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Saudi Arabia's oil policy also emphasizes expanding
its downstream operations abroad. As a first step, Saudi Aramco
and Texaco Inc. established a joint-venture company, Star Enterprise,
to refine and market petroleum products in the United States.
The company, which began operation on January 1, 1989, owned
approximately 10,000 gasoline stations and a number of distribution
centers in 26 states in the eastern U.S. It also owned and operated
three refineries with a combined capacity of over 600,000 barrels
per day. Star Enterprise was dissolved in 1997, and its assets
amalgamated into a new three-way joint venture with Texaco Incorporated
and Shell Oil Company to form one of the largest refining and
marketing networks in the United States.
Saudi Aramco entered into another joint venture operation with
Ssang Yong Company of South Korea for the refining and marketing
of petroleum products in South Korea and Southeast Asia. Under
the agreement, Saudi Aramco became joint owner of two refineries
with a capacity of 260,000 barrels per day and part owner of
other refining, marketing and distribution facilities. The second
phase, inaugurated in April, 1997, upgraded the capacity to more
than 500,000.
In January 1994, Saudi Aramco purchased 40 percent of Petron,
the largest refiner and distributor of petroleum products in
the Philippines. In April 1996, Aramco took a fifty percent interest
in the Vardinoyannis Group of Greece, which refines and distributes
Avin Oil in Europe. Later in 1996, Aramco negotiated a stake
in an oil refinery in the Punjab, in a joint venture with the
Hindustan Petroleum Company of India, and in June 1997 announced
a joint venture with Sinopec of China.
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