UserPic Kokel, Nicolas
2025/06/06 08:00 PM

Mass Balance has been completed.
Asset capacities and technologies have been identified.

#lyondellbasell  #tarragona  #spain  #novolen  #polypropylene 
 

UserPic Kokel, Nicolas
2025/04/30 02:51 PM



Portfolio Planning PLUS provides a comprehensive overview of refining and petrochemical activities in every world' s country. Screenshot shows Spanish refineries via the platform's
refining module.

Portfolio Planning PLUS | April 30, 2025

A massive power outage swept across Spain and Portugal on April 28, forcing all major Spanish refineries and several petrochemical plants into an emergency shutdown. The blackout, which struck at around 12:30 CET, caused an abrupt drop of over 10GW from the Spanish electricity grid, disrupting industrial complexes, halting metro and rail services, and even grounding flights across the region

  • All five of Repsol’s Spanish refineries-representing a combined refining capacity of 890,000 barrels of crude oil per day-were compelled to cease operations, alongside the company’s petrochemical plants in Tarragona and Puertollano.
  • Moeve, another key Spanish refiner with 464,000 barrels per day of refining capacity, also shut down its Algeciras and Huelva refineries, as well as two petrochemical plants in southern Spain.
  • Dow Chemical Spain’s Tarragona industrial complex was similarly affected, and emergency flaring was observed at some sites as part of safety protocols during the shutdown.

Following the restoration of power from late on April 28, refinery operators began the complex process of restarting their facilities. According to Repsol, crude oil crude distillation units require about three days to come back online, while secondary conversion units, including hydrocrackers, may take up to a week to resume normal operations. The company confirmed that its Bilbao refinery was the first to restart, aided by electricity imports from France, and emphasized that no significant damage occurred during the outage.

Moeve and other operators are also in the process of progressively bringing their plants back online, though none have specified when output will return to pre-outage levels.

The outage has prompted Spain’s petroleum reserves corporation Cores to temporarily relax strategic reserve requirements, reducing the obligation by four days to help mitigate potential supply disruptions. Meanwhile, Exolum, the country’s main pipeline and storage operator, reported that its infrastructure is functioning normally and that essential services and airports continued to receive fuel throughout the blackout

While most industrial activity is expected to recover within a week, the incident has highlighted the vulnerability of Spain’s energy infrastructure and the critical importance of grid stability for the country’s refining and petrochemical sectors.


#electricitygrid  #electricity  #poweroutage  #refineryshutdown  #refineryrestart  #refining  #spain  #repsol  #moeve  #petronor  #dowchemical 

UserPic Kokel, Nicolas
2025/03/19 09:41 AM

LA ROBLA GREEN project site that will include a carbon-negative green biomass energy generation plant and an e-methanol plant produced by combining CO₂ extracted from the Roblum biomass power plant with green hydrogen.


#spain  #larobla  #reolum  #greenhydrogen  #emethanol  #biomassenergy  #co2extraction  #sustainability 

UserPic Kokel, Nicolas
2025/03/19 06:20 AM

The description of the Repsol Tarragona refining and petrochemical site has been updated with all details about existing plants and units. This now needs to be converted into a mass balance model of the site.

#repsol  #tarragona  #spain  #refinery  #petrochemicals .

UserPic Kokel, Nicolas
2025/03/18 10:07 AM

Dow Tarragona North has been created  and the cracker plant has been  added as well as ethylene and propylene production.


#dow  #spain  #iberica  #steamcracker  #linde  #ethylene  #propylene 

UserPic Kokel, Nicolas
2025/03/18 09:44 AM

Dow Chemical Ibérica S.L. has been added.

 

#dowchemical #spain  #iberica 

UserPic Kokel, Nicolas
2024/10/21 03:15 PM




Francesco Sassi, 21 Oct 2024, eklipX Research

Spanish energy giant Repsol is freezing the development of all major hydrogen assets in the country, says the company.
After international companies cancelled their plans to export hydrogen from Norway to Germany, this is another alarming sign for the industry in the E.U.
According to Repsol, the world-renowned Oil & Gas Spanish giant, has halted all developments of green hydrogen projects in Spain with a large electrolysis capacity, namely over 350 MW. The company says that the existing regulations in Spain are at the root of this decision.
From Repsol's perspective, the current political discussion about possible windfall taxes on energy companies and banks to be confirmed in the long term makes these investments simply too risky.  Spain is one of the few E.U. countries to still apply a windfall profit tax to fund relief measures for consumers. In 2023, the levy granted Madrid additional €2.9 billion going into the State's coffers.
At the end of 2023, the same government extended the measure for 12 months, allowing companies to partially offset the levy on renewable energy projects. Now, the tensions between the State & Market stakeholders are rising due to the proposal of extending the windfall tax in the future.
Thus, we should understand Repsol's decision in the contexts of growing, domestic political frictions, and the instability of the hydrogen market in the E.U.

#oilandgas  #crudeoil  #naturalgas  #hydrogen  #greenhydrogen  #electrolysis  #repsol  #spain  #eu  #pipeline 

UserPic Kokel, Nicolas
2024/02/02 06:04 AM

Ships arriving at the port of Barcelona in Spain are experiencing delays of 10-15 days as they navigate around Africa to avoid potential attacks in the Red Sea. This delay impacts various products, including liquefied natural gas.

While delays in the western Mediterranean are shorter due to proximity to the Afrikaans bypass route, Barcelona, being one of Spain's major LNG terminals, is significantly affected.

Despite security concerns, many gas carriers continue to use the Suez Canal route. However, QatarEnergy, the world's second-largest LNG exporter, has ceased sending tankers through the Red Sea, citing safety reasons.

#Spain