Total project director takes on his new role in Beijing
The
 deer and the antelope play at the Griffith Ranch, a 300-acre spread 
near Winnie and the home of exotic game and Carl Griffith, the former 
sheriff and county judge. It was in the latter role that he helped 
facilitate the Deep Conversion Project at the Total Port Arthur 
Refinery, a multi-billion dollar expansion that has positioned the 
facility to play a major role in 21st century fuel production.
Now some five years later, a small gathering in the hangar at the ranch 
is bidding a fond farewell to one of the major players in the project. 
Griffith, now a private citizen, has gathered friends and public 
officials for a crawfish boil in honor of Rajan Krishnan,
 who came to Southeast Texas as Deep Conversion Project director. In two
 days he would depart for Beijing, where he will play an integral role 
in Total’s new coal gasification efforts in China.
On this night, Rajan and his wife Sunitha are enjoying the company of friends even as they contemplate the next adventure in their lives.
Deloris
 “Bobbie” Prince, mayor of Port Arthur, was in attendance. She has been a
 prominent supporter of the Deep Conversion Project since it was in the 
conception stage, but her presence here is also personal.
“I wanted to wish Mr. Krishnan
 well in his new job, and to thank him and Total for all their efforts 
here in Port Arthur,” said Prince. In her job as mayor, she moves easily
 between the personal and the political with her acknowledgement of what
 Total represents in the community as both a job-creating business and 
conscientious corporate citizen.
Similar recognition can be construed from the presence of Jefferson County Commissioners Everett “Bo” Alfred, Michael “Shane” Sinegal and Brent Weaver along with district court judges Bob Wortham and Mickey Shuffield.
 The social lubricant of the crawfish boil with the attendant corn, 
potatoes and beer has been a familiar ingredient in forging bonds of 
friendship.
“A week after I came to Port Arthur, they took me to my first crawfish boil,” recalled Krishnan with a chuckle. “I have really learned to enjoy Cajun food, more so than the rest of my family.”
Krishnan had 
previously held management positions at Total’s heavy oil joint venture 
in Venezuela before coming to Total Port Arthur Refinery as technical 
manager in 2002. He became assistant general manager in 2003 before 
being named director of the Deep Conversion Project in 2006.
With more than a decade of his 24 years with Total spent in Port Arthur, Krishnan
 has forged deep ties in Southeast Texas. His two sons were largely 
raised here – one attends Johns Hopkins in Maryland; the other works for
 Total.
“This is our home now,”  he said. “When I retire, we will return here.”
A native of India, Krishnan followed a circuitous route to Texas. He graduated from the University of Calicut in India as a chemical engineer in 1975.
“A lot of engineering students from India have found much success in the
 United States but I didn’t really want to leave home – so I said ‘Let 
me go to France,’” he said. France was much closer to home so he 
continued his studies there, earning a Masters degree in chemical 
engineering from the French Petroleum Institute.
Perhaps it was inevitable that Krishnan
 would then go to work for the Paris-based Total, one of the world’s 
largest integrated international oil and gas companies that   operates 
in more than 130 countries.
Krishnan’s 
job has taken him to all corners of the globe. In addition to his 
current posting to China and his earlier sojourn to Venezuela, his first
 assignment in the United States was in New Jersey. He became an 
American citizen in 2002.
His passion for his work is evident. At the conclusion of an interview with the Business Journal, Krishnan said, “You can build or you can transform but you must put your heart in it.”
Rajan Krishnan may be in China now, but he left a significant chunk of his heart in Texas – and said he will be back to get it.
Business Journal editor James Shannon offers a weekly column of business
 news for readers of The Examiner. For more details, see the editions of
 the Business journal published monthly in Beaumont, Port Arthur and 
Greater Orange. Check out the blog at setxbiz.blogspot.com or e-mail 
james@beaumontbusinessjournal.com.

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