Portugal's truck drivers to meet essential supplies as
fuel dries up
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[April 17, 2019]
By Catarina Demony
LISBON (Reuters) - Striking fuel-tanker
drivers in Portugal have agreed to provide essential supplies to
emergency services such as hospitals and airports, the government said
on Wednesday, but the strike continued, worsening fuel shortages in
cities and towns across the country.
Portugal declared an energy crisis on Tuesday night after the strike
forced it to order striking workers to get back on the road immediately
as airports resorted to emergency reserves, forcing at least one flight
to be canceled.
Airports in Lisbon and Faro, the country's two biggest tourist hubs,
have been running low on fuel supplies, and long queues of motorists
have formed outside thousands of petrol stations across the country.
But the airport in Porto, another popular tourist spot, is coping as its
fuel arrives through a pipeline, Portuguese news agency Lusa said.
The government said in a statement that representatives from the
National Union of Dangerous Goods Drivers had agreed to provide minimum
services in talks held late on Tuesday.
"The aim of the meeting wasn't to reach an agreement (on the strike).
The aim was to define minimum services so the population doesn't suffer
as it has suffered in recent days," said Gustavo Duarte, president of
the National Association of Public Road Freight Conveyors, quoted by
local newspaper ECO.
Under the minimum supply requirement laid down by government decree,
drivers must supply fuel to 40 percent of gas stations in Portugal's
biggest cities, Lisbon and Porto.
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A placard reading "Diesel sold out" is seen at a gas station in
Porto, Portugal April 17, 2019. REUTERS/Rafael Marchante
The union already said workers won't supply any more fuel than what is required
by the decree.
Lusa also reported that the government has 15 soldiers ready to drive fuel
trucks if needed.
On Tuesday, before the government's crisis talks with union and industry
representatives, state agencies including the security forces chartered
commercial fuel trucks to ensure supplies to Lisbon airport. Early on Wednesday
morning, these chartered trucks continued to operate, TV channel SIC reported.
"At both airports, where fuel supply wasn't ensured, we have reached critical
levels of fuel reserves for aircraft refueling," Economy Minister Pedro Siza
Vieira told reporters on Tuesday.
Crowd-sourced emergency services platform VOST Portugal said that more than
2,000 petrol stations across the country are currently running on reduced fuel
supplies.
The National Union of Dangerous Goods Drivers said the strike would continue
until its demands are met.
(Reporting by Catarina Demony; Editing by Mark Bendeich and Hugh Lawson
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