(Adds company statement, details)
By Erwin Seba
HOUSTON, Dec 2 (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell Plc
began the permanent shutdown of its 211,146 barrel-per-day (bpd)
Convent, Louisiana refinery, the company said on Tuesday.
Sources familiar with plant operations told Reuters the
permanent shutdown of the refinery, which Shell has been unable
to sell as fuel demand has been hammered in the COVID-19
pandemic, began on Monday night.
"Weโre engaged in a phased shutdown of Convent and (will)
take all of the time necessary to safely accomplish that," said
Shell spokesman Curtis Smith in an email on Tuesday.
The shutdown began when Shell idled the 12,000-bpd
isomerization unit on Monday night, the sources said. The
company was taking offline the 36,000-bpd diesel hydrotreater on
Tuesday.
Shell said on Nov. 5 it would permanently shutter the
refinery after failing to find a buyer for the plant, which had
become unprofitable because of reduced demand during the
COVID-19 pandemic.
Shell will keep the refinery on the market after it
completes the shutdown by the Christmas holiday, the sources
said.
Shell and the United Steelworkers union (USW) reached
agreement last week on a severance package for 350 hourly
workers at Convent.
The USW and Shell agreed hourly employees will be paid three
weeks for every year of service with a minimum of 12 weeks and a
maximum of 78 weeks, sources familiar with agreement said.
That package is similar to what Shell salaried employees are
being offered, they said. The number of salaried and hourly
staff is about equal. Another 400 contractors work at the
Convent refinery.
(Reporting by Erwin Seba, editing by Louise Heavens and
Bernadette Baum)