Dungquat EZ

11/24/2013

No “syndrome” of oil refineries in Vietnam, lawmakers reassured

24th Nov 2013
At a recent addressing at the National Assembly, Vietnam Prime Minister reassured the lawmakers on their concerns over the so-called oil refinery “syndrome” in the country that implicated that the oil refining projects Vietnam are blooming unnecessarily. The Prime Minister said there was no such syndrome except for the fact that the state-owned Thai PTT's proposed mega-refinery to be located in Binh Dinh province is the only one so far not included in the master plan [for oil refinery and petrochemical projects].
Groundbreaking Ceremony of Nghi Son Oil Refinery and Petrochemical Complex in Oct 2013 - Source: Nangluongvietnam
“This project is invested by a big Thai oil refining corporation and it’s just in the pre-feasibility study stage; after the study, only when both economic and social effectiveness is proven, then it would be included in the national master plan” he further explained.
He also cited some facts that the Dungquat oil refinery is running at its full capacity of 6 million tones/year and brings about obvious effectiveness; and Russian Gazprom and Vietnamese PVN already inked a cooperation agreement on raising its capacity to 10 million tons/year during a recent visit by Russian president to Vietnam. The work will also upgrade the technical efficiency of motor fuel production to meet the Euro-5 standard. “We basically do not have to pour more money to raise Dungquat refinery’s capacity because its share shall be sold to Gazprom [and Vietnam will use the capital from such sales]”, he acknowledged.
Meanwhile, PetroVietnam and its partners began construction at the 200,000 b/d Nghi Son refinery and petrochemical complex last month. This project is jointly invested by Vietnamese PVN (25% of shares), an Kuweit Petroleum Corporation (35%) and Mitsui Petrochemical Inc (40%) with the total investment estimated at US$ 9 billion. The refinery is planned to finish construction within 40 months and to start commercial operation in 2017. According to Prime Minister Dung, this project will be also very effective because the Kuwait pledges to supply 100% of the input crude oil for the refinery during its lifetime.
Two other proposed 200,000 b/d refinery and petrochemical projects -- PVN's Long Son complex in the southern province of Ba Ria Vung Tau and state-owned Petrolimex's Nam Van Phong project in the central province of Khanh Hoa -- are looking for foreign investors, the prime minister said. Meanwhile, the refinery project in Can Tho (2 million tons per year) is said to face difficulties in financial arrangement and would be likely to be revoked.

11/22/2013

JGC led JV Awarded Contract for Refinery and Petrochemical Complex in Vietnam

Jan 2013
               
Yokohama Japan – JGC Corporation (JGC), Chiyoda Corporation (Chiyoda), Technip, and South Korean contractors GS Engineering & Construction (GS) and SK Engineering & Construction (SK) today jointly announced that the joint venture, formed by JGC, Chiyoda, Technip, GS and SK, has received notification of the award of a contract for the Nghi Son refinery and petrochemicals complex in the Nghi Son economic zone in northern Vietnam. The contract was awarded by the Nghi Son Refinery Petrochemical Limited Liability Company, a joint venture between Idemitsu Kosan Co., Ltd (35.1%), Kuwait Petroleum International (35.1%), Vietnam Oil and Gas Corporation (25.0%), and Mitsui Chemicals, Inc. (4.8%). The lump-sum turnkey contract calls for the engineering, procurement, construction (EPC) and commissioning work for an oil refinery with a production capacity of 200,000 barrels per day. The complex, scheduled for completion in late 2016, will be located in the Thanh Hoa Province in Vietnam, 200 km south of the capital city of Hanoi. The value of the contract was not disclosed.

This project, which is being promoted by Idemitsu Kosan Co., Ltd., Kuwait Petroleum International, Vietnam Oil and Gas Corporation, and Mitsui Chemicals, Inc. is a grassroots oil refinery and petrochemical complex project in Vietnam. This project will be the second constructed in Vietnam, and is aimed at satisfying increasing demands for petroleum products to support the progress of Vietnam's motorization, as well as produce petrochemicals for export. Together with Vietnam's first refinery, the Dung Quat refinery (constructed by a consortium of JGC, Technip and others, and completed in 2009), the Nghi Son refinery and petrochemical complex will be a major pillar supporting the country's economic development.

JGC has been targeting marketing activities toward Southeast Asian countries, including Vietnam, and has been concurrently working on strengthening and expanding JGC Vietnam, an EPC subsidiary of JGC established in Vietnam in 2009. Part of JGC's portion of this project is scheduled to be constructed by JGC Vietnam.

JGC plans to become involved in many more oil refining and petrochemicals projects in Vietnam in the future. JGC has been responsible for the construction of more than fifty oil refineries, and JGC and JGC Vietnam are focusing marketing activities on Southeast Asia in hopes of contributing to building Vietnam's industrial base and furthering economic development.


Source: JGC

11/17/2013

Russia to sell Vietnam more military hardware



Russian President Vladimir Putin has said his country is going to increase the assortment of military hardware it sells to the Vietnamese army.

The announcement comes on the heels of Putin’s one-day trip to Hanoi where he met with President Truong Tan Sang and other leaders.

The Russian president has said the two nations today signed a new military deal that will see Russia train Vietnamese navy and armed forces.

Russian firms Rosneft and Gazprom also signed a raft of deals with state energy firm Petrovietnam tackling oil exploration and modernization of Vietnam’s oil refinery.

Putin said Gazprom was to supply the Dung Quat refinery with oil and help it market the produce.

Moscow has also promised to help Hanoi develop its nascent energy industry, building a nuclear energy plant and training its atomic experts. Russia will take part in creating the country’s first Center of Nuclear Science and Technology.

The countries concluded a package of cooperation contracts in ecology, healthcare and industry, including textile manufacturing.

In the meanwhile, the International Investment Bank and the Vietnamese Investment bank have agreed a $50 million loan to Vietnam to boost its small business.

Korean FDI in Vietnam – a sign of the future



After Samsung’s announcement that the company will increase its investment in two plants in Bac Ninh and Thai Nguyen provinces to US$4.5 billion, LG electronics, another major Korean group, has declared a new project worth $1.5 billion in Hai Phong.

Cumulatively, as of the end of August, South Korea has approximately 3,400 investment projects in Vietnam with total registered capital of $25.73 billion, ranking fourth among nations and regions which invest in Vietnam.

Big boys

LG Electronics (LGE), with total capital worth $1.5 billion, plans to produce household electric appliances, hi-tech electronic products, automobile electronic components and smartphones at the Hai Phong-based Trang Due Industrial Park.

The company aims to build not only a simple plant on an area of more than 402,000 square meters, but also a production complex, said Kim Jong Sik, Co-president at LG Display Co Ltd. “It will add more than 20,000 jobs and allow lots of LGE satellite firms to come to Hai Phong and invest,” Kim asserted.

Meanwhile, Samsung has said it wants to construct a new production plant in Vietnam, including two hi-tech complexes. The first one will be built in Bac Ninh with total capital of $2.5 billion, and the second will be in Thai Nguyen for $2 billion.

Beside $2 billion in initial investments, Samsung also plans to increase its capital to transform the plant into a production complex which will not only assemble and package products, but also produce essential components and accessories.

In late August, Seung Mo Ryu, director of Samsung Electro – Mechanics, during his official visit to Vietnam, submitted documents to request an investment license for the company’s integrated circuit and electronic components manufacturing plant.

The followers

In addition to Samsung and LG, other big Korean corporations and companies also want to increase their investment plans in Vietnam. Kumho Asiana will add an extra of $100 million to its Kumho Tires plant in Binh Duong, said Park Sam Koo, president of the company.

Besides topping out a $400 million Lotte Center building in Hanoi, Lotte continues to expand its shopping malls in several provinces. Korea has invested more than $30 billion in Vietnam, ranking second after Japan, which spends more than $33 billion.

Statistics show that thousands of small projects and satellite investors have followed big corporations like Samsung and LG to Vietnam. As of March there were 55 Korean satellite firms with a total registered capital of $2 billion operating in Vietnam, according to a report issued by Samsung Electronics Vietnam.

Last week, Young Sung Precision Vina obtained an investment license for its $400,000 manufacturing plant in Bac Giang. Haesung Vina, another Korean firm, also inaugurated its second plant, which specializes in producing Samsung’s smartphone cameras, at the Vinh Yen-based Khai Quang Industrial Park.

Previously, other small firms including Keosan Vina Electronics, Heasung Teach and Sung Gwang had already invested in the Vietnamese market. “Vietnam is expected to attract investment from Korea, especially in the hi-tech sector,” emphasized Kim Jung In, president of the Korean Business Center.

Besides investing in real estate, finance and the textile industry, Korean investors have begun to expand their businesses to the entertainment and technology sectors.

Source: TuoitreNews
Updated : 11/17/2013 09:30 GMT + 7

11/15/2013

Gazprom Neft and PetroVietnam sign agreement to invest in Dung Quat refinery modernisation



12 November 2013 , press-release

Gazprom Neft and Vietnam Oil and Gas Group (PetroVietnam) have signed a framework agreement setting out the terms of Gazprom Neft’s proposed acquisition of a stake in the Dung Quat oil refinery and the refinery’s planned modernisation programme.


Gazprom Neft and PetroVietnam sign agreement to invest in Dung Quat refinery modernization
Gazprom Neft will acquire a 49% share in Binh Son Refining and Petrochemical, which controls and manages the refinery. The two parties are currently in negotiations over the price of the stake.

As part of the modernization programme, the capacity at Dung Quat will be increased from the current 6.5 million tonnes to 10-12 million tonnes within one year and the plant will improve the technical efficiency of its motor fuel production to meet the Euro-5 standard. Gazprom Neft’s financial contribution to the modernisation project will be proportional to its stake.

Alexander Dyukov, Chairman of the Management Board of Gazprom Neft, said; “Our Company’s long-term strategy calls for a major increase in refining volumes outside Russia. Access to the capacity at Dung Quat will allow Gazprom Neft to enter the Asian market for refined products, which is one of the fastest growing and most promising markets globally. For this refinery upgrade project in Vietnam Gazprom Neft will draw extensively on the Company’s experience in modernising our refining capacities in Russia and Europe, where all plants now produce fuel meeting the Euro-5 standard. By working with PetroVietnam we will ensure that the Vietnamese market enjoys a stable supply of refined products that meet world standards.”

REFERENCE
Dung Quat, Vietnam’s only operating oil refinery, is located in the centre of the country. It came on stream in 2009 and has an installed capacity of 6.5 tonnes.

Vietnam Oil and Gas Group (PetroVietnam) is the state oil and gas company, which has its head office in Hanoi. The company produces, transports and refines hydrocarbons in Vietnam and other countries.

Source: Gazprom

11/11/2013

Vietnam's Refinery Gamble: Will it pay off?


Source: Energy Tribune - Tim Daiss
State-owned PetroVietnam received some bad news last Friday. Japan’s biggest oil refiner JX Holdings said that it would not participate in its planned project to expand Vietnam’s Dung Quat refinery, the only operating refinery in the country.



A JX Holdings spokesman said his company had been considering taking part in the project but it and PetroVietnam failed to come to an agreement on financing terms.

Though this might be bad news for PetroVietnam it might actually be a blessing in disguise for the Southeast Asian country’s future refining plans, which many analysts both in Vietnam and internationally admit are too ambitious and could potentially be disastrous.

The Dung Quat refinery, with a capacity of 140,000 barrels per day (bpd), came online in 2009. It can satisfy around one-third of Vietnam’s domestic refined products demand, while the country imports the rest.  PetroVietnam is looking to boost Dung Quat’s crude distillation capacity to around 200,000 bbl/d by 2017 and to develop its ability to handle sweet and less expensive sour crude oil from Russia, the Middle East, and Venezuela, according to the US Energy Information Agency (EIA).

While Dung Quat is currently Vietnam’s sole oil refinery, the country will be home to a total of seven such facilities in the next few years, the total capacity of which is much greater than the nation’s current demand, Vietnam’s TuoitreNews said two weeks ago.

Construction on the country’s second refinery, Nghi Son, started on October 24 at a cost of $9 billion, with refining capacity at 200,000 bpd, or 10 million tons per year, once it comes online in 2017.
Together, the new plant and the existing Dung Quat refinery are expected to satisfy 65% of Vietnam’s oil and gas needs by 2020, while both refineries would nearly satisfy domestic demand at 2012 levels.

A third refinery at 160,000 bpd, in the central province of Phu Yen, is in the planning stages and scheduled to be built by 2017.

Other petrochemical and oil refinery projects are also in planning stages, including the Long Son project with a capacity of 200,000 bpd, the Vung Ang project with 300,000 bpd capacity and Khanh Hoa at 200,000 bpd. In addition Thailand’s PTT Group as well as provincial authorities in Can Tho are also moving ahead with oil refinery plans.

By 2020, according to the Vietnamese Ministry of Industry and Trade, the total supply of oil products produced in Vietnam could reach 36 million tons, while total demand will be just 29 million tons. The ministry said the surplus will rise to 11 million tons in 2025.

Dr. Ho Sy Thoang, from PetroVietnam’s Oil and Gas Research Institute, raised doubts in May over these plans, and questioned if the country would be able to become a petrochemical and oil refinery center for export like Singapore.

Since then others have voiced concerns for various reasons, while some juxtapose the rapid and over-building of hydropower projects in Vietnam and its corresponding problems with the country’s refining plans, claiming the country is in danger of making similar mistakes if it precedes with building five additional refineries.

Vietnam’s gamble

However, unlike hydropower projects that often lose money, refineries are built to turn a profit, especially when exporting. The gamble for Vietnam is just that: Can refining margins be high enough to justify the billions in investment needed to build five additional refineries?

Several variables fit into this equation. Vietnam will have to import the crude to supply these new refineries. The US shale oil revolution could help. As the US produces more of its own oil, this frees up oil shipments, mostly from the Middle East, to be re-routed to Asian markets, potentially at lower prices in the future (though nobody can accurately predict where world oil prices will be in the future).

Lower crude prices mean higher profit margins for refineries. However, caution should be maintained as a worldwide glut of refined petroleum products is in full swing as China, with 54 refineries as of 2012, leads the charge.

The EIA said in April that China’s installed crude refining capacity is over 11 million bpd, doubling since 2000, while its goal is to augment crude oil refining capacity by around 3 million bpd to reach 14 million bpd by 2015.

The International Energy Agency (IEA) addressed this also. It said that global oil demand could rise to 95.7 million bpd by 2017, but refining sector expansion will likely take global refining capacity to 100.5 million bpd for the same period. China will account for more than 40% of global refining capacity in the next five years.

The IEA added in June that the world is heading for a glut of refined products as new Asian and Middle Eastern refineries increase oil processing in a move likely to force less advanced competitors in developed countries to close.

US refineries (especially along the Gulf Coast) that are exporting increased amounts of refined products must also be factored into the supply side of the equation.

The Star reported on this over supply problem last week. Though the report addresses this situation in the short term, it will also likely play out similarly in the long term as well. The Malaysian based newspaper said Asian oil refiners are facing slumping profits as China is expected to ramp up exports of diesel and gasoline this quarter, while Asian refineries are already experienced plunges in profit margins.

Therefore, if prices for refined products remain static or fall, especially if crude oil prices rise in the future at the same time, Vietnam could face enormous risk. This is not even factoring in other conditions that could adversely affect refining margins such as geopolitical crisis and increased governmental and environmental regulations.

This situation could be exacerbated by the time Vietnam’s planned refineries come on stream, raising doubts that having seven refineries is in the best interest of the country and beckoning questions and concerns that energy planners in Hanoi need to address immediately.
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