Saudi Aramco to sign China refinery deals during crown prince visit: sources

Reuters  |  SINGAPORE/DUBAI/BEIJING 

SINGAPORE/DUBAI/(Reuters) - plans to sign preliminary deals to invest in two and petrochemical complexes in during Saudi Arabian Mohammed bin Salman's state visit to this week, according to sources familiar with the plans.

Aramco is also expected to formalise an earlier plan to take a minority stake in Petrochemical, controlled by private Chinese group Rongsheng Holding Group, said two sources with knowledge of this particular deal. Petrochemical is building a refinery and petrochemical complex in eastern Chinese province of Zhejiang.

The investments could help regain its place as the top to China, which it has relinquished to for the past three years. is poised to bolster its market share by signing supply agreements with non-state Chinese refiners.

It is not clear what new details will be in the MOU with expected during the visit, as the two companies first announced an alliance in May 2017 during Saudi ruler Salman's visit to

Under that earlier MOU, the companies agreed to build a refinery capable of processing 300,000 barrels per day of crude and a facility that would make 1 million tonnes per year of ethylene, a building block for petrochemicals, at an estimated cost of over $10 billion.

A said last June he expected the front-end engineering for the project to be finished by mid-2019, following which the company will take a final investment decision.

public affairs officials were not immediately available for a comment.

Aramco officials did not reply to a request for comment sent by email.

Meanwhile, the Zhejiang agreement would give control of the 9 percent stake in the project held by the

The agreement follows an earlier MOU that Aramco signed in October to invest in Zhejiang's project, which is planned as a refinery to process 400,000 bpd of crude and associated petrochemical facilities in the city of Zhoushan, south of

was not able to immediately reach Ocean Development and Investment Co Ltd, which holds the 9 percent stake in for the provincial government, for a comment.

The Saudi delegation, including top executives from Aramco, arrived in Beijing on Thursday for a two-day visit, part of the crown prince's tour, during which the kingdom has pledged $20 billion of investment in and sought additional investment in India's refining industry.

(Reporting by in SINGAPORE, Rania El Gamal in and Meng Meng in BEIJING; editing by Christian Schmollinger)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, February 21 2019. 13:10 IST