Bloomberg

Biggest Oil Refineries in U.S. Are Going Dark Amid the Cold

Bloomberg logoBloomberg 15/02/2021 22:41:51 Jeffrey Bair and Barbara Powell
a large long train on a steel track: The Motiva Enterprises LLC Refinery stands in Port Arthur, Texas, U.S., on Monday, Aug. 24, 2020. Oil and chemical facilities located along the Texas Gulf Coast are shuttering, securing equipment or running through emergency protocols ahead of a strong hurricane set to rip through the region this week. © BloombergThe Motiva Enterprises LLC Refinery stands in Port Arthur, Texas, U.S., on Monday, Aug. 24, 2020. Oil and chemical facilities located along the Texas Gulf Coast are shuttering, securing equipment or running through emergency protocols ahead of a strong hurricane set to rip through the region this week.

(Bloomberg) -- After creating havoc in the power and natural gas markets, the next commodity sector causing concern in Texas is the state's enormous oil refining industry, where installations are being forced offline by the big freeze.

The largest refineries in North America were shutting down Monday because of arctic conditions that have cut electricity, water and fuel supplies across Texas. More than 3 million barrels of daily oil-processing capacity has been idled in the wake of the record-setting cold, according to consultant Energy Aspects Ltd.

The shutdowns portend tightening supplies and higher prices for everything from gasoline to propane in coming days and weeks in cities across the country that rely on the U.S. Gulf Coast for fuels. The impact on fuel supplied by pipeline will likely spread far beyond Texas if the outages last more than a few days, considering that the oil industry had already cut back production during the pandemic. The Gulf Coast supplies more than three-fifths of the East Coast's fuel.

Gasoline futures rose 3.5% to $1.75 a gallon on the New York Mercantile Exchange on Monday as traders watched developments in Texas:

Saudi Aramco's Motiva Enterprises LLC is halting operations at its Port Arthur, Texas, refinery, the nation's largest, according to an email from the company.Marathon Petroleum Corp.'s Galveston Bay plant south of Houston was shut in response to the chill, Reuters reported.Exxon Mobil Corp. shut its massive Baytown refinery near Houston, as well as some units at its refinery in the town of Beaumont about 70 miles (112 kilometers) to the east, spokeswoman Sarah Nordin said. In addition to the cold, the Beaumont closure was also driven by a shortage of natural gas.Total SE ratcheted down crude processing to minimal levels and shut a key refining unit at its Port Arthur, Texas, plant, a person familiar with operations said. The refinery probably will shut completely within hours as temperatures drop, the person said.

Video: 'All Clear' Issued After Chevron Oil Spill Dumps 600 Gallons Of Petroleum Into Bay (CBS SF Bay Area)

UP NEXT
UP NEXT

Oil pipelines, electricity generators and wind farms have been paralyzed by the extreme weather conditions in the nation's top crude-producing state. Refinery capacity is shrinking at a faster pace than oil production is declining due to the arctic weather, according to Energy Aspects.

More on the Texas Freeze
Blackouts Cascade Beyond Texas in Deepening Power Crisis
'This Is Extremely Dangerous': Texans in Peril at Home, on Road
U.S. LNG Exports to Fall as Deep Freeze Shuts Ports, Wells

"Disruptions to refining operations could be prolonged if the cold damages any equipment or if the power outages affecting Texas are not resolved quickly," the consultant said in a note to clients.

(Adds additional background in third paragraph)

For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

mardi 16 février 2021 00:41:51 Categories: Bloomberg

ShareButton
ShareButton
ShareButton
  • RSS

Suomi sisu kantaa
NorpaNet Beta 1.1.0.18818 - Firebird 5.0 LI-V6.3.2.1497

TetraSys Oy.

TetraSys Oy.