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Texas Refiners Rush to Fix Leaks, Burst Pipes After Storm

At least seven of them were trying to restart as of early Monday, with varying degrees of success.

Texas Refiners Rush to Fix Leaks, Burst Pipes After Storm
The silhouette of contractors are seen working to replace piping above a subterranean salt cavern at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Bryan Mound Strategic Petroleum Reserve in Freeport, Texas (Photographer: Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg)

Refineries in Texas are finding a return to normal after last week’s Arctic blast and widespread power outages is a messy, stop-and-start process.

At least eight of them were trying to restart as of early Tuesday, with varying degrees of success. Some lacked all the power and water they needed to begin the process. All were grappling with storm-related damage, including water leaks, burst pipes, cracked pumping and other equipment damage.

The specter of fuel shortages as drivers take to the roads again is just one of the problems Texans may continue to face in the fallout of the energy crisis that left millions without power last week.

Texas Refiners Rush to Fix Leaks, Burst Pipes After Storm

Regaining power at refineries, repairing damage and returning to normal rates can take a week to several weeks. More damage will likely emerge as units are heated and fluid introduced. Total Port Arthur, which remains without potable water, must first repair multiple water leaks that were caused by stress on equipment before beginning its restart.

LyondellBasell Industries NV’s Houston refinery may remain inoperable for another week or more as multiple sections have leaks, damage to equipment and pipe ruptures that must be repaired.

Some, like Valero Energy Corp.’s Houston refinery, appear to be steadily progressing in restarting equipment like crude units and catalytic crackers, vital to making gasoline and diesel. Others like Royal Dutch Shell Plc’s Deer Park remain down with no timetable yet for a restart process to begin.

Citgo Petroleum Corp.’s Corpus Christi plant is gradually getting nitrogen and water restored. Exxon Mobil Corp.’s Beaumont refinery paused a restart earlier awaiting more natural gas supply and is now trying to get some units running at least minimally by the end of the week.

RELATED:

  • Valero Houston Refinery Is Restarting Units After Winter Storm
  • Motiva Port Arthur Tests Units to See If They Run Normally
  • Citgo Corpus Christi Refinery Prepares For Restart After Storm
  • Exxon Beaumont Wants to Restart Some Units By Week’s End
  • LyondellBasell Houston Must Repair Storm Damage Before Restart
  • Exxon Baytown Gets Power Restored, Restart Attempt Begins
  • Shell Says No Timeline Yet to Restart Deer Park After Storm
  • Total Port Arthur May Take Several Weeks to Return to Normal

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