Oman Daily Observer

Oman LNG posts revenues of $1.925 bn in 2016

- CONRAD PRABHU MUSCAT, APR 2

Oman LNG, which operates a threetrain natural gas liquefacti­on plant at Qalhat on the Sultanate’s South Al Sharqiya coast, posted revenues of $1.925 billion in 2016, down from $2.612 billion a year earlier, reflecting a protracted global downturn weighing down internatio­nal gas markets. Net income after tax (NIAT) slumped to $566 million, down from $965 million in 2015, the majority Omani government-owned company said in its 2016 Annual Report.

The decline, both in gross revenue and NIAT, follows a pattern that began in 2014 when internatio­nal oil prices began a steep downward spiral. From a high of $4.491 billion achieved in 2013 just before the crisis erupted, revenues ticked down to $4.075 billion a year later, slumping to $2.612 billion in 2015 before ending at $1.925 billion last year.

Net income after tax (NIAT) also dropped year on year from a peak of $2.018 billion in 2013 to $1.768 billion a year later, tumbling to $965 million in 2015 before declining to $566 million last year. Dr Mohammed Rumhy, Minister al bin of Hamad Oil and Gas who is also Chairman of the Board of Directors of Oman LNG, commented: “Oman LNG ended 2016 at an intersecti­on of national and internatio­nal occurrence­s that impact diverse aspects of our operation. In the circumstan­ces, the export revenue loss was somewhat offset by price stabilizat­ion across global markets in the latter half of 2016 following the harsh downturn of the previous two years.”

“An additional contributi­on to the company’s balance sheet,” he further stated in the Chairman’s Message, came from efficienci­es obtained across the board by a marriage of intelligen­t management and productivi­tyenhancin­g new technologi­es.”

Oman LNG Chief Executive Officer Harib al Kitani noted that the global LNG market is expected to remain constraine­d for some time. “Although gas prices will not see the highs of 2014 for a long time to come, it is possible, to go by a consensus of leading forecasts, that we may have entered a steady, if modest, rising price trajectory into the next decade. Against this backdrop, revenues for 2016, though unspectacu­lar, need not impede our long-term aspiration­s at Oman LNG,” he noted.

LNG production totaled around 8.5 million tons per annum (mtpa) last year, versus an installed capacity of 10.4 mtpa across all three trains.

A total of 133 cargoes (91 from Oman LNG and 42 from Qalhat LNG) were despatched from Qalhat during the year.

They included two spot cargoes to regional destinatio­ns Kuwait and Jordan for the first time. Production of natural gas liquids (NGLs), a byproduct of LNG production, totaled 254,029 tonnes last year.

This output was exported in a total of 39 cargoes.

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