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Sources: Sinochem will sell two refineries in bankruptcy to local operators

Sources: Sinochem will sell two refineries in bankruptcy to local operators

Seven trade sources and auction documents indicate that China's state owned Sinochem Group is selling two more bankrupt refineries to local refiners in eastern Shandong Province for a much lower price than their value, via auctions which closed on Friday.

The new owners would increase crude imports and restart operations at the troubled facilities, boosting oil purchases in the world’s biggest importer.

The refineries, Zhenghe Group, which operates a 100,000-barrels-per-day refinery, and Huaxing Petrochemical, which has a 140,000-bpd plant, were listed for sale on last Monday, according to the Shandong Property Right Exchange Centre.

Sources with knowledge in the matter have said that Shandong Qicheng Petrochemical should acquire Zhenghe, while Shandong Qirun Petrochemical would take over Huaxing. All three are located in Dongying.

Sinochem, when contacted by a reporter from, said that the company would not comment on speculation in the market.

Qicheng Qirun have not responded to any requests for comment.

Sinochem will be leaving Shandong where most Chinese independent refiners are located, commonly known as teapots. These refiners account for about a fifth China's crude oil imports.

Sinochem acquired the refineries in Shandong via a state-organised merger with ChemChina. Local courts declared the plants bankrupt last year due to debts and unpaid taxes.

Documents on the website of the Shandong Property Right Exchange Centre showed that Zhenghe's minimum transfer price was 2.62 billion Yuan ($365.12 millions), while its valuation was 6.3 billion Yuan.

Documents show that Huaxing's minimum transfer price was 3.24 billion Yuan compared to its valuation of 8.7 billion Yuan.

The website didn't reveal the names of bidders, and it wasn't immediately clear if these deals would be completed at those prices. The Shandong Property Right Exchange Centre refused to comment.

Sinochem sold Changyi Petrochemical in March to Shandong Hongrun Petrochemical.

The acquisition will allow Qicheng's and Qirun’s refinery capacities in Dongying to increase from 170,000 bpd to 184,000 bpd respectively, thereby improving their economies-of-scale.

Three sources said that the two Shandong refiners will also receive a government quota for crude oil imports of approximately 3.56 million tons (26 millions barrels) in the remainder of 2025 after purchasing Sinochem's factories.

A fax sent to the Ministry of Commerce for comment was not returned.

Changyi has recently resumed its operations, and purchased crude oil from Brazil and Canada with the 2025 import quota. Reporting by Chen Aizhu in Singapore, Siyi LIu in Beijing Newsroom and Trixie Yap. Editing by Florence Tan and Helen Popper.

(source: Reuters)