World oil prices rose by more than US$1 in Asian trading yesterday after Hurricane Gustav forced the shutdown of almost all oil production in the Gulf of Mexico.
New York’s main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in October, rose US$1.17 to US$116.63 a barrel from its close of US$115.46 on Friday at the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent North Sea crude for October gained US$1.04 to US$115.09 from US$114.05 in London on Friday.
About one-quarter of US oil production comes from the Gulf, but US officials said on Sunday that more than 96 percent of Gulf oil production and 82 percent of natural gas output had been stopped in the face of the storm.
“It’s all about Gustav,” said Tony Nunan of Mitsubishi Corp’s international petroleum business in Tokyo.
Heavy winds and rains began battering the Gulf Coast yesterday, although the eye of the storm was not expected to make official landfall until later in the day.
Nunan said price gains had been limited because of underlying worries about a global economic slowdown and falling demand for oil.
World oil prices have sunk from record highs above US$147 a barrel in early July after surging from US$100 at the start of the year.
Monday’s rise of about US$1 was “not really that much,” Nunan said, adding that trading would be thin because the US markets were shut for the Labor Day holiday yesterday.
If oil facilities survive the storm undamaged, the oil price could continue its trend down. But damage on the scale of Hurricane Katrina three years ago could generate a price surge to US$120, Nunan said.
The threat of Gustav raised grim memories of the 2005 hurricanes Katrina and Rita that damaged or destroyed about 165 of around 4,000 oil platforms in the Gulf.
US energy giant ExxonMobil said on Sunday it had completed storm preparations for its Gulf Coast oil and gas operations. Workers on offshore platforms had been evacuated, the company said.
“We are also releasing personnel from onshore facilities anticipated to be in or near the path of the storm,” it said in a statement, adding the company expected to continue supplying its customers.
One of ExxonMobil’s refineries, in Chalmette, Louisiana, was being shut down, but Exxon’s other refineries and chemical plants on the Gulf Coast remained in operation as of Sunday, the company said.
Shell, in addition to its offshore facilities, was also shutting a number of its coastal refineries and chemical plants while putting others on standby.
British oil group BP and US rival ConocoPhillips also evacuated offshore workers.
Oil industry analyst Andy Lipow, based in Houston, Texas, said there would be a supply disruption, “but how quickly can the industry recover is going to be the key.”
Lipow said the oil industry was now better prepared for storms, both with offshore and onshore facilities.
‘ABUSE OF POWER’: Lee Chun-yi allegedly used a Control Yuan vehicle to transport his dog to a pet grooming salon and take his wife to restaurants, media reports said Control Yuan Secretary-General Lee Chun-yi (李俊俋) resigned on Sunday night, admitting that he had misused a government vehicle, as reported by the media. Control Yuan Vice President Lee Hung-chun (李鴻鈞) yesterday apologized to the public over the issue. The watchdog body would follow up on similar accusations made by the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) and would investigate the alleged misuse of government vehicles by three other Control Yuan members: Su Li-chiung (蘇麗瓊), Lin Yu-jung (林郁容) and Wang Jung-chang (王榮璋), Lee Hung-chun said. Lee Chun-yi in a statement apologized for using a Control Yuan vehicle to transport his dog to a
Taiwan yesterday denied Chinese allegations that its military was behind a cyberattack on a technology company in Guangzhou, after city authorities issued warrants for 20 suspects. The Guangzhou Municipal Public Security Bureau earlier yesterday issued warrants for 20 people it identified as members of the Information, Communications and Electronic Force Command (ICEFCOM). The bureau alleged they were behind a May 20 cyberattack targeting the backend system of a self-service facility at the company. “ICEFCOM, under Taiwan’s ruling Democratic Progressive Party, directed the illegal attack,” the warrant says. The bureau placed a bounty of 10,000 yuan (US$1,392) on each of the 20 people named in
The High Court yesterday found a New Taipei City woman guilty of charges related to helping Beijing secure surrender agreements from military service members. Lee Huei-hsin (李慧馨) was sentenced to six years and eight months in prison for breaching the National Security Act (國家安全法), making illegal compacts with government employees and bribery, the court said. The verdict is final. Lee, the manager of a temple in the city’s Lujhou District (蘆洲), was accused of arranging for eight service members to make surrender pledges to the Chinese People’s Liberation Army in exchange for money, the court said. The pledges, which required them to provide identification
INDO-PACIFIC REGION: Royal Navy ships exercise the right of freedom of navigation, including in the Taiwan Strait and South China Sea, the UK’s Tony Radakin told a summit Freedom of navigation in the Indo-Pacific region is as important as it is in the English Channel, British Chief of the Defence Staff Admiral Tony Radakin said at a summit in Singapore on Saturday. The remark came as the British Royal Navy’s flagship aircraft carrier, the HMS Prince of Wales, is on an eight-month deployment to the Indo-Pacific region as head of an international carrier strike group. “Upholding the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, and with it, the principles of the freedom of navigation, in this part of the world matters to us just as it matters in the