Today, Jurong Island is home to many companies such as
Arkema, Arlanxeo,
Afton Chemical,
Air Liquide,
Asahi Kasei,
BASF,
Celanese,
Evonik,
ExxonMobil,
Infineum,
DuPont, Mitsui Chemicals,
Chevron Oronite,
Linde, Mitsubishi Chemicals, SLNG,
Royal Dutch Shell,
Singapore Petroleum Company Singapore Refining Company,
Stepan Company, Petrochemical Corporation of Singapore, The Polyolefin Company,
Chevron Phillips, Mitsui Elastomer,
Baker Hughes and
Sumitomo Chemical. Clusters of gigantic cylindrical tanks amid a maze of pipelines now dot the island; investment totalled
S$31billion in 2010. Resident companies produce a vast range of items, from petroleum products to
polycarbonate resins used in
CDs,
DVDs and
LCD TV panels, and super-absorbent
polymers that go into
diapers and
sanitary napkins. ExxonMobil, which has invested S$4billion in a
refinery and
cracker plant, makes industrial and
automotive lubricants including a product used in
Formula One racing cars. DuPont has invested S$1billion, and manufactures
Zytel nylon resin, a versatile engineering plastic used in
automobile components, appliances,
wire insulation, sporting gear and home
furnishings. Afton Chemical is constructing a new manufacturing facility, expected to become operational in January 2016, to produce petroleum additives for the Asia-Pacific and Middle East markets. Output for the chemicals clusterwhich cover oil and gas, petrochemicals and
speciality chemicalstotalled S$66.5billion in 2005, an increase of 31 per cent from 2004. This accounted for almost 32 per cent of production in Singapore's
manufacturing sector. Powered by the cluster, Singapore is currently one of the world's top three
oil refining centres despite not having a single drop of
crude deposits. Jurong Island's refineries process of crude oil per day, turning it into
petrol,
kerosene and
jet fuel sold locally and abroad. Cracker plants break down the molecules of other oil-and gas-related substances such as
naphtha into additives that give unique characteristics to certain products, from
printer inks to plastic
mouldings,
semiconductors and
aircraft materials.. Apart from imported crude,
natural gas from
Indonesia's
West Natuna field arrives at Jurong Island via a undersea pipeline. Some of it is refined to provide a source of fuel, while the rest is sent to crackers that make other petrochemical products. The country's first refilling station for
compressed natural gas (CNG) opened on Jurong Island in 2002. As most of the more than 2500 cars running on CNG in Singapore are not allowed to enter the island because the drivers do not have the necessary security pass, four more CNG stations opened on the main island leading up to September 2009. . The Jurong Pier Flyover and the island of
Pulau Damar Laut, with Jurong Island Highway that leads to Jurong Island, can be seen on the left. ==Security==