WEIR Arabian Metals Company (Amco Weir) is an engineering and general machining subsidiary of the Saudi-based Olayan Group and UK based Weir Group. The joint venture (JV) company is a key service provider to the oil field industry.
The company was established in 1977, primarily to serve the oil field industry in the eastern region of Saudi Arabia, from its base in Dammam in Saudi Arabia. During the initial 28-year period that Amco operated, it provided engineering and general machining services to oil field operators and service companies, specialising in the repair and re-certification of drilling components.
This JV was formed in order to strengthen the local manufacturing capabilities in the kingdom and to bring world-class technology to the country and it has been very successful, says a company spokesman. Weir brings over 140 years of international industrial engineering experience and proven methodology to the JV. The company has an excellent reputation for quality and service; Amco Weir is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and 365 days a year; a preeminent vendor and service support organisation for the oil and gas industry, he says.
The company’s main client, in terms of oil production and oil field operation, is Saudi Aramco, with which it has an ongoing service contracts. Amco Weir also counts the leading oil field services companies among its customers, such as Halliburton, Schlumberger and Baker Hughes, as well as drilling companies, including Nabors, Arabian Drilling Company (ADC), Saipem and Transocean. In addition, Amco Weir works for SEC (Saudi Electricity Company) and Sabic.
Amco Weir is structured into four core product and service segments.
• Tubular equipment and accessories; valve, BOP and wellhead recertification: The tubular segment includes the inspection, repair and recertification of drill pipes, tubing, crossover subs and everything else that goes into a well. Within this segment, Amco Weir has license agreements with several international companies, such as Vallourec, Hunting, Nippon Steel, Tenaris Hydril and Grant Prideco, for the repair of premium connections;
• Repair and API accessories manufacturing: The valve and wellhead segment incorporates re-certifications of BOP’s and they are authorised to repair pressure control equipment for GE, Hydril and NOV Shaffer;
• Rotating equipment: The rotating equipment segment is a division that has been added into the overall services that they provide, it involves anything that has to do with the repair, maintenance and upgrading of rotating equipment, be it centrifugal pumps or compressors, steam turbines, blowers or gearboxes; and
• Spare parts manufacturing: Amco Weir gets involved in supplying customers with manufactured spare parts that are re-designed, and also re-engineer existing equipment.
As part of its long-term strategy to achieve growth and diversification, the company has recently more than doubled its size, and now operates from two adjacent sites with a combined area of 35,000 sq m, he says.
Amco Weir employs over 220 people and runs 24/7, the skills range from machinists and quality control managers to technical inspectors and engineers. They have an engineering department for both the oil field and the rotating equipment sectors, and this is staffed by mechanical engineers, who provide expert assistance in the development of designs and specific procedures for repairs and manufacturing. “Amco Weir is a service company and carries out its business in a very dynamic, rather than a project basis. Response, response, response is Amco Weir’s mantra as the customer does not need things done today, he needs them done yesterday,” he says.
Amco Weir will participate in the upcoming third Saudi International Petrochemical Exhibition and Forum which will take place from May 12 to 14, 2013 at the Dhahran Exhibitions Centre in Saudi Arabia.
“It will give Amco Weir the opportunity to promote its in-kingdom manufacturing capabilities as the exhibition is by far the largest downstream exhibition in the kingdom and one of the largest in the Middle East,” he says.