Oil Prices Rise More Than $1 Per Barrel

Vance

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That's what I'm afraid of. Here it is:


Crude oil prices rose more than $1 a barrel Monday while the oil industry assessed damage from Hurricane Rita and traders worried that demand for heating oil could soar ahead of the winter months.

The strength of the economy, showing up in continued robust demand for housing, also helped boost prices, analysts said.

Light, sweet crude rose $1.31 to $65.50 a barrel in afternoon trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Gasoline futures on Nymex rose more than 2 cents to $2.1075 a gallon. Heating oil rose nearly 8 cents to $2.0260 a gallon.

On London's International Petroleum Exchange, November Brent crude futures rose $1.19 to $63.63 a barrel.

Monday's report from the National Association of Realtors showed that sales of previously owned homes rose in August to the second-highest level ever - suggesting that U.S. consumer demand remained firm before Katrina and Rita hit.

"Maybe the economy is not hurt as much as people feared," said Phil Flynn, analyst at Alaron Trading Corp. in Chicago. "Tight supplies plus more demand means high prices."

He added that oil markets are also jittery over the possibility of another tropical storm hitting the Gulf coast. Hurricane season isn't officially over until November.

Rita gave a only glancing blow to crucial oil refineries in Texas, but consumers shouldn't expect prices at the pump to fall to pre-Katrina levels anytime soon.

"Most areas of the country will see price increases in gasoline this week," said Tom Kloza, analyst at Oil Price Information Service in Wall, N.J. The average U.S. retail price of a gallon of unleaded gasoline was $2.80 on Monday, up from $2.75 Sunday, but below the all-time high of $3.06 on Sept. 5.

The average price a month ago, a few days before Hurricane Katrina hit, was $2.60.

Sixteen Texas oil refineries remained shut down after the storm, and crews found significant damage to at least one in the Port Arthur area, said Energy Department spokesman Craig Stevens.

These outages could lead to petroleum product shortages and further aggravate the heating oil and natural gas markets, which are usually volatile ahead of the winter months.

President Bush said Monday the government is prepared to again tap into the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to alleviate any new pain at the pump.

"A lot of our production comes from the Gulf and when you have a Hurricane Katrina followed by a Hurricane Rita, it's natural, unfortunately, that it's going to affect supplies," Bush said after a briefing at the Energy Department.

While preliminary assessments show little damage to most refineries in the U.S. Gulf area, a key economic aide to Bush said hundreds of thousands of jobs were at risk if the storm stunted oil production.

"There is of course the direct impact of the shutting down a part of the economy, the loss of several hundred thousand jobs and reduced energy production in the Gulf," warned Ben Bernanke, chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, in a speech Sunday.

Seven facilities in Port Arthur and Beaumont, Texas, and Lake Charles, Louisiana, were without power from Hurricane Rita, which left the 255,000-barrel-per-day Valero Energy Corp. plant in Port Arthur the most heavily damaged. The facility faces at least two weeks of repairs.

The International Energy Agency, the watchdog for industrialized, oil-importing countries, said it could release state-held stockpiles within the week to cushion any lost output from Rita.

IEA Executive Director Claude Mandil said Monday the agency would decide on whether a further release of state-controlled stockpiles of crude and gasoline is warranted within a week or so based on Rita's impact.

The U.S. Minerals Management Service said Monday that 758 platforms in the Gulf remained unstaffed, up from Sunday. Oil production in the Gulf of Mexico was totally shut down, and more than 78 percent of gas output was shut. Since Katrina hit a month ago, more than 34 million barrels of oil and 163 billion cubic feet of natural gas have been lost.

Elsewhere, France's largest oil refinery in Normandy is likely to come to a complete halt Monday as a strike over pay extends into its seventh day, oil company Total SA said.

Total said production will halt at the few units still operating at its 328,000-barrel per day refinery, which accounts for roughly 15 percent of France's refining capacity.

Also, U.S. oil giant Chevron said it had restarted production at one of two oil platforms in Nigeria shut down last week because of threats from a southern militia, a company spokesman said. The Robertkiri facility produces 19,000 barrels of oil per day.

Source: http://www.forbes.com/business/commerce/feeds/ap/2005/09/26/ap2244578.html
 
crap... this is a reason why i bought electricy fireplace! or pharaps i should buy a wooden fireplace to save heating cost :-/
 
yeah DeafSCUBA98,

We ordered oil to fill our tanks at oil room of basement for heater/hot water at 2 weeks ago. It cost us EUR 2,550.-- ($3,057.77) for 3,000 litres instead of 7,000 litres. (We don't have gas or electricity for heater/hot water but oil).

We already order alot of woods for 2 fireplaces. They will deliver this saturday. We will start to use woods for fireplaces EVERYDAY instead of every weekends. :|
 
Liebling:-))) said:
yeah DeafSCUBA98,

We ordered oil to fill our tanks at oil room of basement for heater/hot water at 2 weeks ago. It cost us EUR 2,550.-- ($3,057.77) for 3,000 litres instead of 7,000 litres. (We don't have gas or electricity for heater/hot water but oil).

We already order alot of woods for 2 fireplaces. They will deliver this saturday. We will start to use woods for fireplaces EVERYDAY instead of every weekends. :|

really ? it seems getting colder weather in ur town yet eh ?
 
deafclimber said:
really ? it seems getting colder weather in ur town yet eh ?

No, it's nothing do with weather. It's oil is not for just heater but hot water to use for bath, shower, wash machine, etc. etc.

We start to switch heat system to heat every room on from 1st November to end of March which we always do that every year. Depend weather ... sometimes snow in April... heating stay longer than end of March.


7,000 litres oil was run out after 2 years used so we have to order to re-fill the oil.

For wood preparation and put them into garage before the cold weather begans.
 
Last edited:
Liebling:-))) said:
No, it's nothing do with weather. It's oil is not for just heater but hot water to use for bath, shower, wash machine, etc. etc.


ahh me <- :doh: sorry i didnt think. i am not morning person...

wud someone pass dr pepper to me, please ? i need to stay awake...
 
deafclimber said:
ahh me <- :doh: sorry i didnt think. i am not morning person...

wud someone pass dr pepper to me, please ? i need to stay awake...


:confused:

Since you thought the oil is for only heater. I explain you that I only ordered oil because oil in tank are running out after 2 years used and not just for heater but hot water for bath, shower, washmachine, etc. etc. etc. anything where you need for hot water where I don't have gas or electricity to use hot waters, heaters, etc.

This oil I order for hot waters, heaters, etc. Got it?

I has no clue what you are talking about :dunno:
 
Check this link over oil heating

http://www.noco.com/heatcool/heatoilfacts.html

There're very common of Germans use oil for heating, hot water, etc. than gas or electricity.


Use gas or electricity on heating, hot waters etc. are expensive than oil... What about you all in your country?
 
smile, liebling. i meant this morning i thought oil was for heat only but i didnt think straightly. sowwies, gal. :) that is why i said myself me duh ! i do know oil is for anything. same with some ppl have oils in north area. we dont have oil in my metro. we use natural gas or electric.

i was very sleepy this moring cuz i came home lately from a baseball stadium last nite. my dr pepper is my "coffee". that is why i dont drink coffee and i drink dr pepper instead. strong caffeine. its like my own slang. :)

got me, liebling ? :)
 
deafclimber said:
smile, liebling. i meant this morning i thought oil was for heat only but i didnt think straightly. sowwies, gal. :) that is why i said myself me duh ! i do know oil is for anything. same with some ppl have oils in north area. we dont have oil in my metro. we use natural gas or electric.

i was very sleepy this moring cuz i came home lately from a baseball stadium last nite. my dr pepper is my "coffee". that is why i dont drink coffee and i drink dr pepper instead. strong caffeine. its like my own slang. :)

got me, liebling ? :)

Sounds like you need something stronger than that :D
 
Don't see anything reflianaice increase more costly oil amounts here yet..
Probably within few days and might be Big bomb prices goes crazy....
*hmmmm*
 
deafclimber said:
smile, liebling. i meant this morning i thought oil was for heat only but i didnt think straightly. sowwies, gal. :) that is why i said myself me duh ! i do know oil is for anything. same with some ppl have oils in north area. we dont have oil in my metro. we use natural gas or electric.

i was very sleepy this moring cuz i came home lately from a baseball stadium last nite. my dr pepper is my "coffee". that is why i dont drink coffee and i drink dr pepper instead. strong caffeine. its like my own slang. :)

got me, liebling ? :)


I was confused by your post. Now I got it :D From now I will know that you are not morning person. :D
 
Liebling:-))) said:
Use gas or electricity on heating, hot waters etc. are expensive than oil... What about you all in your country?
We have total electric power for our house. We also have a wood stove that we can use to heat our house. We only use that for a few weeks in the winter. Most of the time it is not cold enough to use the stove.

Some of our neighbors have electric and natural gas. That is all that is used in this part of the state. No oil heat.

Most of our electricity is hydroelectric with a backup coal plant. The upstate uses mostly nuclear energy.
 
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