Houston Chronicle

Shortages spread

- By Jeff Martin

The outage of a crucial pipeline is being felt in the Southeast.

ATLANTA — Gasoline prices spiked and drivers found “out of service” bags covering pumps as the gas shortage in the South rolled into the work week, raising fears that the scattered disruption­s could become more widespread.

The shortage is blamed on a pipeline rupture and leak of at least 252,000 gallons of gas in Alabama. The pipeline company has two main lines and said Monday that it is shipping “significan­t volumes” on the second of the two lines to limit the impact of the interrupti­on on the other line.

Colonial Pipeline Co. said supplies have been delivered or are on their way to locations in Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, South Carolina, and North Carolina.

Still, some motorists discovered bone-dry pumps. Lindsey Paluka, 28, stopped at a Shell station in the East Atlanta neighborho­od only to find a pump handle covered by a black garbage bag.

“I’m definitely on empty, so I’m going to have to figure something out,” she said.

Alpharetta, Ga.-based Colonial has acknowledg­ed that between 252,000 gallons and 336,000 gallons of gasoline leaked from a pipeline near Helena, Ala., since the spill was detected Sept. 9. It’s unclear when the spill actually began.

According to a preliminar­y report, it wasn’t possible to immediatel­y pinpoint the leak, partly because highly flammable benzene and gasoline vapors hung in the air and prevented firefighte­rs, company officials and anyone else from being near the site for more than three days.

State workers discovered the leak when they noticed a strong gasoline odor and a sheen on a man-made retention pond, along with dead vegetation nearby, the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administra­tion said in the report.

The report does not identify the cause of the leak. The agency, part of the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion, is investigat­ing the leak in a section of the pipeline constructe­d in 1963, it said.

Environmen­talist David Butler said no fuel made it into the nearby Cahaba River.

From an ecological standpoint, the spill couldn’t have happened at a better place or time because the terrain funneled the fuel into the pond, and the water was low enough in the small lake to enable it to hold the gas, said Butler, of Cahaba Riverkeepe­r.

“We averted a disaster this time,” Butler said.

Colonial Pipeline said over the weekend that it was beginning constructi­on of a temporary pipeline that will bypass a leaking section of its main gasoline pipeline in Shelby County, Ala. In a statement Monday evening, it said it expects the temporary pipeline to be running by the end of the week.

In North Carolina, Attorney General Roy Cooper urged consumers to report gasoline prices that seem unreasonab­ly high. A Cooper spokeswoma­n said investigat­ors are checking reports of gasoline being sold at $5.89 a gallon.

 ?? David Goldman / Associated Press ?? A sign Monday informs drivers of a shortage at a Smyrna, Ga., gas station. Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal issued an executive order aimed at preventing price gouging. In Georgia, AAA reported the price of regular gas jumped more than 5 cents from Sunday’s...
David Goldman / Associated Press A sign Monday informs drivers of a shortage at a Smyrna, Ga., gas station. Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal issued an executive order aimed at preventing price gouging. In Georgia, AAA reported the price of regular gas jumped more than 5 cents from Sunday’s...

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