Trinidad seeks fuel, starts refinery shutdown

  • : Crude oil, Oil products
  • 18/10/01

Trinidad and Tobago issued a request for proposals from 13 oil traders to purchase 25,000 b/d of refined products as it starts decommissioning its 168,000 b/d refinery.

The phased shutdown of the century-old refinery starts today. Petrotrin will have 20 days of inventory to meet domestic needs when the decommissioning is completed at the end of October, energy minister Franklin Khan said.

"The requests for proposals are currently out, and we do not foresee any disruption in supply," he said. "Fuel is an internationally traded commodity and is well available on the international market."

The plant's shutdown is a consequence of mounting losses and high debts, state-owned refiner Petrotrin said on 28 August. The company had been forced to import increasing volumes of feedstock as domestic crude production has been falling steadily since 2006.

Petrotrin plans to convert the Pointe-a-Pierre refinery into a storage terminal and bunkering facility.

The refinery is designed to produce gasoline, LPG, diesel, aviation fuel and fuel oil.

Local fuel retailers are concerned about the impact of the shutdown on supplies.

"Our concerns include the reliability and consistency of supply," fuel retailer's federation FDA said, claiming it had not been consulted by Petrotrin and was uncertain how it would continue to meet the daily needs of 400,000 clients.

Petrotrin may have to import additional products to meet supply contracts with several neighboring countries, the energy ministry told Argus.

Petrotrin has been supplying diesel, gasoline, aviation fuel and LPG to several countries in the eastern and northeastern Caribbean.

Petrotrin's fuel exports to neighboring countries had a tariff advantage as the countries are members of Caricom, a regional free trade group.

"The options include Petrotrin importing and re-exporting the products, or the countries sourcing the products themselves, with assistance from Petrotrin," an energy ministry official said.

The closure will result in 1,700 layoffs. Petrotrin has rejected a proposal by labor union OWTU to lease the refinery and keep it open.

"The proposal failed to address critical issues regarding financing and profitability and there was insufficient information to give us an understanding of how the plan would work," Petrotrin chairman Wilfred Espinet said.

The refinery will be segregated from Petrotrin and the facility will be treated as a stand-alone asset that will allow the government to consider future indications of interest, including new proposals from OWTU, Trinidad's prime minister Keith Rowley said.


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24/05/02

Abu Dhabi’s Adnoc puts crude capacity at 4.85mn b/d

Abu Dhabi’s Adnoc puts crude capacity at 4.85mn b/d

Dubai, 2 May (Argus) — Abu Dhabi's state-owned Adnoc has nudged up its self-reported crude production capacity to 4.85mn b/d, from 4.65mn b/d previously. The UAE state energy giant did not formally announce the increase but updated the figure on its website. It did something similar when its capacity reached 4.65mn b/d in late 2023, up from 4.5mn b/d in the middle of last year. This latest hike takes the company a step closer to its long-term 5mn b/d crude capacity target, which it aims to reach by 2027. Adnoc set the 5mn b/d target back in 2018 when its capacity was 3.5mn b/d. At that time, the company said it was aiming to deliver the increase by 2030, but in November 2022 it brought the timeframe forward by three years, citing the "UAE's robust hydrocarbon reserves". The change in timeline had been expected, with sources telling Argus earlier that year that discussions had been taking place in the upper echelons of Adnoc about significantly accelerating its capacity growth plans . Given the speed at which the company has been delivering capacity gains over the past few years, and how close it is to meeting its target already, it is not inconceivable that Adnoc will reach 5mn b/d ahead of schedule. Put your best foot forward The UAE's rising capacity comes as Opec+ producers engage with independent agencies to update their respective crude output capacities for use in production policy decisions from 2025. At their meeting in June last year, all Opec+ members committed to undergo an external assessment of their sustainable capacities in the first half of 2024 by three independent consultancies, IHS, Wood Mackenzie and Rystad. The updated capacity assessment will help address a key criticism of the Opec+ production restraint agreements in their current format, namely that many of the countries involved have been cutting output from a baseline level of production that they can no longer actually deliver, in most cases due to natural decline. The UAE has been one of a handful of countries in the group that has been raising its capacity over the past few years. This means it should, in theory, benefit from the latest assessment, as a higher accepted capacity will afford it a higher production baseline under any Opec+ agreements struck from 2025 onwards. By Nader Itayim Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Shell's 1Q profit supported by LNG and refining


24/05/02
24/05/02

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US Fed signals rates likely to stay high for longer


24/05/01
24/05/01

US Fed signals rates likely to stay high for longer

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24/05/01
24/05/01

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Tankers can take TMX crude mid-May: Trans Mountain


24/05/01
24/05/01

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