BP’s massive 440,000-barrel-per-day Whiting refinery—the largest in the U.S. Midwest—was forced into flaring late Monday after severe thunderstorms dumped heavy rain across northwest Indiana, flooding the site and surrounding neighborhoods. The company said in a statement that materials were being burned in the flare stacks to maintain safe operations and that response teams were on the ground to manage the situation.
BP has not clarified whether output has been curtailed.
The Whiting facility, perched on the southern edge of Lake Michigan just outside Chicago, is critical to regional fuel supply, producing gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel for much of the Midwest. Any disruption at Whiting typically ripples quickly into regional fuel markets, where inventories are already leaner than normal this summer.
The timing could hardly be worse for BP, which is still reeling from operational setbacks in Europe. In June, both crude units at its 400,000-bpd Rotterdam refinery went offline—one for planned maintenance, the other unexpectedly—leaving one of Europe’s largest fuel plants completely out of commission. That outage tightened refined product markets in the Atlantic Basin, helping to buoy margins but adding stress to BP’s downstream network.
Now, with Whiting hit by weather-related disruptions, BP finds itself facing reliability questions on both sides of the Atlantic. While thunderstorms are a far cry from structural failures, flooding at refineries can wreak havoc on power systems, wastewater treatment, and crude handling infrastructure. Even brief interruptions at facilities of this scale can leave refiners scrambling to rebalance feedstocks and products.
The Midwest, in particular, has limited replacement capacity should Whiting go down for any length of time, making it a perennial pressure point in U.S. fuel supply chains. With hurricane season still ahead and climate volatility increasingly a factor in energy operations, the storm will test just how fragile refining reliability can be—even for giants like BP.
By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com
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