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Oman to merge oil, petrochemical firms under OQ brand

  • Market: Crude oil, Oil products, Petrochemicals
  • 18/12/19

Oman's government has announced further details of its planned integration of state-owned oil company OOC, refiner Orpic and seven other domestic energy firms.

A new entity, OQ, will be set up to integrate the operations of the companies. This is the latest step forward in the Nakhla integration programme that was launched late last year, shortly after OOC and Orpic announced plans to merge their downstream and upstream operations.

OQ will comprise OOC, Orpic, OOC's upstream arm OOCEP, Oman Gas (OGC), Duqm Refinery and Petrochemicals Industries (DRPIC), Salalah Methanol (SMC), Oman Trading International (OTI), oxo intermediates and derivatives producer Oxea, and Salalah Liquified Petroleum Gas.

The government said earlier this year that it aims to implement the organisational structure by the end of 2020 and plans to invest over $28bn in the next 10 years.

The integration will enable Oman to streamline its downstream operations before new refinery and petrochemical projects start up in the coming years.

Orpic is in the process of commissioning new polymer plants that are expected to be operational next year. Orpic will produce 300,000 t/yr of polypropylene (PP) and 880,000 t/yr polyethylene (PE), according to Argus data.

The new 260,000 b/d DRPIC refinery is on track to start commissioning in late 2022. DRPIC's planned 1.6mn t/yr mixed-feed steam cracker is scheduled to be operational by 2026, with petrochemical derivative units expected to come on stream around the same period.

Consolidation has been a major theme for Mideast Gulf petrochemical producers in 2019. Saudi Arabia-based Sipchem, a producer of methanol, polymers, and acetic acid, earlier this year merged its operations with fellow Saudi-based firm Sahara Petrochemicals, a supplier of PP.

State-owned Saudi Aramco in March announced plans to acquire a majority stake in state-controlled petrochemicals producer Sabic.

By Muhamad Fadhil


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28/11/24

Opec+ meeting delayed to 5 December

Opec+ meeting delayed to 5 December

Dubai, 28 November (Argus) — A meeting of Opec+ ministers scheduled for 1 December has been postponed to 5 December. Opec said the delay is because of a conflicting travel schedule for energy ministers of Mideast Gulf countries, as the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC) leaders summit in Kuwait overlaps with the Opec+ meeting. The Opec+ meeting, which was to be held online, will coincide with a decision to be taken by eight member countries on whether to press ahead with a plan to begin the phased return of 2.2mn b/d of "voluntary" production cuts to the market from January. This was to begin in October, but concerns about the strength of oil demand and price weakness prompted the group to postpone to December and then to January. The UAE will start increasing its output from January regardless, as a 300,000 b/d increase to its official production quota kicks in over the course of 2025. Any increase to Opec+ supply would be tempered by additional cuts that some of the eight will be making in the coming months to compensate for past overproduction. Iraq, Kazakhstan and Russia are the group's leading overproducers. Saudi energy minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman on 27 November talked with Kazakhstan's energy minister Almasadam Satkaliyev and Russia's deputy prime minister Alexander Novak, Moscow's point man on Opec+ matters. A day earlier, Prince Abdulaziz met in Baghdad with Iraq's prime minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani and Novak. The statements from both meetings emphasised "full adherence to the [current policy] agreement, including the voluntary production cuts agreed upon by the eight participating countries, as well as compensating for any excess production." The 5 December meeting will be a third consecutive Opec+ ordinary ministerial meeting to be held virtually rather than in Vienna. The last time Opec+ held its ministerial meeting in-person was in June 2023. By Bachar Halabi and Nader Itayim Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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US refiners cannot readily replace Canadian oil: AFPM


27/11/24
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27/11/24

US refiners cannot readily replace Canadian oil: AFPM

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Traders expect Opec+ to delay output increase


26/11/24
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26/11/24

Traders expect Opec+ to delay output increase

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Trump tariffs will divert TMX crude from USWC


26/11/24
News
26/11/24

Trump tariffs will divert TMX crude from USWC

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Norden agrees marine biodiesel deal with Meta


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