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"path": "/2026/04/10/fuel-price-protests-blocking-roads-across-ireland-happen-uk-27921442/",
"publishedAt": "2026-04-10T13:26:08.000Z",
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"textContent": "To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5\n\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\tvideo\n\nUp Next\n\nPrevious Page\n\nNext Page\n\nDublin’s roads are gripped by fuel demonstrations, with protests blocking the country’s busiest motorway near the airport.\n\nIreland has been embroiled in widespread protests since Tuesday after hauliers and agricultural workers blocked motorways and fuel depots on the coast.\n\nIt has raised concern over critical supplies like medicines and the situation for frontline workers, while travel to hubs like Dublin Airport has been upended after major queues stretching for miles.\n\nNow over 100 petrol stations are running dry after the ongoing action.\n\nPeople heading to Dublin Airport decided to walk with their suitcases after traffic on the M50 was ground to a halt by the protest blockades (Picture: Brian Lawless/PA Wire)\n\nThe situation has become so inflamed that the Irish Defence Forces are said to have been placed on standby and ready to clear blockades.\n\n## Sign up for all of the latest stories\n\nStart your day informed with Metro's **News Updates** newsletter or get **Breaking News** alerts the moment it happens.\n\nSome fuel has been trickling through from the affected ports and refineries, including from Foynes Port, where a convoy of fuel HGVs were released and intended for front-line workers and hospitals.\n\nThe action by hauliers, farmers, and coach and taxi drivers was sparked the sky-high petrol and diesel prices due to the uncertainty over the Strait of Hormuz, a key oil passage.\n\nThe organisation of the protests is shrouded in mystery and it remains unclear who, if any, are the leaders, with action being organised on social media channels without oversight.\n\nTo view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5\n\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\tvideo\n\nUp Next\n\nPrevious Page\n\nNext Page\n\nThe standstills and road closures have had heartbreaking consequences for some after missed hospital appointments.\n\nTony O’Rourke, a retired firefighter, said his terminally ill wife missed a radiation treatment because of a blockade.\n\nTraffic on the M50 outside Dublin Airport ground to a halt today, forcing passengers to walk with their suitcases the rest of the way after tractor and truck blockages.\n\nThe airport told passengers to allow extra time for journeys due to protest activity wreaking havoc on nearby roads.\n\nCourier giant DPD said it will temporarily suspend services in Ireland from tomorrow due to the fuel protest disruption.\n\n## Latest UK petrol and diesel prices\n\nOil and fuel prices remain high – despite the news of the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz and the fragile US-Iran ceasefire giving a glimmer of hope for stressed-out motorists on Wednesday.\n\nHowever, since then, major cracks have appeared in the truce and oil shipments have not returned to normal as transit through the Strait remains restricted by Iran.\n\n**Petrol** in the UK now costs 158.16p a litre on average, while **diesel** is at a record-high 191.31p, although retail prices may vary between forecourts.\n\nMotoring expert RAC’s head of policy Simon Williams said that average fuel prices have risen every day for the last 40 days since the Iran war started.\n\nHe said: ‘A full tank of diesel for a 55-litre family car is now £105.22, up £27 since the end of February. The cost for a similar petrol car is now £87, £14 more than it was before the conflict began.\n\n‘More positively, as we predicted earlier this week, the rate of price increases has slowed due to oil falling back below $100 for the last two days.\n\n‘This has reduced wholesale costs which should, if sustained, lead to the price of petrol coming down. So, as things stand, we really shouldn’t see unleaded rise any further for the time being and the record diesel price of 199p now shouldn’t be surpassed.’\n\nIn comparison, fuel at Ireland’s forecourts now costs around 193.9 cents for petrol, and 218.9 cents for diesel.\n\n## What caused the fuel protests?\n\nThe row boils down to anger over rising petrol, diesel and gas prices, which have soared non-stop since US and Israel attacked Iran on February 28.\n\nThe protesters are calling for the Irish government to take action, or many will be pushed out of business.\n\nProfessional drivers want a cut in fuel prices, while some are also calling for measures like VAT reduction to bring down prices, and a price cap.\n\nHauliers, truckers, other professional drivers and farmers are among the protesters after anger over surging fuel prices due to Iran war (Picture: Brian Lawless/PA Wire)\n\nWhile the convoys include farmers and hauliers, the Irish Road Haulage Association or the Irish Farmers’ Association are not involved.\n\nIreland’s transport minister Darragh O’Brien warned that the blockades ‘need to end now,’ adding that the government doesn’t want to ‘deal with this situation in a heavy-handed way and I don’t think that will happen.’\n\n## Could fuel protests happen in the UK?\n\nThere are currently no signs of fuel protests spreading to the UK, but they have happened before.\n\nSome social media posts in UK-based Facebook groups have called for similar action, but there doesn’t seem to be any coordination for protests.\n\nThe latest bout of significant protest was in 2022 after the Ukraine war caused fuel prices to shoot up, and there was some action in 2005 and 2007.\n\nThe most notorious fuel protests were in 2000, when Britain was brought to its knees for a week after angry truckers and farmers took action that saw petrol pumps and supermarkets run low.\n\nMatthew Paterson, a professor of international politics at the University of Manchester who has researched the naughties fuel protests, told **Metro** previously that motoring continues to be ‘an obviously flashpoint’ for possible future protests.\n\n******Get in touch with our news team by emailing us atwebnews@metro.co.uk.******\n\n**For more stories like this,** check our news page.\n\nComment now Comments \nAdd Metro as a Preferred Source on Google\nAdd as preferred source\n",
"title": "Fuel price protests are blocking roads across Ireland – could they happen in the UK?"
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