BP earmarks £500m for UK investment
01 December 1998 00:00 [Source: PCE]
BP Chemicals is to invest £500m ($831m) in new plants at
its Grangemouth, Scotland, and Hull, UK, sites. A new 110 000
tonne/year ethanol plant is to be built at Grangemouth and a 250
000 tonne/year vinyl acetate monomer (VAM) plant and a 220 000
tonne/year ethyl acetate plant at Hull.
The VAM plant is scheduled for completion by the end of 2000 and
the ethyl acetate plant by 2001. BP will use its new proprietary
VAM technology, which it claims can more than double the capacity
of a single reactor compared with conventional technology. BP will
close its 115 000 tonne/year VAM plant at Baglan Bay, south Wales,
when the company is in a position to assure uninterrupted supply to
customers.
The new plant will replace output at Hull from BP's current
ethyl acetate process, which relies on the esterification of
ethanol with acetic acid.
Bryan Sanderson, BP Chemicals chief executive, said the
investments will increase mid-cycle earnings by £85m/year,
mainly from reduced production and logistics costs.
'It will demonstrate that northeast UK is one of the most
attractive chemicals manufacturing locations in Europe and, indeed,
the world.'
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