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Refinery Units Offline: Jet Fuel Market Shaken
19 Mar
Summary
- Two processing units at Monroe Energy's Trainer refinery went offline.
- The refinery has restarted its fluid catalytic cracker and is restarting its alkylation unit.
- This outage could worsen the tight jet fuel market due to Middle East disruptions.

At least two critical processing units at Monroe Energy's Trainer, Pennsylvania refinery experienced an outage on Wednesday before operations were restored. The 190,000-barrel-per-day facility is now in the process of resuming normal operations.
The refinery has successfully restarted its 68,000-barrel-per-day fluid catalytic cracker. Additionally, the 12,000-barrel-per-day alkylation unit is reportedly coming back online. A spokesperson for Monroe Energy declined to comment on the operational status of the refinery.
This incident occurs as U.S. jet fuel prices have sharply increased since the start of the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran. Attacks are disrupting crude and feedstock exports from the Middle East, contributing to market volatility. Any operational disruptions at refineries like Trainer can exacerbate an already tight fuel market.
The Trainer refinery, owned by Delta Air Lines' subsidiary Monroe Energy, is a significant producer of jet fuel, gasoline, and diesel. Its output is crucial for the transportation sector. The recent events highlight the sensitivity of fuel markets to supply chain disruptions.




