Apr 17, 2008

Coming To Winter Haven?

Is this coming to Winter Haven? http://www.kindermorgan.com/investor/kmp_2001_annual_report_financials.pdf Central Florida Pipeline We own and operate two liquids terminals, one located in Tampa, Florida and one located in Taft, Florida (near Orlando, Florida), and an intrastate common carrier pipeline system that serves customers' product storage and transportation needs in Central Florida. The Tampa Terminal contains 31 aboveground storage tanks consisting of approximately 1.4 million barrels of storage capacity and is connected to two ship dock facilities in the Port of Tampa that unload reÑned products from barges and ocean-going vessels into the terminal. The Tampa Terminal provides storage for gasoline, diesel fuel and jet fuel for further movement into either trucks through Ñve truck-loading racks or into the Central Florida Pipeline system. The Tampa Terminal also provides storage for chemicals, predominantly used to treat citrus crops, delivered to the terminal by vessel or rail car and loaded onto trucks through Ñve truck loading racks. The Taft Terminal contains 22 above-ground storage tanks consisting of approximately 670,000 barrels of storage capacity, providing storage for gasoline and diesel fuel for further movement into trucks through 11 truck loading racks. The Central Florida Pipeline system consists of a 110-mile, 16-inch pipeline that transports gasoline and an 85-mile, 10-inch pipeline that transports diesel fuel and jet fuel from Tampa to Orlando, with an intermediate delivery point on the 10-inch pipeline at Intercession City, Florida. The Central Florida Pipeline represents the only major reÑned products pipeline in the state of Florida. In addition to being connected to our Tampa Terminal, the pipeline system is connected to terminals owned and operated by TransMontaigne, Citgo, BP, and Marathon Ashland Petroleum. The 10-inch pipeline is connected to our Taft Terminal and is also the sole pipeline supplying jet fuel to the Orlando International Airport in Orlando, Florida. In 2001, the pipeline transported approximately 93,000 barrels per day of reÑned products, with the product mix being approximately 66% gasoline, 13% diesel fuel, and 21% jet fuel.