Cosmo Oil Company, Limited (コスモ石油株式会社, Kosumo Sekiyu kabushiki gaisha) is a Japanese
petrochemical company. It is Japan's third-biggest refiner by sales after
JX Holdings and
Idemitsu Kosan.[2]
History
Cosmo traces its corporate roots to Maruzen Petroleum (丸善石油株式会社), a company established in 1931, although the oil business operated by Maruzen was originally established by Zenzo Matsumura in
Kobe in 1907.
Cosmo Oil Company was formed on April 1, 1986, through the merger of Maruzen Petroleum and Daikyo Petroleum, a group of oil businesses based in
Niigata Prefecture, which merged in 1939.
A major fire occurred at the Cosmo refinery in Ichihara, as a result of the
2011 Tōhoku earthquake.[3][4][5] It was extinguished after ten days, injuring six people and destroying storage tanks[6] The ultimate cause was traced to the collapse of supports for
LPG Tank 364, which had been filled with water and undergoing hydrostatic testing at the time the earthquake struck. The collapse fractured LPG pipes, releasing gas that then ignited, in turn igniting LPG in several adjacent tanks.[7]
In February 2015, the company said it will reorganize itself under a holding company to boost profitability.[2] Also in 2015, in March, Cosmo Oil formed an LPG joint-venture, by merging its LPG business with three other company's LPG units. The new company, named Gyxis Corporation, started effective operations on April 1, 2015.[8] Along Cosmo, the other three shareholding companies are
Showa Shell Sekiyu, TonenGeneral Sekiyu, and
Sumitomo Corporation, all with 25% of the ownership.[9]
Refineries
Cosmo operates three refineries, all of which are located in Japan:[10]
Ichihara, Chiba (former Maruzen refinery): 220,000 barrels per day (35,000 m3/d)
Yokkaichi, Mie (former Daikyo refinery): 175,000 barrels per day (27,800 m3/d)
Sakai, Osaka (former Maruzen refinery): 100,000 barrels per day (16,000 m3/d)
In August 2012, the company announced that it will close its
Sakaide plant in southwest Japan.[11] The refinery, which was closed and turned into an oil terminal in July 2013,[10] was a former Asia Oil refinery with a capacity of 120,000 barrels per day (19,000 m3/d).
Gallery
Explosion and fire at Cosmo refinery in Ichihara, Chiba, following the
2011 Tōhoku earthquake