From the DOE morning update on Katrina recovery:
* A report from MMS will be in the next Situation Report. www.mms.gov
* The LOOP is operational from St. James terminal. Entergy reports that they will restore electricity to Clovelly in 7-9 days.
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[Same as last update]The Strategic Petroleum Reserve at New Orleans Elmwood office complex remains shut down. Bayou Choctaw, Bryan Mound, Big Hill and West Hackberry storage sites, however, are operational and will be able to provide crude oil in the loan program noted above.
* Capline, a crude oil pipeline serving the Midwest, was restarted yesterday at a rate of 720,000 barrels a day and can operate at reduced rates until the LOOP is fully operational.
* The Seaway Interstate Pipeline to Cushing, OK, is operating at full capacity (350,000 barrels a day). From Cushing, the Enbridge (Ozark) pipeline to Wood River and the BP pipeline to Chicago are operating at full capacity.
* Entergy reports that it has restored electricity to all but three of the refineries in the New Orleans area it supplies with power. According to Entergy, the refineries still without power are the ConocoPhillips 250,000 b/d Alliance refinery in Belle Chasse, the ExxonMobil/PDVSA 187,000 b/d Chalmette refinery and the Murphy Oil 125,000 b/d refinery in Meraux.
* Plantation pipeline restored power to Collins last night and expects to significantly increase capacity soon.
* Inaccessibility as well as extensive damage from flooding and saltwater are major issues impacting electricity restoration. Well over 10,000 outside crews have arrived to provide assistance; however, availability of line crews remains an issue. As Florida utilities finish their restoration work their crews have begun to move to other states. Entergy reports that its single biggest problem to restoring power in the Greater New Orleans area is the lack of food, water and shelter for its repair crews who are literally sleeping in their trucks. The Department is coordinating with FEMA and AMTRAK to provide sleeper cars for emergency response crews in New Orleans.
* The Department of Energy has entered into three separate agreements to loan oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. The first agreement, between the Department of Energy and ExxonMobil Corp. is for a loan of 3 million barrels of “sweet†crude and 3 million barrels of “sour†crude oil, and is larger than the 5.4 million barrels loaned during Hurricane Ivan. The second, an agreement between the Department of Energy and Placid Refining is for one million barrels of sweet crude oil. The third is for 1.5 million barrels of sweet crude to Valero. The crude oil will be loaned from the SPR under short-term contractual agreements and returned to the Reserve once supply conditions return to normal. The Department of Energy is working to finalize other loan agreements to loan oil from the SPR.
* Colonial Pipeline is now operating at 40% of normal operating capacity. Once additional generators are activated at inactive pump stations, production will increase to 1.2 to 1.3 million barrels per day. Both gasoline and distillates are currently being transported and delivered. The line was full when it went down, so deliveries were possible within hours – not days – of restart. The company anticipates that it may be able to achieve approximately 74% of normal operating capacity by Sunday and 75% to 86% by early or mid-next week if additional electricity can be supplied to critical pump stations. Further increases cannot be made until normal power is restored. The capacity of Colonial is about 2.4 million barrels per day. Solutions for power restoration are underway.
* As before, status of individual refineries in the affected area in on page 3 of this pdf file:
DOE 11AM Update
Jim