Responsive Image Banner

UAE’s Adnoc awards EPC contracts for US$45bn refinery project

Premium Content

In May, the United Arab Emirates’ Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (Adnoc), announced a five-year, US$45-billion investment into an expansion project to build the ‘single-largest integrated refinery and petrochemicals complex in the world’, and winners of initial engineering, procurement, and construction (EPC) contracts worth more than $5 billion were just revealed on 12 June.

LNG storage tank (Image: Adobe Stock) A liquefied natural gas (LNG) storage tank. (Image: Adobe Stock)

The state-owned oil company valued the contracts at $5.5 billion for the Ruwais project, which seeks to expand an existing gas refinery in Al Ruwais Industrial City, about 238km west of Abu Dhabi, UAE.

Adnoc said it awarded the EPC contracts to a joint venture (JV) led by France-based Technip Energies along with Japan-based JGC Corporation and the UAE-based NMDC Group.

The scheme seeks to install two new liquefaction trains used to make liquefied natural gas (LNG).

The installation, the JV said, should more than double the facility’s current production, allowing for a total LNG production capacity of 9.6 Mtpa (million-tonnes per-annum).

Adnoc using nuclear-powered energy for LNG plant

The JV said the new trains will use electric-driven motors powered by nuclear energy instead of conventional gas turbines.

Arnaud Pieton, CEO of Technip Energies, commented, “By powering electrified LNG trains with nuclear energy, this project sets a new standard for energy security and sustainability. By leveraging our low-carbon and electrified LNG leadership we will support Adnoc’s position as a reliable global natural gas supplier and commitment to decarbonization.”

“The plant is set to be the first LNG export facility in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region to run on clean power, making it one of the lowest-carbon intensity LNG plants in the world,” said the JV.

STAY CONNECTED

Receive the information you need when you need it through our world-leading magazines, newsletters and daily briefings.

Sign up

Longer reads
Liebherr LR 1300 comes of age and keeps on going
At 18 how does the 300 tonne capacity LR 1300 lattice boom crawler crane remain so popular?
Global construction equipment sales are still faltering. When will they recover?
Global construction equipment sales should start to come back from the bottom of the cycle next year, according to Off-Highway Research, but there is some uncertainty around the forecast 
Why construction needs to look forward if it wants to handle uncertainty
Dr Alan Manuel, group chief executive of Currie & Brown, on why the global consultant has launched a new Certainty Index
CONNECT WITH THE TEAM
Andy Brown Editor, Editorial, UK - Wadhurst Tel: +44 (0) 1892 786224 E-mail: [email protected]
Neil Gerrard Senior Editor, Editorial, UK - Wadhurst Tel: +44 (0) 7355 092 771 E-mail: [email protected]
Eleanor Shefford Brand Manager Tel: +44 (0) 1892 786 236 E-mail: [email protected]
Peter Collinson International Sales Manager Tel: +44 (0) 1892 786220 E-mail: [email protected]
CONNECT WITH SOCIAL MEDIA

Inside The Minds of Leaders:
Using Tech To Unearth Greater Profit

FREE WEBINAR ON-DEMAND

This session was hosted by KHL's Mitch Keller, with speakers from AEM, Landmark Construction and Trimble.

Download and watch in your own time