ConocoPhillips

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ConocoPhillips Company
Type Public (NYSECOP)
Founded August 30, 2002 (merger)
1875 (Conoco)
1917 (Phillips)[2]
Headquarters Houston, Texas, USA
Key people James Mulva, CEO & Chairman
John Carrig, CFO
Industry Oil and Gasoline
Products Petrochemical
Revenue $188.52 Billion USD (2006)[1]
Net income $15.55 Billion USD (2006)[1]
Employees 38,000 (2006)
Website www.conocophillips.com

ConocoPhillips Company (NYSECOP) is an international energy corporation with its headquarters located in Houston, Texas. It was created through the merger of Conoco Inc. and the Phillips Petroleum Company on August 30, 2002. Headquarters are based in Houston, Texas in the United States, and offices are located worldwide. It is one of the six "supermajor" vertically integrated oil companies.

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ConocoPhillips employs approximately 38,700 people worldwide in more than 40 countries. As of 2006, their 12 U.S. refineries had a combined crude processing capacity of 2,208,000 barrels per day (BPD) making it the second-largest refiner in the United States. Worldwide, they have a combined crude processing capacity of 2,901,000 BPD making it the fifth-largest refiner in the world.

ConocoPhillips operates 19 refineries around the world.

Name Location Crude Processing Capacity (KBD)
Wood River Refinery Roxana, IL, USA 306
Wilhelmshaven Refinery Wilhelmshaven, Germany 260
Alliance Refinery Belle Chasse, LA, USA 247
Sweeny Refinery Old Ocean, TX, USA 247
Bayway Refinery Linden, NJ, USA 238
Lake Charles Refinery Westlake, LA, USA 239
Humber Refinery North Linconshire, UK 229
Ponca City Refinery Ponca City, OK, USA 187
Trainer Refinery Trainer, PA, USA 185
Borger Refinery Borger, TX, USA 146
Los Angeles Refinery Carson/Wilmington, CA, USA 139
San Francisco Refinery Arroyo Grande/Rodeo, CA, USA 120
Ferndale Refinery Ferndale, WA, USA 105
Whitegate Refinery Cork, Ireland 71
Billings Refinery Billings, MT, USA 58
Melaka Refinery Melaka, Malaysia 58
MIRO Refinery* Karlsruhe, Germany 56
Czech Refineries* Kralupy & Litvinov, Czech Republic 27

* Denotes joint ventures. Crude capacity reflects that proportion.

In the United States, the company operates Conoco, Phillips 66, and (Union) 76 (which was part of Unocal for many years, later a Tosco brand before that company was bought by Phillips) retail gas stations.

In Europe, it operates Jet filling stations in Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Hungary, Norway, Poland, Slovakia, Sweden, Thailand (now take over by PTT) and the United Kingdom.

ProJET was the brand operated in Malaysia, Turkpetrol in Turkey, and COOP in Switzerland.

  • In 2005, the corporation began rebranding their (Union) 76 gas stations, prompting a petition campaign by fans hoping to save the historic 76 orange ball signage[3]. On January 20, 2007, a Wall Street Journal article on the petition campaign included a statement from ConocoPhillips that it was changing course and would be saving several dozen orange and blue 76 Balls to give to museums, as well as fabricating about one hundred spherical 76-logo signs in the ConocoPhillips color scheme of red and blue, to be placed at select 76 stations.
  • On March of 2006, ConocoPhillips bought Burlington Resources.
  • On May 10, 2006, Richard Armitage, former deputy-secretary of the U.S. State Department, was elected to the board of directors of the ConocoPhillips oil company.

On April 11, 2007, ConocoPhillips became the first U.S. oil company to join the U.S. Climate Action Partnership, an alliance of big business and environmental groups that in January sent a letter to President George W. Bush stating that mandatory emissions caps are needed to reduce the flow of carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases into the atmosphere. ConocoPhillips has said it will spend $150 million this year on the research and development of new energy sources and technologies— a 50 percent increase in spending from 2006.[4]

A recent University of Massachusetts study has ranked ConocoPhillips third among U.S. corporate producers of air pollution. According to the researchers, ConocoPhillips facilities release more than eight million pounds of toxic chemicals annually into the air.[5] The company has also been implicated in some of the United States' worst toxic waste dumps; the Center for Public Integrity has announced that United States Environmental Protection Agency documents link ConocoPhillips to 52 Superfund sites.[6]

In 2003, ConocoPhillips was named as a defendant in a lawsuit brought by a Georgian environmental group called Green Alternative. The suit claimed that a number of foreign oil companies colluded with the Georgian government to induce authorities to approve a $3 billion pipeline without properly evaluating environmental impact.[7]

In 2007, a number of environmental groups including the Sierra Club and the Prairie Rivers Network announced their support for ConocoPhillips' plan to expand its Wood River oil refinery. A spokesperson for the group said that, despite ConocoPhillips' history of environmental policy violations, she was optimistic that the corporation would comply with pollution laws as it expanded the refinery.[8]

  1. ^ a b Conoco Phillips posts 13% drop in quarterly profit. Anchorage Daily News. Published 2007-01-25. Last Retrieved 2007-02-01.
  2. ^ ConocoPhillps. Company History. Retrieved on 2007-01-07.
  3. ^ Save the 76 Ball website
  4. ^ John Porretto. "ConocoPhillips joins climate group", Seattle Post-Intelligencer, April 11, 2007. 
  5. ^ Political Economy Research Institute
  6. ^ Center for Public Integrity
  7. ^ Houston Business Journal
  8. ^ St. Louis Post-Dispatch

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