Tropical Storm Don is expected to make landfall in Texas in about 18 hours and quickly lose strength, dissipating completely in two days, according to the U.S. National Hurricane Center.
Don forced the shutdown of 11.9 percent of oil production and 6.2 percent of gas output from the Gulf of Mexico, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement said today.
The storm, with maximum winds of 50 miles (80 kilometers) per hour, is about 120 miles east of Brownsville, Texas, and bands of rain swirling out from its core are approaching the coastline, according to a center advisory issued shortly before 1 p.m. local time.
“Slight strengthening is possible before landfall with steady weakening expected after landfall,” the center said. Don isn’t expected to achieve hurricane level.
Storms are watched closely because they are a threat to oil and natural gas interests in the Gulf, home to 31 percent of U.S. oil output and 7 percent of natural gas production. Coastal refineries account for 7.61 million barrels a day, or 42 percent of U.S. capacity.
The storm is expected to go ashore between Corpus Christi and Brownsville, then track across the southern tip of Texas before entering the Mexican state of Coahuila sometime tomorrow, according to center maps. Tropical storm warnings and watches are posted from Galveston Island to the Mexican border.
Companies Prepare
Personnel were evacuated from 56 oil and gas platforms and four rigs in the Gulf, the Bureau of Ocean Energy said.
Apache Corp. (APA) reported today it has curtailed 41 million cubic feet of gas, up from 15.5 million yesterday, and 1,970 barrels of oil per day, up from 1,890 barrels. Apache also evacuated 368 production employees and contractors from facilities in the western Gulf, according to its website.
Northern Natural Gas told customers in a notice it was shutting production from its Matagorda Offshore Pipeline System in the Gulf that extends from Mustang Island to Tivoli.
Enbridge Inc. said in a notice that it evacuated personnel from its West Cameron 509 platform and will allow gas to free- flow to shore.
Production Halted
BP Plc halted production at its Atlantis platform, and Anadarko Petroleum Corp. (APC) said it evacuated workers and shut in production at six facilities.
Royal Dutch Shell Plc (RDSA) closed its Perdido Spar platform. Shell and Chevron Corp. (CVX) were removing non-essential workers. Chevron said no production was affected.
Don is expected to drop 3 inches to 5 inches of rain across drought-stricken southern Texas and as much as 7 inches in isolated areas, according to the center.
“Texas needs rain with a name,” state Agriculture Commissioner Todd Staples said in a statement yesterday. “Hopefully, this will be just the kickoff of a series of rain events to break the grip of this devastating drought.”
A weather system becomes a tropical storm when it develops cyclone characteristics, and becomes a named storm when winds reach at least 39 mph. A storm becomes a hurricane when winds hit 74 mph.
The U.S. hasn’t had a direct hit from a tropical storm since Bonnie went ashore in Florida in July 2010. The last hurricane to make landfall in the U.S. was Ike, a Category 2 storm, in Texas in 2008.
Storm Brewing
Forecasters are also tracking an area of disturbed weather about 1,200 miles east-southeast of the Lesser Antilles that has a 30 percent chance of becoming a tropical cyclone in the next two days, according to the hurricane center.
That system has to contend with some wind shear and dry air and dust, all of which can prevent it from developing into a hurricane, said Bob Haas, weather group operations manager and meteorologist at MDA Information Systems Inc. in Gaithersburg, Maryland. Some forecasting models show the system becoming better organized in the next five days, however.
“The tropical wave in the eastern Atlantic bears watching,” Haas said in an e-mail today.