Image: REUTERS/ CHRISTIAN HARTMANN
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Oil prices rose on Wednesday, extending gains from the previous session, as a hurricane disrupted US offshore oil and gas production and an industry report showed a big drop in US crude stockpiles.

Brent crude was trading up 15c, or 0.4%, at $40.68 a barrel by 12.55am GMT, while US crude gained 18 cents, or 0.5%, to $38.46 a barrel. Both contracts rose by more than 2% on Tuesday.

More than 25% of US offshore oil and gas output was shut and export ports were closed on Tuesday as Hurricane Sally sat just off the US Gulf Coast.

" Our current estimate for the total outage associated with the Sally weather system is between 3-million and 6-million barrels of oil over approximately 11 days "
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“Our current estimate for the total outage associated with the Sally weather system is between 3-million and 6-million barrels of oil over approximately 11 days,” Rystad Energy said in a note.

That is likely to help reduce stockpiles, though refineries were also shut down, cutting demand for oil.

US crude oil inventories fell by 9.5-million barrels last week, though petrol inventories increased, data from industry group the American Petroleum Institute showed on Tuesday.

Analysts had expected oil stocks to increase by 1.3-million barrels. Official data on US stockpiles is due out later on Wednesday and often conflicts with the industry figures.

Meanwhile, oil producers and traders are painting a bleak picture for a recovery in fuel demand globally as the Covid-19 pandemic rages on, hammering economies.

Reuters


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