ExxonMobil's Baytown Refinery is a major oil refinery named after and located in Baytown, Texas. It has capacity of 588,000 barrels per day (93,500 m3/d).[1] The site first opened in 1919 and was originally operated by the Humble Oil Company. Today, it is the largest employer in the city. The plant has been expanded over the year to 3,400 acres (14 km2) of land next to the Houston Ship Channel.[2]

Baytown Refinery
The Baytown Refinery
Baytown Refinery is located in Texas
Baytown Refinery
Location of the Baytown Refinery in Texas
CountryUnited States
CityBaytown, Texas
Coordinates29°44′20″N 95°00′38″W / 29.7390°N 95.0106°W / 29.7390; -95.0106
Refinery details
Owner(s)ExxonMobil
Commissioned1919 (1919)
Capacity588,000 bbl/d (93,500 m3/d)

The Baytown Refinery is the fifth-largest refinery in the United States by production, after the nearby Port Arthur Refinery. Baytown is also ExxonMobil's third largest refinery, only trailing Exxon's Beaumont Refinery and Jurong Island refinery in Singapore.

On December 23, 2021, a large explosion occurred at the refinery in what was described as a major industrial accident by both local and national news.[3][4] The explosion, caused by a fire, occurred around 1AM and seriously injured five workers, four of whom were airlifted to the hospital with one being transported by ambulance. No fatalities were reported.[5] Two of the injured contract workers have filed a $10 million lawsuit against ExxonMobil and partner Team Industrial Services for unsafe working conditions as of a result of the explosion.[3]

Units

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According to ExxonMobil's filings with the US DOE's Energy Information Agency, the unit capacities for the Baytown Refinery are presented below:[6]

Units Capacity in BPCD
Total Refinery Nameplate 588,000
Atmospheric Distillation 588,000
Vacuum Distillation 297,000
Delayed Coking 54,000
Fluid Coking 42,000
FCC 220,000
Hydrocracking 30,600
Fuels Deasphalting (SDA) 47,000
Naphtha Reforming 126,500
Aklylation 44,500
ULSD Hydrotreating 158,300
Gasoline/Naphtha Hydrotreating 203,800
Kero Jet Hydrotreating 132,700
Naphtha Reformer Feed Hydrotreating 157,000
Heavy Gas Oil Hydrotreating 117,000
Lubricants 32,000

ExxonMobil is developing a large blue hydrogen facility at Baytown to support the refinery and sequester CO2. The project is expected to capture and store 7 million mt of CO2 per year.[7] The Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) purchased a 35% stake of this project in 2024.[7]

The refinery site is also home to extensive petrochemical production including multi-train olefins production. The olefins plans are proposed to become users of blue hydrogen from the mega project being developed with ADNOC that will lower the petrochemical site's emissions by capturing 98% of the CO2 produced at the facility.[8]

The refinery site has two electricity generating power plants.[9][10]

Unit Name Status Fuel(s) Capacity (MW) Type Combined Heat & Power Year
Gen 4 Operating Natural Gas 99 Gas Turbine Yes 1997
Gen 5 Operating Natural Gas 164 Gas Turbine Yes 2004

The site has 3 worldscale ethylene cracking plants with the newest being commissioned in 2018 with 1.5 million tons per year of capacity and being fed with purity ethane.[11]

Total ethylene cracking capacity for the site is presented in the table below. [12]

Cracker Capacity in Mtpa Feed 1 Feed 2
TBD 1.5 Ethane
TBD 2.2 Ethane LPG

Greenhouse Gas Emissions History

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As a major emitting facility, The ExxonMobil Baytown Refinery and Petrochemical Site must report its complete greenhouse gas emissions to the EPA every year subject to the EPA's Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program. The Baytown site's Facility ID is 1007542 and its FRS ID is 110000463178. [13]

Statutory reporting data is in the table below:

Year Total Reported

Direct Emissions

CO2 Emissions

Non-Biogenic

Methane

Emissions

Nitrous Oxide

Emissions

metric ton metric ton metric ton metric ton
2023 12,693,547 12,621,516 39,860 32,171

All emissions data is presented in units of metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent using GWP's from IPCC's AR4

According the EPA's database for 2022, the Baytown (combined site) ranked as the 6th largest GhG emitter in the United States for 2023 with 12.6 million tons of emissions. [14]

Labor Relations

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The Baytown site is a union facility with the United Steelworkers Local 13-2001 representing operations, instrument, lab and mechanical employees. The membership is approximately 600.[15] In addition to the USW, three other unions represent workers at the site including:

Labor History

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Labor relations have, at times, been contentious at the Baytown refinery. A long-standing dispute at the Beaumont Refinery, led to accusations of ExxonMobil attempting to decertify the USW at the site.[17]

See Also

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References

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  1. ^ "Baytown Complex - Company Profile 2023" (PDF). ExxonMobil. 2 April 2024. Retrieved 2 April 2024.
  2. ^ "ExxonMobil announces $2 billion Baytown chemical expansion project; releases study showing value of investments to U.S. economy". ExxonMobil. Retrieved 2024-11-08.
  3. ^ a b Vasquez, Lucio (2021-12-27). "2 injured workers file $10 million lawsuit against ExxonMobil after Baytown refinery explosion". Houston Public Media. Retrieved 2022-01-27.
  4. ^ ""Major industrial accident" sets off fire at ExxonMobil refinery". www.cbsnews.com. 23 December 2021. Retrieved 2022-01-27.
  5. ^ "ExxonMobil Baytown explosion: 4 workers hurt in 'major industrial accident'". FOX TV Digital Team. 2021-12-23. Retrieved 2022-01-27.
  6. ^ "Data & Statistics". www.afpm.org. Retrieved 2024-10-24.
  7. ^ a b gasworld (2024-09-05). "ADNOC to acquire 35% stake in ExxonMobil's Baytown hydrogen project". gasworld. Retrieved 2024-10-31.
  8. ^ Vasquez, Lucio (2024-03-25). "Baytown plant with troubled track record could receive up to $332 million from federal government to lower emissions". Houston Public Media. Retrieved 2024-10-31.
  9. ^ "ExxonMobil Baytown power station". Global Energy Monitor. Retrieved 2024-11-08.
  10. ^ "Form EIA-860 detailed data". U.S. Energy Information Agency. 2022.
  11. ^ "ExxonMobil starts up new ethane cracker in Baytown Texas". ExxonMobil. Retrieved 2024-11-08.
  12. ^ Koottungal, Leena (2015-07-07). "International survey of ethylene from steam crackers - 2015". Oil & Gas Journal. Retrieved 2024-11-08.
  13. ^ US EPA, OAR (2015-05-18). "Data Sets". www.epa.gov. Retrieved 2024-11-01.
  14. ^ Fagelson, Nathaniel (2024). "Top 10 greenhouse gas polluters in Texas". Environment Texas - Research and Policy Center.
  15. ^ "United Steelworkers Local 13-2001". USW Local 13-2001.
  16. ^ "Union FactsUnion Facts". Union Facts. Retrieved 2024-11-07.
  17. ^ Seba, Erwin (2021). "Exxon, union try new approach to resolve increasingly bitter dispute". Reuters.
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