The British-Dutch oil giant Shell said it was temporarily shutting down Europe’s biggest refinery after a pre-dawn fire broke out at a power station on the vast site on Sunday.
Flames billowed into the sky over the port of Rotterdam after the blaze erupted at a high-voltage power station at the Shell Pernis refinery.
Firefighters brought the fire under control by around 6:00 am (0400 GMT).
“Shell is in the process of shutting down all the units at the site,” a Shell spokesman told foreign media agencies.
The units are all interconnected and “several of them are out of service due to the power outage caused by the fire,” he said.
It takes “hours, or even several days” each time that operations are closed down or restarted, he said.
Shell did not confirm media reports that the fire may have been caused by a short circuit. Instead, the company said it would “wait to know more about the circumstances of the incident.”
According to the regional security authority, there were no toxic materials in the smoke.
A spokesman for the refinery said on Sunday evening that after the fire had been mastered, engineers flared off stocks of gas as part of the shutdown.
The flareoff is a recognised safety procedure and was “completely under control,” he said
Shell could not immediately disclose the extent of the damage, nor when the refinery would return to full capacity.
The refinery covers the area equivalent to 800 football pitches, and its pipework, if laid end to end, would be long enough to circle the Earth four times.
The facility can process more than 400,000 barrels of petroleum products a day, but a temporary closure is unlikely to cause any significant fuel shortages, a Shell Pernis spokesman said.
“Drivers are not expected to notice a difference (in price) at the gas station,” he said.