Oil prices ease as Gustav leaves infrastructure unharmed

Several major US refiners said early checks showed their facilities were unharmed by Hurricane Gustav, but at least two others…

Several major US refiners said early checks showed their facilities were unharmed by Hurricane Gustav, but at least two others were said to be considering dipping into the US Strategic Petroleum Reserve to keep operations going after the storm shut down key waterways.

Gustav weakened to Category 2 before roaring ashore near Port Fourchon, Louisiana, yesterday, potentially sparing the the kind of damage that the region's platforms, rigs and refineries suffered at the hands of more powerful Katrina three years ago.

Offshore operators said remote sensors indicated that major platforms remained where they were moored before the storm, although Shell, the region's largest producer, said it may take three to five days to restore production.

Energy companies had to shut in all 1.3 million barrels of US offshore oil production - a quarter of U.S. output - as well as 7.06 billion cubic feet per day in natural gas supply, or nearly all of the 15 per cent of national production the Gulf provides, as Gustav ploughed through the region.

By late last night, Gustav had subsided to a tropical storm, with winds of 96.5kph, as it moved inland across Louisiana.

US crude stood at $111.07 a barrel by 0415 GMT, about 33 cents below trading levels late yesterday, when prices slumped $4 on easing concerns about Gustav, which had been called the biggest threat to the sector since 2005's devastation.

Thirteen refineries with a combined capacity of 2.67 million barrels per day (bpd) - 15 per cent of the country's total - were shut by late yesterday, but early signs suggested many had been spared.

Valero Energy said an initial check of its 250,000 barrels per day (bpd) refinery at St Charles, Louisiana, refinery showed no significant structural damage from Gustav, and that the plant had electrical power.

ConocoPhillips said remote sensors showed that its Magnolia platform in the Gulf of Mexico had suffered no damage from the hurricane.

Elsewhere, police said no flooding had been seen at the Exxon Mobil Chalmette, Murphy Meraux and ConocoPhillips Alliance refineries south and east of New Orleans.

The second-largest U.S. refinery, Exxon Mobil's 503,000-bpd Baton Rouge plant was suddenly and temporarily turned off in an electrical power failure caused by high winds.

Ten refineries with a combined capacity of 3.23 million barrels were at reduced output as ship channels from Florida to Houston were shut, cutting off their supply of crude.

The Louisiana Offshore Oil Port, the only US port capable of offloading the biggest oil tankers, also halted all operations due to high winds and waves.

Chevron said production was cut at its 330,000 barrel-per-day (bpd) refinery in Pascagoula, Mississippi, due to the closure of the ship channel, but expected output to resume as soon as the channel opens. The channel was expected to reopen once weather from Hurricane Gustav clears.

Facing reduced feedstock supplies, Exxon Mobil Corp and Shell Oil Co. are expected to seek emergency crude from the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) today, Louisiana's Republican governor Bobby Jindal said.

An Exxon spokeswoman said she could not confirm Mr Jindal's statement. A US Energy Department official said no requests had yet been made to uncork some of the 700 million barrels of crude the US has on hand for a supply interruption.

The offshore fleet of production platforms and drilling rigs may have fared as well as the refineries, with Conoco and Anadarko saying remote sensors indicated the giant and costly structures had not been dragged far away or crushed.

Shell said it was planning to begin returning crews to platforms outside of Gustav's path.

Reuters