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Exxon Mobil Corp. has resumed operations at its 520,000-bpd Baton Rouge refinery after Hurricane Ida.KATHLEEN FLYNN/Reuters

Damages to oil production facilities in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico on Sunday kept output largely halted a week after Hurricane Ida made landfall, according to offshore regulator the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement.

Energy companies have been coping with damaged platforms and onshore power outages and logistical issues, slowing efforts to restart production. About 88 per cent of crude oil output and 83 per cent of natural gas production remained suspended. Climate change is fuelling deadly and disastrous weather across the globe, including stronger and more damaging hurricanes.

About 1.6 million barrels of crude oil remained offline, with only about 100,000 barrels added since Saturday. Another 1.8 billion cubic feet a day of natural gas output also was shut-in, the regulator said.

A total of 104 oil and gas platforms and five rigs remain evacuated on Sunday, down from the 288 originally evacuated.

Royal Dutch Shell PLC, the largest U.S. Gulf Coast producer, on Saturday was evaluating damage to its West Delta-143 offshore platform, which transfers about 200,000 barrels of oil and gas a day from three offshore oil fields.

The lower Mississippi River and New Orleans ports were reopened to traffic and cargo operations, the Coast Guard said on Saturday, allowing the resumption of grain, metal and energy shipments.

REFINERIES RESTARTING

Four oil refineries in Louisiana have initiated restart processes after Hurricane Ida knocked out most of the state’s oil processing. Five others have yet to resume operations, the U.S. Department of Energy said on Sunday.

Three oil refineries in the Baton Rouge area and one near New Orleans have begun to restart units, the DOE said, without naming the facilities. The four account for 1.3 million barrels a day of U.S. refinery capacity.

Utilities have restored electric power to seven of the impacted refineries since Friday, the DOE said.

Placid Port’s Allen refinery, across the River from Baton Rouge, and Delek’s refinery, at Krotz Springs, have started to resume activity during the weekend, according to industry sources. Both companies did not reply to requests for comments over the past several days.

Marathon Petroleum Corp. on Friday said its 578,000 barrel-a-day (b/d) Garyville, La., refinery, the state’s largest, was in the initial stages of restarting.

Exxon Mobil Corp.’s had also resumed operations at its 520,000-b/d Baton Rouge refinery.

Full restoration of normal refinery output will take two to three weeks for refineries in the region, an analyst estimated.

The five refineries still shut in Louisiana account for about 1.0 million b/d, or approximately 6 per cent of total U.S. operable refining capacity, the DOE said.

The restart timelines in New Orleans may take longer owing to flooding and continuing power supply issues, the DOE said. Utility provider Entergy Corp. on Saturday said some of the refinery locations may be without power until Sept. 29.

Elsewhere in the Gulf of Mexico, a private dive team on Sunday was attempting to locate the source of a suspected oil spill spotted in the Bay Marchand area, the U.S. Coast Guard said.

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