Montreal East Refinery (Shell Canada)

The  Montreal East Refinery (Raffinerie de Montréal-Est) was an oil refinery located in Montreal East and formerly Shell Canada's largest refinery. In October 2010, refinery operations permanently ceased and the facility was subsequently converted into a storage terminal.

History
The defunct refinery, the second owned by Shell in Canada, opened on 24 March 1933. It began with three units; the distillation unit, a topping unit, and cracking catalytic unit. In 1947 it was expanded with the building of the alkylation and catalytic cracking refining units, and the refining capacity of was increased. From 1947 to 1960, the isomerisation, catalytic reforming, chemicals plants were built and the refining capacity was further increased. During 2002 to 2008, desulphuration units were built and the refining capacity was upgraded to its highest level 161000 oilbbl/d.

On January 7, 2010 Shell Canada announced closing the refinery and converting it to a fuel terminal. On June 4, 2010, following the unsuccessful attempts to find a buyer to take over the plant, Shell Canada announced its plans to move forward to downgrade the refinery into a terminal. The conversion commenced in September 2010, with it permanently ceasing operations as a refinery in October 2010. Approximately 800 jobs were lost.

Description
The refinery consisted of two refining units with capacities of 103000 oilbbl/d and 58000 oilbbl/d. It had alkylation, hydro-cracking, reforming catalytic, cracking catalytic, thermal catalytic, isomerisation, and desulphiration units. Its processing capacities included:
 * 14610 oilbbl/d of visbreaking
 * 27900 oilbbl/d of fluid catalytic cracking
 * 20910 oilbbl/d of semi-regenerative catalytic reforming
 * 14100 oilbbl/d of hydrocracking for distillate upgrading
 * 49500 oilbbl/d of catalytic hydrotreating for cat reformer feeds
 * 27000 oilbbl/d of hydrotreating for kerosene/jet desulfurization
 * 2700 oilbbl/d of API Group I base oil
 * 1300 oilbbl/d of unfinished wax. The refinery had 154 oil tanks and more than 450 workers.

After its conversion to a storage terminal, the facility receives gasoline, diesel and aviation fuels for distribution.