Severe Gas Shortage Continues to Cripple Atlanta
Motorists are cruising around Atlanta or waiting in long lines looking for gasoline. Many fueling stations have run dry, while others have extremely long lines. The result is fewer cars on the road and more carpooling. Many have unsettling feeling and are concerned as gas prices soar.
Hurricanes Ike and Gustav and Ike caused many refineries to be closed, affecting north Georgia, parts of Tennessee, and west North Carolina. Metro Atlanta has been particularly hard hit because cleaner fuel standards prohibit gas being diverted from other areas where supplies are more robust.
Gas prices have soared as a result from $3.75 per gallon on average in the Southeast just two weeks ago to $4.14.
- » See also: How Nike Considered Uses Innovation and Collaboration to Close the Loop
- » Get CleanTechnica by RSS or sign up by email.
The Southeast is the only region of the country without extensive oil reserves, leaving it vulnerable to supply dips after natural disasters. The Gulf pipelines which the Southeast depend on heavily continue to operate at low capacity.
Some might find the experience reminiscent of the 1973 oil crisis. Others are realizing that public transportation is not ample. Do such events affect long-term change or merely a short-term panic?







This shortage will be short lived - -and is being exasperated by human nature — many people swarming the stations to “top off” their tanks.
The main problem is that here in Atlanta we have to have a special low-sulfur blend mandated by law due to the pollution levels, and since that blend isn’t widely used is in less overall demand.
However — the pipeline that serves Atlanta is reportedly back up to 100% capacity, and QuickTrip says all their stations will have gas by Wednesday.
http://www.wsbtv.com/news/17590218/detail.html
ORLY????