Trade Resources Market View Sinopec Corp Has Won Initial Approval From China's Top Economic Planner

Sinopec Corp Has Won Initial Approval From China's Top Economic Planner

Sinopec Corp has won initial approval from China's top economic planner for a plan to build a US$10 billion refinery and petrochemical complex in Shanghai, two company officials said.

China, the world's largest net importer of oil, is likely to add 3 million barrels per day, or a quarter of new refining capacity, between 2013 and 2015 to fuel economic growth, industry officials and Chinese media estimate.

Top Asian refiner Sinopec has started formal planning for the 400,000-barrel-per-day refinery and a 1-million-ton-per-year ethylene project, in a plan to curb pollution by shifting an old plant to Shanghai's southern edge, the officials said.

The new Sinopec plant, designed to process mostly imported crude oil, will be built in the Caojing industrial park, some 50 kilometers from the center of Shanghai.

"The initial approval allows us to start planning work," said a company official, adding that Sinopec had agreed with Shanghai authorities in 2011 to shift some of the facilities at its Gaoqiao refinery to the new site once it was ready.

The official declined to be named as he is not authorized to speak to media.

The Gaoqiao plant in the densely-populated Pudong New Area runs two crude processing units with a total refining capacity of 240,000bpd.

Growing public awareness of the need for a cleaner and safer environment has prompted central economic planners to limit the expansion of big industrial projects such as oil refineries and the construction of chemical plants near residential areas.

The new Shanghai plant will need a final government nod and environmental clearance, the officials said. It should take five years to build and will be ready near decade's end.

Similar investments could also be delayed due to tougher environmental rules, changing market conditions and land issues.

Plans for a US$13 billion refinery and petrochemical complex in Taizhou, in which Royal Dutch Shell is a partner, have stalled over efforts to find a suitable site.

The plan for Sinopec's Shanghai refinery includes a new crude oil terminal with the capacity for a 300,000-ton very large crude carrier.

The entire refinery and petrochemical project could cost more than 60 billion yuan (US$10 billion), domestic media have said.

Source: http://news.chemnet.com/Chemical-News/detail-2182223.html
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Sinopec Gets Nod for US$10b Plant
Topics: Metallurgy