More U.S. Gulf oil producers halt output ahead of
Tropical Storm Nate
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[October 07, 2017]
By Ernest Scheyder
HOUSTON (Reuters) - Nearly three-quarters
of U.S. Gulf of Mexico oil production was offline ahead of Tropical
Storm Nate, and more oil companies were halting operations late Friday,
bracing for the second major storm in as many months to menace the
region.
Nate was about 80 miles east of Cozumel Mexico and moving at 21 miles
per hour late Friday afternoon. It was expected to strike the U.S. Gulf
Coast Saturday with hurricane force winds and rain, according to the
National Hurricane Center.
Its path takes it right through the most-active oil-producing region of
the U.S. Gulf of Mexico. Nate has shuttered nearly three times as much
Gulf crude production as Hurricane Harvey did in August. At its height,
Harvey shut-in only about 25 percent of the region's oil production.
Anadarko Petroleum <APC.N> late Friday said it shut in five more
offshore facilities and was removing all their workers. BHP Billiton
<BHP.AX><BHP.L> also said it evacuated two platforms.
BP <BP.L>, Exxon Mobil <XOM.N>, Chevron <CVX.N> and ConocoPhillips
<COP.N> also withdrew staff and curtailed output. Government data showed
oil companies evacuated 66 platforms and took 1.24 million barrels of
oil per day offline since Thursday.
Nate was expected to cut U.S. exports of crude oil and boost refining
margins given low stockpiles of gasoline and other refined products,
brokerage Goldman Sachs <GS.N> said in a note to clients.
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Oil prices <CLc1> dropped nearly 3 percent on Friday despite the storm,
on concerns about global oversupply and profit taking.[O/R]
ConocoPhillips began evacuating non-essential personnel from its
Magnolia oil platform, Exxon evacuated staff at its Mobile Bay and Lena
platforms.
Chevron shut its 4,100-mile (6,598 km) pipeline subsidiary, saying it
would not accept or deliver crude until after Nate subsided.
Matt Rogers, meteorologist at Commodity Weather Group, said the rapid speed of
the storm could keep it from becoming more than a Category 1 hurricane,
producing up to 80 mile per hour winds.
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"In our view it is not going to be strong enough to do damage" to offshore
production facilities, he said. "Usually when storms move this quickly they have
troubles developing," he said.
The U.S. Coast Guard declared condition "X-Ray" at the port of New Orleans ahead
of Nate, which means gale force winds could come within 48 hours. Commercial
vessels and large barges must report to the Coast Guard to decide whether to
depart or remain.
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Parts of the Mississippi River, which flows past New Orleans and is a major
transit hub for oil and other commodities, have been closed to inbound deep
draft vessels.
The region's oil refineries are still recovering from Harvey, which shut
production at some plants for weeks. Producers also curtailed some production
but quickly resumed output.
Royal Dutch Shell Plc <RDSa.L> decided against cutting operations at its 225,800
barrel-per-day (bpd) Norco, Louisiana, refinery, reversing an earlier decision.
Shell did, though, close production at three oil-producing hubs in the eastern
Gulf.
Phillips 66 <PSX.N> was shutting down its 247,000 bpd Alliance, Louisiana,
refinery, 25 miles (40 km) south of New Orleans, as a precaution. [nL2N1MH01Y]
Commodity Weather forecast Nate to bring moderate rainfall when it makes
landfall somewhere west of Mobile Bay, Alabama, and east of New Orleans,
Louisiana. It expects between 4 inches and 6 inches of rain to fall in the path
of the storm.
The U.S. Gulf of Mexico is home to about 17 percent of U.S. crude output and 5
percent of dry natural gas output, according to the U.S. Energy Information
Administration. More than 45 percent of U.S. refining capacity is along the Gulf
Coast.
(Reporting by Ernest Scheyder; Additional reporting by Marianna Parraga, Gary
McWilliams and Erwin Seba; Editing by Marguerita Choy and David Gregorio)
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