By Ian Simm
An unprecedented rise in the number of refineries throughout
the Middle East is set to cut the region’s
reliance on imported petrol and diesel in a move that could transform the
global products market.
“The Gulf is generally short on petrol and diesel, and that
is set to change in the coming years,” Robin Mills at Dubai-based Manaar Energy
Consulting and Project Management said in a recent interview with Bloomberg.
“They are putting more refining capacity into an oversupplied market.”
Increasing capacity
Saudi
Arabia is close to completing the 400,000
barrel per day Saudi Aramco Total Refinery & Petrochemicals (Satorp)
refinery at Jubail in order to slash its imports of fuel products, while two
more projects with the same capacity are also under development in Yanbu and
Jazan.
The latter, which includes a sea terminal, is worth around
US$6 billion in contracts and is the first in a number of facilities that Saudi
Arabia is planning that will lead to the development of the southwestern part
of the country.
Contracts for the work went to South Korean firms Hanwha
Engineering and Construction, SK Engineering and Construction and Hyundai, Japan’s
JGC Corp. and Hitachi Plant Technologies, the UK’s Petrofac and Spanish firm
Tecnicas Reunidas.
Saudi firm Al-Ali Al Ajmi Group will prepare the site, which
covers a 12-square km area. A number of Saudi officials attended the signing
ceremony and commented on the importance of the project for the development of
the industrial city and surrounding area.
Downstream capabilities
The Jazan unit will be designed to process Arab Medium and
Arab Heavy crudes and produce petrol, ultra-low sulphur diesel, benzene and
paraxylene (PX). Products from the refinery will supply the Jazan, Asir and
Najran areas and also be exported through the new marine terminal, which will
supply the refinery with crude oil and export refined products.
Jazan will be in addition to four refineries owned and
operated by Saudi Aramco in the country that have a total production capacity
of 1 million bpd. The firm also holds interests in the Saudi Aramco Mobil
Refinery Company (Samref) in Yanbu, in partnership with ExxonMobil, and in the
Saudi Aramco Shell Refinery (Sasref) in Jubail, with Shell.
The latter units have a combined capacity of 700,000 bpd.
Furthermore, Saudi Aramco holds an interest in the Petro Rabigh refinery which
has a 400,000 bpd capacity, giving the leader of the Organisation of Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC) a refining capacity of more than 2 million bpd.
The Yanbu and Jubail facilities will also process heavy
crudes for export. Operations resumed at Yanbu last week after two months of
maintenance work.
In January, Fereidun Fesharaki, chairman of Facts Global
Energy, said in a report that “despite growing demand at home, most of the
products will go to exports and have a regional impact on product markets and
the flow of products globally”.
Following the trend
Other Gulf countries are also following a similar pattern.
The UAE, Kuwait and Oman are
planning a number of new facilities in order to keep up with rising domestic
demand and to diversify their economies.
In mid-June, the Kuwait National Petroleum Company (KNPC)
intends to award a major engineering, procurement and construction (EPC)
contract to build new sulphur-handling and marine export facilities at its
Mina-al-Ahmadi refinery in the southeast of the country.
In late April, the state-run Oman Oil Company (OOC)
announced that it was seeking a US$4 billion bank loan to build a large export
refinery and petrochemical complex at Duqm in the south of the country.
The Duqm Port & Drydock project will host a planned US$6
billion refinery with a capacity of 230,000 bpd and will be commissioned in
2017. OOC – which owns a 50% stake in the Duqm Refinery and Petrochemical
Industries Company (DRPIC) – recently appointed Shaw Energy and Chemicals as
PMC to oversee the greenfield
scheme.
The remaining 50% is owned by Abu Dhabi’s International Petroleum
Investment Company (IPIC).
Up the coast from Duqm, Oman Oil Refineries and Petroleum
Industries (ORPIC) is carrying out an expansion project on the Sohar refinery,
which is due to be ready in 2016.
The expansion will add around 60,000 bpd, to take the total
capacity to just under 180,000 bpd.
Deeper into the Gulf, state-run Qatar Petroleum (QP) last
month announced a US$1.5 billion joint venture agreement for its Laffan
Refinery 2 (LR2) project in Ras Laffan. At the time, the company said that the
146,000 bpd plant would boost the country’s export capacity, further adding to
the threat of oversupply in the Gulf market.
The Middle East’s push to
increase refining capacity is one that will have an impact on oil and product
markets around the world.
While Saudi and its neighbours’ efforts to cater to growing
domestic demand may result in a dip in available crude oil for the global
market, the downstream facilities will also produce sizeable levels of refined
products, a large amount of which will be available for export.
As European refineries continue to be mothballed or closed
permanently, mega-refineries throughout the Middle East and Asia
are filling the void left by these ageing beasts, creating a new dynamic.
The Middle East’s increasing capacity allows for healthy
economies of scale that make it cheaper for European end users to import
high-grade fuels and petrochemical products rather than refining crude closer
to home.