Oil companies in Texas try to restore operations following storm Beryl

By Arathy Somasekhar, Erwin Seba and Marianna Parraga

HOUSTON (Reuters) -Oil and gas companies in Texas were making efforts to restart operations on Tuesday after Hurricane Beryl lashed the state with 80-mph winds, even as some facilities sustained damages and power had not been fully restored.

Beryl made landfall early on Monday near the coastal town of Matagorda. Energy firms shut operations ahead of its arrival and Texas’ largest ports and navigation channels closed. However, its impact on oil and gas production is expected to be limited.

On Tuesday, some ports had reopened, and most producers and facilities were ramping up output after preventively cutting down processing. Some were limited by the slow restoration of power to homes, businesses and industrial customers.

About 2.2 million customers remained without power in Texas and 21,000 more in Louisiana and Arkansas on Tuesday, according to PowerOutage.us, including some 1.7 million served by provider CenterPoint Energy (NYSE:CNP).

The figure was more than double the number of customers that lost power in May when a weather event bringing strong winds hit Houston. It took more than a week for those outages to be resolved in some city neighborhoods.

CenterPoint said on Monday that it expects to have 1 million impacted customers restored by the end of Wednesday.

Houston was expected to be sunny with temperatures in the high 90 degrees Fahrenheit (32.2°C), causing worries as power outages knocked out air conditioning. The Heat Index in southeast Texas could reach as high as 106 degrees Fahrenheit, according to the National Weather Service.

Beryl lost strength quickly upon making landfall and by Tuesday morning had been downgraded to a post-tropical cyclone, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said. It warned that flash flooding and a risk of tornados remained possible from mid-Mississippi to Lower Ohio Valley on Tuesday.

TEXAS FLOODING EASING

Texas is the largest U.S. oil and gas producing state, accounting for some 40% of oil and 20% of gas output, and is also a major shipping and refining hub. Any weather-related interruption could have an impact on crude and fuel production levels, as well as imports and exports.

“Although the hurricane did not cause severe disruptions in U.S. oil production and refining so far, several oil ports remain closed while vast power outages can weigh on oil demand,” Goldman Sachs said in a note.

Flooding in city regions was easing as water receded quickly after Beryl’s severe rainfall, which surpassed 11 inches in some areas south of Houston.

Most refineries in Houston and Texas City are designed to maintain operations even amid heavy rainfall, but some of those facilities, ports and other energy infrastructure can develop problems from sustained power interruptions, experts said.

Marathon Petroleum Corp (NYSE:MPC) was preparing on Monday to restart multiple units at its 631,000-bpd Galveston Bay oil refinery in Texas City, sources said. The plant was awaiting power to restart operations, the company said in a state regulatory filing.

Phillips 66 (NYSE:PSX)’s 265,000-bpd Sweeny refinery in Texas returned plants to normal operations after an upset early on Monday caused by Beryl.

Citgo Petroleum temporarily reduced production over the weekend at its 165,000-bpd Corpus Christi plant.

Ports from Point Comfort through Houston, including Freeport, Galveston, and Texas City, saw damage in various forms along with substantial operational delays, a shipping agency wrote in a note to clients.

However, the Port of Corpus Christi reopened ship navigation on Monday and the Port of Freeport said it reopened on Monday, even though it was lacking full power supply, according to a notice from a shipping agency.

The Port of Houston said its terminals would remain closed on Tuesday after conducting a preliminary assessment of facilities and systems.

While some ships may begin moving into the port of Houston on Tuesday afternoon, deep draft ship movements would not likely begin until Wednesday after the safe reopening of its various channels, the shipping agency wrote.

Vessel and cargo operations at the Port of Galveston, about 50 miles (80.47 km) from Houston, remained suspended on Tuesday after the passage of Beryl as power outages continued in parts of the city, the maritime commercial center in Galveston said. At least one cruise ship was cleared to dock at the port on Tuesday.

Shell (LON:SHEL), Chevron (NYSE:CVX) and BP (NYSE:BP) started redeploying personnel evacuated from their Gulf of Mexico platforms.

Freeport LNG, the third largest liquefied natural gas facility in the U.S., has not provided an operational update since it said it ramped-down production on Sunday.

Formosa Plastics said on Monday it had temporarily shut down operations at its Point Comfort plant site.

Enterprise Products Partners (NYSE:EPD) said a unit tripped due to the weather at its natural gas liquids (NGL) processing facility in Mont Belvieu, in east Texas, according to a filing.

Energy Transfer (NYSE:ET)’s Mont Belvieu NGL facility was fully operational on Tuesday, the company said, following issues reported in a regulatory filing. Mont Belvieu is the pricing point for North American NGL markets.

Enterprise did not provide additional details, while Formosa did not reply to requests for comments.

This post is originally published on INVESTING.

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