Refinería De Santa Cruz De Tenerife
The refinery, located just outside Santa Cruz de Tenerife, was the first refinery built in Spain. When it opened in November 1930 it had a refining capacity of 250,000 tons. It was built in Tenerife due to the Oil Monopoly Law of 1927 (Spanish: Ley del Monopolio de Petróleos de 1927), which created the state-owned Campsa company and prohibited privately-owned oil industries in mainland Spain.
It supplied the Canary Islands with fuel (and hence electrical energy), as well as refueling ships at the port of Santa Cruz de Tenerife, and providing petroleum products to Africa and the Americas. It also provided petroleum products to mainland Spain until the Gibraltar-San Roque Refinery came online in the 1960s.
It was renovated in the 1980s, including the installation of a digital control room. By 2008 it was refining 4,500,000 tonnes per year, occupying 573,000 square metres (6,170,000 sq ft). In 2001 it was the first Canarian industry to follow the Eco-Management and Audit Scheme.
The refinery was shut down in 2015. In 2018 it was announced that the refinery would be dismantled, with 2/3 of the land used for public purposes and 1/3 used commercially.
References
- ^ "Artículo sobre el funcionamiento de la refinería". Archived from the original on 22 October 2008.
- ^ "Refinería Tenerife". CEPSA. Archived from the original on 23 December 2009.
- ^ Murillo, Pedro (26 June 2018). "La refinería de Santa Cruz de Tenerife anuncia su desmantelamiento". El País (in Spanish).