Oy Teboil Ab is an oil company in Finland, engaged in the marketing, sales and distribution of petroleum products and operation of filling and service stations. It is a subsidiary of the Russian company Lukoil.
Industry | Oil and gas |
---|---|
Founded | 1934 |
Founder | Mauritz Skogström |
Headquarters | , |
Revenue | 1 677 872 000€ (2023) |
Number of employees | 180 (2023) |
Parent | Lukoil |
Website | www |
Teboil's revenue and profit plummeted after the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022 because of customer boycotts. Revenue decreased by -28,8% in 2023[1]
History
editTeboil was established by Mauritz Skogström in Helsinki in 1934 at the name Trustivapaa Bensiini (meaning: "Trust-free Petrol (Benzene)"), abbr. TB, from which came the current name in 1966. At the same year, Estonian shale oil companies Eesti Kiviõli and New Consolidated Gold Fields became the main shareholders in the company.[2][3][4] Another predecessor of Teboil, Suomen Petrooli, was established by German investors in Vyborg in 1932. During World War II, the ownership of Trustivapaa Bensiini was transferred to German owners and later the company was held by the Ehrnrooth's family.[3][5] After the Continuation War, in 1947 according to the Paris Peace Treaty TB became affiliated and it became the property of the Soviet Union state-owned company Soyuznefteexport.[6] In 1966, the company changed its name to Teboil, which came from the pronouncing of its abbreviation TB with addition 'oil'. During these years, the Finnish government enterprise Neste held a legal monopoly in the wholesale of oil products, thus also Teboil actually obtained its petrol and diesel from Neste.
There is some evidence that Teboil kept tank fuel reserves, in the case the Soviets would invade. These were discontinued after the collapse of the Soviet Union.[3]
In 1994 Soyuznefteexport was privatised and reorganised into Nafta-Moskva. In 2005, Nafta-Moskva sold Teboil to Lukoil.[6][7] Teboil acquired JET unmanned stations chain in Finland, from the American company ConocoPhillips in 2006 and they were integrated into the Teboil chain as Teboil Express unmanned stations in 2007. The lubricant factory and laboratory functions of Teboil was moved to the subsidiary LLK Finland, founded in 2007. The three subsidiaries, Suomen Petrooli, Suomen Tähtihovit and Suomen Tähtiautomaatit were merged to the parent company in 2008.
Service station network
editAt the end of year 2012 there were 336 business locations, of which 141 service stations and 195 unmanned refuelling stations. Commercial traffic is served by around 450 refuelling stations, of which about 210 are unmanned diesel points.
The brand Autoasi ("Of Your Car") works in the car maintenance and spare parts services of Teboil Service Centres.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Teboil Oy Ab Pääkonttori - taloustiedot, Y-tunnus ja päättäjät - Finder.fi". www.finder.fi (in Finnish). Retrieved 2024-07-13.
- ^ Holmberg, Rurik (2008). Survival of the Unfit. Path Dependence and the Estonian Oil Shale Industry (PDF). Linköping Studies in Arts and Science. Vol. 427. Linköping University. p. 114. Retrieved 2014-04-27.
- ^ a b c Tiilikainen, Heikki (2000). Kylmän sodan kujanjuoksu. Ajatus Kirjat. ISBN 978-951-20-6452-6.
- ^ Siltala, Minna (2008). "Turn at a turning point" (PDF). Refine (1). Neste Oil. Retrieved 2008-07-14.
- ^ Kuisma, Markku (1997). Kylma sota, kuuma öljy. WSOY. ISBN 951-0-20811-6.
- ^ a b Denis Skorobogatko (2005-02-15). "LUKOil to Rename Finnish Gas Stations". Kommersant. Retrieved 2008-07-14.
- ^ "Russian oil giant Lukoil to acquire Finnish oil company Teboil". Helsingin Sanomat. 2005-02-15. Retrieved 2008-12-02.
External links
edit- Teboil homepages (in English)