Colonial Pipeline has resumed normal operations delivering millions of gallons per hour to its markets, as reported by USA Today on May 15, 2021. Earlier reports indicate they paid the ransom demand of 75 Bitcoin to recover stolen data — $3.7 million based on today’s exchange rate.
The demand was made by the hacking group DarkSide after they inserted a type of malware the encrypts the
On May 7, the company preemptively shut down its pipeline that spans about 5,500 miles from New Jersey to Texas — nearly half of the transport fuels supply for the Atlantic Coast.
Markets served by Colonial Pipeline are Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia, North and South Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, Washington D.C., Deleware, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey. United States Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm told The Associated Press on Friday, that Colonial Pipeline is pumping fuel at the rate that will allow about 200 stations to return to service every hour.
She added:
It’s still going to work its way through the system over the next few days, but we should be back to normal soon.
Written by Cathy Milne-Ware
Sources:
The New York Times: Colonial Pipeline Paid Roughly $5 Million in Ransom to Hackers; by Michael D. Shear, Nicole Perlroth, and Clifford Krauss
USA Today: Pipeline operator says ‘normal operations’ have resumed; gas shortages to end ‘fairly soon,’ Energy Secretary says
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