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The Port Arthur Refinery was a direct by-product of the January 10,
1901, Lucas gusher and the resulting Spindletop oil boom at
Beaumont. Storage tanks and a pump station were constructed at
Garrison station near Spindletop with a pipeline completed in August
1902 to the present refinery site, which was on open prairie next to
an old brickyard. The first product sold by The Texas Company
(Texaco) in 1902 was Spindletop crude oil pumped from tanks at the
refinery site to a barge at Port Arthur Terminal. Construction of
the refinery began in December 1902. The first batch tar stills were
fired up in April 1903. However, the refinery officially started
with the first run on the new crude stills on November 13, 1903.
With the rapid decline in Spindletop production in late 1902
after the great September fire, the crude supply for the new
refinery and the hopes of the fledgling company was in jeopardy. The
Texas Company bet nearly their entire source of capital on a oil
gusher that secretly blew in during a heavy rain storm at Sour Lake
on the night of January 8, 1903. The discovery saved the company
from early extinction. During the nearly three months it took the
company to secure the rights to the secret oil field, they quickly
sold contracts for crude oil at 60 cents a barrel. When the
discovery was announced, crude prices dropped to 10 cents allowing
the company to buy cheap oil to cover the contracts and pocket a
nice profit to help fund its plans to construct a refinery at Port
Arthur.
Over 200 companies sprang up from the Spindletop oil boom, but
only a few were still in business 50 years later. Familiar local
companies born of Spindletop black gold were the Gulf Oil Corp.
(Chevron), Humble Oil & Refining Co. (later Exxon, then
Exxon-Mobil), Sun Oil Co., and The Texas Company, with the latter
being the last survivor. The Texas Company was renamed Texaco, Inc.
in 1959. From modest beginnings in 1902 as The Texas Fuel Co.,
subsequent reorganization as The Texas Co., and the construction of
its first refinery at Port Arthur, an international major oil
company was born.
TIMELINE:
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1901 Spindletop oil discovery
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1903 Port Arthur Refinery begins operation as Texaco’s first
refinery
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1906 Port Neches Asphalt refinery was returned to asphalt
production
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1909 Grease and lube oil processing was added as well as a
canning plant
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1920’s HMVS batteries constructed for gasoline and higher
yields
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1930’s Packaging and shipping facilities were expanded
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1940’s and 1950’s Expansion of gasoline and lube processing
facilities
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1960’s Crude and cracking capacity expanded
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1970’s Crude capacity increased
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1980’s Crude capacity reached over 400 MBPD
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mid-1980’s Refinery was streamlined and crude running
reduced dramatically
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1989 Star Enterprise was formed between TRMI and SRI
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1990’s Numerous environmental programs were put into affect
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1998 Motiva Enterprises was formed by Texaco, Shell, and SRI
and a new state-of-the-art lube processing unit was brought
on-stream
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2002 Motiva Enterprises became equally owned by Shell and SRI
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early 2003 New low sulfur gasoline unit was started
In the first decade, the refinery added facilities to produce
asphalt, grease, and lube oil. Metal cans were made at the Port
Arthur Terminal (The Island) and filled with lube oil and grease
manufactured at the refinery. Wooden boxes were made to safely
transport cans filled with oil products and shipped to all parts of
the world. Markets were quickly developed in the Far East, Europe,
Middle East, and Africa. The growing demand brought a large
expansion of the refinery.
The growing gasoline demand during the 1920’s was supplied by the
Holmes-Manley cracking process developed at Port Arthur Refinery by
the Refining Manager and General Superintendent. A total of 72 HMVS
batteries were constructed from 1919 to 1927. The refinery became a
first class lube oil refinery in the late 1930’s and 1940’s with the
addition of furfural refining and solvent dewaxing. Gasoline for the
war effort and after World War II brought another great expansion.
New fluidized catalytic cracking units (FCCU) and alkylation units
were constructed followed in the 1950’s by three reforming units to
product 100 octane gasoline. The refinery employed over 5000 people.
In the 1970’s crude capacity was increased to 405 MBPD.
With product demand nearly flat during the 1970’s and 1980’s, the
growth in the oil industry resulted in an oversupply with the
resultant narrowing of margins. A tremendous rationalization of the
oil industry took place in the mid-1980’s. Management seriously
considered closing Port Arthur Refinery. The President of Texaco,
Jim Kinnear, thought the refinery could be saved and he gave plant
manager Lee Townsend a chance to turn things around. Many old units
were shut down and employees laid off in an effort to streamline the
refinery and return it to profitability. That time was difficult,
but it did eventually provide a stable work environment for the
remaining employees.
On January 1, 1989, Saudi Refining, Inc. purchased 50% of Port
Arthur refinery as part of a joint venture with Texaco known as Star
Enterprise. It included two other Texaco refineries in Convent,
Louisiana and Delaware City, Delaware and all of Texaco's marketing
in the southeastern U. S. On July 1, 1998, a joint venture was
formed between Star Enterprise and Shell Oil Co. under the name
Motiva Enterprises LLC. In 2001, Texaco was purchased by Chevron and
its interest in Motiva was sold to Shell on February 13, 2002. Port
Arthur Refinery is still operated as Motiva, which is now jointly
owned by Shell and Saudi Refining.
Port Arthur Refinery has made great strides in the past two years
to dramatically improve operational performance, environmental
stewardship, employee safety, and refinery profitability. Motiva’s
Port Arthur Refinery will continue to improve its standing as one of
the preeminent Gulf Coast refineries well into the 21st century.

LInks
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