China said to plan spinning off Sinopec, PetroChina pipelines
NDRC leads the initiative to separate the units but a final decision on the plan or the number of companies to be created has not been made

The Chinese government is looking at stripping its biggest energy companies of their oil and gas pipelines, as part of sweeping industry reforms that would see the assets spun off into independent businesses, according to people with knowledge of the plans.
The National Development and Reform Commission is leading talks on the initiative, according to four people, who asked not to be named as they are not authorised to speak publicly on the issue. The separation of the pipeline units would be part of President Xi Jinping's reforms to allow markets a more decisive role in the economy.
The NDRC has held talks since last year on the sale of the assets with the biggest pipeline owners and the utilities that buy most of the fuels, the people said. A final decision on the plan or the number of companies to be created has not been made.
The assets could be worth as much as US$300 billion, according to an estimate by Neil Beveridge, a Hong Kong-based analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein.
"China should push to strip out pipeline assets from oil companies and allow those facilities to run independently from explorers," said Lin Boqiang, director at the Energy Economics Research Centre at Xiamen University. "This is reform that China can do now."
China National Petroleum Corp and its listed arm PetroChina is the country's biggest owner of pipelines, controlling about 77,000 kilometres. China Petrochemical Corp and its listed unit China Petroleum & Chemical Corp, or Sinopec, are the next largest with more than 30,000 kilometres.