Floodway opening a blessing for Louisiana refineries

KROTZ SPRINGS, La., (Reuters) – The opening of a key  spillway to relieve flooding along the Mississippi River could  create logistical headaches for big Gulf Coast refiners, but  will likely spare the lion’s share of the area’s refining  capacity from flooding danger.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers on Saturday opened the  Morganza Spillway to channel water away from the Mississippi  River and into the Atchafalaya River basin.

That will take the floodwaters toward homes, farms, a  wildlife refuge and a small oil refinery but avoid inundating  New Orleans and Louisiana’s capital Baton Rouge. The opening of the Morganza Spillway on Saturday will  inevitably impact Alon USA Energy’s 80,000 barrel-per-day  refinery in Krotz Springs, which expects to be surrounded by  water within 14 days. Refinery workers scrambled over the  weekend to bolster levees around the nearby Atchafalaya River.

The spillway’s opening brings relief to the eight large  refineries that are nestled along the Mississippi River between  Baton Rouge and Meraux, Louisiana, which collectively process  12 percent of U.S. refined products.

“That’s really what you’re trying to do — save all those  refineries,” said Jeffrey Goetz, managing director of Poten &  Partners. Rather than the prospect of swamped refineries and months  of ceased operations as was seen during hurricanes Katrina and  Rita in 2005, Louisiana’s refineries face the tricky logistical  task of moving barges filled with gasoline and other refined  products along the swollen Mississippi River.“Assuming the levees hold, this risk of flooding is low,”  said Andrew Lipow, president of Lipow Oil Associates LLC in  Houston. “The reality is we really have a logistics and  distribution issue.” But all bets are off if swelling river  levels burst through the levees that protect New Orleans and  other cities, he said.