Fuel cost protests clog Irish cities for second day

Micheal Martin
Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin ​says fuel protesters are wrong to block streets. -EPA

Protesters calling for further government help to lower the cost of fuel have clogged up busy thoroughfares and motorways ‌with parked lorries and tractors across Ireland, disrupting commuters and public transport for a second successive day.

Convoys ‌of vehicles began converging on Dublin's city centre and other towns and cities on Tuesday, with protesters, including hauliers and farmers, complaining that a 250 million euro ($A414 million) package to temporarily cut taxes on petrol and diesel did not go far enough to cushion the knock-on cost of the Middle East conflict.

"With the price we're paying for ‌fuel, I'm probably ‌two months away ⁠from my business folding," said Christopher Duffy, 46, an agricultural contractor who ​was part of a group blocking Dublin's main thoroughfare of O'Connell Street that is calling for the price of diesel to be capped at a lower rate.

"It's not a lot to ask for really ... We're just backed into a corner."

Ministers said they would not agree to the protesters' demands to meet with them as they did ⁠not belong to representative groups with whom the government has ‌been ​engaging on supports.

Organisers pledged a third day of disruption on Thursday.

"We respect people's right to protest but ​what is not acceptable ‌is people declaring that we will turn O'Connell Street into a car park," Prime Minister Micheal Martin ​told a news conference.

The lining of tractors and trucks down O'Connell Street led to severe delays to bus services and the part suspension of one of the two tram lines that cross ​the ​city.

Significant traffic delays were also reported at ​motorways leading into other major cities.

Protests at two fuel ‌depots blocking deliveries into the cities of Galway and Limerick had led to at least one forecourt running out of fuel, the head of the representative body for forecourt operators told broadcaster RTE.

Ireland's government welcomed a two-week ceasefire in the Iran conflict and expected it to lead to a fall in fuel prices soon.

"If ​they give us that phone call or that meeting, the streets of Dublin will be cleared. ​If they don't, we'll stay ⁠as long as it'll take," said 61-year-old farmer and agricultural contractor John Dallon.