The National - News

Saudi Aramco in early talks to buy Sabic stake

- SARAH TOWNSEND

Saudi Aramco, the world’s biggest oil producer, said on Thursday it is in early-stage discussion­s to acquire a stake in Saudi Basic Industries Corporatio­n, the Middle East’s biggest chemicals firm.

“Saudi Aramco confirms it is engaged in very early-stage discussion­s with [sovereign wealth fund] the Public Investment Fund regarding acquiring a strategic interest in Sabic by way of a private transactio­n,” the kingdom’s state oil giant said.

The discussion­s are preliminar­y and there is no certainty that any such transactio­n will take place, it added. Saudi Aramco has “no plans to acquire any publicly held shares of Sabic”, which is listed on the Tadawul stock exchange in Riyadh and 70 per cent owned by PIF.

Aramco said a potential acquisitio­n would be consistent with the company’s strategy of rebalancin­g its portfolio by moving further into downstream sectors of oil and gas, in particular, petrochemi­cals, according to a statement. The company has been evaluating several acquisitio­n opportunit­ies in this space, both locally and globally.

Aramco plans to boost its refining capacity to between 8 million and 10 million barrels per day, from about 5 million bpd now, and double its petrochemi­cals production by 2030, Abdulaziz Al Judaimi, the firm’s senior vice president for downstream told Reuters last month.

Aramco and Sabic signed an agreement in November to build a $20 billion oil-to-chemicals facility on the Red Sea Coast of Saudi Arabia – the world’s largest such refinery under the plans.

The chemicals complex will be integrated with the existing refinery in the industrial city of Yanbu and is targeted for completion in 2025. It is set to process 400,000 barrels per day of oil into around 9 million tonnes of chemicals and base oils annually.

“The project will help achieve the respective growth ambitions of Sabic and Saudi Aramco and further establish the kingdom as one of the pioneers in the petchem industry,” Sabic’s vice-chairman and chief executive Yousef Al Benyan said at the time.

In April, the partners said they had awarded US engineerin­g firm KBR a project management contract to develop the scheme.

Aramco has announced other plans to boost profitabil­ity from the sale of products besides crude. Earlier in April, it signed an agreement to develop a $44bn integrated refining and petrochemi­cals complex in western India, its first foray in the South Asian consuming market.

The scheme is planned to have refining and chemical capacities for 1.2 million barrels of crude and 18 million tonnes of products annually.

Aramco said on Thursday it would make further announceme­nts on the Sabic discussion­s, if appropriat­e, “in compliance with applicable regulation­s”.

 ?? Getty ?? An Aramco oil refinery in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia
Getty An Aramco oil refinery in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia

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