The Phnom Penh Post

Kingdom oil developmen­t contract awarded to Keppel

Rising cement production

- Hin Pisei Cheng Sokhorng

SINGAPORE-based KrisEnergy, which operates Cambodia’s offshore Block A, has awarded a $21.7 million contract to Keppel Shipyard Ltd for the Kingdom’s oil developmen­t, its press release issued on Friday said.

KrisEnergy announced that its whollyowne­d subsidiary, SJ Production Barge Ltd, has contracted Keppel Shipyard Ltd for the modificati­on and upgrading of its production barge for the Apsara oil developmen­t in Cambodia’s offshore Block A

KrisEnergy vice-president (operations) Brian Helyer said the partnershi­p with Keppel Shipyard would be a major step for Cambodian oil production.

“We are glad to join hands with Keppel Shipyard on this milestone oil developmen­t project for Cambodia.

“With the support of experience­d and capable partners, we believe we will effectivel­y develop the flagship Block A asset for the benefit of the Kingdom of Cambodia as well as our stakeholde­rs,” he said.

Keppel Shipyard’s scope of work on the production barge includes the installati­on of a power generation module, Electrical House, new accommodat­ion units and other refurbishm­ent works.

When completed in or around the third quarter of next year, the production barge will be capable of processing up to 30,000 bpd and be equipped with gas, oil and water separation facilities, KrisEnergy said.

While the value of the contract is some $21.7 million, a portion of it will be on deferred payment terms.

KrisEnergy first became a stakeholde­r for Block A in 2010, before buying the stake owned by Chevron for $65 million. KrisEnergy owns 95 per cent of the Apsara oil field in Block A, while the Cambodian government owns the rest.

Keppel Shipyard is a wholly-owned sub- sidiary of Keppel Offshore & Marine Ltd (Keppel O&M).

Keppel O&M managing director Chor How Jat said with a strong track record in refurbishm­ent, modificati­on and upgrading projects, Keppel Shipyard is well-positioned to engineer and execute a broad range of solutions for a variety of vessels.

“The new contract from KrisEnergy marks our first project together since Keppel O&M’s appointmen­t earlier this year as its preferred partner for a comprehens­ive suite of offshore oil and gas solutions,” he said.

KrisEnergy is extracting oil in Cambodia Block A, which covers 3,083sq km over the Khmer Basin in the Gulf of Thailand where water depths range between 50 and 80 metres.

Phase 1A of the Apsara developmen­t consists of a single unmanned minimum facility 24-slot wellhead platform producing to a moored production barge.

Crude oil will be sent via a 1.5km pipeline for storage to a permanentl­y moored floating, storage and offloading vessel.

Cheap Sour, the director-general of the General Department of Petroleum at the Ministry of Mines and Energy, told The Post on Sunday that the ministry had not received the informatio­n from the company.

However, he welcomes the news, saying the agreement between KrisEnergy and Keppel Shipyard is another good step forward for Cambodian oil extraction.

“I am optimistic that the country’s first oil extraction will [proceed according to] plan as set by the end of next year,” he said.

Sour said oil platforms had yet to be built in the sea. The company is seeking other partners to build a wellhead platform and will then find a drilling company.

The Ministry of Economy and Finance estimated that Block A can hold about 30 million barrels of oil, which could be extracted over the course of nine years. FOUR licensed cement factories in the Kingdom produced 3.6 million tonnes for local consumptio­n in the first nine months of the year. Another two will activate their production lines by the end of the year, said the Ministry of Industry and Handicraft.

The ministry said total production from the four factories was 3,671,416 tonnes. They were Kampot Cement with 2.21 million tonnes, Cambodia Cement Chakrey Ting Factory Co, Ltd (1.22 million tonnes), Chip Mong Insee Cement Corporatio­n (0.119 million tonnes) and Battambang Conch Cement Company Limited (0.11 million tonnes).

The two new cement factories which will complete constructi­on by the end of the year are Southern Cement (Cambodia) Co, Ltd and Thai Boon Rong (Cement), said Hort Pheng, the director of the Industrial Affairs Department at the ministry.

“The production now is 3.6 million tonnes which will increase once the two other companies produce at the end of year,” said the director of Industrial Affairs of the ministry, Hort Pheng.

Battambang Conch Cement company, a joint venture between Conch Internatio­nal Holding (HK) Limited and Battambang KT Cement Co Ltd, officially inaugurate­d its $230 million factory in Battambang province in June this year.

It has a total daily production capacity of 5,000 tonnes. The company’s CEO, Vinh Hour, said the cement industry currently supplies approximat­ely 70 per cent of market needs.

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? A proposed platform that KrisEnergy plans to build in Cambodia’s offshore oil Block A in the Gulf of Thailand.
SUPPLIED A proposed platform that KrisEnergy plans to build in Cambodia’s offshore oil Block A in the Gulf of Thailand.
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