Business World

Oil roiled as hurricane slams into US Gulf coast

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SINGAPORE — Oil markets were roiled on Monday after Hurricane Harvey wreaked havoc along the US Gulf coast over the weekend, knocking out numerous refineries and some crude production.

Gasoline prices hit two-year highs as massive floods caused by the storm forced refineries across the US Gulf Coast to shut down.

In crude markets, Brent futures were pushed up by pipeline blockades in Libya, but US crude futures eased as the US refinery shutdowns could reduce demand for American crude.

Harvey came ashore over the weekend as the most powerful hurricane to hit Texas in more than 50 years, killing at least two people, causing large-scale flooding, and forcing the closure of Houston port as well as several refineries.

The US National Hurricane Center ( NHC) said on Monday that Harvey was moving away from the coast but was expected to linger close to the shore through Tuesday, and that floods would spread from Texas eastward to Louisiana.

Texas is home to 5.60 million barrels of refining capacity per day, and Louisiana has 3.30 million barrels. Over two million barrels per day ( bpd) of refining capacity were estimated to be offline as a result of the storm.

Spot prices for US gasoline futures surged 7% to a peak of $ 1.7799 per gallon, the highest level since late July 2015, before easing slightly to $ 1.7622 by 0358 GMT.

To avoid a fuel shortage, US traders were seeking oil product cargoes from North Asia, several refining and shipping sources told Reuters on Monday.

“There may be meaningful and long-term damage to Texas’ refining capacity,” said Jeffrey Halley, analyst at futures brokerage OANDA.

Crude production was also affected, but to a lesser degree.

About 22%, or 379,000 bpd, of Gulf production was idled due to the storm as of Sunday afternoon, according to the US Bureau of Safety and Environmen­tal Enforcemen­t. There may also be around 300,000 bpd of onshore US production shut in, trading sources said.

US West Texas Intermedia­te ( WTI) futures were at $47.70 a barrel, down 17 cents, or 0.40%, from their last settlement.

“It may well be that the market feels the choke point in petroleum’s value chain is not (crude) production, but refined products,” Mr. Halley said.

If US oil output is little affected, there could be excess crude as refiners stay shut and don’t process crude to produce fuel.

In internatio­nal oil markets, Brent crude was stronger at $52.58 per barrel, up 17 cents, or 0.30% as Libyan pipeline blockades prevented three oil fields from supplying crude.

These opposing price movements pushed the WTI discount versus Brent to as much as $4.99 per barrel, the widest in two years.

While the full extent of the storm’s damage is not yet clear, some analysts said the impact would be felt globally and affect energy markets for weeks. —

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