Vancouver Sun

SHORTAGE OF GAS

Colonial hack causes panic

- LAURA SANICOLA and DEVIKA KRISHNA KUMAR

Gas stations from Florida to Virginia began running dry and prices at the pump rose on Tuesday, as the shutdown of the biggest U.S. fuel pipeline by hackers extended into a fifth day and sparked panic buying by motorists.

The administra­tion of U.S. President Joe Biden projected that the Colonial Pipeline, source of nearly half the fuel supply on the U.S. East Coast, would restart in a few days and urged drivers not to top up their tanks.

“We are asking people not to hoard,” U.S. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm told reporters at the White House. “Things will be back to normal soon.”

Colonial was shut on Friday after hackers launched a ransomware attack — effectivel­y locking up its computer systems and demanding payment to release them — and the company has said it is hoping to “substantia­lly” restart by the end of this week.

But the outage, which has underscore­d the vulnerabil­ity of vital U.S. infrastruc­ture to cyberattac­ks, has already started to hurt.

About 7.5 per cent of gas stations in Virginia and 5 per cent in North Carolina had no fuel on Tuesday as demand jumped 20 per cent, tracking firm GasBuddy said. Gas prices, meanwhile, neared an average US$2.99 a gallon, its highest price since November 2014, the American Automobile Associatio­n said.

In an effort to ease the strain on consumers, Georgia suspended sales tax on gas until Saturday, and North Carolina declared an emergency. The U.S. federal government, meanwhile, has loosened rules to make it easier for suppliers to refill storage, including lifting seasonal anti-smog requiremen­ts for gasoline and allowing fuel truckers to work longer hours.

Granholm said there is not a shortage but a gasoline supply “crunch” in North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Georgia and Southern Virginia, regions that typically rely on Colonial for fuel.

Driver Caroline Richardson said she was paying 15 cents more per gallon than a week ago as she refuelled at a gas station in Sumter, South Carolina. “I know some friends who decided not to go out of town this weekend to save gas,” she said.

The strike on Colonial “is potentiall­y the most substantia­l and damaging attack on U.S. critical infrastruc­ture ever,” Ohio Senator Rob Portman told a Senate hearing on cybersecur­ity threats on Tuesday.

The FBI has accused a shadowy criminal gang called DarkSide of the ransomware attack. DarkSide is believed to be based in Russia or Eastern Europe and avoids targeting computers that use languages from former Soviet republics, cyber experts say.

Russia's embassy in the United States rejected speculatio­n that Moscow was behind the attack. President Joe Biden a day earlier said there was no evidence so far that Russia was responsibl­e.

A statement issued in DarkSide's name on Monday said: “Our goal is to make money, and not creating problems for society.”

It is unknown how much money the hackers are seeking, and Colonial has not commented on whether it would pay.

“Cyber attacks on our nation's infrastruc­ture are growing more sophistica­ted, frequent and aggressive,” Brandon Wales, acting director of the Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency (CISA), said on Tuesday at a Senate hearing on the SolarWinds hack that hit companies and government agencies. The Environmen­tal Protection Agency issued a waiver on Tuesday that allows distributo­rs to continue supplying winter fuel blends through May 18 in three Mid-Atlantic states.

North Carolina and the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion, meanwhile, relaxed fuel-driver rules, allowing truckers hauling gasoline to work longer hours. North Carolina and Virginia have both declared a state of emergency.

The U.S. has also started the work needed to enable temporary waivers of Jones Act vessels in response to the cyber attack — something that would allow foreign flagged fuel carriers to move from one U.S. port to another, the Transporta­tion Department said.

There are growing concerns that the pipeline outage could lead to further price spikes ahead of the Memorial Day weekend at the end of this month. The weekend is the traditiona­l start of the busy summer driving season.

Gulf Coast refiners that rely on Colonial's pipeline to move their products have cut processing. Total SE trimmed gasoline production at its Port Arthur, Texas, refinery and Citgo Petroleum pared back at its Lake Charles, Louisiana, plant, sources told Reuters.

Marathon Petroleum is “making adjustment­s” to its operations due to the pipeline shutdown, a spokesman said without providing details.

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 ?? MICAH GREEN/BLOOMBERG ?? Motorists across a swath of the U.S. East Coast and South are struggling to find fuel as filling stations run dry amid the unpreceden­ted pipeline disruption caused by a criminal computer hack.
MICAH GREEN/BLOOMBERG Motorists across a swath of the U.S. East Coast and South are struggling to find fuel as filling stations run dry amid the unpreceden­ted pipeline disruption caused by a criminal computer hack.

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