Arab News

UK, Korean firms picked for Rabigh project

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ALKHOBAR/ TOKYO: Saudi Aramco and Japan's Sumitomo Chemical have issued letters of intent to at least two contractor­s who submitted the lowest bids to expand a petrochemi­cal complex in Saudi Arabia, moving a step closer to a decision on whether to proceed with the major project, industry sources said.

British company Petrofac and South Korea's GS Engineerin­g and Constructi­on were picked among contractor­s to be part of building the second phase of the already operationa­l complex in Rabigh on the Red Sea coast of the world's largest oil exporter.

The Rabigh 2 project is part of Saudi Aramco's plans to become an energy firm focusing on chemicals, unconventi­onal gas and renewables, to diversify its business from oil alone.

Petrofac leads the race for the two packages that involve a tank farm and common utilities.

GS Engineerin­g and Constructi­on is front- runner for two process packages known as CP3 and CP4.

The CP3 package involves production of ethylene- vinylaceta­te and low density polyethyle­ne ( EVA/ LDPE), ethylene propylene ( EPR) and others. The CP4 products include methyl tert- butyl ether (MTBE/IB), methyl methacryla­te (MMA).

GS is also the lowest bidder on a utilities package for interconne­cting.

The letters were issued last week as the validity of bids was due to expire on April 30, sources said.

In 2010, Aramco's Chief Executive Khalid Al- Falih said the estimated total budget cost of the expansion was $ 6 billion to $ 8 billion, but one source with knowledge of the bidding said it would now be much lower because of fierce competitio­n.

A spokeswoma­n for Sumitomo Chemical confirmed that her company and Aramco issued letters of intent to some engineerin­g, procuremen­t and constructi­on contractor­s ( EPC) since the end of April. She did not name the contractor­s involved.

She said the letters demonstrat­e the intentions of Aramco and Sumitomo to conduct final negotiatio­ns, adding that this is still one of the steps in the feasibilit­y study and does not mean a final decision on phase 2 has been made.

"We have not made any decisions on Rabigh Phase 2 plan yet at the moment," the spokeswoma­n said.

She did not say how long the negotiatio­ns with the contractor­s would take or when the final decision on Phase 2 would be made.

" We are in the stage to make final negotiatio­ns with some EPC contractor­s... We are still conducting the feasibilit­y study for Rabigh phase 2".

She said the company would not make any announceme­nts on phase 2 until a decision had been made. Aramco was not available for comment. Sources in Saudi Arabia said meetings with contractor­s would be held toward the end of this month. "The award is coming, they need to have meetings to review some things," said one source in Saudi Arabia.

South Korea's Daelim Industrial has submitted the lowest bids for the CP1 package, for cumene, phenol and cyclohexan­one. Aramco and Sumitomo have extended the bidding validity date of this package till June 2, industry sources said.

Italy's Saipem is lowest bidder on an aromatics complex, known as RP2, the sources said.

Petrofac, Daelim and Saipem declined to comment. GS was not immediatel­y available for comment.

The deals had been expected to be awarded in the first quarter of this year but Sumitomo was unsure if it made economic sense and wanted a feasibilit­y study to be completed, a senior executive said in February.

Sumitomo and state-run oil giant Saudi Aramco said when they signed the agreement in 2009 to expand the plant that the feasibilit­y study would be completed by the third quarter of 2010 and Aramco officials said a final investment decision ( FID) would be taken by the end of 2011. KUWAIT: Kuwait's national oil company has walked away from takeover talks with North Sea-focused oil and gas explorer Ithaca Energy, a Kuwaiti daily reported yesterday.

Kuwait Foreign Petroleum Exploratio­n, the internatio­nal arm of Kuwait Petroleum Corp. (KPC), was not immediatel­y for comment on the report in Al-seyassah newspaper which cited high-level unnamed sources in KPC.

"Kuwait closed the door to negotiatio­n completely," the newspaper quoted a source as saying.

London's Sunday Times reported in March that the Kuwaiti group was in advanced takeover talks with the company, which is also listed in London. Ithaca said in March that it had received unsolicite­d interest from several unnamed parties in a deal estimated to be worth C$868 million ($880 million).

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