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Iraq awards Hyundai E&C contract for Common Seawater Supply Project under GGIP
Iraq awards Hyundai E&C contract for Common Seawater Supply Project under GGIP

Zawya

time13-08-2025

  • Business
  • Zawya

Iraq awards Hyundai E&C contract for Common Seawater Supply Project under GGIP

Iraq's Council of Ministers has approved awarding the contract for the Common Seawater Supply Project (CSSP-ITT-05) to South Korea's Hyundai Engineering & Construction (Hyundai E&C) for the engineering, procurement, supply, construction, and commissioning of a seawater treatment plant at the Ar-ratawi oil field. The decision, taken during the 32nd cabinet session chaired by Prime Minister Mohammed S. Al-Sudani, includes ratifying price negotiation results and bypassing procurement procedures under Government Contracts Implementation Instructions No. 2 of 2014, to address measures taken between 2018 and 2021 in accordance with financial authorities, the official statement noted. The Common Seawater Supply Project (CSSP) is one of the four sub-projects of the $10 billion Gas Growth Integrated Project (GGIP) led by a consortium comprising TotalEnergies (45 percent), Basrah Oil Company (30 percent) and QatarEnergy (25 percent). The facility will be located between Khor Zubair and Umm Qasr ports and will have an initial capacity to treat 5 million barrels of seawater per day. The filtered water will be piped to the Zubair, Rumaila, Majnoon, West Qurna and Ar-Ratawi fields to maintain reservoir pressure while replacing the fresh water currently drawn from the rivers and groundwater. This shift is expected to free up 250,000 cubic metres of freshwater daily for agriculture and irrigation and reduce water stress in the area. In May 2019, South Korean media reported that Hyundai E&C had received a letter of intent from the Basrah Oil Company (BOC) for a $2.4 billion sea water supply facility. A Reuters report in June 2019 said the award was awaiting final ministerial approval at the time. GGIP moves forward The award comes amid a series of GGIP-related announcements this year. Last week, the Shanghai-listed China Petroleum Engineering Co., Ltd., (CPE), a subsidiary of China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), announced that its wholly owned subsidiary China Petroleum Pipeline Engineering Company (CPP) received letter of award from BOC for the Basra Province Seawater Pipeline EPC Project. The company said in a Chinese–language stock exchange statement that the contract, valued at $2.524 billion, is yet to be signed. The scope of work includes the construction of trunk pipelines from seawater treatment facilities to various interconnecting stations, branch pipelines from interconnecting stations to oilfield distribution stations, and pipeline ancillary surface facilities. The contract period is 54 months inclusive of 42 months for the design, procurement, construction, and commissioning phase, and 12 months for operation, maintenance, and training. In June 2025, CPE said in a stock exchange statement that CPP was awarded the $294 million Ar -Ratawi Gas Midstream Pipeline project by TotalEnergies. One of the four sub-projects of GGIP, Ar-Ratawi Gas Midstream Project (GMP) aims to eliminate flaring and recover the gas from several oil fields. Collected and processed, the gas will then be transported by pipeline to supply the local power plants, thereby improving the electricity supply to this region, which is regularly affected by power cuts. CPE stated that project will be executed under the engineering, procurement, supply, construction and commissioning (EPSCC) model over a 36-month period. It involves construction of approximately 114 kilometres of a 26-inch sour gas pipeline, an 83-kilometre 20-inch sour gas pipeline, three export pipelines, and supporting valve stations to link Majnoon and West Qurna II oil fields to the Ar-Ratawi gas processing plant. The GGIP project focuses on recovering flared gas from three oil fields, supplying gas to power plants, developing a 1 Gigawatt (GW) solar power plant for the Basra regional grid, and constructing a seawater treatment plant to support water injection for enhanced oil recovery in the region. In March 2025, Zawya Projects reported that Iraq has commenced construction of a 1,000 megawatt (MW) solar photovoltaic (PV) power plant as part of GGIP. The plant is equally owned by TotalEnergies and QatarEnergy. (Writing by Majda Muhsen; Editing by Anoop Menon) (

ENEC, Hyundai E&C sign MoU to advance global nuclear energy collaboration
ENEC, Hyundai E&C sign MoU to advance global nuclear energy collaboration

Zawya

time28-07-2025

  • Business
  • Zawya

ENEC, Hyundai E&C sign MoU to advance global nuclear energy collaboration

The Emirates Nuclear Energy Company (ENEC) and Hyundai Engineering & Construction (Hyundai E&C) today signed a strategic Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) in Seoul, Republic of Korea, to jointly explore international nuclear energy opportunities. The collaboration between ENEC and Hyundai E&C builds on the longstanding strategic partnership between the UAE and the Republic of Korea in the nuclear sector and supports both countries' shared goals to advancing peaceful nuclear energy in line with IEA and IAEA projections for a significant global scale-up of nuclear capacity by 2030 and 2050 respectively. The MoU provides a comprehensive framework for knowledge sharing, collaborative evaluation of project participation, and assessment of strategic investment opportunities. It also includes the formation of a joint working group to identify areas of mutual interest and support the development of future nuclear energy initiatives. ENEC is pursuing a new phase of investing in, collaborating with and consulting on both large nuclear reactors in addition to advancing new nuclear technologies both locally and internationally. With the Barakah Nuclear Energy Plant fully operational, ENEC is now focused on working with global partners to support the acceleration of nuclear deployment and is committed to working with all responsible nations looking to deploy new nuclear or expand their existing fleets, and MOUs with companies such as Hyundai E&C are a clear demonstration of this approach. Hyundai E&C was the lead contractor in the construction of the Barakah Nuclear Energy Plant, and a proven contributor to the UAE Peaceful Nuclear Energy Programme, which is now recognised as a global benchmark for safe and efficient nuclear development. The signing follows a series of recent agreements between ENEC and leading global operators, technology developers, and energy companies. These partnerships form an integral part of ENEC's broader focus on identifying global investment, collaboration and deployment opportunities to support the rapid delivery of civil nuclear energy, driving energy security and sustainability through the provision of clean baseload electricity. The successful construction of the Barakah Nuclear Energy Plant, earned Hyundai E&C high praise from the global nuclear industry for demonstrating its unique risk management and construction capabilities. As Korea and the UAE deepen their commitment to future cooperation in the energy sector, including nuclear, Hyundai E&C also plans to expand the horizon of their cooperation as a strategic partner, building on the trust and experience developed during the Barakah Nuclear Energy Plant project.

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