Hurricane Francine Leaves Over 12% of US Gulf of Mexico Oil Output Shut

Published

© Igor Hotinsky / Adobe Stock
© Igor Hotinsky / Adobe Stock

More than 12% of crude production and 16% of natural gas output in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico were offline in the aftermath of Hurricane Francine, the U.S. Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE) said on Monday.

There were 213,204 barrels per day of oil and 298 million cubic feet of natural gas still offline after Francine hit the coast last week.

The hurricane caused U.S. offshore oil and gas producers to lose 2.37 million barrels of oil and 4.93 billion cubic feet of gas due to shut-ins that began last week, according to a Reuters tally of BSEE daily estimates.

Oil and gas producers began shutting in offshore production a week ago, as Francine moved through the U.S. Gulf of Mexico.

There were 24 oil and gas platforms still evacuated on Monday, about 6.5% of the Gulf of Mexico total, down from 171 evacuated offshore platforms at peak last week, the offshore regulator said citing reports from producers.

Exxon Mobil said on Monday it was working to safely restart operations at its Hoover offshore platform in the Gulf.

Meanwhile, Chevron also redeployed all personnel to their Gulf facilities and resumed production.

The U.S. Gulf of Mexico accounts for about 15% of all domestic oil production and 2% of natural gas output, according to federal data.


(Reuters - Reporting by Anmol Choubey in Bengaluru; Editing by Mark Porter and Nick Zieminski)

Current News

Ndungu Full-Field Starts Up Offshore Angola

Ndungu Full-Field Starts Up Of

Norway's 2025 Oil Output Climbs to Highest Level Since 2009

Norway's 2025 Oil Output Climb

AKOFS Offshore Inks New Vessel Deal with Petrobras

AKOFS Offshore Inks New Vessel

UK Trade Body Challenges Government View on North Sea Gas Decline

UK Trade Body Challenges Gover

Subscribe for OE Digital E‑News

 
Offshore Engineer Magazine