Oil prices dipped on Thursday over fears that
Hurricane Irma in the Caribbean could interrupt crude shipments in and
out of the United States, and as Libyan output began to recover from
disruptions.
Oil
output at Libya’s Sharara field, the country’s largest, was resuming on
Wednesday after a valve was reopened on a pipeline shut by an armed
group for more than two weeks, Libyan oil industry sources said.
However, prices received some
support from rising demand in the United States, where Gulf Coast
refineries are restarting in the wake of Hurricane Harvey that hit the
region less than two weeks ago.
U.S. West Texas
Intermediate (WTI) crude futures CLc1 were down 14 cents at $49.02
barrel at 0609 GMT, but were still close to their highest in more than
three weeks, reached in the previous session.
Brent
crude futures LCOc1, the benchmark for oil prices outside the United
States, dipped 26 cents to $53.94 a barrel, though still not far from
May highs reached the day before.
U.S.
Gulf Coast facilities were slowly recovering from the devastating
effects of Harvey, which hammered Louisiana and Texas almost two weeks
ago, shutting key infrastructure in the heart of the U.S. oil and
natural gas industry.
As of Wednesday, about
3.8 million barrels of daily refining capacity, or about 20 percent, was
shut in, although a number of the refineries, as well as petroleum
handling ports, were in the process of restarting.
ANZ
bank said on Thursday that U.S. crude prices should receive some
support “as U.S. refineries increase their oil demand as they recover
from recent flooding”.
While Harvey’s effects
were slowly fading, the massive Hurricane Irma hit Caribbean islands
overnight with wind speeds up to 185 miles per hour (295 km/h) and was
heading for Florida, where fuel shortages were reported as gas stations
struggled to keep up with demand from customers filling tanks ahead of
the storm’s landfall, expected this weekend.
Another
Atlantic storm, named Jose, is following on Irma’s heels and has been
upgraded to hurricane strength by the U.S. National Hurricane Centre.
Yet another hurricane, Katia, is developing in the Gulf of Mexico.

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