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Saudi firm Ma’aden awards $2.26bn combined contracts on phosphate project
Saudi firm Ma’aden awards $2.26bn combined contracts on phosphate project
Reuters
Khobar, Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabian Mining Company (Ma’aden) has awarded three contracts worth a combined 8.46bn riyals ($2.26bn) to Canadian and Asian companies concerning its new phosphate mining and production project, it said yesterday.
The project in Waad al-Shimal City in the north of the country is a joint venture between Ma’aden, Saudi Basic Industries Corp and Mosaic.
Canada’s SNC Lavalin and China’s Sinopec Engineering Group have won a 2.86bn-riyal deal to build a power plant and a sulphuric acid plant which has a production capacity of 4.9mn tonnes, Ma’aden said in a bourse filing.
South Korea’s Hanwha Engineering & Construction Co won a contract to build a phosphoric acid plant worth 3.5bn riyals. The plant will have a production capacity of 1.5mn tonnes.
China Huanqiu Contracting & Engineering Corp Co won a contract to build an ore beneficiation plant worth 2.08bn riyals with a production capacity of 5.3mn tonnes.
The projects are due to be completed in 2016, Ma’aden said. Ma’aden aims to close fundraising for its $7bn phosphate project before the end of the year, a timetable reiterated in the statement.