Petroleum Marketing Program

Petroleum Marketing Program

782c.instructions.20072

Petroleum Marketing Program

OMB: 1905-0174

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U. S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
ENERGY INFORMATION ADMINISTRATION
Washington, D. C. 20585

DRAFT
OMB No. 1905-0174
Expiration Date: XX/XX/XX
Version No.: 2007.001

EIA-782C
MONTHLY REPORT OF PRIME SUPPLIER SALES OF PETROLEUM PRODUCTS
SOLD FOR LOCAL CONSUMPTION
INSTRUCTIONS
1. QUESTIONS?
If you have any questions about Form EIA-782C after
reading the instructions, please call our toll-free number
1-800-638-8812. Firms located in the Washington, D.C.
Metropolitan Area should call (301) 495-8440.

2. PURPOSE
The Energy Information Administration (EIA) Form EIA782C, "Monthly Report of Prime Supplier Sales of
Petroleum Products Sold for Local Consumption," is used
to collect data on the sales of selected petroleum products
by prime suppliers delivered into States for local
consumption. The data are used by the Department of
Energy to analyze and report on petroleum product
demand. In addition, the data are used by State and
federal agencies (such as the Bureau of Economic
Analysis), Congress, industry analysts, trade publications,
academia, and the public to analyze, model and forecast
petroleum product consumption by State.

3. WHO MUST SUBMIT
The Form EIA-782C is mandatory pursuant to Section
13(b) of the Federal Energy Administration Act of 1974
(Public Law 93-275) and must be completed by all
suppliers who produce, import, or transport across State
boundaries and local marketing areas any of the listed
products and sell the product to local distributors, local
retailers, or end-users.
Section 9 explains the possible sanctions for failing to
report.

4. WHEN TO SUBMIT
The Form EIA-782C must be submitted to the EIA no later
than 20 calendar days after the close of the reference
month (e.g., if the reference month is March 2007, the
report must be submitted to the EIA by April 20, 2007).

5. WHERE TO SUBMIT
Completed forms may be submitted by facsimile, e-mail,
electronic transmission, or mail.
Secure File Transfer forms to:
https://idc.eia.doe.gov/upload/noticeoog.jsp
Fax forms to: (301) 495-8483

E-mail forms to: [email protected]
Electronic Transmission: The PC Electronic Data
Reporting Option (PEDRO) is a Windows-based
application that will enable you to enter data interactively,
import data from your own database, validate your data
online, and transmit the encrypted data electronically to
EIA via the Internet or a dial-up modem. If you are
interested in receiving this free software, contact the
Electronic Data Collection Support Staff at (202) 5869659.
Mail forms to:
Energy Information Administration, EI-45
U.S. Department of Energy
P.O. Box 8279
Silver Spring, MD 20907
Attn: EIA-782C
The State energy offices are vitally interested in receiving
information identical to that contained on the EIA-782C.
To ensure consistent reporting, respondents may provide
a duplicate of each Form EIA-782C directly to the
appropriate State office. Information provided to State
energy offices are not subject to federal regulations
governing disclosure of company level data described in
Section 8. Contact your State energy office for details on
their data confidentiality policies and regulations.
To obtain a list of the State energy offices, call toll-free
1-800-638-8812. Firms located in the Washington, D.C.
metropolitan area should call (301) 495-8440.

6. COPIES OF SURVEY FORMS, INSTRUCTIONS
AND DEFINITIONS
Copies in portable document format (PDF) and
spreadsheet format (XLS) are available on EIA's website:
www.eia.doe.gov/oil_gas/petroleum/survey_forms/pet_survey_forms.html

You may also access the materials by following the steps
below:
· Go to EIA’s website at www.eia.doe.gov
· Click on Petroleum
· Click on Petroleum Survey Forms located in the
References box on the right side of the page
· Select the materials you want.
Files must be saved to your personal computer. Data
cannot be entered interactively on the website.

EIA-782C, “Monthly Report of Prime Supplier Sales of Petroleum Products Sold for Local Consumption”

Page 1

7. HOW TO COMPLETE THE SURVEY FORM
PART 1. RESPONDENT IDENTIFICATION DATA
Report Period: Enter the year and month for which this
form is being submitted.
Enter the 10-digit EIA ID Number. If you do not have a
number, submit your report leaving this field blank. EIA
will advise you of the number.
Enter the name and mailing address of the reporting
company, contact name, telephone number, fax number
and email address.
Enter the month, day, and year this report is being filed.
Type of Report: Check the box which indicates whether
this form is: (1) an Original, or (2) a Resubmission. If this
is a resubmission, enter the date of the report for which
this report is a resubmission.
Enter the number of States for which data are reported.
Report sales for all States in which your company does
business.
PART 3. TYPE OF OPERATIONS
Mark the appropriate type of entity according to the
definitions provided. The type of entity should not change
from month to month but should reflect the activity of the
firm throughout the year.
- Refiners operating in more than one capacity should
mark “Refiner/Gas Plant Operator.”

Check the box to indicate whether this form is: (1) an
Original, or (2) a Resubmission. If it is a resubmission,
enter the reference month for which this report is a
resubmission.
Enter the month and year of the reference month for
which these data are being submitted.
Enter the 10-digit number assigned to the reporting firm
for this survey.
Enter the abbreviation for the State. See Appendix A for a
list of State abbreviations.
Complete the “Monthly Sales” column for all the listed
petroleum products your firm sold and delivered in that
State during the reference month. Report only the data for
the products listed. DOE is not seeking full coverage of all
petroleum products sold.
Definitions of petroleum
products and other terms are provided for your use in
Section 11. Please refer to these definitions before
completing the survey form.
To avoid double counting, respondents are to exclude
sales to other companies (and their subsidiaries) who also
report on the EIA-782C. A list of these companies is
available on our website following the steps in Section 6.
Report all volumes in thousands of gallons (e.g., report
6,500 gallons as 7, and 6,400 gallons as 6). Leave
volume blank if no volumes were sold. Enter 1 for
volumes between 0 and 1,499. Note: One barrel is equal
to 42 gallons.

- Firms engaging in both reselling and retailing should
mark “Reseller/Retailer.”

Enter sales made during the reference month only.
Exclude from all calculations any material prior period
adjustments for volumes and revise the report(s) for the
appropriate prior period(s).

- Firms which directly or indirectly control a refiner
should mark "Refiner/Gas Plant Operator."

Do not report negative volumes or any punctuation, such
as decimals and commas.

- Firms which directly or indirectly control a gas plant
operator should mark "Refiner/Gas Plant Operator."

Exclude amounts supplied to exchange partners except
where the amount supplied exceeds the amount received
and the imbalance is invoiced as a sale during the
reference month.

Enter the status of the firm at the end of the reference
month. If the firm has been sold, leased, or permanently
ceased operation, submit a letter to DOE stating the
reason for the change in status. If the firm has been sold
or leased, provide the name and address of the new
company, and the date of the transfer. If the firm has
permanently ceased operation, provide the date the firm
ceased operation. You may either include the letter with
your monthly report or send it separately to the address
shown in Section 5.
PART 4. STATE DATA
File a separate Part 4 form for each State in which
your company does business.

Report the entire firm's monthly sales of the selected
products. This includes sales made directly by the parent,
affiliates, subsidiaries, or through commissioned agents.
Exclude sales made among the parent firm, subsidiaries,
and affiliates (i.e., intrafirm transfers/sales).
Exclude all volumes sold for export, regardless of where
transfer of title occurs.
Include sales for vessel bunkering.
Report gasoline sales volumes by category and grade in
accordance with their classification at the time of sale. The

EIA-782C, “Monthly Report of Prime Supplier Sales of Petroleum Products Sold for Local Consumption”

Page 2

intent of this form is to collect sales volumes for
reformulated, oxygenated, and conventional gasoline sold
as regular, midgrade, and premium. For the majority of the
United States, the octane ranges “(R+M)/2" identified in
the Definitions (Section 11) are appropriate for
distinguishing among the three grades of gasoline to be
reported.
Report sales of oxygenated gasoline as conventional
gasoline if it meets the specifications for oxygenated
gasoline as approved by EPA. Blends of gasoline
containing Fuel Ethanol, Methyl Tertiary Butyl Ether
(MTBE) or other oxygenates should be reported according
to the above criteria. Report gasohol as conventional
gasoline in the grade of gasoline in which it was sold. Do
not report ethanol (alcohol) sold separately for blending
purposes.
Report sales of No. 2 diesel fuel according to the parts per
million (ppm) sulfur content.
Resubmissions
Revisions to prior month’s reports are required if
previously reported price or volume data are in error by
more than five percent (+5%). All revisions must be
submitted within 120 days after the end of the reference
month. However, EIA must be notified of significant
changes discovered after this date and will determine if a
late resubmission is required.

8.

PROVISIONS REGARDING
CONFIDENTIALITY OF INFORMATION

The information reported on Form EIA-782C will be kept
confidential and not disclosed to the public to the extent
that it satisfies the criteria for exemption under the
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. §552, the
DOE regulations, 10 C.F.R. §1004.11, implementing the
FOIA, and the Trade Secrets Act, 18 U.S.C. §1905. The
Energy Information Administration (EIA) will protect your
information in accordance with its confidentiality and
security policies and procedures.

identifiable information is very small.

9. SANCTIONS
The timely submission of Form EIA-782C by those
required to report is mandatory under Section 13(b) of the
Federal Energy Administration Act of 1974 (FEAA) (Public
Law 93-275), as amended. Failure to respond may result
in a civil penalty of not more than $2,750 per day for each
violation, or a fine of not more than $5,000 per day for
each criminal violation. The government may bring a civil
action to prohibit reporting violations which may result in a
temporary restraining order or a preliminary or permanent
injunction without bond. In such civil action, the court may
also issue mandatory injunctions commanding any person
to comply with these reporting requirements.

10. FILING
FORMS
WITH
GOVERNMENT
AND
REPORTING BURDEN

FEDERAL
ESTIMATED

Respondents are not required to file or reply to any
Federal collection of information unless it has a valid OMB
control number. Public reporting burden for this collection
of information is estimated to average 2.1 hours per
response, including the time of reviewing instructions,
searching existing data sources, gathering and
maintaining the data needed, and completing and
reviewing the collection of information. Send comments
regarding this burden estimate or any other aspect of this
collection of information including suggestions for
reducing this burden to: Energy Information
Administration, Statistics and Methods Group, EI-70, 1000
Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20585;
and to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Office of Management and Budget, Washington, D.C.
20503.

The Federal Energy Administration Act requires the EIA to
provide company-specific data to other Federal agencies
when requested for official use. The information reported
on this form may also be made available, upon request, to
another component of the Department of Energy (DOE);
to any Committee of Congress, the General Accounting
Office, or other Federal agencies authorized by law to
receive such information.
A court of competent
jurisdiction may obtain this information in response to an
order. The information may be used for any nonstatistical
purposes such as administrative, regulatory, law
enforcement, or adjudicatory purposes.
Disclosure limitation procedures are applied to the
statistical data published from EIA-782C survey
information to ensure that the risk of disclosure of
EIA-782C, “Monthly Report of Prime Supplier Sales of Petroleum Products Sold for Local Consumption”

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11. DEFINITIONS
Affiliate - An entity which is directly or indirectly owned,
operated, or controlled by another entity.
ASTM - The acronym for the American Society for
Testing and Materials.
Aviation Gasoline (Finished) - A complex mixture of
relatively volatile hydrocarbons with or without small
quantities of additives, blended to form a fuel suitable for
use in aviation reciprocating engines. Fuel specifications
are provided in ASTM Specification D 910 and Military
Specification MIL-G-5572. Note: Data on blending
components are not counted in data on finished aviation
gasoline.
Conventional Gasoline - See Finished Motor Gasoline.
Distillate Fuel Oil - A general classification for one of the
petroleum fractions produced in conventional distillation
operations. It includes diesel fuels and fuel oils.
Products known as No. 1, No. 2, and No. 4 diesel fuel
are used in on-highway diesel engines, such as those in
trucks and automobiles, as well as off-highway engines,
such as those in railroad locomotives and agricultural
machinery. Products known as No. 1, No. 2, and No. 4
fuel oils are used primarily for space heating and electric
power generation.
a. No. 1 Distillate - A light petroleum distillate that can
be used as either a diesel fuel (see No. 1 Diesel
Fuel) or a fuel oil (see No. 1 Fuel Oil).
(1) No. 1 Diesel Fuel - A light distillate fuel oil that
has distillation temperatures of 550 degrees
Fahrenheit at the 90-percent point and meets
the specifications defined in ASTM Specification
D 975. It is used in high-speed diesel engines
generally operated under frequent speed and
load changes, such as those in city buses and
similar vehicles.
(2) No. 1 Fuel Oil - A light distillate fuel oil that has
distillation temperatures of 400 degrees
Fahrenheit at the 10-percent recovery point and
550 degrees Fahrenheit at the 90-percent point
and meets the specifications defined in ASTM
Specification D 396. It is used primarily as fuel
for portable outdoor stoves and portable outdoor
heaters.
b. No. 2 Distillate - A petroleum distillate that can be
used as either a diesel fuel (see No. 2 Diesel Fuel) or
a fuel oil (see No. 2 Fuel Oil).
(1) No. 2 Diesel Fuel - A distillate fuel oil that has a
distillation temperature of 640 degrees
Fahrenheit at the 90-percent recovery point and
meets the specifications defined in ASTM

Specification D 975. It is used in high-speed
diesel engines that are generally operated under
uniform speed and load conditions, such as
those in railroad locomotives, trucks, and
automobiles.
(a) Ultra-low Sulfur No. 2 Diesel Fuel - No. 2
diesel fuel that has a sulfur level no higher
than 15 ppm. It is used primarily in motor
vehicle diesel engines for on-highway use.
(b) Low Sulfur No. 2 Diesel Fuel - No. 2 diesel
fuel that has a sulfur level between 15 ppm
and 500 ppm (inclusive). It is used primarily
in motor vehicle diesel engines for onhighway use.
(c) High Sulfur No. 2 Diesel Fuel - No. 2
diesel fuel that has a sulfur level above 500
ppm.
(2) No. 2 Fuel Oil (Heating Oil) - A distillate fuel oil
that has distillation temperatures of 400 degrees
Fahrenheit at the 10-percent recovery point and
640 degrees Fahrenheit at the 90-percent
recovery point and meets the specifications
defined in ASTM Specification D 396. It is
used in atomizing type burners for domestic
heating
or
for
moderate
capacity
commercial/industrial burner units.
c. No. 4 Fuel Oil - A distillate fuel oil made by blending
distillate fuel oil and residual fuel oil stocks. It
conforms with ASTM Specification D 396 or Federal
Specification VV-F-815C and is used extensively in
industrial plants and in commercial burner
installations that are not equipped with preheating
facilities. It also includes No. 4 diesel fuel used for
low- and mediumspeed diesel engines and
conforms to ASTM
Specification D 975.
Finished Motor Gasoline - A complex mixture of
relatively volatile hydrocarbons with or without small
quantities of additives, blended to form a fuel suitable for
use in spark-ignition engines. Motor gasoline, as defined
in ASTM Specification D 4814 or Federal Specification
VV-G1690C, is characterized as having a boiling range
of 122 to 158 degrees Fahrenheit at the 10-percent
recovery point to 365 to 374 degrees Fahrenheit at the
90-percent recovery point. "Motor gasoline" includes
conventional gasoline; all types of oxygenated gasoline,
including gasohol; and reformulated gasoline, but
excludes aviation gasoline. Note: Volumetric data on
blending components, such as oxygenates, are not
counted in data on finished motor gasoline until the
blending components are blended into the gasoline.
a. Reformulated

Gasoline

-

Finished

EIA-782C, “Monthly Report of Prime Supplier Sales of Petroleum Products Sold for Local Consumption”

gasoline
Page 4

formulated for use in motor vehicles, the composition
and properties of which meet the requirements of the
reformulated gasoline regulations promulgated by
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency under
Section 211(k) of the Clean Air Act. It includes
gasoline produced to meet or exceed emissions
performance and benzene content standards of
federal-program reformulated gasoline even though
the gasoline may not meet all of the composition
requirements (e.g. oxygen content) of federalprogram reformulated gasoline. Note: This category
includes oxygenated fuels program reformulated
gasoline (OPRG) but excludes reformulated gasoline
blendstock for oxygenate blending (RBOB).
b. Oxygenated Gasoline - Finished motor gasoline,
other than reformulated gasoline, having an oxygen
content of 2.7 percent or higher by weight and
required by the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) to be sold in areas designated by EPA
as carbon monoxide (CO) nonattainment areas.
Note: Oxygenated gasoline excludes oxygenated
fuels program reformulated gasoline (OPRG) and
reformulated gasoline blendstock for oxygenate
blending (RBOB). Data on gasohol that has at least
2.7 percent oxygen, by weight, and is intended for
sale inside CO attainment areas are included in data
on oxygenated gasoline. Other data on gasohol are
included in data on conventional gasoline.
Oxygenated gasoline is included in conventional
gasoline beginning with January 2007 data.
c. Conventional Gasoline - Finished motor gasoline
not included in the oxygenated or reformulated
gasoline category. Note: This category excludes
reformulated gasoline blendstock for oxygenate
blending (RBOB) as well as other blendstock.
Within each of these three types of gasoline are the
following three grades:
1. Regular Gasoline - Gasoline having an antiknock
index, i.e., octane rating, greater than or equal to 85
and less than 88.

proprietorship or any other entity, however organized,
including: (a) charitable or educational institutions; (b) the
Federal
Government,
including
corporations,
departments,
Federal agencies, and other
instrumentalities; and (c) State and local governments. A
firm may consist of (1) a parent entity, including the
consolidated and unconsolidated entities (if any) that it
directly or indirectly controls; (2) a parent and its
consolidated entities only; (3) an unconsolidated entity;
or (4) any part or combination of the above.
Gas Plant Operator - Any firm, including a gas plant
owner, which operates a gas plant and keeps the gas
plant records. A gas plant is a facility in which natural gas
liquids are separated from natural gas, or in which
natural gas liquids are fractionated or otherwise
separated into natural gas liquid products or both.
Gasohol - A blend of finished motor gasoline containing
alcohol (generally ethanol but sometimes methanol) at a
concentration of 10 percent or less by volume. Data on
gasohol that has at least 2.7 percent oxygen, by weight,
and is intended for sale inside carbon monoxide
nonattainment areas are included in data on oxygenated
gasoline.
Kerosene - A light petroleum distillate that is used in
space heaters, cook stoves, and water heaters and is
suitable for use as a light source when burned in wick-fed
lamps.
Kerosene has a maximum distillation
temperature of 400 degrees Fahrenheit at the 10-percent
recovery point, a final boiling point of 572 degrees
Fahrenheit, and a minimum flash point of 100 degrees
Fahrenheit. Included are No. 1-K and No. 2-K, and the
two grades recognized by ASTM Specification D 3699 as
well as all grades of kerosene called range or stove oil,
which have properties similar to No. 1 Fuel Oil.
Kerosene-type Jet Fuel - A kerosene-based product
having a maximum distillation temperature of 400
degrees Fahrenheit at the 10-percent recovery point and
a final maximum boiling point of 572 degrees Fahrenheit
and meeting ASTM Specification D 1655 and Military
Specifications MIL-T-5624P and MIL-T-83133D (Grades
JP-5 and JP-8). It is used for commercial and military
turbojet and turboprop aircraft engines.

3. Premium Gasoline - Gasoline having an antiknock
index, i.e., octane rating, greater than 90.

Naphtha-type Jet Fuel - A fuel in the heavy naphtha
boiling range having an average gravity of 52.8 degrees
API, 20 to 90 percent distillation temperatures of 290
degrees to 470 degrees Fahrenheit, and meeting Military
Specification MIL-T-5624L (Grade JP-4). It is used
primarily for military turbojet and turboprop aircraft
engines because it has a lower freeze point than other
aviation fuels and meets engine requirements at high
altitudes and speeds.

Note: In general, automotive octane requirements are
lower at high altitudes. Therefore, in some areas of the
United States, such as the Rocky Mountain States, the
octane ranges for the gasoline grades above may be 2 or
more octane points lower.

Nonattainment Area - Any area that does not meet the
national primary or secondary ambient air quality
standard established by the Environmental Protection
Agency for designated pollutants, such as carbon
monoxide and ozone.

Firm - Any association, company, corporation, estate,
individual,
joint-venture,
partnership,
or
sole

OPRG - "Oxygenated Fuels Program Reformulated
Gasoline" is reformulated gasoline which is intended for
use in an oxygenated fuels program control area during

2. Midgrade Gasoline - Gasoline having an antiknock
index, i.e., octane rating, greater than or equal to 88
but less than or equal to 90.

EIA-782C, “Monthly Report of Prime Supplier Sales of Petroleum Products Sold for Local Consumption”

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an oxygenated fuels program control period.
Oxygenated Gasoline - See Finished Motor Gasoline.

Parent - A firm that directly or indirectly controls another
entity.

operations. They conform to ASTM Specifications D 396
and D 975 and Federal Specification VV-F-815C. No. 5,
a residual fuel oil of medium viscosity, is also known as
Navy Special and is defined in Military Specification
MIL-F-859E, including Amendment 2 (NATO Symbol
F-770).
It is used in steam-powered vessels in
government service and inshore powerplants. No. 6 fuel
oil includes Bunker C fuel oil and is used for the
production of electric power, space heating, vessel
bunkering, and various industrial purposes.

Prime Supplier - A firm that produces, imports, or
transports selected petroleum products across State
boundaries and local marketing areas, and sells the
product to local distributors, retailers, or end-users.

Retailer - A firm (other than a refiner, reseller, or
reseller/retailer) that carries on the trade or business of
purchasing refined petroleum products and reselling
them to ultimate consumers.

Propane, Consumer Grade - A normally gaseous
paraffinic compound (C3H8), which includes all products
covered by Natural Gas Policy Act specifications for
commercial use and HD-5 propane and ASTM
Specification D 1835. It is a colorless paraffinic gas that
boils at a temperature of -43.67°F. It does not include
the propane portion of any natural gas liquid mixes, e.g.,
butane-propane mix.

Sale - The transfer of title of an energy commodity from
the seller to a buyer for a price or quantity transferred
during a specified period. EXCLUDES: Intrafirm
transfers, product consumed directly by the reporting
firm, sales of bonded fuel, and products delivered/loaned
to exchange partners except where the amount supplied
exceeds the amount received and the differential is
invoiced as a sale during the reference month.

Oxygenates - Substances which, when added to
gasoline, increase the amount of oxygen in that gasoline
blend. Ethanol, Methyl Tertiary Butyl Ether (MTBE),
Ethyl Tertiary Butyl Ether (ETBE), and methanol are
common oxygenates.

RBOB - “Reformulated Gasoline Blendstock for
Oxygenate Blending” is a motor gasoline blending
component which, when blended with a specified type
and percentage of oxygenate, meets the definition of
reformulated gasoline.
Reference Month - The calendar month and year to
which the reported cost, price, and volume information
relates.

Subsidiary - An entity directly or indirectly controlled by
a parent company which owns 50% or more of its voting
stock.
United States - The 50 States and the District of
Columbia.

Refiner - A firm or the part of a firm that refines products
or blends and substantially changes products, or refines
liquid hydrocarbons from oil and gas field gases, or
recovers liquefied petroleum gases incident to petroleum
refining and sells those products to resellers, retailers,
reseller/retailers or ultimate consumers. "Refiner"
includes any owner of products which contracts to have
those products refined and then sells the refined
products to resellers, retailers, or ultimate consumers.
Reformulated Gasoline - See Finished Motor Gasoline.
Reseller - A firm (other than a refiner) that is engaged in
a trade or business that buys refined petroleum products
and then sells them to a purchaser who is not the
ultimate consumer of those refined products.
Reseller/Retailer - A firm (other than a refiner) that
carries on the trade or business activities of both a
reseller and a retailer; i.e., purchasing refined petroleum
products and reselling them to purchasers who may be
either ultimate or other than ultimate consumers.
Residual Fuel Oils - The heavier oils, known as No. 5
and No. 6 fuel oils, that remain after the distillate fuel oils
and lighter hydrocarbons are distilled away in refinery
EIA-782C, “Monthly Report of Prime Supplier Sales of Petroleum Products Sold for Local Consumption”

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EIA-782C, “Monthly Report of Prime Supplier Sales of Petroleum Products Sold for Local Consumption”

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APPENDIX A

LIST OF STANDARD STATE ABBREVIATIONS
AL ... Alabama
AK ... Alaska
AZ ... Arizona
AR ... Arkansas
CA ... California
CO ... Colorado
CT ... Connecticut
DE ... Delaware
DC ... District of Columbia
FL ... Florida
GA ... Georgia
HI ... Hawaii
ID ... Idaho
NH
IL ... Illinois
IN ... Indiana
IA ... Iowa
KS ... Kansas

KY
LA
ME
MD
MA
MI
MN
MS
MO
MT
NE
NV
...
NJ
NM
NY
NC

... Kentucky
... Louisiana
... Maine
... Maryland
... Massachusetts
... Michigan
... Minnesota
... Mississippi
... Missouri
... Montana
... Nebraska
... Nevada
New Hampshire
... New Jersey
... New Mexico
... New York
... North Carolina

ND
OH
OK
OR
PA
RI
SC
SD
TN
TX
UT
VT
VA
WA
WV
WI
WY

...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...

North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming

GU … Guam
PR … Puerto Rico
VI … Virgin Islands

EIA-782C, “Monthly Report of Prime Supplier Sales of Petroleum Products Sold for Local Consumption”

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