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Striking French refinery workers defy government threats

14 Oct 2022 - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}      

Drivers in cars and motorbikes queue for fuel at a gas station in Paris on October 12,  as filling stations across France are low on petrol as a pay-related strike by workers at energy giant TotalEnergies entered its third week despite government pressure to negotiate 

 

 

 PARIS (AFP) -  Striking French oil refinery employees voted Wednesday to maintain blockades now in their third week, despite a government order for some of them to return to work in a bid to get fuel supplies flowing.


The industrial action in pursuit of pay hikes has paralysed six out of the seven fuel refineries in France, leading to shortages of petrol and diesel exacerbated by panic-buying from drivers.
But, President Emmanuel Macron vowed in a prime-time television interview that things would return to normal “in the coming week”.


Having previously threatened to use emergency powers to order essential workers back to the job on pain of fines or jail time, the government announced Wednesday it was putting them into action.


Officials said that an Esso-Exxon-Mobil fuel depot in northwest France and another belonging to TotalEnergies in the northeast would be the first where workers are “requisitioned”.
Long queues of motorists desperately seeking fuel again blocked streets in Paris and other major cities.


As of Tuesday evening, 31 percent of stations across the country lacked at least one grade of fuel. In the greater Paris region, that figure stood at 44 percent.
Esther Berrebi, a home health aide in the capital, was trying her third station since 7:00 am.


“I’m very angry, and very worried,” she told AFP. “I understand they want higher salaries, but I don’t understand how they can halt an entire country.”
“We can’t allow the country to be blocked because a few people always want to take things further even when a deal has been reached” between bosses and some of the unions, Macron told broadcaster France 2.


He also warned managers that “it’s important to get back around the table and talk”.


The hard-left CGT union leading the stoppages said Tuesday that any requisitioning would be “not necessary and illegal”, raising the prospect of legal challenges.
It is seeking a 10-percent pay rise for staff at TotalEnergies, retroactive for all of 2022, and says management has refused to hold talks.


“It would have been easier to requisition our CEO and bring him to the negotiating table,” said Germinal Lancelin, the CGT leader for ExxonMobil at the Gravenchon-Port-Jerome refinery.
On Wednesday, TotalEnergies said it would meet all union representatives, having previously insisted it would meet only those who accepted the end of the blockades.

“We’ll see what management puts on the table, but this is a first step,” said Antoine Lopez, 50, enjoying a barbecue with colleagues at a picket outside the Feyzin refinery in eastern France.


CGT’s branch inside the company said bosses had agreed to drop its demand for an end to the refinery strike before opening wage talks, but were still insisting fuel deliveries should resume.


“It’s up to the strikers to decide, not us, but I’d lay money on them not agreeing” to the condition, CGT representative Thierry Dufresne told reporters.


Until now, the government had been reluctant to inflame the conflict, but in recent days officials have had to acknowledge the growing frustration and economic damage caused by drivers spending hours trying to fill their tanks.


“Petrol is too important for us. It’s been a nightmare for a week,” Santiago, a delivery driver, told AFP in Paris.


Even if key personnel are ordered back to work, “it will take at least two weeks” to restore fuel supplies, said Gil Villard, a CGT representative for Esso at the Fos-sur-Mer refinery outside Marseille, in the southeast.


At a time of high energy prices and inflation, TotalEnergies’ bumper profits have caused anger, leading to calls for a windfall tax.


The standoff could invigorate a march planned by left-wing political parties on Sunday against the policies of President Emmanuel Macron and the high cost of living. 
“I hope this is the spark that begins a general strike,” leading Greens party parliamentarian Sandrine Rousseau told Franceinfo radio Wednesday.


The industrial action comes as Macron is preparing to push through a contentious pension overhaul by the end of the winter, despite warnings from some allies about the risk of widespread resistance.


Labour unions and left-wing political parties have vowed to try to block the reform, which would see the pension age raised to 64 or 65 for most people, up from 62 currently.