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This is a list of notable automotive fuel retailers ("petrol" or "gasoline", "diesel", etc.) and their controlling oil companies.The format of this page is based on current ownership and where they largely operate:
Diesel's headquarters are in Breganze, on the former Moto Laverda factory area, and had twelve international subsidiaries as of 2005. [20] As of 2008, the company had five thousand points of sale across eighty countries, with 270 mono-brand Diesel stores. Diesel itself owns 170 of those, with the rest owned by franchisees. [27]
Shell's involvement in Australia began in 1901 when bulk fuel handling facilities commissioned by the 'Shell' Transport and Trading Company of London at Gore Bay, Sydney and on leased land in Melbourne, near Williamstown railway station. The arrival of the ship Turbo on 3 June was the first ever delivery of bulk kerosene to Australia. [1]
NPD, short for Nelson Petroleum Distributors, is a New Zealand family-owned budget fuel distributor. [1] [2] It distributes Mobil fuels and Castrol lubricants, and started business in the 1960s. [3] [4] It is based in Nelson. As of August 2021, NPD has 96 petrol stations, most being in the South Island.
In that year Amway Australia became part of the publicly listed company, Amway Asia Pacific, and by 1998 sales had reached A$198 million, [3] [4] with more than 100,000 distributors marketing over 2,500 products. [1] In 2000 Amway Asia Pacific returned to private ownership by New AAP Limited, a Bermuda corporation. [5] [6]
Volkswagen Australia Pty Ltd was formed in 1954 by Volkswagen of Germany and various Australian state Volkswagen distributors. [30] The company acquired a suitable site from Martin & King situated at Clayton having facilities for CKD vehicle assembly in Victoria , that site having been used for local assembly of the Volkswagen Beetle since 1954 ...
Western Australia's share of national petroleum production in 2007. Oil production in Australia increased gradually after 1980, peaking in 2000 at 805,000 barrels per day (128,000 m 3 /d). In 2003, production fell dramatically to 630,522 bbl/d (100,245.0 m 3 /d). In 2006, Australia produced approximately 562,000 bbl/d (89,400 m 3 /d) of oil. [14]
This page was last edited on 30 December 2020, at 20:30 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.