A pipeline carrying nearly half of Britain's oil was closed today as a strike over pensions began at the neighbouring Grangemouth refinery in Scotland, operator BP said.
The refinery, owned by international chemical company Ineos, produces a tenth of Britain's petrol and diesel but also supplies vital steam to BP's Kinneil plant that starts to process the crude oil coming ashore from 70 North Sea fields.
Unions rejected pleas to operate the steam plant at the level necessary to keep Kinneil functioning during the two-day stoppage which began at 6am.
The company said that assuming it got power back as soon as the strike ended and Forties fields resumed production rapidly, the pipeline could be back in operation within 24 hours but might take a few more days to get back to full flow.
The strike is the first to close a British refinery in more than 70 years.
The Forties pipeline carries an average of 700,000 barrels per day, close to half the 1.5 million barrels the country produces daily. One fifth of Britain's gas supply also relies on the Forties system.
Management at the Grangemouth refinery met officials of the UNITE union yesterday but failed to get a deal that would allow the pipeline to continue operating.
Industry lobby group Oil & Gas UK said the dispute was holding the country to ransom and urged the government to step in.
The Scottish Executive said it was importing 65,000 tonnes equivalent to 10 days supply of fuel - mostly diesel - from across Europe to ensure shortages did not develop.
First Minister Alex Salmond appealed to people not to hoard fuel and aggravate the problems.
"There is a job to do to do to keep Scotland moving and we are absolutely focused on that. In the meantime, all of us can help to maintain supplies by acting responsibly," he said.
The strike, which has caused some fuel shortages in Scotland and northern England, comes just days before local elections in England and Wales.
The May 1st vote will be seen as the first electoral test of prime minister Gordon Brown.