Page added on July 21, 2009
NEW YORK/HOUSTON (Reuters) – The recession-battered U.S. oil refining industry may be forced to eliminate more jobs and further curtail capacity in the face of limp demand, tighter U.S. environmental regulations and stricter fuel-efficiency requirements for automobiles.
In the coming months, more refiners may be forced to shut additional units and slash employee numbers due to dismal demand for petroleum fuels.
“You’re going to see some whole refineries taken down … we could see (refinery) runs, as a percent of capacity, drop several percentage points into the low 80s, and correspondingly you’re going to see some loss of jobs within the sector, unfortunately,” said Jim Ritterbusch, president, Ritterbusch & Associates in Galena, Illinois.
The looming capacity cuts for U.S. refiners could be made permanent as the sector faces more stringent environmental regulations, improved fuel efficiency and foreign competition.
The latest company to fall victim to the recession is Shell, Europe’s largest oil company, which announced last week it is mulling staff cuts at its refineries and chemical plants in Texas, Louisiana and Alabama to cut costs.
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