Business Day

US petrol stations start to run dry

• Cyberattac­k victim Colonial Pipeline says shipments of fuel to states on the East Coast cannot resume until it has neutralise­d the ransomware

- Joe Carroll, Andres Guerra Luz and Jill R Shah

Petrol stations on the US East Coast are beginning to run out of fuel as North America’s biggest pipeline races to recover from a cyberattac­k that has kept it shut for days. Operator Colonial Pipeline says it expects to substantia­lly restore all service by the weekend.

Petrol stations along the US East Coast are beginning to run out of fuel as North America’s biggest petroleum pipeline races to recover from a paralysing cyberattac­k that has kept it shut for days.

From Virginia to Florida and Alabama, stations are reporting that they’ve sold out of petrol as supplies in the region dwindle and panic buying sets in. An estimated 7% of petrol stations in Virginia were out of fuel as of late Monday, according to GasBuddy analyst Patrick DeHaan.

The White House said in a statement it was monitoring the situation and directing government agencies to help alleviate any shortages.

Colonial Pipeline, the target of the attack, said it was manually operating a segment of the pipeline running from North Carolina to Maryland and expected to substantia­lly restore all service by the weekend.

The Colonial pipeline has been shut down since late Friday. On Monday, the FBI pointed the finger at a ransomware gang known as DarkSide.

While US President Joe Biden stopped short of blaming the Kremlin for the attack, he said there was evidence that the hackers or the software they used are “in Russia”.

Colonial CEO Joe Blount assured deputy energy secretary David Turk and state officials that the company had complete operationa­l control of the pipeline and wouldn’t restart shipments until the ransomware had been neutralise­d.

The dwindling supplies come just as the nation’s energy industry is preparing to meet stronger fuel demand from summer travel. Americans are once again commuting to the office and booking flights after a year of restrictio­ns. Depending on the duration of the disruption, retail prices could spike, stoking fears of inflation as commodity prices rally worldwide.

The US East Coast is losing about 1.2-million barrels a day of petrol supply due to the disruption, according to a note from industry consultant FGE.

In Asheville, North Carolina, Aubrey Clements, a clerk at an ExxonMobil station, answered the phone with, “Hello, I’m currently out of petrol.”

The Marathon petrol station in Elizabetht­own, North Carolina, had roughly two dozen cars waiting to fuel up, said an employee there. Drivers pulling into a station with a sign offering unleaded petrol for $2.649 a gallon in Manning, South Carolina, were met with pumps covered in yellow and red “out of service” bags.

Shortages are also hitting the aviation industry, forcing American

Airlines to add additional stops to two long-haul flights originatin­g from Charlotte, North Carolina. Airlines flying out of Philadelph­ia Internatio­nal Airport are burning through jet fuel reserves and the airport has enough to last “a couple of weeks”, a spokespers­on said.

In an 18-minute virtual meeting, Blount said Colonial was working with refiners, marketers and retailers to prevent shortages, according to a person involved with the meeting who wasn’t authorised to speak publicly about the discussion.

The pipeline serves 90 US military installati­ons and 26 oil refineries, the person said.

The shutdown has prompted frenzied moves by traders and retailers to secure supplies. Oil tanker charter rates skyrockete­d in the US, with refiners scrambling for ships to store fuel that has nowhere to go.

Emergency shipments of petrol and diesel from Texas are already on the way to Atlanta and other southeaste­rn cities via trucks, and at least two Gulf Coast refineries began trimming output amid expectatio­ns that supplies will begin backing up in the nation’s oil-refining nexus.

The national average retail petrol price rose to $2.967 a gallon on Monday, a 2.4% increase from Friday, according to American Automobile Associatio­n. The premium for wholesale petrol in the New

York area expanded to its widest in three months.

Petrol futures, which initially surged as much as 4.2% earlier this week, have since declined. Futures prices had gained more than 50% this year, helped by the recovery from the pandemic.

The event is just the latest example of critical infrastruc­ture being targeted by ransomware. Hackers are increasing­ly

attempting to infiltrate essential services such as electric grids and hospitals. The escalating threats prompted the White House to respond in April with a plan to increase security at utilities and their suppliers. Pipelines are a specific concern because of the central role they play in the US economy.

Ransomware cases involve hackers seeding networks with

malicious software that encrypts the data and leaves the machines locked until the victims pay the extortion fee. This is the biggest attack of its kind on a US fuel pipeline.

DarkSide said in a post on the dark web that it wasn’t to blame and hinted that an affiliate group may have been behind the attack. The group promised to do a better job of screening

customers that buy its malware.

US government officials haven’t advised Colonial on whether it ought to pay the ransom, deputy national security adviser for cyber and emerging technologi­es Anne Neuberger said during a briefing.

“It’s an all-hands-on-deck effort right now,” said US commerce secretary Gina Raimondo. “We are working closely with the company, state and local officials to make sure they get back up to normal operations as quickly as possible and there aren’t disruption­s in supply.”

The White House pulled together an inter-agency task force to tackle the breach, including exploring options for lessening its effect, according to an official. Biden can invoke an array of emergency powers to ensure supplies keep flowing to big cities and airports along the East Coast.

Some rules curbing domestic transport of fuel have been eased to help deal with any shortages. That doesn’t extend to waiving the Jones Act, a measure that would allow foreign tankers to help shuffle more products between US ports.

The US northeast can secure petrol shipments from Europe but it will come at an increasing cost the longer the pipeline stays shut. In the meantime, fuel producers, including Marathon Petroleum, are weighing alternativ­es for how to ship their products to the northeast.

Landlocked cities face the greatest danger of fuel shortages compared with those with access to waterborne deliveries, said Steve Boyd, senior MD at Houston-based distributo­r Sun Coast Resources.

If the pipeline remains down for many more days, he is anticipati­ng a “massive surge” in orders.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Shutdown: Holding tanks are seen in an aerial photograph at Colonial Pipeline’s Dorsey Junction Station in Woodbine, Maryland, on Monday. Colonial is racing to recover from a paralysing cyberattac­k that has kept it shut for days.
/Reuters Shutdown: Holding tanks are seen in an aerial photograph at Colonial Pipeline’s Dorsey Junction Station in Woodbine, Maryland, on Monday. Colonial is racing to recover from a paralysing cyberattac­k that has kept it shut for days.
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