Gas Shortages, Long Lines Adding to Storm's Misery
Gasoline
futures jumped as cranky consumers on the East Coast—already
stressed by the wrath of Superstorm Sandy—joined long lines at the
pump to fill up their cars and gas cans to fuel home generators,
causing shortages in some areas.
CNBC,
31
October, 2012
Though
retail gasoline prices were steady or dropping at the pump through
Tuesday, they could start to spike in hard-hit areas of the storm,
particularly the New York metropolitan region.
As more drivers emerged from storm damaged residential areas, lengthy lines with hours long waits formed around the region at gas stations that still had fuel and power.
“The price spike will last several days, probably as long as a week, and then it will depend on whether or not some of the key facilities get back on line, like the ports and the Colonial Pipeline,” said John Kilduff of Again Capital. “The ports are open but there are severe restrictions on navigation.”
Shell [RDS.A 68.48 0.67 (+0.99%) ], which has many services in the storm hit zones, advised consumers to conserve fuel and avoid unnecessary driving while Shell-branded stations are being reopened and restocked. BP[BP 42.89 1.16 (+2.78%) ] said one third of its branded gasoline stations in the New York, New Jersey area were shut due to flooding, lack of power, or no fuel.
“You
have a lot of stations that are closed, and they’re closed due to
no power or no product or both,” said Kevin Beyer, president of
the Long Island Gasoline Retailers Association. He said less than
half the more than 600 gas stations his organization represents
between Brooklyn and Montauk, N.Y. have both gasoline and power.
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