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Ports along Texas coast close, limit traffic as Tropical Storm Beryl approaches

Ports along the Texas coast started to close or restrict vessel traffic on Sunday to prepare for Hurricane Beryl, which was anticipated to enhance back to a Category 1 cyclone before striking the location late in the night.

The storm, which at one point heightened to a Classification 5 hurricane, left a deadly path of destruction across the Caribbean. It swept through Jamaica, Grenada, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, in addition to letting loose heavy rains on northern Venezuela.

The port of Corpus Christi said it was closed after condition Zulu was set by the Coast Guard captain on Sunday. All vessel movement and freight operations are limited as gale force winds were anticipated within 12 hours.

Corpus Christi, about 200 miles (322 km) from Houston, is the leading petroleum export center in the United States. Port closures could bring a short-term halt to petroleum exports, deliveries of crude oil to refineries, and motor fuels from those plants.

On the other hand the ports of Houston, Galveston, Freeport and Texas City were under condition Yankee. With wind force winds were forecasted within 24 hr, all incoming vessel traffic was suspended at these ports.

Chemical maker Chemours, which has a production facility near Corpus Christi, stated on Sunday it has actually incorporated hurricane preparedness strategies, consisting of training and drills, in place to guarantee its websites stay safe.

We continue to closely monitor Beryl's track and have intensified our typhoon preparedness plans to include planning for safe and sufficient staffing during and after the storm and protecting our equipment and assets, should the storm make landfall near our website, the business stated in a e-mailed declaration.

Freeport LNG said it meant to preserve normal operations at its liquefaction facility, adding it will initiate weather condition emergency action plan if necessary.

Enbridge and Gibson Energy, which operate big crude oil export centers near Corpus Christi, did not immediately reply to ask for discuss Sunday. They had actually said they were operational on Friday and Saturday respectively.

Citgo Petroleum Corp was

cutting production

at its 165,000 barrel-per-day Corpus Christi, Texas, refinery on Saturday, sources said.

Citgo plans to keep the refinery in operation at minimum production throughout passage of Beryl to the east of Corpus Christi on Sunday, the sources included.

Some oil manufacturers, consisting of

Shell and Chevron, had also left workers from their Gulf of Mexico offshore production platforms ahead of the storm.

(source: Reuters)