“The project is nearly complete”, Qapco said in a recent report.
The petrochemical major said a sharp increase in oil prices along with numerous unscheduled cracker shutdowns mainly in Europe and
Qapco said with EP2 coming online, ethylene supply to Qatar Vinyl Company (QVC) would increase. QVC, a Qapco joint venture, had been under “tremendous pressure” because of the high cost of ethylene, both locally sourced and imported, the report said.
According to Qapco, significant progress had been achieved in the Ras Laffan Ethane Cracker and Qatofin projects in which the company holds a stake.
The ethane cracker to be constructed in
The Qatofin project for production of linear low-density polyethylene will have a nameplate capacity of 450,000 tonnes per annum and will be constructed at
After the start-up of the ethylene expansion project and the Qatofin project, a significant quantity of ethylene will be available either for export or as feedstock for the downstream derivative units.
“The proposal to invest in a new low-density polyethylene (LDPE-3) plant of 250,000 tonnes capacity is under advanced stage of discussion and the prospective technology licensor has been identified. The final selection is expected this year itself and the project is expected to go onstream in 2011,” Qapco said.
In its drive to offer a larger basket of petrochemical items to its customers worldwide, Qapco said it is expanding its product range. Qapco currently markets 37.5% of QVC’s ethylene dichloride, vinyl chloro monomer and caustic soda and 10% of Q-Chem’s high-density polyethylene production.
In the near future, Qapco will be marketing 10% of products from Q-Chem II, Qatofin (50%) and LDPE-3 (100%).
PIN/Gulf-Times.Com
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