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The company operates seven complex oil refineries with a total crude oil processing capacity of 678,000 barrels per stream day. It has facilities in Cheyenne, Wyoming (52,000 barrels per day), El Dorado, Kansas (coking refinery - 135,000 bbl/d), Artesia, New Mexico (100,000 bbl/d), Tulsa, Oklahoma (125,000 bbl/d), Woods Cross, Utah (45,000 bbl ...
It is operated by HF Sinclair and is one of the largest employers in Skagit County. [3] The refinery has a capacity of 145,000 barrels a day, [4] making it the 52nd largest in the United States, in 2015, with facilities that include a delayed coker, fluid catalytic cracker, polymerization unit and alkylation units. HF Sinclair’s refinery ...
The purchase of Prairie also gave Sinclair a 65% interest in Producers and Refiners Corporation (or Parco), which Sinclair subsequently acquired when Parco entered receivership in 1934. Lastly, in 1936, Sinclair purchased the East Coast marketing subsidiary of Richfield Oil Company, which had operated in receivership for several years.
HF Sinclair Corporation (NYSE:DINO) reported a third-quarter revenue decline of 19% year over year to $7.207 billion, beating the consensus of $6.833 billion. Adjusted EBITDA fell 74% YoY to $316 ...
Parco was built as a company town to house workers at the Producers and Refiners Oil Company (PARCO) refinery for oil man Frank Kistler. The town was renamed Sinclair in 1942 when the town and refinery were managed by the Sinclair Refining Company. [2] The Parco Historic District was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on May 6 ...
The town was originally called Parco, after the Producers & Refiners Corporation (or PARCO) which founded the refinery and the company town. [6] It was renamed Sinclair after PARCO was acquired during the Great Depression by Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corporation. The original refinery, located just east of town, remains in use to this day ...
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