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Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Gavin Cordon, PA & Nick Wood & Max Channon

Military tanker drivers take to roads to ease fuel crisis

Army tanker drivers are taking to the roads for the first time to deliver supplies to beleaguered petrol stations hit by the fuel crisis.

Around 200 military personnel, half of them drivers, are being deployed in Operation Escalin, despite ministers insisting the situation at the pumps is easing.

The troops, who have been on standby since the start of last week, will initially be concentrated in London and the south east, where the worst shortages remain.

They include members of 3rd Logistic Support Regiment who have been training with the petroleum industry logistics company Hoyers in Thurrock in Essex.

Ministers have faced criticism for not sending them out earlier after a wave of panic-buying, prompted by reports that supplies to filling stations were being hit, led to chaos on the forecourts.

However, the Government has deployed its reserve tanker fleet, driven by civilian drivers, since last week in an effort to bolster supplies.

A Government spokesman said: “We are working closely with industry to help increase fuel stocks and there are signs of improvement in average forecourt stocks across the UK with demand continuing to stabilise.

“Stocks in London and the south of England have been recovering at slightly slower rates than other parts of the UK, so we have begun deploying military personnel to boost supply in these areas."

Operation Escalin was originally drawn up in preparation for possible fuel shortages following Britain’s final withdrawal from the EU single market at the start of the year.

The Petrol Retailers Association (PRA), representing independent retailers, has welcomed the deployment of the military, although it has suggested it will only have limited impact.

PRA chairman Brian Madderson said while the crisis was “virtually over” in Scotland, the north and the Midlands, more than one-in-five filling stations in London and the south east were out of fuel.

Boris Johnson, attending the opening day of the Tory Party conference in Manchester on Sunday, expressed confidence the crisis was “abating” and said the military were being deployed as a “precaution”.

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