Updating Ireland Fuel Crisis Updated continuously

Fuel crisis
live coverage.

Protest blockades have locked up roughly half of Ireland’s fuel supply. Track forecourts running dry, follow the news as it breaks, and see the situation live from the streets of Dublin. This page updates continuously.

Situation dashboard

Key numbers compiled from news coverage, industry body statements, and community reports. Updated as the story develops.

Forecourts reported dry
100+
Fuels for Ireland estimate. Some reports suggest up to 500 could be dry by tonight.
Diesel national avg
€2.10
Per litre. Up 9.4% on a month ago, per CSO focus on fuel costs.
Petrol national avg
€1.89
Per litre. Significant regional variation at forecourts across Ireland.
Whitegate refinery
Blockaded
Ireland’s only oil refinery. Front and back entrances blocked by tractors and trucks since 7 April.
Days of protests
4
Blockades spreading north and east from Munster.
Defence Forces
On standby
Placed on standby at Foynes and Whitegate. No deployment ordered.
Petrol Diesel
Pump price 181.00c 190.00c
Price before taxes, levies and charges 74.54c 83.16c
Breakdown of taxes, levies and charges
1. Excise* 54.18c 42.57c
2. NORA** 2.00c 2.00c
3. Carbon Tax 16.35c 18.74c
4. Better Energy*** 0.08c 0.08c
5. VAT (23%) 33.85c 35.53c
Total taxes, levies and charges 106.46c 98.92c
Total as % 59% 52%

* Excise is a duty added to the sale of mineral oils, cigarettes and alcohol. It is a fixed amount charged per litre and does not change as the price fluctuates. Carbon Tax works the same way although it is calculated per tonne of CO2 generated.

** National Oil Reserves Agency (NORA) levy is charged at 2 cents per litre on oil products such as petrol, autodiesel and kerosene. It funds the acquisition and storage of strategic oil stocks. It does not apply on fuel used for international aviation or maritime transport.

*** Better Energy is a small charge added by some fuel companies to fund their obligations under the Energy Efficiency Obligation Scheme (EEOS). It is not a tax or a levy.

Dry forecourts
Where supply has run out
Blockade / protest site Reported dry Long queues
Filter:
Community reports and news coverage. Not independently verified. Station data © OpenStreetMap contributors

Live timeline

News as it breaks, most recent first. All links open the original source in a new tab.

10 Apr · 14:30 (planned)
Irish Times · Politics
Taoiseach to meet industry representative groups at Merrion Street

Government open to talks with protesters only if blockades end first. Taoiseach says he will not dictate who forms part of the industry groups meeting ministers.

Read full article →
10 Apr · 11:00
Irish Times · Live
Up to 500 forecourts could be out of supplies by tonight; DPD suspends services

Dublin Bus and Luas services disrupted. DPD suspends deliveries across Ireland. Blockades continue on M50, M9, M8 and M7/N7.

Read live updates →
10 Apr · 09:45
Irish Times · Ireland
Where are the fuel protests on Friday and which roads are impacted?

A live breakdown of blockade locations across Dublin and the rest of the country. Updated throughout the day.

Read article →
10 Apr · 08:30
The Journal · Analysis
Three reasons why the government refuses to meet the fuel protesters

Pat Leahy analysis: concerns about precedent, the composition of the protest leadership, and the demand for uncosted price caps.

Read analysis →
10 Apr · 07:15
The Journal
Canada trade mission cancelled amid fuel crisis

Government cancels planned Canadian trade mission as ministers prepare to meet industry representative groups this afternoon.

Read article →
9 Apr · 20:00
Irish Times · Ireland
Fuel protesters say they will ease blockades after securing government meeting

Protest organisers say some blockades will be eased following confirmation of Friday’s meeting with ministers, but the Whitegate blockade remains in place until diesel is price-capped.

Read article →
9 Apr · 17:30
Irish Times · Ireland
Whitegate refinery blockade to stay until diesel is capped

Organisers at the Whitegate oil refinery in east Cork say the blockade will remain in place until a legal price cap on diesel is introduced.

Read article →
8 Apr · 22:00
ITV / UTV News
Third day of fuel price protests bring Dublin to a standstill

Major routes affected across the capital as protests continue into a third day. Gardaí manage disruption but do not disperse demonstrators.

Read article →
8 Apr · 19:00
Irish Times · Ireland
Fuel protest organisers promise massive nationwide action

Organisers pledge expanded blockades and demonstrations across every county if the government does not meet their demands.

Read article →
8 Apr · 15:30
Reuters
Protests over high fuel costs clog Dublin and other Irish cities for second day

International wire coverage. Demonstrations reach second day as diesel remains above €2.00/L nationally.

Read article →
8 Apr · 12:30
BBC News
Irish fuel protests: What’s behind the disruption

BBC explainer on the protests, the underlying price pressures, and the political response in Dublin.

Read article →
7 Apr · 20:00
The Journal
Protests take place over fuel prices as demonstrations spread

First major day of coordinated protests. Tractors and trucks converge on depots and forecourts in Munster and the west.

Read article →
7 Apr · 09:00
CSO Ireland
CSO: Focus on fuel and home heating costs, March 2026

Central Statistics Office publishes monthly fuel cost report. Diesel up sharply month-on-month; petrol tracking higher across all 26 counties.

Read report →

What you need to
know.

A neutral summary of the crisis, the protester demands, and the government position. Every claim is sourced in the timeline above.

What is happening

Since 7 April 2026, a loose coalition of hauliers, farmers, and private motorists has blockaded Ireland’s only oil refinery at Whitegate in east Cork, along with fuel depots at Foynes (Limerick) and in Galway. According to Fuels for Ireland, the industry body representing distributors, roughly half of the country’s fuel supply is now locked behind blockades. At least 100 forecourts have already run dry, with the worst of the shortages concentrated in Munster and the west, and reports suggest the number could reach 500 by tonight.

Disruption has spread beyond fuel supply: DPD has suspended deliveries, Dublin Bus and Luas services have been affected, and the M50, M7/N7, M8 and M9 have all seen blockade-related disruption. The Defence Forces have been placed on standby at Foynes and Whitegate, though no deployment has been ordered as of this morning.

Why prices rose in the first place

The crisis is the result of several pressures stacking at once: wholesale crude oil prices have risen sharply since tensions in the Strait of Hormuz earlier in the spring, carbon tax remains in place, and roughly 65% of the price at the pump in Ireland is made up of duties, VAT and levies. Diesel sat above €2.10 per litre nationally this week, up from €1.92 a month ago according to the CSO’s March 2026 focus report.

What the protesters are demanding

The demands are not uniform across all protest groups, and some organisers have added or modified these publicly during the week.

The government position

Taoiseach Micheál Martin has said the government is open to talks only after blockades end, and will not dictate who forms part of the industry representative groups meeting ministers at Merrion Street today. The government points to the 20c/L diesel and 15c/L petrol excise cuts announced in March, a €250m support package, and the two-month NORA levy pause, arguing that further cuts are not fiscally feasible without breaking budget commitments.

Where the official bodies stand

Neither the Irish Farmers’ Association (IFA) nor the Irish Road Haulage Association (IRHA) has endorsed the blockades as a protest tactic, though both have criticised the government’s response to the price crisis and called for further support for working drivers. The IRHA has described the current fuel prices as reaching the level of a “national emergency.”

What to do today

Drive only if necessary. Check the map above before leaving the house, and consider whether your journey can be delayed. If your local forecourt is dry, open the FuelWatch app and report it so your neighbours can see. The app is free and works in every county.

Where do you stand?

Results so far

0 votes
Support the protests 00%
Do not support 00%
Unsure 00%

FuelWatch is free.

Report the forecourts you see running dry, and help your neighbours find fuel. Available on iOS and the web. No subscription, no ads, no tracking.