History
Here is a brief history of our business purchases and achievements
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Project announces to replace ageing steam and power plant with a new energy plant (NEP)
INEOS announces acquisition of the Forties Pipeline System from BP
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Restart of KG’s second manufacturing train following mothballing in 2008
Commissioning of the ethane storage tank
First Dragon ship delivery of US shale gas ethane
O&P UK HQ opens (12 months after construction began)
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INEOS raises the roof on the ethane tank
Agreement with Shell ExxonMobil to supply US shale gas ethane from Grangemouth to the Fife Ethylene Plant (FEP) in Mossmorran announced
BAM Construction appointed
INEOS Grangemouth awards contract to construct the new business HQ for the O&P UK business
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Piling works for the ethane tank commence
Planning permission for ethane tank granted
Go run for Fun first event in Scotland takes place close to the Grangemouth site
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Plans are announced to build an ethane terminal at Grangemouth
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INEOS O&P UK business is formed (out of O&P Europe) consisting of the O&P activities on the Grangemouth site and the Wilton liquefaction unit
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INEOS’ refining business entered in a joint venture (50:50) with Petrochina. The new company, PetroIneos, owns and operates the refinery at Grangemouth
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BP sells INNOVENE to INEOS; the refinery installs a second sulphur recovery unit (SRU)
Legal entity Innovene (O&D) formed by BP with a view to an IPO
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BP announces divestment of its Olefins and Derivative (O&D) business
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Second ethanol plant commissioned
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Further expansion of the KG ethylene plant
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Polypropylene plant (PP3) commissioned
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Expansion of the KG ethylene plant
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Hydrofiner plant built in the refinery to produce ultra low sulphur fuel
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KG ethylene plant constructed
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Sulphur recovery unit constructed in the refinery
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Mossmorran to Grangemouth pipelines constructed
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Ethylene pipeline built
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GTU/Benzene plant commissioned
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First North Sea oil flowed to Grangemouth
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Refinery hydrocracker complex built
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First shipment of polyethylene from the site
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Our pipeline from Finnart Ocean terminal on the west coast, capable of receiving larger tankers, first imported crude oil in 1951. First tonne of ethylene produced at Grangemouth
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First chemicals’ plant built to take advantage of feedstocks
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Major expansion of refinery
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Refinery shut-down during WW2
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BP was persuaded by Scottish Oils to locate a refinery near Grangemouth rather than in North-East England Scottish Oils; a throughput of 360,000 tons per year
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Glasgow scientist Dr James “Paraffin” Young took out a patent for ‘treating bituminous coals to obtain paraffine therefrom’. The first oil works in the world were opened in Bathgate in 1851 producing oil from shale or coal.