Andeavor


Andeavor was a Fortune 100 and a Fortune Global 500 company headquartered in San Antonio, Texas, with 2017 annual revenues of $35 billion, and over 14,000 employees worldwide. Based on 2017 revenue, the company ranked No. 90 in the 2018 Fortune 500 list of the largest United States corporations by total revenue.
Andeavor was an independent refiner and marketer of petroleum products, operating ten refineries in the Western United States with a combined rated crude oil capacity of approximately per day. Andeavor's retail-marketing system included approx. 3,000 branded retail gas stations, of which more than 595 were company-operated under its own Tesoro brandname, as well as Shell, ExxonMobil, ARCO, and USA Gasoline brands.
Andeavor was acquired by Marathon Petroleum on October 1, 2018.

History

Andeavor, formerly Tesoro, was founded in 1968 by Dr. Robert V. West Jr, and was primarily engaged in petroleum exploration and production. is the word for treasure in Italian and Spanish. In 1969, Tesoro began operating its first refinery, near Kenai, Alaska. Tesoro became the first Fortune 500 company to be headquartered in San Antonio, Texas.
Beginning in the late 1990s, Tesoro grew through a series of acquisitions and initiatives that created Tesoro Corporation, the company focusing on a single core business: petroleum refining and marketing. Acquisitions expanded refining capacity from to approximately.
Prior to its acquisition by Marathon Petroleum in 2018, Andeavor was the third-largest independent petroleum refining and marketing company in the United States.
Milestones in the company's history are:

Environmental record

Having taken over BP installations, researchers at the Political Economy Research Institute identified Tesoro as being the 24th-largest corporate producer of air pollution in the United States, releasing roughly of toxic chemicals annually. Major pollutants emitted annually by the corporation include more than of sulfuric acid.
following which the Environmental Protection Agency named Tesoro a potentially responsible party for at least four superfund toxic waste sites.
Tesoro has settled and/or closed each of the superfund sites for which it has been named as one of many responsible parties. Tesoro was listed as a de minimis contributor to a superfund site in Abbeville, LA, and the site has since been closed by the EPA.
Tesoro has given over $1 million in support of California Proposition 23, which aimed to suspend the Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006.
Defenders of the Amazon forest in South America cite Tesoro for sourcing some of their crude oil from the Amazon. Three of Tesoro's refineries- Anacortes, LA and Golden Eagle, are known to process Amazonian crude oil.

Explosion

On April 2, 2010, there was an explosion at the Anacortes refinery with seven deaths.

Libya

After the overthrow of Colonel Gaddafi, Tesoro bought Libyan crude oil in early April 2011 from the Vitol Group to supply its then-Hawaiian refinery.