Indian state-controlled refiner Bharat Petroleum (BPCL) plans to build a 400,000 t/yr polypropylene (PP) project at its Kochi refining complex in southwest India's Kerala state.
The project is expected to be completed in almost 46 months and will cost approximately 50.44bn rupees ($606mn), the company said without giving an actual construction start date.
It is setting up the PP unit because of expanding demand for petrochemicals in India and availability of propylene feedstock from its 310,000 b/d Kochi refinery. PP is used in downstream industries to produce products such as packaging film, sheet, boxes, containers, bags and homeware.
The petrochemical unit at the Kochi refinery produces 500,000 t/yr of propylene, part of which goes into downstream production. The refinery already operates a propylene derivative petrochemical plant at Kochi, which produces acrylic acid, acrylates, oxo-alcohol and other niche petrochemicals.
BPCL in 2022 scrapped a Rs111bn polyols project at Kochi because of higher revised cost estimates.
It announced a plan in May to build an ethylene cracker project at its 156,000 b/d Bina refinery in central India's Madhya Pradesh state, including downstream petrochemical plants. The cost of the project, including the expansion of the Bina refinery, is estimated to be Rs490bn. Production of petrochemical and oil products — including ethylene, propylene, polyethylene, PP and benzene — aims to begin from the April 2027-March 2028 fiscal year.

