Business Standard

Aramco to expand largest US refinery

- Houston, 8 April

Saudi Aramco took the first steps to integratin­g a petrochemi­cals business into the United States’ biggest oil refinery, which is operated by its subsidiary Motiva Enterprise­s.

Aramco’s Chief Executive Amin Nasser signed memoranda of understand­ing (MoUs) worth $8 billion-$10 billion with Honeywell UOP and Technip FMC to study petrochemi­cal production technology for use in a chemical plant the company is considerin­g building at the

Port Arthur refinery.

Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who was winding up a twoweek visit to the United States, was present at the signing in Houston, Texas, on Saturday along with Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih and US Energy Secretary Rick Perry.

"These agreements signal our plans for expansion into petrochemi­cals," Motiva's Chief Executive Brian Coffman said.

Aramco, which wants to develop its downstream business as the government prepares to sell up to 5 percent of the world's largest oil firm in an initial public offering (IPO) this year, wants to use oil as a major petrochemi­cals feedstock.

Coffman also said Motiva was evaluating boosting the 603,000 barrel-per-day (bpd) Port Arthur refinery's capacity to 1 million or 1.5 million bpd, which would make it the largest in the world.

The aromatics unit for which Honeywell UOP's technology is being considered under one of the MoUs, would convert benzene and paraxylene, byproducts of gasoline production, into 2 million tons annually of feedstocks for chemicals and plastics.

The other MoU would allow Aramco to use Technip FMC's mixed-feed ethylene production technologi­es in the United States. The technology would produce 2 million tons a year of ethylene, which is used to make plastics, Motiva said.

The final investment decision on setting up a multi-billion-dollar petrochemi­cal plant at Port Arthur is not expected until 2019, and is “dependent on strong economics, competitiv­e incentives, and regulatory support,” Aramco said in a statement. Coffman did not provide a timeline for the possible expansion of the Port Arthur refinery’s crude oil processing capacity.

Aramco’s CEO Amin Nasser signed MoUs worth $8 billion-$10 billion with Honeywell UOP and Technip FMC

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