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Explainer | UK fuel crisis: why is it happening and when could it end?
- Trucker shortage has hit supply chains, as the government tries to entice drivers back into the industry
- Army tanker drivers are on standby and will be deployed if needed to help out
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Long lines are snaking down streets across the UK as drivers struggle to fill up their cars, causing widespread traffic misery and worries over whether the emergency services can do their work.
The British army has been put on standby to help out. And the government is blaming the public, urging people not to panic. Unsurprisingly, perhaps, people hear the word panic and do just that – panic buying fuel on a scale not seen since September 2000 when a similar crisis brought the country to a virtual standstill.
Here’s a look at how the crisis is unfolding:
What is going on?
In recent months, many companies have reported shortages, including fast-food chains KFC, McDonald’s and Nando’s. Supermarket shelves have also run dry.
At first, the shortages drew a shrug. An inconvenience for some, but hardly the stuff to shake an economy or a government. But Thursday’s news from oil giants BP and ExxonMobil that they were having to close some gas stations as a result of a truck driver shortage changed that.
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