The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Energy pipeline could be back by week’s end

- By Eric Tucker, Cathy Bussewitz and Alan Suderman

A major U.S. pipeline hit by a cyberattac­k may have its service mostly restored by the end of the week.

WASHINGTON >> The operator of a major U.S. pipeline hit by a cyberattac­k said Monday it hopes to have service mostly restored by the end of the week.

Colonial Pipeline offered the update after revealing that it had halted operations because of a ransomware attack the FBI has linked to a criminal gang.

The ransomware attack on the pipeline, which the company says delivers roughly 45% of fuel consumed on the U.S. East Coast, raised concerns that supplies of gasoline, jet fuel and diesel could be disrupted in parts of the region if the disruption continues.

At the moment, though, officials said there is no fuel shortage.

The Colonial Pipeline transports gasoline and other fuel through 10 states between Texas and New Jersey, according to the company.

Colonial is in the process of restarting portions of its network. It said Sunday that its main pipeline remained offline, but that some smaller lines were operationa­l. The company has not said when it would completely restart the pipeline.

“The time of the outage is now approachin­g critical levels and if it continues to remain down we do expect an increase in East Coast gasoline and diesel prices,” said Debnil Chowdhury, IHS Markit Executive Director. The last time there was an outage of this magnitude was in 2016, he said, when gas prices rose 15 to 20 cents per gallon. But the Northeast had significan­tly more local refining capacity at that time, potentiall­y intensifyi­ng any impact.

The FBI on Monday said the ransomware attack had been carried out by a criminal gang known as DarkSide, which cultivates a Robin Hood image of stealing from corporatio­ns and giving a cut to charity.

In response to the attack, the Biden administra­tion loosened regulation­s for the transport of petroleum products on highways as part of an “all-hands-ondeck” effort to avoid disruption­s in the fuel supply.

If the pipeline outage persists, the industry may want to turn to barges to transport fuel, but that could require a waiver of the Jones Act, a U.S. maritime law that requires products shipped between U.S. ports to be moved by American-flagged ships.

The pipeline utilizes both common and custom technology systems, which could complicate efforts to bring the entire network back online, according to analysts at Third Bridge.

Gasoline futures ticked higher Monday. Futures for crude and fuel, prices that traders pay for contracts for delivery at some point in the future, typically begin to rise each year as the driving season approaches. The price you pay at the gas pump tends to follow.

 ?? MARK LENNIHAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Traffic on I-95passes oil storage tanks owned by the Colonial Pipeline Company in Linden, N.J. Colonial, which operates a major pipeline transporti­ng fuels along the East Coast, says it had to stop operations because it was the victim of a cyberattac­k.
MARK LENNIHAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Traffic on I-95passes oil storage tanks owned by the Colonial Pipeline Company in Linden, N.J. Colonial, which operates a major pipeline transporti­ng fuels along the East Coast, says it had to stop operations because it was the victim of a cyberattac­k.

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