Kuwait Times

Pipeline shutdown sparks fear of US gasoline shortage

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WASHINGTON: Fears the shutdown of a major fuel pipeline network would cause a gasoline shortage led to some panic buying and prompted US regulators on Tuesday to temporaril­y suspend clean fuel requiremen­ts in three eastern states and the nation’s capital. While it remained unclear the degree to which supplies would be affected, drivers lined up to fill their tanks at gas stations in the southeast, with some carrying extra containers amid fears of fuel scarcity.

A ransomware attack Friday on Colonial Pipeline forced the company to shut down its entire network, but government officials on Tuesday urged calm and said the situation is only temporary. The operator of the largest fuel conduit system in the United States, Colonial Pipeline sends gasoline and jet fuel from the Gulf Coast of Texas to the populous east coast through 8,850 km of ducts that serve 50 million consumers.

The company said it expects to have the pipeline network fully up and running by the end of the week. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said some areas “may feel a supply crunch, as Colonial fully resumes.” However, “there should be no cause for hoarding gasoline, especially in the light of the fact that the pipeline should be substantia­lly operationa­l by the end of this week and over the weekend,” she told reporters at the White House.

The shutdown raised fears the shortages would cause gasoline prices to spike just ahead of the US Memorial Day holiday, the unofficial kickoff to the summer travel season. But Granholm called on station owners to act responsibl­y and said, “We will have no tolerance for price gouging.” The Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA) on Tuesday announced a one-week suspension of clean air rules in an effort to ease supply issues.

The waiver is meant “to address the fuel supply emergency caused by a cyberattac­k on Colonial Pipeline’s computer networks that led to the pipeline’s shutdown,” EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan said in a letter to the governors of Maryland, Pennsylvan­ia and Virginia and the mayor of Washington. Regan said the EPA and Energy Department “have been actively monitoring the supply of fuel” and found that “the unusual pipeline shutdown has affected gasoline supplies.”

No gas by nightfall?

The EPA move, effective through May 18, suspends rules that require urban areas to use fuel with additives like MTBE, which makes gasoline less polluting but also more expensive. The waiver “is necessary to take action to minimize or prevent disruption of an adequate supply of gasoline to consumers,” Regan said.

That followed the weekend announceme­nt from the Transporta­tion Department that it was easing up on time limits for drivers of tankers carrying diesel, gasoline and jet fuel to 18 of the most affected states, and is considerin­g easing shipping rules as well. “Everybody’s seeing the news, you know, they get fearful, then everybody rushes out and gets gas. They’re filling up gas cans and everything,” one gas station manager in Raleigh, North Carolina told AFP. “We’ll be out of gas before the sun goes down if it stays this way.”

American Airlines said in a statement that two daily long-haul routes out of Charlotte, North Carolina, were impacted by the fuel shortage, without giving further details. Oil industry analyst Patrick De Haan said on Twitter the national average gasoline price reached $2.97 a gallon, “matching the highest since 2018.”

 ?? —AFP ?? ATLANTA: Gas stations begin to run out of gasoline after motorists rushed to fill up on Tuesday.
—AFP ATLANTA: Gas stations begin to run out of gasoline after motorists rushed to fill up on Tuesday.

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