February's cold weather shut more U.S. refinery capacity than Hurricane
Harvey
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[April 17, 2021]
HOUSTON (Reuters) - A severe cold
spell in mid-February knocked out a third of U.S. oil refining capacity,
according to data compiled by Reuters and Wood Mackenzie.
A sharp drop in temperatures that lasted five days shut individual units
and sometimes entire plants at 25 refineries in Texas, New Mexico,
Oklahoma, Louisiana and Tennessee.
Six million barrels per day (bpd) of national refining capacity was out
of production before refineries in Beaumont, Corpus Christi and Port
Arthur, Texas, began restarting on Feb. 22.
Bt comparison, Hurricane Harvey idled a fifth of national refining
capacity at the end of August 2017.
The last major unit shut by the storm, the 38,000 barrel-per-day (bpd)
vacuum distillation unit (VDU) at Chevron Corp’s 112,229 bpd Pasadena,
Texas, refinery, restarted on Wednesday, according to sources familiar
with plant operations.
But like in a hurricane, problems inside the plants were compounded by
outages of larger systems on which the refineries rely.
Problems began on the night of Feb. 14 when the 30-degree drop to 15
degrees Fahrenheit froze instrumentation needed to operate production
units, said sources familiar with operations at several refineries.
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The Valero refinery next to the Houston Ship Channel is seen in
Houston, Texas, U.S., May 5, 2019. REUTERS/Loren Elliott/
Crews struggled throughout the night maintaining
minimum levels of production, but on the Feb. 15 utilities failed,
including industrial gas supplies, natural gas for power and steam
production as well as external power, forcing complete shutdowns at
many of the plants, the sources said.
Oil companies have begun describing the financial cost of the
freeze.
Exxon Mobil Corp said at the end of March that the shutdown of its
refineries in Baytown and Beaumont, Texas, accounts for as much as a
quarter of the estimated $800-million loss the company incurred in
February.
The nation’s second largest refiner, Valero Energy Corp, said last
week it will take a charge between $520 million and $535 million for
higher electricity and natural gas costs in the first quarter.
Eight of Valero’s 12 U.S. refineries were shut by the storm.
Phillips 66 said its loss for the first quarter could reach $865
million, but up to $210 million of that is due to a pre-tax
impairment for a pipeline project.
(Reporting by Erwin Seba; Editing by Kim Coghill)
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