Sticker shock seen for
U.S. motorists after key pipeline break
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[September 17, 2016]
By Devika Krishna Kumar
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Colonial Pipeline Co
aims to restart a key U.S. gasoline line by Thursday after delays to
repair a leak boosted fuel prices, but analysts expect some motorists to
feel the sticker shock for longer.
Colonial, the largest U.S. refined products pipeline system, last Friday
shut its main gasoline and distillate lines that run from the Gulf Coast
refining hub to the East Coast, after the leak was discovered in Shelby
County, Alabama.
Greg Robinson, the head of Alabama's Emergency Management Agency, said
on Friday Colonial told him it hoped to get the pipeline up and running
by Thursday.
Gasoline futures <RBc1> have soared 9 percent in the past week mainly on
the closure while prices at the pump in certain states started to spike
on Friday due to the ongoing partial shutdown of the vital artery that
flows 1.2 million barrels per day of gasoline and other products.
The company has restarted operations at some parts of its gasoline
pipeline at reduced rates, and is also pumping fuel on its distillate
line, which has been completely restarted.
The restart of the gasoline line was pushed to next week because of
gasoline vapors at the site, the company said. Colonial said it would
begin excavation operations on Friday afternoon to repair the affected
section.
Colonial said it was also considering constructing a temporary segment
of pipeline around the leak site.
On Friday, the company increased its estimate of the volume of the spill
to a range of 6,000-8,000 barrels from a previous estimate of 6,000
barrels.
The Department of Transportation Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety
Administration (PHMSA) issued a corrective action order late on Friday
listing a number of requirements that need to be met by Colonial in
order to restart Line 1 completely, including a 'restart plan'.
The full restart of Line 1 will require federal approval and gasoline
has flowed beyond the area initially identified, into a holding pond,
PHMSA said. (http://bit.ly/2cftHMx)
A colonial spokesman said the company was still reviewing the PHMSA
order. "Like PHMSA, we are focused on safety and committed to ensuring
the integrity of the pipeline," he said in an email.
STICKER SHOCK
The outage is expected to hit the East Coast and Southeast markets the
most, as they rely heavily on Line 1 which brings gasoline from Houston
to Greensboro, North Carolina, and on another line that ends in Linden,
New Jersey.
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A car is filled with gasoline at a gas station pump in Carlsbad,
California August 4, 2015. REUTERS/Mike Blake
The six states most likely to be affected are Georgia, Virginia, South Carolina,
North Carolina, Alabama and Tennessee, traders and analysts said.
Georgia and Alabama declared a state of emergency on Thursday to allow easier
road transportation of fuel by road.
Regular gasoline in Georgia rose to $2.136 a gallon on Friday from $2.108 on
Thursday, while in Tennessee it rose more than 1 cent to $2.014, AAA said.
"You're looking at a lot of terminals that are running pretty tight on gasoline
supply and ... it's becoming an issue where motorists are starting to feel it
with their wallets," said Patrick DeHaan, petroleum analyst at Gasbuddy.
"The immediate concern is availability in these areas, but even after the
pipeline is fully restored, you still have racks and terminals that are trying
to beef up their inventory to pre-outage levels and that's going to be a
struggle."
While the supply disruption led to increased buying for prompt gasoline futures
contracts on the New York Mercantile Exchange, it also helped to boost the
profit for refining crude into gasoline, with the so-called gasoline crack
<1RBc1-Clc1> soaring nearly 18 percent to a three-month high. [O/R]
(Additional reporting by Jessica Resnick-Ault and Jarrett Renshaw in New York;
Editing by Marguerita Choy and Matthew Lewis)
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