Posted on 09/27/2005 7:49:09 PM PDT by My Favorite Headache
Rita causes record damage to oil rigs By Carola Hoyos in London, Sheila McNulty in Houston and Thomas Catan in Johannesburg Published: September 27 2005 20:14 | Last updated: September 27 2005 20:14
Hurricane Rita has caused more damage to oil rigs than any other storm in history and will force companies to delay drilling for oil in the US and as far away as the Middle East, initial damage assessments show.
ODS-Petrodata, which provides market intelligence to the offshore oil and natural gas industry, said it expected a shortage of rigs in the US Gulf this year.
Based on what we have right now, it appears that drilling contractors and rig owners took a big hit from Rita, said Tom Marsh of ODS-Petrodata. The path Katrina took was through the mature areas of the US Gulf where there are mainly oil [production] platforms. Rita came to the west where there is a lot of [exploratory] rig activity.
Ken Sill of Credit Suisse First Boston said: Early reports indicate numerous rigs are missing, destroyed or have suffered serious damage and several companies have yet to report. Rita may set an all-time record.
The US Coast Guard said nine semisubmersible rigs had broken free from their moorings and were adrift.
This damage could not have come at a worse time for oil companies and consumers. US crude futures on Monday fell 37 cents to $65.45 a barrel in midday trading in New York as refineries that were evacuated before the onset of Rita returned to operation.
Earlier in the day, Ali Naimi, Saudi Arabia's oil minister, said the market had not taken up the 2m barrels a day of spare capacity the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries offered last week. Speaking in Johannesburg, he blamed high oil prices on a lack of industry infrastructure, including rigs and refineries, rather than oil reserves. Rigs, which are movable and are used for exploration and development, were in short supply before hurricanes Katrina and Rita blew through the US Gulf in late August and September.
High oil prices and the desperate search for new oil supplies needed to meet rampant demand from the US and China have made rigs difficult to find and expensive to hire. Rigs cost $90m-$550m to construct, depending on how sophisticated the structure and how deep the water in which it will drill. A rig ordered today is unlikely to be ready before 2008 or 2009, analysts said.
As a sign of just how precious rigs are becoming to the market, Anadarko, the biggest US independent oil company, this week set a record by committing to a rig six years in advance; commitments in the past were made months ahead of time rather than years.
Initial reports from companies are ominous. Global Santa Fe reported it could not find two of its rigs. Rowan Companies reported four rigs damaged, with two having moved, one losing its legs and the fourth presumed sunk. Noble has four rigs adrift, with two run aground one into a ChevronTexaco platform.
Can we have our gas panic now?
Say, how many thousands does your 'inside source' claim are still dead in Missisippi?
Not yet. I still have a 55 gal drum of gasoline in my outside shed, just waiting for the panic. (It's not about price, it's about availability)
Always prepared here as well. These gas panics haven't affected me much.
"We dodged a bullet" might become the most overused incorrect phrase of the year.
thats great , i sold all my rig repair co's
da.n the msm...
The death toll in Mississippi is a hell of a lot higher than it is officially listed at. They can only issue official numbers for bodies that have death certificates from being identified by medical records (many washed away or were destroyed),dental records (same thing), illegals,homeless and others that washed away or rotted and can't be identified.
I will 100% stand by an EMS workers words and his crew that worked for days and told stories of horror down there as it happened and not to mention dozens of printed stories from various media sources including Fox News that said and showed the exact same thing days later.
I guess this is why the president was telling us all to conserve.
Some amazing pictures but, I can't find any on-line.
BurbankKarl reported a specific rig being "adrift" after a towing cable snapped during Rita - it was something he picked up off a scanner - I'll go back and try to get the name.
They used it all afternoon in New Orleans after Katrina hit despite Mississippi being leveled....and did it with Rita and the SW La. and east Texas coast as well because Houston wasn't hit head on or Galveston.
Bias for the big cities.
Say, how many thousands does your 'inside source' claim are still dead in Missisippi?
You go diddle.
MFH and treble rebel are way over the top
on their dead figgers.
I thought I read that this one was already in port for repairs and just broke loose from it's moorings.
Now if the LOOP or it's pipeline sustained serious damage, I'd freak out.
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