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Nome, Alaska Fuel Transfer Going Smoothly

Nome Alaska Fuel Transfer

First Posted: 01/17/12 03:04 AM ET Updated: 01/18/12 05:36 PM ET

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — A Russian tanker that went on an ocean odyssey of 5,000 miles to deliver fuel to the iced-in city of Nome was offloading the gasoline and diesel in what officials say is smooth sailing so far, with one possible problem avoided.

Two parallel hoses, 700 yards long each, are stretched between the tanker Renda and a pipeline that will deliver 1.3 million gallons of fuel to storage tanks near the harbor of the iced-in city. The offloading began with gasoline, and then both gasoline and diesel were being transferred separately.

Jason Evans, board chairman of Sitnasuak Native Corp., the company that arranged for the fuel delivery, said Tuesday the tanker's two hoses are pumping between 30,000 and 40,000 gallons of gasoline and diesel an hour.

One section of hose had to be switched out early Tuesday morning when a suspected bubble occurred in the line, Evans said. The change-out went smoothly and there have been no spills since the pumping operation began Monday evening.

This is the first time petroleum products have been delivered to a western Alaska community by sea in winter. The mayor said festivities were planned, including a Coast Guard helicopter landing on the beach so children can look inside. They also set a basketball game between residents and Coast Guard crew members, and the city invited the crew to a pizza dinner.

"It is our way to show our appreciation and how grateful we are and what they did for us," said Mayor Denise Michels.

The transfer could take from 36 hours to five days. It started near sundown Monday, after crews laid the hoses along a stretch of Bering Sea ice to the pipeline that begins on a rock causeway 550 yards from the tanker, Evans said.

Sitnasuak owns the local fuel company, Bonanza Fuel, and has been working closely with Vitus Marine, the supplier that arranged for the delivery of the 1.3 million gallons of fuel.

State officials said the transfer had to start during daylight, but can continue in darkness. Nome has just five hours of daylight this time of year.

The city of 3,500 didn't get its last pre-winter barge fuel delivery because of a massive November storm. Without the Renda's delivery, Nome would run out of fuel by March or April, long before the next barge delivery is possible.

Alaska has had one of the most severe winters in decades. Snow has piled up 10 feet or higher against the wood-sided buildings in Nome, a former gold rush town that is the final stop on the 1,150-mile Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race.

The Renda began its journey from Russia in mid-December, picking up diesel fuel in South Korea before heading to Dutch Harbor, Alaska, where it took on unleaded gasoline. It arrived last week off Nome on Alaska's west coast, more than 500 miles from Anchorage.

A Coast Guard icebreaker cleared a path for the 370-foot tanker through hundreds of miles of a slow journey stalled by thick ice and strong ocean currents. In total, the tanker traveled an estimated 5,000 miles, said Rear Adm. Thomas Ostebo, commander of District Seventeen with the Coast Guard.

"It's just been an absolutely grand collaboration by all parties involved," said Stacey Smith of Vitus Marine, the fuel supplier.

Smith said the effort is a third of the way over with the arrival of the Renda near Nome. Pumping the fuel from the tanker will be the second part. The third part will be the exiting through ice by the two ships.

Personnel will walk the entire length of hosing every 30 minutes to check for leaks, Evans said. Each segment has its own containment area, and extra absorbent boom will be on hand.

The Coast Guard is monitoring the effort, working with state, federal, local and tribal representatives, Chief Petty Officer Kip Wadlow said. The fuel participants had to submit a plan to state environmental regulators on how they intended to get the fuel off the Renda, he said.

"We want to make sure the fuel transfer from the Renda to the onshore storage facility is conducted in as safe a manner as possible," he said.

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ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — A Russian tanker that went on an ocean odyssey of 5,000 miles to deliver fuel to the iced-in city of Nome was offloading the gasoline and diesel in what officials say is smo...
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — A Russian tanker that went on an ocean odyssey of 5,000 miles to deliver fuel to the iced-in city of Nome was offloading the gasoline and diesel in what officials say is smo...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JordanPerry
Resist.
11:49 AM on 01/19/2012
This feels like a peek into our collective future (absent all the ice and snow, of course).
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
thriftshop441
08:58 AM on 01/19/2012
With a Coast Guard Ice Breaker a 5000 mile Russian fuel Trip I shudder to think how much a gallon of fuel is their with all these added massive expenses
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
propackage
06:38 AM on 01/19/2012
It is alsways nice to hear stories of cooperation. Just shows that when people work together there are no bounderies
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mike Sowell
06:14 AM on 01/19/2012
Tell me again why anyone would live in this place?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
luckyfreeman69
02:04 AM on 01/19/2012
Thank You for the help Russia .... there is always a first time for everything ... A job well done... We need a couple roads one 750 long from miles Magadan, Russia to Uellen Russia... And The USA needs one from Nome to Fairbanks Alaska... Then we won't have this near death expierience again.
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01:54 AM on 01/19/2012
Where does all the Alaskan pipeline oil go? Are there any refineries in Alaska? Does any actually make it to the US?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DasBoatless
As long as you got gas, you're never lost...
03:46 AM on 01/19/2012
All available online. Nome is in the upper nortwest of AK and inaccessible by land other than dogsled from the population centers... No roads or gas stations......
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
infinitestealth
11:39 PM on 01/18/2012
President Obama has these boys scared to death. Every waking moment, Obama this, Obama that. The weather is Obamas fault as is every crime in America! I would not put an assasination attempt past some of these fools.
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jwallstrom
Is this thing on?
11:13 PM on 01/18/2012
Good thing they didn't have to wait for the current administration to allow the pipline.
11:05 PM on 01/18/2012
why send them fuel....just have obama send solyndra up there with a bunch of solar panels, and while they are at it, throw in a few wind turbines to boot.
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n ferra
Live and learn, or what's the point of life?
04:28 AM on 01/19/2012
Would solar panels even work with only five hours of daylight? How much energy would that be able to produce?
11:03 PM on 01/18/2012
A pipelne in America? Don't tell Obama, he'll shut it down.
02:03 AM on 01/19/2012
NOW come on, decreasing oil depence? The Keystone pipline, Canadain oil, Dakota oil, nah JOBS, NO can't have that makes too much sense? We gotta have super tanker crashes, massive oil spills, oil platform blow outs etc.. Obama made the Right decision. screw American interests! Hug a tree.. and walk to the rally.....
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
10:12 PM on 01/18/2012
I wonder how Alaskan bears keep warm? There must be cozy caves in the mountains. Where do moose go to stay warm? Hungry wolves in the woods want to attack them, and earthquakes at times shake their homes. Don't know how they live that way. They must be mostly super strong Native Americans.
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Sunwyn Ravenwood
Farewell my friends, time to go...
10:17 PM on 01/18/2012
Brown Bears sleep all winter long. Moose live in the southern parts of Alaska, where there are forests to provide food and shelter. Caribou live in he northern part, their hair is so thick that snow that falls on their backs doesn't melt. The same for Musk Oxen.
10:06 PM on 01/18/2012
Glad that we were able to import oil from Russia for Nome.

Now, may we please import oil from Canada (or at least more of it) for the rest of us?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cqdeed
Filling the mind with facts...or trivia?
03:25 AM on 01/19/2012
The oil in that pipeline is not intended for our use. They want us to refine it for them so they can then load it on outgoing ships. More cost effiecient that way.
07:04 AM on 01/19/2012
Well, oil is a fungible good. Economically it was smarter to ship our North Slope oil to Japan, politically it was suicide. (The "optics" were wrong.) Even if the Keystone XL oil, after refinement, were to be exported there'd be thousands of permanent jobs involved in Texas, and our balance of payments would be helped. And, of course, if we needed it and the price would be right, it would be used here. It is amazing to learn that we are a net petroleum products exporter these days.
08:39 AM on 01/19/2012
And what evidence do you have to support this statement?
09:30 PM on 01/18/2012
Did Sarah run when she actually saw Russians? Never thought she would miss a photo-op.
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09:04 PM on 01/18/2012
Russians and Americans working together to help PEOPLE...PRICELESS!!!
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01:23 AM on 01/19/2012
They aint' giving it for free.

“It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own interest.” — Adam Smith
09:02 PM on 01/18/2012
How about we get the barge there in October & perhaps add a couple more storage tanks? Maybe that will do it. What do you think?
09:47 PM on 01/18/2012
Are you not aware that there was one scheduled and it could not go due to storms? What do I think? Having lived in Alaska I think that you should go there and live there for two or three full years and perhaps then you will be able to figure out what is and has been going on.