The Montreal Refinery is an
oil refinery
An oil refinery or petroleum refinery is an industrial processes, industrial process Factory, plant where petroleum (crude oil) is transformed and refining, refined into products such as gasoline (petrol), diesel fuel, Bitumen, asphalt base, ...
located in the city of Montreal inside the
Rivière-des-Prairies–Pointe-aux-Trembles
Rivière-des-Prairies–Pointe-aux-Trembles () is a suburban Boroughs of Montreal, borough (''arrondissement'') on the eastern tip of the city of Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is located at the eastern end of the Island of Montreal.
Geography
T ...
borough. The refinery is not far from the
Montreal East Refinery. This refinery is the largest
Suncor Energy
Suncor Energy Inc. () is a Canada, Canadian integrated energy company based in Calgary, Alberta. It specializes in production of synthetic crude from oil sands. In the 2020 Forbes Global 2000, Suncor Energy was ranked as the 48th-largest public ...
refinery. The refinery has ~400 Suncor employees but including contractors, employs 816 Full-Time-Equivalent employees.
History
The Montreal refinery was originally commissioned by
Petrofina
Petrofina was a Belgium, Belgian oil company. It merged with Total S.A., Total in 1999 to form TotalFina, which after subsequent mergers has changed its name back to Total. In the United States, Fina's former refining and marketing operations ...
on September 15, 1955, with a throughput of 20,000 bpd. Montreal had long been Canada's refining center with 8 refineries and large chemical plants in operation at its peak. Economist D. Chretien noted that "well before Calgary, Montreal was the hub of activity for oil refineries because Montreal was the principle consuming market for petroleum products in Canada." In the 1970's, expansion work was undertaken to bring capacity to 95,000 bpd. In 1981, the then Crown corporation
Petro-Canada
Petro-Canada (colloquially known as Petro-Can) is a retail and wholesale marketing brand subsidiary of Suncor Energy. Until 1991, it was a federal Crown corporation (a state-owned enterprise). In August 2009, Petro-Canada merged with Suncor En ...
acquired the Montreal refinery as part of a government backed $1.6 billion ($1.2 billion in USD) deal to acquire all Petrofina's Canadian assets.
According to the New York Times, the government of Canada enabled its crown-corporation PetroCanada to buy the refinery as part of a converted effort to reduce foreign influence on Canadian oil. In a 1981 article, it was noted that:
The half-dozen major foreign oil companies operating in Canada now account for about three-quarters of oil and gas sales here and about the same share of ownership of oil and gas companies. A key element of the Government's energy program, announced in October, was the reduction of this ownership so that it would account for only 50 percent of sales by 1990.
The last major expansion of the refinery occurred in 2005 when Petro-Canada made the decision to close a smaller refinery operating in Oakville, Ontario and consolidate the Eastern Canada operations in Montreal. A very substantial investment in the Montreal refinery was made to expand the capacity of that facility to approximately 130,000 bpd. The plans at one point included the construction of a delayed coker (of 25,000 bpd capacity) which was never completed even though the FEED was completed. In 2009, Suncor Energy and Petro-Canada merged their operations. The new company is operated under the Suncor name for its general and trading purposes, and under the Petro-Canada trademark for its refined products and its retail and wholesale network.
Operating units
The Montreal refinery is complex with both fluid cat cracking and hydrocracking units for gasoil conversion. The alkylation unit plus a high ratio of naphtha reforming relative to total crude capacity indicates that the refinery will be able to produce high octane gasoline.
The Refinery has a Nelson Complexity Index of 9.0, making it moderately complex.
The refinery shifted its crude slate to focus on domestic crude production and imports from the USA from shale crude. With the shift to a lighter domestic and US sourced crude slate, any need for a delayed coker project had become obsolete.
Emissions
Greenhouse gas emissions
According to filings with the Canadian Federal Government, the oil refining sector was responsible for approximately 2.5% of the province's GhG emissions. The refinery's performance can be tracked on th
Government of Canada's website for emissions The chart below provides the GhG performance in 2022:
The 20-year history of GhG emissions statistics at the refinery are below:
Future carbon plans
Suncor is aggressively pursuing climate change goals and Net Zero by 2050. The go-forward plan for the Montreal Refinery has year to be published for the public as of 2024. There is controversy around Suncor's future plant for GhG emissions reductions including the Montreal Refinery.
See also
*
List of oil facilities in Montreal
References
Oil refineries in Canada
Buildings and structures in Rivière-des-Prairies–Pointe-aux-Trembles
Industrial buildings and structures in Montreal
1955 establishments in Quebec
1950s in Montreal
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