Oil, Natural Gas Rise After Katrina Damages U.S. Gulf PlatformsAug. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Crude oil and natural gas climbed after Hurricane Katrina damaged platforms and ports and curtailed production at refineries as it slammed the Gulf of Mexico coast, the source of almost a third of U.S. oil output.
Royal Dutch Shell Plc said its 220,000 barrel-a-day Mars platform, which is able to pump as much as 15 percent of U.S. Gulf output, suffered damage. Katrina, which killed at least 54 people, shut 92 percent of U.S. Gulf crude production and eight refineries. President George W. Bush may tap the U.S. strategic petroleum reserve to help producers compensate for disruptions.
``The worst case scenario is pretty bad,'' said Seth Kleinman, an analyst at PFC Energy in Washington. ``You have power outages that could severely impact refining. The problem is on the product side. There is little that can be done about that, particularly gasoline.''
Crude oil for October delivery rose as much as $1.28, or 1.9 percent, to $68.48 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, where it was up $1.07 at 12:22 p.m. London time. Oil, which reached a record $70.80 yesterday as the storm approached, has jumped 61 percent from a year ago.
``It wouldn't surprise me if we're back at $70 by the end of this week,'' said Kleinman.
``I think that we're headed toward $80 by the end of the year.''Elizabeth
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