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Cyclone interruption to oil and gas output grows, some energy ports reopen

U.S. energy producers on Thursday were assessing the level of damage from Typhoon Francine to their U.S. Gulf of Mexico infrastructure while export ports in southern Texas started to resume.

Hurricane Francine struck the Louisiana coast with as much as 100 mile per hour winds (161 kph), knocking out power to 375,000 consumers and bringing heavy rains and flooding to the state. Francine's winds dropped quickly and it was over southern Mississippi early Thursday where another 54,000 consumers were without power.

The level of Francine's effect on energy production started to emerge with brand-new, greater price quotes of lost output from the more than 171 offshore platforms evacuated. Woodside Energy also shut output at an overseas platform due to a power loss onshore.

The storm likely interrupted about 1.5 million barrels of Gulf of Mexico production, experts at UBS estimated, and will decrease the region's monthly oil production by 50,000 barrels a day.

U.S. oil futures on Thursday increased 1.7% on the production losses, and natural gas prices slumped less than 1% in early trading as liquefied gas export plants were spared the brunt of Francine.

Top U.S. oil and fuel export ports from south to central Texas resumed. Corpus Christi, the largest oil export port by volume, lifted restrictions, while ports in Freeport, Houston to as far north as Sabine resumed, the U.S. Coast Guard stated.

Louisiana ports consisting of Cameron, Lake Charles, New Orleans, Plaquemines, St. Bernard and sections of the Mississippi River stayed closed, according to the Coast Guard. The closures were affecting energy, farming and metals exports.

(source: Reuters)