Fears Of Fuel Shortage Growing In France As Strikes At Refineries Continued

Fears Of Fuel Shortage Growing In France As Strikes At Refineries Continued

PARIS, Oct 11 (NNN-XINHUA) – Strikes in France’s major refineries continued yesterday, leading to fuel-related panics in the country.

The strikes at TotalEnergies and ExxonMobil refineries, will extend to today, the General Confederation of Labour (CGT), said.

According to the Ministry for Energy Transition, 29.4 percent of service stations experienced difficulties, with at least one product, yesterday, compared to 19 percent on Friday.

French Prime Minister, Elisabeth Borne, organised an urgent crisis meeting last night. According to media, the government will ban the filling of fuel jerry cans across the country.

The strikers’ actions have led to a decrease in fuel deliveries, provoking fears and long hours of waiting. School bus transportation was also affected by the strikes.

“The French must not be prisoners of this social conflict, which does not concern them,” said Minister for Energy Transition, Agnes Pannier-Runacher, yesterday.

In addition to the strikes, the price of fuel has increased in the last seven days. In order to counterbalance the fuel shortage, the French government has released significant volumes of fuel from its strategic stocks, and reinforced fuel imports from Belgium.

Over the weekend, TotalEnergies and the CGT agreed to start negotiations, but no agreement was concluded.

The strikers demand a raise in salary, to compensate for the high inflation that France is experiencing.– NNN-XINHUA

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