Portugal May Declare Civil Order to Counter Fuel Supply Shortage

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Portugal may declare a civil order to ensure that truck drivers, who began a strikeÌęAug. 12, deliver enough fuel to stop gas stations across the country from running dry at the height of the countryâs tourism season, Prime Minister Antonio Costa said.
In the runup to the strike, the government said truck drivers needed to supply gas stations with at least 50% of their fuel supplies. At 5:20 p.m. local time, about a third of Portugalâs almost 3,000 petrol stations were partially or totally out of fuel, according to Ja Nao Da Para Abastecer website, which tracks data on the number of gas pumps in Portugal.

Costa
âUnfortunately, some truck drivers arenât complying with the minimum services,â Costa said in comments broadcast by SIC Noticias television station after meeting with President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa in Lisbon. âWe need to ensure that the country is operating normally.â
Costa said he was going to meet with his Cabinet on Aug. 12 to consider the civil order. Portugalâs southern Algarve region, a popular European vacation destination, has been the area most affected by the strike, said Costa. The truck driversâ strike began at midnight to protest low wages. Last week, the government declared an âenergy emergencyâ ahead of the strike.
A similar strike in April led to fuel shortages across the country. It ended four days later, but talks about possible salary increases broke down, prompting unions to call this weekâs strike for an indefinite period.
The protest takes place less than two months before a general election scheduled for Oct. 6, with the governing Socialist party ahead by 15.2 percentage points of the center-right Social Democrats, the main opposition party, according to a survey published on the website of TVI television channel July 30. Costa said the upcoming elections would not limit his governmentâs authority.
âThe government isnât a hostage of the elections,â said Costa. âWe will carry out duties as we should regardless of the electoral cost that those measures might have.â