The National - News

Adnoc and Cepsa award Ruwais engineerin­g to Spain’s Tecnicas

- JENNIFER GNANA

Abu Dhabi National Oil Company and Mubadala Investment Company-owned Cepsa have awarded engineerin­g company Tecnicas Reunidas a contract to study the developmen­t of a planned petrochemi­cals project in Ruwais.

The Spanish contractor will execute front-end engineerin­g and design on the project to produce linear alkyl benzene (LAB), a chemical compound that is used in industrial detergents, Adnoc said yesterday.

The developmen­t, the first to be advanced as part of the Dh165 billion downstream investment strategy Adnoc announced in May, will produce 225,000 metric tonnes annually of normal paraffin and 150,000 metric tonnes of LAB.

In an interview with The National in November, Cepsa chief executive Pedro Miro said the company valued the project between $575m and $625m.

The LAB plant in Abu Dhabi will be located in a derivative­s park, which Adnoc in its downstream strategy said would act as a manufactur­ing hub on the back of products from the expanding refining and chemicals facilities in Ruwais.

“The park will act as a prime catalyst for the next stage of Adnoc’s petrochemi­cal transforma­tion by inviting partners to invest and produce new products and solutions from the growing range of feedstocks that are available in Ruwais,” said Abdulla Al Messabi, business unit manager at Adnoc Refining & Petrochemi­cals.

Spanish Energy company Cepsa, which held back its initial public offering at domestic exchanges, operates LAB plants in Spain, Canada, and Brazil.

Cepsa, which is fully owned by Mubadala, plans to spend $500m over the next three years to develop its LAB business globally.

Apart from its investment in Abu Dhabi, the company is in the process of upgrading some existing plants, on which it would spend the remainder of its capital expenditur­e.

“Our estimation for the LAB plant here is $575 and $625m, and since it’s a 50:50 joint venture, it will be $300m each way.

“We have a little bit less than $100m in Spain, $50m in Brazil and another $25m to $30m in Canada,” Mr Miro said.

“All of this gives us [a capex] of $500m for [the LAB business] in the next two and half to three years, keeping in mind we have a partner in Brazil, Petrobras, which is sharing 27 per cent and we have 73 per cent, so the total capex for LAB plants Cepsa is involved in is higher,” he added.

Meanwhile, Borouge, the UAE’s largest chemicals company, said yesterday it had begun constructi­on of a fifth polypropyl­ene unit at its third plant located within the Ruwais facility.

The contractor will execute front-end engineerin­g and design on the project to produce LAB

The project is set to boost polypropyl­ene capacity by more than 25 per cent to 2.24 million tonnes per year.

In July, the chemicals company awarded Italy’s Marie Tecnimont the contract to build the polypropyl­ene plant.

Polypropyl­ene is a key petchems product that is a basic in the plastics industry and has increasing demand from consumer markets in Asia, notably India and China.

The new unit, known as PP5, is set to have a production capacity of 480,000 tonnes per year and will come on-stream in the third quarter of 2021.

With the addition of the latest unit, Borouge’s total production of polymers will increase by almost 11 per cent to reach 5 million tonnes per year.

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