Ampol Limited is an Australian petroleum company headquartered in Sydney, New South Wales. Ampol is the largest transport energy distributor and retailer in Australia, with more than 1,800 Ampol-branded service stations across the country as of June 2025. Ampol also operates in New Zealand through its subsidiary Z Energy.
Ampol was first incorporated in 1936 and would later be owned by Pioneer International (now Heidelberg Materials Australia). The Caltex brand in Australia separately began in 1941 to market petrol in its chain of service stations and was owned by Caltex Australia Limited. In 1995, the Ampol and Caltex operations merged to form Australian Petroleum, equally owned by Pioneer and Caltex Australia. Pioneer sold its shareholding between 1997 and 1998, and Caltex Australia gained full ownership of Australian Petroleum. Caltex Australia then gradually replaced the Ampol brand with Caltex over the next decade.
From 2001 until 2015, Caltex Australia was owned equally by American petroleum company Chevron Corporation and the Australian public until Chevron sold its shareholding to the public. In December 2019 Chevron, owner of the Caltex trademark, gave notice to Caltex Australia to terminate the licence agreement for use of the Caltex brand in Australia. In May 2020, the company officially changed its name and began to rebrand as Ampol, along with a new logo that was rolled out across Australia between 2020 and 2022.
History
Early history
Today's Ampol Limited traces its history back to two independent businesses that merged in 1995, Caltex Oil (Australia) Pty Ltd (a subsidiary of Caltex Australia Limited, owned by the global Caltex Petroleum Corporation) and a previous incarnation of Ampol Limited (owned by Hanson Australia).[3] It became the largest downstream petroleum company in Australia.[3] At the time of merger, Caltex Petroleum Corporation was owned equally by American petroleum companies Chevron Corporation and Texaco.[3]
Caltex (1918–1995)
Texas Company (later Texaco
Store formats
Ampol-branded sites can have any of the following types of convenience store formats.
Current store formats
Foodary
The typical store format in Ampol service stations. They are usually large sites that contain a bakery, coffee, hot food, convenience items and an ATM. Selected larger sites also offer barista made coffee and fresh healthy food. Other retailers such as Boost Juice and Guzman y Gomez are co-located on selected Foodary sites.[83] The first Foodary store, initially known as "The Foodary" opened in Concord, Sydney in February 2017 as a pilot store to offer a "unique, convenient experience" on food and convenience when refuelling.[84][85]
Operations
Management
Julian Segal was the CEO of Caltex Australia for almost 11 years from July 2009 until 2 March 2020.[99][100] CFO Matthew Halliday was appointed as interim CEO until he was appointed permanent CEO of Ampol on 29 June 2020.[101][102]
Oil refineries
After the closure of Kurnell Refinery for conversion in 2014, the only Ampol oil refinery remaining in Australia is the Lytton Oil Refinery.
Fuel brand
Other investments
In 2016, Caltex Australia invested A$2.5 million in startup Car Next Door, a peer-to-peer car sharing platform.[124] Ampol sold its 17.2% interest for A$16.7 million on 24 December 2021.[125]
Sponsorship
Professional tennis
In the late 1950s, Ampol sponsored professional tennis events. The Ampol Tournament of Champions was held at White City Stadium in Sydney in 1957 (won by Pancho Segura), at Kooyong Stadium in Melbourne in 1958 (won by Lew Hoad), and at White City Stadium in Sydney in 1959 (won by Pancho Gonzales).
In 1959/1960, the Ampol Open Trophy and bonus prize was presented to the winner of a 15-tournament world series of tennis tournaments which included all 12 of Jack Kramer's professional players.[126] The Ampol Open Trophy was presented at Kooyong Stadium on 2 January 1960 to Hoad, acclaimed "the world's top professional tennis player" for accumulating the most points in the 15 tournaments (which included the Forest Hills stadium in New York City, Roland Garros stadium in Paris, Wembley Arena in London, White City stadium in Sydney, Kooyong Stadium in Melbourne, the Los Angeles Tennis Club, and the Toronto Lawn Tennis Club).
Professional golf
See also
External links
References
- Find a station 28 March 2022^
- Who we are Ampol, retrieved 12 October 2022^
- Charles E. Brown. World Energy Resources: International Geohydroscience and Energy Research Institute Springer Science & Business Media, 2012^