Sasol plant up and running

Second plant on target to start later this year

The first of Sasol’s seven chemical product manufacturing plants recently began operations at its Westlake site, with a second plant set to start up later this year, officials said Thursday.

Michael Kane, vice president of operations at the site, said the first unit will produce 470,000 tons of low-density polyethylene per year, with the second plant producing 420,000 tons of polyethylene annually.

“Both are world-scale plants,” Kane said. “This is really an exciting day for us. We’ve been looking forward to it for a very long time.”

The Sasol site centers around an ethane cracker, which is expected to be up and running by July, Kane said. Until then, Sasol is purchasing ethylene from a Gulf Coast network that includes other suppliers, he said.

The remaining chemical project manufacturing units are expected to begin operations throughout this year and into early 2020, Kane said. Starting up operations at the first plant is “just the tip of the iceberg,” he said.

“This represents a success story for us to get to this point,” Kane said. “It represents a culmination of partnering with the state and (Calcasieu) Parish in a way that brought this part of an economic engine to life.”

Sasol has hired 650 of the 1,100 employees working at the site, with the other 450 working there before the expansion, Kane said. More than 80 percent of those newer hires are from Louisiana, while 71 percent are from Calcasieu Parish.

Because the remaining manufacturing plants will start up in sequence, the roughly 6,000 construction workers and craftsmen will continue to work at the site, he said.

“We see ourselves as a very viable entity,” Kane said. “This is bigger than one plant.”

Kane said Sasol has invested $40 million worth of infrastructure in Southwest Louisiana, with $35 million focused on Westlake. Another $5 million was invested in nonprofits throughout the region. Starting this year, the site is expected to generate $6.2 million in local taxes and $7.5 million in state taxes annually. “It’s a very visible part of an underlying philosophy that we invest in our community,” he said. “And this is the payoff.”””

In this file photo, officials closed roads Wednesday, January 6, 2018 to allow Sasol to transport a 50-foot-tall section of an ethane cracker.

SportsPlus

Crime

Arrest made in fatal Pecan Acres Drive shooting

Crime

9/18: Calcasieu Parish Sheriff announces arrest list

life

2025 Chennault International Airshow canceled

Local News

Today last day to apply for Louisiana State Police Cadet Class 106

life

Celebrity chefs, master classes to be featured during Louisiana Food & Wine Festival

life

Demolition of hurricane-damaged houses in Sulphur slow going

life

Photos found in tower rubble returned intact to family

McNeese Sports

Know your foe: Alcorn

Local News

McNeese, Sowela enrollment numbers on the rise

Jim Beam

Jim Beam column:Tax reform is back on table

life

Salvation Army starts giving season 100 days before Christmas 

Local News

Cassidy: Second assassination attempt ‘beyond concerning’

Business

PPG reaches agreement to sell silicas products business

Local News

Lottery registration for Louisiana Fortify Homes Program grants opens Wednesday

Crime

9/17: Calcasieu Parish Sheriff announces arrest list

Local News

Trump, Harris resume campaigning after apparent assassination attempt

Crime

Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs has been indicted on sex trafficking and racketeering charges

McNeese Sports

Understudy takes center stage

Business

Cameron school employees to get boost in pay

Crime

Fired police officers accused of using racist language

McNeese Sports

McNeese looks to keep momentum

Business

Citgo vice president: Sale of petroleum refiner nearing the finish line

Local News

Sulphur Council hears arguments against borrow pit

McNeese Sports

McDowell earns SLC honors