MPGC: Postwar Iraq's refining sector continues to take shape

May 11, 2004
A program of rehabilitation and reconstruction for the Iraqi refining industry is beginning to take shape.

Bob Tippee
Editor

BAHRAIN, May 11 -- A program of rehabilitation and reconstruction for the Iraqi refining industry is beginning to take shape.

A. Barifcani, advisor on downstream operations for Iraqi's Ministry of Oil, Tuesday described plans for the industry at the Middle East Petroleum & Gas Conference in Bahrain. He didn't discuss how the program would be financed other than to say a "prudent, thoughtful investment plan" is in place.

Also at the conference, Hazim Sultan, director general of the ministry's Reservoirs and Fields Development Directorate, said Iraqi production of crude oil would reach 3.3-3.5 million b/d by the end of 2005.

Progress both upstream and downstream comes despite the threat of sabotage and attacks on workers. Sultan said Iraqi oil professionals have learned from past difficulties to sustain operations under challenging conditions.

"They fear nothing," Sultan said.

Refining plans
The oil ministry plans to add processing units to facilities in each of three refining companies.

For North Refinery Co. (NRC), anchored by the Beiji refinery built during the 1980s north of Baghdad, it plans to add two package units—which is what it calls 10,000 b/sd topping plants it operates throughout the country.

It also plans to add reforming units at the 20,000 b/sd Seria refinery and 30,000 b/sd Kirkuk plant, as well as a 30,000 b/sd fluid catalytic cracker and 20,000 b/sd isomerization unit, apparently at Beiji.

The ministry also plans to rehabilitate the Beiji hydrocracker and upgrade a lube plant and all processing units.

NRC has total design crude capacity of 402,000 b/sd, of which 288,000 b/sd is in use.

Plans for South Refinery Co. (SRC), with main facilities at Basrah, call for rehabilitation of a 70,000 b/d crude unit and modernization of all processing units.

Construction plans for the company include a 10,000 b/d reforming unit; two 15,000 b/sd, light gas-oil hydrodesulfurization units, a 9,000 b/d isomerization unit, a cracking unit, a 2,500 b/sd reformer at Nassiriya, and three 10,000 b/sd crude units.

Design crude capacity in SRC, built in the 1970s, totals 190,000 b/sd, of which 150,000 b/sd is in use.

In Middle Refinery Co. (MRC), which includes the Daura refinery built during the 1950s outside Baghdad, the ministry plans to add a 70,000 b/sd distillation unit, a continuous catalytic reformer, a gas-oil hydrodesulfurization unit, and a 20,000 b/sd reformer in Najaf.

It further plans to replace two crude units with a 70,000 b/sd unit and modernize all processing units.

MRC has total distillation capacity of 122,000 b/sd. Barifcani didn't say how much was in use.

The ministry hopes soon to build two new refineries—one with capacity of 20,000 b/sd at Konya and another with 10,000 b/sd of capacity at Erbil. In the longer term it wants to build a 250,000-300,000 b/sd refinery oriented to gasoline output.

Production gains
On progress in Iraq's upstream, Sultan said, "we have more or less picked up the pieces of our production rates prior to the last war."

Like the refining industry, Iraq's producing industry was ravaged by three wars since 1980 and economic sanctions following the former regime's invasion of Kuwait in 1990.

Direct damage from the most recent war, which expelled President Saddam Hussein from power a year ago, was limited to a pipeline pump station and a Tigris River bridge for crude, products, and natural gas pipelines.

Subsequent looting and sabotage were extensive, however, and caused equipment bought with funds from the United Nations Oil-for-Food program during the sanctions era to disappear.

Production has climbed back to about 2.5 million b/d, 400,000 b/d less than its level before last year's invasion of Iraq.

April exports, Sultan said, averaged 1.806 million b/d, of which 1.575 million b/d passed through the Basrah terminal on the Persian Gulf and 231,000 b/d through the recently restarted pipeline from northern fields through Turkey to the Mediterranean.

Export capacities are about 500,000 b/d through the north and 2 million b/d through the Basrah and partially restored Khor Al-Amaya terminals. Capacity of the northern pipeline might rise to 800,000 b/d by yearend if rehabilitation continues.

"Always we keep our fingers crossed, hoping that nothing will happen," Sultan said. "We get surprises all the time."

To raise production to 3.5 million by the end of next year, he said, "we do not have to do much." Recompletions and connections of wells already completed can boost output to that level with little drilling, he said.

The ministry soon will seek bids for reservoir studies of giant Kirkuk field in the north and Rumaila field in the south.

Iraq's longer-term production capacity goal remains 6 million b/d, which Sultan said is possible by the end of the current decade with "tremendous work."

Contact Bob Tippee at [email protected].