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Oil Updates — Crude edges up; Mexico, Venezuela help Cuba to fight oil fire

Oil Updates — Crude edges up; Mexico, Venezuela help Cuba to fight oil fire
Brent crude futures had risen 22 cents, or 0.2 percent, to $95.14 a barrel by 0439 GMT.  (Shutterstock)
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Updated 08 August 2022

Oil Updates — Crude edges up; Mexico, Venezuela help Cuba to fight oil fire

Oil Updates — Crude edges up; Mexico, Venezuela help Cuba to fight oil fire

RIYADH: Oil prices edged up from multi-month lows on Monday as investors’ appetite improved following data on US jobs and Chinese exports that eased recession concerns.

Brent crude futures had risen 22 cents, or 0.2 percent, to $95.14 a barrel by 0439 GMT. 

US West Texas Intermediate crude was at $89.18 a barrel, up 17 cents, or 0.2 percent.

Cuba gets help from Mexico, Venezuela to fight oil fire

Cuba appeared to make progress on Sunday bringing under control a fire at its main oil storage facility that has killed one firefighter, drawing on help from Mexico and Venezuela to fight the raging flames.

A lightning strike on Friday ignited one of eight storage tanks at the Matanzas super tanker port 60 miles east of Havana. A second tank caught fire on Saturday, catching firefighters and others at the scene by surprise. Sixteen people were missing.

Susely Morfa Gonzalez, head of the Communist Party in Matanzas, told local reporters “there are no flames at this time, only white smoke” coming from the first tank hit by lightning.

She said a second tank was still burning, sending up a huge column of black smoke, while a third, which on Saturday night officials feared would explode “is being cooled with water at intervals, in order to maintain an adequate temperature that prevents combustion.”

A secondary fire feeding off oil leaking from the area was also extinguished. No oil had contaminated Matanzas Bay, officials said.

The second explosion on Saturday injured more than 100 people, many first responders, and 24 remain hospitalized, five of those in critical condition.

On Sunday, 82 Mexican and 35 Venezuelan personnel experienced in combating fuel blazes joined the effort, bringing four planeloads of fire-fighting chemicals.

“The help is important, I would say that it is vital and it is going to be decisive,” Diaz-Canel said. 

(With input from Reuters)