refinery Archives - Ireland's Forecourt & Convenience Retailer https://forecourtretailer.com/tag/refinery/ Ireland's Only Forecourt & Convenience Retailer Tue, 08 Nov 2022 15:46:57 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 https://forecourtretailer.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/cropped-IFCR-Site-Icon-32x32.png refinery Archives - Ireland's Forecourt & Convenience Retailer https://forecourtretailer.com/tag/refinery/ 32 32 94949456 Petrol shortage fears as refinery staff back strike action https://forecourtretailer.com/petrol-shortage-fears-as-refinery-staff-back-strike-action/ Tue, 08 Nov 2022 15:46:57 +0000 https://forecourtretailer.com/?p=21590 Fears are growing of a petrol shortage later this month after staff at the UK’s biggest oil refinery voted for strike action over pay. A 12-day strike

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Fears are growing of a petrol shortage later this month after staff at the UK’s biggest oil refinery voted for strike action over pay.

A 12-day strike is expected to begin on November 21 after members of the General, Municipal and Boilermakers Union (GMB) at Exxonmobil’s Fawley Oil Refinery in Southampton voted to take industrial action.

Fawley is the UK’s largest refinery, supplying a sixth of petrol stations and all airports.

It is feared that the maintenance workers’ stoppage, which is expected to also affect deliveries, will hit the fuel pumps of garages across the south of England.

A spokesman for the GMB said: “We have issued a strike notice to various employers whose workers are based at the site in Southampton.

“The dispute revolves around an Incentive Bonus Arrangement (IBA) which has been previously paid to workers but has been refused.”

Bryan Hulley, GMB Regional Organiser, said there is a ‘”real possibility” that supplies of petrol could be affected by the strike action between November 21 and December 2.

He added: “Our members work hard in arduous and hazardous conditions, outside in all weathers, to repair and maintain process units.

“Without their efforts, breakdowns cannot be repaired and maintenance work to prevent breakdowns will not be carried out, so there is a real possibility that supplies of petroleum products could be affected.

“During the pandemic, our members were asked to work a shift system and waived a shift allowance due to the difficult financial situation.

“Given the current cost of living crisis, it is only fair that the employers put their hands in their pockets and reinstate this allowance, to which our members should be entitled.

“Industrial action is the last resort and it is a shame it has come to this but the employers know where we are if they would like to talk to us.”

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Entrepreneur Ennis aims to fuel HGV fleets for less with cleantech venture https://forecourtretailer.com/entrepreneur-ennis-aims-to-fuel-hgv-fleets-for-less-with-cleantech-venture/ Mon, 26 Sep 2022 09:20:06 +0000 https://forecourtretailer.com/?p=21390 Having previously disrupted the energy sector with Vayu, Irish entrepreneur Tony Ennis is hoping to do it again with a new cleantech venture aiming to

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Having previously disrupted the energy sector with Vayu, Irish entrepreneur Tony Ennis is hoping to do it again with a new cleantech venture aiming to fuel HGV fleets at a significantly lower price than traditional fossil fuels.

The businessman plans to build a series of bio-methane refineries in Britain and Ireland through a company he chairs called Manby BGE as part of a projected €1 million spend.

The refineries will break down organic matter such as animal waste through a process called anaerobic digestion, with all gas produced reserved specifically for use by the heavy goods transportation sector.

Ennis is also planning for 2050 Group, a second business he chairs, to establish a nationwide chain of refuelling stations rather than selling the bio-compressed natural gas (Bio-CNG) that Manby BGE produces through other distributors.

Ennis told the Business Post that Manby BGE is already going through the planning process for its first bio-gas refinery in Lincolnshire at a projected cost of €150 million.

The group intends to develop four more sites in Britain and two in Ireland, with Ennis claiming there is strong interest from backers in the project. Each refinery would be capable of producing up to 6000 cubic metres of gas every hour, more than enough to fuel 1,000 HGVs operating 24/7, 365 days a year.

Ennis previously founded Vayu in 2003, which was the first independent firm to get a gas supply licence in Ireland and won 30 per cent of the industrial and commercial market, before he sold his stake for €10 million in 2011.

He said Manby GBE’s plan is to build up to 12 sites in the next decade.

“We’ve lots of other investors who want in on this. There was already huge interest in the plan before the war in Ukraine but the impact of that on energy prices, combined with the need for businesses to do more on the ESG front, means that what we are proposing is proving to be very attractive,” he said.

“This is very much a means of ensuring security of supply while also accelerating the green agenda.”

Ennis believes there is a strong opportunity to get truck drivers using fuel that is cheaper that fossil fuels and less damaging to the environment.

“Forget about hydrogen. Bio-CNG is the only real commercially viable alternative to diesel for HGVs. One truck consumes more energy in a week than your average household does in a year. HGVs account for just 5 per cent of all vehicles on European road, but with responsibility for 25 per cent of all emissions,” he said.

The planned refineries will also process biodegradable waste to extract CO2, which will be sold to the drinks industry. The remaining bio-gas can then be used for the transport sector or injected into the gas network, with a third product, fertiliser, that can be returned to farmers for use on their lands.

Currently, there are four publicly available CNG/Bio-CNG stations in Ireland and a small number of private ones. Research undertaken by 2050 Group estimates that close to 50 stations would be able to supply 80 per cent of the fuel needs for HGVs. The company is currently looking at developing up to 20 stations itself, in order to speed up the availability of bio-CNG gas for transportation.

2050 Group already has a Bio-CNG fuelled delivery truck contracted to Spar owner BWG Foods. Ennis said HGVs can run at a cost of €0.43 per km, versus diesel with a 10 per cent biofuel blend, which costs €0.76 per km.

“Ireland per capita has the most amount of agricultural waste that can be turned into fuel in Europe, but we’ve probably done least to take advantage of this. In other countries, there have been moves towards using Bio-CNG for fuelling trucks, but we’ve not followed. We have a huge opportunity, and I’m determined to lead the way in addressing this,” Ennis said.

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Ineos Grangemouth contractors stage unofficial walkout over pay https://forecourtretailer.com/ineos-grangemouth-contractors-stage-unofficial-walkout-over-pay/ Wed, 10 Aug 2022 14:25:19 +0000 https://forecourtretailer.com/?p=21027 Scores of contractors at the Ineos Grangemouth petrochemical plant have staged an unofficial walkout in a protest over pay. The protesters are calling on the

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Scores of contractors at the Ineos Grangemouth petrochemical plant have staged an unofficial walkout in a protest over pay.

The protesters are calling on the Engineering Construction Industry Association (ECIA) trade body to renegotiate a new pay deal in light of the cost of living crisis.

Workers blocked a road outside the refinery after walking out at 7am Ineos Grangemouth said its manufacturing and fuel distribution operations were unaffected.

A letter handed out at the protest said the action was in response to the ECIA’s “refusal to recognise the impact of the cost of living crisis on its workers.”

It said they had received a 2.5% pay rise this year and would receive the same next year.

The protesters are covered by the National Agreement for the Engineering Construction Industry (NAECI), which sets terms and conditions of employment for engineering construction workers.

The letter said that many employers had recognised rises in inflation and had negotiated pay rises and one-off agreements, but workers covered by the NAECI were “expected just to get on with it.”

Ineos Grangemouth said: “We can confirm that a number of contractors employed by third parties are taking unofficial action at the Ineos Grangemouth site as part of a nationwide protest event.

“Our manufacturing and fuel distribution operations are unaffected.

“The site has a very good working relationship with the contracting companies and their employees at Grangemouth, including those operating under the NAECI agreement.

“We are disappointed that the protesters have chosen to use the Ineos Grangemouth site as one of their backdrops for their unofficial action today.”

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