Oil slides 3.5 percent as Rita weakens (Reuters) Updated: 2005-09-24 08:53 Crude oil prices slumped 3.5
percent on Friday as massive Hurricane Rita weakened before landfall on the U.S.
Gulf Coast, easing fears the second major storm in a month would lead to
prolonged energy shortages by damaging refineries and pipelines.
U.S. crude oil futures on the New York Mercantile Exchange fell $2.31 to
$64.19 a barrel while prices on London's International Petroleum Exchange
dropped $2.16 to $62.44.
Rita, expected to strike the Texas and Louisiana coasts Saturday morning, has
already paralyzed a vast swath of U.S. refining and crude production. But
dealers anticipated a weakening of the storm could make it easier for the
industry to bounce back.
"The thinking is it will be less of a direct hit on Houston and therefore
less damaging to energy interests and that was enough for people to take some
profits," said Marshall Steeves, analyst at Refco Group in New York.
Nearly 30 percent of U.S. refining capacity was shut down, along with nearly
all oil production from the Gulf of Mexico, as companies battened down for
Rita's heavy winds, massive waves and flooding.
"The total amount of refinery capacity shut down amounts to nearly 5 million
barrels per day," EIA, the Energy Department's analytical arm, said in its
latest hurricane update.
But Rita weakened sharply as it approached land, with winds dropping to 125
miles per hour from peaks around 175 mph reached earlier in the week over the
warm waters of the gulf. At least one private forecaster said he expected the
storm to weaken further before making landfall.
"From what once was a super hurricane, this could turn into one of the
biggest duds of all time," said Charlie Notis at Freese-Notis Weather, a private
weather forecasting firm based in Iowa. Other forecasters said it could remain
near its current strength when it reaches the coast.
BP (BP.L) said on Friday it was hoping for a quick restart of its Texas City
refinery -- the third largest in the United States -- after Rita passes. Several
other refiners have told state regulators they plan restarts early next week.
U.S. crude prices have fallen well below the record near $71 hit in late
August in Katrina's wake, pressured by the release of global reserves of
emergency crude and a wave of products imports from Europe after Katrina.
The International Energy Agency said it could order another release of
emergency crude, gasoline and heating oil reserves to help the
hurricane-battered United States.
"We are on alert," IEA chief Claude Mandil told Reuters.
The Paris-based agency, which groups the world's industrialized nations, will
meet on Saturday to assess damage wrought by Rita.
The U.S. Department of Energy said it was also ready to loan oil from its
Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) as it did after Katrina. But its resources to
deal with a refined products shortage are limited.
"There isn't a shortage of crude. The problem is gasoline," said oil
consultant Geoff Pynne.
Rita led oil companies to shut some 15 refineries on the Gulf Coast, adding
to four that remained shut in the wake of Hurricane Katrina which hit in late
August.
A United Nations weather expert said there could be a record number of
ferocious storms over the Atlantic this year, fueled by a rise in sea
temperatures. Rita is the 17th named storm so far, with two months of the
hurricane season to go.
"The last time we had 21 named storms was in 1933," said Nanette Lombarda of
the World Meteorological Organization.
More than 99 percent of offshore oil output, or 1.49 million bpd, is out of
action in the Gulf of Mexico, the U.S. Minerals Management Service said. More
than 72 percent of gas output, or 7.2 billion cubic feet is also down.
Analysts warned that any damage to natural gas facilities could boost prices
because reduced supplies would be far more difficult to replace than lost crude
and could spur additional demand for heating oil and utility fuel oil.
The threat of supply disruption also hung over Nigeria where armed militants
are targeting oil facilities to demand the release from jail of a militia
leader.
U.S. oil company Chevron shut a second platform on Friday.
The militants have threatened to blow up pipelines and platforms in the
world's eighth biggest crude exporter and a key supplier to the United States.
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