Lindfield by the Pond
Well-known member
Waiting for the "Filling up my Tesla" as I type...........
Waiting for the "Filling up my Tesla" as I type...........
Good old BBC, well worth the licence fee.
Radio4 at 5.45-ish this evening cut out all the British bullshitters (on both sides) who always seem to think they know so much about the continent. By talking to the head of the German logistics industry trade body. These are the facts:
- The shortage of HGV drivers is continental wide.
- Germany is short by 60,000, which worsens by 15,000 per annum. [100,000 in the UK apparently].
- Continental countries at present are not suffering the effect on goods/fuel supply to the extent we see here.
- It’s a long term structural change. Young people aren’t prepared to work long days or stay away from home.
- Increasing pay in Germany hasn’t solved this. Young continentals and Brits simply don’t want to be HGV drivers.
- Germany has not found that Eastern European drivers will solve their issues at all. They simply have no idea how they’re going to crack the ever growing driver shortage.
To me it’s interesting about the career/job choices of young people across all of Europe. Have people got more and more fussy as we’ve become more civilised or economies have matured? People would rather work in a supermarket or be unemployed than take a career with long hours it appears.
IMO this story had not been sensationalised or engineered to cause a frenzy and has been presented factually.
thats really interesting, thank you. Shame the BBC didnt do an equally good job on the fuel thing!
As its a general thing rather than an UK issue alone, it does seem that the "easy solution" of making HGV a "skill shortage occupation wont help
thats really interesting, thank you. Shame the BBC didnt do an equally good job on the fuel thing!
As its a general thing rather than an UK issue alone, it does seem that the "easy solution" of making HGV a "skill shortage occupation wont help
but the point is 1% is normal and fine- my husband run petrol stations for years, on any given day a few garages in his area would run out due to late deliveries, driver illness or some such. No one is saying the government have tackled the lorry driver shortage properly- that is a **** up of monumental proportions, we all saw it coming. What we are saying is this "fuel crisis" has been manufactured by the media badly reporting and then the usual ****wits panic buying - an no I dont consider those needing to fill up because they have to get to hospita, or work, or various other reasons panic buying. I do consider a lot of people filling up simply because they are 3/4 full the problem
To be fair that German expert also said there was no fuel shortages on German forecourts or empty shelves in German supermarkets.Good old BBC, well worth the licence fee.
Radio4 at 5.45-ish this evening cut out all the British bullshitters (on both sides) who always seem to think they know so much about the continent. By talking to the head of the German logistics industry trade body. These are the facts:
- The shortage of HGV drivers is continental wide.
- Germany is short by 60,000, which worsens by 15,000 per annum. [100,000 in the UK apparently].
- Continental countries at present are not suffering the effect on goods/fuel supply to the extent we see here.
- It’s a long term structural change. Young people aren’t prepared to work long days or stay away from home.
- Increasing pay in Germany hasn’t solved this. Young continentals and Brits simply don’t want to be HGV drivers.
- Germany has not found that Eastern European drivers will solve their issues at all. They simply have no idea how they’re going to crack the ever growing driver shortage.
To me it’s interesting about the career/job choices of young people across all of Europe. Have people got more and more fussy as we’ve become more civilised or economies have matured? People would rather work in a supermarket or be unemployed than take a career with long hours it appears.
except the point there wasnt a petrol shortage, only a few sites from one company having problems. until this morning.
And - there isnt any sun
Good old BBC, well worth the licence fee.
Radio4 at 5.45-ish this evening cut out all the British bullshitters (on both sides) who always seem to think they know so much about the continent. By talking to the head of the German logistics industry trade body. These are the facts:
- The shortage of HGV drivers is continental wide.
- Germany is short by 60,000, which worsens by 15,000 per annum. [100,000 in the UK apparently].
- Continental countries at present are not suffering the effect on goods/fuel supply to the extent we see here.
- It’s a long term structural change. Young people aren’t prepared to work long days or stay away from home.
- Increasing pay in Germany hasn’t solved this. Young continentals and Brits simply don’t want to be HGV drivers.
- Germany has not found that Eastern European drivers will solve their issues at all. They simply have no idea how they’re going to crack the ever growing driver shortage.
To me it’s interesting about the career/job choices of young people across all of Europe. Have people got more and more fussy as we’ve become more civilised or economies have matured? People would rather work in a supermarket or be unemployed than take a career with long hours it appears.
Did they discuss any reasons why the UK shortage is double (population based) that of the Germans ?
That’s the first thing which came to my mind. Whilst there’s a shortage of 45-50k here, if you weight it per population the U.K. shortage is around 3 times that of the U.K. Furthermore, the German situation has been a steady shortage whereas the U.K. has had a massive recent spike.....a sudden spike can’t help.
London Road in Burgess Hill almost blocked with queuing cars - for BP one side and Shell the other. Tesco and Hickstead petrol stations closed.
If the petrol stations had a sign stating "Minimum Spend £30" should be sorted
They were there on BBC Breakfast news too. It was a stunning piece of current affairs journalism:
Correspondent: - "How often do you get fuel deliveries?"
Site owner:- "Twice every 10 days."
Correspondent:- "And how long does each delivery last you?"
Site owner:- "Err, 5 days."