GS Caltex

GS Caltex is a South Korean oil refiner. The company changed its name from LG-Caltex Oil Corporation to GS Caltex Corporation on January 27, 2006. It is jointly owned by Chevron and GS Group.

GS Caltex
GS칼텍스
Joint venture
IndustryOil refiner
Founded1967
HeadquartersSeoul, South Korea
Area served
Worldwide
ProductsPetroleum products
RevenueUS$50.26 billion (2014)
ParentGS Group
Chevron Corporation
Websitewww.gscaltex.com
Korean name
Hangul
GS칼텍스
Revised RomanizationGS Kaltaekseu
McCune–ReischauerGS Kaltaeksǔ
(former)
Hangul
호남정유
Hanja
湖南精油
Revised RomanizationHonam Jeongyu
McCune–ReischauerHonam Chongyu
GS Caltex gas station in Seoul
GS Caltex gas station in Changwon

GS Caltex was founded in May 1967 as the first private oil company in Korea. GS Caltex provides more than one-third of Korea's oil needs and exports over 50% of its products.

Production Base

  • Refining Facilities : GS Caltex has crude oil refining facilities with a capacity of 775,000 barrels per day (123,200 m3/d).
  • Kero-Diesel Hydrodesulfurization Facilities : GS Caltex desulfurizes 272,000 barrels (43,200 m3) of kerosene and diesel each day.

Business Domain

  • Petroleum : GS Caltex has a daily production capacity of 775,000 barrels (123,200 m3) per stream day and more than 50% of total output is exported.
  • Petrochemicals : GS Caltex constructed a polypropylene plant in 1988. That was followed by expansion into the aromatics business in 1990. Currently, GS Caltex manufactures basic petrochemicals.
  • Base Oil & Lubricants : In November 2007, GS Caltex began base oil production with a capacity of 16,000 barrels (2,500 m3) per stream day. As of 2011, its production capacity reached 26,000 barrels (4,100 m3) per stream day; GS Caltex exports more than 70% of its total base oil production. GS Caltex produces 9,000 barrels (1,400 m3) of lubricants per day and 8,000 million tonne per year of grease products.
gollark: Technically, solar panels have a finite lifespan and we can't make arbitrarily many from Earth resources.
gollark: I mean, it's less renewable than solar.
gollark: I can have the GTech™ Mercury assembler swarms self-replicate and disassemble it if you want?
gollark: It would be cool™ and probably fix some problems to have nuclear-heated desalination plants.
gollark: IIRC they don't really have many radioactive heavy metals.

See also

References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.