Almost 30 gas stations in Stanly currently have limited fuel
Many people across Stanly County, and many other parts of the state, have been waiting in long lines over the past day to purchase gas following the news of a major pipeline that’s been temporarily shut down.
And it’s had an impact as 29 gas stations in the county have limited fuel options as of Wednesday, according to GasBuddy.com, which tracks fuel prices and demand, while another three stations have no fuel or power. Those totals account for about 72 percent of all the gas stations in the county, per GasBuddy.
As of around 3 p.m. Wednesday, GasBuddy reported that 65 percent of North Carolina’s gas stations had fuel outages, the largest percentage of any state along the East Coast.
Gov. Roy Cooper signed an Executive Order Monday following the news that Colonial Pipeline, which stretches from Texas to New Jersey and provides about 45 percent all fuel consumed on the East Coast, shut down following a ransomware attack.
“Today’s emergency declaration will help North Carolina prepare for any potential motor vehicle fuel supply interruptions across the state and ensure motorists are able to have access to fuel,” Cooper said in a release.
North Carolina’s gas price average currently sits at $2.85, according to AAA Carolinas, 6 cents more expensive than Tuesday and 22 cents more expensive than last month.
Stanly’s gas price average is $2.77, up 4 cents since Tuesday, though still one of the lowest price averages in the state, according to AAA. It’s 11 cents lower than Mecklenburg, for example, and 7 cents lower than Cabarrus. The western part of the state appears to be the worst, with average prices approaching or even exceeding $3.
“The impact of this pipeline outage will vary regionally,” said Tiffany Wright, spokesperson, AAA – The Auto Club Group in the Carolinas. “The outage will have implications on both gasoline supply and prices. The longer it is offline, the larger the impact on the east coast.”
Some of Colonial Pipeline’s lateral lines have reopened, according to AAA, but there is no word of when the mainline, including the gasoline line, will be operational.
Stanly County Airport director Ken Swaringen said the airport hasn’t been impacted, as it recently received fuel shipments.
“We don’t foresee severe impact at this point because we know there’s fuel available and it’s just us scheduling and ordering and them being able to get it in a truck and get it delivered,” Swaringen said.
But the longer Colonial Pipelines remains shut down, the more likely problems could possibly arise, he said.