REFINERY
Refining and fuels
Petroleum refining converts crude oil into fuels such as gasoline, diesel, kerosene, and aviation and jet fuel. In addition, oil refineries produce a number of other products such as LPG, propylene, naphtha, solvents and spirits, petroleum and needle coke, asphalt binder or bitumen, petroleum wax, and a number of feedstocks for the petrochemical industry including aromatics and olefins. Petroleum refineries can be segmented simply by the extent of crude oil conversion that is achieved in their operations.
Simple refineries typically process crude oil into the key transportation fuels such as gasoline and diesel. Cracking refineries have moderate conversion units such as the fluidized catalytic cracker (FCC) to convert more of the crude oil barrel into fuels and other products. Coking refineries, finally, have extensive conversion capacity including typically delayed coking and hydrocracking and can convert the entire barrel of crude oil into useful refined products and petrochemical feedstocks. Over time, the largest petroleum refineries have relied on integration to increase their margins by adding petrochemical plants and capacity to their operations.
Fuel markets have significantly broadened in the past few decades due to regulatory pressures such as California’s Low-Carbon Fuel Standard and the Renewable Fuel Standard. A few examples of alternative fuels that are gaining traction include biofuels such as ethanol, biodiesel, and renewable diesel; compressed and liquefied natural gas; and methanol and di-methyl ether (DME). The alternative markets will only expand as the Energy Transition gains momentum driving new interest in sustainable and low-carbon fuels.
Refiners face a number of near- and long-term competitive pressures. In the near-term, transportation fuel demand recovery, compliance with various regional and global regulations, and development of new export markets are all key challenges. In the long-term, competition with electric vehicles, the necessity to cut Scope 1-3 emissions, and repurposing refining for the Energy Transition future are all critical disruptions that refiners will have to prepare for.
Relevant examples
A few examples of our work in the fuels and refining sector are presented here. Please contact us to learn more about how JSC KazTransGaz can help you.
Market research
Asset strategy
Costs and economics
Supply chain analysis
Technology assessments
Regulatory strategy