The Crude Oil Refinery Process in Sudan
- Use: Cooking Oil
- Type:Cooking Oil Refinery Machine
- Production Capacity: 10/20/3/40/50t/d
- Power: 1.5/2.2/3KW
- Dimension(L*W*H): 1500*600*400
- Weight (KG): 2500
- Material: Stainess Steel 304
- Market: Sudan
Petroleum industry in Sudan, Wikipedia
The domestic processing of crude petroleum began in late 1964, when the Port Sudan oil refinery went into operation. [1] The refinery, which was financed, built, and managed by the British Petroleum and Royal Dutch Shell companies—from July 1976 as a joint-equal shareholding project with the government—had a capacity of about 21,440 barrels
2B, 4, and 5A; its crude oil characteristics make it a relatively more attractive blend to refiners because of its high fuel and gasoil yields. The Fula blend is a highly acidic crude oil produced in the Muglad Basin at Block 6 and is processed for domestic use (Table 3). 5 Table 3. Selected crude oil grades produced in Sudan and South Sudan
Sudan, Oil and Gas, International Trade Administration
Sudan exported $317 million in crude oil exports in 2020. In 2021, its oil fields produced 59,000 barrels per day (bpd). The Sudan Oil Refinery has the capacity to refine 90-95,000 bpd. The Sudanese government also receives an in-kind royalty payment of 14,000 bpd from the government of South Sudan for oil pipeline transit rights to Port Sudan.
All crude oil produced in South Sudan is exported via pipeline to Sudan for refining or export because South Sudan has no refining capacity, and Sudan is the only country in the region with the refining infrastructure capable of processing these particular blends.[23] Crude oil is exported from Port Sudan to Asia via the Bab el-Mandeb Strait.
South Sudan: Keeping the Oil Flowing, Energy Capital & Power
These fees include the actual crude oil transport costs and a $15 per barrel fee that corresponds to the $3 billion South Sudan must compensate Sudan for. After 2022, if no further extensions are needed, the cost per barrel should come down to $9.1 and $11 for the GNP and Petrodar pipelines respectively, reflecting the conclusion of that
South Sudan relies on Sudan’s pipelines and refineries, as well as Port Sudan on the Red Sea, to export its 150,000 barrels of oil per day. The war in Sudan has significantly damaged Sudan’s oil infrastructure, including the major refinery Al-Jaili, thereby threatening South Sudan’s oil exports, according to a February Bloomberg report.
The Assessment of Environmental Impacts: A Case Study
It aims to analyze the environmental impacts of the Sudan crude oil upstream and downstream operations using an LCA methodology following the ISO14040/14044 frameworks applied via SimaPro software
Crude oil refining as we know it today took off in the early 1900s because petroleum-based products were increasingly used for transport 8.Large-scale chemical processes, such as cracking
Oil storage tanks destroyed at Sudan's Khartoum refinery in
Sudan, the second-smallest producer in OPEC+, pumps roughly 50,000 b/d of crude, well below South Sudan's 160,000 b/d, but Juba sends all its crude through a pipeline via Khartoum to Port Sudan. Early fighting prompted speculation that oil infrastructure would come under fire as the RSF attempted to cut off a key source of revenue to Burhan's army.
In this study, we compare two different types of crude oil used in Sudan refineries, namely X and Y blend crude oil, in terms of environmental impacts. A detailed Life Cycle Assessment (LCA