Fuel scramble as storm-hit gas pumps dry up

Daily News Article   —   Posted on November 2, 2012

(by David Sheppard and Edward McAllister, YahooNews) NEW YORK (Reuters) – Drivers and homeowners scrambled to secure fuel for their cars and generators in the U.S. Northeast on Wednesday as storm-hit gasoline stations started to run dry.

More than half of all gasoline service stations in the New York City area and New Jersey were shut because of depleted fuel supplies and power outages, frustrating attempts to restore normal life, industry officials said.

Reports of long lines, dark stations and empty tanks circulated across the region. Some station owners were unable to pump fuel due to a lack of power, while others quickly ran their tanks dry because of increased demand and logistical problems in delivering fresh supplies.

The lack of working gasoline stations is likely to compound travel problems in the region, with the New York City subway system [resumed partial operation] Thursday and overland rail and bus services severely disrupted.

Homeowners and businesses relying on back-up generators during the power cuts, including many Wall Street banks in lower Manhattan, may also run short of fuel. …

Tempers flared as a queue of at least 30 cars spilled down the street, with drivers blaring horns, shouting and getting out of their cars. Pump attendant Nadim Amid said the station had already run out of regular gasoline and only had a tiny amount of super unleaded and diesel left.

One driver, a doctor who asked not to be named, said she had driven all the way across New York City from New Jersey, where half of all businesses and homes are still without power. More than 80 percent of filling stations in the state were unable to sell gasoline as of Wednesday morning, said Sal Risalvato, head of the New Jersey Gasoline, Convenience, Automotive Association.

“It’s going to be an ugly few days until we can see both power and supplies restored,” Risalvato said.

Gasoline stations on New York’s Long Island and the city borough of Staten Island also reported shortages, while lengthy lines were seen in the borough of Queens. Commuters may see higher prices at the pumps in the coming days, though oil traders said that with so many people unable to buy gasoline it may eventually lead to a surplus in the region. …

Kevin Beyer, president of the Long Island Gasoline Retailers Association in Smithtown, New York, estimated that less than half of all stations were able to sell fuel Wednesday morning.

“I have gas in the ground but no power. For many others they’re facing the opposite problem, with power but no gasoline. For the few stations that are lucky enough to have both they’ve got huge lines out front,” Beyer said.

“With the kind of demand they’re seeing they’re likely to run out of gasoline within the next 24 hours.”  Beyer estimated it could take until the end of next week to get all fuel stations operating again.

New York State and New Jersey fuel retailers sell a combined average of 26 million gallons of gasoline a day, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

The problem is not a severe shortage of gasoline in the Northeast, but widespread power outages and the storm-related logistical problems of getting the fuel from refineries and terminals to those who need it.

Jenn Hibbs, an account director at marketing firm Marden-Kane Inc in Garden City, Long Island, said there was only one gasoline station open within 10 miles of her house. Friends were sharing tips on Facebook about where they could get fuel, but two lines for gas leading to the service station were both over half a mile long.  “It’s making people think about whether they can get to work, whether they have enough gas in the tank to get there and back,” Hibbs said.

A line of cars at a gas station on Route 1 and 9 South in Linden, New Jersey, at one point stretched at least two miles. …

Four of the region’s six oil refineries were back to full production or increasing run rates on Wednesday. The second-largest – the Bayway plant in New Jersey – was still idle after flooding damage that traders fear could delay its return to full service. Key import terminals were also shut.

“Most of the problems are at the service station level with power and transportation to the stations,” said Ralph Bombardiere, head of the New York State Association of Service Stations and Repair Shops.

Gasoline inventories in the Mid-Atlantic region were 16 percent below last year’s level before the storm, but were enough to cover almost 23 days of total demand.

Power is slowly being restored. The Department of Energy said on Wednesday afternoon that 51 percent of homes and businesses in New Jersey were still without power. That was down from around 65 percent on Tuesday.

(Additional reporting by Robert Gibbons, Matthew Robinson, Janet McGurty and Edward McAllister; Editing by Claudia Parsons, Grant McCool, Dan Grebler and Tim Dobbyn)

By Reuters at YahooNews.com. Reprinted here for educational purposes only. Visit ca.news.yahoo.com/yorkers-fuel-scramble-storm-hit-pumps-dry-223002793.html for the original post.



Background

Fuel supplies into New York and New Jersey have been cut off in several ways. Two refineries that make up a quarter of the region's refining capacity had not reopened due to power outages or flooding. The New York Harbor waterway that imports a fifth of the area's fuel was still closed to traffic, and major import terminals were damaged and powerless.

In addition, the main oil pipeline from the Gulf Coast, which pumps 15 percent of the East Coast's fuel, remained shut. (from a Reuters report)

Coast Guard re-opens port for fuel deliveries:

  • The U.S. Coast Guard opened the Port of New York and New Jersey on Thursday on a restricted basis to get gasoline and fuel to the areas hit hardest by Superstorm Sandy. The Coast Guard had shut down the port as a precaution against the superstorm.
  • The limited opening of the Port of New York and New Jersey to allow for fuel deliveries is aimed at stemming the widespread shortages and massive lines at gas stations in the two states, and in Connecticut.
  • The Coast Guard said the port is now open to all tug and barge traffic carrying petroleum products. The Hudson River, used by oil barges to get to the Port of Albany for distribution throughout the Northeast, is also open. Shipments will also be made to Long Island Sound, also hit hard by Sandy.
  • One of the busiest ports in the world, the Port of New York and New Jersey receives 900,000 barrels of petroleum on most days.  (1 barrel = 42 gallons)
  • None of the piers in the Port are open yet, so fuel is being unloaded to tugs and barges that will then transport the product. (from an Associated Press report)