Gulf Coast energy production to restart

From "Storms Cast Spotlight on Energy's New Reality":

...Still, on the Texas coast, the focus through the weekend was on how long it would take to restart the 16 refineries that were shut down by the storm.
Those refineries can process 4 million barrels of oil a day, or 23 percent of the country's total capacity, according to the Energy Department. Another four refineries, accounting for 5 percent of capacity, are undergoing repair after the damage caused by Hurricane Katrina.
Also, there was little sign of damage to the offshore infrastructure, according to the United States Coast Guard, whose initial survey found only two damaged drilling platforms and no traces of oil spills. By contrast, Hurricane Katrina destroyed about 50 small facilities and damaged a handful of major platforms.
Even if the damage from the latest storm proves to be light, oil production from the Gulf of Mexico is likely to be months away from returning to its normal level. Oil companies evacuated 80 percent of all the manned platforms operating in the gulf in anticipation of Hurricane Rita and shut down the region's oil production, about 1.5 million barrels a day...