No plans to build new US refinery: ConocoPhillips

Mon Jul 6, 2009 3:30pm EDT
 
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(Adds byline, analyst comment)

By Janet McGurty

NEW YORK, July 6 (Reuters) - ConocoPhillips Co said on Monday it was not building a new U.S. refinery despite a statement earlier from Russian partner LUKOIL on a joint investment.

"ConocoPhillips has no plans to build a new U.S. refinery," said Janet Grothe, a spokeswoman for the company.

Excess U.S. capacity makes it unlikely that a new refinery is currently planned but another joint venture, one which gives ConocoPhillips access to production of Russian oil and LUKOIL access to refining capacity on U.S. soil, could be a likely outcome.

The Kremlin said on Monday, in documents prepared for the visit of President Barack Obama, that LUKOIL will invest in a new refinery on the U.S. East Coast with ConocoPhillips.

"The investment of the Russian company will be attracted for the construction of a new ConocoPhillips refinery in the U.S. eastern coast that will focus on processing Russian crude blends," the documents said.

ConocoPhillips owns a 20 percent stake in LUKOIL, and together the two companies own an oil producing venture in Russia's Arctic, making another joint venture likely, industry watchers said.

"LUKOIL wants to establish a foothold in the U.S. They already have the marketing aspect of it. They don't have the refining side of it," said Fadel Gheit, an oil analyst with Oppenheimer.

"Conoco does not necessarily need the cash but needs the strategic alliance," Gheit added. "Conoco is going to trade its downstream for interest in the upstream."

LUKOIL, Russia's second largest oil producer and the country's private oil firm, has long been looking for a refinery stake in the U.S. to process its rising oil output as well as supply the more than 2,000 gasoline stations it controls in the U.S.

Over the past several years, speculation swirled that LUKOIL was interested in taking a piece of ConocoPhillips' 238,000 bpd Bayway refinery in Linden, New Jersey.

LUKOIL Americas is a wholly owned subsidiary of LUKOIL, which sells branded gasoline as LUKOIL and Getty.

With the recent acquisition of ConocoPhillips premium assets in New Jersey and neighboring Pennsylvania, access to a refinery would simplify supply logistics.

ConocoPhillips also has a 185,000-barrel-per-day refinery in Trainer, Pennsylvania, located on the Delaware River below Philadelphia.

Grothe said she had no comment on any joint refinery ventures as company policy did not allow her to discuss operations. (Additional reporting by Oleg Shchedrov and Dmitry Zhdannikov in Moscow; Editing by Christian Wiessner)

 

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