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Diesel Treatment Unit at Isfahan Refinery Operational in 2 Months

The diesel treatment unit of Isfahan Oil Refining Company in Isfahan Province will become operational within the next two months, the managing director of the company said.

“Costing $600 million, the project is expected to reduce sulfur content in diesel from 6,000 parts per million to less than 10 ppm,” Mohsen Qadiri was also quoted as saying by the Oil Ministry’s news agency Shana.

The company now produces 4 million liters of Euro-5 diesel a day and the output will rise fivefold when the project is launched.

Established in 1979, the refinery produces 25% of the country’s petroleum products, including 16 million liters of Euro-4 diesel, 8 million liters of Euro-4 and 12 million liters of Euro-5 gasoline per day. It currently supplies fuel to 16 provinces.

Located on an area of 340 hectares in northwest Isfahan, the company produces about 30 types of petroleum products.

In 2020, the IORC launched a sulfur granulation unit with a daily capacity of 300 tons. The move was also in line with policies to reduce environmental pollution and upgrade the quality of refined products.

Sulfur is used mainly to produce sulfuric acid, an important chemical widely used in the fertilizer, rubber, steel manufacturing and pharmaceutical industries.

The company has succeeded in removing aromatic compounds, sulfur and benzene from AW-406 solvent and converting it to ++AW-406 solvent.

Isfahan’s refinery is the main supplier of feedstock to Sepahan Oil Company, Isfahan Petrochemical Company, Arak Petrochemical Company, Jey Oil Refining Company and Iran Chemical Industries Company.

Crude oil needed by the refinery comes from Maroun Oilfield in Khuzestan Province via a 430-km pipeline.

As per its environmental commitments, the company is making efforts to reduce the amount of sulfur in mazut and gradually reduce the production of this eco-unfriendly fuel by converting it into other products.

Mazut is among highly polluting products. It is a heavy, low quality fuel oil used in power plants and factories. The main type of bunker oil for ships is heavy mazut, derived as a residue from crude oil distillation.