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Gridlock fears as Operation Stack returns

Phase Two of Operation Stack is in force. Library image.
Phase Two of Operation Stack is in force. Library image.

Operation Stack is back in force today as French fishermen continue to blockade ports across the Channel.

Junctions 8-9 (Leeds Castle to Ashford) were closed coastbound around 6.15am with lorries being parked up and other motorists diverted.

Fishing boats are being used to block the ports of Calais, Boulogne and Dunkirk in a dispute over EU fishing quotas.

The action began on Tuesday at Boulogne, and spread to the other two ports later in the day, trapping some ferries on their berths, and resulting in other services being cancelled.

Calais re-opened at 10pm allowing some ferries to enter and leave, but the port was blocked again at 6am today.

Some ferries were already in the Channel on their way to France. Operators will now have to decide whether to bring them back to Dover, or wait off the French coast in the hope that the dispute is settled.

Phase two of Operation Stack was initially launched on Tuesday just before the afternoon rush-hour. Parts of the M20 are used to queue lorries that are travelling towards the continent, the aim being to avoid gridlock across Kent's road network.

Hauliers, lorry drivers and motorists are being urged to consider whether journeys are necessary and, where possible, to avoid travelling. People living around the Ashford and Maidstone areas should also consider alternative routes to the M20.

Eurotunnel will continue to take freight and people who have already secured bookings. Tourist traffic is advised to contact their ferry operators before travelling, but Eurostar services will not be affected.


How Operation Stack will work

Lorry drivers will be stopped at junction 8, where Eurotunnel traffic will be directed through the diversion route, re-joining the M20 at junction 9 and then on to Eurotunnel.

Ferry traffic will be stacked in two lanes (hard shoulder and lane three) between junctions 8 and 9.

A freight ticketing system will operate in the Stack queue, with strict enforcement conditions, operated by both police and the Port of Dover.

Any lorry driver arriving at Dover without the correct ticket will be turned away from the port and told to drive back to the rear of the M20 freight queue.


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