Friday, August 24, 2007

Saudi Arabia is top oil supplier to China

Saudi Arabia is top oil supplier to China
BI-ME and Bloomberg
22 August 2007



Saudi Arabia was the top supplier of crude oil to China in July, beating Angola, Oman and Russia as the Middle Eastern country increased exports to gain from demand in the world's fastest-growing major economy.

Saudi Arabia, the world's biggest oil producer, exported 2.33 million metric tons of crude oil to China last month, about 548,677 barrels a day and 57% more than the same period in 2006, the Beijing-based Customs General Administration said today.

Angola, the second-largest supplier to China in July, shipped 2.2 million tons, a 28% increase from last year.

China's crude oil imports surged 39% to a record in July, according to customs data released earlier this month. Oil imports by the world's second-biggest energy user have tripled in the last five years as production from domestic fields failed to keep pace with demand.

Oman, Russia and Iran were among China's top five suppliers in July, shipping 1.56 million, 1.27 million and 1.24 million respectively.

Saudi Arabia was also China's biggest crude supplier in the first seven months of this year as sales from the kingdom increased by 6.8% to 14.32 million tons.

Imports from Sudan surged more than 12-fold to 1 million tons in July after China National Petroleum, the country's largest oil producer, increased output of the Dar Blend crude oil from its production-sharing field in the African nation. The field started production last August.

China imported 14.83 million tons of crude last month. Shipments in the first seven months rose 15% to 96.37 million tons.

Monday, August 20, 2007

Aramco invites engineering bids for refinery

By Oliver Klaus
Aug 20, 2007
DUBAI (MarketWatch)


Saudi Arabian Oil Co. has invited engineering firms to bid for a contract to help it build an estimated $8-billion refinery in eastern Saudi Arabia, people familiar with the plans said Monday.

Saudi Aramco, the world's largest national oil company, has invited international engineering companies to bid by Sept. 15 for the contract to carry out early engineering for and manage the construction of the new refinery, the sources said.
The plant, known as East Coast refinery, is the fourth new facility planned in the kingdom and will boost total domestic crude oil refining capacity to above 3.5 million barrels a day by 2012, more than double the U.K.'s.

The refinery, due for completion around late 2011, will process 400,000 barrels a day of Saudi crude and will be at Ras Tanura on the Persian Gulf, already home to the country's largest refinery with a capacity of 550,000 barrels a day, the sources said.

Aramco will meet selected contractors Monday for a project briefing in Bahrain, the people said.

Companies including KBR Inc. KBR, Foster Wheeler Ltd. FWLT, and WorleyParsons Ltd. (WOR.AU) have bid for similar contracts in the kingdom.

The new project is aimed at meeting fast-growing demand for refined products from the local power and industrial sectors
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