Posted on 09/11/2008 3:58:35 PM PDT by Jet Jaguar
COLUMBIA, SC (WIS) - The impending landfall of Hurricane Ike has caused issues with the price of gas and limits in South Carolina according to officials.
"Hurricane Ike is projected to hit landfall in Texas Friday or Saturday and in anticipation of its storm path, refineries in the Gulf of Mexico have closed," said David E. Parsons, CEO and President of AAA Carolinas.
Michael Fields with the South Carolina Petroleum Marketers Association says gas prices have risen throughout the day and will continue to do so on the wholesale and retail level.
"Gas prices have gone up and some stations have placed a restriction on the number of gallons customers can buy because it is unclear right now how long the refineries will remain closed or if they will sustain any damage," Parsons said.
Fields has also heard of several stations in the state such as the Pee Dee, the Lowcountry and the Upstate that are rationing gas out to customers.
In Sumter, all Kangaroo gas stations are imposing at 10 gallon limit. At the Kangaroo on Broad Street, they have put up a sign asking customers to limit their gas purchases.
An attendant at the station says they aren't enforcing the limit at the moment, but may have to Friday and over the weekend.
Fields adds that all this is a preemptive move with Ike because of what happened with Hurricane Katrina. He calls the current situation "volatile" and says there is a concern about how much fuel will be available after Ike hits.
"The worst thing that could happen would be for motorists to flock to gas stations to top off their tanks," said Parsons. "That will worsen the situation before anyone knows what the damage will be. We encourage people not to panic, drive conservatively and don't take unnecessary trips until the damage assessment is completed early next week."
Parsons says this gas spike comes on the heels of the closing of some refineries in the past few days based on the expected path of Hurricane Gustav, which did not cause any major damage and the refineries reopened and put more oil into the pipeline.
Parsons said most refineries made significant changes to their oil rigs after Hurricane Katrina three years ago and these upgrades are designed to protect against hurricanes.
Count on WIS News 10 to keep you updated on this developing story. If you'd like to monitor Hurricane Ike yourself, click here to go to our Hurricane Center.
The four stations I drove by this evening had lines around the block. Prices were still at 3.45.
SC isn’t in the path of the storm, wonder why the price hike?
Is that real? Did you take that? If so, where?
If this is real, this is both irresponsible panic mongering and price gouging.
I did not take the photo. It’s credited to Connors Superette in Sumter, photo courtesy Angie Bryant.
I have been noticing that prices here have risen steadily over the last few days while oil prices have fallen. I have fought the urge to buy into idea that we are being ‘gouged” but.....
Where are any of the republicans on this issue? I Georgia, we have to spineless twits that are part of the ‘gang’ So I can not count on them.
DRILL HERE DRILL NOW
Here in York county gas prices are up two to three cents today, but no lines no where.
DRILL IN ANWR NOW!!!!!!!
Here in Charleston every station is full with lines of vehicles waiting. No price increase as far as I could tell.
(AP, WLTX) - Gasoline prices jumped to unprecedented levels in the wholesale markets Thursday as Hurricane Ike tore across the Gulf of Mexico, threatening to strike Texas and its refineries.
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In Sumter, lines are long as people try to fill up before the price jumps.
The wholesale price of gasoline ranged from $4 to nearly $5 a gallon in the U.S. Gulf Coast throughout the day on Thursday, said Tom Kloza, publisher and chief oil analyst of the Oil Price Information Service in Wall, N.J.
That was up significantly from about $3 to $3.30 a gallon on Wednesday, Kloza said, and the surge drove up wholesale prices in other U.S. regions, too.
“We’re looking at the highest wholesale prices ever for a huge swath of the country,” he said. “People understand that regardless of what happens with Ike, it’s going to shut down the biggest refining cluster for a period of five, six, seven days.”
Wholesale prices are what refineries charge retailers. Retailers then mark up those prices for the customer to make a profit, so if these wholesale prices hold, it could mean that pump prices for U.S. drivers easily break through the July 17 record of $4.114 a gallon.
The average U.S. retail price for regular gasoline was at $3.671 Thursday, according to the Oil Price Information Service, auto club AAA and Wright Express.
The market’s renewed storm worries arrive a day after the U.S. Energy Department reported a larger-than-expected drop in crude and gasoline inventories, and OPEC decided to cut excess production by about half a million barrels a day.
October gasoline futures rose 8.72 cents to settle at $2.7488 a gallon on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
But despite the heightening anxiety about Ike, funds continued to liquidate their crude investments, anticipating a slower global economy and a stronger U.S. dollar.
Light, sweet crude for October delivery on the Nymex fell $1.71 to settle at $100.87 a barrel, the lowest close since March 24. During trading, the contract dropped as low as $100.10 a barrel. The last time crude traded below $100 was April 2, and the last time it closed below that level was March 4.
“It’s a strange, strange world here,” Kloza said. “You might see an extraordinary thing, you may see crude oil less than $100 and retail gasoline more than $4 a gallon.”
Ike, following last week’s Hurricane Gustav, was expected to blow ashore early Saturday somewhere between Corpus Christi and Houston. Some forecasters predict it will strengthen from a Category 2 storm, with winds near 100 mph, to a Category 4. Ike ripped through Cuba and killed at least 80 people in the Caribbean.
Texas is home to 26 refineries that account for one-fourth of U.S. refining capacity. Most are clustered along the Gulf Coast near such cities as Houston, Port Arthur and Corpus Christi. Exxon Mobil Corp.’s plant in Baytown, outside Houston, is the nation’s largest refinery.
Refineries are built to withstand high winds, but flooding can disrupt operations and, as happened in Louisiana after Gustav, power outages can shut down equipment for days or weeks.
The big question, however, is whether a possible disruption in gasoline distribution, not to mention the slow economy, would crimp demand and drive gasoline prices back down again.
“This could end up looking just like Katrina, whereby prices spiked substantially and came down just as hard,” said Linda Rafield, senior oil analyst for Platts, the energy research arm of McGraw-Hill Cos.
When Hurricanes Katrina and Rita scoured the Gulf Coast in 2005, she said, “the U.S. economy was in the mature phase of a business expansion.” Now, the economy is slowing, so demand could suffer even more.
The Energy Department recently reported that in June, U.S. demand for oil products was down 1.17 million barrels a day, or 5.6 percent, from the same time last year. That slowdown, along with weak economies in other developed nations and a strengthening dollarl, has sent crude prices down about 30 percent from their record above $147 a barrel on July 11.
The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries responded to falling crude prices and waning demand Wednesday by reducing output by 520,000 barrels a day.
“OPEC was trying to slow this steep decline,” said Mark Pervan, senior commodity strategist with ANZ Bank in Melbourne. “But we’re in a bearish trend right now and I still expect the price to fall another $10.”
Trader and analyst Stephen Schork suggested prices could fall even lower, to $75, “which is exactly where oil was last September.”
http://www.wltx.com/news/story.aspx?storyid=66097&catid=2
Rig info :
http://www.rigzone.com/news/article.asp?a_id=66545
With current sustained wind gusts of nearly 100 mph, the storm has the potential of turning into a Category 3 hurricane in the
next 24 hours. Gaining strength over the warm waters of the GOM, the storm is expected to be its strongest when passing oil and gas fields and facilities in the central GOM. While the path of the storm has changed over the last couple of days, all measures have already been taken by the oil and gas industry to ensure the safety of its offshore personnel and facilities.
According to the most-recent report from the Minerals Management Service, personnel have been evacuated from 452 production facilities, or 63% of the 717 manned platforms in the GOM. Additionally, personnel have been evacuated from 81 rigs, accounting for 66.9% of the drilling rigs currently working in the gulf.
Production has, again, been brought to a standstill, just a week after the passing of Hurricane Gustav and subsequent production shut-in. The MMS reports that 95.9% of the oil and 73.1 of the natural gas produced in the gulf are currently shut-in.
~~~
The refineries in the Galveston area are already shut-in,,,
I wonder how much home heating oil is gunna cost ?...
The problem is refined supplies in the market. Local supplies became tight during Gustav, because the pipelines in the SE had little flowing through them. With little time to recover, Ike comes in. Could be the same thing, where there is no damage, but local supplies just aren’t there.
Gas went up .09 overnight here in southern Wisconsin. Still affordable at $3.69/gallon.
Good question, I can’t understand that either. I live outside of a small town near Sumter, SC. I was watching the local WIS-TV news and they had video footage of a gas station in Sumter that had already raised it’s price to $5.30 a gallon, up almost $2. I hope that person is arrested and charged with price gauging, but I doubt it. My husband just took my car into town to get gas (I was going to get it tomorrow because it needs it but he was kind enough not to want me to wait). It’ll be interesting to see how this pans out.
Actually, it isn’t Ike’s fault.
Gasoline has been going up around here for the past week, at the same time that crude oil has been falling. last I saw today, it was close to $100 per barrel...
Yet the price of the refined product continues to go up. And you can be certain that if oil prices spike up at all, that those prices at the pump will jump nearly simultaneously...
3.54 in Kempner Texas. Same as yesterday. No lines.
If someone wants to sell something they own at an extraordinarily high price, they should be able to.
If you put something on eBay, should you be forced to sell it to the bidder who was 15th down from the highest?
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