Oil and Gas

Colonial Pipeline expects to resume service after assessing Ida's impact

Key Points
  • Colonial Pipeline expects to resume full service once the company assesses the impact of Hurricane Ida on the system's operations, the company said on Monday.
  • Colonial Pipeline said on Sunday it would temporarily halt fuel deliveries from Houston to Greensboro, North Carolina, due to Hurricane Ida.
  • Colonial is the largest petroleum products pipeline in the United States.
In an aerial view, fuel holding tanks are seen at Colonial Pipeline's Dorsey Junction Station on May 13, 2021 in Washington, DC.
Drew Angerer | Getty Images

Colonial Pipeline, the largest fuel pipeline in the United States, expects to resume full service once the company assesses the impact of Hurricane Ida on the system's operations, the company said on Monday.

Fuel supply continues to be available throughout the Southeast from numerous terminals located along the supply route, Colonial said.

Colonial said on Sunday it would temporarily halt fuel deliveries from Houston to Greensboro, North Carolina, due to Hurricane Ida.

The pipeline operator, which carries nearly half the fuel consumed along the U.S. East Coast, said supplies would continue to be available at its terminals throughout the Southeast. It expects to resume full service when it is safe to do so, it said in a note to shippers.

Colonial suffered a crippling cyberattack earlier this year that disrupted fuel supplies for almost a week, leaving thousands of gas stations in the Southeast without fuel and prompting airlines to reroute planes to get jet fuel.

Hurricane Ida prompted U.S. Gulf of Mexico oil operators to shut in some 95% of crude production on Sunday, while refineries that produce gasoline and jet fuel along the Gulf Coast are shutting plants or reducing production due to the storm.

Phillips 66 shut its Alliance plant in Belle Chasse, Louisiana, while Exxon Mobil cut production at its Baton Rouge, Louisiana, refinery on Saturday.