SOURCE: Phillips 66
July 30, 2024
BY Erin Voegele
Phillips 66 on July 30 confirmed its Rodeo Renewable Energy Complex in California will begin producing sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) during the third quarter. The company also expects renewable diesel margins to improve later this year.
Company officials discussed operations at the Rodeo Renewable Energy Complex during a second quarter earnings call.
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The biorefinery project has been under development since mid-2022 and reached full processing rates of approximately 50,000 barrels per day during the second quarter of 2024. Phillips 66 Chairman and CEO Mark Lashier explained that the facility’s two hydrocrackers and both pretreatment units are now fully operational. The facility is currently transitioning to lower carbon intensity (CI) feedstocks as the company optimizes the economic performance of the facility, he added.
Rich Harbison, executive vice president of refining at Phillips 66, said the Rodeo facility has been running approximately 50% to 55% soybean oil, but plans to increase the share of lower CI feedstocks throughout the third and fourth quarters.
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According to Harbison, SAF production will begin during the third quarter, with SAF sales beginning in the fourth quarter. The Rodeo facility will be able to blend up to 20,000 barrels per day of SAF, he added.
Brian Mandell, executive vice president of marking and commercial at Phillips 66, said that biofuel margins were low, but positive during the second quarter despite a 10% increase in renewable diesel consumption when compared to the first quarter of the year. Looking into the future, Mandell said the company currently expects renewable diesel margins to begin to improve. He cited several factors the company expects to contribute to improved margins, including the conversion of some current renewable diesel capacity to SAF, the shutdown of additional marginal biodiesel producers, declining feedstock prices as new crush facilities open in the U.S. and Canada, and changing tax credit structures.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration reduced its 2025 forecasts for renewable diesel and biodiesel in its latest Short-Term Energy Outlook, released April 10. The outlook for “other biofuel” production, which includes SAF, was raised.
FutureFuel Corp. on March 26 announced the restart of its 59 MMgy biodiesel plant in Batesville, Arkansas. The company’s annual report, released April 4, indicates biodiesel production was down 24% last year when compared to 2023.
Lawmakers in Wisconsin on April 3 announced their intent to introduce legislation that would create a $1.50 per gallon production tax credit for SAF. The bill is currently circulating for co-sponsorship support and will be formally introduced soon.
Neste has started producing SAF at its renewable products refinery in Rotterdam. The refinery has been modified to enable Neste to produce up to 500,000 tons of SAF per year. Neste’s global SAF production capacity is now 1.5 million tons.
Tidewater Renewables Ltd. has reported that its biorefinery in Prince George, British Columbia, operated at 88% capacity last year. A final investment decision on the company’s proposed SAF project is expected by year end.