Hurricane Nate disrupts 90% of Gulf of Mexico oil production
RT,
9
October, 2017
More
than 90 percent of crude oil production as well 78 percent of natural
gas production was taken offline in the Gulf of Mexico in preparation
for Hurricane Nate, according to the Bureau of Safety and
Environmental Enforcement.
Energy
companies turned off the taps and evacuated workers at 298 platforms
and 14 rigs, representing between one-third and three-quarters of the
platforms and rigs in the Gulf of Mexico, to avoid any damage from
the hurricane.
Most oil production in the Gulf of Mexico is shut and thousands are without power after Nate crashes ashore https://bloom.bg/2y4fHgg
Chevron
shut its 4,100-mile (6,598 km) pipeline subsidiary ahead of the
storm. By Monday, Chevron and Shell were bringing back personnel to
the platforms and doing assessment on the infrastructure. Chevron was
carrying out assessment at its Pascagoula, Mississippi plant, capable
of refining 340,000 barrels a day, Reuters reported.
Phillips
66, which shut down its Alliance refinery in Louisiana, has reported
it was undamaged from the hurricane, according to oilprice.com.
Majority of oil production in US Gulf of Mexico is offline ahead of Nate http://dlvr.it/Pt6wNv
#shipping
Nate
was about 80 miles (129 km) east of Cozumel, Mexico and moving at 21
miles per hour (34 km/h) on late Friday afternoon. It strengthened as
it passed through the central Gulf of Mexico before making landfall
in Mississippi as a Category 1 Hurricane. It moved inland and has
weakened back into a tropical depression. Heavy rains were forecast,
according to the Weather Channel, but oil and gas field and refinery
operations are already preparing to restart their shut-in facilities.
New
Orleans has already resumed normal port operations and vessel
traffic.
71 per cent of the Gulf of Mexico's oil production has been shut in. About 1.2 million barrels per day: https://www.bsee.gov/newsroom/latest-news/statements-and-releases/press-releases/bsee-tropical-storm-nate-activity-0 …
Nate
was expected to cut US exports of crude oil and boost refining
margins, given low stockpiles of gasoline and other refined products,
Goldman Sachs said in a note to clients. Oil prices dropped nearly 3
percent on Friday despite the storm.
“It’s
really been a very minor event as far as the energy infrastructure is
concerned,” Andrew Lipow, president of Lipow Oil Associates, told
CNBC. “Damage to energy infrastructure including oil production and
refining is minimal.”
Refineries
further west have largely restored operations after Hurricane Harvey
pummeled southeast Texas about six weeks ago, shutting down
one-quarter of US refining capacity.
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