Saudi Arabia's Diamond Era

Aramco plans to award Manifa work

Snamprogetti .. hot in the race for Manifa

Three international contractors have emerged as frontrunners to win more than $3 billion worth of engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contracts on Saudi Aramco’s 900,000-barrel-a-day (bpd) Manifa oil field.

The firms understood to have submitted the lowest bids for the three main packages are Italy’s Snamprogetti, Japan’s JGC Corporation and Spain’s TR, following commercial evaluation by Aramco.
The first package, worth about $1.8 billion, covers the construction of central processing facilities including a gas-oil separation plant. Snamprogetti is in pole position for the package, edging ahead of JGC, TR, South Korea’s Hyundai Engineering & Construction Company, France’s Technip, Japan’s Chiyoda Corporation and Italy’s Techint.
JGC is favourite for the second package, worth $800 million, covering utilities, storage and shipping at the central processing facility. It is thought to have won the deal over Techint, Snamprogetti and Hyundai Engineering & Construction.
TR is expected to take the $500 million final package, covering power generation and the main substation, from South Korea’s Hyundai Heavy Industries and Italy’s Technimont.
Aramco is expected to finalise its technical evaluation of bids and issue the contracts by mid-May.
The latest bidding activity caps a frantic few months for Aramco. The development of Manifa is regarded as crucial for Riyadh to hit its target of increasing production capacity from 10.8 million bpd to 12.5 million bpd by 2009.
The oil giant pumped about 9.2 million bpd of crude in March, according to industry data.
Global US oil service giants Schlumberger and Halliburton have been awarded separate drilling deals on Manifa worth up to $1 billion in total, covering horizontal drilling, stimulation and cementing.
The state-run oil firm also confirms that production at its 500,000-bpd Khursaniyah oil field commenced in early April, about four months later than expected.
The delay was partly due to difficulties on one of the central gas processing components at the field, which was one of the first to be awarded by Aramco on a convertible lump-sum turnkey basis, in 2005.
US-based Bechtel and Paris-based Technip took longer than expected to reach an agreement with Aramco to convert the largest contract on the development to a lump-sum turnkey basis.
It is not yet known if Aramco plans to sign fixed-price deals with contractors for the Manifa packages. The firm was unavailable for comment.