Charlene Pereira is the South Asia Pacific Lubricants Marketing Director at ExxonMobil. Headquartered in Texas, US, the company has been operating in Singapore for over a century and currently runs one of its largest integrated manufacturing complexes globally here. Singapore is also the regional hub for the company’s downstream and lubricants businesses.
1. Tell us more about what ExxonMobil does, and your role within the company.
I’ve been with ExxonMobil for 18 years. The company is one of Singapore’s largest foreign-backed manufacturing investors with over S$30 billion in fixed asset investments. Our manufacturing facilities include an integrated world-scale refining and petrochemical complex, as well as a lubricant plant.
Most of what we make in Singapore, including lubricants and greases, is then exported to markets and customers in the Asia-Pacific region and around the world. In my current role as South Asia-Pacific Marketing Director for our lubricants business, I translate the needs of our regional customers and consumers into differentiated solutions that solve real-world problems in the market.
Many people may think ExxonMobil just deals with transportation fuels like petrol, jet fuel for planes, and bunkering fuel for ships. Actually, we make many other useful products, such as petrochemicals and lubricants. Lubricants are a critical enabler across industries and equipment — they reduce wear and tear, protect vital components, and help machines operate efficiently and reliably. Each lubricant is uniquely formulated with properties tailored to specific applications. Take the engine in a car, for example — lubricants minimise friction between moving parts, manage heat, and prevent dirt and other particles from damaging engine components. These same fundamental functions apply across industrial machinery, albeit often under far more extreme operating temperatures and conditions.