Houston Chronicle

Keys to success for the hurricane season

- Todd Staples is president of the Texas Oil & Gas Associatio­n and a former Texas agricultur­e commission­er. By Todd Staples

We are early into Hurricane Season 2018 and forecaster­s say this season could be an active one. Last year’s devastatin­g Hurricane Harvey is the most recent reminder of just how important fuel supplies are to our daily lives. The men and women in the Texas oil and natural gas industry and its public and private sector partners are ready. In fact, we make it a priority to stay ready.

After Hurricane Rita in 2005, Texas created the Task Force on Evacuation, Transporta­tion and Logistics, which developed a comprehens­ive slate of recommenda­tions to fortify hurricane preparedne­ss, response and recovery plans.

As part of ongoing work to innovate and improve, the energy sector is part of a collaborat­ive effort among private and publicsect­or entities such as the Department of Public Safety, Texas Commission on Environmen­tal Quality, Texas Railroad Commission, Texas Department of Transporta­tion, Texas ports, FEMA, health care facilities and local emergency management officials.

Hurricane Harvey was a unique beast of a storm. Despite unpreceden­ted challenges that accompany a 1,000-year flood, the oil and natural gas industry's plans worked, and disruption­s were minimized, as operators responded rapidly to meet Texans' fuel needs. The industry continuous­ly evaluates and refines its preparedne­ss and recovery plans after every natural disaster. Staffing, flooding reinforcem­ents, technologi­es, as well as employee and community assistance are all items the industry evaluates to ensure we remain prepared for the next event.

Keeping people, communitie­s, and facilities safe is the top priority. Sometimes it is necessary to shut down a refinery or terminal before a storm makes landfall to maintain human and environmen­tal safety. Other times, the storm itself may cause damage at these facilities. Comprehens­ive damage assessment­s, safety reviews, personnel and equipment deployment must be completed before critical fuel infrastruc­ture can be brought back online.

As Texans know well, floods, hurricanes and other natural disasters create significan­t disruption in access to roads, power, cell service, groceries and fuels. So, it is important to be prepared and be patient. Manpower and electrical power are essential to restore critical infrastruc­ture. When the power comes on, not everything is back to business as usual. Across the country 96 percent of gas stations are independen­tly owned and of those, 64 percent are individual business owners. Often small business operators like gas station owners can get to their stores only when power is restored and even then, their stores may not be operationa­l.

To a passerby, it may seem like critical infrastruc­ture and services are back online and operationa­l once power is restored. That’s not always the case. Texas’ fuel system needs people, power, ports, pipelines, trucks, refineries and raw materials. Restarting the entire system is a safety-driven process. That is why patience and conservati­on are important during recovery.

Not being able to go to your neighborho­od gas station doesn’t always mean there’s no fuel. It’s important to keep calm and try another station or even try the next day. Fuel is often replenishe­d daily in larger markets. Runs on fuel can further disrupt the market, interferin­g with access to fuel for the general public and first responders.

From the wellhead to offshore platforms, across pipeline miles to our refining complexes, the oil and natural gas industry takes seriously our responsibi­lity to prepare for, endure and restart when a storm hits. Texans can help themselves and their neighbors by maintainin­g normal routines and not overbuying fuel before or after a storm.

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