Producer
Phillips 66
US refining, midstream, chemicals, and marketing company (NYSE: PSX, HQ Houston TX); spun off from ConocoPhillips in 2012. Gulf Coast facilities: Sweeny TX (247,000 bpd) and Lake Charles LA (255,000 bpd). Phillips 66 Partners LP (midstream MLP) owns pipelines and terminals feeding crude to its refineries, including the Gray Oak Pipeline (Permian Basin crude to Texas Gulf Coast) and Liberty Pipeline (Rockies crude). The Sweeny refinery includes an 835,000 bpd fractionation hub that also processes NGL from shale formations — same facility handles both crude refining and NGL processing.
5
Inputs supplied
4
Goods downstream
4
Facilities
0
Stories
What they make
5 inputs Phillips 66 supplies
Click an input to see every good that depends on it, every country that produces it, and every other company in the supply chain.
mineral
Calcined Petroleum Coke (CPC) — Aluminum Anodes →
chemical
Ethylene monomer (polymer grade) →
energy
Petroleum Coke (Fuel Grade) →
chemical
Linear low-density polyethylene (LLDPE) resin →
energy
Gulf Coast crude oil feedstock (jet fraction) →
Where it shows up
Goods downstream
Essential goods that depend on something Phillips 66 makes — pick one to see the full supply chain.
Where they make it
4 facilities
Kinder Morgan Houston Bulk Terminal →
USGreens Bayou, Houston, Texas · bulk terminal
600,000 ton storage capacity; 5.25M t/yr throughput; 20,000 t/day loading rate; key petcoke export gateway on Houston Ship Channel. Texas Gulf Coast exported 2.63M t petcoke in February 2024 alone.
Phillips 66 Humber Refinery →
GBLincolnshire, UK · petroleum refining
Produces 700,000 t/yr of petroleum coke; leading needle coke producer globally; key for Li-ion battery anodes and graphite electrodes.
Phillips 66 Lake Charles Manufacturing Complex →
USLake Charles, Louisiana · petroleum refining
255,000 bpd crude capacity; specialty coker and calciner on site; produces needle coke AND fuel-grade petcoke; key to Phillips 66 all-grades strategy.
Phillips 66 Wood River Refinery →
USRoxana, Illinois · petroleum refining
356,000 bpd (50/50 JV with Cenovus); delayed coking units producing fuel-grade petcoke; upper Midwest location ships petcoke via Mississippi River barge.
What else they do
Business segments
The company's full revenue map — where this supply-chain role fits within their broader business.
Refining
55%Chemicals (CPChem — 50% joint venture with Chevron)
15%Midstream
20%Marketing & Specialties
10%
Intelligence
What's known
Sourced claims about this company's role in supply chains — chokepoints, concentration, incidents, dual-use connections.
Did you know2023
Phillips 66, widely known as a US gasoline refiner and gas station brand, co-owns one of the world's largest petrochemical companies through its 50% stake in Chevron Phillips Chemical Company (CPChem). CPChem is a top-3 US ethylene producer and one of the world's largest polyethylene manufacturers — Marlex HDPE and Marflex LLDPE are in billions of plastic grocery bags, food containers, detergent bottles, and water pipes globally. Most consumers who fill up at a Phillips 66 gas station don't know the company also co-produces a significant share of the polyethylene packaging their groceries come in. A fuel company is simultaneously a major supplier to the consumer packaging, food, and healthcare supply chains through its plastics joint venture.
Chevron Phillips Chemical (CPChem) ↗Origin2023
Phillips 66 was spun off from ConocoPhillips in 2012 as a standalone refining, midstream, chemicals, and marketing company — splitting the upstream oil production (ConocoPhillips) from the downstream refining and chemicals. The separation was designed to unlock valuation for the midstream and chemicals businesses, which trade at different multiples than upstream E&P. Phillips 66 retained a 50% stake in Chevron Phillips Chemical (CPChem), one of the world's largest petrochemical companies, which had been a joint venture since 2000. Today Phillips 66's gas stations sell fuel made at its own refineries from crude that arrives via its own pipelines — with chemicals and plastics contributing material earnings alongside refining.
Phillips 66 ↗