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Biden Lifts U.S. Ship Mandate to Ease Gasoline Shortages

Bloomberg2021-05-13

(Bloomberg) -- The Biden administration temporarily eased century-old U.S. shipping requirements to allow foreign tankers to transport gasoline and diesel to fuel-starved areas of the country following the Colonial Pipeline outage.

A waiver has been issued for a single company to the 101-year-old Jones Act, which stipulates goods transported between U.S. ports be carried on ships built in the U.S. and crewed by American workers, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said in a Thursday statement.

The move is designed to address fuel shortages spurred by the cyberattack on the Colonial Pipeline, which shut down a major artery for gasoline, diesel and jet fuel across the U.S. East Coast. Even with fuel shipments resuming from around 5 p.m. Eastern time Wednesday, it’s unclear how long it will take for the network to return to normal.

“This waiver will enable the transport of additional gas and jet fuel between the Gulf Coast and East Coast ports to ease supply constraints,” White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said in a statement.

Biden is also urging Americans “to just purchase what they need, and not hoard fuel, as supply is restored,” Psaki said. Gasoline stations from Florida to Virginia have reported running dry after Colonial was forced to take systems offline on May 7, and pump prices soared above $3 a gallon for the first time in six years.

While the government has temporarily lifted U.S. ship requirements to combat fuel shortages after Superstorm Sandy, Hurricane Harvey and other natural disasters, the issue is politically fraught. The Jones Act is championed by some of the nation’s biggest shipbuilders and vessel operators, as well as their allies on Capitol Hill. It also has the backing of a key Biden constituency in organized labor, including the Seafarers International Union.

What the Jones Act Has to Do With Your Car’s Gas Tank: QuickTake

Waiving the requirements could allow foreign-flagged tankers to fill the supply gap left by the interruption to the pipeline. It would take roughly six to seven days for a tanker to carry fuel from the Gulf Coast to New York Harbor.

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Comment9

  • Dawang
    ·2021-05-14
    Time to upload the oldies regulations and progress with the new changing landscape
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  • Alexius
    ·2021-05-13
    Good report
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  • 小虎一只
    ·2021-05-13
    Like and comment. Thanks ?
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  • Ccl2
    ·2021-05-13
    Like n comment
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  • Glenn101
    ·2021-05-13
    Like and comment! Thanks!
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  • LEEQF
    ·2021-05-13
    Like n comment 
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    • Haslin
      Comment n like thx
      2021-05-13
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    • Glenn101
      Ok. Plz help mine too.
      2021-05-13
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    • LEEQF
      Replied
      2021-05-13
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  • RachelNguyen
    ·2021-05-13
    Then the gas Stocks up
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    • LEEQF
      Like n rEply pls
      2021-05-13
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  • Terrorfredx
    ·2021-05-13
    Hmm
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  • IamBolt
    ·2021-05-13
    Like and comment
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