Business World

Oil rises as US refineries restart; Irma wanes

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NEW YORK — Oil prices rose on Monday as key US refineries began restarts following hurricane Harvey, which may help revive crude oil processing, while fuel prices fell as hurricane Irma is likely to clip demand for gasoline and diesel.

The possibilit­y of an extension to the 15-month production pact between members of the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and non- OPEC producers also helped to support prices, traders said.

Brent crude oil futures settled up six cents, or 0.10%, to $53.84 a barrel while US West Texas Intermedia­te crude rose by 59 cents, or 1.20%, to $48.07.

Hurricane Irma knocked out power to over 7.30 million in Florida, Georgia, South Carolina and Alabama, according to state officials and utilities on Monday. That has raised concerns about demand, as storms tend to cut down on driving, particular­ly as many cars have been destroyed.

Both US product futures ended lower — gasoline dropped 0.70% and heating oil fell 1.40%.

Harvey is still likely to be a bigger driver for the crude market, analysts at Goldman Sachs said. A quarter of US refining capacity to be taken off-line due to the hurricane, sapping demand. Refining runs on the US Gulf Coast hit record low in the week to Sept. 1, after the storm, due to shutdowns.

“While some are concerned about the demand side [ from Irma] I don’t think it’s that big a situation,” said James Williams, president of energy consultant WTRG Economics, noting that Harvey had more of an impact on crude. “The demand for crude is going to be set by the refineries coming back online.”

Many US Gulf Coast refineries were restarting, with Motiva Enterprise­s on Monday restoring the 325,000 barrel per day crude distillati­on unit at its Port Arthur, Texas, refinery to minimum production levels, sources said.

Saudi Arabia’s Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih met his Venezuelan and Kazakh counterpar­ts at the weekend to discuss an extension of the deal to cut production by about 1.80 million barrels per day until March 2018 by at least three months, the Saudi energy ministry said. On Monday, Mr. Falih and his United Arab Emirates counterpar­t also agreed to consider an extension beyond March. —

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