Katrina could bring oil prices to $70 a barrel
Hurricane could damage a key source of energy in Gulf of Mexico
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Storm clouds for oil Aug. 28: The Gulf of Mexico is crucial to U.S. oil production. Fears over Hurricane Katrina's potential impact on that region drove the cost of crude oil past $70 a barrel in early trading on Monday. NBC's Rosalind Jordan reports. Nightly News |
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“We probably produce about 25 percent to 30 percent of the nation’s domestic oil,” says Mayor Ray Nagin. “If we get shut down with this hurricane that’s going to impact the price of oil significantly.”
Energy analysts agree, they predict the price of a barrel of oil could jump to more than $70 on Monday compared that to Friday’s closing price just above $66.
What could that spike mean for consumers already paying record gasoline prices?
“Hurricane Katrina could add another 20 to 30 cents to the cost of gasoline in this country,” says NBC Global Energy Analyst Daniel Yergin.
Yergin says if Katrina causes considerable damage, the resulting price spikes could affect the cost of heating your home this winter.
Another price shock could add 20 to 30 cents a gallon to the cost of home heating oil this winter as well.
And if you cook on a stove using natural gas, the price of doing so might go up as well, since 20 percent of the country’s natural gas comes from facilities in the Gulf of Mexico.
Does this mean the U.S. might have to tap into the strategic petroleum reserve? As of Sunday night, there’s no word from the White House, which has said before it should only be used in an emergency.
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