Research Article
Evaluation of Production Capability Using The Min-Max Stock Method: A Case Study at An Indonesian Oil Refinery Unit
@INPROCEEDINGS{10.4108/eai.24-11-2023.2346382, author={Resista Vikaliana and Daris Setya Saputra}, title={Evaluation of Production Capability Using The Min-Max Stock Method: A Case Study at An Indonesian Oil Refinery Unit}, proceedings={Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Nature-Based Solution in Climate Change, RESILIENCE 2023, 24 November 2023, Jakarta, Indonesia}, publisher={EAI}, proceedings_a={RESILIENCE}, year={2024}, month={7}, keywords={production capability maximum stock min-max stock minimum stock ullage}, doi={10.4108/eai.24-11-2023.2346382} }
- Resista Vikaliana
Daris Setya Saputra
Year: 2024
Evaluation of Production Capability Using The Min-Max Stock Method: A Case Study at An Indonesian Oil Refinery Unit
RESILIENCE
EAI
DOI: 10.4108/eai.24-11-2023.2346382
Abstract
The availability of tanks in production activities greatly influences production capabilities in a processing oil company. Tanks must not be filled with products so that production activities are not disrupted. So, evaluation is needed in production activities to maintain smooth production and determine the tank's production capabilities. This research uses the min-max stock method to determine the effect of tank capacity on monthly production capability, minimum stock, maximum stock, and ullage value of Perta series products. Results for Pertalite products, namely monthly production capacity of 2,291.40 MB, minimum stock of 309.48 MB, maximum stock of 500.43 MB, and a tank ullage value of 3.53 days. Meanwhile, for Pertamax products, the monthly production capacity is 401.40 MB, minimum stock of 96.70 MB, maximum stock of 123.46 MB, and tank ullage value of 4.97 days.