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Sources: Sinochem sells bankrupt Shandong refinery to independent Shandong refiner

Sources: Sinochem sells bankrupt Shandong refinery to independent Shandong refiner

According to four sources with knowledge of the situation and a document describing an auction, Hongrun Petrochemical based in eastern China has agreed to purchase a bankrupt oil refining plant operated by state-run Sinochem Group located in Shandong Province.

Documents show that Changyi Petrochemical in China's refinery hub of Shandong attracted a bid of approximately 2.98 billion Yuan ($411,82 million) by an unidentified third party during an auction which closed on 14 March.

Sources declined to identify themselves as they weren't authorised to speak to media. Hongrun Petrochemical is a private refiner located in Weifang, which is where Changyi, is located.

Sinochem and Hongrun have not responded to our requests for comment.

Three Sinochem plants were declared bankrupt in Shandong by local courts due to debts and unpaid taxes last year.

According to reports, the sale price was less than half of the 6.4 billion Yuan Sinochem initially requested last October. However, the refineries at that time did not have any crude oil import quotas.

Sources said that Hongrun, a large independent refinery in Shandong known as "teapots", is expected to take over Changyi’s crude oil imports quota which was allocated to Sinochem by Beijing under the first release of 2025 permits released late last year.

Two of them stated that Changyi's unpaid tax will be written off.

China's fiercely-competitive independent refining industry faces consolidation due to a sluggish economy, excessive capacity, and increased regulatory scrutiny.

One source said that the acquisition would increase Hongrun's crude-processing capacity to approximately 20 million tons per year, or 400,000 barrels per day.

Sinochem purchased the troubled Shandong refining plants in 2021 through a merger orchestrated by Beijing with their former operator, ChemChina.

Sources say Sinochem is in talks with two private refiners in Shandong to possibly offload the two other bankrupt plants: Huaxing Petrochemical Zhenghe Petrochemical.

(source: Reuters)