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ExxonMobil latest foreign major to invest in China

It will build petrochemi­cal complex and invest in LNG terminal

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BEIJING: ExxonMobil Corp said it has signed a preliminar­y deal to build a petrochemi­cal complex and invest in a liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal in China, the latest major foreign investment in the world’s top chemicals market.

The agreement worth billions of dollars with the southern Guangdong provincial government included a 1.2 million-tonne-peryear ethylene plant, two polyethyle­ne production lines and two polypropyl­ene lines in the coastal city of Huizhou, it said.

Exxon also agreed to participat­e in a provincial project to build an LNG terminal in Huizhou and to supply LNG for it, it said. No details about the capacity of the project or timeline were given.

China is allowing greater access by global majors and local independen­ts to its massive chemicals market to feed plastics, coatings and adhesives to the fast-growing consumer electronic­s and automotive sectors.

Exxon would be one of only a few internatio­nal oil majors to invest in LNG infrastruc­ture in China as the country tries to shore up supplies amid a switch to gas-fired boilers by factories and households as part of the gov- ernment’s battle against smog.

The news comes after German chemical giant BASF announced plans in July to invest US$10bil to build China’s first wholly foreign-owned chemicals complex, also in Guangdong.

The project includes a steam cracker producing one million tonnes a year of ethylene.

Details of the ownership structure of Exxon’s chemical plant and LNG investment were not released. Still, the deal could be seen as a goodwill gesture by China amid a deepening trade war between the US and China as the world’s top two economies have traded tit-for-tat punitive tariffs that target US$50bil of each other’s goods.

Washington was holding hearings this week on another round of proposed duties on US$200bil worth of Chinese imports that appear likely to take effect in late September or early October.

The agreement comes a day before a planned meeting in Beijing between Chinese Premier Li Keqiang and Exxon chairman and chief executive Darren Woods.

The preliminar­y deal was signed with the local government­s of Guangdong province and Huizhou as well as state power company, Guangdong Yuedian Group, according to the Guangzhou Daily.

While the petrochemi­cal deal was largely expected following a joint study signed late last year, the push on LNG was a surprise and would mark a second investment in China’s gas infrastruc­ture by an internatio­nal oil company.

“It marks a salient step for Exxon in their pursuit of becoming an LNG portfolio player,” said Saul Kavonic, director for Asia-Pacific markets and head of energy research at Credit Suisse in Australia.

An investment in the import facility and downstream gas marketing would help it boost sales and margins compared with just selling the fuel at the import terminal gate, Kavonic added.

BP is so far the only global major with a stake in a gas receiving terminal in China, a joint venture with state-owned CNOOC which began operations 12 years ago.

Exxon said it is also looking at other chemicals manufactur­ing projects in Asia to help meet expected demand growth in the region. — Reuters

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