WORLD / EUROPE
Time for talks is over: France orders more fuel depot staff back to work
Published: Oct 17, 2022 10:39 PM
The time for talking is over, French ­Finance Minister Bruno le Maire said on Monday, as the government ordered more fuel depot staff back to work to try to restore petrol supplies that have been disrupted by strikes for weeks.

The government said it had requisitioned six workers at a TotalEnergies depot in Dunkirk, northern France, and would do the same at its Feyzin depot in the southeast later.

The oil company and unions ­representing a majority of its workers reached a pay deal including a 7 percent increase and a bonus on Friday, but the company failed to end its dispute with the hardline General Confederation of Labour (CGT) union, which is ­demanding a 10 percent pay rise, citing inflation and huge profits made by the firm.

"The time for negotiation is over," Le Maire told BFM TV, adding it was "unacceptable" and "illegitimate" for the CGT to continue walkouts into a fourth week when a deal has been reached.

A CGT representative said workers had extended their protest on Monday at TotalEnergies' refineries at Normandie, Donges, La Mede, and Feyzin, as well as the depot in Dunkirk.

The government has already requisitioned staff elsewhere, a move vehemently opposed by the CGT, which has called on other workers to join its protest.

But even so, petrol supplies will take some time to get back to normal. ­Transport Minister Clement Beaune told France Inter radio that petrol stations might still have problems until next week, adding, "We're still struggling."

According to government data, roughly one in three petrol stations has not been supplied normally in the last few days.

As tensions rise in the euro zone's second-biggest economy amid high inflation, strikes have spilt over into other parts of the energy sector, including at nuclear giant EDF where maintenance work crucial for Europe's power supply will be delayed.