- Ludwigshafen is the world’s largest chemical production factory, employing 39,000 people.
- The plant is supplied primarily with Russian gas, deliveries of which have dwindled amid tensions with Moscow.
- The company has “subbed” for gas and “optimised” production units to save fuel.
BASF, Germany’s top gas consumer, said Wednesday that its plants would continue to operate on a reduced scale even if fuel supplies were rationed.
If the government implements its rationing plan this winter, “we assume BASF will still acquire enough gas to keep our Ludwigshafen plant running at reduced capacity,” CEO Martin Brudermueller stated during a conference call.
The location in western Germany is the world’s largest chemical production factory, employing 39,000 people and considered especially vulnerable to the effects of a gas shortage.
The plant is supplied primarily with Russian gas, deliveries of which have dwindled amid tensions with Moscow over its invasion of Ukraine.
Ludwigshafen would not be able to keep operating if its supplies were cut by over 50 percent, Brudermueller said.
“Most of the gas industry is really system-critical,” he said, adding that the group was in discussions with the government about maintaining the gas supply to the sector.
BASF “subbed” for gas and “optimised” production units to save fuel, Brudermueller added.
[embedpost slug=”airbus-announces-unchanged-first-half-deliveries/”]