Mozambique Oil refinery planned
Sun, 28/09/2008 - 04:29 — AA Mozambique
If all goes according to plan, by the middle of the next decade there could be two oil refineries operating in Mozambique, one at Nacala in the north of the country, and one in the district of Matutuine, in the far south of the country.
The southern refinery is a project of Oilmoz, a company founded by former foreign minister Leonardo Simao. On 27 June Oilmoz signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the world’s largest services company, PriceWaterhouse Coopers (PWC), under which PWC will undertake feasibility studies for the project.
Other areas covered in the memorandum are the identification of strategic partners, consideration of tax, legal, insurance and regulatory requirements, risk management, marketing the project to “key stakeholders”, and finance modelling.
Oilmoz says that the total capacity of the refinery will be 350,000 barrels a day, and it will cost about eight billion US dollars to build. The Oilmoz Chief Executive Officer, Fausto Cruz, told AIM that the funding will come from a consortium of banks, and that negotiations with the banks are now being finalized.
Cruz said that around 95 per cent of the production from the refinery will be exported, mostly to other members of SADC (Southern African Development Community). Currently SADC imports about 506,000 barrels of refined fuels a day, and by 2014, the year Oilmoz expects the refinery to start operating, the figure will have risen to over 600,000 barrels a day.
Matutuine is an environmentally sensitive area, noted for its biodiversity, and its pristine beaches. A press release from Oilmoz promises that “the erection of the refinery and the petrochemical processing plant will be undertaken in accordance with the latest environmental, industrial and engineering standards applicable in Mozambique, the European Union and North America”.
It continues that “strict environmental standards will be imposed in regard to the use of resources, air, noise and soil pollution, and the discharge and disposal of waste products, in liquid, gas and solid forms”.
Also part of the package is a 500-megawatt gas-fired power station. This additional electricity will be a welcome spin-off from the project, given southern Africa’s current critical shortage of power. The lack of electricity has put several major industrial projects on hold, including a third phase of the MOZAL aluminium smelter on the outskirts of Maputo.
Oilmoz expects that 15,000 jobs will be created during the construction phase, and a further 2,000 direct, permanent jobs once the refinery is operational.
The company is working with the Joaquim Chissano Foundation (of which Simao is executive director) to design a package of social projects to assist the communities living in the refinery area. The foundation will also take responsibility for all of Oilmoz’s training projects.
The refinery planned for Nacala has as its main shareholder the US company Ayr Logistics. Known as the Ayr-Petro-Nacala project, its capacity will be somewhat smaller than that of the Oilmoz refinery, with a projected production of 300,000 barrels a day.
The southern refinery is a project of Oilmoz, a company founded by former foreign minister Leonardo Simao. On 27 June Oilmoz signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the world’s largest services company, PriceWaterhouse Coopers (PWC), under which PWC will undertake feasibility studies for the project.
Other areas covered in the memorandum are the identification of strategic partners, consideration of tax, legal, insurance and regulatory requirements, risk management, marketing the project to “key stakeholders”, and finance modelling.
Oilmoz says that the total capacity of the refinery will be 350,000 barrels a day, and it will cost about eight billion US dollars to build. The Oilmoz Chief Executive Officer, Fausto Cruz, told AIM that the funding will come from a consortium of banks, and that negotiations with the banks are now being finalized.
Cruz said that around 95 per cent of the production from the refinery will be exported, mostly to other members of SADC (Southern African Development Community). Currently SADC imports about 506,000 barrels of refined fuels a day, and by 2014, the year Oilmoz expects the refinery to start operating, the figure will have risen to over 600,000 barrels a day.
Matutuine is an environmentally sensitive area, noted for its biodiversity, and its pristine beaches. A press release from Oilmoz promises that “the erection of the refinery and the petrochemical processing plant will be undertaken in accordance with the latest environmental, industrial and engineering standards applicable in Mozambique, the European Union and North America”.
It continues that “strict environmental standards will be imposed in regard to the use of resources, air, noise and soil pollution, and the discharge and disposal of waste products, in liquid, gas and solid forms”.
Also part of the package is a 500-megawatt gas-fired power station. This additional electricity will be a welcome spin-off from the project, given southern Africa’s current critical shortage of power. The lack of electricity has put several major industrial projects on hold, including a third phase of the MOZAL aluminium smelter on the outskirts of Maputo.
Oilmoz expects that 15,000 jobs will be created during the construction phase, and a further 2,000 direct, permanent jobs once the refinery is operational.
The company is working with the Joaquim Chissano Foundation (of which Simao is executive director) to design a package of social projects to assist the communities living in the refinery area. The foundation will also take responsibility for all of Oilmoz’s training projects.
The refinery planned for Nacala has as its main shareholder the US company Ayr Logistics. Known as the Ayr-Petro-Nacala project, its capacity will be somewhat smaller than that of the Oilmoz refinery, with a projected production of 300,000 barrels a day.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario