Friday, June 6

The former Netherlands Antilles does not have significant crude oil reserves of its own. However, Curaçao and Sint Eustatius have played strategic roles in the global oil industry due to their geographic location and large-scale oil storage and refining infrastructure.


Crude Oil & Petroleum Industry in the Former Netherlands Antilles

Curaçao

Refinery & Transshipment Hub

  • Curaçao Oil Refinery (ISLA Refinery):
    • Located in Willemstad, operational since the early 20th century.
    • Originally owned by Royal Dutch Shell, later leased to Venezuela’s PDVSA.
    • Not a source of crude oil, but a refining and transshipment hub.
  • Refines imported crude (mostly from Venezuela in the past).
  • Has storage tanks, deepwater port, and oil terminals.

No Proven Crude Reserves

  • No domestic exploration or production of crude oil.

Sint Eustatius

Oil Storage & Bunkering

  • Home to the Statia Terminals:
    • One of the Caribbean’s key oil storage and bunkering facilities.
    • Capable of handling millions of barrels of crude and refined oil.
  • Used for temporary storage, blending, and transfer of crude oil.

No Domestic Crude Production

  • Acts only as a logistics center.

Strategic Importance

  • Location near Venezuela, South America, and major shipping routes.
  • Used by global oil companies for:
    • Transshipment
    • Blending
    • Strategic petroleum storage

Recent Developments

  • Curaçao’s ISLA refinery has struggled since PDVSA’s lease ended in 2019.
  • Efforts have been made to find new operators or investors, including China’s Guangdong Zhenrong Energy, but with limited success as of 2025.
  • Statia Terminals continues to operate, though ownership and activity levels have changed due to global oil market shifts.

Summary

IslandCrude Oil ProductionRole in Oil Industry
Curaçao None Refining, storage, and shipping hub
Sint Eustatius None Oil storage and bunkering terminal
Others (SXM, BON, Saba) None Not involved in crude oil
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