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Sanjack has been committed to the research of automatic workover technology for many years and has a perfect automatic workover technology development, production, and manufacturing system.

In recent years, a whole set of automation technology has been formed in the automation and intelligent development of automatic workover equipment. Through the application of module design, servo drive, integrated control, electro-hydraulic compound drive and other technologies, the supporting products suitable for various types of workover equipment have been developed to meet the needs of oilfield workover equipment upgrading.

Drill floor automatic pipe arranging manipulator can replace workers to complete the placement of the column on the drill floor surface, and connect single joint, thread connection, etc., to achieve unmanned operation of the drill floor for major workover operations.

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Tensions between China and Vietnam over the disputed South China Sea are at their highest levels in years. On May 2, the state-owned China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) placed its deep sea drilling rig HD-981 in disputed waters south of the Paracel Islands. Vietnam objected to the placement, declaring that the rig is located on its continental shelf. China has since sent approximately 80 ships, including seven military vessels, along with aircraft to support the rig. In response, Hanoi dispatched 29 ships to attempt to disrupt the rig’s placement and operations.

The situation escalated dramatically on May 7, when Vietnam accused Chinese vessels of turning high powered water cannons on the Vietnamese ships and eventually ramming several vessels. The incidents reportedly left six Vietnamese injured and several of the country’s ships damaged. Hanoi released photos and videos of the incidents to support its claims.

The implications of these developments are significant. The fact that the Chinese moved ahead in placing their rig immediately after President Obama’s visit to four Asian countries in late April underlines Beijing’s commitment to test the resolve of Vietnam, its ASEAN neighbors and Washington. Beijing may also be attempting to substantially change the facts on the seas by moving while it perceives Washington to be distracted by Russian aggression inUkraine, developments in Nigeria, and Syria. If China believes Washington is distracted, in an increasingly insular and isolationist mood and unwilling to back up relatively strong security assertions made to Japan and the Philippines and repeated during President Obama’s trip, these developments south of the Paracel Islands could have long term regional and global consequences.

A1:The war of words between Beijing and Hanoi has largely focused on the status of the area where HD-981 was placed. Vietnamese officials insist that it lies on their continental shelf, where according to the UN Convention on the Law of the Seas (UNCLOS), Vietnam has exclusive rights to all mineral and hydrocarbon resources.

The rig was placed near the edge of two hydrocarbon blocks already created by Hanoi, though not yet offered for exploitation to foreign oil and gas companies. It also sits near blocks 118 and 119, where U.S.-based ExxonMobil discovered substantial oil and gas reserves in 2011 and 2012. In 2013, Exxon and Vietnam’s state-owned PetroVietnam announced plans to build a $20 billion power plant to be fueled by the oil and gas from those blocks. Those discoveries help explain why CNOOC chose to place HD-981 nearby.

China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs has responded to Vietnam’s complaints by insisting that the rig was placed “completely within the waters of China"s Paracel Islands.” This presumably refers to the 200 nautical mile exclusive economic zone and continental shelf that those islands—which are occupied by China but claimed by Vietnam—would generate under UNCLOS if they met certain requirements.

A3:The deployment of HD-981, which Beijing insists will remain in place until August 15, has clearly ratcheted China-Vietnam tensions to a new level. Hanoi seems determined to disrupt the rig’s operations. And, in contrast to the Philippines, it has the capabilities—Russian-built Kilo-class submarines and an outdated but sizeable surface and air fleet—to do so. This means there is a real threat that acts of brinksmanship, like the recent ramming of Vietnamese vessels, could escalate quickly. Vietnam’s neighbors and outside partners like the United States must use every available channel to urge caution on both sides.

On the other hand, Vietnam’s relative naval capabilities will likely help temper Chinese assertiveness. After all, despite the presence of Chinese naval vessels around HD-981, it appeared that only Chinese Coast Guard vessels were involved in harassing and deterring Vietnamese ships attempting to enter the waters around the rig. The two nations’ and their leaders are as familiar with each other as anyone in the Asia Pacific, and they have substantial channels for communications, including top-level naval hotlines. This could also help avoid a larger crisis.

Vietnam has already launched a diplomatic campaign to build support abroad and paint China as the aggressor. Given other recent provocations by China against its neighbors, this will prove easy. This weekend, Vietnamese prime minister Nguyen Tan Dung will join his fellow leaders from across Southeast Asia at the ASEAN Summit. The placement of the drilling rig, along with China’s patrols at Malaysia’s James Shoal earlier this year and attempts to block resupply of Philippine troops at Second Thomas Shoal in March, will ensure that the South China Sea disputes take center stage. There is no telling who will blink first in the stand-off over HD-981, but the one thing that is certain is that China’s newest provocation will further heighten the threat perception among ASEAN states and drive them closer to each other and interested outside parties, especially Japan and the United States.

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While Bluewhale 1 is an exploration platform, the world"s largest production oil rig is Russia"s Sakhalin-1 offshore platform, which weighs 200,000 tonnes.

China"s deployment of large drilling rigs in disputed waters has raised concerns among its neighbours, particularly Japan and Vietnam. In 2014, Chinese and Vietnamese marine forces had a stand-off when the Haiyang Shiyou 981 platform drilled near the disputed Paracel Islands in the South China Sea.

The vessel had undergone extensive tests before commercial operations began last month. Chinese rig makers also made news last month when an oil platform weighing 31,000 tonnes was loaded onto its largest semi-submersible ship Xinguanghua for delivery to Britain"s Western Isles Development Project in the North Sea.

Last year, China passed a new law on deep-sea exploration that it said will "protect the rightful interests" of Chinese citizens and organisations in their search for resources and in deep sea surveys.

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URUMQI, China (AP) — China has highlighted an unlikely series of videos this year in which Uyghur men and women deny U.S. charges that Beijing is committing human rights violations against their ethnic group. In fact, a text obtained by the AP shows that the videos are part of a government campaign that raises questions about the willingness of those filmed.

Chinese state media have published dozens of the videos praising the Communist Party and showing Uyghurs angrily denouncing former U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo for declaring a genocide in the far west Xinjiang region. The videos, which officials have insisted are spontaneous outpourings of emotion, have also featured prominently in a series of government news conferences held for foreign media.

But the text obtained by AP is the first concrete confirmation that the videos are anything but grassroots. Sent in January to government offices in the northern city of Karamay, the text told each office to find one Uyghur fluent in Mandarin to film a one-minute video in response to Pompeo’s “anti-China remarks.”

While it’s not impossible officials were able to find Uyghurs willing to be in such a public relations campaign, China’s track record in Xinjiang and its documented abuses of Uyghurs have led many experts to conclude it’s more likely those in the videos were forced to take part.

“There’s something instinctive about these videos which feels ingenuine, but the significance is that there’s hard evidence here that the Chinese government is requesting these kinds of videos,” said Albert Zhang, a researcher at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute who recently coauthored a report on Beijing’s disinformation campaign on Xinjiang.

Xinjiang spokesperson Xu Guixiang did not directly deny the authenticity of the text, but said it didn’t follow the usual format of state orders and that his understanding was that “the government has never issued this kind of notice or made this kind of request.” He suggested the videos were made voluntarily.

Tahir Imin, a Uyghur activist who fled China in 2017, said the videos are almost certainly state-orchestrated and coerced, given that information in Xinjiang is heavily censored.

In a fax, the Xinjiang government confirmed that Drinov had been arrested, saying he was suspected of “fabricating and posting fake information” and “poisoning and bewitching ignorant groups and instigating splittism.” Referring to Drinov by his legal Mandarin name, Chen Haoyu, it said he is awaiting trial in a detention center and that his “rights will be protected according to the law.”

Experts say the videos of supportive Uyghurs ordered up by authorities are part of a broader state-coordinated disinformation campaign aimed at whitewashing their policies in Xinjiang.

Dozens of new Twitter and Tiktok accounts promoting those policies have cropped up. Some purport to be run by Uyghurs from Xinjiang, even though merely downloading those apps has landed others in detention. The accounts share videos promoting Xinjiang’s lush landscapes and snow-capped mountains, depicting an idyllic, carefree life at total odds with accounts from hundreds of Uyghurs and Kazakhs who have fled the region in recent years.

Zhang’s Australian Strategic Policy Institute report traced some of the social media videos to a company funded by the Xinjiang government. It found that many of the accounts were likely to be inauthentic and state-linked, though it could not prove so definitively.

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Vietnam has pressed China to withdraw an oil rig from disputed waters in the South China Sea, potentially leading to a re-run of a 2014 standoff between the two neighbors.

The country’s foreign ministry spokesman Le Hai Binh said Tuesday that China had moved its Haiyang Shiyou 981 oil rig to an area outside the Gulf of Tonkin on January 16.

“Vietnam requests China not to conduct drilling activities and to withdraw the HYSY 981 oil rig from this area,” a statement from Vietnam’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said.

The oil rig was moved to “an overlapping area” between the two continental shelves of Central Vietnam and China’s Hainan Island that had not been demarcated, it said.

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Coast Guard Chief of Staff Admiral Ngo Ngoc Thu said the rig had been moving since late on Tuesday. A senior fisheries official also confirmed that the rig was under way.

China moved its Haiyang Shiyou 981 oil rig into South China Sea waters west of the disputed Paracel Islands in early May, an action the US described as "provocative" and "aggressive".

A statement by China"s Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Hong Lei on the rig"s removal pointed out that "the Xisha [Paracel] Islands are integral parts of China" and that the drilling operation was in "indisputable" waters which fell within China"s jurisdiction.

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RMT25JKE–Construction and building of the wellhead of the oil rig platform for Lukoil Filanovsky field development project in the Caspian sea in Russia.

RF2AABNND–Oil rig platform during construction site in the harbor yard and workers preparing to move into the vessel to be installed in offshore locations. - i

RMT25JJF–Construction and building of the wellhead of the oil rig platform for Lukoil Filanovsky field development project in the Caspian sea in Russia.

RM2JP9774–Dundee, Tayside, Scotland, UK. 16th August, 2022. UK Weather: Overcast and humid day with scattered showers, temperatures reaching 19°C. The weather has calmed down today allowing maintenance work to proceed on the Prospector 5 oil rig platform which is berthed at Port of Dundee docks, after a day of violent thunderstorms and torrential downpours blasted North East Scotland. Credit: Dundee Photographics/Alamy Live News

RF2AABP2E–Oil rig platform during construction site in the harbor yard and workers preparing to move into the vessel to be installed in offshore locations. - i

RMT25JJE–Construction and building of the wellhead of the oil rig platform for Lukoil Filanovsky field development project in the Caspian sea in Russia.

RM2JP976Y–Dundee, Tayside, Scotland, UK. 16th August, 2022. UK Weather: Overcast and humid day with scattered showers, temperatures reaching 19°C. The weather has calmed down today allowing maintenance work to proceed on the Prospector 5 oil rig platform which is berthed at Port of Dundee docks, after a day of violent thunderstorms and torrential downpours blasted North East Scotland. Credit: Dundee Photographics/Alamy Live News

RF2AABP2G–Oil rig platform during construction site in the harbor yard and workers preparing to move into the vessel to be installed in offshore locations. - i

RMT25JJY–Construction and building of the wellhead of the oil rig platform for Lukoil Filanovsky field development project in the Caspian sea in Russia.

RM2JP978E–Dundee, Tayside, Scotland, UK. 16th August, 2022. UK Weather: Overcast and humid day with scattered showers, temperatures reaching 19°C. The weather has calmed down today allowing maintenance work to proceed on the Prospector 5 oil rig platform which is berthed at Port of Dundee docks, after a day of violent thunderstorms and torrential downpours blasted North East Scotland. Credit: Dundee Photographics/Alamy Live News

RF2AABP50–Oil rig platform during construction site in the harbor yard and workers preparing to move into the vessel to be installed in offshore locations. - i

RME7E439–Kaikou. 15th Sep, 2014. This photo taken on March 7, 2012 shows workers working at the deepwater drilling rig 981 on the South China Sea, China. China"s largest producer of offshore oil and gas CNOOC said on Sept. 15, 2014 that CNOOC 981, the country"s first deepwater drilling rig, has reported its first deepwater gasfield discovery below the South China Sea. The newly-discovered Lingshui 17-2 gasfield is located 150 kilometers south of the Hainan Island. Its average operational depth was 1,500 meters below the sea surface, the company said in a statement. © Xinhua/Alamy Live News

RM2CN5H9X–A man works on the rig of an oil drilling pump site in McKenzie County outside of Williston, North Dakota March 12, 2013. North Dakota"s booming oil business has quickly ran up against a serious shortage of housing for the thousands of workers who have poured into the state looking to cash in on the Bakken oil formation that has made North Dakota the second-largest oil-producing state after Texas. Picture taken on March 12, 2013. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton (UNITED STATES - Tags: BUSINESS ENERGY ENVIRONMENT COMMODITIES)

RMT25JJG–Construction and building of the wellhead of the oil rig platform for Lukoil Filanovsky field development project in the Caspian sea in Russia.

RF2AABP2C–Oil rig platform during construction site in the harbor yard and workers preparing to move into the vessel to be installed in offshore locations. - i

RM2E602YD–An absorbent boom surrounds oiled marshland, one year after the BP Oil Spill, in Bay Jimmy near Myrtle Grove, Louisiana April 20, 2011. An explosion on the Deepwater Horizon rig at BP"s Macondo undersea well in the Gulf of Mexico on April 20, 2010 killed 11 workers and spewed nearly 5 million barrels of oil from the UK energy giant"s ruptured well, triggering the largest offshore oil spill in U.S. history. REUTERS/Lee Celano (UNITED STATES - - Tags: DISASTER ENVIRONMENT ENERGY BUSINESS)

RMT25JK1–Construction and building of the wellhead of the oil rig platform for Lukoil Filanovsky field development project in the Caspian sea in Russia.

RF2JNKP3Y–SENIOR LECTURER GORDON MAXWELL PUTS THE NEW £100,000 MODEL OIL RIG THROUGH ITS PACES AT SOUTHAMPTON SOLENT INIVERSITY"S WARSASH MARITIME ACADEMY. THE ONE MAN MODEL WILL BE USED TO TEACH OIL WORKERS HOW TO MOVE AND SECURE THE GIANT PLATFORMS AT THE WORLDS ONLY OFFSHORE OIL OPERATIONS COURSE IN THE WORLD. PIC MIKE WALKER,2010

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Wide selection: At our production facility in China we design and develop workover rigs for service depths ranging from 1,600 m to 8,500 m (5,250 ft-27,900 ft), and workover depths from 2,000 m to 9,000 m (6,600 ft-30,000 ft) for 2 7/8” DP.

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HONG KONG, May 29 (Reuters) - A Chinese oil rig whose deployment to waters claimed by Vietnam early this month triggered a rupture in ties has a good chance of finding enough gas to put the area into production, Chinese industry experts said.

For now, China has said nothing about the potential of the area. The first round of drilling had been completed, the rig operator said on Tuesday, without giving any results from the tapped wells.

The $1 billion deepwater rig owned by state-run China National Offshore Oil Company Group (CNOOC Group), parent of flagship unit CNOOC Ltd, is scheduled to explore until mid-August.

“The place where the rig is drilling at the moment is likely to be a gas field. China conducted three-dimensional geological surveys before moving the rig there,” said Wu Shicun, president of the National Institute for South China Sea Studies, a Chinese government think-tank on the southern island of Hainan.

Deployment of the rig on May 2 set off deadly anti-Chinese riots in Vietnam while scores of Vietnamese and Chinese ships remain squared off around the platform. There have been several collisions.

The rig lies approximately 330 km (205 miles) east of Vietnam and 370 km from the southern coast of Hainan. It is just below the Paracel island chain occupied by China and claimed by Hanoi. Earlier this week the rig was moved after having been some 20 nautical miles closer to central Vietnam’s coast.

Hanoi has said the Haiyang Shiyou 981 rig is in its exclusive economic zone. China says its biggest and most advanced mobile energy platform was operating within its waters.

Indeed, Vietnam has two fields to the left of the rig, much closer to its coast, where U.S. giant Exxon Mobil Corp discovered oil and gas in 2011 and 2012.

No production had taken place in Blocks 118 and 119, Do Van Khanh, head of state-run PetroVietnam Exploration Production Corporation, told Reuters. He declined to discuss the rig.

Neither CNOOC Group nor CNPC could be reached for comment on the rig or the field despite repeated attempts. An executive at China Oilfield Services Ltd , the service arm of CNOOC Group and the rig’s operator, declined to give details on drilling results so far.

Experts said if the rig found commercial reserves, China would bring in platforms for production and pipe-laying ships to build the infrastructure to transfer gas to vessels. That process could take several years while production could last decades.

Hanoi, for example, said last week it was considering taking legal action against China following the rig’s deployment. The Philippines, another claimant in the South China Sea, challenged China by filing a case with an international arbitration tribunal in late March.

Some Chinese industry experts said they believed the 981 rig - once called “mobile national territory” by CNOOC - would be moved elsewhere in the South China Sea once exploration was completed near the Paracel islands.

“The rig was designed, meant for oil exploration in the South China Sea,” said Lin Boqiang, director of the China Center for Energy Economics Research at Xiamen University and an adviser to China’s National Energy Administration, the top regulator of China’s energy industry.