About us

Géosel was created in the 1960s to meet a strategic imperative: ensuring the country’s energy security, the importance of which had been highlighted in 1956 by the Suez Canal crisis.

With its underground capacity of 9 million m³, Géosel is one of the largest hydrocarbon storage facilities in Europe. It provides storages capacities for crude oil, as well as refined products such as diesel, gasoline and naphtha.

France’s strategic oil reserves must cover at least 90 days of national consumption, and Géosel holds a significant part of the strategic stocks of the country.

In addition to Géosel’s strategic role, the site offers commercial storage services to players in the oil sector, such as refineries, the chemical industry, oil distribution and trading companies.

As a key element in the oil logistics of south-eastern France, Géosel storage facilities are connected by piplines to the refineries and petrochemical plants of the Fos/Berre area, to the Marseilles-Fos harbour (Grand Port Maritime de Marseille) and to three pipeline networks : SPSE, SPMR and ODC, connecting the area to the North of France and beyond. This unique location enables Géosel to optimize the distribution of hydrocarbons on a French and even European scale.

Committed to its own energy transition and that of its territory, Géosel is currently conducting in-depth studies on the evolution of the energy mix and the adaptation of part of its infrastructure to the storage of alternative energies such as hydrogen.

1967 – 1968
CONSTRUCTION OF PIPELINES AND SURFACE FACILITIES

As a prerequisite to the creation of the storage caverns, the building of the pipelines and surface facilities began in 1967.

The construction work involved the building of:

  1. A 15 km water supply pipeline linking Villeneuve and Passaire (Géosel site);
  2. The Passaire (Manosque) storage facility;
  3. A pumping station at Villeneuve, to supply water to the Passaire site;
  4. A pumping station at Lavéra to transport hydrocarbons to Passaire;
  5. A relay pumping station at Rognac (Berre);
  6. Hydrocarbon delivery stations at Lavéra, La Mède and Fos-sur-Mer.
1969 – 1974
DRILLING OF CAVERNS AND COMMISSIONING OF STORAGE FACILITIES

The “Manosque I” project began on October 2, 1967, with the drilling of the first cavern. Eighteen caverns were dug the same year, in several phases. They began to be filled with petroleum products on July 15, 1969.

The “Manosque II” project was launched on October 12, 1972, leading to the  leaching of 17 new  storage caverns. The project doubled the pipelines capacity to cope with the need to expand the storage facility.

To this end, a new pipeline between the Passaire (Manosque) station and the Etang de Berre was laid in November 1973. Works were completed in 1974 with the connection of the Rognac Géopipe station to the Shell refinery in Berre.

1975 – 1987
AFTER THE OIL CRISIS

The first oil crisis in 1973 led to an increase of the input and output volumes in and out of  Manosque storage facility, initially designed for a limited number of operations, Geosel’s operations as we know them today began.

In 1975, the GSM2 pipeline is extended to the Lavalduc and Engrenier basins.

Two new pumping stations are built at Engrenier and Lavalduc.

Brine is then used  to enable regular inflows and outflows of petroleum products. This hydraulic compensation mechanism, base don brine, becomes a major asset for Géosel.

The development of “Manosque II”, supplemented by a new cavern, continues until 1983.

1977
CREATION OF THE LUBERON REGIONAL NATURAL PARK

The creation of the Parc Naturel Régional du Luberon (PNRL) aims to protect the natural and cultural assets of the Luberon. Local biodiversity, traditions and specific know-how are the focus of much attention. The PNRL project is thus part of a sustainable development and environmental preservation approach.

Since then, Géosel, located in the heart of the park, has taken great care to ensure that this sensitive natural environment and its industrial activity coexist respectfully.

1988 – 2004
TRANSFORMING AND EXPANDING THE COMPLEX

In 1988, the common interests of Géosel and Gaz de France (then 100% owned by the French state) led to the signing, in autumn 1988, of long-term agreements for the conversion of seven cavities to natural gas storage.

Géométhane, with equal shareholding by Geostock and Gaz de France, was created on June 5, 1989.

Law no. 2003-8 of January 3, 2003 incorporated all the previous 1958 provisions into the French Mining Code and defined the legal framework for underground hydrocarbon storage in France. It is these provisions, specified by several decrees, that apply today.

2004 – 2015
NEW FACILITIES STARTUP

In 2004, a filtration unit and a sea outfall were built to evacuate leaching brines.

A new pipeline, the Sagess Manosque Pipeline, was commissioned on November 9, 2007.

On May 1, 2010, a pipeline rupture led to a naphtha leak that caused soil pollution. The incident led to the intensification of the plant renovation plan.

In June 2012, a new building was inaugurated on the Manosque site. Two new cavities are commissioned in 2013 and 2014.

In 2015, Géosel’s shareholder base changed significantly with the arrival of a new shareholder: TSH (Transport Stockage Hydrocarbures).

2025
NEW CHALLENGES: TRANSITION AND ENERGY SECURITY

Géosel palys a significant role  in France’s energy security. The stocks hosted by Géosel are regularly mobilized to respond to oil product supply crises, particularly during periods of international geopolitical tension.

Since 2016, Géosel has been committed to its own and the region’s green transition, working to reduce its environmental footprint and exploring its ability to extend its know-how to other forms of energy, both decarbonized and renewable, such as hydrogen, for example.

Géosel’s capacities can store up to two months’ worth of French petroleum products.

From left to right: Samuel Barbedor, Xavier Decotenie, Charlotte Toulemonde, François Martin, Karim Benbrik, Flore Ostapoff, Mariana Azcarraga, Pierre Rayton.

Management team

Mariana Azcarraga
Sales Director
Flore Ostapoff
HSE and Permitting Director
Samuel Barbedor
Finance and Administration Director
Pierre Rayton
Operations and Maintenance Director
Xavier Decotenie
Operations and Development Director
Charlotte Toulemonde
Projects Director
Géosel offers storage and pipeline transportation services
for liquid hydrocarbons