Sec. 2. Coordination of refinery outages
561 words·~3 min read·
/bill/113/s/1073/is/section-2A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.
Section 804 of the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 ( 42 U.S.C. 17283 ) is amended to read as follows: In this section: The term Administrator means the Administrator of the Energy Information Administration. The term planned refinery outage means a removal, scheduled before the date on which the removal occurs, of a refinery, or any unit of a refinery, from service for maintenance, repair, or modification. The term refined petroleum product means any gasoline, diesel fuel, fuel oil, lubricating oil, liquid petroleum gas, or other petroleum distillate that is produced through the refining or processing of crude oil or an oil derived from tar sands, shale, or coal.
The term refinery means a facility used in the production of a refined petroleum product through distillation, cracking, or any other process. The unplanned refinery outage means the removal of a refinery, or any unit of a refinery, from service that is not scheduled in advance. The owner or operator of a refinery shall submit to the Administrator information describing— the schedule of the refinery for any planned refinery outage, including— the dates for the planned refinery outage at least 1 year in advance of the date of the expected outage or the date the outage is scheduled; and the estimated inventories and production of refined petroleum products during the period described in subparagraph (A); and any unplanned refinery outages as soon as practicable The Administrator shall, on an ongoing basis— review information on planned refinery outages and unplanned refinery outages— reported by refineries under subsection (b); and that is available from commercial reporting services; analyze that information to determine whether the scheduling of a planned refinery outage or an unplanned refinery outage may nationally or regionally substantially affect the price or supply of any refined petroleum product by— decreasing the production of the refined petroleum product; and causing or contributing to a retail or wholesale supply shortage or disruption; and alert the Secretary of any refinery outage that the Administrator determines may nationally or regionally substantially affect the price or supply of a refined petroleum product.
On a determination by the Secretary that a refinery outage may affect the price or supply of a refined petroleum product, the Secretary shall make available to refinery operators information on planned refinery outages or unplanned refinery outages to prevent significant market disruptions. Nothing in this section— alters any existing legal obligation or responsibility of a refinery operator; creates any legal right of action; or authorizes the Secretary— to prohibit a refinery operator from conducting a planned refinery outage; or to require a refinery operator to continue to operate a refinery.
Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this subsection, the Secretary shall study and submit to Congress a report on the costs and benefits of creating a national strategic refined petroleum products reserve for refined petroleum products. The report required under paragraph
(1)shall include information on— the days of existing storage capabilities within the different petroleum administration defense districts based on normal usage of refined petroleum products; the feasibility of increasing storage capacity for refined petroleum products on a regional basis; and the impact additional storage capacity would have on the retail price of refined petroleum products for consumers in the event of a supply shortage or market disruption from a natural disaster or refinery outage. .
Connectionstraces to 1
Traces to 1 document
Citation graph
cites case law
Sec. 2
Coordination of refinery outages
Cites 1Cited by 0 across 0 sources