Ministry suggests
adding $22bn Thai oil complex to Vietnam’s oil sector planning
The Ministry of Industry and Trade
has called on the Prime Minister to add a Thai company's megaproject to build
an oil complex in a south-central province to the planned development of Vietnam’s oil
and gas sector.
The Nhon Hoi oil complex, to be located in the
eponymous industrial park in Binh
Dinh Province,
should be part of the oil and gas projects zoned for development between 2015
and 2025, the ministry said in a document submitted last week to the Prime
Minister.
Thai energy firm PTT Pcl is the developer of the
complex, consisting of an oil refinery, an olefin manufacturing plant, and an
ethylene steam cracking component.
The proposed megaproject is worth US$22 billion and
will have a total capacity of up to 20 million tons of products per year
during its first phase, the industry and trade ministry said in its document.
The planned 20 million ton per year capacity of the
Nhon Hoi complex is three times that of Dung Quat, the Southeast Asian
country’s sole operating refinery.
PTT will only hold a stake of 40 to 45 percent in the
project, while Saudi Arabian national petroleum and natural gas company Saudi
Aramco will also own a similar share in the complex, according to the
ministry.
The remaining 15 to 20 percent stake must be held by a
Vietnamese entity, which the Binh Dinh administration suggested in
mid-October to be Petrolimex,
Vietnam’s
largest fuel wholesaler.
Little preferential treatment
The Ministry of Industry and Trade said Vietnam
should encourage and support a foreign investor if it wants to build an oil
refinery that satisfies legal requirements, while the interests for both
parties are ensured, according to Hai Quan (Customs) newswire.
The ministry rejected claims that the Nhon Hoi oil
complex would affect the operations of other government-backed refineries in Vietnam, the
newswire said in a Friday article.
Dung Quat refinery, located in the Dung Quat Economic
Zone in the central province of Quang Ngai, is the only operating refinery in Vietnam, while the second such facility, the
Nghi Son Refinery, is slated to be commissioned in 2017 in the north-central province of Thanh Hoa.
The industry ministry said the proposed Nhon Hoi plant,
as well as other projects besides Dung Quat and Nghi Son, would not receive
as much preferential treatment as their predecessors.
The presence of Nhon Hoi will act as motivation for
Dung Quat and Nghi Son to increase their competitiveness and reduce
production costs, it added.
The ministry said not all of the requests for incentives
to develop the project by PTT will be accepted.
PTT has asked to enjoy zero taxes on crude oil imports
and transfer of profits abroad, and be allowed to distribute the complex’s
products domestically, to which the ministry agrees.
But the request to have its corporate income tax
exempted for the first 13 years of the project has been turned down,
according to the ministry.
“This is against all current laws and regulations,” the
ministry said, adding it agrees with the proposal by the Binh Dinh administration
to levy a 10 percent corporate income tax on the complex for 17 out of 30
years from its opening.
“The project will enjoy zero tax for the first four
years, 5 percent in the next nine years, and 10 percent in the remaining 17
years,” the ministry said.
PTT has said in the project’s feasibility report that
if everything proceeds as planned, the oil complex could break ground in 2016
and begin production in 2021.
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