Publication

22 Nov 2010

A decade ago, 158 refineries operated in the United States and its territories and sporadic refinery outages led many policy makers to advocate new refinery construction. Fears that crude oil production was in decline also led to policies promoting alternative fuels and increased vehicle fuel efficiency. Since the summer 2008 peak in crude oil prices, however, the US demand for refined petroleum products has declined, and the outlook for the petroleum refining industry in the United States has changed.

Download English (PDF, 43 pages, 1.0 MB)
Author Anthony Andrews, Robert Pirog, Molly F Sherlock
Publisher Congressional Research Service (CRS)
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