Malaysia to Boost Oil Storage Business as New Terminal Starts on Saturday
04.11.2014 - NEWS

April 11, 2014 [Reuters] - Malaysia's biggest commercial oil storage facility will start operations on Saturday, the 12th of April 12, when it receives its first fuel shipment, expanding Southeast Asia's share in the oil storage  business and also raising competition with neighbouring Singapore.


The $600 million oil storage terminal with a capacity of 1.28 million cubic meters at Pengerang in the southern Malaysian state of Johor will receive a clean oil product shipment on Saturday morning, Dialog Group Bhd, one of the owners of the terminal, confirmed to Reuters in an email.

The Pengerang terminal, majority owned by a 51:49 joint venture of Dialog and Dutch oil and chemicals storage company Vopak, will boost southern Malaysia’s oil storage capacity by nearly 70 percent to more than 3 million cubic metres when its first phase is completed by year-end.

It will also become then the first commercial oil terminal in the region to offer crude oil storage.

It was not immediately clear what fuel the shipment will bring on Saturday or what the quantities are and who’s leasing the storage space.

Malaysia also has oil storage terminals at Tanjung Bin, Tanjung Langsat and Pasir Gudang.

Twenty-five storage tanks at Pengerang with a combined capacity of 432,000 cubic meters that can store clean oil products such as naphtha and diesel will be brought online at Saturday’s commencement. Another 432,000 cubic meters is set to be commissioned by June and a further 420,000 cubic meters by December, an industry source familiar with the matter said.

When the first stage is completed, the project will offer 57 tanks and six berths. It will have capabilities to dock a very large crude carrier.

Two-thirds of the terminal’s capacity will be designated to store clean products and the remaining for crude oil.

Subject to demand for more storage, there are also plans to expand Pengerang’s storage capacity to up to 5 million cubic meters.

The storage terminal is one of several upcoming energy projects in Pengerang.

Malaysia’s state oil firm Petronas will build a 300,000 barrels-per-day refinery and petrochemical integrated development which costs about $16 billion at Pengerang. The refinery is expected to start operations by early 2019.

And in November, Singapore-based oil trader Concord Energy said it had signed a pact with Dialog for a feasibility study to build another terminal there with a capacity of up to 2 million cubic meters.

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