British army to start driving tankers as queues for fuel continue
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[September 29, 2021]
By Guy Faulconbridge
LONDON (Reuters) -British soldiers will
start driving tankers to replenish empty pumps, as drivers queued again
for fuel after days of shortages, despite Prime Minister Boris Johnson
saying the situation was improving.
Britain has been gripped by a rush of panic-buying for almost a week
that has left pumps dry across major cities, after oil companies warned
they did not have enough tanker drivers to move petrol and diesel from
refineries to filling stations.
Business minister Kwasi Kwarteng said 150 soldiers had been mobilised,
and would be driving tankers within a few days.
"The last few days have been difficult, we've seen large queues. But I
think the situation is stabilising, we're getting petrol into the
forecourts. I think we're going to see our way through this," Kwarteng
said.
Johnson has sought to quell concerns, saying supplies were returning to
normal while also urging people not to panic buy.
A shortage of around 100,000 drivers has sown chaos through supply
chains and raised the spectre of empty shelves and price increases at
Christmas.
Asked if he could guarantee that there would not be problems in the
run-up to the busy retail period, Kwarteng said: "I'm not guaranteeing
anything. All I'm saying is that, I think the situation is stabilising."
By the early morning rush hour there were already long queues of cars in
and around London and on the busy M25 orbital motorway circling the
capital. Signs were up at some sites announcing no fuel was available.
The gridlock has sparked calls for doctors, nurses and other essential
workers to be given priority access to fuel, a move Johnson has
resisted.
Industry groups said the worst of the shortages seemed to be in London,
the southeast and other English cities. Fights have broken out as
drivers jostled.
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A sign informs customers that fuel has run out at a petrol station
in Hemel Hempstead, Britain, September 29, 2021. REUTERS/Matthew
Childs
The Petrol Retailers Association (PRA), which
represents independent retailers who account for about two-thirds of
all the 8,380 UK filling stations, said on Tuesday 37% its members'
stations were out of fuel.
The shortages have added to an air of chaos in the world's
fifth-largest economy, leaving gaps on supermarket shelves. A spike
in European wholesale natural gas prices has also tipped energy
companies into bankruptcy.
Britain left the EU single market at the start of this year,
preventing hauliers from recruiting drivers in the bloc. To tackle
the shortage, the government has said it will issue temporary visas
to 5,000 foreign drivers, a measure it had previously ruled out.
"What we want to do is make sure that we have all the preparations
necessary to get through until Christmas and beyond, not just in
supplying the petrol stations but all parts of our supply chain,"
Johnson said.
Hauliers, petrol stations and retailers say there are no quick fixes
as the shortfall of drivers is so acute, and transporting fuel
demands training and licensing. European drivers may also be
reluctant to take up the visa offer, which only lasts until Dec. 24.
(Reporting by Guy FaulconbridgeWriting by Kate HoltonEditing by
Michael Holden and Peter Graff)
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