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News > France

French PM to Order Refineries Workers Back as Strike Continues

  • Workers from TotalEnergies and Esso ExxonMobil release colored smoke bomb during a protest called by CGT union outside TotalEnergies refinery in La Mede, Chateau Neuf les Martigues, France, 11 October 2022

    Workers from TotalEnergies and Esso ExxonMobil release colored smoke bomb during a protest called by CGT union outside TotalEnergies refinery in La Mede, Chateau Neuf les Martigues, France, 11 October 2022 | Photo: EFE/EPA/GUILLAUME HORCAJUELO

Published 11 October 2022
Opinion

On Tuesday, French Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne ordered local authorities to requisition workers needed to ensure petrol supply to service stations across the country as France struggles with strikes at oil refineries operated by TotalEnergies and ExxonMobil.

"A salary disagreement does not justify blocking the country," Borne told the National Assembly. "To refuse to discuss is to make the French the victims of an absence of dialogue."
   
According to Borne, 30 percent of the country's gas stations have already run out of at least one fuel type, with the Greater Paris region being the worst affected.

RELATED:
 Fuel Shortage Grows in France as Strikes at Refineries Continue

   

Over the weekend, TotalEnergies and the General Confederation of Labour (CGT) agreed to start negotiations, but no agreement was reached.
   
The strikers' actions have led to a decrease in fuel deliveries, provoking fears of fuel shortage and long hours of waiting. School bus transportation was also affected by the strikes.
   
On Tuesday, French minister for energy transition Agnes Pannier-Runacher warned of the manipulated prices in several service stations.
   
"Fuel supply tensions do not justify the soaring prices at several service stations. We will not allow prices to be artificially inflated," she said on her social media account.
   
The strikers demand a raise in salary to compensate for the high inflation that France is experiencing.

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