MOSCOW (MRC) -- In a bid to reduce imports of oil products and chemicals, Indonesia's state energy firm Pertamina has restarted a refining and petrochemical complex in East Java province owned by TPPI, as per Plastemart.
The restart could help reduce the current account deficit in Indonesia, where import costs have been rising due to a weak rupiah. During the six-month agreement, the plant will process 55,000 to 80,000 barrels of condensate per day (bpd) and will produce about 1.5 mln barrels of gasoil and fuel oil, 36,000 tons of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) and 2.8 mln barrels of light naphtha.
A total of 530,000 tons of petrochemicals will also be produced. The designed capacity of the condensate splitter is 100,000 bpd. Pertamina has signed an agreement with plant operator TPPI to use the facility for six months. The plant had been idled for nearly two years due to heavy debts at TPPI. "The restart of TPPI Tuban refinery is intended to provide an opportunity for TPPI to get an income again through the tolling fee derived from the joint-processing agreement," Pertamina said. The restart has also tightened condensate supply in the region.
As MRC wrote before, Pertamina has signed an agreement to purchase petrochemical products from Thailand’s PTT Global Chemical. The agreement serves as a pre-marketing strategy for Pertamina and PTT’s joint Indonesian petrochemical business. Under the agreement, PTT will deliver at least 5,000 tonnes of polyethylene and polypropylene products each month to Pertamina for sale in Indonesia.
Pertamina is an Indonesian state-owned oil and natural gas corporation based in Jakarta. It was created in August 1968 by the merger of Pertamin (established 1961) and Permina (established 1957). Pertamina is the world's largest producer and exporter of Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG).
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