Please register to access this content.
To continue viewing the content you love, please sign in or create a new account
Dismiss
This content is for our paying subscribers only

World Mena

Lebanon petrol stations to begin nationwide strike today

Union says it is striking because of losses sustained using a parallel market for dollars



A worker fills up a car's tank at a petrol station, in Beirut, Lebanon, November 27, 2019.
Image Credit: REUTERS

Beirut: Lebanon’s petrol stations will begin an open-ended strike on Thursday nationwide, a union representing them said on Wednesday, amid the country’s worst economic crisis in decades.

Protests that have swept Lebanon since Oct. 17 have added to deep strains in the financial system, worsening a hard currency crunch that has hit the ability of many importers to bring in goods.

The union said it was striking because of losses sustained while using a parallel market for dollars relied on to import fuel, according to a statement cited by state news agency NNA.

The Lebanese pound’s value on the parallel market, the only source of dollars for most importers, has slumped since the protests erupted, currently trading about 40% weaker than the official rate.

Read more:

Advertisement

The central bank said last month that it would prioritise foreign currency reserves for fuel, medicine and wheat, but buyers tapping the facility are still required to supply 15% of their own dollar needs.

Lebanon’s energy ministry is set to trial a state tender for gasoline next month after fuel importers threatened to raise prices. The ministry sets price guidelines for fuel stations, who typically import the gasoline themselves.

The Lebanese Economic Bodies, a private sector group that includes industrialists and bankers, called off a separate three-day strike that was also to start Thursday, citing tough economic conditions and the need for employees to collect end-of-month salaries.

Advertisement