Published March 2002 | Version v1
Journal article

The rise and fall of refineries

Creators

Description

This paper described the rise and fall of refineries in Montreal. Well before Calgary, Montreal was the hub of activity for oil refineries because Montreal was the principle consuming market for petroleum products in Canada. The location was good, particularly since the soil was clay which helped prevent soil infiltration of petroleum. The first refinery in Montreal was constructed in 1916 by Esso, followed by Texaco in 1921 and Gulf in 1931. Initially oil was shipped by boat to the Port of Montreal from Saudi Arabia. Later, the petroleum came mostly from Venezuela. At the beginning of the 1980s many refineries were closed because they became obsolete and upgrading them would have been too costly. Only 3 refineries remain in Quebec, of which 2 are in Montreal. They are owned by Shell and PetroCanada. The third refinery in Quebec is in St-Romuald and is owned by UltraMar. One of the major contributing factors to the decline of the refining industry in Montreal was the decision in 1984 by former Prime Minister Trudeau to force Canadian provinces to purchase their petroleum from Alberta. This caused the petrochemical industry to locate in Sarnia in Ontario, leaving the Montreal refining centre to become obsolete. 3 figs

Additional details

Additional titles

Original title (French)
Grandeurs et declin des raffineries

Publishing Information

Journal Title
Quebec Science
Journal Volume
40
Journal Issue
6
Journal Page Range
p. 36-39, 40
ISSN
0021-6127
CODEN
QBSCA9

INIS

Country of Publication
Canada
Country of Input or Organization
Canada
INIS RN
33011562
Subject category
S29: ENERGY PLANNING, POLICY AND ECONOMY; S02: PETROLEUM;
Descriptors DEI
HISTORICAL ASPECTS; INDUSTRIAL PLANTS; MARKET; PETROLEUM; PETROLEUM REFINERIES; QUEBEC
Descriptors DEC
CANADA; DEVELOPED COUNTRIES; ENERGY SOURCES; FOSSIL FUELS; FUELS; INDUSTRIAL PLANTS; NORTH AMERICA