THE TIMES (UK): Shell reassures over Hurricane Katrina: "Shell, the international oil giant, has tried to reassure markets and its investors about the impact on its operations of Hurricane Katrina, which forced it to shut down oil and chemical refineries in the United States and Gulf of Mexico.": Posted Saturday September 10, 2005
By Miles Costello, Times Online
Shell, the international oil giant, has tried to reassure markets and its
investors about the impact on its operations of Hurricane Katrina, which forced
it to shut down oil and chemical refineries in the United States and Gulf of
Mexico.
The reassurances from Shell, which said it hoped to have production restored to
60 per cent of capacity during the fourth quarter, came as the oil price rose
again on fears of a winter fuel supply shortage.
The US Energy Department has forecast dramatic increases to the cost of petrol
and natural gas - likely to have a knock-on effect on fuel prices in Britain -
after the devastation caused by Katrina resulted in lost production capacity of
13.6 million barrels of oil.
At least four oil refineries in the Mexican Gulf are believed still to be out of
action in the wake of the Hurricane, which caused catastrophic damage in New
Orleans and led to deaths estimated at at least 25,000.
This morning American crude oil rose again to trade above $65 a barrel, although
this is down from the $70 a barrel heights it hit in the immediate aftermath of
Katrina.
Shell said that production is now "flowing and ramping up" at all the facilities
it operates in the Western Mexican Gulf. In the Eastern Gulf, Shell said its two
oil and gas plants were "operating normally".
During the first half of the year, Shell and its affiliates were producing about
450,000 barrels off oil a day.
Shell said - nearly two weeks after the Hurricane struck - it had now managed to
return production to 160,000 barrels - just over 35 per cent of its normal
amount. "Significant efforts" are being made to improve this as it tries to
assess the impact of Katrina on its assets, pipelines and transportation
facilities.
The group said: "Pending full assessment and evaluation of instrastructure and
assets, it is expected that about 60 per cent of total production will be
restored to pre-hurricane levels within Q4, 2005.
"The situation with respect to the remaining production, mainly from the Mars
and Ursa area, Mensa, and Cognac, is still being assessed but production from
these facilities may not be feasible during the fourth quarter, depending on
options available for recovery."
Shell and its partner Motiva operate seven refineries in the United States,
processing about 1 million barrels of oil a day. The group said that two of
these, representing about 27 per cent of its capacity, were hit by the
Hurricane.
The oil gaint said it has completed repairs on one, the Motiva Convent refinery,
and hopes to restore production to full capacity "over several days". The
second, Motiva Norco, refinery could restart operations in the middle of next
week.
Shell Chemical, which operates plants in Louisiana and Alabama, is "continuing
to make progress in restoring operations". The Louisiana plant is running at 60
per cent capacity and the Alabama mobile plant is in the final start-up phase.
Shell added: "Work is in progress assessing the full impact of the storm on our
network, and great efforts are being made to keep production flowing. Motiva has
taken specific actions to help control prices in the affected areas and is also
taking strict measures against price gouging by any of our branded locations."
Shares in Shell rose nearly 1 per cent to 1,836p as morning trading progressed,
valuing the oil group at more than £50 billion.
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