As queues form at gas stations, Britain vows to solve trucker shortage
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[September 24, 2021] By
Sarah Young, Victor Jack and Kylie MacLellan
LONDON (Reuters) -Britain on Friday vowed
to do whatever it takes to resolve a trucker shortage that has closed
petrol stations and strained supermarket supply chains to breaking point
but the haulage industry cautioned that there were no quick fixes.
Just as the world's fifth largest economy emerges from the COVID-19
pandemic, a spike in European natural gas prices and a post-Brexit
shortage of truck drivers has left Britain grappling with soaring energy
prices and a potential food supply crunch.
BP temporarily closed some of its 1,200 UK petrol stations due to a lack
of both unleaded and diesel grades, which it blamed on driver shortages.
ExxonMobil's Esso said a small number of its 200 Tesco Alliance retail
sites had also been impacted.
Queues formed at some petrol stations in London and the southern English
county of Kent on Friday as motorists rushed to fill up, Reuters
reporters said.
For months supermarkets and farmers have warned that a shortage of truck
drivers was straining supply chains to breaking point - making it harder
to get goods onto shelves.
Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said there was a global shortage of
truckers after COVID halted lorry driver testing so Britain was doubling
the number of tests. Asked if the government would ease visa rules, he
said the government would look at all options.
"We'll do whatever it takes," Shapps told Sky News. "We'll move heaven
and earth to do whatever we can to make sure that shortages are
alleviated with HGV drivers."
"We should see it smooth out fairly quickly," he said.
Hauliers and logistics companies cautioned that there were no quick
fixes and that any change to testing or visas would likely be too late
to alleviate the pre-Christmas shortages as retailers stockpile months
ahead.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson's government has insisted that there will
be no return to the 1970s when Britain was cast by allies as the "sick
man of Europe" with three-day weeks, energy shortages and rampant
inflation.
But as ministers urged the public not to panic buy, some of Britain's
biggest supermarkets have warned that a shortage of truck drivers could
lead to just that ahead of Christmas.
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Lorries are seen at an HGV parking, at Cobham services on the M25
motorway, Cobham, Britain, August 31, 2021. REUTERS/Peter Cziborra/File
Photo
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro said that Johnson, whom he met in New York,
had asked him for an "emergency" agreement to supply a food product that is
lacking in Britain, though the British embassy disputed Bolsonaro's account.
TRUCKER VISAS?
Such is the strain on the supply chain, McDonald's had to take milkshakes and
bottled drinks off the menu at its British restaurants in August and chicken
chain Nando's ran out of chicken.
Suppliers have warned that there could be more shortages of petrol because of a
lack of drivers to transport fuel from refineries to retail outlets.
The trucking industry body, the Road Haulage Association, has called on the
government to allow short-term visas for international drivers to enter Britain
and fill the gap, while British drivers are being trained for the future.
"It's an enormous challenge," Rod McKenzie, head of policy at the RHA, told
Reuters. In the short-term he said international drivers could help, even if it
may be too late to help Christmas, and in the longer term the industry needed
better pay and conditions to attract workers.
"It's a tough job. We the British do not help truckers in the way that Europeans
and Americans do by giving them decent facilities," he said.
The British haulage industry says it needs around 100,000 more drivers after
25,000 returned to Europe before Brexit and the pandemic halted the
qualification process for new workers.
Shapps, who said the driver shortage was not due to Brexit, said COVID-19
exacerbated the problem given that Britain was unable to test 40,000 drivers
during lockdowns.
"It's a bit of a global problem so it's not immediately obvious that opening up
visas would actually resolve the problem," he told Times Radio.
(Additional reporting by Gerhard Mey, Kate Holton, Michael Holden and Paul
Sandle; Writing by Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by Toby Chopra)
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