VENICE, La. (AP) - Oil gushing from a blown-out well at the
bottom of the Gulf of Mexico could force closure of the Louisiana
Offshore Oil Port next week, authorities said Friday.
The port, known as LOOP, is a platform off the Louisiana coast
about 80 miles southwest of New Orleans. It is one of the leading
facilities for imported oil, handling up to 1.2 million barrels a
day and feeding half the nation's refinery capacity.
Tankers that are too large to enter the Mississippi River pull
up to the facility and hook into a pipeline system that sends their
oil to onshore refineries, including those lining the Mississippi
north of New Orleans.
Current projections show the oil spill from the Deepwater
Horizon disaster could reach the port next week, said Sale Sittig,
director of the Louisiana Oil Terminal Authority, an oversight body
for LOOP.
"It definitely could be shut down if the heavy oil gets in the
vicinity of the platform," Sittig said.
The Coast Guard would determine whether LOOP would be shut down.
The port has never closed for an extended period since its
inception in the 1970s, though it has closed briefly for
hurricanes.
A long closure almost certainly would send gasoline prices
higher, Sittig said.
"We're open, we're operational," said LOOP spokeswoman Barb
Hesterman. She said the Coast Guard currently has no plans to shut
the port.
Phil Flynn, energy analyst with PFG Best in Chicago, said
temporary LOOP shutdowns in the past haven't moved prices much.
"A short-term closure, might support prices for the short term
but would not have a lasting impact," he said.
If the port were to close for a longer period, the federal
government could order oil drawn from the Strategic Petroleum
Reserve, he said.
Flynn said the biggest worry is shipping through the
Mississippi's Southwest Pass, where finished gasoline and other
fuels move out in small tankers for U.S. ports.
Interruption or delay in those supplies also could push gasoline
prices up, he said. So far, the pass has remained open though
officials are making preparations to scrub oily ships that might
come into the river, a process that could back up ship traffic. As
of midday Friday, port officials said traffic was flowing normally
on the Mississippi.
Flynn said gasoline supplies are more than ample now, giving
some breathing room in case of supply interruptions.
On Friday, oil traded around $76 a barrel, down from an 18-month
high of $87.15 on Monday.
An Associated Press team saw a heavy band of putrid, orange and
rust-colored oil snake its way into the LOOP security zone Thursday
about 30 miles off Grand Isle. LOOP has a heavily guarded security
zone. The AP team was not allowed to enter the security zone, which
is patrolled by security ships.
Satellite imagery confirmed Friday that oil is moving west of
the Mississippi River delta.
Late Thursday, the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and
Fisheries ordered immediate closure of shrimp harvesting in state
waters from South Pass of the Mississippi to the eastern shore of
Four Bayous Pass just east of Grand Isle.
Earlier, state officials closed territorial waters east of the
Mississippi and a federal fishing ban outside of state territorial
waters is in effect from the mouth of the Mississippi east to an
area south of Pensacola, Fla.
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