Daily Trust

Oil rises, gasoline falls as US refineries restart

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U.S. oil prices rose on Tuesday and gasoline fell as the gradual restart of refineries in the Gulf of Mexico that were shut by Hurricane Harvey raised demand for crude and eased fears of a fuel supply crunch.

Gasoline futures RBc1 dropped around 4 percent from their last close, to $1.68 per gallon, down from $2.17 on Aug. 31 and back to levels last seen before Harvey hit the U.S. Gulf Coast and its large refining industry.

On internatio­nal markets, Brent crude futures LCOc1 also rose by 0.9 percent to $53.23 a barrel amid signals the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries could extend its output limits beyond the first quarter of 2018.

U.S. West Texas Intermedia­te crude futures Clc1 jumped by almost 3 percent to $48.64 per barrel by 1320 GMT, their highest levels in two weeks, up $1.35 cents from their last settlement.

Harvey hit the Texan coast late on Aug. 25 and at its peak knocked out almost a quarter of all U.S. refining capacity.

Another Hurricane Irma - strengthen­ed on Tuesday into a Category 5 hurricane, the most powerful storm on the Saffir-Simpson scale with sustained winds of over 157 miles per hour.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center’s forecast path for the storm has Irma passing south of Florida on Sunday on its way into the Gulf of Mexico.

September is typically the peak of the hurricane season. Another storm is developing behind Irma in the Atlantic, and an area of bad weather in the southwest Gulf of Mexico threatens to become a tropical storm in the next two days. (Reuters)

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