Grangemouth oil refinery owner turns down further bid to buy out industrial site

Hundreds of Grangemouth refinery workers are set to lose their jobs next summer
-Credit: (Image: Ben Montgomery/Getty Images)


The Grangemouth oil refinery owner has turned down another bid to buy out the industrial site ahead of its proposed closure next year, according to reports.

It's understood a consortium - including a US-based energy investor - has approached Petroineos and the Scottish Government. As reported by the BBC, the proposed takeover was deemed "not credible" without the necessary capital to invest while sustaining continued losses.

More than 400 jobs are expected to go at the site and Petroineos has plans to turn it into an fuel import terminal, with possible investment in a biofuels refinery or hydrogen plant. This was the consortium's second approach after another potential bidder was also turned away on the same grounds.

READ MORE: US campaign group says Scots prosecutors failed to investigate Trump's golf course financing

READ MORE: Scots SUV drivers wake to find vehicles vandalised by eco activists as police launch probe

The Times newspaper reported in September that Canadian businessman Garth Reid was engaged in talks with Petroineos with the report saying there had been "concerns" about the viability of that approach.

A Petroineos spokesman said: "Since the Petroineos joint venture was formed 13 years ago, our shareholders have invested nearly £1bn in the refinery, only to absorb losses of £600m. Last week, the refinery lost £385,000 on average each day and we expect to lose more than £150m in total during the course of this year. We have not received any credible or viable bids for the refinery."

Meanwhile trade union Unite general secretary Sharon Graham said she is “dismayed” by comments from the Scottish Secretary which appeared to “give up” on keeping the refinery open.

Last week, officials from the company told a Holyrood committee it is simply too late to secure a smooth transition of the site from fossil fuels to renewables, as workers and politicians have suggested. The Scottish and UK Governments have launched Project Willow, which aims to chart a future for the site in low-carbon fuels.

Unite says Grangemouth could be converted “relatively easily” to produce SAF – made from feedstocks such as cooking oil – saying this could happen in between one to three years without job losses. They pointed to examples of other refineries around the world such as P66’s in Rodeo, California, which switched from crude oil to renewable feedstocks at a cost of one billion US dollars.

Unite are sceptical of Peroineos’ claims about the lack of financial viability at Grangemouth, saying there will soon be burgeoning demand for SAF.

In a letter to Energy Secretary Ed Miliband, Ms Graham said: “I do not need to remind you that this is the only refinery in Scotland and it is critical to our national security. A Labour Government not putting together a serious plan for the future of the site and the thousands of jobs which depend on it, would be a huge dereliction of duty.

“I was extremely concerned to hear the evidence of Iain Hardie and Colin Pritchard from Petroineos to the select committee on Wednesday. In particular, they claimed that no Government discussions around an intervention had happened yet. I was also dismayed at the comments of (Scottish Secretary) Ian Murray which seemed to give up on Grangemouth, which is totally unacceptable.”

Unite’s survival plan for the site involves the UK and Scottish governments taking a stake in the refinery to prevent its closure, though so far ministers in neither London or Edinburgh have suggested they would do this.

Last week, Mr Murray told STV “there is no way round” the fact the refinery is closing in May. Iain Hardie, head of legal and external affairs for Petroineos, has told MSPs the site lost on average £385,000 per day last week and expects a £150 million loss this year.

Don't miss the latest news from around Scotland and beyond - Sign up to our daily newsletter here.