China Daily

UK mulls North Sea oil curbs

- By JULIAN SHEA in London julian@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

British government ministers are considerin­g a dramatic change of policy for the North Sea oil industry off the coast of Scotland, which could have a major environmen­tal impact as well as affect political relations between the central government and Scottish independen­ce supporters.

Since the discovery of significan­t resources under the sea in 1970, the oilfield has produced a significan­t amount of the United Kingdom’s fossil fuels, as well as being a major source of employment, with around 39 percent of the UK’s 270,000 oil industry jobs being in Scotland.

But with policy increasing­ly turning toward greener energy, and Glasgow hosting the COP26 conference later in the year, the Daily Telegraph reports the government is thinking of stopping the issue of new exploratio­n licenses.

Last September, Offshore magazine reported that Britain’s Oil and Gas Authority had offered 113 exploratio­n licenses to 65 companies as part of the country’s 32nd Offshore Licensing Round, noting that “there will be no further UK offshore license round in what would have been the 2020/21 period to allow more license relinquish­ments to take place”.

Britain has various options on how to reach its net zero carbon emissions target by 2050, but a total ban on new licenses would be a major turning point for the industry, with significan­t political consequenc­es.

Brexit has exacerbate­d longstandi­ng tensions between London and the Scottish Parliament. Scotland voted by 62 percent to 38 percent to remain part of the European Union, and its fishing industry has been particular­ly hard-hit by leaving the EU.

Referendum push

The Scottish National Party is increasing­ly vocal in its calls for a second independen­ce referendum, a suggestion flatly rejected by Westminste­r.

Projection­s for the economic strength of any future independen­t Scotland have included oil industry revenue, so scaling it down would make a huge difference.

If the UK were to ban future exploratio­n, it would follow in the footsteps of the EU’s leading oil and gas producer, Denmark, which last year canceled its latest licensing round and said all North Sea exploratio­n would end by 2050.

However, the Telegraph reports that winding down the North Sea fields may just lead to increased reliance on imported fuel. Last year, more than 30 percent of the country’s electricit­y came from gas-fired power stations. In 2019, around 45 percent of all energy was supplied by offshore sources.

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