Return of ‘work from home’ plan to save fuel in event of crisis caused by Ukraine war

Authored by independent.ie and submitted by malcolm58

If fuel rationing is introduced, only designated critical service stations will be stocked with fuel. Stock image

People will be ordered to work from home in the event of a major fuel crisis sparked by the war in Ukraine, under secret Government emergency plans.

The Irish Independent has learned confidential details of an emergency planning exercise held 10 days ago between all the major state agencies and the Government.

The high-level planning exercise proposed three fuel supply deficit scenarios, and possible consequences were presented and discussed.

Delegates were given a scenario of a 20pc diesel supply deficit in September and a 35pc drop in supply in December. The third and most extreme scenario proposed for February 2023, is where gas and oil supplies cannot meet the demand for electricity generation or farmers preparing to cut silage.

The Irish Independent can reveal that in the event of a national fuel crisis, emergency contingency measures discussed at the high-level meeting include:

:: All non-essential workers will be ordered to work from home

:: A limit will be placed on all non-essential car travel

:: A strict limit on the amount of fuel motorists can buy at any one time

:: The implementation of an immediate and strict reduction in the speed limit on motorways.

The plan also includes the introduction of an emergency scheme whereby motorists with an odd number at the end of their car registration will only be allowed to drive or refuel on alternate days.

The Indo Daily: Running on empty: Why you could soon be rationing your fuel

Those with odd numbers could refuel on a Monday, Wednesday and Friday and those with an even number on a Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday.

The confidential meeting, convened by the Department of the Environment, Climate and Communications (DECC) on May 26 at the National Emergency Co-ordination Centre, was termed the “Oil Emergency Exercise”.

The meeting was attended by members of DECC, the National Oil Reserves Agency (NORA), Fuels for Ireland (FFI), the Department of Transport and National Emergency Coordination Group (NECG).

Each group was required to run through the three possible scenarios. One Government source described the planning exercise and the options available to mitigate supply problems and protect societal function as “very, very stark”.

"They gave us a scenario where there was a 20pc reduction of diesel coming into the country. And then one where there was 30-35pc reduction and then one where essentially we don't have enough oil or gas, and the question arises as to whether we divert oil to electricity generation or agriculture to grow food.

"All of this happening is very unlikely but to have it discussed openly when we know the situation in Ukraine was an eye-opener.”

Senior Government sources have told the Irish Independent the likelihood of a fuel crisis at the magnitudes discussed at the meeting is "highly remote".

The first scenario, which was tabled for four months time – September 1, 2022 – discussed what measure would be introduced if there was an 18-20pc shortfall in diesel.

The plan states that if a supply deficit of this magnitude occurs, it will lead to "diesel stockouts" where many fuel stations will run dry and supply to critical and emergency services will be threatened.

At this point, NORA would be required to release limited amounts of its 90-day reserve stock to meet essential demand.

In the second scenario, fuel stocks have dipped to dangerously low levels – 35pc below demand for eight weeks leading up to December 19, 2022.

At this critical point, the plan states the NECG will discuss activating the Oil Emergency Allocation Scheme "to control the supply and distribution of diesel".

The emergency contingency plan, if implemented, would prioritise essential services and critical workers, with other motorists told to limit their driving.

If Ireland has to introduce fuel rationing, consumers would be separated into four categories. Tier one comprises essential workers, such as farmers and food producers. Those classified in tier four are motorists making non-essential journeys.

Only designated critical service stations – of which there are approximately 100 in the country – will be stocked with fuel.

The designated stations will only provide fuel to emergency and essential services and workers.

Kevin McPartlan, CEO of Fuels for Ireland, described the planning exercise as "prudent".

"While it remains highly unlikely that we will experience a reduced supply of fuel, it is prudent that we and Government engage in emergency planning.

"As things stand, despite the invasion of Ukraine and the announcement of sanctions prohibiting the importation of Russian fuel into the EU, our stock levels are very healthy, and we see no cause for concern in our supply pipeline.

"We remain more than confident that, save for any massive shock to supply or demand, we will have no issue in continuing to meet Ireland's need for liquid fuels."

Autumnlove92 on June 6th, 2022 at 17:24 UTC »

As someone who's job requires them to be in person, please keep nonessential people who can do their job from home OFF THE FUCKING ROADS.

I'M SICK OF TRAFFIC. THERE'S TOO MANY PEOPLE DRIVING.

Peak pandemic driving was the best 😭

Cantdoanythingrn on June 6th, 2022 at 12:17 UTC »

This thing has to become more widely adopted, especially by bigger companies like Google, meta etc. I work in a software company which still has work from home and will probably have it throughout this year.

green_flash on June 6th, 2022 at 11:57 UTC »

As per the article this is the contingency plan:

All non-essential workers will be ordered to work from home A limit will be placed on all non-essential car travel A strict limit on the amount of fuel motorists can buy at any one time The implementation of an immediate and strict reduction in the speed limit on motorways