South European Pipeline | |
Type: | Crude oil |
Country: | France Switzerland Germany |
Coordinates: | 43.4625°N 4.9144°W |
Direction: | south–north |
Start: | Fos-sur-Mer, France |
Through: | Strasbourg |
Finish: | Karlsruhe Oberhoffen-sur-Moder Feyzin |
Owner: | Société du pipeline sud-européen |
Est: | 1962; 1971–1972 |
Length: | 1848 |
Discharge: | 23 million metric tons per year |
Diameter In: | 34 |
Pumping Stations No: | 12 |
The South European Pipeline (also known as Lavera–Karlsruhe pipeline; French: Pipeline sud-européen) is a crude oil pipeline system in France, Switzerland, and Germany. It is built and operated by Société du pipeline sud-européen. The system supplies crude oil to refineries in Feyzin, Cressier, Reichstett, and Karlsruhe.[1]
The main 769adj=midNaNadj=mid 34inches pipeline starts in Fos-sur-Mer (Lavera) in France and runs through Strasbourg to Karlsruhe in Germany. It became operational in 1962–1963.[2] [3] [4] As of 2011 it is inactive as the Fos–Strasbourg section is mothballed. Another 714adj=midNaNadj=mid 40inches pipeline runs from Fos to Strasbourg (Oberhoffen-sur-Moder), and 260adj=midNaNadj=mid 24inches pipeline runs from Fos to Lyon (Feyzin).[5] These pipelines became operational in 1971–1972. The system uses Twelve pumping stations. The maximum discharge of the system is 35 million metric tons per year, although the real used annual amount is approximately 23 million metric tons per year.[6] [7]
In August 2009, a breach in the pipeline led to crude oil spilling into Réserve naturelle nationale des Coussouls de Crau, a nature reserve in France.[8]