Register

Peak Oil is You


Donate Bitcoins ;-) or Paypal :-)


Page added on May 11, 2021

Bookmark and Share

More than 1,000 gas stations run out of fuel

More than 1,000 gas stations run out of fuel thumbnail

More than 1,000 gas stations in the Southeast reported running out of fuel, primarily because of what analysts say is unwarranted panic-buying among drivers, as the shutdown of a major pipeline by a gang of hackers entered its fifth day Tuesday.

Government officials acted swiftly to waive safety and environmental rules to speed the delivery of fuel by truck, ship or rail to motorists and airports, even as they sought to assure the public that there was no cause for alarm.

The Colonial Pipeline, the biggest fuel pipeline in the U.S., delivering about 45% of what is 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.

A large part of the pipeline resumed operations manually late Monday, and Colonial anticipates restarting most of its operations by the end of the week, U.S. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said.

Motorists may still feel a crunch because it takes a few days to ramp up operations, but she said there is no reason to hoard gasoline.

“We know that we have gasoline; we just have to get it to the right places,” she said.

S&P’s Oil Price Information Service put the number of gas stations encountering shortages at more than 1,000.

“A lot of that is because they’re selling three or four times as much gasoline that they normally sell in a given day, because people do panic,” said Tom Kloza, an analyst with S&P. “It becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.”

The pipeline runs from the Texas Gulf Coast to the New York metropolitan area. The states most dependent on the pipeline include Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee and the Carolinas, Kloza said.

In Virginia, 7.7% of the state’s nearly 3,900 gas stations reported running out of fuel Tuesday, according to Gasbuddy.com, which tracks supply. In North Carolina, 8.5% of almost 5,400 stations were out, the company said.

There were scattered reports of higher gasoline prices, but prices were rising even before the pipeline incident heading into the busy summer driving season. Nevertheless, Granholm warned gas station owners, “We will have no tolerance for price gouging.”

To ease brief shortages, the White House is considering temporarily waiving a law that says ships delivering products between U.S. ports must be built and manned by Americans.

The Transportation Department also is relaxing some workforce requirements and enlisting railroads to deliver fuel inland. And the Environmental Protection Agency lifted some fuel quality requirements on an emergency basis.

“We’re looking at every option we have across the federal government and all of the federal agencies,” Granholm said.

In Georgia, Gov. Brian Kemp suspended state taxes on motor fuels through Saturday. Georgia collects a gasoline tax of 28.7 cents per gallon and a diesel tax of 32.2 cents per gallon.

“It will probably help level the price at the pump off for a little while,” Kemp said.

However, he urged people not to hoard gasoline, saying he expects the situation to be resolved soon.

“You don’t need to go out and fill up every 5-gallon can you’ve got,” the governor said.

Scattered gas stations in metro Atlanta were out of fuel Monday and Tuesday. In Georgia, nearly 6% of about 6,400 stations had run out of fuel, Gasbuddy.com said.

In Florida, drivers in some areas faced long lines, and 3% of gas stations had run out.

Dave Gussak drove from one station to the next in Tallahassee, Florida, in search of gas, seeing a line nearly a mile long at the pumps outside a Costco. He eventually passed a station with gas on the way to Florida State University where he works.

“This is insane,” he said.

Irena Yanava’s tank was about half full, but she wasn’t about to take chances as she sat in her car at the same Tallahassee gas station.

“I know that I’ll be needing it soon, so why not?” she said.

Citgo’s Fairfax, Virginia, terminal ran out of premium reformulated gasoline, and its Richmond, Virginia, terminal was out of unleaded regular, according to the American Automobile Association, citing a shipper bulletin,

The Colonial Pipeline carries jet fuel as well. American Airlines rerouted two long-haul flights from Charlotte, North Carolina, because of possible shortages. Passengers flying to Honolulu will have to change planes in Dallas, and those heading to London will stop in Boston to refuel.

Southwest and United flights carried extra fuel on flights to Nashville, Tennessee, Baltimore and some other airports in case jet fuel was unavailable at those airports. Normally airlines load only enough fuel for a single flight, because topping off adds to the plane’s weight and hurts mileage. Most planes can carry enough fuel for a round trip, but the extra fuel burn costs money.

fax5



14 Comments on "More than 1,000 gas stations run out of fuel"

  1. Cloggie on Wed, 12th May 2021 1:29 pm 

    Sneak preview of a society that refuses to get serious about preparing for a time after oil.

  2. Cloggie on Thu, 13th May 2021 3:50 am 

    “More than 1,000 gas stations run out of fuel”

    No worries though:

    https://deepresource.wordpress.com/2021/05/13/us-approves-first-offshore-wind-project/

    “US Approves First Offshore Wind Project”

    The construction will be an all-European affair. That’s what older brothers are for.

  3. Anonymouse on Thu, 13th May 2021 3:37 pm 

    Well its a damn good thing then you have a whole fleet of autonomous, flying electric and or ‘conventional’ electric cars (ie the non-flying variety)on standby in your housing projects carpark for that glorious day when the EV singularity finally arrives (ETA 2035-9999).

    Right cloggJUDE!!?

  4. makati1 on Thu, 13th May 2021 4:46 pm 

    Cloggie, the “time after oil” will be more a combination of Mad Max and the Middle Ages, not your techie wet dream. There are a million reasons why that is the future but you deny them and I will not try to educate your narrow mind. You must have a huge investment in your dream or you are just stupid. Or both. LOL

  5. Biden’s hairplug on Thu, 13th May 2021 10:40 pm 

    “the “time after oil” will be more a combination of Mad Max and the Middle Ages, not your techie wet dream.“

    Absolutely correct! If you refuse to invest in solar panels, wind turbines, hydrogen storage and seriously slashing your energy consumption, Mad Max will be your future indeed. You cannot have a future if you keep dissing that what enables your future. You’re not nearly as stupid as that you look.

  6. DT on Fri, 14th May 2021 1:18 pm 

    “If you refuse to invest in solar panels, wind turbines, hydrogen storage”

    Biden-Cloggie, assuming one has “invested” in said clean green techno wet dream energy schemes, when the oil goes away how will all of those industrial made products be replaced without oil inputs when the time comes?

  7. makati1 on Fri, 14th May 2021 4:38 pm 

    Biden’s, bad advice. All those things are not going to be made, installed, maintained in any quantity. It takes huge amounts of FFs for them to just exit in small amounts. Which country is going to cut back on FF use for daily needs to make 100s of millions of windmills, billions of solar panels, etc? None I know of. A lot of political bullshit, not reality.

  8. makati1 on Fri, 14th May 2021 4:39 pm 

    DT, you re not supposed to point out the obvious to the techie dreamers. You could get erased. LOL

  9. Cloggie on Sat, 15th May 2021 12:20 am 

    “assuming one has “invested” in said clean green techno wet dream energy schemes, when the oil goes away how will all of those industrial made products be replaced without oil inputs when the time comes?“

    From renewable energy.

    https://deepresource.wordpress.com/2021/02/06/yabut-to-get-wind-power-you-need-oil/

  10. Cloggie on Sat, 15th May 2021 4:22 am 

    Here something that can’t happen in DT’s and makati’s little uninformed world:

    https://deepresource.wordpress.com/2021/05/15/dpd-e-truck-futuricum-with-760-km-range/

    “DPD E-Truck Futuricum with 760 km Range”

  11. DT on Sat, 15th May 2021 11:09 am 

    “Here something that can’t happen in DT’s and makati’s little uninformed world:”

    Cloggie. where do the batteries come from? Hows about the tires and roadways? How much plastic and steel is involved? Where do all the mining activities go on and at what energy cost? Intermittent wind and solar are all good and well for rich white boy’s cream dream energy schemes however reality has other ideas.

  12. Hello on Sat, 15th May 2021 4:29 pm 

    >>> and well for rich white boy’s
    what has this to do with being White? Do you think chinks, niggers and rag heads are any better?

    Please support NBA.
    Niggers Back to Africa.

  13. DT on Sun, 16th May 2021 1:29 am 

    Fuck you HELLO you are truly an asshole…….

  14. Cloggie on Sun, 16th May 2021 3:43 am 

    “Cloggie. where do the batteries come from? Hows about the tires and roadways? How much plastic and steel is involved?”

    From factories, from machines running on electricity or hydrogen. With (renewable) electricity you can do more than with fossil fuel.

    And if you see this…

    https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2020/05/19/sunny-places-could-see-average-solar-prices-of-0-01-or-0-02-per-kilowatt-hour-within-15-years/

    already outdated… this is REALITY:

    https://deepresource.wordpress.com/2020/04/29/more-solar-price-erosion-abu-dhabi-2-gw-1-24-eurocent-kwh/

    “More Solar Price Erosion – Abu Dhabi 2 GW, 1.24 Eurocent/kWh”

    If you know this, you know for a fact that renewable electricity has won on price and beaten fossil. The price of a kWh electricity is no longer relevant. Relevant is the question of how to store that kWh and bring it to Eurasian and North-American markets, most likely in the form of hydrogen or one of its many derivatives. Or perhaps even with high voltages lines, like was proposed by Desertec, a plan that came too early:

    https://deepresource.wordpress.com/2012/04/03/desertec/

    “Cloggie. where do the batteries come from?”

    But you DT, have to answer a question as well: where do YOU think you will get your energy from after the end of the oil age?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *