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Fuel Supply System Fixes Pick Up Gas After Superstorm Sandy

People line up at a gas station waiting to fill up on Nov. 2, 2012, in Newark, N.J. In parts of New York and New Jersey, drivers lined up for hours at gas stations that were struggling to stay supplied.
Julio Cortez
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AP
People line up at a gas station waiting to fill up on Nov. 2, 2012, in Newark, N.J. In parts of New York and New Jersey, drivers lined up for hours at gas stations that were struggling to stay supplied.

One of the effects of Superstorm Sandy a year ago could be seen at service stations throughout New York City and surrounding areas: Motorists joined long lines outside the few stations that had both electricity and gasoline.

"People were fighting over here. People were fighting over there. People were coming through the wrong way. It was chaos," Jessica Laura said at the time. "Then the cops came, and they just started organizing it."

Since then, the oil industry and policymakers have been working to shore up the region's fuel supply system.

Calm The Panic

To fix the power problem, New York and New Jersey announced grant programs to help station owners install wiring to quickly hook up mobile generators. But the long lines were about more than just the lack of power.

"I'm of the view that most of the problem came with the panic behavior by the public," says Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst with GasBuddy.com. He says next time governors should begin rationing gasoline sooner because that helped calm the panic.

The fuel-supply problems went well beyond gas stations though. The storm surge from Sandy damaged local supply terminals, those big, round tanks that are often found near water. Kloza says these can't be moved to higher ground.

"You're going to have problems because the very nature of the storage business is that it has to be very close to shipping lanes and ship channels and that puts it close to sea level," Kloza explains.

While many of these facilities have been there for decades, climate change could mean that a facility that was once above flood level now is not. Making those facilities more resilient will require significant work.

"It could be looking at berms, looking at elevating cables, looking at elevating motors — other equipment that traditionally has been at ground level, we need to raise that above that flood plain level to ensure that salt water doesn't impact that infrastructure," says Patricia A. Hoffman, assistant secretary for the Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability at the U.S. Department of Energy.

'Everybody's Blind'

Near some large tanks and a warehouse, Paul Riggins, president of Riggins Oil Company in Vineland, N.J., points to a shiny yellow-and-black generator that he installed last year. It cost $75,000 and it'll allow him to pump gas and diesel into his fleet of tanker trucks even if the electricity goes out.

Paul Riggins, president of Riggins Oil Company in Vineland, N.J., was deluged with requests for fuel after Sandy and had to choose which shipments to prioritize.
Jeff Brady / NPR
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NPR
Paul Riggins, president of Riggins Oil Company in Vineland, N.J., was deluged with requests for fuel after Sandy and had to choose which shipments to prioritize.

Riggins says he learned some valuable lessons during Sandy. For example he always assumed delivering generator fuel to police stations and medical facilities was the priority. But authorities told him that one of the most important things to keep running is cellphone towers.

"Because they said, you know, without communication the fire, the police, the hospitals everybody's blind," he says.

Riggins says he meets regularly with government officials now. That helps policymakers understand his challenges during a disaster too. Since most of his customers buy on credit, a sudden surge in business can become a problem.

"We actually got into a position where we had $7,000 left in our bank account and every credit line with banks and suppliers extended," he explains. "And we had $1 million in orders the next day. And it was like, 'OK, what are we going to do here?' "

N.J. Gov. Chris Christie's office helped him get quick access to more credit so he could continue delivering fuel.

'Less Cost, Less Disruption'

The U.S. Department of Energy has led some of the discussions between policymakers and the industry, and Hoffman thinks the lessons learned from Sandy will be applied moving forward. That concept is appreciated by Stephen Flynn, director of the Center for Resilience Studies at Northeastern University in Boston.

"We always pat ourselves on the back because we cope pretty well when things go wrong," he says. "But we have to get much better at planning for these events, preparing to withstand them better so we have less cost, less disruption, less consequence."

And Flynn says considering all the things that can go wrong, there is still a lot more work the country needs to do to protect its fuel supply system.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Jeff Brady is a National Desk Correspondent based in Philadelphia, where he covers energy issues and climate change. Brady helped establish NPR's environment and energy collaborative which brings together NPR and Member station reporters from across the country to cover the big stories involving the natural world.