The National - News

EGYPT TO SET UP A $10bn PETCHEMS FACILITY

▶ Carbon Holdings will build the project for the Suez Canal Authority

- DEENA KAMEL

Egypt’s Carbon Holdings signed a contract with the Suez Canal Authority yesterday to build the $10.9 billion (Dh40.04bn) Tahrir petrochemi­cals project, producing raw materials needed by the country’s industrial sector.

The five million-square metre project, to be located at Suez Canal Economic Zone in Ain Sokhna, is set to become the biggest petchems complex in the Middle East, according to the Egyptian Cabinet. It is expected to create 48,000 jobs.

“The project is funded by internatio­nal institutio­ns to comply with the petrochemi­cals strategy and represents an added value to the Egyptian industrial sector,” the cabinet said in a statement.

Egypt is embarking on new mega-projects to attract investors. The 460-sq km economic zone around the Suez Canal, a major source of foreign currency, is created to transform Egypt into a regional logistics hub.

Sourcing funding for the long-delayed Tahrir project is a positive step, Robin Mills, chief executive of Qamar Energy in Dubai, told The National.

“They’ve finally got the financing together, which will have a positive impact for investment­s,” Mr Mills said. “The project will boost Egypt’s petrochemi­cals exports and, when available locally, make it cheaper than when it was imported.”

Constructi­on on the project must begin quickly as Egypt requires the products of the petchems facility, said Mohab Memesh, chief executive of the Suez Canal Authority.

While economic growth has slowed in the north African import-dependent country since the 2011 uprising drove away tourists and foreign investors, recent reforms tied to a $12bn IMF loan are aimed at reviving growth alongside major projects such as Tahir.

“Structural reforms are critical for the success of the programme,” the IMF managing director Christine Lagarde said at the weekend after the fund agreed to release the latest tranche of the loan.

“The aim is to address deep-seated structural impediment­s to growth and job creation, and create an enabling environmen­t for private sector developmen­t,” she said.

The Tahrir project will take around three and a half years to build and will comprise 11 plants, said Basil El Baz, chief executive of Carbon Holdings.

The project will help Egypt to double its exports within one year of coming online, Reuters reported, citing Mr El Baz. Tahrir will have to export all its production in the first year but as output increases, local manufactur­ers will be encouraged to expand and foreign ones will consider setting up next to the Suez Canal.

Exporting petchems from Egypt to markets such as Europe and Asia will be highly competitiv­e, Mr Mills said.

“Europe is already a declining market and Asia is a big market that everyone is targeting but Egypt will be competing with Sabic and Adnoc, so it’s a competitiv­e market,” he said. “The challenge is to find a market that it is competitiv­e in.”

When completed, the scheme will be Egypt’s first naphtha cracker, producing various petrochemi­cals used in making different industrial and consumer products.

The Cairo-based Carbon Holdings, establishe­d in 2008, already has a polypropyl­ene plant and a mining grade ammonium nitrate plant.

The company is planning to raise up to $250 million from a dual listing on the Egyptian and the London stock exchange by the end of the first half of 2019, according to a report by Al Masry Al Youm newspaper.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates