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  • Contractors prepare prices for major Lower Zakum oil project

    Administrator

    13 November 2024

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    Contractors are preparing commercial bids for the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) works on a major Adnoc Offshore project to boost oil production at the Lower Zakum offshore hydrocarbons concession in Abu Dhabi.

    The Lower Zakum hydrocarbons zone is located 65 kilometres northwest of Abu Dhabi in the Gulf’s waters. The offshore arm of Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (Adnoc Offshore) holds the majority 60% stake in the Lower Zakum asset. Foreign partners include an Indian consortium of companies led by ONGC Videsh (10%), Japan’s Inpex Corporation (10%), China National Petroleum Corporation (10%), Italy’s Eni (5%) and France’s TotalEnergies (5%).

    Adnoc Offshore’s larger, longer-term objective is to raise the asset’s output capacity to 520,000 barrels a day (b/d) by 2027 and maintain that level until 2034. This strategic goal will be accomplished through the Lower Zakum Long-Term Development Plan (LTDP-1) project.

    Contractors have been set a deadline of 15 November for the submission of commercial bids for the multibillion-dollar Lower Zakum LTDP-1 project, according to sources. Bidders were earlier required to submit prices in September.

    MEED previously reported that contractors submitted technical bids for the project by 14 August.

    Adnoc Offshore issued the main EPC tender for the Lower Zakum LTDP-1 project in March, MEED reported.

    Adnoc Offshore intends to award EPC contracts for the Lower Zakum LTDP-1 project by the end of the year, sources told MEED.

    Lower Zakum LTDP-1 project

    Adnoc Offshore has divided the scope of work on the Lower Zakum LTDP-1 project into three EPC packages:

    Topside facilities on G Island – Civil works on process facilities and associated buildings on the artificial greenfield G Island.

    Process facilities include well pads, inlet and export reception, production separation, export pumps, gas compression, dehydration and lift, produced water treatment and disposal, vapour recovery units, water injection units, riser tower, flare towers, accommodation, drilling of high-pressure flare knock out drum, power distribution facility, substations and local equipment rooms.

    Offshore WHTs and pipelines – Seven WHTs will be installed: six in the east area, and one in the AGI area. Five of the WHTs are to be 16-slot, while the other two are to be nine-slot.

    Das Island Terminal, ZCSC and ZWSC – The five existing oil processing trains at the Lower Zakum offshore development are to be decommissioned in 2028, with the new configuration of the main processing plant at Das Island to be:

    • Two existing trains with a processing/stabilisation capacity of 110,000 b/d each
    • Three new trains with a processing/stabilisation capacity of 150,000 b/d

    The scope of work also covers the installation of other structures such as:

    • Three high-pressure separator trains
    • High-pressure scrubber
    • Three low-pressure separator trains
    • Low-pressure scrubber
    • Three atmospheric separator trains
    • Four crude charge pumps
    • Three crude charge heaters
    • Three cold strippers integrated with a degassing vessel
    • Six stripped crude product pumps
    • Common ejector with a spare for three cold strippers
    • Closed drain drum with transfer pump
    • Blow case vessel

    Adnoc Offshore expects the Lower Zakum LTDP-1 project to be commissioned by the end of 2027.

    Technip Energies has performed the front-end engineering and design (feed) work on the Lower Zakum LTDP-1 project. Adnoc Offshore awarded the French firm the contract in November 2022, and set a feed completion deadline of January 2024.

    Adnoc Offshore began the main contract prequalification process for the EPC works on the Lower Zakum LTDP-1 project in March 2023. Contractors were initially asked to submit expression of interest documents by 10 April that year, with the deadline extended to 27 April.

    Adnoc Offshore started an early engagement process for the main EPC tendering process on the Lower Zakum LTDP-1 project in the fourth quarter of last year.

    ALSO READ: Adnoc awards Lower Zakum offshore project

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    Indrajit Sen
  • Hatta hydropower plant heads for trial operation

    Administrator

    13 November 2024

    Construction work on Dubai’s Hatta pumped-storage hydroelectric power plant is 94.15% complete, and generator installations are under way in preparation for a trial operation in the first quarter of 2025.

    According to the state utility, Dubai Electricity & Water Authority (Dewa), the plant’s upper dam, which includes a 72-metre-high main wall and a 37-metre-high side dam, has also been filled.

    The plant will have a production capacity of 250MW, a storage capacity of 1,500 megawatt-hours and a lifespan of up to 80 years.

    The state utility awarded the contract to build the plant to a consortium of Austrian firms Strabag and Andritz and Turkey’s Ozkar in August 2019.

    Dewa said on 12 November that the AED1.421bn ($387m) project is expected to be fully completed by the end of the second quarter of 2025.

    The hydroelectric power plant is designed as an energy storage facility with a turnaround efficiency of 78.9%.

    It uses the potential energy of water stored in the upper dam, converting it into kinetic energy as the water flows through a 1.2-kilometre subterranean tunnel.

    This kinetic energy rotates the turbines, converting mechanical energy into electrical energy, which can be delivered to Dewa’s grid within 90 seconds to meet demand.

    To store energy, clean power generated at the Mohammed Bin Rashid Al-Maktoum Solar Park will be used to pump water back to the upper dam, converting electrical power into kinetic energy during the process.

    Dewa said the project is part of a comprehensive vision to develop Hatta and enhance its sustainable development, including the creation of job opportunities for Emiratis.

    It added that the project “also supports the Dubai Clean Energy Strategy and the Dubai Net Zero Carbon Emissions Strategy 2050”.

    Through the project, Dewa aims to diversify energy production from renewable and clean sources in Dubai. These include different available technologies, such as solar photovoltaic panels and concentrated solar power, as well as the use of renewable energy to produce green hydrogen.

    https://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/12908014/main.jpg
    Jennifer Aguinaldo
  • Bahrain invites independent water prequalifications

    Administrator

    13 November 2024

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    Bahrain’s Electricity & Water Authority (EWA) has invited interested firms to prequalify for a tender to develop the state’s first independent water project (IWP).

    The Al-Hidd seawater reverse osmosis (SWRO) plant is expected to have a production capacity of about 60 million imperial gallons a day (MIGD) of potable water.

    The client expects firms to submit their statements of qualifications (SOQs) by 18 December.

    The facility will be developed on a brownfield site and is expected to be fully operational by the second quarter of 2028. It will help expand Bahrain’s water infrastructure to meet projected demand based on its 2030 master plan.

    The Al-Hidd IWP will be developed using a build, own and operate (BOO) model for 20 to 25 years.

    EWA has also issued the prequalification request for another BOO project, MEED reported on 11 November.

    The Sitra independent water and power project (IWPP) is a combined-cycle gas turbine (CCGT) plant expected to have a production capacity of about 1,200MW of electricity. The project’s SWRO desalination facility will have a production capacity of 30MIGD of potable water.

    The plant is Bahrain’s fourth IWPP, replacing the previously planned Al-Dur 3. The Sitra IWPP is expected to be fully operational by the second quarter of 2029.

    Sixty representatives from utility developers and contracting firms attended a market-sounding event for the two separate utility BOO projects in Manama on 21 October.

    The firms that sent representatives to the event included France’s Engie, Japan’s Mitsui, Saudi Arabia’s Acwa Power, AlJomaih Electricity & Water Company and Ajlan & Bros, and Kuwait’s Gulf Investment Corporation, among others, said sources.

    EWA’s transaction advisory team for the two BOO projects comprises KPMG Fakhro as the financial consultant, WSP Parsons Brinckerhoff as the technical consultant and Trowers & Hamlins as the legal consultant.

    MEED understands that EWA’s Sitra IWPP will likely be Bahrain’s last CCGT plant project. Solar power is expected to account for all future electricity generation capacity.

    Bahrain aims to reach net-zero carbon emissions by 2060.

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    Jennifer Aguinaldo
  • Neom replaces CEO

    Administrator

    12 November 2024

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    Nadhmi Al-Nasr has left his role as Neom CEO and will be replaced by Aiman Al-Mudaifer as acting CEO of the company developing the $500bn project in northwestern Saudi Arabia, which includes The Line, Trojena and Oxagon.

    In a statement published online, Neom said: “The Neom Board of Directors today announced the appointment of Eng. Aiman Al-Mudaifer as acting CEO of the company. Eng. Al-Mudaifer assumes leadership of Neom, following Nadhmi Al-Nasr’s departure.”

    The statement added: “As Neom enters a new phase of delivery, this new leadership will ensure operational continuity, agility and efficiency to match the overall vision and objectives of the project.”

    Al-Mudaifer has been head of the Public Investment Fund’s local real estate division since 2018, and the Neom statement says he has a deep and strategic understanding of Neom and its projects.

    Neom has attracted significant criticism over the past year as it grapples with major programmes of construction work such as The Line. In a statement announcing the appointment of consultants for work on The Line on 11 November, Neom said it “is currently focused on the initial phases of infrastructure and enabling works for the new city”.

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    Colin Foreman
  • Adnoc awards Upper Zakum field expansion contract

    Administrator

    12 November 2024

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    Adnoc Offshore has awarded the main contract for the second phase of a project to increase the oil production potential of Abu Dhabi’s largest producing oil asset – the Upper Zakum offshore field – to 1.2 million barrels a day (b/d).

    Abu Dhabi-based Target Engineering Construction Company has won the contract for engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) works on the project, which is known as UZ 1.2MMBD EPC-2.

    The value of the contract awarded by the offshore business of Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (Adnoc Offshore) is understood to be about $500m, according to sources.

    MEED recently reported that Adnoc Offshore was close to awarding the main contract for the UZ 1.2MMBD EPC-2 project.

    Apart from Target, the other bidders for the project included Greece-based Archirodon and UK-headquartered Petrofac.

    Adnoc Offshore received technical bids for the project by the 14 August deadline. Contractors submitted commercial bids for the project by the deadline of 2 October, MEED previously reported.

    Located 84 kilometres offshore in Abu Dhabi, Upper Zakum is the world’s second-largest offshore oil field and fourth-largest oil field.

    The Upper Zakum offshore development consists of four main artificial islands: Al-Ghallan, Umm Al-Anbar, Ettouk and Asseifiya – also known as Central Island, West Island, North Island and South Island, respectively.

    The scope of work on the UZ 1.2MMBD EPC-2 project covers the EPC of the following structures on Assefiya Island:

    • Integrated gas lift compressor and its associated facilities
    • Gas dehydration unit
    • Vapour recovery system
    • Electro-chlorination package
    • Seawater winning pumps
    • Seawater filtration package
    • Instrument air compressor
    • Air dryer package
    • Nitrogen generation package
    • Chemical injection package (scale inhibitor and biocide injection)
    • Pre-assembled pipe racks
    • Modular variable frequency drives room
    • Modular technical rooms
    • Piping tie-ins connection with existing facilities
    • Electrical, instrumentation and control and telecommunications tie-ins

    Adnoc Offshore has performed the front-end engineering and design (feed) work on the project in-house, it said in the expression of interest (EoI) document.

    MEED previously reported that Adnoc Offshore issued the EoI document for the EPC tendering phase on 8 February, with contractors submitting responses by 26 February.

    Adnoc Offshore then issued the main EPC tender for the project “in early June”, sources told MEED.

    Upper Zakum expansion

    The first phase of the programme to raise the Upper Zakum offshore field development’s oil production capacity to 1.2 million b/d was launched in 2019. The initial goal was to increase the field’s output potential to 1 million b/d by 2024, which was later increased to 1.2 million, with the project execution timeline eventually extended.

    In April, MEED reported that Adnoc Offshore had awarded the main EPC contract for the UZ 1.2MMBD EPC-1 project to UAE-based Target Engineering Construction Company. The value of the EPC contract won by Target is estimated to be $825m.

    Spanish contractor Tecnicas Reunidas won the contract for the feed works on the UZ 1.2MMBD EPC-1 project in 2019. UK-headquartered Wood Group was appointed as the project management consultant for the EPC phase.

    The project’s main scope involves the EPC of several surface facilities and plants at the Upper Zakum offshore development’s four main artificial islands.

    Upper Zakum oil production

    Adnoc has committed to a capital expenditure budget of approximately $30bn, along with its operating partners in the Upper Zakum hydrocarbons concession, Japan Oil Development Company (Jodco) and US-based ExxonMobil

    The strategic objective is to first raise the asset’s oil output from 640,000 b/d to 750,000 b/d through the UZ 750 project, and then eventually to 1.2 million b/d through the two phases of the ongoing UZ 1.2 MMBD project.

    Zakum Development Company (Zadco), which later merged into Adnoc Offshore, awarded EPC contracts for the UZ 750 project in 2012 and early 2013.

    The $817m first package was awarded to a consortium of Abu Dhabi’s NMDC Energy (then known as National Petroleum Construction Company) and France-based Technip Energies. Package two, the project’s largest EPC package, worth $3.7bn, was awarded to a consortium of UK-headquartered Petrofac and South Korea’s Daewoo Shipbuilding & Engineering.

    EPC work on UZ 750 began in 2014 and was completed in 2022.

    In October 2022, Adnoc Group subsidiary Adnoc Drilling set a world record for drilling the longest oil and gas well at the Upper Zakum concession, stretching 50,000 feet.

    The extended-reach wells will tap into an undeveloped part of the Upper Zakum reservoir, potentially increasing the field’s production capacity by 15,000 b/d without expanding or building any new infrastructure, Adnoc said.

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    Indrajit Sen
  • Swiss engineering firm wins Saudi railway design work

    Administrator

    12 November 2024

     

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    Switzerland-headquartered Pini Group has won the preliminary design contract for the dualisation of 230 kilometres of track on Saudi Arabia’s North Railway.

    The deal also covers the preliminary design and site selection of a new depot and the preparation of tender documents for the estimated SR4bn ($1.08bn) design-and-build contract, which is scheduled to be issued to selected contractors in late 2025.

    Two sections featuring five loops will have the additional track. They are:

    Section 1: From the Al-Zabirah 1/Nariyah Marshalling Yard to Ras Al-Khair

    Section 2: From Zabirah Junction to the Hail Intermodal Yard

    The Ministry of Transport & Logistic Services tendered Pini’s contract in October 2023 to provide additional phosphate ore freight capacity for Saudi Arabia Mining Company’s (Maaden) fertiliser expansion plans.

    Management of the project’s construction and post-completion operations will sit with Saudi Arabian Railways (SAR).

    The 2,750km-long North Railway, previously known as the North-South Railway, comprises a 1,550km freight line running from the Al-Jalamid phosphate mine and Waad Al-Shamal fertiliser production complex in the far northwest of the kingdom to Maaden’s diammonium phosphate fertiliser production and export facilities at Ras Al-Khair on the Gulf coast.

    It also consists of a 1,250km-long passenger line linking Riyadh with Al-Haditha near the Jordanian border.

    The deal marks the first major project win in Saudi Arabia for the 74-year-old engineering firm, which established its offices in the GCC in May 2023. It is delivering detailed design services for the Mid-Island Parkway Tunnel connecting Saadiyat Island to Umm Yifenah Island, and the Hafeet Rail project connecting UAE and Oman.

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    Edward James
  • Hitachi Energy rides HVDC boom

    Administrator

    12 November 2024

    The GCC region’s strong drive to decarbonise electricity generation, distribution and consumption has led to an increased demand for renewable energy and electric mobility, which in turn require strong, secure and reliable grids.

    “The key issue [among stakeholders] is how to stabilise the grid and maintain its resilience to ensure safety and security of supply,” Bruno Melles, global managing director for the Transformers Business Unit at Zurich-headquartered Hitachi Energy, tells MEED.

    Options to address this issue include offshore and onshore interconnections, particularly through high-voltage direct current (HVDC) networks, as well as the deployment of battery energy storage systems.

    HVDCs are broadly considered more environment-friendly compared to their alternating current predecessors by allowing electricity transmission over long distances with minimal losses.

    Several HVDC networks are under construction across the GCC states. The region’s first subsea power transmission network in Abu Dhabi replaces existing offshore gas turbine generators catering to Adnoc’s offshore operations with more sustainable power sources available in Abu Dhabi’s onshore power network.

    The Saudi-Egypt interconnection is also underway. Once completed, it will enable the daily exchange of up to 3,000MW of electricity, opening up potential energy trade between the GCC and other countries in the GulfAfrica and Europe.

    Saudi Arabia also recently awarded a $5.3bn contract to interconnect its western, central and southern regions through an on-land HVDC network.

    In addition, in May this year, Hitachi Energy signed agreements with Enowa, the utility arm of Saudi gigaproject developer Neom, to supply three HVDC transmission systems with a total capacity to transmit up to 9,000MW of electricity.

    Discussions are under way for more of these types of projects, notes Melles, who says these projects reflect the need to integrate and secure the grid, particularly as more countries consider cross-border links and connecting their existing grids to remote renewable energy plants.

    As interconnection investments grow, the need for digitalisation will also grow as utilities and transmission system operators seek more precise ways to manage their electrical loads and avoid waste.

    Large users

    The presence of industries with high power demands such as refining has been a distinguishing feature of most GCC states' power systems.

    Most recently, the drive to deploy AI-based applications has spurred a boom in data centre construction particularly in the UAE and Saudi Arabia.

    “We’re seeing plans to build data centres with load capacities of up to 1,000MW,” explains Melles, who points out that these facilities are fast becoming a major power utilisation point similar to other large industries.

    The International Energy Agency estimates that data centres represent roughly 2% of global power consumption in 2022 and this is expected to more than double to 5% to 6%,  according to various projections.

    An increase in the large power user base, even as electrification increases, reinforces the need for more resilient grids that can deal with varying loads and distances and energy sources, according to Melles.

    Meeting demand

    Globally, transmission and distribution infrastructure buildout is expected to catch up with prolific investments to expand generation capacity as power and decarbonisation demands increase.

    Across the GCC, an estimated 49,000MW of conventional and renewable energy power generation plants are under construction as of October this year. The project pipeline remains robust, with key jurisdictions such as Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi aiming for renewable sources to meet up to 50% of their electricity demand by the end of the decade.

    The GCC region’s power transmission and distribution sector is also set to experience its best year in terms of the value of awarded contracts. 

    According to data from regional projects-tracking service MEED Projects, the total value of awarded contracts for substations, control centres, overhead lines and cables across the six GCC states reached an estimated $13.8bn between January and September 2024.

    This figure already exceeds by 81% the total value of contracts awarded in the preceding full year.

    To meet demand, Hitachi Energy, which supplies solutions ranging from large transformers, communication networks, cooling systems and cybersecurity to cable accessories, recently launched a $1.5bn programme to boost its transformer production capacity between 2024 and 2027.

    “We need to scale up capacity and availability, and we are committing with our parts suppliers… to be able to supply [transformers] to the industry,” explains Melles.

    Hitachi Energy is also, more crucially, investing in human resources as it expands its production capacity and presence globally. "We are investing in people across all skill levels in our company not just in our factories… because we believe resource constraints will be more serious than steel or copper constraints."  

    The executive notes that in addition to driving power demand, AI is a key development that suppliers like Hitachi Energy are following closely due to its potential to transform industries over time.

    Current AI applications enable predictive maintenance and reliability, where they can analyse data from sensors and maintenance records to predict when equipment may fail.

    The next stage, which Melles expects will cause widespread disruption, is when AI is applied to industrial process and engineering optimisation, which experts say may lead to increased efficiency, reduced resources and improved product quality, among others.

    “AI offers a great opportunity if used properly,” the executive concludes.

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    Jennifer Aguinaldo
  • Buhur, Nesma and Aljomaih bid low for Jubail-Buraydah link

    Administrator

    12 November 2024

    A developer team comprising local companies Aljomaih Energy & Water, Nesma Company and Buhur for Investment Company has been named as the preferred bidder for the contract to develop and operate Saudi Arabia’s second independent water transmission pipeline (IWTP) project.

    The project will link Jubail in the kingdom’s Eastern Province and Buraydah in the Qassim region over a 587-kilometre (km) pipeline that can transmit 650,000 cubic metres a day of water.

    The Aljomaih, Nesma and Buhur team proposed to develop the Jubail-Buraydah IWTP project for SR3.59468 a cubic metre.

    Saudi Water Partnership Company (SWPC) has also named a second team, comprising the local Vision Invest and UAE-based Abu Dhabi National Energy Company (Taqa), as the reserved bidder.

    The Vision Invest/Taqa team offered to develop the project for SR5.04214/cm.

    The Jubail-Buraydah IWTP project is larger than the kingdom’s first IWTP linking Rayis and Rabigh, which a consortium including the local Alkhorayef Water & Power Technologies Company and Spain’s Cobra Instalaciones y Servicios will develop and operate at a cost of SR7.78bn ($2bn).

    SWPC issued the request for proposals for the Jubail-Buraydah IWTP scheme to prequalified bidders in October last year.

    The transaction advisory team for the client comprises the US/India’s Synergy Consulting as financial adviser and the local Amer Al-Amr and Germany’s Fichtner Consulting as legal and technical advisers, respectively.

    SWPC’s obligations under the water transfer agreement will be guaranteed by a credit support agreement entered into by the Finance Ministry on behalf of the Saudi government.

    The project is part of the kingdom’s National Water Strategy 2030, which aims to reduce the water demand-supply gap and ensure desalinated water accounts for 90% of national urban supply to reduce reliance on non-renewable ground sources.

    Related read: SWPC focuses on desalination and sewage plants

    MEED reported in March that the responsibility for procuring several water transmission pipeline projects in Saudi Arabia has been transferred from SWPC to the Water Transmission & Technologies Company (WTTCO), which has recently been renamed Water Transmission Company (WTCO). 

    Earlier this week, WTCO invited companies to express interest in an upcoming tender to develop the Ras Mohaisen-Baha-Mecca independent water transmission system, which will have a contracted transmission capacity of 515,000 cubic metres a day, and extend approximately 300 kilometres.

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    Jennifer Aguinaldo
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