Khaleej Times

Aramco to build biggest GCC shipyard

- Reem Shamseddin­e

khobar — Saudi Aramco plans to build the Gulf’s largest shipyard through a joint venture with three companies that it announced on Wednesday, a $5.2 billion (Dh19.1 billion) project aimed at helping reduce the economy’s reliance on oil.

Low oil prices have drasticall­y slowed Saudi Arabia’s economy so it is trying to create manufactur­ing jobs and produce goods and services which traditiona­lly it has imported. Its strategy is to use large amounts of government money and the procuremen­t budgets of big state-run enterprise­s, such as national oil firm Aramco, to attract foreign expertise to develop strategic industries.

Aramco said it had signed a shareholde­r agreement with National Shipping of Saudi Arabia (Bahri), a state-controlled firm which ships oil for Aramco, London-listed UAE engineerin­g firm Lamprell and South Korea’s Hyundai Heavy Industries.

The 4.3-square-kilometre (1.7-square-mile) shipyard will be located at Ras Al Khair on Saudi Arabia’s east coast.

“The directors expect that the Maritime Yard will be the largest in the Arabian Gulf in terms of production capacity and scale,” Lamprell said in a statement. Major production is expected to start in 2019 with the yard hitting full capacity by 2022. It will be able to work on four offshore rigs and over 40 vessels a year including three very large crude carriers (VLCCs), Saudi Aramco said.

The government will cover about $3.5 billion of the total cost, with the remainder funded by the joint venture, said Lamprell, which will invest up to $140 million and own 20 percent of the venture.

Aramco will own 50.1 per cent, investing as much as $351 million. Bahri will invest up to $139 million for a 19.9 per cent stake and Hyundai up to $70 million for 10 per cent.

The government’s Saudi Industrial Developmen­t Fund has agreed to provide a debt facility worth about $1 billion.

As part of the deal, Saudi Aramco’s parent firm will buy 20 jack-up drilling rigs as well as offshore support vessels and services from the joint venture, Lamprell said.

Lamprell shares jumped 13 per cent after the announceme­nt.

Bahri will buy at least 75 per cent of its commercial vessel requiremen­ts over 10 years from the venture — a minimum of 52 commercial vessels including a “significan­t number” of VLCCs, Lamprell said.

US oilfield services and equipment provider McDermott Internatio­nal has said it will build a fabricatio­n yard at the Ras Al Khair complex and move some of its operations gradually from Dubai to Ras Al Khair by the mid2020s.

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