China to eclipse America as world’s biggest oil refiner


Shell, the world’s third-biggest oil major, wanted to radically reduce refining capacity and couldn’t find a buyer.

EARLIER this month, Royal Dutch Shell Plc pulled the plug on its Convent refinery in Louisiana.

Unlike many oil refineries shut in recent years, Convent was far from obsolete: it’s fairly big by U.S. standards and sophisticated enough to turn a wide range of crude oils into high-value fuels. Yet Shell, the world’s third-biggest oil major, wanted to radically reduce refining capacity and couldn’t find a buyer.

As Convent’s 700 workers found out they were out of a job, their counterparts on the other side of Pacific were firing up a new unit at Rongsheng Petrochemical’s giant Zhejiang complex in northeast China. It’s just one of at least four projects underway in the country, totaling 1.2 million barrels a day of crude-processing capacity, equivalent to the U.K.’s entire fleet.

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refining , China , Shell , Rongsheng Petrochemical

   

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