Lockport to Vote on Crude-oil Depot Proposal
01.30.2012 - NEWS

Janaury 30, 2012 [The Herald-News] - The city council is set to vote next week on concept plans for a crude-oil depot on the former Texaco property.


The council will address the issue at a public meeting at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the third-floor boardroom of the Central Square building, 222 E. Ninth St. 

Cogent Energy Solutions has submitted plans for a depot on 15 acres now owned by Chevron. Crude oil would be brought in by rail and then piped to new tanks similar to the existing tanks owned by Shell Pipeline Co.

Six new crude tanks are planned for the property

Crude oil would arrive by rail, on the Canadian National and BNSF railways, and go out by pipeline, or would be moved out by barge.

A rail spur is proposed for the property

An additional five tracks would be installed for the stacking or storage of cars. Anywhere from 29 to 34 cars would be stacked on each track. There also is potential to add another two storage tracks storing up to 60 cars each.

The plan also proposes seven bridge-culverts for the new track adjacent to the existing Canadian National lines and to cross over the various creeks on the property, said Kimberly Jones, community development director, in a city staff report.
Rail transport

Randy Balhorn, a representative for Cogent, presented the concept plan at last week’s city council meeting.

“Cogent was formed in 2008 to participate in the opportunities to transport crude oil by rail,” Balhorn said. “Today we lease about 400 rail cars that are in service, moving crude oil from Canada and North Dakota to various points in the United States. And we also develop projects like the terminal in Lockport.”

“The terminal will consist of six new crude-oil tanks and connections to Shell’s facility,” he said. “Products and activities are similar to the existing operations in the area. It will handle crude oil and condensates.”

Condensate is like crude oil, but is produced in making natural gas, Balhorn said.
Balhorn also addressed the issue of truck traffic: “Other than during the time of construction, there won’t be any trucks moving in and out. Maybe once in a while — maintenance or something like that — there will be a truck. It would be impossible to know how frequent they would be. It would be very small. When you look at the diagram, you will see there are no facilities for loading trucks or receiving trucks. So we don’t have trucks.”

South Australia to Host HAMR Energy’s First-of-its Kind Methanol-to-Jet Fuel Facility
03.03.2026 - NEWS
March 03, 2026 [HAMR Energy]- Leading low carbon liquid fuels (LCLF) company HAMR Energy has toda... Read More
DOE Approves Export Expansion at Corpus Christi LNG
03.03.2026 - NEWS
March 03, 2026 [Hydrocarbon Engineering]- US Secretary of Energy, Chris Wright, has signed an exp... Read More
SK Innovation Explores Sale of Controlling Stake in Korea Pipeline Corp.
03.03.2026 - NEWS
March 03, 2026 [Pipeline Technology Journal]- SK Innovation is reportedly seeking to divest its c... Read More
China’s Renewable Boom Masks a Quiet Coal-to-Liquids Expansion
03.03.2026 - NEWS
March 03, 2026 [Oil Price]- China’s power sector is undergoing a visible transformation. Electr... Read More