Britain sends military to solve fuel crisis as driver
shortage persists
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[October 04, 2021] By
Andrew Boyers
HEMEL HEMPSTEAD, England (Reuters) -British
military personnel in combat fatigues arrived on Monday at a BP storage
depot after the government ordered the army to help deliver fuel to
tackle an acute shortage of truckers, a Reuters reporter said.
Britain's supply chains for everything from pork, petrol and poultry to
medicines and milk have been strained to breaking point by shortages of
labour in the wake of the Brexit and COVID crises.
Panic buying of fuel amid the shortage of truckers triggered chaotic
scenes across major cities last week with queues of drivers stacked up.
Some have had fist fights over the pumps while others hoarded fuel in
old water bottles.
"As an extra precaution, we've put the extra drivers on," Prime Minister
Boris Johnson's finance minister, Rishi Sunak, told LBC radio.
"The situation has been improving now for I think over a week every day
... it is getting better and as demand settles back to more normal
levels the strong expectation is things will resolve themselves."
Reuters reporters said they saw at least two dozen gas stations still
closed across London and southern England. Drivers were still queuing
outside those stations which were open.
The Petrol Retailers Association said about 22% of fuel stations in
London and the southeast were still without fuel, and the association's
executive director, Gordon Balmer, said it might take a week to 10 days
to get stocks back up to normal.
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Members of the military look on at Buncefield Oil Depot in Hemel
Hempstead, Britain, October 4, 2021. REUTERS/Andrew Boyers
British ministers have repeatedly denied that the fuel crisis has anything to do
with Brexit and have cast the trucker shortage as a global problem, though other
European neighbours have not experienced queues at gas stations.
"The HGV drivers is not a UK issue, it's a Europe wide issue and beyond," Sunak
said. "I want people to know that we are doing everything we can to mitigate
some of those challenges, where we can make a difference."
Johnson said on Sunday he would not return to "uncontrolled immigration" to
solve fuel, gas and Christmas food crises, suggesting such strains were part of
a period of post-Brexit adjustment.
Amid the fuel station crisis, farmers have repeatedly warned that a shortage of
butchers and abattoir workers could force a cull of more than 100,000 pigs
backed up on farms.
Adding to the sense of chaos on Monday, the British capital was brought to a
standstill by climate change activists who blocked major routes into London.
About 50 campaigners from Insulate Britain, which wants the government to commit
to providing insulation for 29 million homes, blocked busy routes into the city
including the Blackwall Tunnel in east London and a bridge over the River Thames
in southwest of the capital.
Police said they made 38 arrests.
(Reporting by Andrew Boyers, writing Guy Faulconbridge; editing by Michael
Holden, William Maclean)
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