And there is a
possibility that the increased refinery capacity could help lower
the cost of gasoline and other oil products, Mick Heim, project
manager for Motiva Enterprises LLC, the refinery’s parent company,
told a group gathered at Brewer City Hall on Thursday.
"This is huge," he
said. "When we’re finished with this facility, we’re going to have
to import less" finished petroleum product.
"We’re going to be
the largest refinery in the United States and the fifth or sixth
largest in the world," Heim said. "You’re a part of something really
big."
The partnership
that owns the Motiva Port Arthur Refinery announced Sunday that the
Texas plant is expanding to double its capacity.
Cianbro Corp., a
Pittsfield construction company, is in the process of changing the
defunct Eastern Fine Paper Co. mill site on South Main Street, which
closed in 2004, into a modular manufacturing facility that is
scheduled to begin work in April.
It was announced
this week that Cianbro won a huge 15-month contract to build 54
building modules, or prefabricated, self-standing building
skeletons, each weighing in excess of 500 tons, for the estimated $7
billion expansion project in Texas.
"This is a great
day for our company, and certainly a great day for Brewer and for
the state of Maine," Peter G. Vigue, CEO and president of Cianbro
Corp., told the gathering.
The undertaking to
change the century-old industrial site into a manufacturing facility
has taken a collaborative effort among city officials, Gov. John
Baldacci, other state officials, and numerous state and federal
agencies, he said, praising all for their hard work.
"As sad as it is to
see the old buildings come down, we believe at the end of the day …
that transformation will be a significant improvement to that area,"
he said.
The Eastern
Manufacturing Facility is one of four that will produce building
modules for the Texas refinery project.
After Hurricane
Katrina hit the Gulf Coast in 2005, Motiva officials began looking
at building modules in other areas of the country, and Maine was not
on top of the list, Heim said.
That was the case
until officials with Bechtel Corp. and Jacobs Engineering Group, the
joint venture hired to manage the expansion, met with Vigue.
The story of the
meeting "kind of goes around the elbow and it’s kind of
interesting," Ralph Hanberry, modular fabrication team manager for
Bechtel and Jacobs, said in a thick South Carolina accent at the
Brewer gathering. Cianbro once helped his company with another
project, he said.
Hanberry said there
are two things that kept Cianbro at the top of the list of 168
companies competing for the job.
"The people, the
skills" are the major reasons, he said, "and the most important one
is the passion for work and the passion for success."
After a visit to
Maine in January and numerous meetings with Vigue and other Cianbro
leaders, he said, "I expect this facility here to deliver us the
best product we’re going to get on this project."
Even after Cianbro
kept topping the list of possible companies, it still was tough
convincing higher-ups, Heim said. He commonly was asked, "We’re
going to ship stuff from where down to Texas?"
The other module
manufacturing facilities are in Corpus Christi, Texas, Charleston,
N.C., and Tampico, Mexico.
"There are a number
of people in a number of comminutes helping us," Heim said. "We’re
very happy Brewer is one of them."
For Brewer
officials, who watched their paper mill — once the city’s largest
employer — make cutbacks after cutbacks and then close altogether,
the returning well-paying jobs are the news.
"We’re going to
bring people back to work and that’s what matters," Deputy Mayor
Gail Kelly said.
She then turned to
Hanberry and Heim and said: "I want to thank you from the bottom of
my heart for giving us this opportunity."
Hanberry, Heim and
Vigue were given keys to the city at the end of the gathering.
Hanberry and Heim returned the gesture by giving glass vases to the
city, Jack Cashman, senior economic adviser to Baldacci, and Vigue.
A copyright
story from the Bangor Daily News, Friday, October 19, 2007.