Phillips 66 Wood River refinery reports unit upset

  • Market: Crude oil, Oil products
  • 29/11/21

Phillips 66 reported a process unit upset yesterday at its 356,000 b/d Wood River refinery in Roxana, Illinois.

The refinery reported flaring activity associated with the upset at 3:30pm ET on 28 November in a filing to state hazardous material monitors. Flaring lasted for roughly 30 minutes, according to the filing.

The company did not comment on the unit associated with the flaring event.


Sharelinkedin-sharetwitter-sharefacebook-shareemail-share

Related news posts

Argus illuminates the markets by putting a lens on the areas that matter most to you. The market news and commentary we publish reveals vital insights that enable you to make stronger, well-informed decisions. Explore a selection of news stories related to this one.

News
26/04/24

EU adopts Net-Zero Industry Act

EU adopts Net-Zero Industry Act

London, 26 April (Argus) — Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) have adopted Net-Zero Industry Act, which plans to allocate funds towards the production of net-zero technologies. The act provides a pathway to scale up development and production of technologies that are critical towards meeting the EU's recommendation of net-zero greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 2050. This would include solar panels, electrolysers and fuel cells, batteries, heat pumps, onshore and offshore wind turbines, grid technologies, sustainable biomethane, as well as carbon capture and storage (CCS). The act is designed to help simplify the regulatory framework for the manufacture of these technologies in order to incentivise European production and supply. It also sets a target of 40pc production within the EU for its annual "deployment needs" of these technologies by 2030. Time limits will be instated on permit grants for manufacturing projects, at 12 months if the manufacturing capacity is under 1 GW/yr and 18 months for those above that. It will introduce time limits of nine months for "net-zero strategic projects" of less than 1 GW/yr and 12 months for those above. This is further complemented by the introduction of net-zero strategic projects for CO2 storage, to help support the development of CCS technology. The act was met with positive reactions from the European Community Shipowners' Association (ECSA), which said the bill will set the benchmark for member states to match 40pc of the deployment needs for clean fuels for shipping with production capacity. ECSA said the Net-Zero Industry Act will be instrumental in supporting the shipping industry to meet targets set under FuelEU Maritime regulations , which are set to come into effect next year. By Hussein Al-Khalisy Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Read more
News

New technologies aim to boost SAF production


26/04/24
News
26/04/24

New technologies aim to boost SAF production

London, 26 April (Argus) — A likely rise in global demand for sustainable aviation fuel (SAF), underpinned by mandates for its use, is encouraging development of new production pathways. While hydrotreated esters and fatty acids synthesised paraffinic kerosine (HEFA-SPK) remains the most common type of SAF available today, much more production will be needed. The International Air Transport Association (Iata) estimated SAF output at around 500,000t in 2023, and expects this to rise to 1.5mn t this year, but that only meets around 0.5pc of global jet fuel demand. An EU-wide SAF mandate will come into effect in 2025 that will set a minimum target of 2pc, with a sub-target for synthetic SAF starting from 2030. This week the UK published its domestic SAF mandate , also targeting a 2pc SAF share in 2025 and introducing a power-to-liquid (PtL) obligation from 2028. New pathways involve different technology to unlock use of a wider feedstock base. US engineering company Honeywell said this week its hydrocracking technology, Fischer-Tropsch (FT) Unicracking, can be used to produce SAF from biomass such as crop residue or wood and food waste. Renewable fuels producer DG Fuels will use the technology for its SAF facility in Louisiana, US. The plant will be able to produce 13,000 b/d of SAF starting from 2028, Honeywell said. The company said its SAF technologies — which include ethanol-to-jet , which converts cellulosic ethanol into SAF — have been adopted at more than 50 sites worldwide including Brazil and China. Honeywell is part of the Google and Boeing-backed United Airlines Ventures Sustainable Flight Fund , which is aimed at scaling up SAF production. German alternative fuels company Ineratec said this week it will use South African integrated energy firm Sasol's FT catalysts for SAF production. The catalysts will be used in Ineratec's plants, including a PtL facility it is building in Frankfurt, Germany. The plant will be able to produce e-fuels from green hydrogen and CO2, with a capacity of 2,500 t/yr of e-fuels beginning in 2024. The e-fuels will then be processed into synthetic SAF. Earlier this month , ethanol-to-jet producer LanzaJet said it has received funding from technology giant Microsoft's Climate Innovation Fund, "to continue building its capability and capacity to deploy its sustainable fuels process technology globally". The producer recently signed a licence and engineering agreement with sustainable fuels company Jet Zero Australia to progress development of an SAF plant in north Queensland, Australia. The plant will have capacity of 102mn l/yr of SAF. Polish oil firm Orlen formed a partnership with Japanese electrical engineering company Yakogawa to develop SAF technology . They aim to develop a technological process to synthesise CO2 and hydrogen to form PtL SAF. The SAF will be produced from renewable hydrogen as defined by the recast EU Renewable Energy Directive (RED II) and bio-CO2 from biomass boilers, Orlen told Argus . By Evelina Lungu Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

P66 to sell German, Austrian retail business: Update


26/04/24
News
26/04/24

P66 to sell German, Austrian retail business: Update

Adds number of Phillips 66-owned gas stations in Germany and Austria, company response. Houston, 26 April (Argus) — US refiner Phillips 66 plans to sell its gas station business in Germany and Austria as part of a broader plan to divest non-core assets, the company said in earnings released today. The company sells to retail and wholesale customers under the JET gas station brand across 1,270 sites in Austria, Germany and the UK, according to the refiner's 2022 annual review. JET operated 813 gas station in Germany as of June 2023, according to the country's federal association of independent petrol stations and 154 sites in Austria according to the company website. Phillips 66 has a further 330 gas stations in Switzerland through a joint venture under the Coop brand, but those are not included in the sales effort. The refiner declined to provide details of the current number of sites for sale in Germany and Austria. Phillips 66 has undertaken multi-year cost-cutting projects and said this year it is considering selling some of its midstream assets to satisfy a planned $3bn in divestments. Late last year hedge fund Elliott Investment Management purchased a $1bn stake in the company, calling on it to refocus on its refining business and reduce operating costs. In Elliott's December activist letter to the refiner, the hedge fund said if Phillips 66 failed to make sufficient progress towards its cost-cutting goals, it would push for management changes and a sale of the company's stake in Chevron Phillips Chemicals (CPChem) — valued at about $15bn-20bn after taxes by the investor — and its European convenience stores and other non-operated midstream assets. Elliott previously targeted Canadian integrated Suncor, pushing for board changes and divestment of its 1,500 retail stores, which ultimately it did not sell. US refiner Marathon, however, agreed to sell its 3,900-store Speedway retail network in 2019 following pressure from Elliott, which had criticised its integrated downstream business model. By Nathan Risser Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Start-ups to help Total keep output stable in 2Q


26/04/24
News
26/04/24

Start-ups to help Total keep output stable in 2Q

London, 26 April (Argus) — TotalEnergies said it expects its oil and gas production to hold broadly steady in the second quarter as planned maintenance is partially offset by rising output from new projects in Brazil and Denmark. The company expects to average 2.4mn-2.45mn b/d of oil equivalent (boe/d) in April-June, compared with 2.46mn boe/d in the previous three months and 2.47mn boe/d in the second quarter of 2023. Production is being supported by the restart of gas output from the redeveloped Tyra hub in Denmark late last month and the start of the 180,000 b/d second development phase of the Mero oil field on the Libra block in Brazil's Santos Basin at the beginning of the year. TotalEnergies first-quarter output was flat compared with the previous three months but 2pc lower than a year earlier as a result of Canadian oil sands divestments. The company reported a robust set of first-quarter results today, broadly in line with analysts' expectations. Profit for the first three months of 2024 was $5.7bn, compared to $5.6bn in the same period last year. Adjusted profit — which takes into account inventory valuation effects and special items — came in at $5.1bn, down by 22pc on the year but slightly ahead of the consensus of analysts' estimates of $5bn. Adjusted operating profit from the firm's Exploration & Production business was down by 4pc year-on-year at $2.55bn, driven in part by lower natural gas prices. The Canadian oil sands asset sales weighed on the segment's production but this was partly compensated by start-ups. As well as Mero 2, the Akpo West oil project in Nigeria started production during the first quarter. TotalEnergies' Integrated LNG segment saw a 41pc year-on-year decline in its adjusted operating profit to $1.22bn in January-March. The company said this reflects lower LNG prices and sales. But while its LNG sales for the quarter fell by 3pc in year-on-year terms, its LNG production was greater by 6pc. TotalEnergies achieved an average $78.9/bl for its liquids sales in the first quarter, an improvement on $73.4/bl a year earlier. But the average price achieved for its gas sales was 43pc lower on the year at $5.11/mn Btu. In the downstream, the company's Refining & Chemicals segment's first-quarter adjusted operating profit was $962mn in January-March, down by 41pc on the year but 52pc higher than the preceding quarter. TotalEnergies attributes the quarter-on-quarter rise to higher refining margins and a rise in refinery throughput . For the second quarter, it expects refinery utilisation rates to be above 85pc, compared with 79pc in the first quarter, boosted by the restart of 219,000 b/d Donges refinery in France. Total's Integrated Power segment continued to improve, registering a quarter-on-quarter and year-on-year increased of 16pc and 65pc respectively in its adjusted operating profit to €611mn. Net power production increased 14pc year-on-year to 9.6 TWh, while the company's portfolio of installed power generation capacity grew 54pc to 19.5GW. Total's cash flow from operations, excluding working capital, was down by 15pc on a year earlier at $8.2bn in the first quarter. The company has decided to raise its dividend for 2024 by 7pc to €0.79/share and plans a $2bn programme of share buybacks for the second quarter. By Jon Mainwaring Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

India's crude output steady, throughput rises in March


26/04/24
News
26/04/24

India's crude output steady, throughput rises in March

Mumbai, 26 April (Argus) — India's March crude production was steady on the year and up by 2pc on the month at 543,000 b/d. Output fell by 2pc to 546,000 b/d during the April 2023-March 2024 fiscal year. Total crude and condensate production was 590,000 b/d in March, up from 580,000 b/d in February and steady from March 2023, data from the oil ministry show. Crude output from state-controlled upstream firm ONGC was 354,000 b/d in March, up by 0.2pc on the month and down by 6pc on the year. This was likely because of a shutdown at the Panna-Mukta offshore platforms to commission a new crude pipeline and to modernise its evacuation facilities. The windfall tax for domestic crude production was raised to 4,600 rupees/t ($7.58/bl) during 1-15 March and then to Rs4,900/t during 16 March-3 April. The rate is reviewed every two weeks. The Indian government first imposed the windfall tax in July 2022 as a sharp increase in crude prices then resulted in domestic crude producers making windfall gains. Indian crude producers sell crude to domestic refineries at international parity prices. ONGC and fellow state-controlled upstream firm Oil India continued to produce the most of India's crude in March at 425,000 b/d, making up 78pc of the total production. Private-sector producers and joint ventures made up the remainder. India's dependence on crude imports declined to 88pc in March from 89pc in February and March 2023. Its dependence on crude imports rose to around 88pc in April 2023-March 2024 from 87pc in the previous year. India has steadily been trying to reduce its dependence on imports. It extended the deadline to 15 May for submitting bids for 28 upstream oil and gas blocks in the ninth Open Acreage Licensing Program bidding round. India's oil product exports fell to 5.3mn t in March from 6mn t in March 2023, but rose from 4.1mn t in February. Higher throughput Indian refiners processed 5.53mn b/d in March, higher from 5.28mn b/d in February and 5.44mn b/d in March 2023. Processing rose to 5.24mn b/d in April 2023-March 2024, up from 5.11mn b/d the previous year. Processing likely picked up as product demand increased in March. India's product demand — including diesel, gasoline, jet fuel, LPG, bitumen, naphtha and petroleum coke — increased by nearly 7pc from the previous month and was steady on the year to 21mn t in March. Crude throughput at state-controlled IOC's nine refineries was 1.6mn b/d, up by 8pc from a year earlier and by 10pc against the previous month. State-controlled BPCL processed 874,000 b/d at its refineries in March, up by 3pc from a year earlier and by 8pc from February. State-controlled HPCL's throughput rose by 3pc from the previous year and was steady from a month earlier at 709,000 b/d. ONGC's refineries processed 354,000 b/d in March, 6pc lower on the month and steady against a year earlier. India imported 4.7mn b/d of crude in March, 4pc lower from the previous year and up by 4pc from a month earlier, according to oil ministry data. By Roshni Devi Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Business intelligence reports

Get concise, trustworthy and unbiased analysis of the latest trends and developments in oil and energy markets. These reports are specially created for decision makers who don’t have time to track markets day-by-day, minute-by-minute.

Learn more