Published: Wednesday October 10, 2012 MYT 2:24:00 PM
China's Sinopec to build $850m oil storage in Indonesia
SINGAPORE/BEIJING: Asia's top refiner, China's Sinopec, has started work to build Southeast Asia's largest oil storage terminal at the Batam free trade zone in Indonesia, the company and industry sources said, in an $850-million investment aimed to boost petroleum trading.
Sinopec Kantons Holdings, a unit of the Sinopec Group, will hold a stake of 95 percent in the PT West Point Terminal project covering the construction of storage for up to 16 million barrels of crude and refined fuels, the company told the Hong Kong Exchange in a filing on Tuesday.
This would be Sinopec's first facility of such a size near Singapore, Asia's oil trading hub, where the Chinese refiner has established its presence over the past 15 years, trading refined products with a team of 50.
"It should boost Sinopec's trading opportunities...and Singapore has run out of space to build such facilities," said a crude oil trader based in Beijing who deals with Sinopec.
Sinopec's Asia crude teams are based in Beijing and Hong Kong.
"Sinopec has a trading presence in Singapore and I imagine having a storage terminal in Batam, bordering Singapore, would be used to support their trading activity in the region," said Victor Shum, managing director at IHS Purvin and Gertz in Singapore.
"I think the terminal has very little to do with energy security for China. It is a commercial decision."
About 360 hectares of land in Batam's Free Trade Zone has been set aside, with a refinery and petrochemical project being considered in the second phase of development, a source familiar with project details said.
Indonesian officials were not immediately available for comment.
"For the moment, the immediate priority is to get the storage facility built, the refining and petrochemical projects are not at the execution phase yet," said a second industry official.
"This has been a project which they (Sinopec) had been thinking about for a while now ... OK, at least two years in the making, this project is on a cluster of islands where some reclamation has taken place."
The project edges the Chinese oil major closer to domestic rival PetroChina, Asia's largest producer of oil and gas, which has a stake of 35 percent in the 14-million-barrel Universal Oil Terminal on Singapore's Jurong Island.
Industry sources said the project was originally planned as a joint venture between the Chinese refiner and OilTanking, a unit of privately held Marquard & Bahls, but did not work out.
"The deal fell through after Oiltanking decided to go ahead to build a storage facility in Karimun (Indonesia)," an industry source said. "To be honest this came as a surprise. It's happened all very quickly."
An invitation sent to select industry executives said Indonesian president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono would preside at a ground-breaking ceremony set for Wednesday.
The new storage facility is likely to take anything between 18 and 24 months to build, industry sources said. It will complement Singapore's role as the region's top trading hub.
Singapore, which is about three and half times the size of the U.S. capital, Washington D.C., has been struggling in recent years to meet the region's expanding demand for oil storage.
The reluctance of the Economic Development Board, its main agency for economic strategy, to free up more land to build oil storage facilities has triggered a series of oil infrastructure projects in southern Malaysia over the past 24 months.
In late 2011, Vopak, the world's largest independent oil storage operator, began construction of a terminal project at Pengerang, a seaside town at the southern tip of Malaysia's Johor state.
The 1.3 million cubic metre (cu m) facility, being developed with Malaysia's Dialog Group, is estimated to cost up to $700 million and be fully operational in 2014.
Earlier this year, Vitol, the world's largest independent oil trader, kicked off operations at its $290 million storage facility at Tanjong Bin in southwest Malaysia. - Reuters
- Malaysia to work hard for UN Security Council
- Respect the rule of law, Senate chief tells Karpal
- Fishermen slammed for selling off free engines
- Cops urge motorists to avoid roads near Dataran PJ Thursday evening
- EC: Special team to find out why indelible ink was not indelible
- Banting murders: Thilaiyalagan never met Sosilawati and friends
- Sabah moves to nullify rape victim’s marriage to alleged rapist
- Sarawak ministers, assemblymen get three-fold pay hike
- Low’s Cabinet appointment will not change his principles, says Tunku Aziz
- Saturday rally near Amcorp Mall to go on despite official warning
- Merged Education Ministry to have workforce of half a million
- Security guards jailed for killing alleged Nigerian conman
- Coconut yogurt anyone?
- Court postpones return of Genneva directors’ assets
- Contest for top MCA posts to be held in December
- Alliance full year profit up 7% to RM538mil
- Bumi Armada's earnings up 22% to RM109.67mil, order book RM12.2b
- Dayang bags RM2bil contract from Shell
- CIMB earnings up 37.1% to RM1.386b in Q1, 2013
- MMHE Q1 earnings down 35% to RM50.59m
- KLCI closes a shade below record high
- AmIncome Flexi bond fund to attract RM200m investments
- EPF invests additional US$1.3b overseas
- MIDA: Investments up 44% on-year to RM49.3b in Q1
- Prague metro plans to launch love train for singles
- iGate sacks chief executive Murthy after sexual harassment probe
- Eversendai Q1 earnings slip 13.1% to RM23.68m on timing differences
- US asks judge to deny S&P's motion to dismiss fraud lawsuit
- Perdana Petroleum bidding for over RM1b contracts
- IOI Corp Q3 earnings up just 2.8% to RM567.8m (Update)
- 6.0 quake off Russia's far-east Kamchatka coastline: USGS
- Death toll rises to 21 in Indonesian mine collapse
- Dozens dead as tornado hits Oklahoma City (Updated)

- No new H7N9 cases in China for a week: government
- Villagers discover ancient ball game statue in Mexico
- British PM survives gay marriage vote
- Kerry to help ink $2.1 bn defense accord with Oman
- Yahoo unveils makeover of flickr site
- China crush arch rivals Indonesia
- Former Asian phenom takes slow route to success
- Plenty for Hafizh as 55 is significant in his early racing career
- Yi Ting on a mission
- Razif: Indiscipline the cause of senior players’ poor performances
- Cool V Shem believes he will be too hot for rivals to handle
- Spirited Malaysian team vow to deliver against Germans
- Japan hope to reach their first semis in tourney
- KLHC to rule the roost if other teams don’t raise their game
- Malaysia have their work cut out in the World League
- Gobi’s fate to be decided by MHC’s administrative committee
- Andre nails it with last jump
- Grace hammers home a point with two golds
- Delia one step away from main draw after easy win
- Sharon believes KPT circuit is excellent for squash’s future
- Plaza Rakyat may be revived
- iGate sacks chief executive Murthy after sexual harassment probe
- RM1.7b Maju Expressway deal crashes
- Report: iPhone maker Apple keeping billions of dollars in Irish subsidiaries to avoid taxes
- Malaysia's Titan seeks up to 130,000 tonnes of naphtha
- Maybank seeking suitable replacement for CEO Wahid
- Time dotCom CEO Afzal ready to move on, but wants a solid management team in place first
- UBS predicts Malaysia’s 2013 GDP at below 5%
- Wahid: M’sia growth prospects still bright, will be driven by Govt identified projects
- Malindo set to operate from Subang Skypark
- Malindo set to operate from Subang Skypark
- Plaza Rakyat may be revived
- Maybank seeking suitable replacement for CEO Wahid
- Perdana Petroleum bidding for over RM1b contracts
- CME to launch palm oil swaps contract on June 3
- Report: iPhone maker Apple keeping billions of dollars in Irish subsidiaries to avoid taxes
- MAHB sees 10% rise in KLIA passenger numbers from last year's 39.9mil
- AmIncome Flexi bond fund to attract RM200m investments
- MIDA: Investments up 44% on-year to RM49.3b in Q1
- iGate sacks chief executive Murthy after sexual harassment probe


