Crude dips, gasoline spikes as floods knock out almost a quarter of U.S. refineries
(Reuters) - Oil prices dipped on Wednesday
but gasoline spiked to its highest since mid-2015 as flooding in the wake of
Hurricane Harvey knocked out almost a quarter of U.S. refineries, crimping
demand for crude but raising fears of fuel shortages.
Harvey, which has been downgraded to a storm, has
caused massive floods across coastal Texas, including in Houston. It is now
moving into Louisiana, where more floods are expected.
"Catastrophic and life-threatening flooding
continues in southeastern Texas and portions of southwestern Louisiana,"
the National Hurricane Center (NHC) said in its latest note.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures were
at $46.35 per barrel at 0644 GMT, down 9 cents from their last close. Brent
crude futures were down 6 cents, at $51.94 a barrel.
In the refined product market, price movements have
been more dramatic.
U.S. gasoline prices were over 3 percent higher at
$1.8380 per gallon. Prices earlier climbed to the most since July 31, 2015, at
$1.842.
Diesel futures also jumped, gaining 1.2 percent to $1.6854 a barrel and
were earlier at their highest since Jan. 9 at $1.697.
"As of August 29, we estimate U.S. refining
production offline was 4.1 million barrels per day (bpd); this represents 23
percent of total U.S. refining production," Goldman Sachs said in a note
to clients.
Goldman also said around 1.4 million bpd of crude
production was disrupted, equivalent to 15 percent of total U.S. output.
The NHC said the next 24 hours would remain dangerous.
"There is a danger of life-threatening
inundation, from rising water moving inland from the coastline, during the next
12 to 24 hours," the NHC said, adding that 6 to 12 inches of rain could
fall in far east Texas and southwestern Louisiana.
The largest refinery in the United States, Motiva
Enterprises' 603,000 barrel-per-day (bpd) plant in Port Arthur, Texas, was
shutting down on Tuesday night because of flooding.
Preparing for more rain and floods, Total cut
production in half at its 225,500 bpd refinery, also in Port Arthur.
Restarting plants even under good conditions can take
weeks.
Harvey has also delayed loading of liquefied natural
gas (LNG) at Cheniere's Sabine Pass in Louisiana, the only U.S. LNG export
terminal.
Beyond the impact of Harvey, the American Petroleum
Institute (API) said on Tuesday that U.S. crude inventories fell by 5.780
million barrels last week, an indicator that the U.S. oil market is gradually
tightening.
The figures, however, do not reflect the impact from
Harvey. Government data for last week is due to be published by the Energy
Information Administration (EIA) later on Wednesday.
Traders said that EIA data would take weeks to fully
reflect the impact of the storm and floods.
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