The shale oil industry at Glen Davis was developed for production of
shale oil for
national defence purposes, although the basis of this project was the 1934 report of the
Newnes Investigation Committee, which looked at ways to decrease the number of unemployed miners in the region. Davis contributed £166,000 and Commonwealth Government £344,000 (together the capital of £500,000), and the
New South Wales Government provided £166,000 secured by debentures. Glen Davis was chosen as the site, in preference to the old works site at
Newnes, due to the high cost of rehabilitating the old
Wolgan Valley railway and because mining conditions were considered to be better at Glen Davis. More capital was required from shareholders in April 1940 and again in November 1940, and the Commonwealth Government provided another £225,000 in the form of a loan. It became apparent that the estimate of cost provided in the Newnes Investigation Committee's report was inadequate, as the total expenditure on the plant reached £1,300,000. The government would buy out the private shareholders in 1949. During
World War II, shale oil produced by the Glen Davis Shale Oil Works was considered to be a strategic resource. In 1941, of shale oil were produced. In 1942, a visiting party from the US
Board of Economic Warfare recommended that the plant be expanded using
Renco (or NTU) retorts, and an order was placed to supply these from the US but that order was later cancelled. A Renco retort, which had been successfully tested by Standard Oil of Australia at Newcastle using
Baemari oil shale, was transported to Glen Davis, in 1942, but not used there. During the calendar years 1943 to 1945 inclusive, the Glen Davis plant refined around 2,000,000 gallons of crude shale oil that had been produced from the mines and
NTU retorts of Lithgow Oil Proprietary Ltd, at
Marangaroo, near
Lithgow. Despite expert opinion and the apparent success of NTU retorts at Marangaroo, Glen Davis remained committed to its 'modified
Pumpherston' or 'Fell' retort design. That commitment to retort design was likely based on advice given to George Davis by
John Fell, who had run the Newnes oil extraction operations from 1914 to 1923, but the failure to even try the Renco retort, which had been relocated at great cost, remains one of the mysteries of the Glen Davis operation. After expansion of the Glen Davis plant in 1946—to a nominal capacity of of petrol per year—a shortage of mined shale constrained its output. In 1947, the refinery section of the plant was only operating 70-days during the first half of that year; not enough crude shale oil was produced by the retorts, which were only processing about 400
short tons of shale per calendar day. Productivity was poor and the works' losses were only limited by a petrol excise rebate on the oil that it produced. Securing sufficient skilled labour was a problem, due to the isolated location of
Glen Davis. The workforce was around 600. In December 1950, it was decided to close the operation. In 1951, the last full year before closure, it produced only and in the year ending December 1950 it had lost £507,637—consisting of a trading loss of £206,078, depreciation of £124,903, and interest of £176,656—revenue from petrol sales was £263,156 but wages, salaries, stores and insurance costs were £501,951. Had the plant achieved even half of its design throughput in 1951, it would have been profitable but, by the end of 1950, the accumulated losses already totalled 84% of capital and advances. To the end, the continuing inability to mine sufficient shale to feed the retorts was the cause of the works' losses. Plans to change the method of mining from '
bord and pillar' to '
longwall' never eventuated. Government funding ceased in 1952, and Glen Davis was closed on 30 May. Although some syndicates had interest in the facility, no deal was concluded. The closure caused a 'stay down' strike by miners and other workers kept the retorts running without being paid. The 'stay down' strike ended after 26 days, without success, when the
Australian Council of Trade Unions decided not to support the strike. The works had been the site of contention between
communist-inspired and non-communist trade union leadership, particularly between the
Miner's Federation—covering the mine workers—and the
Australian Workers' Union—covering workers at the retorts and refinery. In 1948, the miners' union refused to allow Polish immigrants—eight of the men were experienced coal miners—to work in the shale mine but the same men were welcomed by the AWU. The miner's resistance to the Poles' working in the mine, seems to have been based on a perception of their political views rather than their ethnicity. Many saw the rigorous enforcement of the 'darg'—a work quota—by communist-led miners, as the reason for the low production rate of oil shale in the highly mechanised shale mine—with claims that miners were working actively for as little as four hours in an eight-hour shift—that in turn being the cause of the works' eventual fate. Others denied even the existence of a 'darg' and of communist-led unions at Glen Davis, blaming instead the state of the mining equipment and the management for the closure. Others blamed the scale of operations and the choice of retort design as the cause of its demise. The closure of the works loomed as a personal financial catastrophe for those who had built or bought houses on land in the township. The Commonwealth Government agreed to compensation that softened the blow, and the unions agreed to allow the industrial plant to be disassembled. Beginning in early 1953, much of the movable equipment and other salvageable items were put on sale at auction. The population soon drifted away—dwindling from around 2,000, at its peak, to only 195 by late 1954—and some buildings in the town were relocated, leaving
Glen Davis close to a
ghost town. The immovable parts of the plant became ruins. Although the works had been intended as a means of securing local petrol production, it had provided only a tiny portion of annual petrol consumption in Australia, which by 1952 was 638-million imperial gallons per year. As early as 1944, it had been pointed out that the entire oil shale reserves of New South Wales were equivalent to only three months of Australia's peace-time oil consumption. In the end, the Glen Davis operation had only a very minor economic significance and would not be missed. The site was used as a location for the 1980 Australian movie "
The Chain Reaction" and as the base location for the 2021
reality television show SAS Australia. == Deposits and resources ==