Arab Times

Aramco signs contracts to build $50 bn riyal gas project

Saudi co says still studying clean fuels, Jizan refinery in 2018

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FADHILI, Saudi Arabia, July 20, (RTRS): State oil giant Saudi Aramco signed four engineerin­g contracts to build its Fadhili gas processing project, the company said on Wednesday.

The project is worth more than 50 billion riyals ($13.3 billion) and, when completed in 2019, will be the first programme in the kingdom to treat gas from both onshore and offshore fields.

The company signed a contract with Saudi Electricit­y Co and France’s Engie to construct the Fadhili plant, which will produce power and steam. A contract for work on offshore facilities went to India’s Larsen & Toubro .

Two other contracts, awarded to local companies, are for downstream facilities and a residentia­l camp. Other contracts for the project were signed late last year.

“Fadhili underscore­s Saudi Aramco’s resolute focus on longterm strategies, despite the weak market conditions,” said Aramco’s Chief Executive Amin Nasser.

The Fadhili project aims to boost Saudi gas production capacity to more than 17 billion standard cubic feet per day by 2020, a top energy priority in Saudi Arabia outlined in the kingdom’s National Transforma­tion Plan.

Many industrial firms have complained about a gas shortage crimping expansion plans. The kingdom is also trying to use more gas for power generation and water desalinati­on instead of burning crude oil, which it wants to export.

“Using low btu (British thermal unit) gas, where technicall­y viable, as a substitute for convention­al gas (methane) will extend the availabili­ty of gas supplies within the kingdom during periods of peak gas demand,” Sadad al-Husseini, a former senior executive at Aramco, said of the project.

The plan for Fadhili includes a 1,500-megawatt power plant, which will use 400 MW of electricit­y to power the gas project and send the remaining 1,100 MW to the domestic grid.

Engie has signed an agreement which will ensure the power produced by the plant will be bought for 20 years.

Meanwhile, Saudi Aramco’s planned Jizan refinery will come online in 2018, while the firm is still studying plans for a clean fuels project, chief executive Amin Nasser said at a company event on Wednesday.

The Jizan refinery, to be located in the southwest of the kingdom, is slated to process 400,000 barrels per day when fully operationa­l.

Sources told Reuters in May that the deadline for contractor­s to bid to build the clean fuels project at Aramco’s biggest oil refinery in Ras Tanura had been delayed until July 17.

The proposed $2 billion scheme to remove sulphur from refined products would be part of a drive to meet stricter environmen­tal standards.

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