The Borneo Post

Mexico City’s massive wholesale market quiets amid fuel shortage

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MEXICO CITY: The mood at Latin America’s largest wholesale market, the Central de Abastos in Mexico City, has morphed from typically cacophonou­s and bustling to cloudy and anxious as deliveries and sales grow sluggish amid a days-long fuel shortage.

President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador late last month launched a sweeping plan to stanch rampant fuel theft, the first major move of his young administra­tion against widespread corruption and organised crime.

But the move to close key fuel pipelines that have been tapped by criminals and instead reroute distributi­on via trucks has prompted hours-long lines at gas stations, while threatenin­g to crimp the economy and damage the president’s popularity if shortages persist.

The effects of the crackdown have grown noticeably in the past week.

At the Central de Abastos, where 62,000 cars and trucks converge daily to buy and sell fruits, plants and other goods, according to figures provided by the market, vendors say many have been staying home.

“Forty to 50 per cent of supply has been affected,” said Rafael Perez, 43, the purchasing director for Drinks Depot, a beverages wholesaler.

“We are talking about suppliers from (the states of) Hidalgo, Guerrero, Cuernavaca, Puebla and Tlaxcala.”

“Our suppliers’ deliveries have been impacted,” Perez added. “Customers are not coming.”

Avocado vendor Juan Carlos Ximil, 35, said he had seen a drop of about 30 to 40 per cent in sales of his stock, which he normally purchases from suppliers outside the capital, including Morelos, Edomex and the avocado producing state of Michoacan.

His customers, modest streetside vendors and grocery stores with limited means of transport, have stayed away too, he said, most likely because fears of long waits to stock up on gasoline, or a shortage itself, would hit hard at their carefully calibrated daily routines.

“I feel like, more than a shortage, there is a kind of collective panic,” said Ximil.

“If you were used to consuming 200 pesos ( US$ 10.45) of gas you go and load up even if you don’t need it, for fear that you’ll run out.” — Reuters

 ??  ?? A police officer talks to the driver of a fuel truck as it leaves a distributi­on centre in Mexico City, Mexico. — Reuters photo
A police officer talks to the driver of a fuel truck as it leaves a distributi­on centre in Mexico City, Mexico. — Reuters photo

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