Posted on 07/10/2015 6:02:12 AM PDT by thackney
Refineries are expanding for the first time in years to soak up a wave of cheap crude unleashed by the U.S. shale boom, but their lack of in-house construction experience puts the projects at greater risk for cost overruns and delays, a new report finds.
More than 30 refining expansions worth $14 billion total are under development across the United States as the industry hustles to take advantage of the oil glut, according to a new analysis by Petrochemical Update, which analyzes construction trends for the industry.
Texas alone has three refining projects under construction, including Kinder Morgan Energy Partners $369 million condensate splitter in Galena Park slated to come online at the end of this year. Another five projects are in planning stages, including a $400 million proposal by Valero to expand its Houston refinery.
But the industry has a shortage of workers with experience managing such massive investments, which can make it difficult for companies to accurately estimate how much a project will cost and how long it will take to build, the report said.
The industry is suffering from a depleting resource pool of highly-experienced project managers and project support personnel, Stephen Cabano, president of Pathfinder, a project management consulting firm, wrote in the report.
Thats problematic because its critical for refineries to fully understand all the risks associated with building an expansion, Cabano wrote. For example, the flurry of new petrochemical and refining construction projects happening across the U.S. Gulf Coast has created stiff competition for skilled construction workers, materials and equipment, which in turn can drive up prices, the report found. However, those problems may be easing amid falling oil prices, the report said.
Companies can avoid cost overruns and delays by planning around these risks, but those mitigation skills are in short supply, the report found.
The ability to manage risks is often developed over time through experience and lessons learned, both of which are weak in todays marketplace, Cabano wrote in the report.
The report suggests that companies suffering from a lack of experience on their project teams should look for workers within the company, or hire outside experts and consultants, to help manage the projects, the report suggested.
With the application of goodly amounts of research, applied experience, sound ideas from in-house and outside experts and an eye always on company objectives, capital projects can be completed on time and on budget, the report found.
The o/g industry has been losing expertise for the past 20 years, now those decisions are having impact.
This is the first I’ve heard of refinery expansions. Good news.
We have been expanding our refineries for a couple decades.
http://www.eia.gov/dnav/pet/hist/LeafHandler.ashx?n=PET&s=MOCLEUS2&f=M
Far cheaper to enlarge the ones we have, rather than build entire new ones. The existing are already connected to pipelines, railroads, docks, etc.
Plus the natural curtailment of NIMBYs.
You might also be interested in this Econtalk podcast with Flyvbjerg on why mega projects fail and what not to do.
http://www.econtalk.org/archives/_featuring/bent_flyvbjerg/
It includes solutions and best practices, plus the links are full of data and case studies.
What the heck...
Wasn’t it just a few months ago the talk was of the vast global glut of refining capacity?
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