Updated

The potential damage to oil platforms, refineries and pipelines that remain closed along the Gulf Coast drove energy prices to new highs Tuesday, with crude futures briefly topping $70 a barrel and wholesale gasoline costs surging to levels that could lead to $3 a gallon at the pump in some markets.

Companies scrambled planes and helicopters to get an aerial view of their assets and they began escorting some previously evacuated workers back to offshore facilities to conduct detailed inspections of rigs and underwater pipes. Some producers found that a rig or platform had disappeared, drifted or listed, while others reported that damage appeared minimal.

Onshore, flooding from Hurricane Katrina (search) is likely to have caused enough damage to some refineries that it could take weeks, and possibly a month or more, before operations return to normal, analysts said.

Indeed, the production and distribution of oil and gas remained severely disrupted by the shutdown of a key oil import terminal off the coast of Louisiana and by the Gulf region's widespread loss of electricity, which is needed to power pipelines and refineries.

"It's ugly," said Lawrence J. Goldstein, president of the New York-based nonprofit Petroleum Industry Research Foundation (search). "Power is a problem, but the water issue is unbelievable."

To avert a severe supply crunch, Goldstein said the government should relax summer gasoline specifications to immediately free-up motor fuel supplies otherwise being held in storage until Sept. 15. He said the U.S. should also seek help from European nations, who might be willing to lend, exchange or sell gasoline and other fuels out of their own inventories.

The trading frenzy on futures markets reflected the uncertainty and fear about the full extent of the damage Katrina inflicted, as well as the constraints being felt where actual shipments of gasoline, heating oil and jet fuel are bought and sold.

"This is an extremely serious situation," said Tom Kloza, director of the Wall, N.J.-based Oil Price Information Service (search).

Light sweet crude for October delivery rose $2.61 to settle at $69.81 a barrel, a record close since trading began in 1983 on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Prices had reached as high as $70.85, an intraday high on Nymex, although still below the inflation-adjusted high of about $90 a barrel that was set in 1980.

September gasoline futures rose 41.39 cents to settle at $2.4745 a gallon on Nymex, where trading was halted briefly after the exchange's 25-cent trading limit was reached. Heating oil futures climbed 16.71 cents to $2.0759 a gallon.

In wholesale markets on the Gulf Coast, some gasoline was being priced as high as $2.85 a gallon and in the Midwest, prices were as high as $2.65 a gallon, according to Kloza. Retail prices are typically 60 cents higher, meaning motorists in these regions could very well $3 a gallon at the pump in some markets.

Natural gas futures raced higher as well, foreshadowing higher home-heating bills this winter. Natural gas for October delivery traded at $11.659 per 1,000 cubic feet, an increase of 52 cents.

Some signs of the havoc Katrina caused:

— Diamond Offshore Drilling Inc. reported one missing rig. Another broke free from its moorings, but it was found about nine miles north of its original location.

— Newfield Exploration Co. said one of its production platforms disappeared entirely.

— Rowan Cos. said it believes a rig capsized and sunk off the coast of Louisiana.

— An oil drilling platform washed up onto Dauphin Island, a weekend retreat off the Alabama coast, but it was not known where the platform came from.

Valero Energy Corp. said its St. Charles refinery in Norco, La., which has capacity of 260,000 barrels a day, might not be restarted for another two weeks, but other big refiners in the region have yet to report the impact on their own facilities.

"The refiners that are in proximity to both the Mississippi River and Lake Pontchartrain are the ones that probably have flood damage," said William Veno, an analyst at Cambridge Energy Research Associates.

In addition to refineries and oil platforms, critical infrastructure that remained out of service included:

— the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port, the largest oil import terminal in the United States.

— the Colonial Pipeline, which transports refined products such as gasoline, heating oil and jet fuel from Houston to markets as far away as the Northeast.

— the Plantation Pipe Line, which transports fuel from refineries in Mississippi and Louisiana to consuming markets as far away as northern Virginia.

— the Capline pipeline system, which transports crude oil from the Gulf to the Midwest.

Many energy companies struggled just to visit their facilities.

Such is the case for Chevron Corp., which shut down its 325,000 barrel a day Pascagoula, Miss., refinery before Katrina's arrival. "We are hoping to get in there today, but that's the issue — getting there," said company spokesman Michael Barrett.

BP PLC spokesman Scott Dean said the company managed to conduct aerial overflights of several deepwater oil and gas platforms and that the damage appeared to be minimal. The company also brought a few workers back to their offshore rigs to get a closer look. "I still can't speculate on when we'll resume production," he said.

But even if offshore platforms and rigs are ready to resume production, many may have to wait until onshore pipelines, refineries and processors are ready to take delivery of the oil and gas, industry officials said.

An Energy Department spokesman said there have been requests from two companies seeking loans of crude oil from the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve. No decision has been made yet about whether to lend the oil, spokesman Craig Stevens said.

At least eight Gulf Coast refineries in the path of Hurricane Katrina have shut down or reduced operations, taking out anywhere from 8 percent to 10 percent of the nation's production capacity, according to company and federal reports.

Katrina, which struck the Gulf Coast as a Category 4 storm, was blamed for at least 55 deaths and the evacuation of more than 700 offshore platforms and rigs. It slammed into a major oil production hub at a time when producers worldwide were already struggling to cope.

Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries secretary general Adnan Shihab-Eldin reiterated Tuesday that the group will supply extra barrels of crude oil to refiners if they want them. Previous OPEC pledges have done little to ease market fears over supply.

The U.S. Minerals Management Service said Monday that 95 percent of the region's oil output was out of service, with more than 4.6 million barrels of production lost since Friday. The agency said 88 percent of natural gas output was shut down, resulting in a loss of 25.4 billion cubic feet of lost production since Friday.

The Gulf of Mexico normally produces 2 million barrels of crude oil a day and about 10 billion cubic feet a day of natural gas.