The Sapugaskanda Refinery is the single largest oil refinery of Sri Lanka. The refinery was built by Iran under the guidance of the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation in August 1969, initially designed to process per stream day of IranianUpper Zakumcrude oil, and Arabian light crude oil. It was commissioned on 12 October 1969. The facility, which covers an area of, currently has a capacity of per stream day. As with most refineries, the Sapugaskanda Refinery has an in-house utilities section which supplies electricity, water, steam, instrument air, and other necessities for operations. In total, 65 storage tanks are located at the premises for storage of crude oil, finished, and other products, five of which has a capacity of. A further four crude oil tanks located in the separate Orugodawattatank farm.
History
The initial survey for the refinery was conducted in 1963.
On 12 October 1969, the refinery was commissioned.
In 1971, the naphthamerox unit was modified to commence production of liquefied natural gas, while SBPS production was also commenced with existing infrastructure. The crude distiller was also modified to increase capacity from per stream day during this period.
In 1981, a kerosene merox was installed to process A-1 jet fuel, while the energy-intensive Kerosene unifiner was decommissioned.
In 1992, the crude distiller unit was again modified to support far Eastern crude oils such as Mirilight crude oil, and Naphtha unifiner capacity was increased to 1100 tonne per day.
In 1999, platformer unit was modified to increase capacity to 650 tonne per day, to meet increasing gasoline demand, and to phase out lead in gasoline.
In 2003, the kerosene unifiner was modified to process diesel, and the existing gas oil unifiner was rehabilitated to meet thesulphur specification of 0.3%wt in diesel.
On 19 February 2018, the entire facility was shutdown for 35 days due to a planned refurbishment project. 1,200 engineers and mechanics handled the 24×7 maintenance covering the processing units, utilities, and tank farm. The production shortage during the period was covered by importing the requirements by the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation.
Power stations
Three oil-fired power stations are built at the vicinity of the refinery for ease of fuel logistics: