Page added on September 19, 2005
BATON ROUGE — Three weeks after Hurricane Katrina tore into the Gulf Coast and with Tropical Storm Rita threatening the Gulf of Mexico, more than half of the region’s offshore oil production remained cut off from market Monday, a federal agency said.
Following a survey of 54 energy companies, the Minerals Management Service reported 83 of the 819 staffed production platforms in the Gulf were evacuated, compared with 84 on Friday.
Monday’s shut-ins blocked 55.9%, or 837,648 barrels of oil, of the region’s normal daily production of 1.5 million barrels. Also, 3.4 billion cubic feet of natural gas, or 33.8% of the Gulf’s normal daily production of 10 billion cubic feet, were kept from market, the MMS said.
The agency said it was impossible to tell from its survey, which was not taken over the weekend, to determine how many platforms had been re-evacuated because of Rita’s threat.
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