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Saudi Aramco Expanding R&D Reach In US
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Courtesy of saudiaramco.com |
The inauguration last week of a new Aramco Research Center in Cambridge, Mass., near Boston, signaled another step forward in Saudi Arabian Oil Company’s (Saudi Aramco) strategic commitment to build a global research and development presence, and to expand its worldwide research network and capabilities. The global research and development (R&D) program positions Saudi Aramco to grow its already technology-intensive upstream and downstream programs.
The centre’s opening ceremony drew about 100 attendees, including officials from universities, local research institutions and partner companies, who joined Saudi Aramco president and CEO Khalid A. Al-Falih and other Aramco representatives at a ribbon-cutting and facility tour.
In his keynote address at the event, Al-Falih highlighted the importance of R&D, how technology can contribute to accelerated R&D activity and the role of collaboration in the company’s broader research strategy. “To provide the energy the world needs,” he said, “our challenge is not simply to develop more energy supplies ... but also to make them cleaner, more cost-effective and more efficient. That means revolutionary, game-changing technologies.
“We see innovation and increasing knowledge intensity as the next opportunity for transformative growth and prosperity, since it will unlock new possibilities and affect every human endeavor,” he continued. “Making a real difference to the world through transformative innovation is precisely why Saudi Aramco is establishing research centres in key hubs around the world.”
In the past 18 months, the company has made substantial progress in its global R&D program, opening new research centres at the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology in Thuwal, Saudi Arabia; and internationally in Delft, The Netherlands; Paris; Daejeon, Korea; and, in the near future, Beijing. The two other U.S.-based centres will be officially inaugurated next year in Houston and Detroit.
This network of new centres has been established to align with and advance the groundbreaking work being conducted at Saudi Aramco’s Exploration and Petroleum Engineering Advanced Research Center (EXPEC ARC) and its Research and Development Center (R&DC). Strategically located in geographic centres of excellence, the centres are ideally situated to “access novel ideas and tap global talent wherever particular strengths may lie,” said Al-Falih.
An equally important driver of the R&D program is the role it will play in strengthening the kingdom’s research capacity, as well as the commercialization and manufacturing of company technologies. A core outcome of the global network is the ability to bring benefit to Saudi Arabia through innovations that foster growth.
“Research is an investment; it is a long-term strategic commitment. Saudi Aramco recognizes that R&D is key to its growth and is on a course to build its research program as part of a far-reaching plan to become a global leader in energy and chemicals,” Saudi Aramco’s chief technology officer Charles Kresge said in his remarks during the event. “This investment builds on decades of strong in-kingdom R&D achievements.”
The Cambridge centre will pursue major advances in upstream and downstream energy research. Addressing subsurface challenges of hydrocarbon discovery and recovery requires focus and deeper fundamental research to achieve the goals the company is targeting, according to Samer AlAshgar, manager of EXPEC ARC.
AlAshgar explained: “The research centre in Cambridge gives EXPEC ARC the ability to connect with a large pool of very bright and innovative scientists and engineers as well as the ability to collaborate with many top tier institutions in this rich ecosystem. Our intent in Cambridge is to continue to advance Saudi Aramco’s leading position in areas of subsurface technology where we look to further deepen and expand our research programs in computational modelling as well as nanomaterials as they relate to subsurface applications of monitoring and recovery.”
Source: saudiaramco.com