at times getting close
as 1 nautical mile from the main wells.
Russia's state-controlled Zarubezhneft is the operator and a shareholder
of one the two blocks, 06-01; Russia's gas giant Gazprom is a
shareholder in the other, 05-03, which is operated by a subsidiary of
PetroVietnam, the country's state-owned fossil fuel company, according
to the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), a think
tank in Washington.
The Chinese ship on Saturday sailed through both blocks, data show, as
well as two others. The Vietnamese ship Kiem Ngu 278, operated by a
fisheries law enforcement agency, followed the vessel, data show, at
times closing to distances of just a few hundred metres.
From those blocks, roughly 630 nautical miles from China's Hainan
island, the Chinese ships typically return on a direct route to Vanguard
Bank, where they are stationed, data reviewed by Reuters show. The
Chinese ship on Saturday instead sailed to Malaysia's EEZ.
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A Chinese Coast Guard vessel is pictured
near the Philippine-occupied Thitu Island, in the disputed Spratly
Islands, South China Sea, March 9, 2023. REUTERS/Eloisa Lopez/File
Photo
A spokesperson for China's foreign ministry said the Chinese Coast
Guard carries out patrols in the areas under China's jurisdiction in
the South China Sea while respecting international law, and said it
was not aware of patrols in energy exploration blocks operated by
Russian firms.
A spokeswoman for Vietnam's foreign ministry said on Friday that
Vietnam acts in the South China Sea “to protect its legal rights”.
Zarubezhneft, Gazprom, and Russia's foreign ministry and embassy in
Hanoi did not respond to requests for comment.
Exclusive economic zones generally extend 200 nautical miles (370km)
beyond its shores. By international law, a country's territorial
waters - in which it can control all activities - typically extend
about 12 nautical miles from its shores. Conflicts can arise where
such claims overlap.
Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Brunei are among other
countries that have competing claims in the South China Sea.
The gas-rich fields exploited by the Russian companies are among the
furthest from Vietnam's coast and are close to the strategic
boundary with Indonesia's EEZ, and to blocks claimed by China.
Since at least November, the Chinese Coast Guard ships have also
expanded their routes, moving through block 12-11, which is jointly
operated by Zarubezhneft and PetroVietnam, on their way to oil and
gas field 12W, explored by Britain's Harbour Energy, SCSCI data
show.
The patrols of the area operated by Harbour Energy started just
before Indonesia and Vietnam signed an agreement in December 2022
setting their EEZs' boundaries in the South China Sea, which paved
the way for gas deals.
Harbour Energy declined to comment.
Harbour Energy and Zarubezhneft are developing the nearby Tuna gas
field in Indonesia's EEZ, from which Jakarta plans to export gas to
Vietnam via a pipeline starting in 2026. The project is currently
suspended because of Western Ukraine-related sanctions on some of
the companies involved.
Chinese Coast Guard vessels have also patrolled the Tuna block; in
January, Indonesia deployed a warship to monitor a Chinese ship
there.
(Reporting by Francesco Guarascio; additional reporting by Laurie
Chen and Joe Cash in Beijing, and Guy Faulconbridge in Moscow.
Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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