Houston Community News >> Malaysia to Build 7 Billion Dollar Oil Pipeline
5/7/2007 Kuala Lumpur --
Malaysia will build a $7bn pipeline to transport Middle East oil across the
north of its peninsula to East Asian countries, Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad
Badawi said yesterday.
“Yes we have agreed,” Abdullah told reporters.
Abdullah, who is also the finance minister, said the project was one of the
government’s major initiatives to develop Malaysia’s northern region.
“Anything that happens there is part of that, we take into account all of this.
We have always wanted to do more for that area and that also will take care of
the eastern corridor,” he said. Abdullah declined to elaborate.
The News Straits Times reported yesterday that Trans-Peninsula Petroleum Sdn Bhd,
the company that will construct the 312km pipeline, said it will invest as much
as seven billion dollars in the ambitious project over eight years.
The pipeline will run from northwestern Kedah state, across Perak state to
northeastern Kelantan state which faces the South China Sea, which Chairman
Rahim Kamil Sulaiman said will bypass the piracy-prone Malacca Strait.
Half of the world’s oil shipments currently pass through the 960-kilometre
strategic strait, the busiest seaway in the world.
“The initial phase of two million barrels of oil per day is expected to cost
about two billion dollars, and the investment will increase to $4.5bn and $7bn
upon completion of the second and third phases of the project, respectively,”
Rahim told the newspaper.
“Investors will also be invited, among them the key oil producers of the Middle
East, Islamic funds and major consumers in East Asia,” he said.
Last month, Deputy Prime Minister Najib Razak said the proposed project was
intended to reduce transport costs and security risks for tankers on the Malacca
Strait.
Yin Shao Yang, oil and gas analyst with Kenanga Research, said there was much
excitement over the mega project, with Middle East oil transported by the
pipeline to “come primarily from Iran for the hungry Chinese market.”
However, Yin cautioned that the “economics of the oil pipeline project is not
determined yet”, flagging ongoing competition with neighboring Singapore as
Southeast Asia’s petro-chemical hub.
“Let’s say they want to transport Middle East oil to China, will it be cheaper
through the oil pipeline and refining it in Malaysia or through Singapore. This
is the burning question,” he said.
“If it is cheaper by sea, oil tankers will go to Singapore,” he added.
Singapore processes at least two million barrels a day while Malaysia produces
550,000 barrels per day, according to Yin.
Rahim said tankers will offload crude oil from the Middle East in the coastal
town of Yan in Kedah.
The oil will then be transported through the pipeline to Bachok on Kelantan’s
coast, for distribution to countries in the East Asian region, he said. There
will be three storage tanks located in Yan, and Jeli and Bachok in Kelantan,
while the initial storage capacity of the pipeline will be around 60 million
barrels of oil, the newspaper said.
“This will be upgraded later to serve as the regional strategic reserve of the
East Asian countries, especially China, Japan and South Korea,” it said.
Rahim also said that his company was not involved in the proposed construction
of two oil refineries.
(Contributed by Malaysia News)