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Construction of urea plant in Azerbaijan nears completion

Oil&Gas Materials 29 November 2017 14:13 (UTC +04:00)
Construction of a carbamide (urea) plant of Azerbaijan’s state oil company SOCAR has been completed by 98.4 percent
Construction of urea plant in Azerbaijan nears completion

Baku, Azerbaijan, Nov. 29

By Maksim Tsurkov – Trend:

Construction of a urea (carbamide) plant of Azerbaijan’s state oil company SOCAR has been completed by 98.4 percent, Khayal Jafarov, the plant’s director, said at the fourth international conference in Baku titled “Oil refining and petrochemistry of the Caspian Sea and Central Asia” Nov. 29.

The engineering work and equipment procurement are completed by 100 percent, construction work – by 94.7 percent, civil work – by 99.8 percent, while the equipment installation is completed by 91.7 percent, he noted.

“All the work for the plant’s construction is planned to be completed in December and to start the commissioning work early next year,” Jafarov said. “Production at the plant will begin in the first half of 2018.”

The plant will produce 1,200 tons of ammonia and, subsequently, 2,000 tons of urea per day. It is planned to supply a quarter of production, that is, 150,000-200,000 tons of urea, to the Azerbaijani domestic market. The remaining part will be exported to Turkey, Georgia and the markets of the Black Sea and the Mediterranean Sea countries.

South Korea’s Samsung Engineering won the tender for the construction of the urea plant. Samsung Engineering acts as a general contractor of the plant’s construction, but it has no license for production of urea and ammonia, which will be by-product in the urea production process. Therefore, the relevant licensing agreements were signed with Haldor Topsoe company (Denmark) for production of ammonia and Stamicarbon B.V. company (the Netherlands) for production of urea.

Production at the plant will be environmentally friendly, that is, no pollutant emissions into the atmosphere are expected.

The plant will have an autonomous electricity system. The plant will consume 25-26 MW of electricity per hour.

At first, financing of construction work was carried out from the Azerbaijani state budget and about 210 million manats were allocated from there before the beginning of 2015, but later it was decided to switch to project finance and negotiations with banks were started.

As a result, the Export–Import Bank of South Korea (EximBank) opened a line of credit worth 500 million euros under Azerbaijan’s state guarantee to complete the construction of the plant. EximBank will directly provide 251 million euros, while 249 million euros will be allocated by three commercial banks (Italy’s UniCredit S.p.A., France’s Societe Generale S.A. and Germany’s Deutsche Bank AG) with the support of EximBank.

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