Hurricane Sandy forcing wave of oil refinery shutdowns
29
October, 2012
Hurricane
Sandy is beginning to have a noticeable economic impact on the U.S.,
forcing major oil producers to cease operations in their refineries
in the North East. With Sandy expected to traverse a path that hosts
6.5% of the nation’s total refining capacity, and tight supplies
due to regulation, prices for refined products could surge to new
highs. Amid thin trading and illiquid markets, prices for gasoline
and heating oil are already on the rise and are expected to move
higher.
Due
to low inventories, the East Coast is “totally unprepared for this
disaster,” explained economist Phil Verleger. The reality is that
Hurricane Sandy has already forced refiners to shut down their
operations, and this is coming in a time of thin inventories in the
East Coast.
East
Coast inventory numbers (PADD 1) aren’t too encouraging. Gasoline
inventories hit a recent low at approximately 45.1 million barrels in
the first week of October, compared to an average of around 55.8
million barrels for the corresponding weeks over the last couple of
years. “For distillates, the drop is even more stunning,”
explained John Kingston of The Barrel:
Stocks
in the most recent report for PADD I were 39.5 million barrels. In
the prior three years in the corresponding week they were 58.3, 75
and 74 million barrels. Even in 2008, when companies were dumping
stocks like crazy in the wake of the fiscal crisis, they were 48.4
million barrels.
Refiners
have already moved to cease their operations, which will put further
upward pressure on prices. Phillips 66 will take 238,000 barrels per
day offline as they shut down their Bayway Refinery in Linden, New
Jersey, while Hess will be taking another 70,000 daily barrels of
capacity off the market as it shuts down their operations at Port
Reading, New Jersey. According to Trade the News, Philadelphia Energy
will be operating its 330,000 barrel-per-day plant in Philadelphia
(recently acquired from Sunoco) at reduced rates.
“The
problem is that the US is already terribly short of refinery capacity
on the East Coast and the refiners have little if any inventory on
hand of products even as crude is moving toward them,” noted
commodity expert Dennis Gartman. “With the refineries shuttered in,
products are going to become uncommonly short supplied, while crude
inventories likely back up and increase,” he added.
And
the problem could get worse. Beyond the safety of its employees,
refiners will have to deal with possible power outages and damages to
equipment and infrastructure. Sam Stovall of S&P Capital IQ notes
that estimated damages could hit $3.2 billion, but if the storm truly
materializes as a “Frankenstorm,” then he sees no reason why it
couldn’t top $10 billion (comparative damages estimates from the
prior top 12 hurricanes all topped $10 billion).
Major
utility Con Edison is already “bracing for Hurricane Sandy.” By
10 AM on Monday, ConEd reported just over 3,600 customers without
electrical power, and indicated it could shut down underground
equipment in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, and elsewhere.
With
major refiners like Chevron and Exxon Mobil having moved out of the
North East, it will be a challenge for companies operating in the
region to bring production back up in the aftermath of Hurricane
Sandy. With supplies already tight, experts agree prices for gasoline
and other distilled products are set to rise rapidly. While there may
be a boost from construction and employment in the aftermath of the
storm, the dire state of the U.S. economy could be further aggravated
by Sandy.
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