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Cenovus Energy Inc. (pronounced se-nō-vus) is a Canadian integrated oil and natural gas company headquartered in Calgary, Alberta. Its offices are located at Brookfield Place , having completed a move from the neighbouring Bow in 2019.
The refinery is currently owned by Phillips 66 and Cenovus Energy and operated by the joint-venture company WRB Refining, LLC (WRB). WRB was formed on 1 July 2007, with Encana taking a 49% interest in Wood River and also Phillips 66's Borger refinery. Encana subsequently spun off oil sands producer Cenovus and ConocoPhillips spun off Phillips 66.
[6] [7] By the end of 2012, Encana's staff had increased to 4,169 employees. [8] Encana and Cenovus' headquarters, The Bow in Calgary, was completed in 2013, becoming the tallest building in Canada outside of Toronto. [9] The project, owned by H&R REIT, was announced as Encana's headquarters in 2006, prior to the Cenovus split. [10]
Learn to edit; Community portal; ... Cenovus Energy Inc. 55,665,000,448 Energy: TSX 7 TD: ... net profit, number of employees worldwide and industry sector of each ...
Cenovus will gain an additional 80,000 bbl/d of downstream throughput capacity from the transaction, including 45,000 bbl/d of heavy oil refining capacity. In total, the transaction will bring ...
The Minnedosa Ethanol Plant is an ethanol plant located in Minnedosa, Manitoba.Owned by Cenovus Energy, as part of its 2021 acquisition of Husky Energy, [1] [2] the plant annually produces 130 million liters (34 million U.S. gallons) of ethanol and 126,000 tonnes of dried distillers grain with solubles.
Pathways Alliance's major project is a potential $16.5 billion carbon capture and storage network to be constructed in northern Alberta. [4] As of May 2024, the proposed CCS network aims to capture CO2 emissions from over 20 oilsands facilities in northern Alberta and transport them via a 400-kilometer pipeline to an underground storage hub near Cold Lake.
In 2009, EnCana's oil business was spun-off as Cenovus Energy. [13] In November 2011, a potential buyer backed out of a $45 million deal to buy the company's gas field in Pavillion, Wyoming. [14] In December 2011, the company sold the majority of its natural gas producing assets in the Barnett Shale. [15]