Environment & Safety Gas Processing/LNG Maintenance & Reliability Petrochemicals Process Control Process Optimization Project Management Refining

Three French refineries prepare to restart, oil ports remain shut

PARIS (Reuters)—Preliminary work is now underway to restart three of Total's French oil refineries that were stopped as part of nationwide strikes against planned changes to employment laws. However, workers are still on strike at the country's two main oil ports. Total operates five of the country's eight refineries.
Workers voted to end a strike at Grandpuits near Paris, and preliminary work to resume operations was underway there and at the Normandy refinery, as well as at the Feyzin refinery in the southern Rhone region.
The Donges refinery on France's western coast was still blocked by about 30 members of the CGT union, which is leading the campaign of stoppages and protests in the rail and energy sectors against the government's labor reforms.
Workers were whether to go back to work at Feyzin, while the La Mede refinery was still working and also ensuring outbound deliveries.
However, oil terminals still remain blocked.
At CIM, an oil storage and supply services company that handles about 40% of French crude imports, workers have voted to extend their strike at Le Havre port until 1000 GMT on Wednesday, a CGT union official told Reuters.
"Some 80% of the workers approved extending the strike," a union representative said.
Le Havre is France's second-biggest oil port and the action by workers has disrupted the delivery of crude to refineries and products through the Trapil pipeline.
Seventeen managers and engineers, instead of the usual 38 workers, have been operating the plant for more than a week after the government ordered pipes to be re-opened to allow supplies to flow. They were performing pumping activities to supply ExxonMobil's Port Jerome refinery as well as airports, the union official said.
Meanwhile the Fos Lavera oil terminals in southern France remained idle, but the port was functioning for gas and other goods, a port spokeswoman said.
"There's no commercial activity at the oil terminals - no loading and no offloading," she said.
Some 25 ships were waiting in the harbor and 15 at quay, carrying crude oil, natural gas or refined products, an official of Fluxel, which manages the oil terminal, said. The situation has barely changed over the past 10 days. Other cargoes were diverted to other ports.
In addition, CGT called in a statement for port and dock workers to strike again on Thursday, June 9, and to join the nationwide strike planned for June 14, which could disrupt shipments of grain and other cargoes through the ports.
(Reporting by Bate Felix and Valerie Parent; writing by Brian Love and Sybille de La Hamaide; editing by William Hardy and Greg Mahlich)

From the Archive

Comments

Comments

{{ error }}
{{ comment.name }} • {{ comment.dateCreated | date:'short' }}
{{ comment.text }}