SUMMARY:
DJ Refinery Status:Benzene Leak Detected At Chevron's
Pascagoula, Mississippi, Refinery
The following table lists unplanned and planned production
outages at U.S. refineries as reported by Dow Jones Newswire's.
ORIGINAL TEXT:
DJN Material
DJ Refinery Status:Benzene Leak Detected at Chevron's
Pascagoula, Mississippi Refinery
The following table lists unplanned and planned production
outages at U.S. refineries as reported by Dow Jones Newswire's. The
information is compiled from both official and unofficial refining
sources and doesn't purport to be a comprehensive list.
Benzene was leaking from a heat exchanger on Sept. 14, at
Chevron Corp's 330,000 barrel-a-day refinery in Pascagoula,
Mississippi, according to the U.S. National Response Center. No
indication of affected units was given.
All units at Phillips 66 247,000 barrel-a-day Alliance refinery
in Belle Chasse, Louisiana, are expected to be back in service by
Sept. 22, according to a Phillips website. Refinery operations were
shut on Aug. 28, in advance of approaching hurricane, Isaac.
A heat exchanger hydrogen leak took place on Sept. 14, at
Chevron's 347,000 barrel-a-day Richmond, Calif., refinery,
according to traders and marketers doing business with the company.
In addition, the crude unit is still down after a major fire forced
it to be shut the evening of Aug. 6. Some estimates indicate it
will be another four months before the crude unit is brought back
into service.
A power interruption at Delek's 58,000 barrel-a-day refinery in
Tyler, Texas, caused excessive emission to be released at the
facility on Sept. 15 and 16, according to the Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality.
Record heat and a power outage on Sept 15, forced the shutdown
of Phillips 66 140,000 barrel-a-day combined Wilmington and Carson,
Calif., refineries. Excessive emissions, causing smoke and flaring,
took place and much of the refinery is still down, according to the
South Coast Air Quality Management District. A majority of the
refining units are expected to be back on line by the end of the
week.
A coking unit at Petrochemical's & Refining USA's 232,000
barrel-a-day refinery in Port Arthur, Texas, wasn't operating
properly on Sept. 14 and 15, according to the Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality. There was a problem with wet compressor
valves and a flaring event ensued.
Fluid Catalytic cracking units at WRB Refining LLC's 146,000
barrel-a-day refinery in Borger, Texas, will be shut from Sept. 15
to Sept. 29, for maintenance, according to the Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality.
A coker unit at HollyFrontier's 139,000 barrel-a-day refinery in
El Dorado, Kansas is undergoing maintenance until further notice,
according to traders doing business with the company. No
significant impact to production is expected.
Sunooco Inc., shut down a so-called cumene unit and restarted an
alkylation unit at it's 336,000 barrel-a-day refinery in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on Sept. 6, according to local
pollution regulators.
A flaring even took place on Sept. 14, at ExxonMobil's 345,000
barrel-a-day refinery in Beaumont, Texas, according to marketers
and traders doing business with the refinery.
A 30 minute flaring event took place at ExxonMobil's 155,000
barrel-a-day Torrance, Calif., refinery the morning of Sept. 13,
according to the South Coast Air Quality Management District. The
event was unplanned and it wasn't know which units were
affected.
A crude unit was upset at ExxonMobil's 560,000 barrel-a-day
refinery in Baytown, Texas, the morning of Sept. 13, and flaring
was evident for six hours, according to the Texas Commission on
Environmental quality. Crude runs were temporarily reduced while
the fractionation tower was returned to service. A flexicoker at
the refinery was taken out of service on sept.11, due to a heat
exchanger tube leak.
Equipment within a unit called 812 was shutdown beginning
mid-afternoon on Sept. 12, at Total PetroChemicals & Refining
USA's 232,000 barrel-a-day refinery in Port Arthur, Texas,
according to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. The
unit was restarted and the flaring incident lasted for just under
two hours.
The problem ridden 67,000 barrel-a-day Big Spring, Texas,
refinery owned and operated by Alon USA was running it's fluid
catalytic cracker at reduced rates on Sept. 13, as a result of
necessary maintenance work on a wet gas compressor, according to
the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. Flaring was evident
for five hours during the morning.
A hydrotreater at BP's 226,000 barrel-a-day refinery in Cherry
Point, Washington, was upset on Sept. 13, according to traders
doing business with the company. It wasn't known how long the
problem would last.
A coker unit at Marathon Petroleum Corp's 489,000 barrel-a-day
refinery in Garyville, Louisiana was upset the afternoon of Sept.
11, according to the U.S. National Response Center. The nature of
the equipment failure involved a leaky flange, the NRC said
A flexicoker was taken out of service on Sept. 11, at
ExxonMobil's 560,000 barrel-a-day refinery in Baytown, Texas, due
to a heat exchanger tube leak, according to the Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality. The event caused the release of excessive
emissions and the event is expected to last until Sept. 16.
A flaring event took place the afternoon of Sept 11, at the
239,000 barrel-a-day refinery owned and operated by ExxonMobil in
Joliet, Illinois, due to an undefined equipment failure, according
to traders doing business with the company
A brief flaring event took place on Sept. 10, at the 284,000
barrel-a-day refinery owned and operated by Flint hills Resources
in Corpus Christi, Texas, according to the Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality. The flaring was in conjunction with a
scheduled coker unit outage and the cause is being
investigated.
An ultracracker at BP's 407,000 barrel-a-day refinery in Texas
City, Texas, was put into restart mode on Sept 9, according to
traders doing business with the company. BP confirmed the
restart.
An unplanned flaring event took place on Sept. 10, at Phillips
66 120,000 barrel-a-day Rodeo, Calif., refinery, according to the
California Emergency Management Agency. It wasn't know which units
were affected.
A planned flaring event will take place at BP's 266,000
barrel-a-day Carson, Calif., refinery beginning Sept. 10 through
Sept. 14, according to the South Coast Air Quality Management
District. It wasn't known which refining units would be affected
and BP was unavailable for comment.
A fluid catalytic cracker at Pasadena Refining Systems, Inc.
100,000 barrel-a-day refinery in Pasadena, Texas, was upset the
evening of Sept. 6, and a flaring even occurred, according to the
Texas Commission On Environmental Quality. The unit has been
brought back to normal operations, according to the Commission.
A fluid catalytic cracker and alkylation unit at Sunoco's
335,000 barrel-a-day refinery in Philadelphia, PA, experienced
mechanical problems on Sept. 4, and both units were taken out of
service, according to traders doing business with the company. No
timetable was given for restarting the units.
Delta Airlines (DAL) said Sept. 6 that the 185,000 barrel-a-day
Trainer refinery in Pennsylvania will be operational by the end of
September.
BP PLC (BP) restarted the ultracker at its 400,780 barrel-a-day
refinery in Texas City, according to a government filing Sept. 6.
The company did not say when the unit went out. A company spokesman
did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Phillips 66 (PSX) said Sept. 6 that power was restored to the
Alliance Refinery in Belle Chasse, La. and workers are in the
process of restarting the 247,000 barrel-a-day is in facility
following Hurricane Isaac. The company said it expects the refinery
"will be operating by mid-month."
Valero Energy Corp. (VLO) Chief Executive Bill Klesse said work
on a diesel-making unit at the company's St. Charles refinery in
Norco, La., is now likely to be completed in early 2013, rather
than later this year as the company had previously estimated, in
part due to Hurricane Isaac. The unit is still on track to be
operational in the second quarter of 2013.
Both of the refineries Valero Energy Corp (VLO) had shut down
ahead of Isaac are in the process of restarting, company spokesman
Bill Day said. Sept. 5. He said "most production units" are back in
operation at the 205,000 barrel-a-day refinery in Norco and the
125,000 barrel-a-day refinery in Meraux, though some are still
being brought back. The crude unit at the Meraux facility was shut
for repairs prior to the storm, and has not been restarted, he
said.
Royal Dutch Shell PLC (RDSA) and Motiva Enterprises said Sept. 5
that their 235,000 barrel-a-day refinery in Convent, La. and their
233,500 barrel-a-day refinery in Norco., La. are restarting after
Isaac and operating at reduced or near-normal rates.
Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM) said Tuesday that its refinery in
Chalmette, La., is in the process of restarting after being
temporarily shut in advance of Hurricane Isaac. The 192,500
barrel-a-day refinery is a joint venture between Exxon and
Petroleos de Venezuela. Exxon also said it is working to bring
production back to normal levels at its 502,500 barrel-a-day
refinery in Baton Rouge. The company began running the refinery at
reduced rates as part of its preparation for the storm.
Marathon Petroleum said its 464,000 barrel-a-day Garyville
Refinery has returned to normal operations following Hurricane
Isaac.
Tesoro Corp's (TSO) Wilmington, Calif. refinery experienced a
brief power outage but is returning to normal operations, a
spokesman said Sept. 1. The 103,800 barrel-a-day refinery flared
sulfur dioxide due to the outage.
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