Fire at Biggest US Midwest Refinery Threatens Fuel Supplies

via Yahoo / Bloomberg

An outage at the largest US Midwest refinery is raising wholesale fuel prices regionally just as the agricultural sector gears up for its busiest time of year.

BP PLC shut two crude units at its 435,000 barrel-a-day Whiting, Indiana, refinery after a fire Wednesday, Wood Mackenzie’s Genscape said. The fire occurred in the power house and caused a loss of cooling water, which could lead to damaged equipment, according to a person familiar with operations.

A prolonged shutdown of the plant, which supplies gasoline, diesel and jet fuel to most of the region’s major distribution centers, could tighten fuel markets just as farmers in the nation’s breadbasket prepare for harvesting season. Diesel demand typically starts to rise this time of year because it’s used for heating and to fuel big machinery.

Mid-continent distillate inventories, which include diesel, are at their lowest seasonally since 2006, and gasoline stockpiles are the least since 2014, according to government data. Diesel for prompt delivery traded at a 5-cent per gallon premium over early September deliveries, according to a broker. Gasoline delivered into Michigan jumped 10 cents a gallon on news of the outage as well.

A lengthy shutdown could divert crude to the storage depot in Cushing, Oklahoma. Inventories at the hub, the delivery point for benchmark US crude futures, have already risen for eight straight weeks and the prospect of further builds are weighing on futures and physical crude markets.

In the oil futures market, the US crude futures prompt spread contracted sharply, with the gap between the October and November contracts narrowing by 10 cents. WTI’s discount to international benchmark Brent crude weakened for the same reason, traders said.

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About the Author: NC Scout

NC Scout is the nom de guerre of a former Infantry Scout and Sergeant in one of the Army’s best Reconnaissance Units. He has combat tours in both Iraq and Afghanistan. He teaches a series of courses focusing on small unit skills rarely if ever taught anywhere else in the prepping and survival field, including his RTO Course which focuses on small unit communications. In his free time he is an avid hunter, bushcrafter, writer, long range shooter, prepper, amateur radio operator and Libertarian activist. He can be contacted at [email protected] or via his blog at brushbeater.wordpress.com .

4 Comments

  1. CPL Antero Rokka August 29, 2022 at 04:09

    Been on this planet for close to 80 Summers.

    Worked the mills, shops, factories, farmed and even logged a bit. Keep my ear to the ground on fuel, prices, tools, supplies, and especially “happenings.”

    Never– NEVER have I seen such a pattern of industrial destruction in America. Food processing plants, grain storage facilities, petrochemical plants–all burning up. Odds on all this–next to nil.

    There seems to be a nationwide dedicated group of saboteurs here. Roving gangs of demo teams at work.

    Worse yet–this is 2022, there are beaucoup video cameras, perimeter warning devices, fences and wire up he ying-yang and even guards at these places. And still critical infrastructure facilities “accidently” catch fire? I’m not buying it for a minute.

    cui bono? Think on it.

    • The Old Freedom Fighter August 29, 2022 at 13:10

      I’ll vouch for you on that one. This usually is a prelude for something more devastating. I live along the Ohio River. Peaceful & scenic. However, very vulnerable to sabotage. Coal & chemical barges up & down the river day & night.Three major utility power plants in close proximity. The CSX Railroad line across the river in Kentucky carries virtually everything from grain, petroleum to passengers via AMTRAK. Various storage facilities located nearby or on the banks covering acres & the bridges for good measure. Good possibility those saboteurs could hit here next.

  2. Kooper1 August 29, 2022 at 11:05

    Imagine that!

  3. Not So Free August 29, 2022 at 19:56

    Is that the FBI’s night job now?

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