Friday, August 17, 2012


Mass Exodus of US Oil Refineries - "The Price of Gas will skyrocket" in Obama's second term if reelected




From Will at The Other News:
This comes from a retired oil executive who spent some 40 years in the industry.The Closures in The U.S. Oil Refinery Industry In The Past 2 Years In 2010, there were 149 operable U.S. refineries with a combined capacity of 17.6 million barrels (2,800,000) per day. 
Something odd started happening in late 2010-early 2011. The US oil refinery industry quietly announced the closure of numerous US oil refineries. Many are completely unaware the US ships oil overseas to be processed. We do so as we do not have enough refineries to process the vast amounts here, and we are barred from building anymore refineries.  
All refineries perform three basic steps: separation, conversion, and treatment. Pretty simple. Several reasons include technical and economic factors as to why we ship it overseas to be processed. 
1. The crude petroleum is sold to the highest bidder, NOT the nearest bidder 
2. There are different kinds of crude oil, such as sweet/light and dark/heavy. They have different applications and uses. 
3. Different kinds of refining processes are needed to make different products from the crude oil. Petroleum is processed to make lots of products other than gasoline, like plastics and asphalt. 
4. Politics, unions and the "environmentalists"  
How many of you are aware Sunoco, Conoco Phillips and The HESS Corp are all closing US oil refineries? Not many, as the media refuses to give this HUGE story coverage. 
My guess is that if Americans understood the complete truth to how we are being sold out, and enslaved there just might be the much needed revolution to turn this country around.  
Last September, both Sunoco and Conoco Phillips announced plant closing, effecting thousands of workers. Sunoco announced they are completely getting out of the oil industry.  
Closing up shop. They are done with the US oil industry. 
Sunoco is closing it's 2 oil refineries in July 2012 in Philadelphia and Marcus Hook, Pa. Those 2 facilities alone process over 500,000 barrels a day.  Also announced last year, ConocoPhillips announced 2 plant closing for sure in Trainer, PA and Bayway, NJ., the other 3 plants are undecided as of today.   
Conoco also announced they were closing their Alaskan refining facility:  Just a week ago, the US 3rd largest oil refinery owned and operated by The HESS Corp just announced it's permanent closure. Costing over 2,000 jobs, and effecting 950 contractors. 
Refineries on the East Coast of the US supply 40% of the gasoline sales and 60% of the diesel and other fuel oils. Of that, HALF that comes from the Sunoco and Conoco Phillips plant closures. When Conoco Phillips announced that it was closing the Trainer refinery, Willie Chiang, then ConocoPhillips' Senior Vice President of Refining, Marketing, Transportation and Commercial, noted that their decision to sell, like Sunoco's, was based on unfavorable economics caused by a competitive and difficult market environment characterized by "...product imports, weakness in motor fuel demand, and costly regulatory requirements."  
They are ALL closing up shop due to government regulations, union demands and excessive operating costs brought on by the Government regulations. Then you have the unions, led by Barry's buddy Leo Gerard saying they will close ALL US oil refineriesstarting from the east coast to west coast today.   
The unions are shutting down ports, rail and air across the pond right now......the SAME EXACT thing they plan on doing here. When the ships stop importing, the rails and air stop delivering....how much is everything you consume gonna cost? Remember...we are a CONSUMING country, no longer a producing one.   
The excessive and costly government regulations on the US oil refinery market has forced companies to re-evaluate the cost of doing business in the US ..  
Why have operations in the US where you bleed money via regulations and demands, when you can have refineries built in Columbia , Mexico or Brazil for pennies on the dollar, and less regulations? It's all business America ...nothing personal. Besides.....your government is giving BILLIONS to Columbia and Brazil to build refineries to process all that oil the US is losing. We are building up every country on earth, while destroying our own....all in the name of redistribution of wealth. 
I covered some of these "deals" Barry inked in my previous note.   
You do the math. When the US oil refineries finally close up shop, who will process all that oil....and how much do YOU think that oil will cost when it's ALL processed over seas? Think gas and energy costs are high right now.......wait 6 months. You haven't seen anything yet.  
How can anyone expect any company to do business with an anti-American, hostile government out of control?You can't. That is why we are seeing a mass exodus, across the board in every industry in the US LEAVING.
Read the full story here

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

And when Iran goes fully online with dumping Petrodollars, with SA, China and India following suit? This are indeed troubling times.

Always On Watch said...

Another serious hike for gasoline prices will take down the American economy. Period.

tim said...

I just did a search and found a sunoco refinery as of july 2012 in south philly is staying open under new ownership.

Pastorius said...

That is good.

Who is going to own it now?

tim said...

Private equity firm Carlyle Group (CG: 25.05, +0.06, +0.24%) has teamed with Sunoco to help keep the oil giant’s Philadelphia refinery open, easing concerns that a mass exodus of oil on the East Coast would lead to shortages during the busy summer season.

The companies have established a joint venture called Philadelphia Energy Solutions that allows the oldest and biggest East Coast refinery to continue operating. The facility, which processes 330,000 barrels of oil a day, was scheduled to shut down in August.

With Carlyle stepping in, the two are able to secure the region’s fuel supply, which includes the daily flow of 10 million gallons of various fuels. It saves an existing 850 jobs, and they say it will add another 100 to 200 permanent jobs as well as thousands of temporary construction jobs.


Read more: http://www.foxbusiness.com/industries/2012/07/02/report-sunoco-carlyle-to-keep-philadelphia-plant-in-operation/#ixzz23uhpYhOe