Friday, July 3, 2015

Total unveils its largest global lubricant plant in Singapore

Total unveils its largest global lubricant plant in Singapore

FRENCH oil major Total on Friday launched its new lubricant oil-blending plant in Singapore, which is its largest in the world.
Located at Tuas Industrial Complex, the plant has the capacity to produce 310,000 tonnes per year of lubricants for automotive, industrial and marine applications mainly for its customers in the Asean region.
The new facility replaces Total's two lubricant plants in Singapore.
Total Oil Asia Pacific's president of marketing and strategy and new energies, Philippe Boisseau, said at the plant's opening ceremony: "With a population of more than four billion, Asia is for Total a key region of future energy demand growth. The lubricants market is expected to reach 20 million tonnes by 2025. Globally, the growth of our lubricants business is the most dynamic, boosting our international development."
The plant will also supply for its customers in China and India certain products that are not manufactured locally, added Francois Dehodencq, Total Oil Asia Pacific's senior vice-president and CEO of marketing and services.
Total first set up its oil trading and sales & marketing operations for lubricant products in Singapore in 1982. In 1991, it opened its first lubricant plant in Pandan, and in 1992, its second in Pioneer.
When fully operational, the new facility will double Total's lubricants production in Singapore, and increase its regional capacity by 30 per cent.
This will better enable Total to capitalise on the growing Asian lubricants market, which is expected to grow by 2.5 per cent per year to US$70 billion by 2020.
Singapore's Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Home Affairs Teo Chee Hean said at the opening event that the lubricants industry strengthens integration across the refining sector. "Our refineries produce the base oil that goes into the production of lubricants, while our lubricant additive manufacturers improve the performance of finished lubricant products.
"The lubricants blending plant adds significant value by integrating the intermediate inputs to produce high-value lubricants. Total's growing presence in Singapore thus strengthens and adds value across the entire energy and chemicals value chain."
Mr Teo also commended Total's attempts at making its new facility more sustainable.
The two-storey facility is also part of the Singapore Lube Park, Total's joint venture with oil majors Shell and Sinopec, whose plans were announced in 2013.
"It allows companies to save costs through shared operations and Singapore to optimise its limited land," Mr Teo said.
Meanwhile, automated filling lines raise the facility's productivity from five workers producing 160 drums per hour to two workers producing 250 drums per hour, Mr Teo added.
The energy and chemicals industry today accounts for a third of Singapore's manufacturing output, and employs 26,000 people in manufacturing jobs.
"As this industry competes globally, we have to continually look for ways to improve our competitive advantage to stay ahead," Mr Teo said.

China says multiple currencies can be used in cross-border fund scheme

China says multiple currencies can be used in cross-border fund scheme

[HONG KONG] Fund investments under a landmark new scheme between China and Hong Kong will be able to be denominated in yuan or other currencies, a Chinese regulator said on Friday, a big step in liberalizing its capital account and a major departure from existing schemes.
The mutual fund recognition scheme launched on July 1 enables funds domiciled in Hong Kong and China to be sold in each others' markets, and is the latest landmark initiative connecting markets in Hong Kong and the mainland as China allows more access to overseas investors.
The decision to allow those investments to be denominated in multiple currencies other than the yuan marks a departure from other such schemes such as the Hong Kong-Shanghai stock trading link launched last November, which operates in yuan and the Hong Kong dollar only.
Other existing schemes to buy Chinese assets such as the qualified foreign institutional investment program and its yuan counterpart are only denominated in US dollars and the yuan respectively.
The announcement on Friday at a regulatory conference in Hong Kong comes as China pushes to internationalise the yuan, also known as renminbi, and have it included in the IMF's basket of reserve currencies."Fund inflows and outflows can be in renminbi or in foreign currencies," Ye Haisheng, deputy director-general of China's State Administration of Foreign Exchange, told a regulatory conference in Hong Kong."Currency conversions can be done in Hong Kong or mainland. It's very liberalized as we don't differentiate or restrict currency types," Mr Ye said.
Friday's announcement clarifying the rules of the scheme comes amid heavy losses in the mainland markets, with stocks in Shanghai falling seven per cent in opening trade. Benchmark indexes have fallen more than a quarter from June 12 highs.
Funds sold under the recently launched scheme will also not be subject to individual quota approvals but rather an overall limit, Ye said.
The China Securities and Regulatory Commission (CSRC) said on July 1 that the initial overall quota for mutual fund recognition would be 300 billion yuan (S$65.2 billion) in each direction.
A CSRC official on Friday also said that the regulator is mulling adding additional products such as exchange traded funds to the mutual fund recognition scheme.
REUTERS

India central bank, govt in talks to scrap import curbs on gold-silver alloy: sources

India central bank, govt in talks to scrap import curbs on gold-silver alloy: sources

[MUMBAI] The Reserve Bank of India and the finance ministry are in talks to scrap bulk import licences for a gold-silver alloy used by domestic refiners, months after relaxing curbs on gold imports, officials with direct knowledge of the discussions told Reuters.
Gold is India's second-highest import in value terms, and a jump in imports widened the current account deficit in 2013, sparking the country's worst currency turmoil since a balance of payments crisis in 1991.
An alloy of gold and silver, called dore, from which refineries produce pure gold, forms about 150 tonnes of imports each year and attracts a duty of 8.24 per cent, which is less than the duty of 10.30 per cent on refined gold.
The RBI wants to remove all restrictions on refiners while the finance ministry has raised concerns over tax evasion, the sources said.
Government and RBI officials met late last month to examine the proposal.
"The finance ministry is not in favour of relaxing conditions for import of gold dore as it could lead to tax evasion," said a senior finance ministry official, who declined to be identified because he is not authorised to speak to the media.
Government officials worry that buyers may try to exploit the difference in import duties by declaring pure gold as dore.
"As of now, refineries like us need to get a licence from the Directorate-General of Foreign Trade to import bulk of gold dore," said Rajesh Khosla, the managing director of MMTC-PAMP, India's biggest gold refiner. "This policy was to prevent any misuse as dore gets a concessionary import duty. Now there is a possibility of scrapping the need for a licence for dore as gold can be imported freely anyway."
In November 2014, the government scrapped an unpopular rule, the 80:20 requirement that forced traders to export 20 per cent of all gold imported into the country.
Separately, India now plans to issue sovereign bonds linked to the bullion price, in a bid to divert some of the estimated 300 tonnes of annual demand for gold bars and coins.
REUTERS

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