The National - News

Aramco steps up negotiatio­ns with China’s Rongsheng for stake sale in Jubail refinery

Chinese private refiner could acquire 50% as Saudi oil giant seeks more investment in downstream sector

- DEEPTHI NAIR

Saudi Aramco, the world’s largest oil-producing company, is exploring the formation of a joint venture in the Saudi Aramco Jubail Refinery Company with Chinese partner Rongsheng Petrochemi­cal as it seeks to attract new investment to the downstream sector.

The two companies are also working towards significan­t investment­s in the Saudi and Chinese petrochemi­cal sectors, Aramco said.

The company recently signed a co-operation framework agreement that envisions Rongsheng potentiall­y acquiring a 50 per cent stake in the refinery, according to the world’s fourth-most valuable firm in terms of market capitalisa­tion after American tech giants Apple, Microsoft and Nvidia.

Saudi Aramco acquired Royal Dutch Shell’s 50 per cent stake in the refinery, also called Sasref, for $631 million in 2019.

The refinery, based in Jubail Industrial City in Saudi Arabia, has a production capacity of 305,000 barrels per day.

The agreement also lays the groundwork for the developmen­t of a liquids-to-chemicals expansion project at the refinery.

Rongsheng is also negotiatin­g a reciprocal deal with Aramco, involving the sale of up to a 50 per cent stake in its unit, Ningbo Zhongjin Petrochemi­cal Co (ZJPC) and participat­ion in its expansion project, according to the Saudi company.

“These discussion­s highlight our ambition to advance our liquids-to-chemicals strategy with strategic partner Rongsheng, both in Saudi Arabia and China,” Mohammed Al

Qahtani, Aramco downstream president, said.

“In building on our existing relationsh­ip, we aim to advance our expansion in a key geography and attract new investment to the Saudi downstream sector.”

If the Jubail refinery stake acquisitio­n happens, it would be the first investment by a private Chinese company in a significan­t Saudi refining asset, according to Reuters.

State refining giant Sinopec is so far the only Chinese company that owns a refinery stake in Saudi Arabia.

Aramco aims to become a global leader in chemicals and the world’s largest integrated energy firm, with plans to expand its refining operations and petrochemi­cal output.

In July 2023, Aramco acquired a 10 per cent interest in Shenzhen-listed Rongsheng through its Netherland­s-based subsidiary Aramco Overseas Company for $3.4 billion.

Under the terms of the deal, Aramco agreed to supply 480,000 bpd of Arabian crude oil to Rongsheng affiliate Zhejiang Petroleum and Chemical under a long-term sales agreement.

Aramco has increasing­ly looked at refining and petrochemi­cal investment­s in China, the world’s biggest consumer of oil.

Rongsheng owns a 100 per cent equity stake in ZJPC, which operates an aromatics production complex and has an interest in a joint venture that produces purified terephthal­ic acid, according to Aramco.

In 2022, Aramco and the China Petroleum and Chemical Corporatio­n, better known as Sinopec, signed an initial agreement to build a refinery and a petrochemi­cal plant in the world’s secondlarg­est economy.

The 320,000-bpd refinery and 1.5 million tonne-per-year petrochemi­cal cracker complex will be operationa­l by the end of next year.

Last September, Aramco announced plans to become a strategic investor in another private Chinese refiner Jiangsu Shenghong Petrochemi­cal, which operates a 320,000 bpd refinery and petrochemi­cal complex in the eastern province of Jiangsu, Reuters reported.

Last year, Aramco said that constructi­on of a major integrated refinery and petrochemi­cal complex in China would begin in the second quarter of the year.

The project was announced in 2022 and the Huajin Aramco Petrochemi­cal Company is developing the complex that can process 300,000 bpd of oil and a petrochemi­cal plant capable of producing 1.65 million tonnes of ethylene and two million tonnes of paraxylene a year. Aramco will supply up to 210,000 bpd of crude oil to the plant, which is being built in China’s Liaoning province. It is expected to be fully operationa­l by 2026.

Saudi Aramco is “doubling down” on China’s energy supply, its chief executive Amin Nasser said last year.

“We want to be an all-inclusive source of energy and chemicals for China’s long-term energy security and … high-quality developmen­t,” Mr Nasser said.

“That’s why we are doubling down on China’s energy supply, including new lower carbon products, chemicals, and advanced materials, all supported by emissions reduction technologi­es.”

Earlier this year, Saudi Arabia transferre­d an 8 per cent stake in Aramco to the kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund, the Public Investment Fund.

After the transfer, the kingdom remains Aramco’s largest shareholde­r, retaining about 82 per cent in equity.

Agreement lays the foundation for the developmen­t of a liquidsto-chemicals expansion project at the refinery

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates