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Refineries scale back as storm moves in; oil falls
THE biggest refineries in the Northeastern United States shut down or throttled back sharply yesterday as Hurricane Sandy moved in. Oil prices fell as it appeared the massive storm will reduce demand by keeping drivers off the road and shutting businesses.
Owners of the six biggest refineries in the Northeast shut down two and cut production at most of the others. That includes a full shutdown of the Phillips 66 refinery in Linden, New Jersey, the second-biggest in the Northeast at 285,000 barrels per day. The biggest refinery in the area, Philadelphia Energy Solutions, was nearly shut.
Sandy is powerful enough to down trees and power lines and cause widespread flooding. Businesses could also be closed for days. If so, demand for gasoline and other oil products would drop sharply.
The power outages and the shutdown of major cities "may take a toll on demand unlike anything we have seen before," wrote Phil Flynn, a senior market analyst for Price Futures Group, in a report yesterday. "The impact on demand may not last for hours but more than likely for days," he wrote.
Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst at Oil Price Information Services, said he expects gasoline demand to drop by two to five million barrels because of the storm. Typical demand for late October is 59 million barrels a week.
Crude oil prices fell 74 cents, or 1.3 percent, to finish at US$85.54 a barrel in trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The Nymex was closed Monday because of the storm and evacuation in New York, but electronic trading continued.
Monday's drop continued a decline in oil prices that began after oil got to around US$100 a barrel in mid-September.
Gasoline for November delivery rose almost 5.8 cents, or 2.1 percent, to US$2.7568, and could shoot higher if refinery damage or long-term shutdowns cause gasoline shortages. Analysts say it's still too early to predict just what the storm's impact would be.
The Philadelphia Energy Solutions refinery, the biggest in the Northeast with a capacity of 330,000 barrels of oil a day, was mostly shut down with some units running only at "minimum safe operating levels," according to spokeswoman Cherice Corley.
Hess shut down its refinery in Port Reading, New Jersey. PBF Energy Co. reduced output at refineries in Delaware City, Delaware. And Paulsboro, New Jersey..
Delta Air Lines Inc. would not say whether its newly-bought refinery in Trainer, Pennsylvania was running or shutting down.
Owners of the six biggest refineries in the Northeast shut down two and cut production at most of the others. That includes a full shutdown of the Phillips 66 refinery in Linden, New Jersey, the second-biggest in the Northeast at 285,000 barrels per day. The biggest refinery in the area, Philadelphia Energy Solutions, was nearly shut.
Sandy is powerful enough to down trees and power lines and cause widespread flooding. Businesses could also be closed for days. If so, demand for gasoline and other oil products would drop sharply.
The power outages and the shutdown of major cities "may take a toll on demand unlike anything we have seen before," wrote Phil Flynn, a senior market analyst for Price Futures Group, in a report yesterday. "The impact on demand may not last for hours but more than likely for days," he wrote.
Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst at Oil Price Information Services, said he expects gasoline demand to drop by two to five million barrels because of the storm. Typical demand for late October is 59 million barrels a week.
Crude oil prices fell 74 cents, or 1.3 percent, to finish at US$85.54 a barrel in trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The Nymex was closed Monday because of the storm and evacuation in New York, but electronic trading continued.
Monday's drop continued a decline in oil prices that began after oil got to around US$100 a barrel in mid-September.
Gasoline for November delivery rose almost 5.8 cents, or 2.1 percent, to US$2.7568, and could shoot higher if refinery damage or long-term shutdowns cause gasoline shortages. Analysts say it's still too early to predict just what the storm's impact would be.
The Philadelphia Energy Solutions refinery, the biggest in the Northeast with a capacity of 330,000 barrels of oil a day, was mostly shut down with some units running only at "minimum safe operating levels," according to spokeswoman Cherice Corley.
Hess shut down its refinery in Port Reading, New Jersey. PBF Energy Co. reduced output at refineries in Delaware City, Delaware. And Paulsboro, New Jersey..
Delta Air Lines Inc. would not say whether its newly-bought refinery in Trainer, Pennsylvania was running or shutting down.
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