Feyzin Refinery
The Feyzin Refinery (Raffinerie de Feyzin) is an oil refinery in south-east France, one of seven oil refineries in France.
Location of Feyzin Refinery | |
Country | France |
---|---|
Coordinates | 45.674°N 4.844°E |
Refinery details | |
Operator | Elf (until 2003) |
Owner(s) | Total S.A. |
Commissioned | 15 October 1964 |
No. of employees | 500 |
History
Until 1964 most of the petrol in France was refined by British or American companies. A law was passed on 28 February 1963 declaring that at least 20% of the petrol refined in France had to have French involvement, by imposing import quotas.
The state-owned l'Union générale des pétroles (UGP) was formed on 19 June 1960.
By 1965 France was refining around 70m tonnes of oil per year.[1]
Elf was formed on 27 April 1967. Elf merged with ERAP in 1976, then merged with Total in 2003.
Elf opened the Grandpuits refinery in 1967. The site has mainly been owned by Elf Aquitaine (Essence et Lubrifiants de France).
In 1973, a subsidiary of Elf became Sanofi, currently the world's fifth-largest pharmaceutical company.
Structure
It is on the South European Pipeline, built in 1962 by the Société du pipeline sud-européen (founded in 1958), with an extension first proposed in April 1970. [5]
See also
References
- Minerals Yearbook
- Le Monde
- INA
- Times Wednesday 5 January 1966, page 8
- Times Friday 10 April 1970, page 24