US Sunoco puts chemicals business up for sale

15 December 2008 16:16  [Source: ICIS news]

SunocoHOUSTON (ICIS news)--US refiner Sunoco has placed its chemical business up for sale, the company said on Monday during an investor meeting.

Sunoco's chemicals business produces acetone, phenol, cumene and polypropylene (PP) among others.

Although the chemical business has produced steady cash and income, it has not met the company's targets for a return on investment, Sunoco said. In addition, the global economic downturn is dragging down the outlook for the chemical industry.

Sunoco did not identify any possible buyers for the business.

Sunoco's business segments are refining and supply, retail marketing, chemicals, logistics and coke. For the nine months that ended on 30 September, the chemicals segment reported an income of $40m (€30m), or 7% of the company's total.

Sunoco owns and operates acetone and phenol plants in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and Haverhill, Ohio. Its PP plants are in LaPorte, Texas, Bayport, Texas, and Neal, West Virginia.

The company also owns a plant in Marcus Hook, Pennsylvania, which upgrades propylene and produces PP. Sunoco's refineries in Philadelphia and Westville, New Jersey, produce cumene.

Product

m lb/year

tonnes/year

Phenol

1,775

805,000

Acetone

1,083

491,000

Bisphenol A (BPA)

240

109,000

Other phenol derivatives

120

54,000

Cumene

1,925

873,000

Polypropylene

2,550

1.16m

Propylene

750

340,000

($1 = €0.75)

For more on acetone, BPA, cumene, phenol or PP, visit ICIS chemical intelligence
To discuss issues facing the chemical industry go to ICIS connect


By: Al Greenwood
+1 713 525 2653

< previous article(VIDEO - ICIS news Asia Lunchtime Bulletin 16 October 2009)


AddThis Social Bookmark Button

For the latest chemical news, data and analysis that directly impacts your business sign up for a free trial to ICIS news - the breaking online news service for the global chemical industry.

Get the facts and analysis behind the headlines from our market leading weekly magazine: sign up to a free trial to ICIS Chemical Business.

Printer Friendly

Links posted in this story: