| In 2000,  the Middle East and Africa  accounted for 8% of the global installed petrochemical capacity. The Mideast, notably the Gulf  Cooperation Council (GCC) states of Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, have for  decades enjoyed a massive competitive advantage in petrochemicals. The  capacity share of Middle East and Africa is expected to increase to 21% in  2015, and it is set to become the second highest region in terms of capacity  after Asia-Pacific. The  Middle East produces almost 13% of the world’s primary petrochemicals production and grew capacity  by 5.5% in 2012 to reach 127.8 mln tons. In contrast, the global petrochemicals  industry grew by a mere 2.6%. Saudi Arabia led the industry in the region,  accounting for 86.4 mln tpa, while Qatar produced 16.8 mln tpa and Oman 9.5 mln  tpa, making up 88% production of the Gulf petrochemicals industry. The UAE  makes up roughly 5% of the regional capacity with 6.1 mln tpa. Though the region’s petrochemical industry is growing, and  has seen robust growth over the past two  decades, it is facing fresh new challenges with rising feedstock costs and  increased competition. 
 At the onset of the development of the region’s  petrochemical industry, access to cheap feedstock fuelled growth. Cheap raw materials,  especially associated gas from oil production, and a favorable geographical  location with accessibility and geographic proximity to both Asia and Europe, propelled  the region to the leading producer and exporter of basic petrochemicals  and polymers. The cheap feedstock advantage  is slowly eroding, and will continue to erode in the medium term as the  opportunity cost of natural  gas as the major domestic feedstock rises and ethane reserves decrease. Recent constraints on  feedstock supplies in the Mideast coupled with the shale gas revolution in the United States  and an upsurge in coal-to-chemicals  investments in China are presenting challenges.
      Growing industrialization  in the region has lead to increased urbanization, resulting in rising demand for power.  Demand continues to rise, driven by power generation, water desalination and  petrochemical projects, as well as captive consumption in LNG and gas-to-liquids  production, as per the International Energy Agency (Paris). Rising power consumption in the region  means that natural gas is fast becoming a scarce commodity despite huge  reserves. Natural gas consumption in the Middle East region has grown from 86 bln  cubic metres by 1990 to 376 bcm by 2010, and is set to reach 485 bcm by the end  of the decade. Though production is set to reach 600 bcm by that time, much of  the natural gas is set for exports, as per gulfbusiness.com. In some cases, low  regulated gas prices have resulted in physical shortages of gas, as demand has  outstripped local supply capacity. The sizeable shortfall in natural gas in the  coming years will result in low growth for ethane. The supply of ethane is not  expected to grow significantly and most of the anticipated supply is already  committed to existing and new projects. The last allocation of ethane gas  for a grassroots petrochemicals project in Saudi Arabia was in the middle of  the last decade. The US$20 bln Sadara joint venture between Saudi Aramco and  Dow Chemical will use liquid feedstocks as well as gas to feed its cracker at  Al Jubail. Liquid feedstocks  do not offer the same cost advantages. The situation is similar in other GCC  states. The Borouge 3 project took up the last of the gas availability in the  United Arab Emirates, as did Equate II in Kuwait. Another major threat is shale gas production in  North America, which has revived the US petrochemicals sector. GCC players will  need to work on multiple fronts to ensure they maintain their lead in the  sector. Consulting firm Booz & Co.  (Dubai) says that GCC petrochemical players have three main options to secure  future growth: remain upstream and participate in shale gas ventures in North  America, move downstream into performance or specialty chemicals, or become  consolidators of the industry within the GCC to build greater scale. Mideast  producers are beginning to consolidate. The US produced nearly 30% of  the world’s petrochemicals in the 1980s, but that market share shrunk to 10% by  2010. With access to new cheap natural gas, it is predicted that the United States will be 99% self-sufficient in energy  by 2030. USA has already overtaken Russia as the world’s biggest gas producer.  According to the World Energy Outlook from the International Energy Agency in  2012, within two or three years the United States will also have surpassed  Saudi Arabia in oil production.
 
 With shale gas development, USA moves towards  potential self-sufficiency and towards a gas-exporting nation, resulting in loss of market for the Middle Eastern. As a result, diversification - already well under way  in some GCC states - investments in new resource-rich countries, and regional and  overseas acquisitions are the way forward, as per analysts in IHS Chemicals. Most analysts believe that Mideast producers will  retain a cost advantage in certain niches despite the growth in US competitiveness.  The pure ethane facilities in MENA are likely to be  cost-advantaged relative to US facilities, but the  mixed-feed facilities will not.
 Developments are also underway to  integrate Saudi Arabia’s refineries with petrochemicals production at Jazan, in  the southwest of the country, Yanbu, on the Red Sea coast; and Ras Tanura, in  the country’s Eastern Province. The initiatives are led by Aramco but also  include Sabic and Farabi Petrochemicals (Al Jubail). Aramco and Total, partners  in the Satorp refinery and aromatics complex at Al Jubail, also have tentative  plans to expand the JV after the first phase comes  onstream at the end of this year. There are plans to integrate the Aramco  Sinopec Refining venture further into chemicals production. Aramco, under its  Accelerated Transformation Program (ATP), aims to transform itself into the  world’s leading integrated energy and chemicals company by 2020. ATP foresees  Aramco’s refining capacity, including its share of JV’s, doubling, to 8 mln  bpd. The company’s current chemical operations include Petro Rabigh, where the  planned doubling of capacity and an expansion into specialty chemicals will  involve a US$7 bln investment in the next three years; the Satorp JV; and  Sadara. Aramco plans to invest heavily to expand its aromatics capacity. The company aims, by  2017–18, to be among the top-three aromatics players worldwide. The company and  its partnerships, including Petro Rabigh, S-Oil, and the Fujian JV, will-over  the next five years-supply 4 mln tpa of paraxylene to world markets, which will make Aramco one of the  largest paraxylene producers in the world by 2018. Sadara will  operate the world’s largest single-phase  integrated petrochemical facility when it comes onstream, in 2016.  Sadara’s Al Jubail complex will include 26 process units making amines, glycol ethers,  isocyanates, polyether polyols, polyethylene (PE), polyolefin elastomers and  propylene glycol.
 
 Sabic  aims to become more integrated, more differentiated, and more global under its  new Sabic 2025 strategy. Sabic’s US$3.4 bln investment with ExxonMobil Chemical  to build a rubber and elastomers complex is Sabic’s largest investment to date.  Sabic’s performance chemicals unit is also planning to build a fully integrated polyurethanes  (PUs) complex, which would mark the company’s entry into that market.  Sabic signed an agreement with Shell Chemicals to expand their Sadaf JV at Al  Jubail through the addition of propylene oxide–styrene monomer and polyol plants. Saudi Japanese Acrylonitrile  Co. (Shrouq), a Sabic JV with Asahi Kasei and Mitsubishi Corp. is building a  220,000 tpa acrylonitrile plant at the Ibn Zahr facility at Al Jubail. The  plant, scheduled to be onstream in 2016, will supply a planned 3,000 tpa carbon  fiber plant at Sabic’s Ibn Rushd facility at Yanbu. Sabic Innovative Plastics  will use some of the acrylonitrile in a 140,000 tpa acrylonitrile butadiene styrene resin plant  at the Petrokemya facility at Al Jubail.   Sabic and Mitsubishi Rayon are building 250,000 tpa methyl methacrylate (MMA)  and 40,000 tpa polymethyl  methacrylate plants at the Ibn Sina complex at Al Jubail. Ibn Sina,  owned 50% by Sabic and 25% each by Celanese and an affiliate of Duke Energy, is  building a 50,000 tpa polyacetal plant at Al Jubail, scheduled to be completed  at the end of 2016. Sabic has significant operations in Europe following the  company’s acquisition of the petrochemical operations of DSM in the Netherlands  and of Huntsman in the United Kingdom. Sabic, after restructuring some of these  operations to make them more competitive, says it is studying plans to “review  the potential of the UK Wilton cracker to crack ethane.”
 
 Qatar  is planning to spend about US$25 bln by 2020 to expand capacity in its chemical  and petrochemical industries. Qatar plans two mega petrochemical projects at  Ras Laffan. The first, Al Karaana, a JV with Qatar Petroleum and Shell, is  slated to be onstream in 2017. The second, Al Sejeel, a JV between QP and Qatar  Petrochemical Co., is expected online in 2018. The JVs form part of Qatar’s  plans to raise petrochemicals output to 23 mln tpa by 2020, more than doubling  current production. Al Karaana will comprise a world-scale steam cracker; a 1.5  mln tpa ethylene glycol plant; a 300,000 tpa linear alpha-olefin unit; and a  250,000 tpa oxo alcohols unit. Al Sejeel will produce 2.2 mln tpa of polymers,  including PE and polypropylene (PP). Upstream units will include a world-scale ethylene plant and a butadiene  facility. One will be designed to produce 550,000 tpa of linear low-density PE (LLDPE),  and the others will each produce 520,000 tpa of high-density PE (HDPE).  Dow has licensed the PP technology. QP is also carrying out feasibility studies  for propylene-based and  benzene-derivative complexes at Ras Laffan, adjacent to existing  liquefied petroleum gas facilities. Plans include a propane dehydrogenation  plant producing 650,000–750,000 tpa of propylene; and an aromatics complex,  which would produce 1 million tpa of paraxylene; and  500,000–700,000 tpa of benzene.
 At  Ruwais, Abu Dhabi, the Borouge 3 complex is nearing completion, consisting of a  third cracker and 2.5 mln tpa of additional polyolefins capacity by 2014. Equate  (Safat, Kuwait) is also planning to grow its operations. The company has  completed a feasibility study to debottleneck its complex at Al Shuayba, which  may lead to the addition of an ethylene furnace.  Oman Refineries and Petroleum Industries Co.  is planning a polyolefins  project integrated with the Sohar, Oman, refinery, which is currently  being expanded. Completion of the project is scheduled for 2018. The project  has six components: a gas extraction plant at Fahud; a 300-kilometer gas  pipeline between Fahud and Sohar Port; a cracker based on ethane, propane,  butane, and condensate feedstocks; and two PE plants, one producing 420,000 tpa  of HDPE and the other making 420,000 tpa of LLDPE. An existing 200,000 tpa PP  plant, also a part of Orpic, will be expanded by 215,000 tpa. About 60% of the  feedstock for the polyolefins project would come from the Sohar refinery, and  the remaining 40% would be natural gas liquids extracted from gas at Fahud. The  project would increase Oman’s polyolefins capacity from 200,000 tpa to 1.4 mln  tpa. Oman is also planning to build purified terephthalic acid (PTA) and Polyethylene terephthalate (PET)  resin plants at Sohar. OOC and IPIC announced last year the formation of a  50-50 JV to develop a refinery and petrochemical complex at Duqm, on the east  coast of Oman. Duqm Refinery and Petrochemical Industries expects to begin  production in 2017. The refinery, the first phase of the project, will have a  capacity of 230,000 bpd, with petrochemicals being produced in the second  phase.
 
 The global petrochemicals  industry is at cross roads, and players from the Gulf are moving quickly and  smartly to ensure they do not lose their edge in the industry.
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