The 48-hour strike began at 0600 BST on Sunday as last minute talks failed to find a solution to the dispute between workers and management at the Grangemouth refinery About 1,200 members of the Unite union joined the picket lines outside the huge oil facility in central Scotland The protests remained good natured despite the bitterness of the row over pensions which led to workers walking out The families of striking workers turned out in force to show their support Ineos owner Jim Ratcliffe arrived at the refinery for further talks amid increasing political pressure for a settlement to be found Several filling stations across Scotland introduced petrol rationing as fears grew that the strike, which also closed the crucial Forties pipeline, would lead to fuel shortages Some worried drivers, like this man in Edinburgh, stockpiled fuel in jerry cans despite warnings that panic buying would only make the problem worse, with reports of some pumps running dry Emergency fuel supplies were shipped in from across Europe on tankers like the Bro Developer, which carried 14,000 tonnes of diesel from Rotterdam UK Business Secretary John Hutton joined Grangemouth general manager Gordon Grant and Scottish Finance Secretary John Swinney for talks at the plant as staff returned to work on Tuesday
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