Montreal East Refinery (Gulf Oil Canada)
View a refinery unit from the Broadway South street in Montréal-Est city | |
Country | Canada |
---|---|
Province | Quebec |
City | Montréal-Est |
Coordinates | 45°38′01″N 73°31′21″W / 45.63369°N 73.52261°W |
Refinery details | |
Operator | Coastal Petrochemical |
Owner(s) | Coastal Petrochemical |
Commissioned | 1963 |
Decommissioned |
1983 Restart 2003 |
Capacity | 70,000 bbl/d (11,000 m3/d) |
Number of employees | 75 |
Refining units | alkylation, isomerisation, distillation of crude oil, reforming catalytic, cracking catalytic, thermal catalytic |
Oil refining center | Montreal |
The Montreal East Refinery (Gulf Canada) is a small petrochemical refinery located inside the city of Montréal-Est and inside the Coastal Petrochemical fields. The operator of the refining unit is Coastal Petrochemical (Petrochimie Coastal du Canada).
The refinery was constructed by British-American Oil Company in the 1930s to process crude oil imported from Texas.[1] It was shut down by B/A’s successor company, Gulf Canada, in 1983. Ultramar Canada purchased the 74,000 b/d capacity facility.[2] refinery from Gulf Canada in 1986 and closed it soon after with the loss of 450 jobs. [3] In June 1986 Montreal-based engineering firm Lavalin Inc. announced it was purchasing the refinery and would re-open it.[4] In 1986 the refinery and its 210 000 m2 site was sold to Kemtec Petrochemicals which converted the plant to produce paraxylene. The plant came on line in 1989 and operated until 1991. That year Kemtec filed for bankruptcy. The site was determined to be heavily contaminated and, facing potentially large clean-up costs, all creditors of the company except the Government of Quebec declined to take over the property.
In 1994 the refinery was purchased by Coastal Canada Petroleum, Inc., (CCP) a subsidiary of Houston-based Coastal Corporation, for USD $1.2 million.[5] CCP acquired the processing equipment, entered into a long-term lease for the site, and agreed to make payments to an environmental trust fund for remediation of the contaminated site.
See also
References
- ↑ History of the British-American Oil Company, page 4. Retrieved 2015-04-08
- ↑ Untramar seeks Gulf's assets, The Montreal Gazette, August 14, 1985. Retrieved 2015-04-08
- ↑ Montreal refinery closure approved, The Ottawa Citizen, December 7, 2005. Retrieved 2015-04-08
- ↑ The Montreal Gazette, June 27, 1986. Retrieved 2015-04-08
- ↑ Coastal Subsidiary Acquires Kemtec Petrochemical Plant, PRNewsire, August 4, 1994. Retrieved 2015-04-08
http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-15665673.html OTTAWA -- Coastal Corp. has paid just US$1.2 million to take the bankrupt Kemtec oil refinery in Montreal off the hands of the Quebec provincial government. Coastal also pledged to invest up to $14.5 million to upgrade the polluting refinery on Montreal's east side that was shut down in 1991 after it was abandoned by Lavalin Inc., a Quebec engineering firm. The Quebec government was left with the refinery that was originally valued at $200 million and had employed 300 people. Coastal will not have to pay $33 million Lavalin owed to the Quebec government. Coastal also insisted that it will not assume any responsibility for the heavily contaminated land and ground water around the refinery because it is only buying the equipment and signing a 40- year lease for the property from the government for $1. …