Sinclair begins expansion project on Tulsa refinery
29-04-08 Sinclair Tulsa Refining broke ground on an expansion project that is contributing millions to local businesses, company officials said. Sinclair said it has placed orders or committed to place orders totalling $ 150 mm with Tulsa area suppliers and fabricators. The total project, estimated to cost $ 1 bn, will boost production at Sinclair's west Tulsa refinery and cut the plant's emissions.
"We really are trying to make our refinery more competitive in the long run," said Kevin Brown, executive vice president of Sinclair Tulsa Refining, a subsidiary of Salt Lake City-based Sinclair Oil Corp.
Sinclair announced plans to increase production at the refinery last autumn. The project will raise output by 60 % and allow the plant to refine low-quality, heavy sour crude oil.
Refining capacity will jump to 115,000 barrels of crude per day when the project is completed in 2010. The current capacity is 70,000 barrels.
The expansion follows a growing trend in the refining industry. A new
refinery has not been built in the United States since 1976, but the industry has engaged in expansion -- building out existing facilities to meet a growing demand for fuel. Refiners have added the equivalent of a new refinery every year for the last decade.
The bulk of the production gains at Sinclair will be made in diesel fuel. The refinery will add more than 36,000 bpd of ultra low-sulphur diesel, bringing its total production of the fuel to 56,300 bpd.
"One of the reasons diesel is so expensive is because there is a worldwide shortage," Brown said.
Diesel prices continue to set records nationwide. The average price of the fuel reached another all-time high, reaching $ 4.233 per gallon at the pump. A year ago, diesel was averaging $ 2.921 per gallon, according to AAA and the Oil Price Information Service.
Gasoline production at the Sinclair refinery will grow by 22 % to nearly 49,000 bpd. Although the facility will increase its production, Sinclair said the plant's emissions will fall by
1,000 tpy. Sinclair will add a coker unit that will use an odour control system, and also install an enclosed flare system.
Brown said the technology should make a difference to nearby residents.
"I would hope they would notice fewer smells," he said.
Sinclair said the project will take 4 mm man hours and, at its peak, employ 2,500 people. Ultimately, the expansion will add 200 long-term, full-time jobs, Sinclair said.
The company has also contributed $ 250,000 to improve the River Parks land along the west bank of the Arkansas River. It will add 190 trees and triple the area that Sinclair leases to River Parks for public use. Those improvements are scheduled for completion by July.
Sinclair expansion timetable
2005: Sinclair Tulsa Refining Co. begins planning, feasibility studies and the engineering for refinery expansion.
2007: Sinclair files an application to expand with the Oklahoma Department of Environmental Quality.
2008: The Oklahoma Department of Environmental
Quality approves the application March 21.
2008: Construction begins in April.
2010: Refinery expansion scheduled for completion.
Source: www.downstreamtoday.com / Sinclair Tulsa Refining Co.