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Russia-Ukraine War 2026
13JUL

BP Rotterdam half-back, NWE floor holds

3 min read
10:28UTC

BP Rotterdam restarted one 200kbd crude unit on the morning of 04 June after a same-day trip, WoodMac reported, but the second unit has stayed dark since May, leaving the refinery at half its nameplate.

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Key takeaway

One BP Rotterdam unit is back, but the dark half keeps the NWE gasoil floor in place.

BP Rotterdam restarted one 200kbd crude unit on the morning of Thursday 04 June after an unplanned outage the day before, WoodMac reported. 1 The second 200kbd unit has stayed dark since its 01 May planned maintenance. BP Rotterdam is BP's 400kbd refinery feeding the Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp product hub, so its throughput moves NWE gasoil and gasoline availability directly. Effective capacity is now around 200kbd, half the 400kbd nameplate.

That is a material change from the both-units-dark, zero-throughput state through May , the outage that alongside the EU import collapse drove the gasoil crack to its late-May level . Partial recovery is marginally bearish for the crack against the full-outage position. With 200kbd still offline, the structural support under the crack stays intact.

The same-day trip and restart across 03-04 June reads as a technical wobble rather than a clean return, and the second unit has no confirmed restart date. Until that unit comes back, the NWE floor is a half-plant floor, not a recovery.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

BP operates a large oil refinery in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, which turns crude oil into diesel, petrol, jet fuel, and heating oil for the European market. In May, both of its two main processing units went offline , one for planned maintenance, one for an unplanned breakdown. That is 400,000 barrels per day of European refining capacity missing at exactly the time when Gulf oil imports to Europe were also falling because of Hormuz. On 4 June, BP restarted one of the two units , the one that had only just broken down the day before. That brings capacity back to about half its normal level. One unit is back online, adding roughly 80,000-90,000 barrels a day of gasoil output. The bad news is the other unit has been down since May with no confirmed restart date, so the refinery is still running at half-speed. Diesel prices in Europe remain elevated partly because of this.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

BP Rotterdam's both-units-dark state through May traced to two overlapping causes: the second unit was on planned maintenance from 01 May, and the first unit , which this event tracks , was on a separate unplanned outage from 03 June, likely triggered by a utility or feed-supply interruption given the same-day restart speed.

The structural context that makes a 200kbd partial restart significant is the coincidence of Rotterdam downtime with the EU gasoil import collapse. EU gasoil imports ran only 695kbd in April, down 38% month-on-month , because Hormuz disruption removed roughly a fifth of Europe's Gulf sourcing.

Rotterdam's both-units-dark state removed a further 400kbd of domestic cracking capacity at the same moment the import channel closed , a double withdrawal from the NWE distillate supply stack. The partial restart restores one of those two deficits; the import channel remains constrained.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The partial restart reduces the gasoil crack floor marginally, but 200kbd still offline means the structural NWE middle-distillate deficit established since May continues to underpin the crack above $50.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Risk

    Wood Mackenzie's hot-restart reliability data suggests a re-trip probability within 45 days is roughly double the rate of a scheduled restart, meaning unit one could be dark again before the second unit is confirmed online.

    Short term · Suggested
  • Opportunity

    If the second 200kbd unit returns on a confirmed schedule before end-June, full Rotterdam capacity combined with a recovering import channel could compress the NWE gasoil crack from $54 toward the $35-40 pre-disruption range.

    Short term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #5 · Sixth straight draw, the flat price won't say

Financial News (LSE.co.uk)· 4 Jun 2026
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