BP
said it had begun the process of evacuating personnel from
offshore platforms and drilling rigs, while also beginning to
shut-in production at its four operated platforms in the U.S.
Gulf of Mexico, the Thunder Horse, Atlantis, Mad Dog and Na Kika.
Shell said it had started to reduce non-essential personnel on
some of its offshore facilities. It said there was currently no
effect on production and work was underway to secure drilling
operations.
Meanwhile, Chevron said it was evacuating all personnel at its
Big Foot, Genesis, Jack/St. Malo and Tahiiti platforms and
initiating shut-in procedures. It also began evacuating
non-essential workers from its Blind Faith and Petronius
platforms, but said production remained normal.
The tropical cyclones churning toward the Gulf of Mexico could
both could make landfall as hurricanes next week, an extremely
rare event that could cause massive disruption from Texas to the
Florida Panhandle.
(Reporting by Liz Hampton; editing by Diane Craft and Tom Brown)
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