Pictures from Google Image Search

Shanghai Petrochemical Co., Ltd.

International Directory of Company Histories | 1997 | Copyright 1997 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Shanghai Petrochemical Co., Ltd.

Jinshanwei
Shanghai 200540
China
(86) 21 794-1941
Fax: (86) 21 794-2267

Public Company (majority-owned by China National Petroleum Corp.)
Founded:
1972
Employees: 60,000
Sales: RMB12.3 billion (US$1.5 billion) (1995)
Stock Exchanges: Hong Kong New York Shanghai
SICs: 2824 Organic Fibers, Noncellulosic; 2911 Petroleum Refining; 1321 Natural Gas Liquids

With more than 55 plants, Shanghai Petrochemical Co., Ltd. (SPC) is Chinas largest and most diverse petrochemical enterprise, ranking among the countrys biggest corporations. By the early 1990s, the firm was Chinas only petrochemical entity to combine petroleum, chemicals, chemical fibers, and plastics operations at one site. Its complex included: one ethylene plant, two chemical intermediates units, two polyester units, an aromatics plant, a poly vinyl alcohol plant, a polyacrylic fiber plant, and a plastics factory. SPCs hundreds of petrochemical products have applications in many industries, including: agriculture, pharmaceutical, automotive, aviation, appliance, and textile. In 1996, the company set new production records, refining 4.85 million metric tons (mt) of crude oil (on a capacity of 5.3 million mt) into premium gasoline, diesel fuel, asphalt, and other petroleum products. The by-products of these processes were used to produce 465,000 mt of ethylene; 701,000 mt of synthetic fibers; and 344,000 mt of synthetic plastics. Asian Monetary Magazine named SPC Chinas Best Managed Company that same year.

SPCs size is not the only factor that sets it apart from the majority of Chinese companies. The firms development can serve as a study in the post-World War II modernization of industry and trade in the Peoples Republic of China. SPCs creation corresponded with the reopening of the country to foreign diplomacy. As China warmed to international relationsboth diplomatic and economicSPC evolved from a dependence on rather backwards domestic technology to a preference for purchasing advanced plant and process from foreign firms. With the governments approval, the company eventually sought development loans from foreign banks. In 1993, this trend reached an important stage when SPC became one of a limited number of Chinese firms to have equity traded on international stock exchanges.

Background and Foundation in 1972

Like all major Chinese enterprises, Shanghai Petrochemical Companys history is intimately linked to Chinas communist government. In fact, the impetus behind the 1972 creation of this petrochemical company can be traced to the ascendance of political leaders Zhou Enlai and Deng Xiaoping in the waning years of Mao Zedongs life.

In the early 1970s, the Peoples Republic of China was beginning to emerge from a chaotic period known as the Cultural Revolution (196676), when Chairman Mao encouraged anti-intellectualism and isolationism while largely neglecting economic development. The social and political upheaval that resulted from this movement hampered the countrys budding industrial efforts, reducing overall industrial production by 12 percent from 1966 to 1968.

With the approval of Mao, who experienced a debilitating stroke in 1972, Zhou began a series of reforms, including the gradual reopening of international relations. After a 20-year hiatus of official Sino-American relations, he hosted a clandestine meeting with U.S. national security advisor Henry Kissinger in 1971, and supported President Richard Nixons historic visit the following year. This relaxation of tensions between the two nations was an important step toward opening the door to importations of the petrochemical processing equipment that was vital to the successful development of the Shanghai Petrochemical Complex.

SPC was organized in 1972 as a wholly-owned subsidiary of China National Petroleum Corp. (SINOPEC), the government-controlled arbiter of the nations petroleum industry. The plant was built on Hangzhou Bay in Jinshanwei, about two hours outside Shanghai. One of about a dozen special economic zones created in the late 1970s and early 1980s to draw international investment and trade, Shanghai would grow to become Chinas premier industrial and manufacturing center. The first phase of SPCs development lasted four years and cost the Chinese government an estimated US$800 million. Although the plant used some imported technology, most of its equipment and processes were developed domestically.

In 1978, after a period of political turmoil surrounding Maos and Zhous deaths in 1976, Deng Xiaoping and the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) formulated a rigorous ten-year plan for economic growth. This program placed utmost emphasis on Four Modernizations: industry, defense, agriculture, and science and technology. And in a dramatic reversal of previous policy, the country began to solicit capital from overseas sources to help finance these modernizations.

Basic chemicals, including petrochemicals, were among the highest priority industries, because they constituted the basic building blocks of many modern consumer goods. Petrochemicals are used in such widely varied products as drugs, fabrics, fertilizers, paints, and plastics of all types. As a result, SPC enjoyed a great deal of support from the government. For example, SINOPECwhich soon grew to rank among the worlds top five petroleum producerssold crude oil to SPC at a 40 percent discount to world market prices.

But with such rewards came heavy responsibilities. In order for the Chinese government to maintain full employment, many of the nations largest firms were obliged to take on upwards of 50 percent more workers than necessary. Furthermore, they had no authority to use incentive or punishment to motivate workers. SPC also had heavy social obligations, including construction and maintenance of its own utilities (power and water plants) and transportation network (a wharf, railroad hub, and highways), not to mention primary and secondary schools and universities, hospitals, movie houses, and shopping centers. By the early 1990s, the complex employed over 60,000 and supported at least 40,000 more. For most of its history, SPC concentrated more on increasing its production levels and meeting its social obligations than making a profit. In fact, the company was compelled to forward any annual financial surplus to the government, which rationed out the funds according to national economic plans.

Economic Reforms Continue Apace in the 1980s

While China often fell short of its stated goals, it did make progress toward economic liberalization in the 1980s. Increasing openness to external influence was evidenced at SPC in the purchase of technology from companies outside the Peoples Republic of China. In fact, the petrochemical company contracted most of the construction and purchased much of its equipment from foreign firms for its subsequent expansion programs. By the early 1990s, over 80 percent of its production facilities were based on imported technology. The Chinese government lent SPC the US$850 million needed to finance this program, which lasted from 1980 to 1985. The debts were paid by 1988.

In 1987, SPC embarked on a third stage of capacity expansion. This three-year program borrowed US$920 million from domestic sources and tapped international lenders for another $350 million. The subsequent addition of an imported 450,000 mt/year ethylene unit ranked SPC number one among Chinas ethylene plants and pushed the nation into the worlds top ten ethylene producers. Ethylene is one of the organic chemical industrys most important feedstocks. It can be polymerized to create polyethylene plastic for packaging; combined with sulfuric acid and hydrolyzed to make gasoline additives; or combined with oxygen to create an ingredient for antifreeze and soaps.

SPC had for most of its first two decades in business concentrated on meeting seemingly insatiable domestic petrochemical demand. The company took its first tentative step toward the export markets with the 1984 creation of Shanghai Jinshan Associated Trading Corp. (SJATC), an overseas trading office. Corporate export volume constituted less than 4 percent of annual sales by 1991, but the company had forged vital ties to customers in 20 different countries. These international contacts would become increasingly important as SPC sought joint venture partners in the early 1990s.

Internationalism Dominates 1990s

China accelerated its economic liberalization program in September 1992. With an eye on increasing efficiency and becoming more involved in the global economy, it gave company managers more authority to allocate resources, both human and material, and slowly began to ease wage, distribution, and price controls to correspond slightly more closely to market levels. Along with this freedom came increased accountability for fiscal performance.

As Chinas domestic petrochemical industry grew close to meeting internal demand, petrochemical ministers began to turn their attention to international export and downstream diversification in the early 1990s. Joint ventures were key to SPCs overseas strategy. Joint venture and patent laws adopted in the late 1970s helped reassure foreign entrepreneurs that their assets and ideas would not be stolen. Furthermore, China made efforts to reduce bureaucratic red tape and relax tax codes to entice outside investors. Realizing the largely untapped potential of the Chinese consumer market, the usually wary leaders of the global chemical industry snapped up joint venture opportunities. From 1993 to 1996, SPC signed cooperative agreements with at least nine foreign firms, including BP Chemicals, Phillips Petroleum Co., Mitsubishi Corp., and Union Carbide.

Economic liberalization also meant that the Chinese government was willing to sell minority stakes in some of its most capital-intensive businesses to reduce outright borrowing. But in order to make the shares attractive to bottom-line-minded investors, the companies had to spin-off their social welfare components as separate entities. Before SPC could make its mid-1993 flotation, it separated into Shanghai Petrochemical Company, Ltd., which got all the production units, and Jinshan Industrial, which oversaw other interests like schools and hospitals. SPC also had to adopt international accounting principles including stating its after-tax profit as opposed to the traditional standard of tax plus profit.

Having cleared these and other hurdles, SPC became one of Chinas first and largest companies to make an initial public stock offering in July 1993, when the government sold 29.6 percent of its equity via H shares traded on the Hong Kong stock exchange and American Depository Receipts (ADRs) offered on the New York stock market. The H shares debuted at about HK$1.40, while each ADR represented 100 class H shares, and was initially priced at US$20.39 apiece. Seeking ground-floor equities in the so-called market of one billion, investors quickly oversubscribed the offering. SPC planned to use the proceeds to pay down about US$123 million in foreign debts and fund new capital projects.

Considerations for the 1990s and Beyond

SPCs stock performed well in the mid-1990s, as its net income multiplied from RMB443.1 million in 1992 to over RMB2 billion by 1995. Far Eastern Economic Reviews Henny Sender warned that [the stock] was blessed less by its own strength than by the fact that demand for China shares far exceeded supply in those heady days.

Sender was by no means the only analyst to sound the alarm with regard to SPC and its securities. For notwithstanding the company and countrys admirable strides toward economic liberalism, several areas of concern remained. For example, although SPC was relieved of the majority of its social welfare responsibilities prior to its initial stock offering, it was still required to allocate a portion of its profits to its public-welfare fund, according to a July 1993 brief in the Far Eastern Economic Review. Furthermore, SPCs reliance on SINOPEC for subsidized crude oil, which constituted over half of its production expenses, undermined its entire balance sheet. For while SPC proved profitable in the early 1990s, some of that prosperity was clearly due to the steep discount on crude it received from SINOPEC. Just as the government relaxed controls on the price of SPCs products (a benefit), it could easily rescind its discounts on crude (a detriment). As the Far Eastern Economic Reviews Ivan Png and Changqui Wu pointed out in October 1995, a company like Shanghai Petrochemical may be making millions of dollars without really succeeding in market terms. Issues such as these must have weighed heavily on the minds of any SPC investor.

In 1995, Wu Yixin succeeded Wang Jiming, who moved on to the presidency of SINOPEC, as SPC President. Soon after taking office, Wu Yixin revealed that the company would require US$9.3 billion to pay for the next three years expansion programs. In light of the scarcity of government funds for these projects, SPC issued 500 million new H shares on the Hong Kong stock exchange to generate over RMB4 billion (about US$500 million) in mid-1996. The floatation reduced SINOPECs share of SPC to 64 percent. The capital investment program included capacity increases of both ethylene and synthetic fibers to 1 million t/y by 2005. By the year 2000, SPC forecast sales of RMB20 billion and income before taxes of RMB5 million.

Further Reading

Chemical Industry Launches Growth Scheme, China Chemical Reporter, January 10, 1994, p. 1.

China Petrochemical Expansion Progressing, The Oil and Gas Journal, August 5, 1991, pp. 2830.

Chinas Polyvinyl Alcohol Output Holding the Worlds First Place, China Chemical Reporter, October 6, 1996, p. 4.

Development of Chinas Ethylene Industry, China Chemical Reporter, May 16, 1996, p. 10.

Development of Chinas Ethylene Industry, China Chemical Reporter, August 16, 1996, p. 15.

Expansion Projects to Cost $9.3 B, HK Standard, May 11, 1996, p. 3.

Hendry, Sandy, Shanghai Petrochemical to Raise Equity Capital, Chemical Week, March 3, 1993, p. 24.

McElligott, Suzanne, Chinas H Share Chemical Quartet, Chemical Week, August 30/September 6, 1995, pp. S31, S33.

Peaff, George, Shanghai Petrochemical Is Free Market Proving Ground, Chemical Marketing Reporter, September 6, 1993, p. 3.

Png, Ivan, and Changqi Wu, A Tale of Two Companies, Far Eastern Economic Review, October 12, 1995, p. 39.

Sender, Henny, Ready for Action, Far Eastern Economic Review, 15 July 1993, p. 82.

, Industrial Revolution: Shanghai Petrochemical Is Reforming, But Slowly, Far Eastern Economic Review, April 28, 1994, p. 74.

Shanghai Ethylene Project Completes, China Chemical Reporter, Number 9, 1992, p. 3.

Shanghai Petrochemical Adds New Investments, Chemical Marketing Reporter, January 17, 1994, p. 8.

Shanghai Petrochemical Is in the Black, chemical Marketing Reporter, May 2, 1994, p. 8.

Shanghai Petrochemical Faces Challenges of Reform, Wall Street Journal, January 19, 1994, p. B4.

SPC Sets Its Strategies for Future Growth, ECN-European Chemical News, May 16, 1994, p. 5.

Twaronite, Lisa, Shanghai Petrochemical Co. Awaits China Oil Price Reform, Journal of Commerce and Commercial, December 3, 1993, p. 11A.

Wood, Andrew, Shanghai: Surprise Number of Ventures, Chemical Week, March 23, 1994, pp. 4042.

Wood, Andrew and Lyn Tattum, Ringing in the Changes at Chinese Firms, Chemical Week, August 31, 1994, p. S38.

Wood, Andrew, and Ian Young, Foreign Companies Rush to Invest, Chemical Week, August 31, 1994, p. S4.

April Dougal Gasbarre

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

"Shanghai Petrochemical Co., Ltd." International Directory of Company Histories. Thomson Gale. 1997. Encyclopedia.com. 27 Nov. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"Shanghai Petrochemical Co., Ltd." International Directory of Company Histories. Thomson Gale. 1997. Encyclopedia.com. (November 27, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-2842200142.html

"Shanghai Petrochemical Co., Ltd." International Directory of Company Histories. Thomson Gale. 1997. Retrieved November 27, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-2842200142.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

BANKERS: RE-EVALUATE AUTOMATED TELLER MACHINE USAGE FEES / ATM CUSTOMERS SHOULD TEMPER USE BY THE EXPENSES INVOLVED
Newspaper article from: The Journal Record; 9/22/1987; ; 700+ words ; ...store, using an automated teller machine (ATM). We...they installed automated tellers, and they urged...for using their machines. And slowly...To many people, automated teller machine use became an integral...
CRIME AT AUTOMATED TELLERS / BE SAFETY CONSCIOUS WHEN USING A TELLER MACHINE
Newspaper article from: The Journal Record; 3/24/1988; ; 700+ words ; ...gains. Bank automated teller machines...smart'' machines, and they...Like bank tellers. Who, the...computer-machine could do that...using an automated teller machine. We'd get...installed the automated tellers, and they...using their ...
Automated tellers let your fingers do the banking: ATMs account for half of all banking transactions. (automatic teller machines) (Special Report: Financial Institutions)
Magazine article from: San Diego Business Journal; 3/18/1991; ; 700+ words ; Automated tellers let your fingers do...life was like before automated teller machines gave consumers 24...are performed on ATM machines, said spokeswoman...the start, the ATM machine's purpose was twofold...
Demand for fast cash turns automated teller machines into an expensive convenience, Business Journal reports.
PR Newswire; 12/14/1987; 700+ words ; ...problem: automated teller machines. Banks are...reports that automated tellers, those plentiful machines that readily dispense...show that there is one automated teller for every 3,259 California...compared with one machine for every 5,000 ...
ATM fees still rising, study by ABA confirms. (automated teller machines, American Bankers Association)
Magazine article from: American Banker; 12/30/1992; ; 700+ words ; ...more than ever before to use automated teller machines, figures from the American...originates at another bank's machine. Two years ago, banks were...the services delivered by automated banking machines. Cost-Cutting Device However...
NationsBank wins major deal to place ATMs in Tex. (automated teller machine contract for Stop-N-Go convenience stores)
Magazine article from: American Banker; 9/5/1995; ; 700+ words ; ...ever for automated teller machines - a 661-machine network for Stop...EDS's 4,000-machine contract with the...Texas to 1,013 machines and the $184 billion...sale terminals than automated tellers. ATMs at retailing...
Chemical joins effort to broaden ATMs' reach. (Chemical Banking Corp. joins consortium to offer services from specialized automated teller machines)
Magazine article from: American Banker; 7/13/1994; ; 700+ words ; ...through self-service machines. The consortium...devices similar to automated tellers to deliver airline...lined up for Docunet machines. Cynthia A. Read...when banks and their automated teller machine suppliers are discussing...
PNC Financial installs image-capturing ATMs. (automated teller machines) (Brief Article)
Magazine article from: American Banker; 7/13/1992; ; 700+ words ; ...first to install advanced automated teller machines that capture and display an...of International Business Machines Corp. and Diebold Inc...PNC officials said, its automated tellers will be able to transmit images...
Chemical Bank of New York to participate in the MAC system of automated teller machines.
PR Newswire; 10/2/1986; 700+ words ; ...multi-state MAC system of automated teller machines (ATMs), the bank and the...access to more than 1,800 MAC automated tellers in three states, including...transactions on the 1,800 MAC automated tellers. Chemical Bank is...
This ATM generation is software-saturated. (automated teller machines)
Magazine article from: Software Magazine; 6/1/1989; ; 700+ words ; ...have the option of using an Automated Teller Machine (ATM), which are widespread...expand the role of ATMs into Automated Information Machines. "The ATM software explosion...corporations discovered that Tandem machines did not have sufficient...

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Automated Teller Machines
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History AUTOMATED TELLER MACHINES AUTOMATED TELLER MACHINES (ATMs) are data terminals for convenient money transactions...is credited as the inventor of the ATM. He created the machine while working for the Docutel Company in Dallas, Texas...
automated teller machine
Book article from: A Dictionary of Business and Management automated teller machine ( ATM ) A computerized machine usually attached to the outside wall of a High-Street...accounts , especially outside normal banking hours. The machines may also be used to pay in cash or cheques, effect transfers...
teller
Book article from: The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English ...employed to deal with customers' transactions in a bank. ∎  an automated teller machine. 2. a person who tells something: a foul-mouthed teller of lies. 3. a person appointed to count votes, esp. in a legislature. DERIVATIVES...
ATM Machines
Book article from: Computer Sciences ATM Machines It is your money and...accounts? The advent of the automated teller machine (ATM) changed the way...interaction of customer and machine, pass messages to and...While the number of machines is increasing, the overall...
SIC 6099 Functions Related to Depository Banking, Not Elsewhere Classified
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of American Industries ...point-of-sale transfers, automated teller transactions, direct-deposit...originating institution uses an automated clearinghouse to collect payments...point-of-sale systems and automated teller machines, or ATMs. Escrow Institutions...

Find thousands of answers for hundreds of subjects at Smart QandA .

All answers verified by trusted sources at Encyclopedia.com

Try Smart QandA now!

For students and teachers!

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including: