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January 3, 2006
The Long Recovery - Gulf Coast Oil and Gas
By: Rowan Wolf
According to the Energy Information Administration (EIA), a significant portion of oil and gas are still shut in (or offline) from the 2005 hurricanes. A December 6, 2005 report from Platts, states that about 36% of oil and 27% of natural gas are still offline in the Gulf of Mexico. Almost 40% of Gulf oil and gas is shut in from pre-hurricane levels. This is in part due to damage off shore, and in part to processing facilities not recovering. The Platt articles states that by March of 2006 the oil situation should improve by about 42% (currently 504,000 b/d shut in, decreasing to 297,000 b/d in March).
The EIA also added to their Primer on Gasoline Prices by including a section explaining the gasoline cost increases in 2005. Below is the addition:
" Since the beginning of 2005, U.S. retail gasoline prices have been generally increasing, with the average price of regular gasoline rising from $1.78 per gallon on January 3 to as high as $3.07 per gallon on September 5, as Hurricane Katrina further tightened gasoline supplies. But the hurricane is only one factor, albeit a dramatic one, which has caused gasoline prices to rise in 2005.A major factor influencing gasoline prices in 2005 was the increase in crude oil prices. The price of West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil, which started the year at about $42 per barrel, reached $70 per barrel in early September. Crude oil prices rose throughout 2004 and 2005, as global oil demand increased dramatically, stretching capacity along the entire oil market system, from crude oil production to transportation (tankers and pipelines) to refinery capacity, nearly to its limits. With minimal spare capacity in the face of the potential for significant supply disruptions from numerous sources, oil prices were high throughout 2005.
In addition, Hurricane Katrina had a devastating impact on U.S. gasoline markets, initially taking out more than 25 percent of U.S. crude oil production and 10-15 percent of U.S. refinery capacity. On top of that, major oil pipelines that feed the Midwest and the East Coast from the Gulf of Mexico area were shut down or forced to operate at reduced rates for a significant period. With such a large drop in supply, prices spiked dramatically. Because two pipelines that carry gasoline were down initially, some stations actually ran out of gasoline temporarily. However, once the pipelines were restored to full capacity and some of the refineries were restarted, retail prices began to fall. Increased gasoline imports in the fall of 2005, in part stemming from the International Energy Agency's emergency release, also added downward pressure to gasoline prices. However, retail prices are likely to remain elevated as long as some refineries remain shut down and the U.S. gasoline market continues to stretch supplies to their limit."
So apparently gasoline prices will remain "elevated" well past March of 2006. That is of course assuming that other global production doesn't run up (which it likely will).
Posted by Rowan at January 3, 2006 8:08 AM Category: Peak Oil