Sei sulla pagina 1di 1

From: Douglas Grandt answerthecall@mac.

com
Subject:Which will be the first refinery to retire in ExxonMobil's endgame
Date:October 11, 2018 at 9:10 PM
To:Darren W. Woods Darren.W.Woods@ExxonMobil.com, William (Bill) M. Colton William.M.Colton@ExxonMobil.com,
Jeffrey J. Woodbury jeff.j.woodbury@exxonmobil.com, Suzanne M. McCarron Suzanne.M.McCarron@ExxonMobil.com,
Max Schulz max.schulz@exxonmobil.com
Cc: U. S. Senator Bernie Sanders senator@sanders.senate.gov, Scott McKee (Senate ENR-D) Scott_McKee@energy.senate.gov,
Mary Louise Wagner (Senate ENR Ctee-D) MaryLouise_Wagner@energy.senate.gov, Katie Thomas (Sen.Sanders)
katie_thomas@sanders.senate.gov, Megan Thompson (Sen. Cantwell) Megan_Thompson@Cantwell.senate.gov

Dear Darren,
.
Since you are publicly supporting a carbon tax and dividend, presumably in step with IPCC and COP time table
for reducing CO2 emissions, you doubtless understand that your refineries will become less and less productive
and the declining volume of crude feedstock must be reallocated each time a refinery is shut down.
.
Implementing the endgame will be a challenge fit for the expertise of your engineers and management.
.
Your financial experts will have to manage expenditure for dismantling and detoxifying abandoned assets.
.
So, since you are not publicly announcing an endgame, allow me to propose the first retirement: BILLINGS.
.
Starting small with 60,000 bbl/d will be a good case study to inform the industry of the economic and societal
impacts and and mitigation strategies. Billings, of course will resist, but we must start somewhere, and we must
accommodate the people with a just transition.
.
Ok, I made the first move. Now, it is your move … how will you proceed?
.
Sincerely yours,
Doug Grandt
Japan, Chiba Refinery (Kyokuto) (Kyokuto Petroleum/ExxonMobil), 175,000 bbl/d (27,800 m3/d)
Japan, Kawasaki Refinery (TonenGeneral Sekiyu/ExxonMobil), 335,000 bbl/d (53,300 m3/d)
Japan, Wakayama Refinery (TonenGeneral Sekiyu/ExxonMobil), 170,000 bbl/d (27,000 m3/d)
Japan, Sakai Refinery (TonenGeneral) (TonenGeneral Sekiyu/ExxonMobil), 156,000 bbl/d (24,800 m3/d)
Qatar, Laffan Refinery 1 (Qatar Petroleum 51%, ExxonMobil 10%, Total 10%, Idemitsu 10%, Cosmo 10%, Mitsui 4.5%,
Marubeni 4.5%), 146,000 bbl/d (23,200 m3/d)
Saudi Arabia, Yanbu' Refinery (SAMREF) (Saudi Aramco/Exxon Mobil), 400,000 bbl/d (64,000 m3/d)
Singapore, ExxonMobil Jurong Island Refinery (ExxonMobil), 605,000 bbl/d (96,200 m3/d)
Thailand, Sri Racha Refinery (ExxonMobil), 170,000 bbl/d (27,000 m3/d)
Belgium, ExxonMobil Antwerp Refinery (ExxonMobil), 333,000 bbl/d (52,900 m3/d)
France, Port Jérôme-Gravenchon Refinery (ExxonMobil), 270,000 bbl/d (43,000 m3/d)
France, os-sur-Mer Refinery (ExxonMobil), 140,000 bbl/d (22,000 m3/d)
Germany, MiRO Karlsruhe Refinery (MiRO(Shell/ExxonMobil/Rosneft/Phillips 66)) 285,000 bbl/d (45,300 m3/d)
Italy, Sarpom Trecate, Novara Refinery (ExxonMobil 74.1%/ERG 25.9%), 200,000 bbl/d (32,000 m3/d)
Italy, Esso Augusta Refinery (ExxonMobil), 190,000 bbl/d (30,000 m3/d) - announced sale to Sonatrach may 2018.
Netherlands, Botlek (ExxonMobil) Rotterdam, 195,000 bbl/d (31,000 m3/d)
Norway, Slagen Refinery (ExxonMobil), 110,000 bbl/d (17,000 m3/d)
England, Fawley Refinery (ExxonMobil), 330,000 bbl/d (52,000 m3/d)
USA, Illinois, Joliet Refinery (ExxonMobil), Joliet, 238,600 bbl/d (37,930 m3/d)
USA, Baton Rouge, Baton Rouge Refinery (ExxonMobil), Baton Rouge, 502,500 bbl/d (79,890 m3/d)
USA, Montana, Billings Refinery (ExxonMobil), Billings, 60,000 bbl/d (9,500 m3/d) Proposed first to be retired
USA, Texas, Baytown Refinery (ExxonMobil), Baytown, 560,500 bbl/d (89,110 m3/d)
USA, Texas, Beaumont Refinery (ExxonMobil), Beaumont, 344,600 bbl/d (54,790 m3/d)
Australia, Victoria, Altona Refinery (ExxonMobil), about 75,000 bbl/d (11,900 m3/d), Altona North (refinery reduced from 2
trains to 1 train between 2000–2004)
Venezuela, Extra Heavy Oil Joint Ventures, Petropiar earlier Cerro Negro (ExxonMobil, Aral AG, and PDVSA) 120,000 bbl/d
(19,000 m3/d) (start-up 2001)

.
ALREADY RETIRED

S. Australia, Port Stanvac Refinery (ExxonMobil), 100,000 bbl/d (16,000 m3/d), Lonsdale - mothballed 2003, closed 2009

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_oil_refineries

Potrebbero piacerti anche