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Ras Laffan Industrial City
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Ras Laffan |
| native_name | راس لفان |
| native_name_lang | ar |
| image_skyline | Ras Laffan LNG terminal in 2012.jpg |
| image_caption | An LNG terminal in Ras Laffan in 2012 |
| image_map | |
| pushpin_map | Qatar |
| coordinates | |
| subdivision_type | Country |
| subdivision_name | Qatar |
| subdivision_type1 | Municipality |
| subdivision_name1 | Al Khor |
| subdivision_type2 | Zone |
| subdivision_name2 | Zone 75 |
| subdivision_type3 | District no. |
| subdivision_name3 | 312 |
| established_title | Established |
| established_date | 1996 |
| area_footnotes | |
| area_total_km2 | 55.5 |
| population_density_km2 | auto |
Ras Laffan Industrial City () is a Qatari industrial hub located 80 km north of Doha. It is administered by QatarEnergy.
Ras Laffan Industrial City is Qatar's main site for production of liquefied natural gas and gas-to-liquid. It hosts among others ORYX GTL and Pearl GTL plants, QatarEnergy LNG plants, and the Dolphin gas processing plant, the Laffan Refinery, and Ras Laffan A, B, and C integrated water and power plants. With an enclosed water area of approximately 4,500 hectares Ras Laffan Port is the largest artificial harbour in the world and contains the world's largest LNG export facility.
Etymology
In Arabic, the term ras translates as "head" and refers to a cape, whereas laffan is derived from the Arabic verb laffa, meaning "to wrap" or "to coil", and is used to describe trees or branches that are intertwined.
History


The earliest-known English text to describe Ras Laffan was in the 1890 book The Persian Gulf Pilot, published by the United Kingdom Hydrographic Office. It recounts only geographic features, implying that the area was not settled at the time. In an early 1904 transcript of the Gazetteer of the Persian Gulf, Oman and Central Arabia by J. G. Lorimer, it is mentioned that a pearling bank known as Umm Al Shebh is found off the coast of Ras Laffan, although Lorimer provides no description of Ras Laffan itself.
As an industrial city, Ras Laffan was commissioned in 1996. The purpose of its founding was to host petrochemical facilities for the natural gas obtained from the North Field. The North Field, found in 1971, is the world's biggest natural gas field, occupying an offshore area of roughly 6,000 km2. The North Field contains over 900 trillion tcsf of recoverable gas.
Ras Laffan's commissioning in 1996 marks the completion date for the city's first liquefied natural gas (LNG) plant to convert the natural gas obtained from the North Field into LNG. At first, it was estimated that only 106 km2 would be needed for industrial operations. However, in 2004, this figure was more than drastically increased, to 296 km2.
In March 2011, the city signed a memorandum of understanding with the Port of Rotterdam on the occasion of an official visit by Queen Beatrix to Qatar.
Qatargas announced in May 2019 that the company's Ras Laffan terminal received its 10,000th non-LNG related shipment.
Geography
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Ras Laffan is located at a very low elevation and has sandy soils. It is 50 mi north of the capital Doha and 23 mi southeast of Ras Rakan. There is a reef off the coast.
Wildlife
Together with Fuwayrit, Ras Laffan accommodates approximately 30% of all sea turtle nests in Qatar. The area has been noted for the presence of the rough-tailed gecko as well as communal nesting sites.
Common vegetation found in Ras Laffan includes arfaj (Rhanterium epapposum), rak (Salvadora persica), desert thumbs (Cynomorium coccineum), ndeewa (Cressa cretica), rukbah (Cyperus jeminicus) near the coast, incense grass (Cymbopogon commutatus) in sandy depressions, kebaisha (Erodium glaucophyllum), reeds (Phragmites australis) in wet areas, ja'ad (Teucrium polium), nafayj (Pulicaria gnaphalodes), and stoneseed (Echiochilon jugatum).
Other common vegetation found in Ras Laffan include mature shrubs of the Taverniera genus including aelijaan (Taverniera spartea) and dahseer (Taverniera aegyptiaca). Roughly 17 hectares of mangroves are found off the coast of Ras Laffan.
In a 2010 survey of Ras Laffan's coastal waters conducted by the Qatar Statistics Authority, it was found that its maximum depth was 12.5 meters and minimum depth was 5 meters. The waters had an average pH of 8.05, a salinity of 46.94 psu, an average temperature of 24.6 C and 6.86 mg/L of dissolved oxygen.
Laffan Environmental Society is an environmental NGO formed as a joint partnership between QatarEnergy Industrial Cities and several other large companies operating in Ras Laffan. It was established as a response to calls for improved environmental management in the area surrounding the city resulting from petrochemical processing.
Companies
- Al Karanaa Petrochemical
- Al Khaleej Gas
- Al Sajeel Petrochemical
- Barzan Gas Co.
- Dolphin Energy
- Laffan Refinery
- Oryx GTL
- Pearl GTL
- QatarEnergy LNG
- QPower
- Ras Girtas Power Co.
- Ras Laffan Olefins Co.
- Ras Laffan Power Co.
Industrial infrastructure
Currently, Ras Laffan accommodates three power generation and water desalination plants, abbreviated as Ras Laffan A, B, and C (also known as Ras Qartas Energy Plant). In 2014, Kahramaa announced a planned project which would see the desalination capacity of the plants increase from 35 million gallons of water per day to 65 million gallons per day. The project began in 2017.
In 1999, QatarEnergy proposed to construct a facility which would meet the water cooling requirements of Ras Laffan's petrochemical industries. This project came to fruition with the launch of the facility's inaugural phase in 2003 with an hourly production capacity of 308,000 cubic meters of seawater. By 2010, the two remaining phases were completed, increasing the hourly production capacity to 937,000 cubic meters of seawater.
In 2017, Qatargas and ExxonMobil launched the $10.4 billion Barzan Gas Project as a joint venture.
Ras Laffan Emergency & Safety College
Ras Laffan Emergency & Safety College is a training center for emergency professionals created to address the safety needs of the city's industrial companies.
Ras Laffan Support Services Area
Companies providing support services to the petrochemicals in Ras Laffan have been based in the specially designated Ras Laffan Support Services Area since its inauguration in March 2013. The area's facilities consist of three large-scale workshops, a yard, and an administration building occupying an area of 46,600 square meters. Mainly, companies based in this area provide replacement and repair of damaged electrical and petrochemical-related equipment.
Port of Ras Laffan
The Port of Ras Laffan is the world's biggest petrochemicals export port, taking up a grand total of 56 square km. The first time an LNG carrier docked in the port was in 1996. In 2015, the port had the capacity to dock 200 tankers annually.
Erhama bin Jaber Al Jalahma Shipyard
Named after the legendary Arab pirate Rahmah ibn Jabir al-Jalahimah, the Erhama bin Jaber Al Jalahma Shipyard occupies 110 hectares and is used by Nakilat Damen Shipyards Qatar.
Health
The city is served by Ras Laffan Hospital, which is spread over 200,000 square meters and features four levels, including an underground level. The bed capacity is 118, with future plans to expand this with the addition of 100 beds. A mosque with a 400-worshiper capacity is also in the works. It has a 30-bed emergency building distributed over 6,000 square meters of the hospital. Hamad Medical Corporation (HMC) is responsible for overseeing the hospital's financing.
One health clinic is in the city, and like the hospital, it too is financed by HMC.
Transport
Ras Laffan is connected with Al Khor City through Al Huwailah Link Road. In November 2014, the 16-km road was improved by increasing it from one lane to four lanes.
References
References
- "District Area Map". Ministry of Development Planning and Statistics.
- (1998). "موسوعة المعلومات القطرية - المجلد الجغرافي". College of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Qatar.
- (14 February 2017). "'Persian Gulf Gazetteer, Part II: Geographical and descriptive materials, Section II: Western Side of the Gulf' [58v] (116/280)". Qatar Digital Library.
- "Ras Laffan Industrial City". Qatar Petroleum.
- (2010). "Development of the Energy Sector in Qatar During the Past Fifteen Years (1995 – 2010)". Qatar Petroleum.
- "North Gas Field". Qatar Petroleum.
- Justin Dargin. (2010). "Qatar's gas revolution". The LNG Review.
- (11 March 2011). "Port of Rotterdam, Ras Laffan Industrial City Sign MoU (Qatar)". LNG World News.
- (14 May 2019). "Qatargas achieves milestone with 10,000th ship loading by RLTO". Gulf Times.
- . (1890). ["The Persian Gulf pilot: comprising the Persian Gulf, Gulf of Omán; and Makran coast"](https://books.google.com/books?id=m5ItAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA126). *Hydrographic Dept*.
- (25 May 2014). "Nature's gift to Fuwairit, turtles". JustHere Qatar.
- "Rough-Tailed Gecko". Qatar e-Nature.
- "Arfaj". Qatar e-Nature.
- "Rak". Qatar e-Nature.
- "Desert Thumb". Qatar e-Nature.
- "Ndeewa". Qatar e-Nature.
- "Rukbah". Qatar e-Nature.
- "Incense Grass". Qatar e-Nature.
- "Kebaisha". Qatar e-Nature.
- "Reed". Qatar e-Nature.
- "Ja'ad". Qatar e-Nature.
- "Nafayj". Qatar e-Nature.
- "Stoneseed". Qatar e-Nature.
- "Aelijaan". Qatar e-Nature.
- "Dahseer". Qatar e-Nature.
- Mohammad Ahmad Shehadi. (May 2015). "Vulnerability of mangroves to sea level rise in Qatar: Assessment and identification of vulnerable mangroves areas". College of Arts and Sciences - Qatar University.
- (May 2012). "Qatar Infrastructure Statistics". Qatar Statistics Authority.
- "Laffan Environmental Society". Qatar Petroleum Industrial City.
- Amir Shabana. (26 October 2014). "Qatar Electricity Boosting Desalination Capacity, Al-Sharq Says". Bloomberg.
- "Barzan Gas Project, Ras Laffan Industrial City, Qatar". Hydrocarbons Technology.
- (21 March 2013). "New 'State-of-the-art' Engineering and Service facility". Mannai Corporation.
- (21 November 2017). "Ras Laffan hospital, health centre handed over to HMC". Gulf Times.
- (5 November 2014). "Qatar's Al Huwailah Link Road opens to public". Road Traffic Technology.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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