Arab Times

Pipeline shutdown could send gas prices higher

Any spike in prices should only be temporary: experts

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DALLAS, Sept 17, (AP): Motorists in the Southeast and East could pay more for gasoline in coming days because of the shutdown of a leaking pipeline in Alabama.

Experts say, however, that any spike in service-station prices should only be temporary.

Colonial Pipeline Co said Friday that it doesn’t expect to fully reopen its primary gasoline pipeline until next week.

It is one of two major pipelines that connect more than two dozen refineries in Texas and Louisiana with cities in the East, from Atlanta to New York. The Colonial pipeline provides nearly 40 percent of the region’s gasoline and usually runs at or near full capacity.

Prices on futures contracts for wholesale gasoline rose about 2 percent Friday to $1.46 a gallon after rising 5 percent on Thursday.

Colonial said that supply disruption­s would be felt first in Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, North Carolina and South Carolina.

Tom Kloza, an energy analyst with the Oil Price Informatio­n Service, said some stations in the Southeast could run short on supply and boost their prices by 20 or 30 cents a gallon. “The Colonial pipeline is the metaphoric­al aorta for the supply to the most-populated regions of the country, and you’ve lost 10 days of blood flow,” Kloza said. The good news, he added, is that the disruption comes at a time when gasoline prices are down sharply from a couple years ago.

If prices rise, the effect could be felt the hardest in Tennessee, which is supplied by a spur off the leaky pipeline.

Trade groups for service stations and convenienc­e stores in Tennessee assured consumers that the pumps won’t run dry. They said fuel wholesaler­s were hauling gasoline in from fuel terminals and refineries that don’t depend on the downed pipeline.

“Tankers are just having to drive farther to get the fuel,” said Emily LeRoy, executive director of the Tennessee Fuel and Convenienc­e Store Associatio­n.

Pump-price increases should be smaller in the Mid-Atlantic, Kloza said, because any shortfall from the shutdown of the Colonial pipeline could be made up within about 10 days by tankers arriving from Europe.

Jim Ritterbusc­h, who advises energy investors, said the surge in gasoline futures was exaggerate­d. A large surplus of gasoline in the central-Atlantic region should have cushioned the blow of the pipeline accident, he said.

By the end of September, the bulk of the price spike should be erased as higher prices attract more supply to fill the void, he wrote in a note to clients.

Georgia-based Colonial Pipeline estimated that the pipeline rupture near Birmingham has spilled 252,000 to 336,000 gallons of gasoline, most of which was corralled in a retention pond. The company downplayed any threat to public safety.

 ??  ?? In this file photo, drivers work their way out of Dallas during rush hour. Motorists in parts of the country could pay a little
more for gasoline in coming days because of the shutdown of a leaking pipeline in Alabama.
In this file photo, drivers work their way out of Dallas during rush hour. Motorists in parts of the country could pay a little more for gasoline in coming days because of the shutdown of a leaking pipeline in Alabama.

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