Tropical Storm Lee is lashing the Louisiana coast with heavy rain and wind, shutting more than half of the crude oil and natural gas production from the resource-rich Gulf of Mexico. Lee was about 85m west-southwest of Morgan City, Louisiana, and moving north-northwest at 2 mph, the US National Hurricane Center said in its latest advisory at 11pm New York time yesterday. The storm’s maximum sustained winds were 50 mph and tropical storm-force winds stretched as far as 260m from its center, it said. “New Orleans is in the bulls-eye of the flooding rain,” said Matt Alto, an AccuWeather.com meteorologist, on the State College, Pennsylvania-based forecaster’s website. Companies including Anadarko Petroleum, BP, Exxon Mobil and Noble Corp. evacuated workers from Gulf rigs and platforms. About 60.3 percent of Gulf oil production and about 55 percent of natural gas output has been shut by the storm, according to the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement.The Gulf accounts for 27 percent of US oil output and 6.5 percent of natural gas production. As much as 91 percent of gas and 98 percent of oil output in the Gulf may be shut in the next four days, according to Kinetic Analysis, a Silver Spring, Maryland-based company that predicts the effects of natural disasters.Oil and gas producers will be watching wind speeds and wave heights to determine whether and how long to shut operations, said Jan Vermeiren, chief executive officer of Kinetic Analysis. James Williams, an economist at WTRG Economics, an energy research firm in London, Arkansas, said Lee isn’t strong enough to cause any significant damage to energy assets at this point.“We’re not talking about Hurricane Gustav here, moving pipelines up and down Louisiana like it was spaghetti,” Williams said in a telephone interview. “This one isn’t a big story. It’s a wet story.” Gustav struck in 2008.Ten to 15 inches of rain is expected to fall in an area from the central Gulf coast northward into the Tennessee Valley, with as much as 20 inches in some areas, according to the hurricane center. The Florida panhandle may see as much as eight inches of rain over the next several days. “A few tornadoes will be possible” over portions of southern Louisiana, southern Mississippi, southern Alabama and the far western Florida panhandle, the center said. The center of Lee is expected to move slowly across Louisiana today, causing many residents to lose power supplies. Bobby Jindal, the state’s governor, declared a state of emergency, saying the storm threatens “extremely heavy, prolonged” rain over the state and may cause flash flooding and high tides. Thirty-five Louisiana parishes declared states of emergency and officials urged voluntary evacuations in parts of some areas in the southern part of the state. Yesterday, Jindal deployed some troops from the Louisiana National Guard to respond to any emergencies. New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu extended a state of emergency he declared last week after a fire broke out in the eastern part of the city. Storm warnings were posted for the Gulf coast from Destin, Florida, westward to Sabine Pass, Texas. Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour declared a state of emergency in several counties expected to be hit with heavy rain and floods. From / Arabian Business News