Miami Herald

Scramble is on for new fuel routes after pipeline hack

- BY CATHY BUSSEWITZ, BEN FINLEY AND TOM FOREMAN, JR. Associated Press

CLEMMONS, N.C.

Drivers waited in long lines at gas stations in the Southeast on Wednesday after a hack of the nation’s largest fuel pipeline led to distributi­on problems and panic-buying, draining supplies at thousands of gas stations.

There is no gasoline shortage, according to government officials and energy analysts. But there is a problem getting the fuel from refineries on the Gulf Coast to the states that need it, and officials are scrambling to find alternate routes to deliver that fuel.

If the pipeline shutdown extends past the weekend, it could create broader fuel disruption­s.

The Colonial Pipeline, which delivers about 45% of the fuel consumed on the East Coast, was hit on Friday with a cyberattac­k by hackers who lock up computer systems and demand a ransom to release them. The attack raised concerns, once again, about the vulnerabil­ity of the nation’s critical infrastruc­ture.

The pipeline runs from the Gulf Coast to the New York metropolit­an region, but states in the Southeast are more reliant on the pipeline. Other parts of the country have more sources to tap. For example, a substantia­l amount of fuel is delivered to states in the Northeast by massive tankers. “What you’re feeling is not a lack of supply or a supply issue. What we have is a transporta­tion issue,” said Jeanette McGee, spokeswoma­n for the AAA auto club. “There is ample supply to fuel the United States for the summer, but what we’re having an issue with is getting it to those gas stations because the pipeline is down.”

Jamar Gatison, 36, was filling up his tank in Norfolk, Virginia, Wednesday before a doctor’s appointmen­t. “I’m about to run out of gas, so I have no choice,” the constructi­on worker said while waiting in line at a 7-Eleven. “I’m also an Uber Eats driver. I also need gas for that,” Gatison said, adding that he probably won’t deliver food Wednesday night because he doesn’t want to wait in line again while the shortage continues.

In North Carolina, 65% of gas stations were out of fuel, according to Gasbuddy.com, a technology firm that tracks real-time fuel prices across the country. Just outside Raleigh, two people were charged with assault after fighting and spitting in each other’s faces while arguing over their spots in line Tuesday at a Marathon gas station, authoritie­s said.

North Carolina Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper urged people Wednesday to only buy gas if their tank is low, and to report any instances of price gouging.

“We will continue our efforts to help make sure there is an adequate supply of fuel,” Cooper wrote on Twitter.

The national average price for a gallon of gasoline ticked above $3 for the first time since 2016 Wednesday, according to the AAA.

Prices begin to rise around this time every year and the auto club said Wednesday that the average price hit $3.008 nationally.

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