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The golden age of California’s oil refining industry is ending. Over the past three years, the state has seen a cascade of refinery closures, regulatory overreach, and a dramatic shift toward electric vehicles (EVs), all of which are reshaping the energy landscape. With refineries shutting their doors and gas stations losing relevance, investors must now confront a critical question: Is California’s fuel sector in terminal decline, or is this a transitional crisis?

California’s refining capacity has plummeted since 2023, driven by closures of major facilities. Phillips 66’s decision to shutter its 145,000-barrel-per-day Los Angeles refinery by late 2025—and Valero’s planned closure of its Benicia refinery by 2026—will slash total refining capacity by nearly 300,000 barrels per day. By 2026, capacity will drop to 1.48 million barrels per day, a 6.3% surplus over demand, leaving the state perilously close to supply shortages. A single unplanned outage, such as the 2025 PBF Martinez fire, could push the state into deficit, risking price spikes exceeding $6 per gallon.
Stringent environmental policies have accelerated the industry’s decline. The 2023 ABX2-1 law, mandating minimum fuel inventories, and the 2024 SB X1-2 creation of the Division of Petroleum Market Oversight (DPMO), have imposed staggering operational costs. “California’s regulations are making the state ‘uninvestable,’” said a
executive, citing the Carson/Wilmington closures. Valero, fined $82 million for emissions violations, has already announced its exit.The DPMO’s focus on penalizing “excessive refining margins” has further deterred investment. “This isn’t just about environmental goals—it’s about economic survival,” said Severin Borenstein of UC Berkeley.
While traditional fuels falter, California’s EV adoption is surging. Zero-emission vehicles (ZEVs) now account for 25% of new car sales, with mandates requiring 35% by 2026 and a full phaseout of gas-powered vehicles by 2035. The state’s EV charging infrastructure now exceeds gasoline nozzles: 178,549 public chargers versus an estimated 120,000 gas pumps.
The shift is structural. Renewable diesel, mandated by the Low Carbon Fuel Standard, now fuels 65% of diesel consumption, while solar and wind power supply 61% of the state’s electricity. “California is no longer just a market—it’s a blueprint,” said Patrick De Haan of GasBuddy.
The contraction of the traditional fuel sector creates both risks and opportunities:
California’s fuel industry is at a crossroads. The data is unequivocal: refining capacity is shrinking, gas stations are losing relevance, and EVs are ascendant. Yet the transition is not without peril. A 2026 refinery closure could trigger a $6/gallon crisis, while federal rollbacks of EV incentives threaten progress.
For investors, the calculus is clear: avoid legacy refiners tied to diminishing fossil fuel demand and embrace EV infrastructure and renewables. The state’s $1.4 billion investment in charging networks and its 2035 ZEV mandate ensure that this is not a temporary dip but the start of a seismic shift.
As one analyst put it, “California’s energy future isn’t about refining—it’s about reimagining.” And that future is here.
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