Chevron Phillips Chemical (49%) and QP (51%) have a plant at
Mesaieed on stream since November 2002 as a JV called Qatar Chemical
Company (Q-Chem), under an agreement signed on May 18, 1997. It has cost
$1.2 bn and has this capacity: 500,000 t/y of ethylene; 270,000 t/y of
HDPE, 189,000 t/y of LLDPE; and 47,000 t/y of hexene-1. Ethane is
supplied by the NGL-4 plant. ChevronPhillips (CPC) has provided its own
proprietary HDPE/LLDPE and hexene-1 technologies. The products are
exported to Asian markets.
Ras Laffan Ethylene Co. & Q-Chem-II: A 1.3m t/y ethylene
cracker will start up at Ras Laffan in 2008 for the Ras Laffan Ethylene
Co. (RLEC) - 53.31% for Q-Chem-II, 45.69% for Qatofin, and 1% for QP.
The EPC contractor and technology supplier is Technip. The cracker will
receive ethane from a part of the North Field being developed by
ExxonMobil, through the pipeline from Ras Laffan (see
down11QatrPetchmSep12-05).
RLEC is one of three JVs set up in 2002. The other two are:
Q-Chem-II - CPC (49%) and QP (51%); and Qatofin - Qapco (63%), Atofina
(36%) and QP (1%).
Punj Lloyd of India in April 2007 won the contract to build the
140-km ethylene pipeline from Ras Laffan to Mesaieed for Qatar Chemical
Co.-II (Q-Chem II). Under the $45m deal, Punj Lloyd will install the
pipeline, which will transport ethylene from the Ras Laffan Olefins Co.
complex to downstream units in Mesaieed. The contract was to last just
over a year.
RLIC will have two more ethylene crackers built by 2011-13 so that,
together with expansion of Mesaieed's plants, ethylene production
by then will exceed 6m t/y. One of these two crackers will be a JV led
by ExxonMobil and the second will be led by Shell (as mentioned above).
Mesaieed Integrated Industry: QP is at an advanced stage of study
for a new ethylene cracker/aromatics complex at Mesaieed. Under the
plan, for which pre-FEED work has already been done, QP is proposing to
integrate the new complex into the existing Mesaieed oil refinery and
build a swing naphtha/ethane cracker, which will supply
ethylene-derivative units and an aromatics complex, including a styrene
unit. QP is finalising the project company's structure and
marketing study. It wants to bring in an international partner - with
negotiations going on with Japanese and European firms - as well as
offer a percentage of the company to local shareholders through an IPO.
The world-scale cracker is to receive naphtha from the existing
refinery and ethane from the Ras Laffan-Mesaieed pipeline. The refinery
would also supply propylene to the complex, which would be converted
into PP.
Qatar Plastic Products Co. (QPPC) - owned a third by each of Qapco,
Qatar Industrial Manufacturing Co. (Qimco), and Febo of Italy, is one of
the small ventures buying PE feedstocks from Qapco to produce heavy duty
plastic bags (2,700 t/y) and shrinkable film (700 t/y).
QPPC's $8.8m plant went on stream in the first quarter of
2000. Its products are used locally and exported.
Qatar Fertiliser Co: Qafco is a JV owned 75% of QP and 25% by Yara
Int'l of Norway (formerly known as Norsk Hydro). Its Mesaieed
complex has four plants producing 2m t/y of ammonia and 2.8m t/y of urea
with the latest, Qafco-4, officially inaugurated in April 2004. The
company now is having a fifth plant, Qafco-5, under construction with a
capacity of 4,400 t/d of ammonia and 3,500 t/d of urea by 2010 in a
project now estimated to cost $2.5 bn (up from about $470m estimated in
2004). Because of the rising cost, the main EPC contract has been
re-tendered, with two FEED contractors having failed to convert their
deals to lump-sum. Yara will provide project management and QP will use
its "best endeavours" to get the project a 20-year tax
holiday.
Qafco-1 came on stream in 1975 with a capacity of 900 t/d of
ammonia and 1,000 t/d of urea. Qafco-2, which doubled the capacity of
ammonia and urea, started up in 1979 and was debottlenecked later to
boost its output. Qafco-3 raised Qafco's capacity for the
production of urea to 1.55m t/y and of ammonia to 1.3m t/y. It cost
about $541m and was completed in early 1997, built by Uhde (a unit of
Hoechst) and Belleli of Italy, under a contract signed in 1994. Fluor
Daniel UK was the project consultant. In 1994, Norsk Hydro was made the
project manager. It signed a 10-year agreement with Qafco to get
marketing rights for ammonia and urea in China and East Africa. QP on
March 26, 1995, signed contracts in India to supply Southern
Petrochemical Industries Co. and Chemical Corp. of Trivandrum Ltd. with
200,000 t/y of liquid ammonia.
Qafco-4 cost $535m. Krupp Uhde got the $420m EPC job for this in
2001. The financing was completed in September 2001. Qafco-4 also has a
45,000 t/y urea formaldehyde plant built by Krupp Uhde. The latter plant
is owned by a separate entity, Qatar Formaldehyde Co. in which the
private United Development Co. (UDC) has a 10% stake.
Qafco is to have two more fertilisers units, Qafco-6 and Qafco-7.
For these and the fifth unit, Qafco and QP have signed a 25-year gas
supply contract. The price of this gas is said to be less than $1/m BTU,
but this has an escalation clause (see background in
down11QatrPetchmSep12-05).
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