The Scotsman

First minister says continued oil and gas extraction is wrong for Scotland

- By JANE BRADLEY jane.bradley@scotsman.com

unlimited oil and gas extraction is “wrong”, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has said ahead of climate change conference COP26, as she warned the summit is “possibly the last opportunit­y” to avert global climate catastroph­e.

Speaking at the University of Strathclyd­e’s Technology and Innovation Centre yesterday, Ms Sturgeon said the Scottish Government’s focus would be on “achieving the fastest possible just transition for the oil and gas sector” in Scotland into renewable energy.

She also said UK Government plans to approve a new drilling permit at the Cambo oil field, west of Shetland, “must be reassessed” in light of the climate emergency, but did not condemn the project outright.

Friends of the Earth Scotland welcomed Ms Sturgeon's position as a “significan­t shift”, but warned that the Scottish Govcontinu­ed ernment needed to actively call for the Cambo oil field to be rejected.

Ms Sturgeon said Scotland would act as a “bridge builder” between major world leaders and those whose voices are not usually heard during COP26, which begins from Sunday.

The First Minister admitted the Scottish Government had fallen short on its past three annual environmen­tal milestones, but pointed to a report from the UK Committee on Climate Change, which said last year that Scotland had decarbonis­ed more quickly than any G20 nation.

The government will this week publish a catch-up plan to highlight some of the actions already announced this year and set out a range of additional measures, including to decarbonis­e public sector buildings, promote home upgrades, and make bus travel cleaner and more accessible.

It will also set out plans to further increase Scotland's onshore wind capacity.

Separately, Ms Sturgeon said the Scottish Government would publish a new Energy Strategy next year, which will state that unlimited extraction of fossil fuels, or maximum economic recovery in UK policy terms, was "not consistent" with climate obligation­s.

She said: "Tens of thousands of jobs are dependent – currently – on oil and gas production. Those jobs and the people in them matter. And, of course, much of our energy use is still catered for by oil and gas.

"So for countries like ours, with significan­t remaining reserves of oil and gas, it is tempting to tell ourselves that for both economic and energy reasons, we must keep exploring for and extracting oil and gas until the last possible moment. That, in my view, would be fundamenta­lly wrong.

"It’s an approach that cannot be justified in the face of the climate emergency, but it can’t be justified economical­ly either."

Ms Sturgeon added: “Instead, our focus will be on achieving the fastest possible just transition for the oil and gas sector – one that delivers jobs and economic benefit, ensures our energy security, and meets our climate obligation­s.

"In many areas – offshore wind and green hydrogen are good examples of this – the skills that oil and gas workers currently already have are hugelyvalu­ableandemi­nently transferab­le."

Last month, MSPS overwhelmi­ngly rejected a Scottish Conservati­ve motion calling on the Scottish Parliament to back new oil and gas projects, including Cambo, following a debate on the future of the industry.

Ms Sturgeon said: “The Internatio­nal Energy Agency is even blunter – in its assessment, there should be no new oil and gas fields approved anywhere.”

She warned the COP26 summit would “shape the future of the world we all live in” and warned that “absolutely nothing – and certainly not party politics” should stand in the way of the Scottish and UK government­s working together.

Ms Sturgeon said: “One of

Scotland’s objectives during the summit itself is to be a bridge builder – to connect those whose voices are too rarely heard, with those making the decisions. And so part of our role at this COP will be to provide the spaces and forums, and support the initiative­s, that will allow these bridges to be built.”

She added: “This may well be the world’s best – possibly last – opportunit­y to avert climate catastroph­e. But if that opportunit­y is seized, the benefits will be plentiful.”

Friends of the Earth Scotland’s climate and energy campaigner Caroline Rance said: “This is a really significan­t shift from the Scottish Government to end their years of support for drilling every last drop of oil and gas.

"The First Minister said that Scotland must lead with actions not words, so this welcome change of heart must be followed with a change of policy that can truly take Scotland beyond oil and gas."

She added: “The First Minister and her government must now call for the Cambo oil field to be rejected and to support a ban on all new oil and gas projects.

"The Scottish Government must ensure that people and communitie­s working in oil and gas are at the heart of planning this rapid phase out of fossil fuels, whilst scaling up renewable energy and oil rig decommissi­oning to help create decent green jobs."

Scottish Conservati­ve shadow net zero secretary Liam Kerr, said: “Nicola Sturgeon won’t stand up for projects like Cambo, which will create jobs and support Scotland's economy as we rebuild from the pandemic. The SNP need to realise our domestic demand for oil and gas will outstrip supply for years to come, even as the industry transition­s towards net zero.

"Appeasing Green coalition partners would mean switching production off now and buying it from abroad, potentiall­y doubling the carbon footprint for no gain.”

 ?? ?? 0 First Minster Nicola Sturgeon spoke at Strathclyd­e University
0 First Minster Nicola Sturgeon spoke at Strathclyd­e University

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