Screw tightens on European refining
Petroplus collapsed into administration in January, dashing hopes for the low-cost business model favoured by the independents and underlining the troubles in Europe's refining sector
Switzerland-based oil refiner Petroplus sought administration in January, after lenders cut off its credit, stopping crude purchases, and then blocked products from leaving its Coryton, UK, refinery. A few days earlier, Petroplus had said it would sell its Petit Couronne refinery in France and was considering the sale of its Antwerp, Belgium, and Cressier, Switzerland, facilities - it also owns the Ingolstadt refinery, in Germany. The collapse - attributed by the company to the "difficult European credit and refining markets" - could mark the end for the low-cost business model adopted by Petroplus. Europe's largest independent refiner was set up in 1993 to operate in storage and trading. It
Also in this section
19 January 2026
Newfound optimism is emerging that a dormant exploration frontier could become a strategic energy play and—whisper it quietly—Europe’s next offshore opportunity
16 January 2026
The country’s global energy importance and domestic political fate are interlocked, highlighting its outsized oil and gas powers, and the heightened fallout risk
16 January 2026
The global maritime oil transport sector enters 2026 facing a rare convergence of crude oversupply, record newbuild deliveries and the potential easing of several geopolitical disruptions that have shaped trade flows since 2022
15 January 2026
Rebuilding industry, energy dominance and lower energy costs are key goals that remain at odds in 2026






