º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Business

Energy trading giant Petroineos makes losses for first time since 2020

Energy trading giant Petroineos, which is majority-owned by China National Petroleum Corporation, has reported a $250m pre-tax loss for 2024

Fuel tankers at the Petroineos Grangemouth Refinery(Image: PA)

Petroineos, the energy trading company backed by Sir Jim Ratcliffe, has reported a loss of $250m (£187.5m) in 2024, marking its first return to the red since 2020.

The Jersey-based firm posted the pre-tax loss after achieving a profit of $30m in 2023, with the previous financial year's results only disclosed in May, as reported by .

Petroineos' 2024 accounts, recently lodged with Companies House, also show revenue declining from $38.8m to $28.3m.

The results follow the company's announcement regarding the closure of its Grangemouth refinery, Scotland's sole oil facility of its kind, after a century of operations.

In its latest financial statement, the business attributed its losses to "depressed refining margins, refinery availability and a challenging year for asset trading and entrepreneurial trading coupled with one-off provisions related to Grangemouth refinery transition."

The last occasion Petroineos recorded a pre-tax loss was in 2020, when it reported $383m in the red.

The China National Petroleum Corporation, owned by the Chinese government, holds a majority stake in Petroineos, whilst Sir Jim Ratcliffe's Ineos controls the remaining shares.

Earlier this year, Petroineos made the decision to halt refining operations at Grangemouth, Scotland's only oil refinery, following a century of production.