REFINERY NEWS ROUNDUP: Mixed run rates in Asia-Pacific
The BPCL Mumbai refinery on the west coast of India is currently running at full capacity even as partial lockdown has been introduced in many parts of the western region. It recorded a 118% run rate in March compared with 116% a year ago, while the run rate for 2019-20 (April-March) was 95%, compared with 115% in 2019-20, reflecting the impact of lockdown in 2020.
However, India’s Reliance Industries Ltd. in March ran at 84% at its two refineries at the Jamnagar integrated refinery complex, down from 96% a year earlier, with overall runs still to attain pre-pandemic levels. In March, the domestic refinery ran at 101%, compared with 108% a year earlier, while the export-focused refinery ran at 69%, from 84% in the year-ago month.
NRL posts Rs1.7bn profit
National Refinery Ltd (NRL) posted PAT of Rs1.7bn during the quarter ended March 31, 2021 as compared to loss of Rs5.1bn in the same period 2020. Gross profit stood at Rs2.87bn as compared to loss of Rs5.459bn.
Attock Petroleum Ltd (APL) posted a pat of Rs1.5bn during 1QCY21 as compared to loss of Rs710m in the same period 2020. Company’s sales plunged to Rs53.5bn from Rs58.5bn in the above period.
DGKC makes Rs2bn profit
D.G. Khan Cement Ltd reported a PAT of Rs2bn during January-March 2021 as compared to loss of Rs1bn in the same period last year. Sales swelled to Rs33bn from Rs11bn in the above period.
The regulatory body added that 28 licences were active while 29 were inactive.
Refineries with active licence to Establish are BUA Refinery & Petrochemicals, Ogini Refinery Limited, Excel Exploration & Production, Lowrie Refinery Limited, NPDC/ND WESTERN OML 34 JV, Ogini Refinery, Eghudu Refinery and Kingdom Global Trading Petroleum & Gas Nig.
The 20 refineries with active Approval to Construct/Relocate include Dangote Oil Refinery Company, OPAC Refineries, Waltersmith Refining & Petrochemical Company, Niger Delta Petroleum Resources, Edo Petrochemical Refinery, Etopo Energy Plc, Resource Petroleum & Petrochemicals International Incorporated, Duport Midstream and Conodit Refinery Nigeria.
Others are Lowrie Refinery, Excel Refinery, Gasoline Associates International, Frao Oil Nigeria, Alexis Refinery, Allegiance Energy and Power, Atlantic International Refineries and Petrochemical, Amakpe International Refinery Inc, Gazingstock Petroleum Company, Azikel Petroleum, and Clairgold Oil
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Thirty-two refinery project licences issued to private investors in the country have become invalid in the past three years, according to the Department of Petroleum Resources.
The DPR said on Monday that the number of valid refinery project licences stood at 23 as of March 2021, down from 44 in April 2018.
An analysis of the agency’s new list of valid refinery project licences and that of April 2018 showed that 32 licences had become invalid while 11 new licences were granted between May 2018 and March 2021.
As of April 2018, there were 38 proposed modular refineries with capacity ranging from 5,000 barrels per stream day to 30,000bpsd, and six conventional plants with a total capacity of 1.35 million bpsd.
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Lack of funds, feedstock, hinder construction of 32 refineries
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By Udeme Akpan, Energy Editor
AS Nigeria continues to record high level of expired refinery licences, experts, Tuesday, identified lack of funds and feedstock, as factors militating against the construction of new plants.
The experts, who expressed their positions in different interviews with Vanguard, said such investors have the right to reapply for the renewal of their licences.
Specifically, in an interview with Vanguard, Lead Promoter, EnergyHub Nigeria, Dr. Felix Amieyeofori, said: “The investors encounter many problems, including lack of funds and feedstock. But the good thing about it is that they have the right to reapply.”