Tag Archives: refining

Turcas sells refinery stake in Azerbaijan

MARCH 26 2014 (The Conway Bulletin) — Turkish energy company Turcas is considering selling most of its 18.5% stake in the Star oil refinery operated by Azerbaijan’s state energy company SOCAR, media reported. The Star refinery is one of SOCAR’s biggest overseas projects. It is currently being built in Izmir on the Mediterranean coast.

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(News report from Issue No. 178, published on April 2 2014)

China builds refinery in Tajikistan

MARCH 24 2014 (The Conway Bulletin) — When Tajik President Emomali Rakhmon headed to his home province of Khatlon to celebrate the Nowruz spring holiday he found time to, possibly at least, take part in an important part of Tajikistan’s modern history.

He joined Fan Xianrong, China’s ambassador in Dushanbe, at the official opening ceremony to build Tajikistan’s first oil refinery.

The facility could process up to 1.2m tonnes of crude annually, mirroring the potential of a similar Chinese-built plant in neighbouring Kyrgyzstan.

The Kyrgyz refinery is ready to begin production but has faced persistent protests and inflated compensation claims from locals concerned about the environmental impact. On March 24, Kyrgyzstan’s environmental agency finally ruled the refinery was not in breach of domestic environmental laws.

When they are up and running these refineries may help break the Russian energy grip over Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan and produce enough supply to feed domestic demand.

The crude oil for the Kyrgyz refinery could be sourced via a spur from the China-Kazakhstan pipeline, while Beijing’s CNPC is working on upstream oil projects in Tajikistan.

For China, building a refinery and controlling crude oil supplies is an effective way of securing influence over regional governments.

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(News report from Issue No. 177, published on March 26 2014)

Kazakhstan to refine more crude oil in China

JAN. 13 2014 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakhstan will increase the amount of oil it sends to refineries in western China for processing into oil-based products, media reported quoting the Kazakh energy ministry. Kazakhstan has three refineries, not enough to meet the growing demand for oil-based products. Sending oil to Chinese refineries increases Kazakhstan’s reliance on China.

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(News report from Issue No. 167, published on Jan. 15 2014)

Refinery restarts operations in Kazakhstan

NOV. 11 2013 (The Conway Bulletin) — Shymkent refinery re-started fuel production after a month-long planned shut-down for maintenance work, official Kazakh media reported, easing pressure on petrol supplies. Re-starting the Shymkent refinery, one of only three in Kazakhstan, on schedule was important after reports of petrol shortages and price rises.

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(News report from Issue No. 160, published on Nov. 13 2013)

 

Karimov sacks deputy at Uzbekneftegaz

NOV. 7 2013 (The Conway Bulletin) — Fuel shortages and a power struggle in Uzbekistan appear to have claimed another major scalp in Shavkat Majidov, the long-serving first deputy chief of Uzbekneftegaz. Although no official information has been made available, media reported Uzbek President Islam Karimov sacked Mr Majidov over continued fuel supply problems.

Mr Majidov was a powerful man, in charge of oil-related affairs in Uzbekistan and closely linked with Gulnara Karimova, Mr Karimov’s elder daughter.

Ms Karimova had once been considered a potential presidential successor but more recently she has come under pressure from rivals. Prosecutors in Europe and Uzbekistan have opened investigations into her business affairs; her supporters are being targeted.

Mr Majidov’s removal, according to a media report, is linked to an investigation into shortages at the Ferghana Oil Refinery. Ms Karimova’s ally Akbarali Abdullayev had controlled the refinery until police arrested him in October. This arrest, it appears, left Mr Majidov vulnerable. It has also allowed outsiders another glimpse of the interwoven world of politics and business in Uzbekistan.

Sultan Alisher, a member of parliament loyal to Mr Karimov, and director of the Shurtangaz chemical plant, has taken over as deputy head of Uzbekneftegaz. He’s a safe pair of hands that Mr Karimov can rely on as the power game in Uzbekistan unfolds.

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(News report from Issue No. 160, published on Nov. 13 2013)

Fuel price increases in Kazakhstan

OCT. 24 2013 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakhstan increased its state-imposed cap on fuel prices by 7 tenge to 117 tenge ($0.76) per litre of 92-octane petrol. Prices for the lower grade 80-octane petrol and diesel were left unchanged.

The closure of the refinery in Shymkent for scheduled repairs has triggered localised fuel shortages in the weeks prior to the price hike, scheduled for November.

In Southern Kazakhstan fuel was sold only through coupons and in limited quantities. Lines of cars queued at petrol stations that quickly ran out of 92-octane fuel and supplied only the 80-octane version.

Fuel price rises hurt consumers and tension is brewing in Kazakhstan.

According to the Kazakhstan Fuel Association (KFA), a fuel industry lobby group, routine repairs at the Shymkent refinery caused the shortage. It is only one of three refineries in Kazakhstan.

The government has instead blamed a general global increase in oil for the rise on the petrol price cap.

Ordinary drivers are even more frustrated. They blame owners of petrol stations for holding back supplies until the fuel price cap had been raised.

They’ve also had to stomach a higher price increase than originally flagged up.

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(News report from Issue No. 158, published on Oct. 30 2013)

Refinery shuts down for upgrades in Kazakhstan

OCT. 8 2013 (The Conway Bulletin) — Shymkent refinery, one of three in Kazakhstan, has closed for a month for planned upgrade work, PetroKazakhstan, the plant owner, said. Kazakhstan has been experiencing increasing pressure on petrol supplies throughout the country this year. The government plans to build a new refinery.

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(News report from Issue No. 155, published on Oct. 9 2013)

Tajikistan opens first oil refinery

JULY 20 2013 (The Conway Bulletin) — Tajik President Emomali Rakhmon has officially opened the first oil refinery in Tajikistan. The refinery has the capacity to process around 100,000 tonnes of oil a year. Russia, which had supplied Tajikistan with most of its oil products, will supply oil to the new refinery.

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(News report from Issue No. 144, published on July 22 2013)

Azerbaijan to finance new refinery in Turkey

MAY 17 2013 (The Conway Bulletin) — SOCAR, Azerbaijan’s state-owned energy company, said it would borrow $4b to part-finance an ambitious new oil refinery in Turkey, only 10 days after figures showed slowing output at its most important oil field.

The refinery, to be built in western Turkey, will be operational by 2016 and produce 10m tonnes of oil a year. The $4b loan will cover around two-thirds of the construction costs.

SOCAR will fund the rest of the project itself.

Azerbaijan’s wealth is anchored to its energy industry and the refinery plan projects both a confidence about the future and an understanding of its most important market — Europe.

The importance of Europe as Azerbaijan’s main market was underlined when the European Commission approved plans to build a pipeline to pump gas from Azerbaijan across the Adriatic to Italy, on May 17.

A few days earlier, though, on May 7, BP announced that production at the main oil field in the Azeri sector of the Caspian Sea, Azeri-Chirag-Guneshli (ACG), was still falling. Bloomberg reported that production at ACG, which produces three-quarters of the country’s oil, had dropped to 662,000 barrels per day in Q1, a fall of 8.4% from a year earlier.

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(News report from Issue No. 135, published on May 20 2013)

Turkmenistan to construct oil refinery

SEP. 14 2012 (The Conway Bulletin) – Turkmenistan has started preparations to construct an oil refinery near the Caspian Sea, media reported. The refinery will be Turkmenistan’s third and have an initial capacity of 3m tonnes of crude oil a year. A feasibility study is being prepared and construction work could start in 2015.

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(News report from Issue No. 105, published on Sep. 21 2012)