LIVE: Fuel protests continue as road blockages disrupt traffic nationwide
A tanker making a fuel delivery to the Applegreen service station on the North Ring rd in Ballyvolane, Cork City. Picture: Noel Sweeney
- Slow moving convoys and road blockages continue again this morning;
- Fuel price protesters have called for a 'national day of strike and protest';
- Carbon tax increase postponed; a 10c cut on petrol and diesel kick in from midnight on Tuesday;
- A number of Leaving and Junior Cert practical exams have been deferred.
A spokesman for the Dublin fuel protest has said that they “achieved something small” in €505m worth of government measures, but said he has “no control” over further protests.
Blockades at fuel depots and Ireland’s only oil refinery have been lifted, but traffic disruption continued in parts of the country on Monday due to some protests.
“Nobody knows what the plan is, that’s being straight out there,” said John Dallon, a Kildare farmer and agriculture contractor who was at the Dublin protest.
He said that he welcomed the reduction in green diesel, but the government “should have done something” on kerosene.

“This protest is out of my hands, it escalated to somewhat so big, and I don’t know where it’s going to end, but it’s the government’s fault,” he told Newstalk radio on Monday.
“We achieved something small, but this is something way bigger now, and I have no control over it, and that’s exactly where I’m coming from.
“It’s gone to the stage that it seems like, looking out there, that the people of the island of Ireland have no confidence in this government anymore.”
Slow-moving convoys and road blockages by fuel protesters are continuing this morning.
In , the N28 Ringaskiddy Road westbound is busy between Shanbally Cross and a protest near Rafeen Bridge.

In , there is a full road closure on the M3/N3 between Junction 11, Kells, and Junction 9, Navan, southbound.
Significant delays are likely, and Transport Infrastructure Ireland (TII) is advising drivers to use alternative routes.
In , the N3 southbound is heavily congested behind a convoy on the Kells side of Virginia.
In , the M9 northbound is busy at Junction 3, Athy, where protesters have gathered.
In , convoys are reported on the M1 southbound before Junction 14 Ardee and Junction 12 Dunleer.
The Justin Kelly has extended the declaration of an “exceptional event” until Tuesday.
Mr Kelly has directed that all rest days are cancelled until 7pm on Tuesday, extending the previous deadline of 8pm on Monday.
“Exceptional events” are declared when the Commissioner determines there is a security threat against the State.
It is understood gardaí were informed by their representative bodies of the extension last night.
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Taoiseach Micheál Martin, along with Tánaiste Simon Harris and junior minister Seán Canney, announced the plan after blockades at Whitegate Oil Refinery, ports at Foynes Port and Shannon Port, and O’Connell Street were lifted, while protests continued in other locations including Cork, Kerry, Offaly and Louth.
The package will include:
- An extension of the excise duty cut to June;
- A 10c reduction on petrol and diesel and 2.4c on green diesel from midnight tomorrow;
- A fuel subsidy for farming and fisheries.
The scheme is additional to the €250m package announced last month.
Mr Martin said the measures would reduce the Government’s projected budget surplus this year but were a response to “real pressures” being felt by people due to rising fuel costs.

A new transport support scheme to help hauliers and those in the food and agri industries will be backdated to March 1.
Mr Canney said the scheme will be modelled on the licensed haulage support scheme and will “help and support those who are vital in our economy”.
Both Mr Harris and Mr Martin were critical of those who blockaded ports in recent days, with Mr Martin warning that if blockades recur, particularly at Whitegate, “the full rigours of the law will be applied”.
Mr Harris said that while the Government will “always” engage with representative bodies, it cannot be “reasonably or rationally be expected to engage with self-appointed spokespeople”.
He also said that while the Government will work to protect people from the effects of rising prices, “no government can completely shield people” from the fallout of war in Iran.
The cut to diesel will require European Commission approval, as Ireland has gone below the minimum tax allowed under EU rules.
Mr Harris said that “many countries” have engaged with the EU on the issue due to price shocks caused by the US-Israel war in Iran and the disruption of the Strait of Hormuz, adding that much will depend on how long the conflict continues.
Mr Martin criticised the Opposition for preparing to table and support a motion of no confidence in his Government this week, saying many Opposition TDs had “acted as wardens” for “illegal blockades” or had spoken in support of protesters who had stopped oil from leaving the country’s only refinery at Whitegate in East Cork.
He said that those TDs were “not fit for government”.
Mr Martin said there would be a review of the “latitude” shown to protesters and a “comprehensive security review” of how the country’s oil supplies were curtailed.

Throughout Sunday, blockades at the entrances to the Shannon Foynes Port Company and fuel terminals at Foynes in Co Limerick and Galway dispersed, while organisers of the blockade of O’Connell Street said they had been “ambushed” by a 3.30am Garda operation to remove their six-day blockade.
The National Emergency Co-ordination Group warned it will take “several days” for fuel distribution to return to normal and that a “risk to key supply chains” remains.
The group also said “concern remains that workers, including essential workers, may not have sufficient access to fuel to travel to and from work, which jeopardises the provision of critical services, including healthcare and business operations”.
The NECG added that supplies of fertiliser and animal feed “remain a challenge and will take a number of days to replenish stock”, while exports of fresh fish, a time-sensitive product, are “especially compromised due to the blockades”.
The NECG also announced that, due to ongoing disruptions, the State Examinations Commission (SEC) has deferred practical examinations scheduled for today, Monday, for Leaving Certificate Music and Junior Cycle Home Economics.
This decision was made because the SEC "cannot be sure that all examiners and students will be able to travel to their schools".
The deferral applies only to practical examinations scheduled for Monday. The SEC will put alternative arrangements in place and contact affected schools directly with further details.
- additional reporting from PA



