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Borealis Announces Successful Commissioning of Its New Naphtha Cavern in Finland

Published on 2020-10-29. Edited By : SpecialChem

Borealis-naphtha Borealis announces that its new naphtha cavern in Porvoo, Finland has now been safely commissioned. Borealis invested around EUR 25 million in the construction of this 80,000 m3 facility and can now source and store naphtha for its Porvoo operations from the global market in a more flexible, cost-efficient, and secure way.

Construction Completed Sooner Than Expected


The cavern can also accommodate renewable naphtha, making it possible for Borealis customers in future to draw on certified renewable polypropylene (PP) and polyethylene (PE), as well as renewable base chemicals, ethylene, propylene and phenol.

Construction of the new cavern began in 2019 and was completed safely, sooner than projected, and significantly under budget. Located 90 meters below ground, the storage volume of the new cavern enables Borealis to source feedstock from various sources and markets.

Naphtha can now be delivered by large marine vessels (up to 35 kilotons) in addition to rail. The new Porvoo cavern has also been built to accommodate the storage of renewable naphtha, thus enabling Borealis to produce renewable base chemicals and renewable PP and PE, certified by the International Sustainability and Carbon Certification (ISCC Plus certification) scheme.

Commitment to Enhance Safety and Sustainability of Operations


A core component of our sustainability strategy is to contribute to societal progress and to enable more sustainable living while at the same time delivering robust financial results for Borealis and our stakeholders,” says Martijn van Koten, Borealis executive vice president base chemicals and operations.

Borealis sees investment in our European assets such as Porvoo as a clear sign of our commitment to enhancing the safety, profitability, and sustainability of our operations. Our new cavern makes Borealis more independent and flexible in our sourcing of naphtha while enabling the production of renewable feedstock.” says Thomas Van De Velde, Borealis senior vice president hydrocarbons & energy.

Naphtha is used in the petrochemical industry to produce olefins in steam crackers. Borealis sources feedstock such as naphtha, butane, propane and ethane from the oil and gas industry, as well as renewable feedstock from the market, and converts these into ethylene and propylene through its olefin units. Its flexible steam cracker in Porvoo produces both ethylene and propylene.


Source: Borealis
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