Shell halts US$6.5billion Qatar petrochemical project as oil prices fall

January 14, 2015 | Middle East, Petrochemicals

The joint venture between the Anglo-Dutch energy giant and state-owned Qatar Petroleum had been signed in December 2011.

Doha, Qatar | – Qatar Petroleum and Royal Dutch Shell have scrapped plans for a petrochemicals project, worth an estimated US$6.5 billion, due to the slump in global oil prices.

In a statement issued on Wednesday (Jan 14), Shell said the Al Karaana project would not go ahead because of the “high envisaged capital cost that has rendered it commercially unfeasible, particularly in the current economic climate prevailing in the energy industry”.

The joint venture between the Anglo-Dutch energy giant and state-owned Qatar Petroleum had been signed in December 2011. At the time it was envisioned that a huge “world-scale petrochemicals complex” would be built in Ras Laffan, an industrial city some 80 kilometres north of Doha.

The Qatari company was to own 80 per cent of the project, and Shell the remaining 20 per cent. Last year it was reported that the project would be completed in 2018. However, the decision not to proceed was taken, said Shell, after “careful and thorough evaluation of commercial quotations”.

“The fall in oil prices is clearly playing its part,” said analyst Keith Bowman at UK-based stockbroker Hargreaves Lansdown about the collapse of the project. “The estimated return on their investment for both companies will have fallen,” he told AFP.

Global oil prices have dived since last June and continued to fall on Wednesday after major crude producers insisted they would maintain current output levels despite oversupply.