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The Cenovus Lloydminster Refinery is an asphalt refinery located in the city of Lloydminster, Alberta, Canada owned by Husky Energy.The refinery provides oil products, primarily 30 different grades of asphalt (2120 m³/day ), as well as light distillate, kerosene distillate, atmospheric gas oil, light vacuum gas oil (VGO), and heavy vacuum gas oil.
Cenovus owns the Lima Refinery in Lima, Ohio, the Superior Refinery in Superior, Wisconsin and the Lloydminster refinery and upgrader in Lloydminster, Alberta. [18] [19] Cenovus has 50 percent ownership in two refineries in the United States: the Wood River Refinery and Borger, Texas refinery. Phillips 66 is the co-owner and operator. [20]
source for market cap, [4] source for profit. Data rounded to nearest million. . By market cap, Crescent Point Energy is the largest Canadian oil company never to make the global 500 list, according to Forbes ; Encana, Talisman Energy last made the Fortune 500 list in June 2011; Cenovus Energy dropped out December 2013.; CNRL 2013 annual production was estimated to be 671,162 bbl (106,706.2 m ...
Alex Pourbaix, Cenovus president and CEO, said the transaction solidifies Cenovus’ refining footprint in the U.S. Midwest and increases the company’s ability to capture margin throughout the ...
(Reuters) -Cenovus Energy and its partners said on Tuesday they will restart the West White Rose oilfield project off the coast of Atlantic Canada in 2023, more than two years after pausing it as ...
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.
Husky Oil headquarters in Calgary. Husky Energy Inc. was a Canadian company engaged in hydrocarbon exploration, headquartered in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.It operated in Western and Atlantic Canada, the United States and the Asia Pacific region, with upstream and downstream business segments.
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.