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Houston refinery needs investment: LyondellBasell

  • Market: Oil products, Petrochemicals
  • 29/04/22

LyondellBasell's decision to close its 268,000 b/d Houston refinery by 2023 partly reflects concerns about the facility's condition, with the company uninterested in making investments necessary to keep it running beyond next year.

"Operation of the refinery beyond next year would require significant capital investment," said interim chief executive Ken Lane today on the company's first quarter earnings call. "After thoroughly analyzing our options, we determined that exiting the business was the best path forward."

The company announced last week that it would shut the refinery — which has been up-for-sale since last year — as part of a bid to reach net zero emissions by 2050. But investments required to run the facility reliably may have loomed large in discussions with potential buyers.

Valero earlier this week waved off the possibility of buying the Houston refinery or Marathon Petroleum's 63,000 b/d Kenai refinery in Alaska — the other US refinery known to be up for sale — due in large part to operational concerns.

"Sometimes you get in there and you start looking at it and [my team] tells me it is going to cost $3bn to get it up to Valero standards, and you think maybe that wasn't exactly the best thing," said Valero chief executive Joe Gorder on 26 April. "It is not that these assets are not good or attractive, we just feel we have better uses for our capital than buying a refinery that is on the market at this point in time."

LyondellBasell's Houston refinery closure would fit within a recent trend of US refiners retiring or converting aging facilities first constructed in the early 20th century. Rival Phillips 66 late last year decided to convert the 250,000 b/d Alliance refinery in Belle Chasse, Louisiana, into a terminal after Hurricane Ida damaged the facility beyond repair. It would also align LyondellBasell with European peer Shell, which has moved away from US refining in recent years amid legal and investor pressure to pursue decarbonization goals.

While increased competition for key crude feedstocks from Canada, Mexico and Colombia in the wake of US sanctions on Russian energy may have also clouded the facility's long-term outlook, the Houston refinery continued to run profitably in the first quarter. The refinery recorded $148mn in profit in the period, its third straight consecutive profitable quarter, and more than doubled year-over-year refining margins as measured by the Maya 2-1-1 crack spread.

But recent quarters have offered signs that the facility, a key producer of gasoline and diesel in the US Gulf coast, was not in ideal shape. LyondellBasell took a $624mn impairment charge against the refinery in its fourth quarter 2021 results for undisclosed reasons, after committing a $570mn impairment against the facility in 2020.

Alternative uses

LyondellBasell has not abandoned efforts to sell the facility, but the company will continue to evaluate other uses for the site along the Houston Ship Channel. One option would include using the facility as part of a recycled plastics business lines linked with its nearby petrochemical facility in Channelview, Texas.

"The refinery site is located in a very good position geographically on the [Houston] Ship Channel and has great pipeline connections with the [930,000 t/yr mixed-feed] crackers at Channelview," said LyondellBasell's Lane today. "And a lot of those pyrolysis oils [from plastic waste] do need some hydrotreating and things like that."

Historically the Houston refinery enjoyed a high degree of integration with the Lyondell Channelview complex since its expansion under Arco ownership in the mid-1970's. It underwent an expansion and reconfiguration in 2004 as a joint venture between Lyondell and Citgo that geared the facility for heavy sour crude processing, before Lyondell took full control of the refinery in 2006.

LyondellBasell reported $1.32bn in profit in the first quarter, up from a $1.1bn profit in the same quarter last year.


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09/05/25

Indonesia threatens to stop oil imports from Singapore

Indonesia threatens to stop oil imports from Singapore

Singapore, 9 May (Argus) — Indonesian market participants have reacted with caution to a call by the country's energy minister to stop all oil imports from Singapore. Energy and mineral resources minister Bahlil Lahadalia said on 8 May that Indonesia should stop purchases from Singapore and instead buy directly from oil producers in the Middle East, according to media reports that were confirmed by several Indonesian market participants. Discussions are taking place but there is so far no official statement from the ministry nor any direction from managers in the oil industry, one market participant said. "None of us are taking it seriously" and it is still "business as usual", the official said. The regional trading hub of Singapore is a major supplier of oil products to Indonesia, and any end to shipments from the country would upend trade flows. Singapore is the biggest gasoline supplier to Indonesia, accounting for more than 60pc of total shipments, according to customs data. Singapore exported 236,000 b/d of gasoline to Indonesia in 2024, with Malaysia a distant second at 79,500 b/d. Singapore is also one of Indonesia's top gasoil and jet fuel suppliers, shipping over 54,000 b/d of gasoil and 8,300 b/d of jet fuel to the country in January-April this year, according to data from government agency Enterprise Singapore. The government has already begun to build docks that can accommodate larger, long-haul vessels, Bahlil said, according to state-owned media. Any move by Indonesian importers to switch purchases to the Mideast Gulf would increase the replacement cost of supply because of higher freight rates, said market participants. Indonesian buyers are currently negotiating term contracts on a fob Singapore basis, so a sudden cut in supplies would not be feasible. The term contract is due for renewal soon, traders said. State-owned oil firm Pertamina, the dominant products importer, is expected to begin term negotiations for its second-half 2025 requirements in May-June. A decision by Indonesia to end imports from Singapore would cut regional gasoline demand but could be bullish for the market overall, given the extra logistics required to blend elsewhere and ship into southeast Asia. The Mideast Gulf currently supplies mainly Pakistan and Africa, with just 15pc of gasoline exports from the region heading towards Indonesia and Singapore in 2024, according to data from ship tracking firm Kpler. Indonesia's energy ministry (ESDM) did not immediately reply to a request for confirmation of Bahlil's comments. They came a day after the country's president Prabowo Subianto called for Indonesia to become self-sufficient in oil in the next five years. Indonesia has also proposed raising energy imports from the US as part of talks to reduce import tariffs threatened by president Donald Trump. Indonesia is considering boosting imports of crude, LPG, LNG and refined fuels in order to rebalance its trade surplus and ease bilateral tensions, government officials have said. By Aldric Chew and Lu Yawen Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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EU consults on tariffs for €95bn US imports


09/05/25
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09/05/25

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Chemicals, polymers part of EU tariff consultation


08/05/25
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08/05/25

Chemicals, polymers part of EU tariff consultation

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HSFO defies the green tide


08/05/25
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08/05/25

HSFO defies the green tide

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Shell to buy Freepoint pyrolysis oil in US: Update


08/05/25
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08/05/25

Shell to buy Freepoint pyrolysis oil in US: Update

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