Oil, Gas and Shale
Advertisement




Advertisement




Advertisement




Advertisement




Advertisement




Advertisement




Refineries and Oil Rigs Shuttered by Harvey Coming Back Online

Published: September 7, 2017 |

An oil refinery in Corpus Christi, Texas, shortly before Harvey's arrival.

An oil refinery in Corpus Christi, Texas, shortly before Harvey's arrival.
[Click image to enlarge]

Oil industry infrastructure that was shut down as Hurricane Harvey ravaged the Gulf Coast of Texas is starting to come back online, Axios reports.

Eight refineries representing 11.4 percent of U.S. refining capacity are beginning procedures to restart, a process that could take weeks or months for each plant to operate at full capacity again, according to a Monday Department of Energy (DOE) report.

Harvey knocked out more than a fifth of U.S. refining capacity overall. Half of that should be back online by Thursday, however, Goldman Sachs officials told Axios.

Colonial Pipeline has begun carrying jet fuel and diesel in certain lines shut down due to Harvey, however, its natural gas lines are still empty. Colonial is the largest refined product pipeline in the U.S., supplying the East Coast with jet fuel, diesel, and natural gas.

Offshore oil rigs and platforms in the Gulf of Mexico are almost completely back online, Axios reports.

Platforms are anchored to the seabed and supply a stable base for oil rigs needing repairs and maintenance. Fourteen of 737 platforms in the Gulf remain evacuated. Workers have returned to all five rigs evacuated before Harvey, though, the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement reported Monday.

Source: The Daily Caller


Be in-the-know when you’re on-the-go!

FREE eNews delivery service to your email twice-weekly. With a focus on lead-driven news, our news service will help you develop new business contacts on an on-going basis.
CLICK HERE to register your email address.

Advertisement




Advertisement




Advertisement




Advertisement




Advertisement




Advertisement