Marathon Petroleum lays out Texas City integration
A five-year, $2bn series of projects will combine the 475,000 b/d Galveston Bay and 80,000 b/d Texas City refineries to a single 585,000 b/d facility, the company said today.
The company plans to next year begin shutting catalytic cracking unit 1, one of three gasoline blendstock-producing units of its kind at Galveston Bay. Marathon will later shut heaters at its older Texas City refinery as it integrates steam production, and then shut down reformer and aromatics units at the same refinery in 2019.
Marathon will revamp a heavy crude unit, adding 40,000 b/d of capacity and improving gas oil and distillates yields. It will upgrade a resid hydrotreater, adding 20,000 b/d of capacity to bring it to 90,000 b/d. It will also add a new ultra-low sulfur diesel (ULSD) hydrotreater to shift the facility to 100pc ULSD production and increase finished distillates output to 65,000 b/d.
Marathon purchased the refinery and other Gulf coast assets from BP in 2012 for $598mn. BP at the time said it would cost too much to add light, sweet domestic crude processing to the facility. The refinery also struggled to keep all of its gasoline-producing fluid catalytic cracking (FCC) units operating consistently.
Marathon sees the refinery as half of its two-pronged waterborne gasoline strategy in the US Gulf coast. The US independent refiner uses its Texas City assets in conjunction with its 562,000 b/d refinery in Garyville, Louisiana, to supply Gulf coast markets including Florida and growing export demand. Marathon plans to through logistics projects reach 395,000 b/d of gasoline export capacity by the end of 2017 and to push to 500,000 b/d of capacity by the end of 2018.
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