Skip to main content

Truckers wait to fill up their trucks as oil refinery workers block their plant in Berre l'Etang, southern France, Wednesday Oct.13, 2010.Claude Paris

French workers protesting against pension reform said they had halted supplies from most of the country's oil refineries on Wednesday and were also blocking some fuel depots as the risk grew of shortages at petrol pumps.

Refinery workers downed tools on Tuesday as part of nationwide strikes over a government pension reform, adding to strain on France's fuel supply due to a dispute at the Fos-Lavera oil port that has lasted more than two weeks.

Nine out of 12 French refineries went on strike on Tuesday. Workers at some plants voted for a 48-hour stoppage, while others who backed a 24-hour strike were due to vote again on Wednesday on whether to extend their action.

Eight refineries saw fuel supplies blocked on Wednesday, including all of oil major Total's six refineries in France, the CGT trade union said.

"By some estimates the strike could continue during the next two weeks and lead to product shortages," the International Energy Agency said in its monthly report on Wednesday.

It said it expected more products to start flowing to France from abroad after a fleet of diesel cargoes was sent to Europe from the United States and Asia last week.

The IEA also said European refinery utilisation was only at 82 percent right now, which meant supplies could be increased elsewhere within the region to deal with a disruption.

"The problem, rather, is a logistical one involving the movement of crude and products within France," the IEA said.

However, shipbrokers told Reuters on Wednesday that at least three tankers shipping Northeast Asian gas oil to Europe were cancelled as the arbitrage was shut.

ICE gasoil prices for November rose by nearly 1 percent by 1050 GMT but stayed off their previous peaks this week, reversing their previous backwardation to contango in a sign market worries over products shortages might be easing.

European gasoline prices stood near five-month highs at around $765-$769 per tonne.

The IEA said France appeared to be using emergency crude stocks in the worst affected regions and replenishing them with commercial reserves held elsewhere in the country.

Unions said a small number of local fuel depots were also blocked due to the strike, raising the risk of shortages occurring at fuel pumps much more quickly if such actions were repeated at depots across the country.

JBC consultancy said in a report it expected middle distillate prices to rise should the strike continue, which would in turn favour the use of volumes held off-shore.

At Fos-Lavera, a longer-running strike over port and pension reforms entered its 17th day. Workers were due to meet later on Wednesday to discuss the outcome of talks the previous day between unions and management, the CGT said.

French oil lobby UFIP said on Tuesday that petrol stations could start to see shortages in just over a week if the Fos-Lavera strike continued, but assuming refinery disruption would not last.

Production at four of Total's five working refineries would be halted progressively, a decision that was supported in a vote among strikers or made at the request of Total management, a CGT spokesman said on Wednesday.

Interact with The Globe