New Jersey Drivers Wait for Fuel as Sandy Curbs Gasoline
New
Jersey drivers waited in two- mile-long lines to buy gasoline as
Hurricane Sandy’s devastation of the New York metropolitan area
flooded fuel terminals, curbed deliveries and left many filling
stations in the dark and unable to run their pumps.
1
November, 2012
The
queues for fuel only worsened hours-long traffic tie- ups on highways
leading in to New York as Mayor Michael Bloomberg banned vehicles
with fewer than three passengers from entering most of Manhattan.
More than half of New Jersey filling stations likely are closed,
Kashmir Gill, whose Creative Management Inc. owns 38 New Jersey
outlets, said in a telephone interview yesterday.
“If
you can even find a gas station, you better stop and fill up,” said
Fred Kardasz, 50, a landscaper who said he waited in line in his
white Chevrolet Tahoe SUV for 20 minutes to buy regular fuel for
$3.49 a gallon at a U.S. Gas station in Hamilton, New Jersey. “You
can’t find a gas station nowhere right now.”
About
17 percent of the 120,950 fuel-and-convenience stores in the U.S. are
in the region affected by Hurricane Sandy, Jeff Lenard, a spokesman
for the National Association of Convenience Stores in Alexandria,
Virginia, said in an e-mail.
“The
challenge for stores is getting power and getting fuel,” he said.
“Retailers are doing anything that they can to find fuel -- and
overpay for it -- so that they can stay open.”
Refineries
Shut
Hurricane
Sandy, the biggest Atlantic storm in history, caused at least 75 U.S.
deaths and blacked out millions of homes and businesses. Six
Northeast refineries with 1.17 million barrels-a-day of processing
capacity shut or operated at reduced rates because of the storm,
according to the U.S. Energy Department. Colonial Pipeline Co.’s
825,000-barrel-a-day Line 3 pipe that carries gasoline and diesel
from Greensboro, North Carolina, to Linden, New Jersey, will resume
limited operations tomorrow.
That
may come as little comfort for motorists in New Jersey New York City
and other suburbs.
Some
stations in Long Island are without power, and those that have lights
are almost out of fuel, Kevin Beyer, president of the Long Island
Gasoline Retailers Association said by phone. His station,
Performance Fuels in Smithtown, New York, doesn’t have electricity.
Getting
Worse
“The
problem is there’s no fuel. The terminals are not going to be open
until next week,” said Beyer. “It’s going to be mayhem for at
least a week, and it’ll get worse before it gets better.”
Gasoline
stations that do have power are being overrun by customers, he said.
“The lines are astronomical. Most places are cash only. They don’t
have Internet so they can’t process credit cards. People are
getting upset and there’s nothing they can do about it.”
At
a Mobil (XOM) station at 155th Street and Broadway in Manhattan’s
Washington Heights, passing motorists barely slowed when they saw the
red traffic cones and garbage pails placed in front of two rows of
pumps bearing “OUT OF GAS” signs.
“Ask
the dispatch,” said attendant Agapito Jimenez, 60, when asked when
a fuel delivery was expected. “Only Mobil has the schedule.”
California
Crunch
The
New York area’s fuel crunch recalls a similar squeeze and price
spike in California last month after an Exxon Mobil Corp. refinery
curbed output after a power failure, a Chevron Corp. (CVX) unit was
knocked out by a fire and a Chevron crude-oil pipeline was shut by
contamination. Governor Jerry Brown helped relieve the shortage by
directing regulators to allow refiners make cheaper fuel.
New
Jersey Governor Chris Christie directed state Treasury officials
yesterday to waive licensing requirements that restrict out-of-state
fuel purchases to boost storm-depleted supplies. The waiver will be
in place until Nov. 7.
Four
out of Quick Chek Corp.’s 12 stations in the state that have power
are out of fuel, said Tim Holiday, the company’s fuel-category
manager in Whitehouse Station. A station in the town had a line of
cars that extended more than two miles (3.2 kilometers) yesterday,
said Gill of Creative Management.
The
long lines at fuel stations are due to power failures rather than
supply issues, Michael Green, a spokesman for AAA in Washington, said
in an e-mail. Few retailers in the Middle Atlantic or New England
states have generators, he said.
The
lines should diminish as power is restored, according to Green. AAA,
the largest U.S. motoring organization is based in Heathrow, Florida.
Cold
Weather
“It’s
going to be crazy,” said Gill. “People are running out of food,
people are running out of gas and the temperature is getting colder.”
Gill
said only 10 percent of his company’s stations were open yesterday.
Store managers are taking only cash, and police are managing the
lines where stations are open, he said.
It
may take as long as 10 days for some stations to return to full
operation, he said. The stations depend upon terminals to replenish
their supply of gasoline, but many of the terminals are without power
as well, Gill said.
Out
of 28 petroleum terminals affected by Sandy, 14 were shut as of 7
a.m. in New York, according to the Energy Department.
“Everyone
thinks it’s the end of the world,” said Holiday. “As soon as a
place has gas, they line up.”
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