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from.– Oil Crisis...is
the world about to be shocked
British PM warns of global oil
'shock'
Breitbart
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown warned Wednesday that the world
faced an era-defining oil "shock" that required urgent action, as
European leaders struggled to contain growing protests over soaring fuel
prices.
"It is now understood that a global shock on this scale requires global
solutions," Brown wrote in The Guardian newspaper.
Record oil prices of around 135 dollars a barrel have contributed to
protests worldwide over the rise in fuel and food costs, with fishermen
and truck drivers taking the lead in Europe, blocking ports and road
access to oil depots.
"However much we might wish otherwise, there is no easy answer to the
global oil problem without a comprehensive international strategy,"
Brown said, adding that the problem should be made a "top priority" at
the EU summit next month and the gathering of G8 leaders in July.
"The way we confront these issues will define our era," he said.
Brown's warning came a day after French President Nicolas Sarkozy urged
a Europe-wide cut in consumer taxes on fuel and Portugal's economy
minister Manuel Pinho called on the Slovenian head of the European Union
to hold an urgent debate on the crisis.
French consumers pay about 19.6 percent VAT on the price of fuel and
Sarkozy renewed his reduction proposal on Wednesday during a visit to
Warsaw.
"Should we really apply the same tax rate when the price of a barrel of
oil has doubled in one year and tripled in three years? I don't think
this is a crazy question to be asking," Sarkozy told reporters in the
Polish capital.
While fishermen called off strikes in key French ports on Wednesday,
lifting a week-long blockade of the country's largest oil refinery,
truckers and farmers stepped up their own protests over soaring fuel
prices.
A group of 300 farmers used their cars to block the entry to a Total
fuel depot near Toulouse, while around 40 protesting truck drivers
slowed traffic to a near-halt on Bordeaux's main ring road.
And a policeman and a protestor were slightly injured when riot police
using tear gas battled farmers blocking an oil depot near Sete on
France's Mediterranean coast.
In Bulgaria, where annual monthly salaries are among the lowest in the
EU and inflation rates among the highest, around 150 trucks drove slowly
along capital Sofia's ring road, disrupting traffic.
Bulgarian bus companies were preparing to launch a nationwide one-hour
strike on Friday.
In Spain, the main trucking union has called for an indefinite strike
beginning June 8.
At a meeting Tuesday of EU agriculture ministers in Slovenia, France and
Spain led the call for direct EU economic assistance to the fishing
industry.
EU member states can currently give their fishermen a subsidy of up to
30,000 euros (47,167 dollars) over a three-year period without seeking
the European Commission's approval.
But French and Spanish fishermen consider this too low and have demanded
additional help from their governments to be able to cope with the sharp
increase of diesel prices.
Italian, Greek and Portuguese fishermen have threatened to strike later
this week.
The Netherlands and Portugal however expressed skepticism, arguing for a
long-term solution for the fishermen, including modernizing their fleets
and increasing competitiveness.
"Short-term solutions are the most popular in political terms, but they
have no lasting effect," said Portuguese Agriculture Minister Jaime
Silva.
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