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A fisherman fills  his boat last summer at a Valero station in California. Valero    is closing a refinery in Delaware  that  lost about $1 million every day this year.
A fisherman fills his boat last summer at a Valero station in California. Valero is closing a refinery in Delaware that lost about $1 million every day this year.
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WILMINGTON, Del. — Refineries from New Mexico to New Jersey are under severe economic pressure because of falling demand for fuel, with a number of facilities shutting down in recent months.

Valero Energy Corp., which shuttered a major refinery over the summer, said Friday that it would permanently close its Delaware City oil refinery and lay off 550 workers.

It is the largest refinery in the U.S. to close this year.

Refineries in the Northeast are particularly vulnerable because many are older, operate less efficiently and must compete with gasoline imported from Europe.

The Delaware City refinery, where workers were notified of the closing Friday, lost about $1 million every day this year, Valero spokesman Bill Day said.

Demand for fuel has been falling for some time, and the recession has made things worse, squeezing profit margins for refiners everywhere.

Refiners are pulling capacity off line and are now operating at levels more consistent with the aftermath of a hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico.

El Paso-based Western Refining Inc. announced this month that it would close its Bloomfield, N.M., facility, putting 100 people out of work.

Valero, based in San Antonio, said in September that it would idle two units in Delaware City, cutting about 150 jobs. Last month, the company said it would cut another 100 jobs at its Paulsboro, N.J., refinery by the end of the year.

The Paulsboro announcement came just days after Sunoco Inc. said it would indefinitely idle its Eagle Point facility, which employs about 400 workers in New Jersey.

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