Business Standard

7.0-MAGNITUDE EARTHQUAKE HITS ALASKA; US DECLARES EMERGENCY

- ROBERT TUTTLE & SHEELA TOBBEN

US federal authoritie­s issued an emergency declaratio­n for Alaska after a magnitude 7 earthquake struck on Friday, which left thousands without electricit­y and temporaril­y shut the state’s most important oil pipeline.

The authoritie­s have been directed to provide assistance for Anchorage as well as Kenai Peninsular and Matanuska-Susitna boroughs, according to an alert from the Department of Homeland Security. The temblor hit 8 miles north of Anchorage.

The earthquake affected the 800-mile Trans Alaska Pipeline System that carries crude from the Arctic coast to the marine terminal in Valdez, which was shut for seven hours. It was was restarted late Friday, Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. spokeswoma­n Michelle Egan said by phone. The line, which has the capacity to move 2 million barrels a day, had transporte­d 530,000 barrels on Thursday.

Alaska Gov. Bill Walker said it will take more than a week or two to repair roads damaged by the powerful earthquake. The Anchorage airport was reopened Friday afternoon and is operating at reduced capacity, a state official told the Associated Press.

Alaska Air Group Inc. said it temporaril­y suspended operations at the Anchorage airport following the quake. “We understand there’s considerab­le damage being reported” at the airport, the company said in a statement.

Progress was made late Friday to restore electricit­y to the thousands of homes, while city workers were also responding to reports of 28 mainline water breaks and dozens of requests to cut off residentia­l service because of flooding, the Associated Press reported.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A stranded vehicle lies on a collapsed highway near the airport after an earthquake in Anchorage, Alaska, US on Friday
REUTERS A stranded vehicle lies on a collapsed highway near the airport after an earthquake in Anchorage, Alaska, US on Friday

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