Britain expected to ease visa rules as truck driver shortage bites
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[September 25, 2021]
By Michael Holden
LONDON (Reuters) - Britain is expected to
announce plans to issue temporary visas to truck drivers to alleviate an
acute labour shortage that has led to fuel rationing at some filling
stations and warnings from retailers (https://www.reuters.com/world/uk/britain-resolve-trucker-shortage-swiftly-minister-says-2021-09-24)
of significant disruption in the run-up to Christmas.
As queues started forming outside filling stations early on Saturday,
Prime Minister Boris Johnson's office said it was looking at temporary
measures to address the shortage of heavy goods vehicle (HGV) drivers.
Newspapers reported that the government would allow up to 5,000 foreign
drivers into Britain on short-term visas, a measure that logistics
companies and retailers have demanded for months but which the
government had previously ruled out.
The UK's Road Haulage Association (RHA) says Britain needs 100,000 more
drivers if it is to meet demand. The driver shortage has been caused
partly by Brexit and COVID-19, and the loss of about a year of driver
training and testing.
"We’re looking at temporary measures to avoid any immediate problems,
but any measures we introduce will be very strictly time limited," a
spokeswoman for Johnson's Downing Street office said in a statement.
Downing Street declined to give further details.
Ministers have cautioned against panic buying, and oil companies say
there is no shortage of supplies, merely problems delivering the fuel to
the gas stations.
However, long lines of vehicles have begun gathering at petrol stations
to fill up after BP said it had to close some of its outlets due to the
driver shortages.
Some Shell stations have also reported pumps running dry while
ExxonMobil's Esso has also said a small number of its 200 Tesco Alliance
retail sites had also been impacted in some way.
EG Group, which runs hundreds of forecourts across Britain, said on
Friday it would impose a purchase limit of 30 pounds ($41) per customer
for fuel due to the “unprecedented customer demand”.
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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
"We have ample fuel stocks in this country and the
public should be reassured there are no shortages," the Downing
Street spokeswoman said.
"But like countries around the world we are suffering from a
temporary COVID-related shortage of drivers needed to move supplies
around the country."
The fuel issue comes as Britain, the world's fifth-largest economy,
also grapples with a spike in European natural gas prices causing
soaring energy prices and a potential food supply crunch.
Other countries such as the United States and Germany are also
dealing with truck driver shortages.
Britain says the long-term solution is for more British drivers to
be hired, with the RHA saying better pay and conditions are needed
to attract people into the industry.
But the retail industry has warned that unless the government acts
to address the shortage in the next 10 days, then significant
disruption is inevitable in the run-up to Christmas.
($1 = 0.7311 pounds)
(Reporting by Michael Holden and Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by
Frances Kerry)
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