Exclusive-Oil producer Hilcorp eyes purchase of shut Louisiana refinery
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[September 25, 2021] By
Erwin Seba
HOUSTON (Reuters) -Houston-based oil
producer Hilcorp is evaluating Phillips 66's refinery in Alliance,
Louisiana, for conversion into an oil export terminal, said four sources
familiar with the matter, a move that would eliminate it as a source of
motor fuels.
Hilcorp, the largest privately owned U.S. oil producer, with operations
from Alaska to Pennsylvania to Texas, did not reply to questions about
its interest in the facility, which occupies 2,400 acres along the
Mississippi River.
The sources said a buyer was scheduled to visit the refinery this week.
Phillips 66 declined to comment on a buyer's possible visit to the
refinery this week.
The hurricane-damaged refinery remains for sale and its "marketing
process is ongoing,” said Phillips 66 spokesperson Bernardo Fallas. The
company plans to repair the storm damages and restart the facility, he
said.
In August, Phillips 66 began meeting with potential buyers of the
255,600 barrel-per-day (bpd) refinery in Louisiana, on the state's
southeast coast. It was knocked out of commission by Hurricane Ida last
month when a protective wall gave way, flooding the plant.
“The U.S. refining business in the future is going to be smaller, not
bigger,” Phillips 66 Chief Executive Officer Greg Garland said last
month as he laid out plans to advance businesses in renewable diesel,
hydrogen and materials for electric-car batteries.
Most of the several feet of water that flooded the plant has been
removed and most employees have returned to clean-up of the plant, said
people familiar with its operations.
In June, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said national
refining capacity last year fell by 4.5%, or 848,385 bpd, because of
weak refining profits with work-from-home policies slashing gasoline
demand.
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A sheen appears on the flooded property of the Phillips 66 Alliance
Refinery, following the passing of Hurricane Ida in an NOAA
surveillance photograph taken south of Belle Chasse, Louisiana, U.S.
August 31, 2021. NOAA/Handout via REUTERS
A conversion of the Alliance site into a crude oil storage and distribution
terminal makes sense, said Andrew Lipow, president of Houston consultants Lipow
Oil Associates.
“These refineries are getting older and older especially in a climate where we
have seen gasoline demand has peaked,” Lipow said.
The Alliance refinery is one of three along the Gulf Coast that has been offered
for sale this year.
The other two are LyondellBasell Industries’ 263,776-bpd Houston refinery and
Royal Dutch Shell’s shuttered 211,146-bpd Convent, Louisiana, refinery.
The Alliance refinery could still have a future in the current energy
transition, said John Auers, executive vice president with refinery-consultants
Turner, Mason & Company
“It’s still a viable refinery,” Auers said. “We’ve had a lot of capacity turned
off. It could potentially come back pretty strong.”
Phillips 66 does have an incentive to make repairs, Auers said.
“You always get more money (for a refinery) if it’s in an operable condition,”
Auers said.
(Reporting by Erwin Seba in Houston; Editing by Gary McWilliams, Matthew Lewis
and Daniel Wallis)
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