Aramco and TotalEnergies award Amiral contracts
24 June 2023
Saudi Aramco and France’s TotalEnergies have formally awarded the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contracts for the $11bn Amiral petrochemicals production facility in Saudi Arabia.
The EPC contracts, which were expected to be awarded in the second quarter, went to:
- Hyundai Engineering & Construction Company (South Korea) — for a mixed feed cracker and utilities, with a nameplate capacity of 1,650 kilotons a year (kt/y) of ethylene and related industrial gases, and utilities, flares and interconnecting systems that support main packages within the facilities
- Maire Tecnimont (Italy) — for two polyethylene units with a nameplate capacity of 500 kt/y each, and the derivative units
- Sinopec Engineering (Group) Saudi Company (China) — for a tank farm and Satorp integration
- Gulf Consolidated Contractors Company (local) — for the transfer pipelines
- Mohammed Ali al-Suwailem Trading & Contracting Company (local) – for industrial support facilities
- Mofarreh Marzouq al Harbi & Partners Company (local) – for site preparation
- Mobarak M. Alsalomi & Partners for Contracting Company (local) – for temporary construction facilities
Integrated with the existing Satorp refinery in Jubail, the new complex aims to house one of the largest mixed-load steam crackers in the Gulf, with a capacity to produce 1,650 kt/y of ethylene and other industrial gases.
This expansion is expected to attract more than $4bn in additional investment in a variety of industrial sectors, including carbon fibres, lubes, drilling fluids, detergents, food additives, automotive parts and tires. It is also expected to create around 7,000 local direct and indirect jobs.
Saudi Aramco and Total Refining & Petrochemical Company (Satorp) – a joint venture in which Aramco owns the majority 62.5 per cent stake and TotalEnergies the other 37.5 per cent share – will be the owner and operator of the Amiral scheme, to be located in Jubail in the kingdom’s Eastern Province.
Satorp reached the final investment decision on Amiral in December last year. Construction work was scheduled to begin during the first quarter of 2023, with commercial operation targeted to start in 2027, Aramco announced at the time.
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The Middle East and North Africa (Mena) region’s midstream and downstream oil, gas and petrochemicals sectors together had one of their best years on record in 2024, with state-owned companies and private players collectively spending close to $38bn on projects.
Saudi Arabia emerged as the biggest regional spender on midstream and downstream projects. To address incremental volumes of gas entering the grid as Saudi Aramco increases its conventional and unconventional gas production, the state enterprise has spent more than $17bn on gas processing and transportation projects this year.
In April 2024, Aramco awarded $7.7bn in engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contracts for a project to expand the Fadhili gas plant in the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia. The project is expected to increase the plant’s processing capacity from 2.5 billion cubic feet a day (cf/d) to up to 4 billion cf/d.
On 30 June, Aramco awarded 15 lump-sum turnkey contracts for the third expansion phase of the Master Gas System (MGS-3), worth $8.8bn. Then, in August, the company awarded contracts for the remaining two packages of the MGS-3 project, which were worth $1bn.
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of pipelines and 17 new gas compression trains.Abu Dhabi capex
The UAE has been the second-largest spender on midstream, downstream and chemicals projects in 2024, led by investments from Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (Adnoc) and Taziz – its 60:40 joint venture with industrial holding entity ADQ.
Adnoc’s biggest capital expenditure (capex) was in the form of a $5.5bn EPC contract that it awarded to a consortium of France’s Technip Energies, Japan-based JGC Corporation and Abu Dhabi-owned NMDC Energy to develop a greenfield liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal complex in Ruwais.
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Adnoc Group subsidiary Adnoc Gas has also advanced a project to expand its sales gas pipeline network across the UAE, which is known as Estidama. The Abu Dhabi-listed company has awarded two EPC packages of the project this year, which together were worth more than $500m.
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Spending to plateau
Having reached a peak in spending, and with EPC contracts awarded for strategic midstream, downstream and chemicals projects in 2024, the Mena region is set to enter a period of more pragmatic project spending in 2025. However, this does not imply that a slump in project capex is likely, and the region could once again equal the level of contract awards made in 2024.
One of the largest projects that may be awarded in 2025 is the main contract for the North Field West LNG project – the third phase of QatarEnergy’s LNG expansion programme.
The North Field West project will have an LNG production capacity of 16 million t/y, which is expected to be achieved through two 8 million t/y LNG processing trains, based on the two earlier phases of QatarEnergy’s LNG expansion programme.
The new project will draw feedstock for LNG production from the western zone of Qatar’s North Field offshore
gas reserve.Taziz is also on course to make progress with the second expansion phase of its derivatives complex, which will more than double the number of chemicals produced at the industrial hub. The expansion’s centrepiece will be a large-scale steam cracker that will supply feedstocks to the several new chemical plants earmarked for third-party investments.
In Saudi Arabia, there has been speculation that Aramco may be revisiting its investment strategy and execution approach for its strategic liquids-to-chemicals programme.
The aim of the programme is to derive greater economic value from every barrel of crude produced in the kingdom by converting 4 million barrels a day (b/d) of Aramco’s oil production into high-value petrochemicals and chemicals feedstocks by 2030.
Aramco has divided its liquids-to-chemicals programme into four main projects. It took a major step forward
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While day-to-day the advancement might appear sluggish, Amin Nasser, Aramco’s president and CEO, said earlier in 2024 that the Saudi energy giant is on track to achieve its crude oil-to-chemicals conversion goal by 2030.
“We are on track to achieve our target of 4 million b/d liquids-to-chemicals [conversion capacity] by 2030,” he said.
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