
Shell Pernis Refinery
Shell's Pernis refinery near Rotterdam, Europe's largest refinery at approximately 400,000 bpd, undergoing scheduled turnaround in May 2026.
Last refreshed: 18 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
With BP Rotterdam offline, can Shell Pernis alone stabilise ARA stocks?
Timeline for Shell Pernis Refinery
BP Rotterdam dark, ARA stocks slide
European Oil MarketsHow big is Shell Pernis refinery?
Why are ARA gasoil stocks falling in 2026?
What happened at Shell Pernis in 2008?
Background
Shell Pernis, situated at the port of Rotterdam in the Netherlands, is Europe's largest refinery by throughput with a nameplate crude distillation capacity of approximately 404,000 Barrels Per Day. The complex processes a wide range of crude grades — from North Sea light sweet to heavier Middle Eastern sour barrels — and produces the full spectrum of refined products for the northwest European market including gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, and heavy fuel oil. Pernis feeds ARA (Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp) product stocks that serve as the swing inventory for continental Europe.
In early May 2026, Pernis assumed heightened strategic importance as BP's adjacent Rotterdam refinery (400,000 bpd) took both crude units offline simultaneously for planned maintenance, removing roughly 800,000 bpd of combined Rotterdam refining capacity from the ARA supply system. ARA gasoil stocks fell to 13.56 million barrels in early May 2026, their lowest since July 2025, with jet and fuel oil also in deficit.
Pernis has suffered significant unplanned outages historically — a 2008 cracker fire caused a prolonged shutdown that tightened European propylene markets for months, setting the template for how a single Rotterdam complex shutdown cascades through regional product balances. The refinery's scale and Rotterdam's position as Europe's largest port make Pernis a benchmark facility: when Pernis runs light, ARA stocks fall and NWE product crack spreads widen, directly affecting ICE Gasoil futures pricing.