Explosives factory In 1895, the ammunition firm
Kynochs built an explosives factory at the site. This opened in 1897, with an estate for employees called Kynochtown. Products included
cordite,
guncotton,
gunpowder, and cartridges. Kynochs also built the
Corringham Light Railway (CLR), with a passenger branch from the works to
Corringham and a goods branch to the
London, Tilbury and Southend Railway at Thames Haven. The Kynoch works closed in 1919.
Oil storage depot In 1921, the site and CLR were taken over by coal merchants
Cory Brothers Ltd of Cardiff to build an oil storage depot, with Kynochtown renamed Coryton. Sources differ as to whether Corys, who sold a well-known brand of petrol, ''Corys' Motor Spirit'', also built a refinery at the site. Cracknell states that Cory Bros 'turned to the manufacture and distribution of oil products' for which they 'constructed oil storage tanks and a cross-cracking plant'. In 1937, the annual throughput of Coryton refinery was 250,000 tonnes. Coryton village was demolished and absorbed into the refinery site in the 1970s. In 1977, work started on an extension to the refinery including a hydrogen fluoride alkylation unit to produce more gasoline. In 1978, about 1.5 million tonnes of oil and refined products were stored in the refinery tank farm, and about 800 people worked on the site. The alkylation unit was commissioned in late 1981 and included a water spray system to dissolve any releases of hydrogen fluoride. Following the merger in 1999 of Mobil with
Exxon, the remaining interest in the refinery was sold to BP Amoco in 2000.
Petroplus In 2007, the plant was sold by BP to
Petroplus for £714.6m (around $1.4 billion). On 24 January 2012, it was announced that Petroplus had filed for bankruptcy, putting the refinery's future into doubt. To alleviate a possible surge in fuel prices, oil supplies were ordered from other refineries in the UK, such as the
Stanlow Refinery via the
UK oil pipeline network. Shipments from Coryton resumed on 26 January following agreements signed by the administrators.
Shutdown ;PwC (Administration) On 28 May 2012, it was announced that the refinery would close due to
PricewaterhouseCoopers, the administrators, having failed to find a buyer.
Igor Yusufov's Energy Investment Fund was the only potential bidder ready to keep the refinery operating. On 28 February 2013, the gas supply to the site was shut off. Around twelve hours later the
flare went out, bringing to an end over 60 years of operations at the refinery.
Deepwater fuel import terminal In 2012 the refinery was planned to be turned into a diesel import terminal by
Vopak,
Shell and
Greenergy, with an initial capacity of . In 2014 the partners delayed the project to consider options, as the existing plant was in a poorer condition than expected.
Coryton Power Station Coryton Power Station was commissioned on part of the site in 2002, and continues to operate. ==Process units==