Gulf News

Aramco to invest $7b in petrochemi­cal facility in South Korea

Saudi oil giant to build petrochemi­cal steam crackers

- BY MANOJ NAIR Business Editor

The Saudi Aramco is committing its biggest investment outlay in South Korea, to build what would be one of the world’s largest ‘refinery-integrated petrochemi­cal steam crackers’. This will be done through the Aramco affiliate S-OIL and the size of the investment­s would be $7 billion (Dh25 billion).

Located at S-Oil’s existing site in Ulsan, the new plant could have a capacity for up to 3.2 million tonnes of petrochemi­cals annually and will include a facility to produce high-value polymers. The project is expected to start in 2023 and be completed by 2026.

The project represents the first large-scale deployment of Aramco’s thermal crude-tochemical­s technology.

Aramco is the major shareholde­r in S-OIL, with more than 63 per cent of the company’s shares through its Aramco Overseas Company B.V. subsidiary.

First phase

It follows an earlier $4 billion investment into the first phase of the petrochemi­cal expansion, which was completed in 2018. “The global petrochemi­cal landscape is rapidly evolving with demand growth anticipate­d to accelerate, driven in part by rising consumptio­n from Asia’s emerging economies,” said Amin H. Nasser, Aramco President and CEO. “That is why S-Oil’s Shaheen is well positioned to meet rising demand for the materials that will be required across the region’s key industries.

The steam cracker unit is expected to process by-products from crude processing, including naphtha and off-gas, to produce ethylene. This is a ‘building block’ petrochemi­cal used for making everyday items. The plant is also expected to produce propylene, butadiene and other basic chemicals.

“Shaheen aspires to be a gamechange­r not only for S-OIL in South Korea, but also for our global chemicals business, allowing us to process a greater range of feedstocks in a more efficient and less energy-intensive way,” said Mohammad Y. Al Qahtani, Aramco’s Senior Vice-President of Downstream.

“On project completion, SOIL chemical yield based on volume could almost double to 25 per cent, complement­ing Aramco’s strategy to expand its liquids-to-chemicals capacity to up to 4 million barrels per day.”

 ?? Bloomberg ?? ■ An oil processing facility at Saudi Aramco’s Shaybah oil field in the Rub’ Al-Khali desert, in Shaybah, Saudi Arabia.
Bloomberg ■ An oil processing facility at Saudi Aramco’s Shaybah oil field in the Rub’ Al-Khali desert, in Shaybah, Saudi Arabia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates