Western Daily Press

Drivers told ‘buy fuel as normal’ as BP closes some forecourts

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DRIVERS are being urged by the Government to “buy fuel as normal”, after the lorry driver shortage hit supplies.

BP said a “handful” of its filling stations are closed due to a lack of fuel available, while Esso owner ExxonMobil also said a “small number” of its Tesco Alliance petrol forecourts have been impacted.

A Government spokeswoma­n said: “There is no shortage of fuel in the UK, and people should continue to buy fuel as normal.

“We recognise the challenges facing industry and have already taken action to increase the supply of HGV drivers, including streamlini­ng the process for new drivers and increasing the number of driving tests.

“We continue to closely monitor labour supply and work with sector leaders to understand how we can best ease particular pinch points.”

Jim McMahon, Labour’s shadow transport secretary, said it was a “rapidly worsening crisis” and accused the Government of “never investing in or valuing working-class jobs”.

He went on: “Sticking plaster solutions are not going to solve it.

“Ministers must take decisive steps now to tackle the 90,000 driver shortfall.”

BP told the Government in a meeting last Thursday that the company’s ability to transport fuel from refineries to its network of forecourts was faltering.

BP’s head of UK retail Hanna Hofer said it was important the Government understood the “urgency of the situation”, which she described as “bad, very bad”, according to a report by ITV News.

She added that BP had “two-thirds of normal forecourt stock levels required for smooth operations” and the level is “declining rapidly”.

Meanwhile, an ExxonMobil spokesman said: “A small number of our 200 Tesco Alliance retail sites are impacted.

“We are working closely with all parties in our distributi­on network to optimise supplies and minimise any inconvenie­nce to customers.”

A Tesco spokeswoma­n said: “We have good availabili­ty of fuel, with deliveries arriving at our petrol filling stations across the UK every day.”

The HGV sector has been struggling with recruitmen­t in recent months with a combinatio­n of the Covid-19 pandemic and Brexit reducing the number of available drivers.

With test centres shut and many HGV drivers from the EU returning home during the pandemic, it has created a shortage of qualified drivers.

The issue has already hit supermarke­ts, with shelves half full and grocers forced to increase salaries and introduce signing on bonuses to fill gaps.

It has also spread to waste collection services.

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