Cape Times

1 500 JOBS FOR ENGEN’S ROUTINE MAINTENANC­E

- Sizwe Dlamini

JOB-SEEKERS in the KwaZulu-Natal area may heave a temporary sigh of relief ahead of the festive season as Engen Refinery’s planned routine maintenanc­e is set to create about 1 500 temporary positions for both skilled and unskilled workers. Engen Refinery, South Africa’s second-largest oil refinery, said in a statement yesterday that the planned maintenanc­e outage would start yesterday. The company said that this activity formed part of the refinery’s ongoing maintenanc­e programme, with 21 days planned for reformer regenerati­on activities and 63 days for maintenanc­e of the plant’s alkylation unit. The general manager of the Engen Refinery, Sykry Hassim, said the routine planned maintenanc­e was essential for the safe and reliable operation of the facility. “The planned outage will primarily focus on essential plant maintenanc­e and inspection activities in the alkylation unit as well as reformer catalyst regenerati­on activities. The safety of our employees and the neighbouri­ng community is at all times of the highest priority to Engen and we want to thank our neighbours in advance for their understand­ing during this period,” said Hassim. Hassim also assured motorists and the company’s commercial customers that the outage would not affect Engen’s ability to service their needs. Engen is a distributo­r and marketer of fuels, lubricants and oil-based products. The Engen Refinery produces about 17 percent of South Africa’s fuel.

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