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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Asphalt shortage delaying road work

Washington counties feel pinch of rising oil prices

By MANUEL VALDES Associated Press

SEATTLE – A change in the type of oil processed at the Tesoro refinery in Anacortes has led to a liquid asphalt shortage for at least four counties in Washington, affecting miles of road maintenance.

Similar changes at refineries around the country are affecting asphalt supplies elsewhere.

Vancouver-based Albina Asphalt Products, which supplies asphalt to counties, reported in July that its suppliers, including Tesoro, have cut back production, meaning the company’s supplies of asphalt plummeted.

“Our suppliers cut us off on it,” said Erwin Winter, Albina’s operations manager. “This is a global event. There’s already been curtailment in Wyoming and Utah.”

On Tuesday, Pierce County announced that it will be able to seal only 22 lane miles of roadway this summer, instead of the planned 70, because of the shortage. Jefferson, Lewis and Clallam counties are also among those affected, along with 18 projects planned by the state Department of Transportation.

Keith Muggoch, a senior engineer for Lewis County, said 50 miles of road maintenance will be postponed.

Lloyd Brown, a spokesman for the state Department of Transportation, said the state will evaluate each project that had listed Tesoro as a supplier of asphalt, and either increase the time frames or seek other solutions. Brown said the state contracts out to different road construction companies and it’s up to those companies to find remedies for unexpected changes.

Brown said the agency did not expect an increase in cost at this time.

The woes in Washington state are the latest in a growing challenge for counties, cities and states, as the rising price of oil prompts refineries to switch to oil that does not produce asphalt. New York, Colorado, and Oklahoma are other states that have reported delays in road projects.

Sarah Simpson, a Tesoro spokeswoman, said the company notified its customers earlier this year it would stop asphalt production at Anacortes.

“The crude oils that we are now running at Anacortes are not conducive to producing paving-grade asphalt,” Simpson said.

Simpson said refiners that do not own oil, such as Tesoro, have been hard-hit by rising crude oil prices, prompting them to focus on a type of oil that produces higher-value products such as gasoline and diesel fuel.