New Terminal to Provide US Port of Albany Crude Oil Storage

October 11, 2012

Buckeye Partners, sign a multi-year agreement with an Irving Oil subsidiary for multi-million barrel storage facility in Port of Albany on the Hudson River.

The approximately 1.8-million barrel storage facility located within the Port of Albany along the Hudson River is expected to begin handling crude oil on November 1, 2012. Buckeye plans to make modifications to the Albany terminal that, once completed, will allow the terminal to handle both crude oil and ethanol unit-trains with a total capacity in excess of 135,000 barrels per day.

"Rail transport has become a critical component of the logistics chain as domestic crude oil production has increased significantly," said Clark C. Smith, Buckeye's President and Chief Executive Officer. "The addition of crude oil services at our Albany terminal is part of our strategy to increase and improve the utilization of our existing assets. We are excited to continue to develop these kinds of opportunities with a strategic partner such as Irving Oil."

Buckeye Partners, L.P. is a publicly traded master limited partnership that owns and operates one of the largest independent liquid petroleum products pipeline systems in the United States in terms of volumes delivered, with over 6,000 miles of pipeline.  

Buckeye's flagship marine terminal in The Bahamas, BORCO, is one of the largest crude oil and petroleum products storage facilities in the world,

 

Logistics News

OpED: A Canadian Toll on U.S. Commerce

OpED: A Canadian Toll on U.S. Commerce

Rio Brasil Terminal Receives Two New Quay Cranes

Rio Brasil Terminal Receives Two New Quay Cranes

By the Numbers: Maritime Safety in 2026 — Fewer Losses, Bigger Risks

By the Numbers: Maritime Safety in 2026 — Fewer Losses, Bigger Risks

Markets: When Will Container Shipping Return to "Normal"

Markets: When Will Container Shipping Return to "Normal"

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

The US FCC tightens rules on submarine cable communication
There are some flights to the Middle East that have resumed but there is still disruption.
Italy's State Railways chief will resign after a rift with the government