This
is part of a worldwide trend for oil refineries to close.
Dark
day as Caltex turns off the tap
Australia
will increase its dependence on foreign sources of oil with the
decision by Caltex to close the Kurnell refinery - the second of
Sydney's two oil refineries - with the loss of several hundred jobs.
27
July, 2012
Caltex
said the refinery, on Port Botany, south of the city, will be
converted to an import terminal at a cost of $680 million. As a
result, more than 330 in-house employees will lose their jobs, and
the jobs of an unspecified number of the 300 contractors who also
work at the plant are at risk.
Minister
for Resources and Energy Martin Ferguson insisted the closure would
not jeopardise Australia's energy security, since the country already
imported large amounts of crude oil and finished petroleum products.
''This
decision will see imported supplies of crude oil being replaced by
imported refined product,'' he said.
Caltex
said it would buy refined oil from Singapore, Korea and India for
sale in the local market.
Last
month, Shell brought forward by 12 months the planned closure of its
smaller Clyde refinery in Sydney's west, which it is also converting
to an import terminal with the loss of more than 220 jobs. The Clyde
refinery handled 80,000 barrels a day, much less than the 125,000
barrels a day handled by Caltex at Kurnell.
The
two refineries represent 27 per cent of Australia's oil refining
capacity.
Victoria
has a production capacity of 190,000 barrels a day between its two
refineries in Altona and Geelong.
Caltex
said Kurnell lost $208 million last year and another $60 million in
the first three months of this year, which had forced its hand on the
closure.
Union
leader Paul Howes was critical of the shutdown, describing it as
''duplicitous'' behaviour.
''Almost
800 workers here at Caltex Kurnell have been delivered a massive kick
in the guts,'' Mr Howes, the national secretary of the Australian
Workers Union, said yesterday of the decision.
Mr
Howes said the AWU would launch an advertising campaign to inform
Australians that their petrol was no longer Australian.
Graeme
Grace, an oil refinery operator, said he felt ''betrayed'' by
Caltex's decision. For the past year, staff had been ''working our
butts off'' and succeeded in making the refinery more efficient.
''I've
been a refinery operator for over 30 years; as refineries are
shutting down, I've got nowhere else to go,'' Mr Grace said. ''At my
age I'm not going to get a job on one of the new gas projects.''
Caltex
said the shutdown and the heavy round of retrenchments would ensure
the company survived.
''We
have taken a decision that's going to secure the position of
Caltex,'' managing director Julian Segal said yesterday. The closure
would not influence petrol prices, he said, which were set by market
competition.
Woolworths,
which sells about a third of Kurnell's output, said the closure would
not affect its retailing operations.
Caltex
said it would spend $260 million to remediate the site, with the work
to begin in 2015, once refining had been halted. The work was
expected to take several years.
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