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ADIPEC 2018

Adnoc awards Dh5.1bn oilfield expansion deal

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Abu Dhabi National Oil Company awarded Tecnicas Reunidas of Spain a Dh5.1 billion contract to expand Bu Hasa, the emirate’s largest onshore field as part of plans to boost output to 5 million barrels per day by 2030.

The expansion will raise its crude output capacity from the field by 18 per cent to 650,000 bpd by 2020, the company said yesterday.

As per the terms of the engineerin­g, procuremen­t and constructi­on contract, the Spanish company will execute the project within 39 months for operator Adnoc Onshore, a subsidiary of the state producer.

“This significan­t investment in the Bu Hasa field will enable production capacity to be increased and generate additional value,” said Dr Sultan Al Jaber, group chief executive at Adnoc.

“We are on track to meet our production capacity target of 3.5 million bpd by the end of this year – to 4 million bpd by the end of 2020.”

The UAE accounts for 4.2 per cent of global production of crude, most of it from fields owned and operated by Adnoc.

Abu Dhabi’s Supreme Petroleum Council last week announced a spending package of Dh486bn, which would unlock the emirate’s sour gas caps and raise production capacity of crude to 5 million bpd by 2030 from about 3 million bpd at present. Adnoc announced earlier this month the discovery of 1 billion barrels of oil, 1 per cent increase of existing reserves.

The scope of work on the project for Tecnicas includes the revamp and expansion of facilities, new pipeline networks, production hubs and the conversion of three trains at a central de-gassing station.

The project would also include streamlini­ng of water handling, a second gas lift recovery phase and improvemen­t of overall production efficiency besides reduction of inactive wells, Adnoc said.

The contract is expected to create 60 per cent in-country value, equivalent to the generation of Dh3bn to the UAE economy, according to Adnoc upstream director Abdulmunim Al Kindy.

The Bu Hasa field, located 200 kilometres south of Abu Dhabi, is one of Adnoc’s oldest fields, where production began in 1965.

It is operated by Adnoc Onshore, in which the state-owned company has a 60 per cent stake. Other partners include BP with 10 per cent, Total with 10 per cent, CNPC of China with 8 per cent, Jodco of Japan with 5 per cent, CEFC of China with 4 per cent, and GS Energy with 3 per cent. The agreement was signed during the four-day Abu Dhabi Internatio­nal Petroleum Exhibition and Conference taking place this week.

The award is one several agreements between Adnoc and a host of companies ranging from Saudi Aramco, the world’s biggest oil-producing company, to France’s Total.

Adnoc is undertakin­g a transforma­tion programme that aims to boost output of oil and gas, sell stakes in units in initial public offerings, partner with internatio­nal oil companies on various projects and extract more value from its output.

In May it unveiled a Dh165bn plan to develop its downstream strategy by doubling refining and tripling petrochemi­cal capacities at its industrial city of Ruwais with the help of foreign partners.

The downstream plans include the addition of a new 600,000 bpd refinery that will boost its total capacity to process crude and condensate to 1.5 million bpd, making it the largest such facility in the world.

This investment in the Bu Hasa field will enable production capacity to be increased and generate additional value DR SULTAN AL JABER Adnoc Group CEO

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 ?? Adnoc ?? Arthur Crossley, Tecnicas Reunidas chief executive for upstream, left, signs the EPC agreement with Adnoc Onshore chief executive Yasser Al Mazrouei
Adnoc Arthur Crossley, Tecnicas Reunidas chief executive for upstream, left, signs the EPC agreement with Adnoc Onshore chief executive Yasser Al Mazrouei

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