ARAMCO and TotalEnergies have awarded engineering, procurement and construction contracts for the $11 billion Amiral complex, a future world-scale petrochemicals facility expansion at the kingdom’s SATORP refinery.
A signing ceremony took place in Dhahran attended by Amin H Nasser, Aramco president and chief executive, and Patrick Pouyanne, TotalEnergies chairman and CEO. Won Hee-ryong, the minister of land, infrastructure and transport in South Korea; government officials from Saudi Arabia, France and South Korea; and company executives from Aramco, TotalEnergies and EPC firms also attended.
The award of EPC contracts for main process units and associated utilities marks the start of construction work on the joint petrochemical expansion, following the final investment decision in December 2022.
Integrated with the existing SATORP refinery in Jubail, the new complex aims to house one of the largest mixed-load steam crackers in the Gulf, with a capacity to produce 1,650 kilotonnes per annum of ethylene and other industrial gasses. This expansion is expected to attract more than $4bn in additional investment in a variety of industrial sectors, including carbon fibers, lubes, drilling fluids, detergents, food additives, automotive parts and tires.
It is also expected to create around 7,000 local direct and indirect jobs. The EPC contracts were awarded to: Hyundai Engineering and Construction Company Limited; Maire Tecnimont; Sinopec Engineering (Group) Saudi Company Limited; Gulf Consolidated Contractors Company; Mohammed Ali Al Suwailem Trading and Contracting Company; Mofarreh Marzouq Al Harbi and Partners Company Limited; and Mobarak M Al Salomi and Partners for Contracting Company.
Nasser said: “Today we are taking a major step forward in further strengthening the partnership between TotalEnergies and Aramco, with the SATORP expansion project being the latest in a long-standing history of collaboration of almost five dec- ades between both companies. “As part of Aramco’s growth strategy, the project is anticipated to contribute to value-addition opportunities in the kingdom’s downstream ecosystem, and we thank the Ministry of Energy and the Ministry of Investment for their tremendous support via the Shareek programme to make this multi-billion-dollar project a reality.”