Bakersfield Renewable Fuels (BKRF) is planning a first-quarter start-up of its 15,000 b/d renewable diesel (RD) refinery in Bakersfield, California, after settling a dispute with its principal construction contractor.
BKRF, a subsidiary of Global Clean Energy Holdings, plans to start operations at the plant late in the first quarter with commercial operations beginning in the second quarter, according to a company filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
Construction has finished for most of the refinery's units, which were in the pre-commissioning or commissioning stage as of late December.
BKRF initially planned to start up the plant in the current quarter after missing its 2022 target date due to pandemic-related supply chain issues and trouble with the project's principal contractor, CTCI Americas.
The company has reached an interim settlement agreement with Taiwan-based CTCI following cost and project deadline overruns, according to the 22 December SEC filing.
"CTCI has agreed to use its reasonable best efforts to achieve mechanical and substantial completion of the project by the earliest date practicable," BKRF said in the filing. BKRF gave no assurance in the filing, however, that the RD project will commence commercial operations by July next year.
Renewable feedstock demand is expected to swell in 2024, as conversions at Marathon Petroleum's Martinez Renewables refinery and Phillips 66's Rodeo refinery — both in northern California — are expected to come online.
An estimated 1.4bn USG/yr (91,000 b/d) of capacity is expected to come on line in 2024, according to Argus' Renewable Diesel Refinery Database, prompting demand for an additional 11bn lb of feedstocks during the year.

