Impacts to the Ethylene Supply Chain From a Hurricane Disruption

Thursday, March 25, 2010: 10:25 AM
Lone Star Salon D/E (Grand Hyatt San Antonio)
Sue Downes, Infrastructure & Economic Systems Analysis, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM, Margaret Welk, Materials, Devices & Energy Technology, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM, Amy Sun, Chemical & Biological Systems, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM and Russell Heinen, SRI Consulting, The Woodlands, TX
Extended Abstracts
  • Ethylene_20100128_acsun.pdf (442.7 kB)

  • Analysis of chemical supply chains is an inherently complex task, given the dependence of these supply chains on multiple infrastructure systems (e.g., the petroleum sector, transportation, etc.). This effort requires data and information at various levels of resolution, ranging from network-level distribution systems to individual chemical reactions. Sandia National Laboratories (Sandia) has integrated its existing simulation and infrastructure analysis capabilities with chemical data models to analyze the chemical supply chains of several nationally critical chemical commodities. This paper describes how Sandia models the ethylene supply chain; that is, the supply chain for the most widely used raw material for plastics production including a description of the types of data and modeling capabilities that are required to represent the ethylene supply chain. The paper concludes with a description of Sandia's use the model to project how the supply chain would be affected by and adapt to a disruptive scenario hurricane.

    Extended Abstract: File Uploaded
    See more of this Session: Ethylene Plant Operations Paper Session
    See more of this Group/Topical: Topical 4: The 22nd Ethylene Producers’ Conference