Text Only
Search

 
Storms in Gulf of Mexico Upending Oil Industry


21 September 2005
watch Oil report / Real broadband - download - Download (Real) video clip
watch Oil report / Real broadband - download - Watch (Real) video clip
watch Oil report / Real dialup - download - Download (Real) video clip
watch Oil report / Real dialup - download - Watch (Real) video clip

The price of crude oil fell from two-week highs in New York Tuesday, after a record surge in prices Monday. The price fell on the hope that Hurricane Rita, which is expected to hit the Gulf Coast, would veer south, missing most of the Gulf regions' oil refineries. .

After AccuWeather, a private forecasting service, predicted Hurricane Rita would veer south, away from the area's major refineries, crude prices eased from more than $67 dollars a barrel.

NY Stock Exchange
NY Stock Exchange
Dealers had feared a further setback to the U.S. energy industry once Tropical Storm, now Hurricane, Rita, hit shore.

On Tuesday, OPEC agreed to make two million extra barrels of oil a day available, in an effort to reassure markets nervous about supplies for the winter and storms along the U.S. Gulf Coast. 

OPEC President, Sheik Ahmed Fahd Al Ahmed Al Sabah
OPEC President, Sheik Ahmed Fahd Al Ahmed Al Sabah
OPEC President Sheik Ahmed Fahd Al Ahmed Al Sabah said OPEC will do what it can to help the market.

"We believe that the two million, what we have, this is our whole extra capacity until December,” said the sheik. “We know this will increase because there is a lot of investment on-stream, but at least what we have now is ready to be in the market and I hope this will affect the prices positive(ly)."

An oil platform ripped from its mooring in the Gulf of Mexico rests by the shore in Dauphin Island, Alabama
An oil platform ripped from its mooring in the Gulf of Mexico rests by the shore in Dauphin Island, Alabama
What could affect them negatively is a direct hit by Rita on the Galveston and Houston, Texas area.  The extent of the damage caused by Hurricane Katrina to offshore oil platforms has become clear in the past few days.  A preliminary count found 140 damaged platforms in the Gulf, more than 40 beyond repair.  Oil production in the region is already off by 24 million barrels.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
OPEC Offers More Oil to Calm Markets
 
  Top Story
G-7 Nations Agree on Financial Action Plan  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
US, India Sign Civilian Nuclear Accord  Audio Clip Available
Suicide Bomber Kills at Least 30 in Pakistan's Northwest  Audio Clip Available
Obama Responds To McCain Character Attacks  Audio Clip Available
NATO to Target Opium Network Funding Taliban  Audio Clip Available
Russian Troops Withdraw from Georgia, But Is It Enough?  Audio Clip Available
Rice in Top-Level Consultations on North Korean Nuclear Impasse
19 Killed in Southern Peru Suspected Shining Path Attack
Asia's Markets Follow Wall Street With Panic Selling  Audio Clip Available
Obama, McCain Stress Bad Economy
Former Finnish President Martti Ahtisaari Wins Nobel Peace Prize  Audio Clip Available
Turkish Air Strikes Target Kurdish Rebels in Iraq
Petraeus: Serious Ethnic Challenges Loom in Iraq  Video clip available
Israeli Police Deploy in Coastal Town After Jewish-Arab Clashes  Audio Clip Available
South Korea Says North's Nuclear Compromise May Be Near  Audio Clip Available
Financial Crisis Not Changing West African Desire to Migrate to US  Audio Clip Available
Nigerian Oil Workers to Strike  Audio Clip Available
As Election Day Approaches, US Presidential Contenders Trade Charges in TV Ads  Video clip available