The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Norway’s Equinor strikes M’sia LPG deal with Global Petro Storage

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OSLO: Equinor and Global Petro Storage (GPS) have entered into a long-term agreement to build and operate a terminal and storage facility for liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) in Malaysia, the Norwegian company said on Thursday.

Oil and gas firm Equinor will bring LPG to the terminal at Port Klang, expected to start operating in mid-2021, to sell into Malaysia and other Asian markets including Bangladesh, the Philippine­s, India, Indonesia and Vietnam, it said.

“Malaysia is an attractive market and we believe that we will be a competitiv­e supplier to the wholesaler­s of LPG into the domestic market,” Equinor’s vice president for Products and Liquids Molly Morris said in a statement.

“The terminal and storage are also strategica­lly located for blending and selling to other growing markets in the region,” she added.

The company declined to disclose the value of the deal. Equinor plans to source the LPG from the North Sea, North Africa, the Middle East and Australia. The 135,000 cubic metre-capacity terminal could handle 1.5 million tonnes of LPG per year, a company spokeswoma­n told Reuters.

Annually, Equinor sells about eight million tonnes of LPG, about half of which it produces itself and the rest it procures from others, she said.

Tesla cuts China car prices amid trade war Equinor said its operations already account for around 10 per cent of global waterborne LPG volumes.

As part of the agreement, Equinor will have an option to acquire a share of the new storage facility and terminal, of which it will be the only user. It declined to give details of its potential ownership of the terminal.

The Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA) said in March it expected demand for petrochemi­cal feedstock including LPG to rise over the coming years, driven by demand for products from fertiliser­s to plastics and beauty products. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Ripe coffee fruits are seen at a coffee plantation. The Central Highlands is Vietnam’s largest coffee growing area, where the harvest of the 2018/19 crop year is underway. — Reuters photo
Ripe coffee fruits are seen at a coffee plantation. The Central Highlands is Vietnam’s largest coffee growing area, where the harvest of the 2018/19 crop year is underway. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? A cargo ship approaches the terminal at Port Klang, near Kuala Lumpur. — Reuters photo
A cargo ship approaches the terminal at Port Klang, near Kuala Lumpur. — Reuters photo

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