Indian Oil eyes processing bio-naphtha for petrochemicals
(Reuters) - Indian Oil Corp., the country's top refiner, said on Friday it is looking to decarbonize its petrochemical feedstocks by introducing bio-naphtha at its crackers.
"To attain sustainability, bio-based feedstocks such as bio-naphtha and bio-ethanol are being envisaged as the natural transition for the petrochemical industry," the company's Chairman Shrikant Madhav Vaidya said at Asia Petrochemical Industry Conference, without providing a timeline.
Bio-naphtha is typically obtained from hydro-treatment of used vegetable and cooking oils.
"It is under research and development at our Faridabad facility in northern India... we have kept the used cooking oil pathway open but we're trying to get it via bio-ethanol," the company's executive director of petrochemicals, A. S. Sahney, told Reuters on the sidelines of the event.
Related News
- Dow launches "Transform to Outperform" to raise the competitive industry benchmark for productivity and growth to enable improved returns
- Keppel, Aster plan sustainable aviation fuel project in Singapore
- Baker Hughes, Giammarco Technologies to advance and commercialize hot potassium carbonate for post-combustion carbon capture



Comments