New Zealand Refiner to Shrink. May Turn into Fuel Import Terminal

Sonali Paul
Thursday, June 25, 2020

Refining NZ said on Thursday it is considering shutting New Zealand's only oil refinery and turning it into a fuel import terminal in the long run, but first will reduce its operations to cut costs and breakeven into 2021.

Refining NZ's Marsden Point refinery has been under pressure due to competition from mega refineries in Asia and rising power and gas costs in New Zealand. Its woes worsened this year as COVD-19 lockdowns hammered fuel demand for planes and ships.

In an update on a strategic review on the plant's future, the company said it would cut costs and shrink to focus on markets where it is most competitive relative to imports, mainly around Auckland.

Chief Executive Naomi James said the company has been shored up over the past six months by its three customers - Z Energy and the New Zealand units of Exxon Mobil Corp and BP Plc - which pay a "fee floor" when margins drop below the plant's fixed operating costs.

Over a full year that would amount to NZ$140 million ($90 million).

"So we have been protected from how low refining margins have gone," James told Reuters. "Simplification for us means operating within...that level of revenue."

The refinery's gross margin collapsed to just $0.67 a barrel in March-April, down from a historical average around $5.

Longer term, the company is working on plans to convert the plant, which produces about 70% of the country's fuel needs, into a fuel import terminal.

The company will discuss fuel security with the government. James said the risks of importing refined products rather than crude for the refinery were manageable.

NZ Energy said it believes "moving to an import terminal model is the best outcome for the refinery and New Zealand".

BP NZ said the company supports the direction Refining NZ is taking. Mobil NZ said it would continue working with Refining NZ as it weighs its next steps.

($1 = 1.5584 New Zealand dollars) 

($1 = 1.4569 Australian dollars) 

(Reporting by Sonali Paul; editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise)

Categories: Energy Activity Asia Australia/NZ Refining

Related Stories

Seatrium Targets $40M Cost Savings in Continued Divestment Drive

Inpex Secures Environmental Approval for Indonesia’s Abadi LNG Project

Dolphin Drilling, Vantris Ink Marketing Deal for Blackford Dolphin Semi-Sub

Malaysia Offers Nine Exploration Blocks in 2026 Bid Round

Vantage Drilling’s Ultra-Deepwater Drillship Heads to India Under $260M Contract

QatarEnergy, Petronas Ink 20-Year LNG Supply Agreement

JERA Lifts First LNG Cargo From Barossa Gas Project in Australia

Chevron in Final Talks with Eneos, Glencore on Singapore Assets Sale

ADNOC Gas Signs $3B LNG Supply Deal with India’s HPCL

Woodside to Supply LNG to JERA During Japan's Winter Peak

Current News

GLO Marine to Invest $7M in New Vessel Retrofit Hub in Romania

Seatrium Targets $40M Cost Savings in Continued Divestment Drive

Inpex Secures Environmental Approval for Indonesia’s Abadi LNG Project

MISC Secures Long-Term Charter for Papua New Guinea's First FSO

Dolphin Drilling, Vantris Ink Marketing Deal for Blackford Dolphin Semi-Sub

Saipem Agrees $272M Deal to Acquire Deep Value Driller Drillship

DUG Hooks Multi-Client Seismic Reprocessing Survey off Malaysia

MISC, PTSC Extend Ruby II FPSO Operations Offshore Vietnam

Petronas Takes Operatorship of Oman’s Offshore Block 18

Mubadala Hires SLB for Deepwater Drilling Services Offshore Indonesia

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com