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Hurricane Katrina and Virginia
by Stuart V. Price
for Virginia Business
October 2005
A month after this country's worst natural disaster
devastated the Gulf Coast, the recovery from Hurricane
Katrina continues, and it includes rebuilding our nation's
petroleum processing and distribution systems. Virginians
learned of their dependence on this system when gasoline
prices soared to more than $3 a gallon and some service
stations ran out of fuel just as motorists were looking
forward to getting out of town over Labor Day.
The situation raised a number of questions: How did
Hurricane Katrina affect Virginia? What lessons can we
learn? And what happens if another hurricane strikes
the Gulf Coast?
Virginia state Sens. Walter Stosch (R-Henrico) and William
Wampler Jr. (R-Bristol), who is chairman of the General
Assembly's Coal and Energy Commission, formed a task
force to tackle these and other issues.
The gasoline price spikes in Virginia were prompted
by electrical outages that temporarily shut down pumping
stations serving the commonwealth's two biggest gasoline
suppliers, the Plantation and Colonial pipelines. Together,
these pipelines normally carry more than 115 million
gallons of gasoline and other fuels from Gulf state refineries
to Virginia and beyond, but the power failures had temporarily
reduced them to 25 percent capacity. Normal operations
in the Gulf produce 1.5 million barrels of petroleum
per day, but the storm temporarily cut daily output to
129,000 barrels.
In addition to crippling the pipelines, Katrina destroyed
dozens of offshore production platforms and damaged others.
Richmond-based energy company Dom-inion Resources was
one of many companies forced to relocate most of its
Gulf Coast operations.
The timing of the crisis over
the Labor Day weekend caused some suppliers to limit
deliveries to gas stations.
That's why station owners in Virginia raised prices.
Some even put up "Out of Gas" signs, a stark
reminder of scenes from the OPEC oil embargo in the 1970s.
To compensate for lost gasoline production, President
Bush opened the nation's Strategic Petroleum Reserve.
ExxonMobil, Marathon Petroleum and BP are some of the
companies that received crude oil loans. In addition,
26 nations linked with the International Energy Agency
agreed to transport petroleum and gasoline reserves to
the Gulf. Nonetheless, if damaged petroleum facilities
are unable to ramp up their operations, having access
to extra crude supplies might be a moot point.
The Gulf Coast is the heart of the petroleum refining
business. While supply disruptions caused by the storm
were significant, Hurricane Katrina will probably have
its greatest long-term impact on energy-intensive oil
refinery operations. The U.S. Senate's Energy and Natural
Resources Committee reports that the storm completely
shut down nine refineries, damaged seven others and destroyed
corresponding electricity distribution assets. The storm,
therefore, removed 10 percent of domestic gasoline systems
from active production.
The industry has been making plans to expand refinery
capacity, from 16.8 million barrels per day in 2003 to
22.3 million barrels per day in 2025. However, almost
all of this new capacity is expected to occur on the
Gulf Coast.
The time may have come to reconsider
plans to concentrate our nation's refineries in the
hurricane-vulnerable Gulf
of Mexico. While energy companies have built a robust
energy infrastructure there — largely because of
nearby petroleum and natural gas reserves and ready access
to central transportation routes such as the Mississippi
River — they have also done so in response to difficulties
they face in gaining permission to locate refineries
elsewhere.
The sector's low profit margins
are another reason energy companies have been reluctant
to expand refineries. To
encourage refinery investments, the federal Energy Policy
Act of 2005 creates new tax benefits. The Senate Energy
and Natural Resources Committee — champion of the
Energy Policy Act — has encouraged interested parties
to build refineries closer to high-consumption areas
including the East Coast.
Katrina's impact on Virginia and other states will depend
on re-establishing crude oil delivery, repairing damaged
refineries in the Gulf, and restoring local electricity
services. In the future, though, the nation's petroleum
infrastructure may be best served by building new refineries
elsewhere. Right now, a single in-state refinery stands
in the city of Yorktown. Sen. Wampler's new task force
should consider ways to bolster Virginia's refining capacity
in addition to developing state energy policy to protect
consumers in times of natural disaster.
Stuart V. Price, a principal with RSVP Communications
in Alexandria, has written about energy, engineering,
and environmental operations for 20 years. |