I got lucky as I filled up on Wednesday while shopping at Asda. The news was on the radio as I drove home and on Thursday it seems that the queues at Asda for petrol prevented people accessing the supermarket at all as they couldn't reach the car park with queues right down the road. Its like the people stockpiling loo rolls! Idiots all of them!
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Petrol queues reported now on BBC news
(718 Posts)Just watching the news showing people queuing for petrol. Apparently ‘the supply chain is under intense pressure”. BP is prioritising motorways and major routes. Deliveries are unpredictable and the army may be involved.
More talk about changing visa regs temporarily.
I don't think the Tesco delivery driver is being quite truthful either
growstuff Why wouldn’t he be truthful? What advantage would there be to him? One imagines he was describing the issue based on his experience, just as posters on here are doing. In most areas, daily deliveries are expected at Tesco, if they are to outlets not linked to Esso. Asda, too, seems to be coping.
There was a petrol station manager on BBC news this morning he said on average on a Friday we sell 8,000 litres of fuel, yesterday we sold 28,000 He is now closed and awaiting a delivery.
panic buying frenzy …
Not everyone with a half full tank of petrol and filling up is panic buying. I had a half full tank yesterday and filled up - why? As I have to drive 250 miles home today with a 3 yr old and I didn’t want to get to rural Aberdeenshire and run out. People would have been welcome to challenge me and would have received a mouthful in return as it’s not anyone’s business why I needed to fill up. Everyone should fill what they need and no more, but I also think people can’t sit in judgement of those filling up as no-one knows exactly why they are doing so.
I blame the MSM totally for putting this on their headline news. Last night on TV there was a garage owner saying there is plenty fuel and there is no need to panic buy. As long as the media keep showing it the people will panic buy. Then the people who really need the fuel will be unable to get it. You just wonder why the MSM behave so irresponsibly?
South London petrol stations have run dry. There are none in my area which are open. I missed out and now have a car with virtually no petrol. I understand queuing starts before 6am. What about emergency vehicles or people trying to get to work? Plumbers needing to get to an emergency call out but can't go due to no petrol? What a state we're in.
There's a shortage of HGV drivers in Europe too, so no Brexit effect there.
Unfortunately the BBC sky daily mail and most of the media seem to be running the country at the moment their articles are nothing more than scaremongering which in turn prompt people to panic buy . When you actually listen to what the media is saying it usually have the words Could.Maybe in the articles the press at the moment is very dangerous to Britain which is very worrying
The roads were rammed with people queuing for petrol, absolutely ridiculous and selfish, you couldn’t navigate the island by the petrol station, it was dangerous as if they were fleeing for sanctuary somewhere. I will need petrol pretty soon but hopefully the panic will subside and I can get some then. Are these the same people that stripped the shelves of essentials at the beginning of lockdown? If there truly was a shortage it would have to go to those with essential jobs.
growstuff
GrannyGravy13
Ashcombe
Copied from a post on Facebook:-
"After seeing the news last night about fuel shortages, I popped in to Tesco and I spoke to a very nice tanker driver who was rather informative and told me that the boats carrying fuel are arriving daily at Plymouth, the two depots in Plymouth are extremely well stocked and there is no shortage of drivers. His only concern was news articles misleading the public. He finished by explaining that it is only BP who have issues."Yep, today’s petrol buying frenzy is entirely the fault of U.K. media.
It wasn't the fault of the media on Thursday morning when my Tesco didn't have any fuel because there hadn't been any news about it. I don't think the Tesco delivery driver is being quite truthful either. Tesco themselves made an announcement that some of their petrol stations are affected. Apparently, some of them have been outsourced to Esso and there's been a problem with them. It was sod's law for me that the next nearest service station is BP. I had no idea that there was any kind of problem.
Same here. In fact i pottered into Tesco petrol station and was surprised as it was tapped off and assumed that the pumps were out of action for some reason because there had been nothing to say about shortage prior to that.
No pictures of people queuing for petrol in Europe are there?
We are indeed.......doomed!
Went out for dinner last night. Came out of the restaurant at about 8.30 pm last night and saw that vehicles were queuing all along the high street through town as if it was a very busy Saturday. We walked towards home wondering what could have happened. As we turned the corner towards the petrol station all became clear. The petrol station is on a small roundabout. The queue of cars we had seen were waiting to turn into the petrol station. This was also causing chaos at the roundabout. I'm not sure whether this was caused by people panic buying petrol that they wouldn't usually be buying or people who had tried to fill up elsewhere during the day and found there was no petrol available.
GrannyGravy13
Ashcombe
Copied from a post on Facebook:-
"After seeing the news last night about fuel shortages, I popped in to Tesco and I spoke to a very nice tanker driver who was rather informative and told me that the boats carrying fuel are arriving daily at Plymouth, the two depots in Plymouth are extremely well stocked and there is no shortage of drivers. His only concern was news articles misleading the public. He finished by explaining that it is only BP who have issues."Yep, today’s petrol buying frenzy is entirely the fault of U.K. media.
It wasn't the fault of the media on Thursday morning when my Tesco didn't have any fuel because there hadn't been any news about it. I don't think the Tesco delivery driver is being quite truthful either. Tesco themselves made an announcement that some of their petrol stations are affected. Apparently, some of them have been outsourced to Esso and there's been a problem with them. It was sod's law for me that the next nearest service station is BP. I had no idea that there was any kind of problem.
Brexit! What did anyone expect - also shelves empty of lots of stuff! Saying no more apart from England and Wales voted for it! What did you expect???
I made the mistake of taking the slip road into the services on my way home from work to get a coffee! I spent 2 hours stuck as the queue for the petrol station ( off the same roundabout to the service block) completely blocked everything! Dozens of lorries and cars all stationary- on a major motorway service roundabout.- nobody going anywhere.
MaizieD
Rosie51
Brilliant, simple idea HurdyGurdy ! I posted up thread about 2000 and the constant topping up causing a bad situation to be worse, but hadn't thought of your effective remedy.
Seems like a good idea, but people have topped up with a tiny amount of fuel before they go to pay for it. So how could they be stopped?
I recall this being exactly what happened last time we had a real petrol shortage, when the tanker drivers were on strike.
I suppose it might need emergency legislation? Or else prominent notices saying "minimum transaction £25" and making it clear that's what you will be charged. I seem to recall notices on fuel pumps in the past that said 'minimum delivery...' I can't recall what the figure was but I'm assuming a petrol can full?? (such as one would purchase if you'd run out of fuel and walked to the garage for an emergency supply) Isn't it a criminal offence to leave a petrol station without paying for your fuel in which case when you either paid at the pump or in the kiosk you'd be charged that £25? I'm sure if there was a will, there'd be a way 
Just read on FB one of my friends has traipsed round 3 or 4 petrol stations to find one without a queue. She isn't going away. She seldom uses her car. But she felt she had to join in. She fails to see it's people like her that cause problems.
We needed petrol and managed to get some this morning. Only car there. But this is quite a rural area so we tend to avoid panic buyers.
un be lie va ble
What does that mean?
This is just un be lie va ble - Tabloids begging for immigrants to return
fb.watch/8e0ZQ5JDyG/
Grandson can walk to school - but not sure if grand-daughter will be able to get to hers next few weeks, across town.
Rosie51
Brilliant, simple idea HurdyGurdy ! I posted up thread about 2000 and the constant topping up causing a bad situation to be worse, but hadn't thought of your effective remedy.
Seems like a good idea, but people have topped up with a tiny amount of fuel before they go to pay for it. So how could they be stopped?
I recall this being exactly what happened last time we had a real petrol shortage, when the tanker drivers were on strike.
Brilliant, simple idea HurdyGurdy ! I posted up thread about 2000 and the constant topping up causing a bad situation to be worse, but hadn't thought of your effective remedy. 
The media have a lot to answer for in feeding the public's fears.
There are queues in our town, and presumably replicated up and down the country, reminiscent of those in (?)2000.
There is NO fuel shortage, and this whole farce started when BP temporarily closed a small number of forecourts.
Along comes the media to turn that into "fuel shortages".
To nip this nonsense in the bud, the petrol stations should make it a minimum £25 spend on fuel, per visit.
This would stop the panicking fools from constantly topping up their almost-full tanks, and ensure that those who actually need fuel, can get it.
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