Hurricane Sally shifts from offshore U.S. oil fields, heavy rains to
damp fuel demand
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[September 16, 2020]
By Erwin Seba
HOUSTON (Reuters) - Hurricane Sally crawled
offshore along the U.S. Gulf Coast on Wednesday, moving away from oil
fields while soaking the region with heavy rains that could damp fuel
demand in the U.S. southeast.
The hurricane has shut more than a quarter of U.S. offshore Gulf of
Mexico oil and gas production and stirred heavy seas that closed ports
from Louisiana to Florida. It moved at a snail's pace toward a Wednesday
landfall on the coast between Mississippi and Florida.
While Sally's intensity lessened, it remained a Category 1 hurricane
with 85 miles per hour (140 kmh) winds. Oil and chemical ports along the
Mississippi River were moving to reopen with restrictions and some
offshore operators were preparing to return workers to offshore
platforms on Thursday.
OIL PRICES RISE IN ASIA
Nearly 500,000 bpd of offshore crude oil production and 759 million
cubic feet per day (mmcfd) of natural gas output were shut in the U.S.
Gulf of Mexico, according to the U.S. Interior Department.
Crude oil prices were higher in Asian trading on Wednesday, extending
the day-earlier's gains on shut-ins and an industry report forecasting a
drop in U.S. crude stockpiles. Oil futures <LCOc1> <CLc1> rose about
1.5% after trading up more than 2% on Tuesday.
The National Hurricane Center warned Sally could drop 10 to 20 inches
(25-50 cm) of rain and up to 30 inches in some spots. It warned of
life-threatening flash flooding along the coast between Mississippi and
the Florida Panhandle.
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Gas station attendants wrap pumps in plastic as Hurricane Sally
approaches to Pass Christian, Mississippi, U.S., September 14, 2020.
REUTERS/Jonathan Bachman/File Photo
Sally's slow crawl will continue after landfall and leave as much as
6 inches of rain through Friday as far inland as Atlanta, said Jim
Foerster, chief meteorologist at weather data provider DTN. "It's
going to be a catastrophic flooding event" for much of the
southeastern United States, he said,
Rain will spread across Alabama, Georgia and South Carolina by
Friday, forecasters said, cutting into travel and damping fuel
demand in the southeast.
U.S. gasoline stocks rose by 3.8 million barrels last week,
according to data released on Tuesday by trade group American
Petroleum Institute, above analysts' expectations in a Reuters poll
for a draw of 160,000 barrels.
(Reporting by Erwin Seba, writing by Gary McWilliams, editing by
Richard Pullin)
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