Showing posts with label refinery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label refinery. Show all posts

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Government hails nation’s 1st oil refinery

Though the country’s first oil refinery was completed nine years behind schedule, its cost was eventually lower than estimated and it remains a breakthrough for the oil industry, a government report to the National Assembly said.

The Dung Quat Refinery only cost VND40 trillion (US$2.05 billion at current value) when it was built this year, VND10 trillion less than estimated, said the report.

But according to a report released by the House Committee of Science, Technology and Environment, the refinery’s cost was estimated at $1.5 billion in 1997, raised more than once, and finally ended at $3.05 billion (VND51.7 trillion) in 2009.

The government attributed the difference of around $1 billion between the two reports to the fact that the committee report included revenue expenses like salaries and taxes.

Regarding the criticism that the plant’s capacity is too low at 6.5 million tons a year compared to 10-12 million tons for other refineries worldwide, the government said the project was executed at a time when there were no strategy or planning for oil refineries making it difficult to make a decision on the capacity.

The report admitted that PetroVietnam, which built the refinery, did not have a long-term vision for refining and therefore had to amend the design two times to add two more workshops. Meanwhile, official agencies had been slow in issuing legal documents on quality.

The government said PetroVietnam is considering importing crude oil of better quality to replace the oil from its offshore Bach Ho field, and expanding the refinery to increase its capacity to 8-10 million tons.

Many legislators questioned the competitiveness of the plant’s products and the economic benefits to the country.

Vietnam’s first refinery - an overview

It took 13 years for the Dung Quat Refinery to be built. Work began in 1997 and the plant was initially expected to go on stream in 2001, but it took until January 2010 for it to be actually completed.

Around 75 percent of the work was carried out by Vietnamese sub-contractors.

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Friday, February 18, 2011

Dung Quat oil refinery operates effectively

Dung Quat oil refinery operates effectively

The Dung Quat Oil Refinery in the central province of Quang Ngai
is running effectively, helping ensure national energy security, a
conference was told on Oct. 18.


A report presented by
Minister of Industry and Trade Vu Huy Hoang at the event showed that the
plant now can meet about 30 percent of the domestic demand for
petroleum and that it has created a breakthrough in economic development
in Quang Ngai, helping boost economic growth in the central region and
the country.


Dung Quat Oil Refinery started its operation in February 2009, becoming the first petrochemical complex in Vietnam .


In a draft report on the implementation of the National Assembly
resolution on the first refinery, the NA’s Committee on Science,
Technology and Environment proposed the NA to recognise the completion
of the project at its upcoming 8th session.


The
committee also proposed that the Government map out plans to raise the
refinery’s capacity in order to develop the petrochemical industry in
conformity with the schemes to develop the Dung Quat Industrial Zone and
the central economy./.

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Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Vietnam’s only refinery to auction oil

Oil produced at the Dung Quat refinery will be auctioned out to reputed buyers, an official told Tuoi Tre Monday, adding that necessary paperwork is being done for it.

Nguyen Hoai Giang, general director of the Binh Son Oil Refining and Petrochemical Company Limited, which operates the refinery, said it should not be difficult to restrict the auction to reputed distributors.

Binh Son’s state-run holding company PetroVietnam (PVN) has held a similar auction for one of its subsidiaries, he said.

Last week a top PVN executive said poor forecast of supply and demand had left Vietnam’s sole oil refinery saddled with huge volumes of unsold products.

Domestic demand was 10 percent lower than forecast and the plant’s output was 25 percent higher, he said.

One wholesaler said Dung Quat’s products cost more than imported fuel but are still preferable because of the exchange rate risks involved in importing.

Three state-owned companies have the right to distribute Dung Quat products -- PV Oil, Petec, and Petrolimex.

Petrolimex was added to the list after it complained that it was unfair to allow just two of PVN’s affiliates to buy directly from the refinery.

Petrolimex is set to finalize a deal to buy 140,000 cubic meters of A92 and A95 gasoline and diesel oil with Binh Son this month.

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Saturday, January 29, 2011

State urges petrol dealers: ‘buy local'

The Ministry of Industry and Trade has asked PetroVietnam and the Dung
Quat Oil Refinery to work directly with domestic petrol dealers,
particularly Petrol-imex, to reduce reliance on imports.


The Vietnam National Oil and Gas Group (PetroVietnam) and the refinery
must report preliminary plans for production, consumption and stock of
Dung Quat's products by Friday, the ministry said.


PetroVietnam and the refinery should also work out a detailed plan for
production in 2011, the ministry said. It also called on the firms to
boost consumption of the refinery's products, including petrol for
airplanes, on the domestic market as early as possible.


So
far, nine out of 11 petrol importers in Vietnam buy the refinery's
products. In the first nine months of this year, the refinery's petrol
and oil sold on the domestic market accounted for 35 percent of the
total volume sold.


The Vietnam National Petroleum
Corporation (Petrolimex), which has a 50 percent share of the domestic
petrol and oil market, consumed 28 percent of the refinery's total
output of petrol and oil.


However, domestic petrol
consumption is 10 percent lower than predictions for this year, while
production at the refinery was now exceeding the year's plan by 25
percent, Pham Dinh Thuc, PetroVietnam's general director, said.


In the fourth quarter of this year, the refinery is expected to produce
about 1.9 million tonnes of petrol, while domestic petrol distributors
such as PVOil, Petec and Petrolimex have registered to buy just 430,000
tonnes from the refinery.


As a result, stockpiles have reached 75,000 tonnes and are predicted to reach 727,000 tonnes by the end of the year.


Domestic importers should revise their signed contracts to import fuel and buy up the difference from Dung Quat, Thuc said./.

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State urges petrol dealers: ‘buy local'

HA NOI — The Ministry of Industry and Trade has asked PetroVietnam and the Dung Quat Oil Refinery to work directly with domestic petrol dealers, particularly Petrol-imex, to reduce reliance on imports.

Viet Nam National Oil and Gas Group (Petro-Vietnam) and the refinery must report preliminary plans for production, consumption and stock of Dung Quat's products by Friday, the ministry said.

PetroVietnam and the refinery should also work out a detailed plan for production in 2011, the ministry said. It also called on the firms to boost consumption of the refinery's products, including petrol for airplanes, on the domestic market as early as possible.

Nine out of 11

So far, nine out of 11 petrol importers in Viet Nam buy the refinery's products. In the first nine months of this year, the refinery's petrol and oil sold on the domestic market accounted for 35 per cent of the total volume sold.

Viet Nam National Petroleum Corporation (Petrol-imex), which has a 50 per cent share of the domestic petrol and oil market, consumed 28 per cent of the refinery's total output of petrol and oil.

However, domestic petrol consumption is 10 per cent lower than predictions for this year, while production at the refinery was now exceeding the year's plan by 25 per cent, Pham Dinh Thuc, PetroVietnam's general director, said.

Fourth quarter

In the fourth quarter of this year, the refinery is expected to produce about 1.9 million tonnes of petrol, while domestic petrol distributors such as PVOil, Petec and Petrolimex have registered to buy just 430,000 tonnes from the refinery.

As a result, stockpiles have reached 75,000 tonnes and are predicted to reach 727,000 tonnes by the end of the year.

Domestic importers should revise their signed contracts to import fuel and buy up the difference from Dung Quat, Thuc said. — VNS

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Sunday, January 23, 2011

Oil products pile up, no storage space

Oil products pile up, no storage spaceVietnam’s first oil refinery is facing the problem of having huge stockpiles of products that it has no place to store.

The Dung Quat oil refinery has 750,000 tons of oil and gasoline products in stock and not enough space to store them, said Vu Quang Nam, deputy chief executive of state-owned oil and gas group

PetroVietnam. He told a Monday conference in Hanoi that the plant has been running at full capacity, or 30 percent higher than the plan for this year.

According to Petrolimex, a subsidiary of PetroVietnam that has more than a 50 percent share of the domestic fuel market, the refinery was not able to project its output accurately at the beginning of this year.

Petrolimex therefore had to sign contracts to import 70 percent of the fuel it needed and only planned to buy the remaining 30 percent from Dung Quat. These import contracts could not be canceled, the company said.

Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade Nguyen Cam Tu said fuel traders had placed import orders early this year to ensure sufficient supply for the market. But the refinery’s output was higher than expected, leaving the ministry with a difficult logistical problem on its hands, he added.

The ministry has ordered PetroVietnam and Petrolimex to work together and balance demand with domestic production and imports.

The Dung Quat refinery, which cost US$3 billion to build, is designed to supply about one-third of the country’s fuel demand this year. The government in August approved a plan to increase its annual capacity from 6.5 to 10 million tons.

Vietnam spent $4.9 billion on petroleum product imports in the first nine months, a 4 percent rise, while earning $3.7 billion from the sale of crude oil, down 22 percent year-on-year, according to the General Statistics Office.

Nguyen Hoai Giang, general director of PetroVietnam subsidiary Binh Son Petrochemical Refinery Co., the operator of the 140,000-bpd refinery, said Dung Quat has supplied 5.5 million tons of fuel products to the market since it began commercial production in February last year.

Giang admitted that the plant was having a problem with slow sales right now. However, it will continue purchasing crude oil and maintain its production schedule, he said.

In the long term local fuel traders should build more storage facilities with a total capacity of 800,000 to one million tons, then “there will be no problem,” he said.

Vietnam plans to build two more refineries, aiming at self-sufficiency in oil products by 2015. Previously, the country had to import all of its fuel products.

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Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Mounting inventory puts refinery under tenterhooks

A view of Dung Quat Oil Refinery in Quang Ngai Province. The facility is facing huge inventory of oil products at the moment - Photo: Van Nam
HCMC, HANOI – Mounting inventory at Dung Quat Oil Refinery is threatening to cripple production at the facility as local distributors have signed irrevocable import contracts earlier and cannot shift to local products at the moment, sources said.

Minister of Industry and Trade Vu Huy Hoang said at a regular meeting of the ministry on Monday that the country’s first oil refinery was having a backlog of two million cubic meters of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) plus over 700,000 tons of oil products.

Meanwhile, local oil traders refused to buy products from the refinery based in the central province of Quang Ngai despite rising demand.

Dung Quat, if running at full capacity, can turn out 150,000 tons of petrol, 240,000 tons of diesel oil, 23,000 tons of LPG and others, which is enough to meet one-third of local demand.

Vu Quang Nam, deputy general director of PetroVietnam as the parent firm of the refinery operator, told the meeting that if consumption of its finished oil products continues to go slow, the refinery will have to scale down production due to the lack of storage facilities.

“So I suggest the Ministry of Industry and Trade instruct all oil and petrol traders in the country to quickly increase their purchases of our products,” Nam said. He noted imports were still increasing while local products were piling up.

Figures at the meeting show the country in the January-September period imported US$4.87 billion worth of oil products, an increase of 4% year-on-year.

However, traders have pointed an accusing finger at the oil refinery operated by Binh Son Oil Refinery and Petrochemical Co., a subsidiary of PetroVietnam.

Pham Thi Huyen, deputy general director of the country’s biggest oil trader Petrolimex, explained that oil traders were still importing oil products from foreign suppliers since production at Dung Quat was not stable.

Due to the unstable production at Dung Quat plant since 2009, several oil traders have since early this year signed contracts to import enough petrol for local demand until the year-end, Huyen said.

She added that domestic oil traders could not stop importing oil products under the signed contracts by this time, otherwise they will have to pay compensations.

So, she said, the reasonable thing now is that Binh Son Oil Refinery and Petrochemical Co. to secure more tanks for storing its products to avoid disrupting the Dung Quat refinery’s production plan.

The Petrolimex executive also traded barbs with PetroVietnam over what she termed as an illogical trading mode when the oil and gas group demanded that all local oil traders buy Dung Quat’s products via PV Oil. Huyen said her company wanted to buy products directly from Binh Son Oil Refinery and Petrochemical Co. to cut cost as PV Oil imposed a high intermediary fee.

Minister Hoang agreed to her point, asking PetroVietnam to allow oil traders to have direct access to Binh Son Oil Refinery and Petrochemical Co.

Nguyen Cam Tu, deputy minister of industry and trade, remarked that the operator of Dung Quat refinery was not serious in complying with production schemes that had been announced, posing difficulties for oil traders in selling its products.

Tu also requested that oil traders to purchase more from the oil refinery. “In the coming time, petroleum traders should limit imports and increase purchases from Dung Quat.”   

It is not known after the meeting whether oil traders would buy more from the oil refinery, or whether the facility would have to limit production.

The US$3 billion refinery has plans to process some 5.2 million tons of crude oil to turn out some 4.1 million tons of oil products this year.

The refinery is also expected to have a total processing capacity of 6.5 million tons by 2011 to meet 30% of the country’s demand.

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Saturday, December 4, 2010

Vietnam to delay 2nd refinery tender till Dec

HANOI - State oil and gas group PetroVietnam will delay announcing the winner of a tender to build the 200,000-bpd Nghi Son refinery until December, the official Vietnam News Agency said in a report.

Several bidders have asked to extend the tender deadline for Vietnam's second such facility by four months so that they can better prepare bidding documents, but PetroVietnam only agreed with a delay by "two months and a half to ensure the project's progress," the report seen on Thursday said.

It was published by the agency's online news distributing arm, Vietnam Plus (www.vietnamplus.vn), quoting the state oil group.

In June, an official of PetroVietnam-run Nghi Son Oil Refinery and Petrochemical Co was quoted in a state media report as saying the firm planned to sign the engineering, procurement and construction contract with the winning bidder in October.

The Vietnam News Agency said so far three consortiums of companies from Japan, France, Italy, South Korea, Spain and Taiwan have submitted bids for the tender. It did not name any firms.

PetroVietnam has been developing the refinery in Nghi Son of the northern province of Thanh Hoa, 215 kilometers south of Hanoi, in a venture with Kuwait Petroleum International, Japan's Idemitsu Kosan Co and Mitsui Chemicals Inc.

Construction of the Nghi Son refinery was initially scheduled to be completed in late 2013. The Vietnam News Agency report said the refinery will start commercial production in 2014, as scheduled. It did not give an exact date.

Last Friday Idemitsu Kosan said it has delayed the projected start of operations of the Nghi Son plant to sometime in 2014, reflecting a slight delay involving a final investment decision by the end of March 2011 from 2010.

Idemitsu Kosan and Kuwait Petroleum International each hold a 35.1 percent stake in the venture, while PetroVietnam owns 25.1 percent and Mitsui Chemicals has the remaining 4.7 percent.

Once operational, the new refinery and 140,000-bpd Dung Quat, Vietnam's first oil refinery, will together meet 80 percent of domestic oil product consumption.

Vietnam aims to be self-sufficient in oil products by 2015, also with the 240,000-bpd Long Son refinery to be built by 2014 in the southern province of Ba Ria-Vung Tau.

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Saturday, November 13, 2010

Plans accelerated for refinery projects

refinery
Photo: Tuoi Tre

The State Steering Committee on Key Oil and Gas Projects has reviewed their work concerning the first oil refinery in Dung Quat and other projects, and developed plans and timelines for their completion.

The National Oil and Gas Group was assigned to take measures to effectively manage and operate the US$3 billion Dung Quat Oil Refinery.

The ministries of Construction and Finance were asked to help with measures to quickly reach a balanced budget. The committee asked provincial authorities in Quang Ngai to focus on management support for resettlement and compensation.

The Dung Quat refinery has a designed capacity of 6.5 million tonnes of crude oil annually, or more than 140,000 barrels per day. Capacity is expected to expand to 10 million tonnes per year by 2013-14.

The refinery project began in the 1980s and came into operation in early 2009. As of last month, the refinery is operating at its full designated capacity. More than 5.7 million tonnes of crude oil have been imported for the refinery to produce 4.98 million tonnes of high-quality products.

However, investors and contractors still had to work to fix technical problems and strike a balanced budget, said Deputy Prime Minister Hoang Trung Hai, who chaired the meeting.

The meeting also discussed measures to complete the investment mechanism for the Nghi Son Petrochemical Refinery in Tinh Gia District, in the central province of Thanh Hoa. The procedures for ground clearance and infrastructure construction are also being sped up for the project.

Construction of Nghi Son Refinery, Vietnam's second planned refinery, is expected to start this year and become operational by 2013. More than 90 percent of the required area for the $6 billion project have been cleared.


Authorised bodies are conducting the necessary negotiations and evaluating the project's environmental impact report.

The refinery has a designed capacity of 10 million tons of crude oil per year with possibility to expand to 20 million tons.

Preparation activities for initial investment in the Southern Petrochemical Refinery complex, the third of its kind in the country, have also discussed. The national steering committee asked relevant bodies to boost their management of completed projects and to review completion plans for others.

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Saturday, November 6, 2010

Plans accelerated for refinery projects

The State Steering Committee on Key Oil and Gas Projects on Sept. 13
reviewed their work concerning the first oil refinery in Dung Quat and
other projects, and developed plans and timelines for their completion.


The National Oil and Gas Group was assigned to take measures to
effectively manage and operate the 3 billion USD Dung Quat Oil Refinery.
The ministries of Construction and Finance were asked to help with
measures to quickly reach a balanced budget. The committee asked
provincial authorities in Quang Ngai to focus on management support for
resettlement and compensation.


The Dung Quat
refinery has a designed capacity of 6.5 million tonnes of crude oil
annually, or more than 140,000 barrels per day. Capacity is expected to
expand to 10 million tonnes per year by 2013-14.


The refinery project began in the 1980s and came into operation in early
2009. As of last month, the refinery is operating at its full
designated capacity. More than 5.7 million tonnes of crude oil have been
imported for the refinery to produce 4.98 million tonnes of
high-quality products.


However, investors and
contractors still had to work to fix technical problems and strike a
balanced budget, said Deputy Prime Minister Hoang Trung Hai, who chaired
the meeting.


The meeting also discussed measures
to complete the investment mechanism for the Nghi Son Petrochemical
Refinery in Tinh Gia District, in the central province of Thanh Hoa. The
procedures for ground clearance and infrastructure construction are
also being sped up for the project.


Construction of
Nghi Son Refinery, Vietnam's second planned refinery, is expected to
start this year and become operational by 2013. More than 90 percent of
the required area for the 6 billion USD project have been cleared.
Authorised bodies are conducting the necessary negotiations and
evaluating the project's environmental impact report.


The refinery has a designed capacity of 10 million tonnes of crude oil
per year with possibility to expand to 20 million tonnes.


Preparation activities for initial investment in the Southern
Petrochemical Refinery complex, the third of its kind in the country,
were also discussed yesterday. The national steering committee asked
relevant bodies to boost their management of completed projects and to
review completion plans for others./.

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Friday, November 5, 2010

Plans accelerated for refinery projects

Dung Quat Oil Refinery operates at full capacity. Measures to speed up implementation and upgrades of key oil and gas projects is being discussed by the government. — VNA/VNS Photo Thanh Long

Dung Quat Oil Refinery operates at full capacity. Measures to speed up implementation and upgrades of key oil and gas projects is being discussed by the government. — VNA/VNS Photo Thanh Long

HA NOI — The State Steering Committee on Key Oil and Gas Projects yesterday reviewed their work concerning the first oil refinery in Dung Quat and other projects, and developed plans and timelines for their completion.

The national petroleum group was assigned to take measures to effectively manage and operate the US$3 billion Dung Quat Oil Refinery. The ministries of Construction and Finance were asked to help with measures to quickly reach a balanced budget. The committee asked provincial authorities in Quang Ngai to focus on management support for resettlement and compensation.

The Dung Quat refinery has a designed capacity of 6.5 million tonnes of crude oil annually, or more than 140,000 barrels per day. Capacity is expected to expand to 10 million tonnes per year by 2013-14.

The refinery project began in the 1980s and came into operation in early 2009. As of last month, the refinery is operating at its full designated capacity. More than 5.7 million tonnes of crude oil have been imported for the refinery to produce 4.98 million tonnes of high-quality products.

However, investors and contractors still had to work to fix technical problems and strike a balanced budget, said Deputy Prime Minister Hoang Trung Hai, who chaired the meeting.

The meeting yesterday also discussed measures to complete the investment mechanism for the Nghi Son Petrochemical Refinery in Tinh Gia District, central Thanh Hoa Province. The procedures for ground clearance and infrastructure construction are also being sped up for the project.

Construction of Nghi Son Refinery, Viet Nam's second planned refinery, is expected to start this year and become operational by 2013. More than 90 per cent of the required area for the $6 billion project have been cleared. Authorised bodies are conducting the necessary negotiations and evaluating the project's environmental impact report.

The refinery has a designed capacity of 10 million tonnes of crude oil per year with possibility to expand to 20 million tonnes.

Preparation activities for initial investment in the Southern Petrochemical Refinery complex, the third of its kind in the country, were also discussed yesterday. The national steering committee asked relevant bodies to boost their management of completed projects and to review completion plans for others. — VNS

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