M. W. Kellogg M.W. Kellogg Company was founded by Morris Woodruff Kellogg in New York City in 1901. At first, it specialized in oil refining and pipe design. Kellogg's entry into process engineering initially focused on the Fleming cracking process, but in the 1920s Kellogg partnered with The Texas Company (
Texaco) and
Standard Oil of Indiana to purchase the Cross
thermal cracking process. Kellogg set up one of the first petroleum laboratories in the country in 1926 to commercialize and then license the technology. This led to Kellogg building some 130 units in the United States and abroad. In the 1940s, M.W. Kellogg built the first commercial FCC (fluid catalytic cracking) unit. Even bigger than the refining work was
K-25, the
gaseous diffusion plant at
Oak Ridge, Tennessee, developed by Kellogg subsidiary the
Kellex Corporation, built as part of the
Manhattan Project. This period also included the development of the
Benedict–Webb–Rubin (BWR) equation of state which has since become an industry mainstay and provided the basis for Kellogg's lead in
cryogenics. The 1950s Kellogg technology expanded into steam
pyrolysis, Orthoflow
fluid catalytic cracking,
phenol-from-
cumene and
coal-to-synthetic fuels technologies and the 1960s saw the growth in
helium recovery,
ethylene, and the development of Kellogg's
ammonia process. Kellogg maintained New York offices at 225 Broadway in the
Transportation Building until 1956 when it moved to 711 Third Avenue in Midtown. In 1973, M.W. Kellogg received five contracts from China for the construction of large-scale ammonia plants. Kellogg's international work expanded to include major ammonia complexes in China, and Mexico as well as an
LNG liquefaction plant in
Algeria and two receiving terminals in the United States, the world's largest
LPG plant in Kuwait and several
fluid catalytic cracking units in Mexico. Kellogg underwent numerous acquisitions and name changes until 1987, when it was acquired by Dresser Industries, a provider of integrated services and project management for the oil and gas industry. Ten years later, Halliburton acquired Dresser, and combined Kellogg with the company Brown & Root to create a new, larger subsidiary – Kellogg Brown & Root (KBR).
Brown & Root Brown & Root was founded in
Texas in 1919 by Herman Brown and Daniel Root, with money provided by Root (Brown's brother in law). Root soon died and Herman Brown's younger brother,
George R. Brown, joined the company in 1922 (according to Robert A. Caro's
The Path to Power). The company began its operations by building roads in Texas. During
World War II, Brown & Root built the
Naval Air Station Corpus Christi and its subsidiary
Brown Shipbuilding produced a series of
warships for the
U.S. government. In 1947 Brown & Root built one of the world's first offshore
oil platforms.
Halliburton years Following the death of Herman Brown,
Halliburton Energy Services acquired Brown & Root in December 1962.
Donald Rumsfeld expressed concern that their contracts were not adequately audited. From 1995 to 2002, Halliburton KBR was awarded at least $2.5 billion to construct and run military bases, some in secret locations, as part of the U.S. Army's Logistics Civil Augmentation Program (
LOGCAP). In September 2005, under a competitive bid contract it won in July 2005 to provide debris removal and other emergency work associated with natural disasters, KBR started assessment of the cleanup and reconstruction of
Gulf Coast Marine and
Navy facilities damaged in the aftermath of
Hurricane Katrina. The facilities include:
Naval Station Pascagoula,
Naval Station Gulfport, the
John C. Stennis Space Center in
Mississippi, two smaller U.S. Navy facilities in
New Orleans, Louisiana, and others in the Gulf Coast region.
Formation of KBR, Inc. Halliburton announced on April 5, 2007, that it had separated from KBR, which had been its contracting, engineering, and construction unit as a part of the company for 44 years. On November 16, 2006, KBR shares were offered for the public in an
initial public offering with shares priced at $17. The shares closed up more than 22 percent to $20.75 a share on the first trading day.
Growth In May 2019, the company introduced new branding. At the end of 2023, KBR released KCap, a decarbonization technology offered in partnership with Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Ltd (HPCL), India. As of 2024, the company supports various NASA programs, educational institutions, international partner space agencies, and commercial partners. MTS is set to become a new, independent publicly-traded company by mid-to-late 2026. After the spinoff, KBR will still operate its sustainable technology business. ==Operations==