Bro to complement the domestic Helium production of 250 million cubic feet from 0 commercial production in 2019/2020
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China and Russia raise domestic helium capacity in response to Gulf supply cuts
By
01 Apr 20262 min read
China is to add 250 million standard cubic feet (mmscf) a year of domestic helium capacity from next month and Russia plans to add 700 mmscf/year from the third quarter.
It takes China’s helium capacity to 750 mmscf annually. The increases were announced at OilChem China Gas Week.
China imports around 85% of its helium, split between Russia and Qatar.
Links with Russia have strengthened over the last month with Qatar’s Ras Laffan LNG and helium production plants down, which have impacted global supply chains and particularly Asian markets.
Last October, Tom Deng, President of G-gas, speaking at
gasworld’s Helium Super Summit, said Russian helium, thanks to its aggressive low-price strategy over the past two years, made up 40% of imports – a figure which is now sure to rise with Qatar out of the frame.
China produces its domestic helium primarily by extracting it from natural gas in major onshore basins across the central and western regions, with significant breakthroughs in ultra-high-purity extraction recently concentrated in Shaanxi Province.
Customers of suppliers with heavy exposure to Qatar will face the most significant curtailments, according to Carlos Nulman, Business Development & Global Projects at Mitsui & Co./Air Water Inc.
“Spot market activity will be significant in terms of price and attention, but modest in volume. For many, the holes that this disruption is creating are too large to be meaningfully filled with occasional spot loads. End-users with major downstream exposure should pursue spot opportunities where available, but should try to avoid relying on them as a primary mitigation strategy,” he writes.
Executives across the technology sector, where Asia is dominant, have begun flagging
during the
, a development that coincides with the accelerating commercial scale of AI platforms and intensifying demand for the semiconductor hardware that powers them.
Key milestones in China's domestic helium development include:
- 2020: Opening of the first major commercial-scale helium plant to extract helium from natural gas.
- 2021-2023: Significant breakthroughs in extracting high-purity helium from coal bed methane, with specialized, award-winning technology applied in Shanxi province.
- 2023: Commissioning of the world's first high-purity helium extraction plant from coal bed methane.
- 2024–2025: Rapid expansion of domestic capacity to reduce import dependence, including utilizing international resources (e.g., in Tanzania).
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By early 2026, China was still heavily importing, but had increased domestic capacity, and was planning to add significant further domestic production capacity by May 2026, according to. The push is driven by the need for high-tech applications, particularly in semiconductors and manufacturing, according to.
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