美国能源信息署:飓风弗朗辛导致能源基础设施瘫痪

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飓风弗朗辛于上周三在路易斯安那州海岸登陆,随后减弱为热带风暴,导致从路易斯安那州到阿拉巴马州的美国墨西哥湾沿岸的一些能源基础设施下线。

美国能源信息署:飓风弗朗辛导致能源基础设施瘫痪

有关能源基础设施和风暴风险的详细信息可在 EIA 的美国能源地图集中找到并定期更新。

  • 电力:截至周四上午,仍有超过 45 万用户断电,主要集中在路易斯安那州西南部。路易斯安那州、密西西比州和阿拉巴马州的其余地区也面临停电,随着风暴的加剧,预计停电情况还会进一步恶化。停电可能持续长达 10 天。目前,发电机运行尚未停止,但安特吉核电站已进入恶劣天气程序。
  • 海上石油和天然气生产:根据美国安全和环境执法局 (BSEE) 汇编的数据,随着风暴临近,海上石油和天然气运营商停止生产,截至周四下午,墨西哥湾约 42% 的原油生产和 53% 的天然气生产处于停产状态。据 BSEE 称,墨西哥湾 169 个海上石油和天然气生产平台的运营商已疏散其员工。
  • 炼油和原油出口:巴吞鲁日、查尔斯湖和新奥尔良附近的几家炼油厂似乎正在减产,这些炼油厂的综合炼油能力约为 300 万桶/天,几乎占美国炼油能力的六分之一。最值得注意的是,埃克森美孚减少了其 523,000 桶/天巴吞鲁日炼油厂的炼油活动。美国墨西哥湾沿岸的几个港口已经关闭或实施限制,这些港口承担着美国 400 万桶/天原油出口的 95% 以上。
  • 液化天然气出口:飓风路径对液化天然气 (LNG) 出口码头的影响并不相同。德克萨斯州南部的码头继续运营,港口有限制地开放。在路易斯安那州南部,飓风登陆前,卡梅伦液化天然气的天然气交付量下降,周四下降了 60%(13 亿立方英尺/天),而 9 月 8 日星期日为 22 亿立方英尺/。卡梅伦港和查尔斯湖港已关闭,但正在评估重新开放的可能性。

飓风对能源基础设施的影响不同,取决于其严重程度和位置。

7 月,飓风贝里尔 (Beryl) 登陆美国德克萨斯州。尽管飓风在几小时内减弱为热带风暴,但其对美国墨西哥湾沿岸能源基础设施的影响持续了数天。

  • 电力:由于输电和配电线路等能源基础设施受损,约 270 万德克萨斯州电力用户断电,部分用户断电时间超过一周。CenterPoint Energy 是此次损失最大的公用事业公司,维修费用高达 13 亿美元。
  • 海上石油和天然气生产:飓风贝丽尔袭击了墨西哥湾西部,该地区的海上生产平台较少;在飓风贝丽尔的高峰期,该地区的原油和天然气产量仅有不到 10% 被关闭。
  • 炼油和原油出口:截至 7 月 12 日当周,美国墨西哥湾沿岸炼油厂利用率从 97% 降至 93%,原因是停电导致包括 Marathon 的 593,000 桶/天加尔维斯顿湾炼油厂在内的几家炼油厂暂时减产。停电还导致 Explorer Pipeline 暂时关闭了德克萨斯州和俄克拉荷马州之间的运营。
  • LNG 出口:飓风贝丽尔来袭时,德克萨斯州南部 LNG 终端的天然气交付量下降,主要是因为位于休斯顿南部的 Freeport LNG 在飓风登陆前出于预防措施关闭了运营。Freeport LNG 于 7 月 28 日恢复了所有三条液化生产线的运行。美国 7 月份的 LNG 出口量平均为 111 亿立方英尺/天,比 6 月份出口量下降 7%。

由于 8 月和 9 月初天气相对平静,AccuWeather 的预报员最近下调了今年命名风暴数量的预期。

图片:飓风弗朗辛路径上的美国石油和天然气基础设施(2024 年 9 月 12 日)。数据来源:美国能源信息署。注:预测轨迹截至 2024 年 9 月 12 日上午 9:45

在线阅读文章:https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/drilling-and-production/16092024/eia-hurricane-francine-took-energy-infrastructure-offline/

 

此篇文章被标记为以下:

墨西哥湾上游新闻 美国上游新闻


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EIA: Hurricane Francine took energy infrastructure offline

Published by , Senior Editor
Oilfield Technology,


Hurricane Francine made landfall last Wednesday on the Louisiana coast before being downgraded to a tropical storm, taking some energy infrastructure offline along the US Gulf Coast from Louisiana through Alabama.

EIA: Hurricane Francine took energy infrastructure offline

Detailed information on energy infrastructure and storm risks is available and regularly updated in the EIA’s US Energy Atlas.

  • Electricity: As of Thursday morning, more than 450 000 customers remained without power, mostly in southwestern Louisiana. The rest of Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama are also facing outages, with more expected as the storm progresses. Outages could last for up to 10 days. Currently, generator operations are not shut down, but Entergy nuclear plants have entered severe weather procedures.
  • Offshore oil and natural gas production: Offshore oil and natural gas operators shut in production as the storm neared, with about 42% of crude oil production and 53% of natural gas production in the Gulf of Mexico offline as of Thursday afternoon, according to data compiled by the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE). Operators of 169 offshore oil and natural gas production platforms in the Gulf of Mexico evacuated their staff, according to BSEE.
  • Refining and crude oil exports: Several refineries around Baton Rouge, Lake Charles, and New Orleans, with a combined refinery capacity of about 3 million bpd or nearly one-sixth of the United States’ refinery capacity, appear to be running at reduced rates. Most notably, ExxonMobil reduced refining activity at its 523 000 bpd Baton Rouge refinery. Several ports on the US Gulf Coast, responsible for over 95% of the United States’ 4 million bpd of crude oil exports, have either closed or imposed restrictions.
  • LNG exports: The path of the hurricane did not affect liquefied natural gas (LNG) export terminals equally. Operations continued at terminals in South Texas, and ports were open with restrictions. In South Louisiana, natural gas deliveries to Cameron LNG declined ahead of the hurricane's landfall and were down by 60% (1.3 billion ft3/d) on Thursday, from 2.2 billion ft3/d on Sunday, September 8. The Ports of Cameron and Lake Charles were closed but are being assessed for reopening.

Hurricanes can have differing effects on energy infrastructure, depending on their severity and location.

In July, Hurricane Beryl made its US landfall in Texas. Although the hurricane weakened to a tropical storm within a few hours, its effects on energy infrastructure were felt for several days along the US Gulf Coast.

  • Electricity: About 2.7 million Texas electricity customers lost power, some for more than a week, due to damage to energy infrastructure such as transmission and distribution lines. CenterPoint Energy, the utility who experienced the bulk of the damage, faced US$1.3 billion dollars in repairs.
  • Offshore oil and natural gas production: Hurricane Beryl affected the western part of the Gulf of Mexico, an area with fewer offshore production platforms; at Beryl’s peak, less than 10% of the crude oil and natural gas production was shut in.
  • Refining and crude oil exports: Refinery utilisation on the US Gulf Coast decreased from 97% to 93% the week ending 12 July, as power outages led a few refineries, including Marathon’s 593 000 bpd Galveston Bay refinery, to temporarily reduce production. Power outages also led Explorer Pipeline to temporarily shut down operations between Texas and Oklahoma.
  • LNG exports: Natural gas deliveries to LNG terminals in South Texas declined at the time of Hurricane Beryl primarily because Freeport LNG, located south of Houston, shut down operations as a precaution ahead of the hurricane’s landfall. Freeport LNG returned all three liquefaction trains to service on July 28. US LNG exports in July averaged 11.1 billion ft3/d, 7% less than exports in June.

Forecasters at AccuWeather recently revised down their expectation for the number of named storms this year after a relatively quiet August and early September.

Image: US oil and gas infrastructure in Hurricane Francine’s path (12 September 2024). Data source: US Energy Information Administration. Note: Forecast track is as of 12 September 2024, 9:45 a.m.

Read the article online at: https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/drilling-and-production/16092024/eia-hurricane-francine-took-energy-infrastructure-offline/

 

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Gulf of Mexico upstream news US upstream news