According to a report, the British government is preparing for further Brexit traffic jams in the English Channel.

As the Guardian reported on Wednesday, the Department for Transport signed a £200,000, one-year contract with an aid organization called Re:act in November to provide water and food to truck drivers in the event of renewed traffic jams that last for days .

The military veterans who work at Re:act are more likely to be deployed in crisis areas.

After Brexit, new controls and additional formalities have repeatedly led to kilometer-long truck queues in the hinterland of the port of Dover, with drivers sometimes having to stand in traffic jams for days.

Because of these "regular disturbances" in the processes, the Ministry of Transport felt compelled to take precautions.

Local aid workers and organizations had helped with past traffic jams but were overwhelmed with the extent, according to the report.

In a statement, the government pointed out that there are currently no such problems.

It works with partners involved to ensure smooth journeys for drivers.

The MP Nick Smith from the opposition Labor party criticized in the "Guardian" that the incompetence of the British Conservative government had led to the fact that organizations had to be used that were actually used in war zones or after natural disasters.

"The government's reaching out to them shows the extent of the chaos caused by their failure to deliver a Brexit that works."