Gas prices up as Gustav threatens Gulf refineries

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STEVENSON JACOBS | August 29, 2008 05:30 PM EST | AP

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NEW YORK — Retail gas prices swung higher Friday _ the first increase in 43 days _ as analysts warned that a direct hit on U.S. energy infrastructure by Hurricane Gustav could send pump prices hurtling toward $5 a gallon.

Meanwhile, oil prices ended the day slightly lower, falling for a second straight session. But prices fluctuated sharply as some traders feared supply disruptions and others bet the government will release supplies from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve if Gustav wreaks havoc in the Gulf of Mexico area _ home to a quarter of U.S. crude supplies and 40 percent of refining capacity.

Gustav, which regained hurricane strength Friday, was spinning away from Jamaica on a course toward Gulf Coast states including Louisiana _ three years to the day since Hurricane Katrina slammed into the state and tore up oil rigs and refineries.

Fears of another monster storm have sent wholesale gasoline prices shooting up in the Gulf region, forcing filling stations to pass on the costs by raising pump prices ahead of Labor Day weekend.

A gallon of regular gasoline jumped about a penny overnight to a national average of $3.669, according to auto club AAA, the Oil Price Information Service and Wright Express.

That's the first increase since prices peaked at an average $4.114 a gallon on July 17, an all-time high.

Jeff Rubin, chief economist at investment bank CIBC World Markets, said that record could be shattered if Gustav seriously disrupts offshore energy production.

In 2005, pump prices jumped from slightly more than $2 a gallon to above $3 after Katrina and Hurricane Rita destroyed more than 100 oil platforms and damaged several refineries.

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"The price consequences could be even worse this time," Rubin said in a report, noting that oil and gasoline inventories are lower than when Katrina and Rita hit. "Any replays of the 2005 storm season could see gasoline prices soar to $5 per gallon."

Gustav was moving northwest of Jamaica toward the Cayman Islands after triggering floods and killing 59 people in Haiti and eight more in the Dominican Republic.

Light, sweet crude for October delivery fell 13 cents to settle $115.46 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after earlier rising as high as $118.76. On Thursday, prices fell $2.56 at $115.59 a barrel, the first time this week it closed lower.

Analysts attributed the volatility to doubts over whether Gustav will affect offshore energy production, as well as speculation that the Energy Department will tap the Strategic Petroleum Reserve should the storm threatens supplies.

"Until this hurricane hits, the trend has to be higher toward the $120 level," said Jonathan Kornafel, Asia director for brokerage Hudson Capital Energy in Singapore. "If this turns out to be a nonevent, the market could really come roaring back down."

As Gustav advanced, oil companies were pulling employees off installations.

Royal Dutch Shell PLC has evacuated nearly 670 workers. BP PLC was also removing personnel from the region, while Exxon Mobil said it was bracing its structures for heavy wind and rain.

Transocean Inc., the world's largest offshore drilling contractor, said Friday it had evacuated about 400 workers from 11 offshore drilling rigs in the Gulf. Transocean still has 1,150 workers in the region.

Weather research firm Planalytics predicted as much as 80 percent of the Gulf's oil and gas production could be shut down as a precaution if Gustav enters the region as a major storm.

Forecasters said Gustav might slip between Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula and the western tip of Cuba on Sunday, then march toward a Tuesday collision with the U.S. Gulf Coast _ anywhere from south Texas to the Florida panhandle.

"It seems there will be at the very least a slight hit to production," Kornafel said. "But everything is up in the air until Monday or Tuesday."

Gustav is the first storm of the 2008 Atlantic hurricane season to pose a serious threat to offshore oil and gas installations in the Gulf.

Some analysts, however, noted that lower appetite for oil products in the United States could well dampen Gustav's effect on the Gulf area's oil output.

"U.S. oil demand is currently 1.6 million barrels a day lower than when Katrina struck," said Olivier Jakob of Petromatrix in Switzerland. "There is today more U.S. refining capacity offline for economic reasons than can be destroyed by Gustav."

In other Nymex trading, heating oil lost 0.07 cent to settle at $3.1819 a gallon, while gasoline fell 1.15 cents to settle at $3.0099 a gallon. Natural gas fell 10.7 cents to settle at $7.943 per 1,000 cubic feet.

In London, October Brent crude fell 12 cents to settle at $114.05 a barrel.

___

Associated Press writers Pablo Gorondi in Budapest, Hungary and Alex Kennedy in Singapore contributed to this report.

NEW YORK — Retail gas prices swung higher Friday _ the first increase in 43 days _ as analysts warned that a direct hit on U.S. energy infrastructure by Hurricane Gustav could send pump prices h...
NEW YORK — Retail gas prices swung higher Friday _ the first increase in 43 days _ as analysts warned that a direct hit on U.S. energy infrastructure by Hurricane Gustav could send pump prices h...
 
 

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- insanityfollows See Profile I'm a Fan of insanityfollows permalink

And Cheney and his "energy policy" of 7 years are now in Georgia sticking their tongues out at Russia, while oil has gone up from roughly $25 a barrel when Bush/Cheney took office to a current price (not the record) of roughly $115 a barrel. That is an increase of 460 percent in 7 years. This is eating us alive.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:22 AM on 08/31/2008
- ndem See Profile I'm a Fan of ndem permalink

Actually hurricanes to this area not only disrupt production offshore the main pipelines on the East Texas/West Louisiana border and tanker transport is stopped, or goes offline for quite some time as it did when it took a direct hit with hurricane Rita.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:59 PM on 08/30/2008
- AllenD See Profile I'm a Fan of AllenD permalink

From the oildrim.com blog (earlier attempt to post link scrubbed by HuffPo censors, Google the oil drum for link):

Recent track shifts have it consistently hitting Louisiana, slightly east of the majority of oil and gas rigs, but this could easily change in either direction, in fact as of the 17:00 EST update, Chuck's current models have the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port or LOOP--the only supertanker oil port on the USA East Coast--being extensively damaged and offline, as well as refinery shut downs for some length of time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:54 PM on 08/30/2008
- AllenD See Profile I'm a Fan of AllenD permalink

Here is a link to the oildrum.com blog on Gustav and infrastructure damage models. It looks like the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port is dead center in the projected path. http://www.theoildrum.com/node/4468#more

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:37 PM on 08/30/2008
- Erdgeist See Profile I'm a Fan of Erdgeist permalink

The MSM is painting the picture that oil prices follow demand. This is nonsense. Oil prices follow speculation. This is exactly what is happening with Hurricane Gustav. Going back to last year, the fear that "peak oil" was at last here fueled speculation although there was no actual oil shortage. On the same track "speculation" posses a dangerous threat to the world economy. It needs to be either stopped or tightly controlled and leveraging stopped. There is no rational basis for any kind of speculative market. History has shown that speculation has caused every major depression (bubbles are created not by agriculture or manufacturing but by financial markets).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:49 AM on 08/30/2008
- insanityfollows See Profile I'm a Fan of insanityfollows permalink

You are correct, and the false speculation has driven up oil prices so high that now there is real fear for future oil specualation, the market (I fear) is going to hit critical mass. I remember paying right around $4 a gallon in Kansas City about a week after Katrina. I really hate to think about what is going to happen to gas prices this next couple of weeks. It could be a really long cold winter.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:11 AM on 08/31/2008
- Durango See Profile I'm a Fan of Durango permalink

And you know, Saudi Arabia agrees with you.

they couldn't figure out why the price of oil was so high.

Actually, the Senate Investigations Committee reported on this some time ago. Tied the Enron Loophole to inflated Natural Gas prices.

Want to be the price of oil drops like a rock on Jan. 21, 2009 when President Obama is in office?

What is in Cheney's Energy Policy? The policy we have been following for the past 7 years.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:42 AM on 08/30/2008
- raker See Profile I'm a Fan of raker permalink

They really should stop building oil rigs out of sticks and straw and try building them out of bricks. What fragile, dainty little structures they must be if conventional hurricanes tear them to bits, or so the fairy tale goes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:05 AM on 08/30/2008
- Paul See Profile I'm a Fan of Paul permalink

The platforms and equipment are designed to withstand hurricanes. But the people are removed and the oil production shut-in as a precaution. Usually, when the hurricane blows by, they go back out to the platforms, do a little clean-up and restart production.

Those platforms cost millions. The oil companies would not invest in them and then put them out in the Gulf if they would blow away in a hurricane.

Anyway, the price of oil is too low. It encourages wasteful consumption in the US.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:27 PM on 08/30/2008
- MarkInEugene See Profile I'm a Fan of MarkInEugene permalink

We've stalled weaning ourselves off this accursed, non-renewable, polluting fuel for 30 years.

It's time America puts its knowledge and resources into finding alternatives

The days of oil shortages, obscene profiteering, Middle East Conflict and economic instability caused by this crude source of energy must come to an end. Lets DO IT NOW before we get stuck in another energy crisis situation due to our dependence on foreign oil that is going to run out in the next 50 years anyway!

It's time America made the switch to alternatives! It's way overdue!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:51 AM on 08/30/2008
- ccpostman See Profile I'm a Fan of ccpostman permalink

Don't forget these untimely Gulf Hurricanes that the oil companies just love!

Gives them and the gas station owners one last chance before winter to inflate the prices way above what they have to be!

They pray for these storms! Takes the refineries offline and gives them another BS excuse to raise prices. Enron had nothing on the oil companies. First rate crooks.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:34 AM on 08/30/2008
- TxAggie See Profile I'm a Fan of TxAggie permalink

CC -I work for an independent company with 100 employees. We drill and produce in the GOM , La and Texas. We do not get one single dime if we do not produce and we are not in the gasoline business. Hurricanes in the GOM are a risk to our very existence and we do not love them a bit.

We are one of the companies that go to work every day and find 90% of the domestic discoveries. We are not crooks, we do not pollute and we do the very best we can in spite of those in the public who think to the contrary and really don't know what they are talking about.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:16 AM on 08/30/2008
- darthdarcy See Profile I'm a Fan of darthdarcy permalink

If McCain would stop his saber rattling with Russia along with Rice and Bush and Cheney and the same losers that were so incompetent during Katrina, weren't still in charge for Gustav maybe Oil wouldn't be shooting up again as much...!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:15 PM on 08/29/2008
- woundedduck See Profile I'm a Fan of woundedduck permalink

At least they didn't blame Obama's speech.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:18 PM on 08/29/2008
- AdV2k1 See Profile I'm a Fan of AdV2k1 permalink

They shouldn't change prices of Oil based on hype, this is wrong. If something ACTUALLY HAPPENS that is fine. THe stock market is such full of crap

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:01 PM on 08/29/2008
- Alexandro See Profile I'm a Fan of Alexandro permalink

and here the speculators go again to make a quick buck:-(

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:41 PM on 08/29/2008
- vietveter See Profile I'm a Fan of vietveter permalink

STEVENSON JACOBS

Here is the REAL TITLE for your story

If you cared to print the truth

OIL PRICES RISE ON SPECULATORS HOPE OF MORE PROFIT

Get it right or stay home!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:06 PM on 08/29/2008
- 1rewd1 See Profile I'm a Fan of 1rewd1 permalink

Why has our society become a such herd of hysterical pantie waists?

Some guy drops a quart of 10w40 at WalMart and the markets go crazy.

Life doesn't have to look like the "Drudge Report" home page, nor is it healthy to live like does.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:17 PM on 08/29/2008
- orianna See Profile I'm a Fan of orianna permalink

This is a good reminder that offshore oil rigs are going to get smashed with every big storm and mean big costs passed onto us... while we wait for that 10 cent savings in 10 years!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:04 PM on 08/29/2008
- ccpostman See Profile I'm a Fan of ccpostman permalink

It is a freebie write-off for the oil companies.

They lost a ton of platforms to Kitrina and Rita and they still make billions in profits each year.
http://www.cccarto.com/katrina/index.html
http://www.cccarto.com/rita/index.html

They must loose a lot of platforms in each Gulf hurricane? How much is the cost of a average oil platform?

I don't think they worry, it is a push! They are free with Bush's generous tax breaks.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:45 AM on 08/30/2008
- research See Profile I'm a Fan of research permalink

Speculation.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:04 PM on 08/29/2008
- Durango See Profile I'm a Fan of Durango permalink

You know, before GW Bush became President you NEVER heard of the heard of a Hurricane raising the price of gasoline.

At least not out here in the West.

For one thing, oil companies and refiners can PREDICT that a hurricane may come by and used to put aside reserves for that contingency. They wouldn't want to lose revenue from disruptions.

Apparently thinking ahead is no longer a business strategy in George Bush's America.

Who knows what was in Dick Cheney's secret Energy Policy that we have been following for the past 7 years?

But it appears to be wildly successful in making his buddies rich, rich, Rich.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:04 PM on 08/29/2008
- KarlaElisa See Profile I'm a Fan of KarlaElisa permalink

Durango, that's a G*d damn good point.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:53 PM on 08/30/2008
- DFL See Profile I'm a Fan of DFL permalink

OIL COMPANIES DONT WANT TO SEE ANY CHANGE, THEY ARE LOWERING THE PRICES FOR A WHILE TO FOOL THE FOOLISH INTO VOTING FOR OILMAN JOHN W MC BUSH

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:23 AM on 08/29/2008
- indypete See Profile I'm a Fan of indypete permalink

Ya think?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:06 PM on 08/29/2008
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