Mumbai, June 28 (IBNS) Petrochemical company Saudi Basic Industries Corporation (SABIC) and affiliates of ExxonMobil announced that they will construct a world-scale specialty elastomers facility at the Al-Jubail Petrochemical Company (KEMYA) manufacturing joint venture.
The facility will be integrated with the existing Al-Jubail complex and completion is anticipated in 2015.
Both companies have approved the next stage of project development, the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) phase.
With a total investment of US $3.4 billion, which will be financed from shareholder and or third party debt, the facility will have the capacity to produce up to 400,000 tonnes per year of rubber including halobutyl, styrene butadiene, polybutadiene, and ethylene propylene diene monomer (EPDM) rubbers, thermoplastic specialty polymers, and carbon black to serve local markets, the Middle East and Asia.
KEMYA has awarded the engineering, procurement, and construction contracts for the elastomers facility to Daelim Industries, Technip, and Tecnicas Reunidas.
Al-Jubail Petrochemical Company (KEMYA) is a 50-50 joint venture between Saudi Basic Industries Corporation (SABIC) and Exxon Chemical Arabia Inc., an affiliate of ExxonMobil Chemical Company.
The two companies have collaborated closely since the joint venture was established in 1980, producing polyethylene, ethylene and propylene. The new synthetic rubber project represents a significant broadening of KEMYA’s product portfolio.
Associated with the new KEMYA elastomers facility is the establishment of the High Institute for Elastomer Industries (HIEI), a vocational training center in Yanbu, a Product Application Center in Riyadh, and thermoplastic polyolefin (TPO) compounding and inventory management facilities in Al-Jubail.
These facilities are aligned with the Kingdom’s National Industrial Clusters Development Program to expand and diversify Saudi Arabia’s manufacturing sector.
The HIEI will employ innovative polymer science education programs developed at the University of Akron Research Foundation (UARF), in Ohio, USA to train Saudis for the Kingdom’s developing elastomers conversion industry.
The HIEI is scheduled to begin classes in September.
Mohamed Al-Mady, SABIC Vice Chairman and CEO said, “We will provide the building blocks for our customers to successfully compete on a domestic and international scale in markets for a wide range of applications.”
Steve Pryor, president of ExxonMobil Chemical Company, said: “This first-of-its-kind elastomers facility in the Kingdom creates a platform that will support the development of a rubber industry, which is designed to produce a broad range of consumer products.”
An expanding transportation infrastructure in the Middle East and Asia-Pacific region has created strong demand for rubber products.
“The expansion will employ the latest proprietary processes and product technologies to meet the growing global demand for specialty elastomers,” said Neil Chapman, senior vice president, polymers, for ExxonMobil Chemical Company.