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$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')il Refineries Update Ticker Staff
123jump.com Last Update Sep 2 2005
Marathon Oil Corporation
The company has begun damage assessments of all facilities in areas affected by hurricane Katrina, and the Company is providing assistance to employees and neighboring communities impacted by the storm.
Activities are focused on the Company's Garyville, Louisiana, refinery, which has 245,000 barrels per day of crude oil processing capacity, as well as the Marathon-operated offshore oil and gas production platforms at South Pass (located 100 miles south of New Orleans) and Ewing Bank (located 130 miles south of New Orleans).
Gross production from these facilities of approximately 18,500 barrels of oil per day (bpd) and 25 million cubic feet of natural gas per day (mmcfd), remains shut-in as a result of the storm.
Marathon's total net production from these operated facilities, as well as other non-operated properties, is approximately 43,000 bpd and 110 mmcfd and this production remains shut-in as a result of the hurricane.
Murphy Oil Corporation
...No assessment has been made regarding pipelines nor can any estimated timeline be given at this time for restarting either facility or any of our other offshore Louisiana production. Some flooding occurred at the Company’s 125,000 barrel a day refinery in Meraux, Louisiana.
While repair to part of the plant’s electrical equipment and instrumentation, as well as a general cleanup of the facility, will be necessary, the refinery appears to have sustained no major damage from the storm. However, no estimate can be provided regarding timing of start-up.
ConocoPhillips
Several ConocoPhillips facilities were impacted by hurricane Katrina:
Alliance refinery remains shut down and access is limited due to flooding in the area. Most of offshore production remains shut in, however we are moving employees back to the platforms to begin assessing the situation.
In addition, many of employees have been affected by the devastation left by hurricane Katrina and the resultant flooding in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama.
Chevron
Chevron today announced that it safely evacuated all of its offshore employees and contractors from facilities in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico prior to the approach of hurricane Katrina. Chevron continues to produce some oil and natural gas in the Western Gulf of Mexico region. Chevron’s New Orleans office is temporarily closed and employees and contractors who work there were advised to follow evacuation recommendations made by government agencies where they reside.