Crude slips, gasoline
jumps as storm shuts a fifth of U.S. fuel output
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[August 30, 2017]
By Alex Lawler
LONDON (Reuters) - Crude oil slid and
gasoline futures hit their highest since mid-2015 on Wednesday as
flooding and damage from Tropical Storm Harvey shut over a fifth of U.S.
refineries, curbing demand for crude while raising the risk of fuel
shortages.
Refineries with output of 4.1 million barrels per day (bpd) were offline
on Tuesday, representing 23 percent of U.S. production, Goldman Sachs
said. Restarting plants even under the best conditions can take a week
or more.
"It will be a while before operations can return to normal and the U.S.
refining industry is bracing itself for an extended shutdown," Stephen
Brennock of oil broker PVM said.
Brent oil <LCOc1>, the international benchmark for crude trading, was
down 23 cents at $51.77 a barrel by 1051 GMT. U.S. crude <CLc1> fell 25
cents to $46.19.
In refined products, price movement was more dramatic and extended gains
after sources on Wednesday said Total's Port Arthur, Texas, refinery was
shut by a power outage resulting from the storm.
U.S. gasoline futures <RBc1> were up 5.5 percent at $1.8858, the highest
since July 2015. Diesel futures <HOc1> advanced by 2.5 percent to
$1.7076 a gallon, having touched their highest since January at $1.7097.
"Crude is always easier to replace than products," said Olivier Jakob,
analyst at Petromatrix. "If the refineries stay shut for more than a
week or 10 days, it's going to be very problematic."
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The Exxon Mobil Beaumont
Polyethylene Plant is seen during tropical storm Harvey in Beaumont,
Texas, U.S. August 28, 2017. REUTERS/Jonathan Bachman/File Photo
Harvey made landfall on Friday as the most powerful hurricane to hit Texas in
more than 50 years, resulting in the death of at least 17 people.
In addition to shutting oil refineries, about 1.4 million bpd of U.S. crude
production has been disrupted, equivalent to 15 percent of total output, Goldman
Sachs said.
The impact of the storm overshadowed the latest weekly figures on U.S. oil
supplies from the American Petroleum Institute (API).
U.S. crude inventories fell by 5.78 million barrels last week, the API industry
group reported on Tuesday, suggesting a gradual tightening of the U.S. oil
market. The figures, however, do not reflect the impact from Harvey. [API/S]
Traders are awaiting the latest U.S. government inventory report, due at 1430
GMT from the Energy Information Administration, to compare with the API figures.
(Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein; Editing by Dale Hudson and Susan
Fenton)
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