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Petrol stations BLOCKED as fuel shortage fears spark panic buying with 20 cars queuing from early hours

HUGE queues are blocking access to petrol stations amid fuel shortage fears.

Panic-buyers have been lining up from the early hours to fill their tanks – despite the government insisting motorists “carry on as normal”.

Huge queues at a petrol station in Billericay, Essex

i-ImagesDrivers queuing for petrol in Tonbridge, Kent[/caption]

On Thursday BP said it had closed a “handful” of its petrol forecourts due to a lock of available fuel.

A “small number” of Tesco refilling stations have also been impacted, Esso owner ExxonMobil, which runs the sites, said.

But hoards of drivers have been making late-night and early morning trips to stock up for fear the country’s fuel supply could completely run out.

One driver visited the ASDA forecourt in Eastleigh, Hampshire, at 11pm last night only to be met with 20 other cars waiting to get in.

Another motorist was one of many waiting for his local garage in Hunstanton, Norfolk, to open at 6am.

Elsewhere, customers at a BP petrol station in Billericay, Essex, faced major delays this morning, and others lined up outside a Sainsbury’s station in Tonbridge, Kent.

The Transport Secretary has tried to dissuade drivers from panic buying petrol.

Grant Shapps told Sky News: “The advice would be to carry on as normal, and that is what BP is saying as well.”


However, ministers are said to be drawing up emergency plans to bring soldiers in to drive tankers to forecourts suffering supply issues.

The Times has been told contingency plans, called Operation Escalin, would go into action if the situation significantly deteriorated.

The supply issues came as Hoyer, one of the UK’s largest fuel logistics companies, revealed it was “struggling to meet deliveries”.

It cannot find enough tanker drivers to make fuel deliveries.

They are typically 20 short of the 400 to 450 needed a day.

The Road Haulage Association says the UK lacks 100,000 HGV drivers.

Hanna Hofer, BP’s head of UK retail, told a government meeting last week the situation was “bad, very bad”. 

The company said up to 100 of its forecourts were short of at least one grade of fuel. It has started rationing petrol deliveries.

Several have been forced to close entirely due to problems with supplies.

Petrol stations on motorways and major roads are being prioritised for fuel deliveries.

The crisis comes on top of families facing soaring energy bills and empty shelves at supermarkets.

i-ImagesChaos as drivers queue for petrol in Tonbridge, Kent[/caption]