The Galveston Bay Refinery is an oil refinery located in the Texas City, Texas Industrial Complex on the edge of Galveston Bay. It is the largest oil refinery in North America with a capacity of 631,000 barrels per day[1] and has been owned and operated by Marathon Petroleum Corporation since 2013.
Country | United States |
---|---|
State | Texas |
City | Texas City, Texas |
Coordinates | 29°22.65′N 94°55.97′W / 29.37750°N 94.93283°W |
Refinery details | |
Owner(s) | Marathon Petroleum Corporation 2013–present |
Commissioned | 1933 |
Capacity | 631,000 bbl/d (100,300 m3/d) |
Complexity index | 15.2 |
No. of employees | 1550 |
History
editThe refinery was established in 1933 as Pan American Refining Corporation. Pan American refining was renamed to American Oil Company in 1954. American Oil Company merged with Standard Oil Company of Indiana to form Amoco Corporation in 1985. Amoco Corporation merged with BP and became BP Amoco PLC (Public Limited Company) in 1998. In 2001 BP Amoco PLC was renamed to BP PLC.[2]
Marathon Petroleum purchased its original 84,000 bpd Texas City Refinery from Plymouth Oil Company in 1962. What remains operating today is an integrated part of the Galveston Bay Refinery, nicknamed Bay Plant. It was established in 1931 by Republic Oil Refining Company and sold to Plymouth Oil Company in 1957.[2]
In 2005, the refinery could produce around 10 million gallons of gasoline per day. It also produced jet fuels, diesel fuels, and chemical feed stocks. Its 1,200-acre (490 ha) site was covered by 29 oil refining units and four chemical units. It employed around 1,800 BP workers.
In February 2013, Marathon Petroleum acquired the Galveston Bay refinery from BP along with other assets. In 2018, Marathon merged its Texas City Refinery with the Galveston Bay facility to form a single refining complex.[3]
Environmental record
editAn issue Galveston Bay dealt with in 2021, was that at the time it was the greatest emitter of benzene among all U.S. refineries.[4]
References
edit- ^ "Galveston Bay Refinery factsheet" (PDF). Marathon Petroleum. April 2024. Retrieved April 1, 2024.
- ^ a b "Texas City Oil & Chemical Companies | Texas City, TX". library.texascitytx.gov. Retrieved 2024-04-04.
- ^ "Marathon Galveston Bay Oil Refinery, Texas City, USA". Retrieved 2024-04-04.
- ^ Erin Douglas (May 12, 2022). "5 Texas refineries polluted above federal limit on cancer-causing benzene last year, report found". The Texas Tribune – via KTRK-TV.
Sources
edit- Kaiser, M.J.; de Klerk, A.; Gary, J.H.; Handwerk, G.E. (2019). Petroleum Refining: Technology, Economics, and Markets, Sixth Edition. CRC Press. ISBN 978-1-4665-6302-5. Retrieved 2022-09-19.
- Mitchell, A.L. (2011). Texas City. Images of America. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7385-7970-2. Retrieved 2022-09-19.
Further reading
edit- "Galveston Bay Refinery emissions data". Electronic Greenhouse Gas Reporting Tool. United States Environmental Protection Agency.