[iwar] [fc:Energy.Threat:.Attacks.Fuel.Panic.over.Oil.Supplies]

From: Fred Cohen (fc@all.net)
Date: 2001-10-04 07:25:50


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Subject: [iwar] [fc:Energy.Threat:.Attacks.Fuel.Panic.over.Oil.Supplies]
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Energy Threat: Attacks Fuel Panic over Oil Supplies 
Detroit Free Press - Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News http://quotes.freerealtime.com/dl/frt/N?art=C2001100100274e8988&SA=Latest%20News

The Sept. 11 suicide attacks on the World Trade Center towers and the
Pentagon -- symbols of U.S. financial and military strength -- served
notice that the nation's oil distribution system could be vulnerable to
terrorism. 
Two hijacked airliners were flown into the World Trade Center in New
York, one struck the Pentagon in Arlington, Va., and a fourth airliner
crashed in a Pennsylvania field. Although companies are adequately
prepared for conventional threats to security, experts say little can be
done to shield oil facilities from those kind of terrorist assaults. 
"I think what we found was that the planning petroleum companies did for
the Y2K events did a lot to prepare people," said Kendra Martin,
spokeswoman on security issues for the American Petroleum Institute.
"But what is different from two years ago is that preparing for and
preventing" a fanatical act "is virtually impossible." 
This perceived increase in vulnerability has some people worried. 
"What I'm hearing throughout the industry is that there isn't a whole
lot that can be done," said David Pasek, director of operations at Atlas
Oil Co. in Taylor. The oil industry, which helps keep cars on the roads,
homes heated and airplanes in the air, is a critical piece of any
society's economy. In the United States, energy consumption makes up
about 6 percent of the nation's $10-trillion economy, while petroleum
accounts for about 40 percent of all energy use. And just four months
after President George W. Bush unveiled his plan to build more oil
refineries and electrical utility plants and encourage more domestic
energy exploration, the nation's energy security situation has been
called into question. 
"In my view, we need to have a national energy policy with a goal of
reducing our oil consumption by one million barrels per day every single
year for the next 10 years," suggests Fadel Gheit, senior oil analyst
with Fahnestock &amp; Co. in New York. "That would mean graduated higher
costs to consumers, but it would be better in the long run, because we
would be less vulnerable to unexpected supply disruptions and threats to
our energy security." 
Security at the nation's oil refineries and major pipeline sites has
become a topic of discussion at the highest levels of business and
government since the four hijacked passenger jets were transformed into
missiles. 
Politicians are quick to try to reassure consumers that fuel inventories
are adequate and that there is no immediate threat. In a speech
Thursday, Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham tried to reassure
consumers that the nation's supplies of oil and gas remain strong,
saying, "the terrorist attacks appear to have had little or no adverse
effects on them." 
But with the possibility of a U.S. military strike growing by the day,
oil refineries, ports and pipeline stations aren't taking any chances on
losing the supply they have. 
"Without question, security is getting beefed up at oil facilities
around the world," said Tom Mueller, spokesman for BP Plc in Chicago.
"But details can't be discussed." 
Other companies like Exxon Mobil Corp. and Marathon Ashland Petroleum
LLC also refuse to discuss specific security procedures that have been
implemented as a result of the attacks. 
Solutions such as limiting the number of planes that can fly over oil
facilities to posting armed guards at all entrances have been suggested
as options, experts say. But, they admit, physical security can be
increased only so much. 
"There is always some vulnerability associated with some of the unmanned
facilities," added David Hackett, president of Stillwater Associates, an
oil refining consulting firm based in Irvine, Calif. "You are talking
about tens of thousands of miles of pipeline." 
In the United States, there are about 152,005 miles of interstate liquid
pipeline that carry about 130 billion gallons of gasoline and other
petroleum products across the country each year, according to the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. 
Once petroleum is refined into gasoline, jet fuel or heating oil, the
products are usually shipped by trucks or tankers to retail outlets
nationwide. In Michigan, oil companies that are responsible for moving
much of that product to gas stations have become much more vigilant
aboutsecurity in the last two weeks. 
"Since what happened on Sept. 11, we've kept the terminal locked at all
times," said Pasek. "Because of the arrests of people with false
documents to transport hazardous material in Michigan, I think there is
a heightened sense of awareness here." 
As a result, Atlas requires truck drivers to have proper identification
and stay with their vehicles at all times while on the company's
property. 
The State Police Motor Carrier division said it will increase the number
of random checks of vehicles that haul dangerous products on Michigan
roads. 
Though fear has grown considerably following the attacks, some oil
industry observers warn against overreaction. 
"If the widely held presumption of who is behind this is accurate, then
I don't believe that attacking the petroleum infrastructure in the
world's biggest market would make much sense," said Bob Tippee, editor
of the Oil &amp; Gas Journal in Houston. "That is a real fast way to
alienate Arab oil-producing nations." 
Nonetheless, concerns abound. 
Veteran oil experts point to the danger the U.S. economy might face if
the nation's petroleum infrastructure were to sustain a series of supply
disruptions due to terrorism. "Petroleum is the lifeblood of our
economy. Without it, the economy can't function," said Sung Won Sohn,
chief economist for Wells Fargo &amp; Co. 
For planning purposes, the U.S. Department of Energy divided the nation
into five Petroleum Administration Defense Districts, or PADDs, during
World War II. These regions were created to help the government keep
track of the nation's petroleum supply during times of crisis. Since
then, they've served an administrative purpose to catalog the nation's
inventory of oil. 
The U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve, or SPR, is a stockpile of crude
oil in underground caverns in Texas and Louisiana that can be tapped in
the event of supply emergencies. It has an inventory of about 540
million barrels of fuel. The SPR can store up to 700 million barrels. 
U.S. consumers use about 20 million barrels of crude oil daily,
according to the American Petroleum Institute, but domestic refineries
process only about 6 million barrels daily. As a result, U.S. oil
companies import the majority of their petroleum needs. 
Caution is being practiced at all levels within the oil industry. 
Shortly after the attacks, the Department of Energy removed maps of
petroleum and natural gas pipeline from its Web site. But the agency has
been aware of threats to the nation's petroleum supply for some time. 
In a June report by the National Petroleum Council, the federal advisory
committee to Abraham warned of future threats to the nation's energy
delivery system. 
The study found that groups, including organized terrorists, could be
able to simultaneously attack multiple sites. The report added that
because the results of those kinds of attacks are usually shown to a
wide viewing audience, they often become the blueprint for additional
attacks. 
"When it comes to safety, the Congress is looking at everything from
nuclear power plants to refineries and electrical utility facilities,"
said Ken Johnson, spokesman for the U.S. House Committee on Energy and
Commerce. "I can only tell you that" the committee "has been assured in
secret briefings by the Department of Energy that aggressive steps have
been taken to safeguard America's energy supply."

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