Last week, hundreds of thousands of angry protesters -
including various labour unions - poured out in to the streets
marching against the plan they say is being imposed on them by
the government.
Both the Gonfreville and Port-Jerome refineries, located in northern France, can produce about 240,000 barrels-per-day (bpd), the biggest in the country, and supply the Ile-de-France region, where the capital city Paris is located. The Gonfreville refinery produces the aviation kerosene fuel used by local airports, which have reported difficulties in recent weeks due to a lack of supply. The civil aviation authority said in a post on Twitter air traffic would be disrupted from Monday until early on Thursday at Paris Orly, Marseille, Bordeaux and Toulouse airports.
An Esso spokesperson said Friday the company had been forced to halt production at their Port Jerome refinery following the complete blockage of crude deliveries from the Le Havre terminal that started March 20. The refinery is expected to return to production as soon as supply resumes from Le Havre and the strike has ceased. However, the restart for the port Jerome refinery will take several weeks, they added. A CGT union spokesperson - which represents workers at various refineries - said that the strike was renewed at both Esso's Fos and Port Jerome sites until Wednesday, and that deliveries from the Fos refinery were blocked and production was reduced. Force majeure was declared at the Dunkirk LNG terminal, which is set to see renewed disruptions from Tuesday morning to Wednesday morning, as delivery capacity reduced to 70 gigawatt-hours per day (GWh/d), operator Fluxys said. The duration of the strike will be decided tomorrow, CGT representative Frederic Ben told Reuters. The three other French LNG terminals operated by Engie subsidiary Elengy have been blocked by the strike since March 7. (Reporting by Forrest Crellin, America Hernandez and Silvia Aloisi; Editing by Jan Harvey and Aurora Ellis)