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In Canada, the Esso brand is used on stations supplied by Imperial Oil, which is 69.8% owned by ExxonMobil. The stations are owned by third-party retailers such as: Couche-Tard (mostly Ontario and Quebec, with stores primarily operating under the Circle K, Couche-Tard and Mac's brands), 7-Eleven (mostly Alberta and British Columbia), Parkland Fuel,
Daily Stop – based in Hong Kong, merged into 7-Eleven in 2004; Hess – based in New York City; sold its gas station/convenience store network to Marathon Petroleum in 2014; Jacksons Stores – became Sainsbury's at Jacksons in 2004; replaced with the Sainsbury's Local brand in 2008; Local Plus – based in the UK, bought by the Co-operative ...
7-Eleven brand gasoline; Shell Canada – Canadian unit of Shell with 1800 stations across Canada; Ultramar – 983 service stations, 87 truck stop facilities across Canada; Wilson Fuel – mainly in Atlantic Canada with 9 as Wilson Gas Stops and 23 as Esso
7-Eleven. Speedway; Sheetz — Pennsylvania, Maryland, Ohio, West Virginia, Virginia, North Carolina; Shell. Motiva Enterprises — a joint venture with Saudi Aramco, sold under Shell brand; Shell — international Shell V-Power — enhanced high specification fuel; Shell Canada; Shell — United States, BeNeLux; Shell Australia — Australia
7-Eleven, Inc. [2] is an American ... or Esso. In November 2005, 7-Eleven started offering the Speak Out Wireless cellphone service in Canada. 7-Eleven locations also ...
In a filing with the Tokyo Stock Exchange, the owner of 7-Eleven revealed that Couche-Tard had offered to acquire all outstanding shares of Seven & i for $14.86 per share. According to LSEG data ...
7-Eleven, originally a U.S. brand, first came to Japan in 1974, after Ito-Yokado opened the first outlet in Tokyo. The Japanese retail company bought a 70% stake in 7-Eleven in 1991.
In 2016, Imperial Oil began to divest its retail locations in Canada; various Esso locations in Ontario and Quebec were sold to Couche-Tard (being rebranded as Circle K and Couche-Tard), [6] and Seven & I Holdings acquired 148 locations in Alberta and British Columbia for $2.8 billion (with the stores either being converted to 7-Eleven, or ...