Thread regarding ExxonMobil Corp. layoffs

ExxonMobil shut Norway Slagen refinery in June 2021 - Which Refinery Is Next?

Published date: 23 July 2021
Source: Argus Media
By Benedict George

ExxonMobil has told Argus that its stopped operations at its 120,000 b/d Slagen refinery in Norway in June.

The company said in April that it would permanently shut the refinery over the summer, saying continued operation "is not economically viable over the long term" because of "strong competition, evolving regulatory measures, and falling demand."

Around 60pc of Slagen's products were exported. Its closure leaves state-controlled Equinor's 200,000 b/d Mongstad plant as Norway's only refinery.

Slagen is the fifth European refinery to halt completely since the Covid-19 pandemic, bringing the lost crude distillation capacity to more than 600,000 b/d.

TotalEnergies halted its 93,000 b/d Grandpuits refinery in France, and will convert it to process pure renewable fuels. Portugal's Galp and Finland's Neste have permanently stopped their respective 110,000 b/d Porto and 55,000 b/d Naantali refineries to focus on products imports.

Trading firm Gunvor has long-term mothballed its 115,000 b/d Antwerp refinery, and UK-Chinese Petroineos has done the same with one crude distillation unit (CDU) at the 210,000 b/d Grangemouth refinery.

Gunvor has also permanently stopped both CDUs at its 80,000 b/d Europoort refinery in Rotterdam, though it continues to run secondary units.

Europe's refineries have for years been contending with competition from producers in the Middle East and Asia-Pacific, where capacity continues to grow rapidly, while local fuel demand growth slows.

Gasoline and diesel vehicles comprised just 62pc of new car sales in the EU in the second quarter of this year, down from more than 80pc a year earlier.

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| 1961 views | | 7 replies (last July 29, 2021) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1c2G37XP

7 replies (most recent on top)

@1hrh People left early on Friday...unfortunately the refinery never made much money.

Sm--k!

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Post ID: @2eow+1c2G37XP

Stand-alone refineries for the most part are over 50 years old globally.
Some are well maintained, but in US there was no reason for shutting down for a few weeks a year to brush things up. That is money lost and no rules say you have to maintain. Simple math.

So if it is a stand-alone refinery, it will be shut down and repurposed.
There might be some ethyl lead underneath those crackers.
Let's make it a park for kids to play. They are our future.

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Post ID: @2pcw+1c2G37XP

Strathcona Refinery just ouside Edmonton, Canada. I've been told its the highest cost refinery in the entire network plus it has no access to crude other than from the nearly depleted conventional Alberta fields. No ocean access to bring in crude by tanker. High labor costs due to the unionized operators. No adjacent ExxonMobil chemical or plastics complex. Western Canadian economy has been depressed for years and declining demand for refined products plus limited pipeline capacity to export products to other markets. I think this refinery will be next to close.

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Post ID: @1qwt+1c2G37XP

Singapore!

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Post ID: @1rlb+1c2G37XP

I also spent much time working at Slagen over the years. The people at the refinery were great.

Try to imagine this: go to work at 7-730 and leaving at 4 to 530 from monday to thursday and then being able to leave at 3 to 4 in the afternoon on friday's: that was life at Slagen. I COULD NOT believe this given the 24/7 work culture back in the states and at other sites. Yet things always got done. Norway management was the best!

The refinery did had some shift work and roles that required longer hours, but overall this place was a dream come true.

Unfortunately, the refinery never made that much money compared to other sites and this is where they have ended up.

Skål to my friends in Norway. Good-luck.

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Post ID: @1hrh+1c2G37XP

Well, Slagen and EM are only a paragraph in this article.
Lots of changes and repurposing of facilities in the O&G arena.

Aside from the regulatory explanation, Slagen is also a Refinery-only facility and does not have the symbiotic Refy/Chem/Plastics co-location of facilities currently promoted by Chevron as a new more efficient and greener O&G model.

It would have been classy for EM to also cite this model in closing Refy-only Slagen, but the brain isn't there.

I've been to Slagen several times - staying in beautiful Tonsberg nearby and also in Oslo a couple times..
Hope the workers there are presented with other good opportunities.
I'm sure they will. Norway cares about its people.

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Post ID: @1ifm+1c2G37XP

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