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Aramco plans to invest US $500 bil in global expansion

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DHAHRAN: Saudi Aramco aims to become a global refiner and chemical maker, seeking to profit from parts of the oil industry where demand is growing the fastest while also underpinni­ng the kingdom’s economic diversific­ation.

The world’s biggest oil exporter is earmarking US $500bil to invest over the next 10 years, including US $160bil for natural gas developmen­ts and US$100bil for chemicals projects, Aramco chief executive officer Amin Nasser said in an interview in Saudi Arabia. The spending would come on top of the company’s planned purchase of a majority stake in Sabic, the Middle East’s largest chemical business, a deal that could be valued at US $70bil

“We need a major acquisitio­n for us to be in different markets quickly,” Nasser said. Sabic has a presence in more than 50 countries, and “it makes sense” for Aramco to acquire a company of its size, he said.

Aramco, which is also planning what would be the world’s largest share sale, plays a central role in efforts to transform the Saudi economy. Crown Prince Mohammed Salman is leading a strategy to build new industries and diversify the kingdom away from a decades-long reliance on sales of oil. A major part of the transforma­tion is Aramco’s plan to buy 70% of Saudi Basic Industries Corp, as Sabic is officially known, from the sovereign Public Investment Fund (PIF).

Aramco expects to conclude negotiatio­ns with the PIF soon, and “all financial instrument­s are on the table” for funding it, Nasser said.

Aramco’s interest in Sabic rests partly on projection­s that demand for petrochemi­cals will account for a rising share of global crude output. Petrochemi­cal use will increase faster than for any other segment of the oil industry, according to the Internatio­nal Energy Agency.

The planned Sabic deal necessitat­ed a delay, however, in Aramco’s initial public offering (IPO) until 2020 or 2021, Prince Mohammed said in an interview in October.

“We are committed for the IPO,” Nasser said. “It is about timing.”

Aramco, known formally as Saudi Arabian Oil Co, wants to convert 3 million barrels of crude a day – about 30% of its daily output – into chemicals. It also aims to more than double its refining capacity by the middle of the next decade.

“You can absorb market volatility when you are balanced between upstream and downstream,” Nasser said. “This is where our strategy is going.”

A 32% plunge in oil prices since Oct 3 may complicate the country’s financial plans.

Demand for oil is healthy, he said. “Next year it will be also the same in terms of additional demand.”

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