Anger grows in Europe over rising fuel prices
Trucker protests block roads, prompt food shortages; more widespread actions planned
Last Modified: Thursday, June 12, 2008 at 5:53 a.m.
LONDON -- Americans paying a record $4-plus a gallon for gasoline are feeling the pinch this summer, but it's even worse for Europeans.
Angered by soaring fuel prices, Europeans are protesting and taking a toll on consumers and companies by creating food shortages and blocked highways.
Motorists are paying the equivalent of $10 a gallon in France, more than $9 a gallon in Britain and more than $8 a gallon in Belgium.
Tens of thousands of truckers already are on strike or threatening to strike in Italy, Spain, France, Britain and Portugal.
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown has urged motorists not to panic as tanker drivers supplying Shell's service stations threatened to launch a four-day strike starting Friday.
"The most responsible thing the public can do is continue to buy as normal," he told reporters.
In France, truckers plan a massive national strike beginning Monday. A go-slow convey of up to 200 French truckers caused gridlock Monday in Bordeaux by creating nearly 20 miles of traffic backups. In Italy, truck drivers are preparing a strike to begin June 30.
Jerome Cordier of Unostra, the French union of trucking companies, told London's Guardian newspaper that the recent protests marked a new phase of coordinated strikes across Europe.
Officials fear that the protests could spur widespread disruptions during the summer holiday season.
Fuel costs in Europe have long been much higher than in the United States, mostly as a result of fuel taxes that account for at least half the price -- and sometimes more than 70 percent, depending on the country -- that motorists pay.
"Every time the price of oil goes up, the amount of tax goes up and it's the motorists who suffer," said Roger Lawson, London region coordinator for the Association of British Drivers. "The government should consider reducing the tax or at least not allowing it to go up any more."
Britain's finance minister, Alistair Darling, has said that a planned 2-pence-per-liter rise in the fuel tax (the equivalent of about 15 U.S. cents per gallon), due in October, could be delayed because of the rising costs of oil.
Amid warnings that the price of oil could soar to perhaps $250 a barrel within 18 months, EU officials plan to meet next week to consider solutions to surging food and fuel costs.
But experts say there isn't much the EU can do.
"What the EU can do is quite limited because this is really a member states issue because member states set fuel taxes," said Adam McCarthy, associate director of Energy Policy Consulting in Brussels, Belgium. "And if a member state tries to lower or even freeze fuel taxes, they'll then be left with a massive hole in their budget."
McCarthy, who says he now spends nearly 60 euros -- or about $93 -- to fill up his Volvo, said he expects protests to continue across Europe as drivers become increasingly frustrated.
In Spain, the situation was particularly tense this week.
Spanish consumers started stockpiling food Wednesday over concerns that an ongoing truckers' strike that has disrupted deliveries might cause food shortages.
A three-day protest has resulted in more than 2,500 trucks blocking a Spanish-French border crossing.
Workers at Madrid's main food wholesale market said this week that supplies of meat, fish, and fruit would start to thin out soon.
At the same time, automakers in Spain said most of the country's automobile plants have had to cut or halt production for lack of spare parts.
One protester was killed Tuesday night when a van drove through a picket line in the southern Spanish city of Granada. Another protester was killed in Portugal when a truck failed to stop at a picket line.
Next Article in Business-Home
-
Exchange Bank CEO quits suddenly
Exchange Bank's top executive, J. Barrie Graham, resigned unexpectedly as president and chief executive officer of Sonoma County's oldest and largest commercial bank.
Colleagues inside and outside the bank were stunned by the news as it spread...
Events Calendar More Events Submit Event
- Hwy. 12 reopens
- Woman dies in crash near Campbell Cove
- Actress has double mastectomy
- Power returning to downtown
- County cuts health benefits
- 49ers quarterbacks not about to rock the boat
- Bigfoot was just gorilla suit
- 500-pound statue taken from Oakmont club
- Exchange Bank CEO quits
- No charges against teacher
- Power returning to downtown
- County cuts health benefits
- Exchange Bank CEO quits
- 55 men charged in child-porn sting
- Union workers protest health care cuts
- 500-pound statue taken from Oakmont club
- 80 pot plants seized from home
- Police searching for gas station robber
- Woman dies in crash near Campbell Cove
- Only 26 survive jet crash in Spain
- Chickens making a comeback? 0 min ago
- Slow Food gains ground 2 min ago
- Power returning to downtown 5 min ago
- Celebrating the 'wholeness of food' -- and wine 7 min ago
- Lawmaker: Electric cars too quiet 16 min ago
- Moving up the charts 29 min ago
- New Only 26 survive jet crash in Spain 31 min ago
- Hwy. 12 reopens 36 min ago
- Dave Matthews Band sax player dies 37 min ago
- A new pot of tea 38 min ago
Featured Businesses

Comments
Post a comment | View all comments on this topic.
June 13, 2008 12:47:25 pm
RE: http://www.pressdemocrat.com/article/20080612/NEWS07/806120388
Euopeans get free health care. Their gas taxes pay for it. If you calculate what we Americans pay for a crappy HMO they are getting the better deal. $4 more per gallon x 100 gallons a month equals $400 for healthcare. Try buying health care in the US for $400. We had better join together or we will be paying $8 and still no healthcare. Sign the petition
<a href="http://www.americansforjobsandenergy.org/">
www.AmericansForJobsAndEnergy.org</a>
This petition supports Act S.2958, which is in the House and needs support!
Post a comment | View all comments