Sagara Oil Field

Sagara oil field

Sagara Oil Field Par
Country Japan
Region Shizuoka Prefecture
Location Makinohara
Offshore/onshore Onshore
Coordinates 34°41′53″N 138°09′35″E / 34.69806°N 138.15972°E / 34.69806; 138.15972Coordinates: 34°41′53″N 138°09′35″E / 34.69806°N 138.15972°E / 34.69806; 138.15972
Field history
Discovery May 1873
Start of production 1873
Peak year 1884
Abandonment 1955

Sagara Oil Field (相良油田 Sagara Yuden) is located in Makinohara, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan.

Crude oil was discovered at Sagara Village in May 1873, and hand-pumping operations began almost immediately. From 1874, Nippon Oil (the predecessor to modern ENEOS) began mechanical pumping operations. The Sagara field was the only producing oil field on Japan's Pacific coast, and was the first in Japan to use oil pumps. At the height of its production (in 1884), some 600 people were employed, and the field was producing 43,000 barrels of oil (721 kiloliters) per year. The oil was very light, and could be used in automobiles without refining.

Production stopped in 1955, with the advent of cheap, imported oil. On November 28, 1980 the oil field was proclaimed a natural monument and protected cultural property by the Shizuoka Prefectural government, and was transformed into a public park.

References


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