Indian state-controlled refiner Bharat Petroleum (BPCL) plans to commission its propylene derivatives project at its Kochi refinery later this year, a delay of around six months from an expected October start-up. It also awarded a contract to US engineering company Fluor to build a polyols project at the same complex.
The 55bn rupee ($770mn) propylene venture will be commissioned in phases between April and September, BPCL said. The project includes an acrylic acid unit with a capacity of 160,000 t/yr and a 212,000 t/yr oxo-alcohol unit. The chemicals produced will be used to make paints, coatings and adhesives. The 310,000 b/d Kochi refinery produces 500,000 t/yr of propylene, half of which will feed the propylene derivatives unit.
Fluor will do design, engineering, procurement and construction management services for the Rs111bn project to produce polyols, propylene glycol and ethylene glycol by 2024, which is the second phase of BPCL's petrochemical project at Kochi. Polyols are used in the auto, textile and furniture sectors.
BPCL plans to gradually shift its focus to producing petrochemicals from transport fuels as the government increasingly promotes electric vehicles to combat air pollution and climate change. Demand for petrochemicals in India is forecast to grow at 8-10pc/yr provided the Indian economy grows at over 7pc/yr.
By S Dinakar

