LONDON — Britain’s government, under increasing pressure to ease a truck driver shortage and supply-chain issues that have left many supermarket shelves depleted and gas pumps dry, said on Saturday that it was extending the temporary visas being offered to thousands of foreign truck drivers into next year.
It also said that military tanker truck drivers would be deployed across the country on Monday to help deliver gas to gas stations.
The government’s announcement a week ago that foreign truck drivers and poultry workers would be allowed to work in Britain for three months — an effort to tide the country over through Christmas — drew criticism from British business leaders and the public. Ruby McGregor-Smith, the president of the British Chambers of Commerce, compared the move to “throwing a thimble of water on a bonfire.”
Now, 300 foreign tanker truck drivers will be allowed to arrive immediately and will be permitted to work in the country until the end of March, the government said on Saturday. In addition, it said, 4,700 food haulage drivers would be allowed to arrive from late October and stay until the end of February.
Long lines formed at gas stations across London and other parts of Britain this past week as motorists resorted to panic buying after some stations ran out of fuel. But unlike the widespread shortages that resulted from an OPEC oil embargo in the 1970s, this time the problem has been a dearth of trained drivers rather than a lack of fuel itself.
The country has a shortage of up to 100,000 truck drivers, according to the Road Haulage Association. About 20 percent of those are drivers who left Britain after it voted in 2016 to leave the European Union.
Keir Starmer, the leader of the opposition Labour Party, had urged the government on Friday to take “emergency action” to address the crisis. “We’re going to see this driver shortage problem coming back again in different sectors,” he said in a statement.
Britain’s business…