Saudi's PetroRabigh Signs $5.2bn Financing For Expansion Scheme
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Saudi’s PetroRabigh Signs $5.2bn Financing For Expansion Scheme

Saudi’s PetroRabigh Signs $5.2bn Financing For Expansion Scheme

The total cost of the project, known as Rabigh Phase II, is now estimated at SAR30 billion.

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Saudi Arabia’s PetroRabigh, a joint venture between Saudi Aramco and Sumitomo Chemical, has signed loans worth SAR19.4 billion ($5.2 billion) for the expansion of its petrochemicals complex, it said on Tuesday.

The move reflects the Kingdom’s determination to diversify its economy even after lower oil prices caused some regional petrochemical and energy projects to stall.

News of the financing initially sent PetroRabigh shares soaring 5.9 per cent to SAR24, before they fell back to trade 3.9 per cent up at 1030 GMT.

The scheme’s cost is now estimated at SAR30 billion, it said, a further revision to the price, which was scaled up to SAR32 billion last May from the original SAR26.3 billion. It gave no reason for the latest revision.

The total loan, maturing in June 2031, includes SAR7.5 billion from the Japan Bank for International Cooperation and SAR4.9 billion from the state-owned Public Investment Fund, a statement from the firm said.

The rest is from a consortium of local and international banks, who would respectively put in SAR3.5 billion. Among the funders were Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation, Saudi British Bank and Al Rajhi Bank.

The statement added a SAR7.5 billion equity bridge loan had also been agreed, which will mature in 2019 and be guaranteed by Aramco and Sumitomo Chemical. Usually, such a facility is to cover initial construction and start-up costs.

Both parent companies will put in 100 billion yen ($824.7 million) each, Sumitomo President Masakazu Tokura said in November 2013.

The project, situated on the Kingdom’s Red Sea coast, has been uncertain since it was first mooted in 2009, despite Aramco and Sumitomo giving a final go-ahead in 2012.

The completion of the financing is also notable as falling oil prices have seen some Gulf projects shelved, including the $6.4 billion Al Karaana petrochemical project in Qatar and Aramco’s $2 billion clean fuels plant at its largest oil refinery in Ras Tanura.

The expanded facility was expected to start production in the first half of 2016, it said. It will increase output and introduce higher-margin products.

Phase II will be able to produce five million tonnes of petrochemicals and 15 million tonnes of petroleum products annually.

PetroRabigh’s existing plant can produce an annual 18 million tonnes of refined products and 2.4 million tonnes of petrochemical products.


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