Pedro Parente, the chief executive officer of Brazil's state-controlled oil producer Petroleo Brasileiro, resigned his post on Friday after a nationwide trucker strike forced the government to lower diesel prices. The resignation comes as Brazilian oil workers begin a three-day strike. Unions demanded that Parente step down and called for an end to a policy of allowing the market to set the price of fuel.

Shares of the company, commonly called Petrobras, were down more than 20 percent in midday trading on Friday following the resignation. Shares in Sao Paulo were suspended after Parente's resignation. In a statement, the company said the board will choose an interim CEO on Friday and that the company's other top executives will remain. In his resignation letter, Parente said that he "delivered what he promised" when he took over Petrobras two years ago. However, Parente said his presence in the company is no longer positive in light of the trucker strike, which ground the nation's economy to a halt. Petrobras unveiled a plan last June to review fuel prices more frequently. For nearly a year, the company has been allowing prices to fluctuate with international benchmark crude futures. Fuel prices have surged in Brazil as oil futures hit 3½-year highs above $80 a barrel, stoking a wave of discontent across the country. Parente said the strikes had put "the Petrobras price policy under intense questioning."

Pedro Parente, President of Brazil's state-run oil company Petroleo Brasileiro SA (Petrobras), attends a news conference in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil May 8, 2018. Sergio Moraes | Reuters