Compañía Primitiva de Gas de Buenos Aires Ltda.

Compañía Primitiva de Gas de Buenos Aires Ltda.
IndustryEnergy
Founded1853
Defunct1945 (1945)
SuccessorGas del Estado [1]
Headquarters,
Area served
Buenos Aires City
Buenos Aires Province
Santa Fe
ProductsFuel gas
electricity
kerosene

Compañía Primitiva de Gas de Buenos Aires Ltda. was an energy company in Argentina which was responsible for the production and supply of gas and electricity. The company of British origin, operated in the city of Buenos Aires between 1854 and 1945.[2] It was the first energy company of the country.[3]

History

By 1824 Buenos Aires' main square was illuminated with hydrogen gas. This event, carried out by the English engineer Santiago Bevans, placed Argentina among the few countries that applied that technology since at that time it had only been tested in Europe and the United States. But it was not until 1853, when the national government contracted gas-powered public lighting for the cobblestone streets located near the Plaza de Mayo, when the effective use of gas began. It was still in this early period <of the industry, referring to manufactured gas, such as that from coal, given that natural gas from deposits had not yet been exploited.[3]

The company was founded in 1853 in Buenos Aires, and its gas holder was located in the area of Retiro, in the current Tower Monumental.[4] The company was dedicated in its origins in provide the public lighting of the city.[5] In 1895 the company began to carry out the works to supply electrical energy to the city of Buenos Aires.[6] In 1897, the Board of the Primitiva acquired the Sociedad de Luz Eléctrica Edison, the main electrical plant of the city.[7] By those times, Retiro was located very close to Río de la Plata, which allowed a quick transport of coal (imported from the United Kingdom) from barges to the plant.[3]

Once the gas was produced, it was transported to consumption points through clay slab pipelines that crisscrossed the area that was already known at that time as "el Bajo" (the lower part of the city): San Martín, Florida, Del Parque (now Lavalle), 25 de Mayo, De la Piedad (now Bartolomé Mitre) streets, including La Recova and Plaza de Mayo. This major advancement, which represented the lighting of the city's most important streets, was followed by the gas lighting of landmarks such as the Cabildo, the Metropolitan Cathedral, the City Hall, the Recova, and Teatro Argentino building.[3]

The gas lighting system continued to develop with great success, expanding very rapidly, first to other neighborhoods in Buenos Aires near the city center and then also to other nearby cities such as Bernal in Avellaneda Partido, and other distant ones such as San Nicolás, Bahía Blanca, Rosario, La Plata, in Buenos Aires Province.[3]

The Primitiva was dedicated to the electric Lighting of Buenos Aires until 1920. year in which it lost the concession.[8]

The Compañía Primitiva de Gas de Buenos Aires Ltda registered its name in 1901, and changed its original name in 1910 as Primitiva Gas and Electric Lighting Company of Buenos Aires.[9] In 1901 the company's capital was £1,200,000 sterling.[10]

In 1944 the national government decreed the nationalization of Compañía Primitiva de Gas. The company ceased its functions on March 5, 1945, taking charge of the management of the expropriated company Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales.[11]

The Primitiva Gas Company of Buenos Aires came to provide gas to a total of 240,000 users until its nationalization in 1945, distributing gas to the areas of Buenos Aires, La Plata, Bahia Blanca and Rosario. The company also counted on a fleet of trucks and motorcycles to provide care to its users.[12]

In 1945, the government of Argentina leaded by Juan Perón, took over the Compañía Primitiva prior the nationalisation of the service with the creation of "Gas del Estado", a state-owned company which became Compañía Primitiva's successor.[13]

References

  1. ^ Historias de Gas en Argentina on TGS (archived)
  2. ^ Historia argentina contemporánea, 1862-1930: Historia económica, Academia Nacional de la Historia (Argentina), 1965
  3. ^ a b c d e Un viaje en el tiempo….la historia del Gas Natural en Argentina. Centro Argentino de Ingenieros
  4. ^ Anales de la Sociedad Científica Argentina, Volume 130, Sociedad Científica Argentina, 1940
  5. ^ Anales de la Sociedad Científica Argentina, Volumes 51-52, Sociedad Científica Argentina, 1901
  6. ^ The Electrical Journal, 1903, 1903
  7. ^ Todo es historia, Issues 247-258, Todo es historia, 1988
  8. ^ Historia del alumbrado, Servicios Eléctricos del Gran Buenos Aires, 1967
  9. ^ Register of Defunct Companies, NA NA, March 1990, ISBN 9781349112715
  10. ^ Gas World, Volume 34, Benn Bros, 1901, 1901
  11. ^ Atlas de la actividad económica de la República Argentina, Volume 7, Centro Editor de América Latina, 1983, ISBN 9789502510088
  12. ^ Transactions, Third World Power Conference, World Power Conference, 1938
  13. ^ Efemérides 05 de Marzo – Nacionalización del gas en la República Argentina on AFP Gas. 5 Mar 2023