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EE_
18th September 2016, 06:35 PM
Gas shortage Atlanta, Nashville 2016: stations running out, prices going up

By Staff Reports
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Published 5:12 pm Sunday, September 18, 2016

Staff and Wire Report

Lines formed at gas stations across the South on Saturday including Atlanta and drivers who were able to find fuel had to pay more for it in some cases, as prices edged up following a pipeline spill in Alabama.

By late Sunday multiple Atlanta area gas stations were out of fuel and those stations that did have gas were charging as much as $2.49 a gallon near busy Interstate highway, sharply higher than prices were days before (about $2.09).

One driver making his way back from Saturday’s Alabama-Ole Miss game said told The Eagle he stopped in Atlanta late Sunday afternoon near the Six Flags exit for gas and the first two stations he stopped at were out.

Stations out of fuel aren’t expected to get more gas until midweek. As one of the largest cities in the South Atlanta’s shortage is a rising concern issue at next week’s workweek begins.

Fuel supplies in at least five states — Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee and the Carolinas — were threatened by the spill, and the U.S. Department of Transportation ordered the company responsible to take corrective action before the fuel starts flowing again.

Colonial Pipeline Co. must conduct testing and analysis on the failed section of the pipeline, according to the U.S. Transportation Department, which is investigating the spill in rural Alabama.

The company has acknowledged that between 252,000 gallons and 336,000 gallons of gasoline leaked from a pipeline near Helena, Alabama, since the spill was first detected Sept. 9. It’s unclear when the spill actually started.

Drivers in Atlanta found some pumps completely dry or they had to pay 20 cents more because, according to a sign on the pump, the gas had to be pulled from Savannah.

“I just came in to town so this is shocking to me,” said Gina Dorman, as she filled up her nearly empty tank. She said she tried to get gas at several pumps at the service station before finding one that had gas flowing.

At a Kroger gas station a couple of miles away, orange cones were set up where cars usually park to get fuel. The pumps were completely dry and attendants were not sure when they would get more gas. Many drivers said they didn’t know about the spill.

Rob Gomes said his wife called him and told him to fill up after hearing about the shortage.

“We were out, so we said, let’s gas up,” he said.

Colonial Pipeline announced Saturday it is beginning construction of a temporary pipeline that will bypass a leaking section of its main gasoline pipeline in Shelby County, Alabama, according to AL.com (http://bit.ly/2cvk9ZU).

Colonial gave no timetable as to when that bypass line would be completed or what path it would take.

Tennessee Emergency Management Director Patrick Sheehan tried to reassure drivers.

“Tennessee’s consumers need to maintain their normal driving and fuel buying habits. If consumers fill up unnecessarily, top off their tanks when they aren’t close to empty, and fill multiple containers at the pumps, then our petroleum retailers will not be able to keep up with the demand of the fuel supply,” he said.

Quik Trip spokesman Mike Thornbrugh said several stations in South Carolina were seeing outages.

“When you have a pipeline of that magnitude go down, it just shows everybody unfortunately how fragile the system is and it doesn’t take much to cause some hiccups,” he said.

In a statement Saturday, the Alpharetta, Georgia-based company said that repair work had begun in an effort to return the pipeline to service “as rapidly and safely as possible.”

The company said it is shipping as much gasoline as possible on its distillate mainline, Line 2, in order to mitigate the impact of the pipeline that has been shut down. Colonial earlier said most of the leaked gasoline is contained in a retention pond near the city of Helena and there’s no public safety concern.

Motorists could pay even more for gasoline in coming days, although experts say that any spike in service-station prices should only be temporary.

In response to the shutdown, the governors in Alabama, Georgia and Tennessee announced they would lift restrictions on the number of hours that truck drivers delivering fuel can work, in hopes of preventing fuel shortages. Governors can suspend federal transportation regulations during emergencies.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency waived requirements this week that metro areas with air quality issues in Georgia and Tennessee use a cleaner-burning type of gasoline during the summer months. That requirement of the Clean Air Act expired at midnight Thursday.

http://www.oxfordeagle.com/2016/09/18/gas-shortage-2016-atlanta-stations-running-out-prices-going-up/

Glass
18th September 2016, 08:18 PM
The mind boggles at these kinds of comments....

Tennessee Emergency Management Director Patrick Sheehan tried to reassure drivers.

“Tennessee’s consumers need to maintain their normal driving and fuel buying habits. If consumers fill up unnecessarily, top off their tanks when they aren’t close to empty, and fill multiple containers at the pumps, then our petroleum retailers will not be able to keep up with the demand of the fuel supply,” he said.


Why shouldn't they? Just run out. That's a better plan.

Ares
18th September 2016, 08:28 PM
Confirmed in SC area of where I live. Most stations are empty. Some only have premium left.

Cebu_4_2
18th September 2016, 08:28 PM
The mind boggles at these kinds of comments....


Why shouldn't they? Just run out. That's a better plan.


All comes from the same place, only difference is some places use additives as they fill the rigs.
http://previews.123rf.com/images/elarina/elarina1307/elarina130700084/20919545-Oil-reservoir-and-storage-tank-of-mineral-oil-Industries-of-gas-refining-Oil-and-gas-industry--Stock-Photo.jpg

http://previews.123rf.com/images/elarina/elarina1307/elarina130700084/20919545-Oil-reservoir-and-storage-tank-of-mineral-oil-Industries-of-gas-refining-Oil-and-gas-industry--Stock-Photo.jpg

Glass
18th September 2016, 08:37 PM
yes but it strikes me that it is more of that "Don't take any steps to protect yourself" attitude that communists seem to love telling everyone.

How many refineries are left in the US now? I know this is apparently a pipe line issue.... although I don't think it is. I think they are just using the leak as a reason for cutting supply.

We don't have any refineries on the west coast anymore. We are 100% reliant on imports from Singapore now.

Cebu_4_2
18th September 2016, 08:53 PM
yes but it strikes me that it is more of that "Don't take any steps to protect yourself" attitude that communists seem to love telling everyone.

How many refineries are left in the US now? I know this is apparently a pipe line issue.... although I don't think it is. I think they are just using the leak as a reason for cutting supply.

We don't have any refineries on the west coast anymore. We are 100% reliant on imports from Singapore now.


We can only refine sweet crude available from the M East. The shit from Canadia is not sweet so we ship it off. So is the fracking oil. Completely useless on a one hand event.

This is what I understood from 5 years ago, dont think we got any new refineries since tho.

cheka.
18th September 2016, 09:17 PM
yawn....

every hurricane on gulf coast results same. no big deal -

cheka.
18th September 2016, 09:17 PM
yes but it strikes me that it is more of that "Don't take any steps to protect yourself" attitude that communists seem to love telling everyone.

How many refineries are left in the US now? I know this is apparently a pipe line issue.... although I don't think it is. I think they are just using the leak as a reason for cutting supply.

We don't have any refineries on the west coast anymore. We are 100% reliant on imports from Singapore now.

there are refineries on west coast

cheka.
18th September 2016, 09:20 PM
All comes from the same place, only difference is some places use additives as they fill the rigs.

http://previews.123rf.com/images/elarina/elarina1307/elarina130700084/20919545-Oil-reservoir-and-storage-tank-of-mineral-oil-Industries-of-gas-refining-Oil-and-gas-industry--Stock-Photo.jpg

regular gas goes into a pool -- commodity style. the regular gas you get at any station can come from anywhere. the premium gas contains the proprietary additives of the maker. so exxon gas station - regular comes from anywhere, premium comes from exxon itself

crimethink
18th September 2016, 09:49 PM
We don't have any refineries on the west coast anymore. We are 100% reliant on imports from Singapore now.

West coast of what? Australia?

Glass
18th September 2016, 10:15 PM
West coast of what? Australia?

yes. I'm in Australia. Sorry I thought everyone knew that.

We used to have 2 refineries. Now none. Gas $$ increased about 7% + / - fluctuations in price on the Singapore exchange. So overall I think prices increased about 10%. These days prices can vary 18 - 20% over the course of a week.

Weekend previous it was $0.99c a litre (about USD $2.66/gal) up to $1.20 mid week ($3.23/gal). 2 years ago it was $1.60 / litre.

crimethink
19th September 2016, 01:12 AM
yes. I'm in Australia. Sorry I thought everyone knew that.

We used to have 2 refineries. Now none. Gas $$ increased about 7% + / - fluctuations in price on the Singapore exchange. So overall I think prices increased about 10%. These days prices can vary 18 - 20% over the course of a week.

Weekend previous it was $0.99c a litre (about USD $2.66/gal) up to $1.20 mid week ($3.23/gal). 2 years ago it was $1.60 / litre.

I wasn't sure, but seemed to recall you were from down under. The reference to Singapore said "Western Australia" for me.

Why did your WA refineries shut down? Canberra? Or petro companies wanted to tighten the production (and jack up the price)?

Glass
19th September 2016, 01:25 AM
Or petro companies wanted to tighten the production (and jack up the price)?

I think this one. Excuse was end of life and no $$ to refit/refurb. Who ever heard of an oil company without $$?

The main thing was a shift to "market prices". This basically means that instead of securing some % of a resource for the local population where the resources come from, all resources must be traded on world markets or at world market prices.

So if we want gasoline we have to pay world market prices which is Singapore.
If we want lobsters caught 400 kms north of Perth we have to pay world price for them. Same for fish in general. In fact we sell our fish overseas and buy in fish from Indonesia and thailand - which is always mislabeled as something it isn't. So again we pay for a higher priced fish type than we get.
If we want natural gas for electricity generation or home heating/cooking we have to pay world price. And we have some of the worlds largest natural gas fields.
Same goes for most food items.

No % of resources saved for us. In my mind the gas should be available at cost of delivery or on a cost recovery basis. It would be a great competitive advantage to us.

Only time prices fall or become reasonable is when there is a glut and they can't sell it overseas for higher prices.

Twisted Titan
19th September 2016, 02:09 AM
This is the best news for the gas companies and you better believe they are going to milk this one.

20 cent spike is a fricken joke as most of the sheep dont have a dam clue

EE_
19th September 2016, 02:53 AM
People have lost all trust in government and the media. They don't wait for them to tell them what to do. Truth is non-existent.
People go right to self protection mode.
Panic gassing here too. Better safe!

boogietillyapuke
19th September 2016, 07:32 AM
yawn....

every hurricane on gulf coast results same. no big deal -

Don't be telling them, that. They need to think that we're pussies just like those poor mistreated folks up in NYC and the jersey shore. We cannot have them thinking that we've heard the warnings and taken appropriate actions. God forbid that we act responsibly.������