Tropical Storm Debby disrupts Gulf oil, gas production
MIAMI
(AP)
–
Tropical Storm Debby churned over the northern Gulf of Mexico
early Sunday, interfering with oil and gas production and putting
officials on alert for flooding and strong winds from Texas to Florida.
At
least one tornado linked to the storm touched down Saturday in
southwest Florida, but no injuries were reported. Heavy squalls pounded
parts of the state.
At 2 a.m. EDT Sunday, Debby was about 200 miles (320 kilometers) south-southeast of the mouth of the Mississippi River,
with maximum sustained winds of 50 mph (85 kph), the Nationial
Hurricane Center in Miami said. Debby was moving toward the north at 6
mph (9 kph).
The center of Debby was expected
to linger in the Gulf over the next few days with no landfall in the
immediate forecast. And while the storm's track remained far from
certain, the hurricane center said Debby was forecast to continue a slow
northward trek during the day Sunday.
Some strengthening is expected and Debby could be near hurricane force winds by Monday night.
Forecasters warned of up to six inches of rain along the coast, with isolated amounts of 10 inches.
It
was the first time four tropical storms have been recorded before July 1
during the Atlantic hurricane season since record keeping began in
1851.
Debby forced the suspension of 8 percent of the region's oil and gas production.
The
government reported that nine production platforms and one drilling rig
were evacuated. The suspended crude production amounts to about 2
percent of U.S
production and about 0.1 percent of global production. The reduced
production is not expected to impact oil prices unless the storm
strengthens and forces more production platforms to close.
A
tropical storm warning was issued for part of the southeast Louisiana
coast. Officials there have been monitoring the weather closely for the
last several days. Some low-lying areas close to the coast flood easily
in rough weather.
"We've already seen higher tides than usual," said Angela Rains, manager of the Terrebonne Levee District.
Near the mouth of the Mississippi southeast of New Orleans,
Plaquemines Parish President Billy Nungesser said officials were making
preparations to protect the main highway from tidal flooding.
A tornado touched down in Collier County in southwest Florida and forecasters warned other twisters were possible.
Several homes were damaged and tree limbs were down, The Naples Daily News reported.
"This is quite common with this type of storm," senior hurricane specialist Stacy Stewart with the National Hurricane Center
said of the twisters. "They tend to not be very large or long-lived,
which can be difficult to detect on radar. So people need to keep an eye
on the sky."
Out in the Gulf, Anadarko
Petroleum removed all non-essential personnel and expects to close four
facilities in the central and eastern Gulf by Saturday. Chevron, Royal Dutch Shell and Marathon Oil
said non-essential personnel were being removed but production was not
being affected. ExxonMobil reported that its operations were unaffected.
Alberto was the first storm this year. It formed off the South Carolina coast on May 19, almost two weeks before the hurricane season officially began June 1.
end quote from:
http://www.usatoday.com/weather/storms/story/2012-06-23/tropical-storm-debby/55783248/1?csp=34news
end quote from:
http://www.usatoday.com/weather/storms/story/2012-06-23/tropical-storm-debby/55783248/1?csp=34news
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