SHANGHAI--(BUSINESS WIRE)--China International Natural Gas Vehicle Summit 2012 will be held this October in Sichuan’s capital city of Chengdu, focusing on the Asian and global natural gas and vehicle market.
According to the Comprehensive Plan for Energy Conservation and Emission Reduction during the 12th Five-year Plan Period approved by the Standing Committee of China’s State Council, one of the binding targets is to ensure that the energy consumption per unit of GDP will decrease by 16% by 2015 compared with that of 2010. Specifically, the chemical oxygen demand (COD) and sulfur dioxide emissions shall each decrease by 8%, and ammonia nitrogen and nitrogen oxide each by 10%. This plan fights a way out for the natural gas vehicles, especially the commercial vehicles, which are expanding to include models such as buses, long-distance buses, heavy trucks and construction vehicles. Meanwhile, HPI and other advanced technologies have been gradually adopted. Currently there are 1 million natural gas vehicles in China, and the figure is estimated to reach 65 million by 2020.
The conference will gather participants from oil and gas companies, LNG plants, LNG trade and logistics companies, equipment and solution providers, automotive manufacturers, automotive engine and related suppliers, third-party institutions and others. It is expected that over 100 participants from more than 80 companies from all over the world will attend the conference.
As a unique platform to promote the world’s NGV development in China, the conference will provide opportunities for information sharing, networking, communication and business cooperation to all members. It focuses on NGV marketing in the future, the geographic layout of filling stations, OEM technologies and logistics.
Highlights:
Focusing on future natural gas market and the geographic layout of NGV
filling stations
Difficulty analysis on application of equipment in
the process of constructing NGV stations
Outlook on the automotive
manufacturers’ NGV technologies and production scale
Technical
breakthroughs and service process of advanced foreign equipment