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Yulong aims for test run of new refinery end-2023
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Commercial operation of Yulong complex expected at
end-2024
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Shandong closing down small refineries to make way for
Yulong
By Chen Aizhu SINGAPORE, Feb 27 (Reuters) - China's Yulong Petrochemical on Monday said it had signed memorandum of understanding agreements with BP and Chevron to supply its 400,000 barrel per day greenfield refinery in northern China.
Yulong Petrochemical, which is building the refinery and a 1.5-million-tonne-per-year ethylene complex in Shandong province, is aiming to start commercial operation of the whole complex by December 2024, a Shandong government official said at an investment forum in Singapore. A BP spokesperson in China could not immediately comment on the agreement. Chevron declined to comment on commercial negotiations.
The new refinery in Longkou county in Shandong province is aiming to carry out test runs late this year, a Yulong executive told Reuters on the sidelines of a signing ceremony at the forum.
The $20-billion Yulong project will add to two large
similar-sized refinery and petrochemical complexes started late
last year, in China's latest wave of refining expansion focused
on petrochemical products such as plastics and chemical fibre
rather than transportation fuel.
The Yulong refinery will help Shandong, China's No.3
provincial economy, scale up its fragmented refining sector,
made up of some 60 small refiners, in line with Beijing's push
to close inefficient plants and build large, competitive
manufacturers.
The province was expected to have closed down 10 smaller
refineries with combined refining capacity of more than 500,000
barrels per day by the end of last year to make way for the
Yulong plant.
Yulong Petrochemical is 51% owned by private aluminium
smelter Nanshan Group, 46.1% owned by provincial
government-backed Shandong Energy Group and the remainder by two
local firms.
To extend the mega complex's value chain, Longkou government
told the forum that it is planning a new chemical park close to
the Yulong project to produce high-end chemicals such as
degradable plastics and special fibre used for high-performing
sports products and safety gears.
Longkou, a county-level city south of Bohai Sea with an
annual industrial output of 138.1 billion yuan ($19.83 billion)
last year, is also where China's state-run Sinopec is building a
large regasification terminal for liquefied natural gas.
($1 = 6.9631 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Reporting by Aizhu Chen in Singapore. Additional reporting by
Andrew Hayley; Writing by Dominique Patton; Editing by
Jacqueline Wong, Simon Cameron-Moore and Shounak Dasgupta)