Around 10% of petrol stations in the Paris region are having problems getting enough fuel supplies, French government spokesman Olivier Veran said on Friday, as strikes at four TotalEnergies (TTEF.PA) refineries continue for a tenth day.
Strike action and unplanned maintenance has taken offline more than 60% of France’s refining capacity- or 740,000 barrels per day (bpd) – forcing the country to import more when global supply uncertainty has increased the cost.
Nothing has changed at the four TotalEnergies sites since Wednesday, CGT spokesperson Thierry Defresne told Reuters.
Veran reiterated that France had enough supplies of petrol overall.
“There are temporary problems regarding distribution,” Veran told BFM TV and RMC Radio.
He said that 90% of petrol stations in the Paris area had no problems, although 15% of petrol stations in France overall were experiencing these “temporary difficulties.”
The strike is part of wider industrial action across France – over wage demands, pensions and purchasing power as inflation spirals across Europe – that has also led to strikes at nuclear reactors restricting power supply.
The UFIP petroleum industry body said the shortages at fuel pumps were due to logistics and not insufficient supplies, saying that the draw on storage had no impact on the national level of reserves.
“It is flexibility given to some regions to tap and balance with other regions who have surplus,” the UFIP spokesperson said about the stock draw.
In the hardest-hit Hauts-de-France region, close to the border with Belgium, authorities banned the sale of petrol and diesel in jerry cans and other portable containers.
The prefect of the Nord department around the city of Lille said he had asked some petrol stations on Wednesday evening to ensure that health emergency workers were given priority.