
Colonial Pipeline Restarts Fuel Transport After Cyberattack
The conduit carries more than two million barrels of product a day and supplies nearly half of the U.S. East Coast’s petroleum fuels, including jet-A.
The transport of fuel through the Colonial Pipeline resumed on May 12 after a five-day interruption due to a cyberattack on its operator. According to reports in Bloomberg, a $5 million ransom was paid to restore control of the pipeline.
The shutdown spurred a run on gasoline stations in the southern U.S. by panicked drivers, causing many stations to run dry, and led the airlines to modify some flight schedules, adding stops to refuel stops in unaffected cities. However, FBOs seem to have come through the crisis relatively unscathed.
“While we continue to hear that the general aviation market is not experiencing widespread jet fuel outages, we advise operators to remain vigilant in planning and preparing for operations until normal pipeline operations return,” said Steve Berry, the National Air Transportation Association’s manager of fuel quality and safety. “In the interim, some FBOs in potentially affected areas have enacted minimum uplift policies. As a result, aircraft operators traveling to these areas should continue to plan accordingly, such as tankering fuel when traveling from unaffected regions and communicating with their destination FBO prior to arrival to determine its anticipated supply.” Berry cautioned that gasoline shortages could also affect ground transportation.