The Herald

Creatures of the night Early tax relief plea to save jobs in trouble-hit North Sea sector

- By Hannah Rodger Westminste­r Correspond­ent

THE Treasury has been urged to release tax refunds for decommissi­oning oil rigs to help save jobs in the North Sea.

The SNP has called for the Chancellor to release a portion of the £12.9billion it has set aside for decommissi­oning tax relief as the oil and gas sector continues to struggle during the pandemic.

HMRC said earlier it would repay operators in taxes they previously spent due to decommissi­oning older rigs, however MP Stephen Flynn has urged the funds to be released now to enable longer-term projects, such as decommissi­oning well campaigns, to begin next year.

The MP for Aberdeen South has called for the government to work with not for profit organisati­on Decom North Sea to develop a way of releasing the cash now, warning of hundreds of job losses if it does not.

Mr Flynn said: “At a time when jobs and livelihood­s are on the line, it is simply not acceptable for the UK Government to sit back and do nothing.

“By releasing a fraction of the £12.9 billion it holds against decommissi­oning tax rebates, with the stroke of a pen the Treasury could save hundreds of jobs in Aberdeen and the North East.

“This is money that they will have to spend in the years to come and it begs the question if now is not the right time to use it, then when is?”

The MP added that the sector is facing a “perfect storm” due to plummeting oil prices and the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Mr Flynn explained: “The perfect storm of coronaviru­s and the oil price crash has put livelihood­s and the very future of the industry on the line – the stakes could not be higher and the Chancellor simply cannot continue to sit on his hands.

“Just this week Maureen Watt MSP and I met with the team at Decom North Sea to discuss their very realistic proposals to free up some of this near £13 billion fund and I’ll be writing to the Chancellor on the matter too – after all, these are revenues raised in Scotland and should be brought forward to support the sector and jobs now.”

Previously industry leaders warned up to 30,000 jobs could be lost in the North Sea due to the crisis.

Dierdre Michie, Oil and Gas UK chief executive, told the Scottish Affairs Committee in July that a sector deal was needed and more than 7,500 jobs had gone already.

She explained: “We have been hit by what we’re calling the triple whammy of Covid, the dramatic drop in the oil price and the low, low gas prices.

“It happened overnight and it happened in a global context.

“We’re a big internatio­nal industry but we’re a very small community. Certainly in the north east of Scotland we are feeling the impact.

“As a result of Covid, we saw industry having to respond in reducing activity levels by about 40 per cent, we saw projects being pushed back and jobs being lost as a result.”

Aberdeensh­ire council’s head of economic developmen­t told a council committee this week that the unemployme­nt rates in the oil and gas industry were getting ready to fall off a “cliff edge”.

Belinda Miller told colleagues on the authority’s sustainabi­lity committee:

“We all know we don’t really know the scale of the challenge yet from an employment point of view, let alone company survivabil­ity through postCovid scenarios.

“We cannot assume it’s going to be an easy journey for any of us in public sector as we support people who potentiall­y will become unemployed.

“The scale of potential unemployme­nt in the region is significan­t.

“If there was a 10% unemployme­nt rate, that’s 26,000 jobs in the city and shire.

“Already data shows a large number of people have been made unemployed from oil and gas sector – and we know the October cliff edge will be quite significan­t.”

A Government spokeswoma­n said: “We are dedicated to supporting the oil and gas sector, which supports 270,000 jobs in the UK, and we continue to engage regularly with the industry.

“We also remain committed to a transforma­tive sector deal to help the industry continue to prosper and become more sustainabl­e, as the UK makes strides towards our net zero carbon emissions targets.”

In the north east of Scotland we are feeling the impact

 ??  ?? This dramatic image of a grey reef shark and molluscs, titled The Night Shift, was taken by Laurent Ballesta and has won a Highly Commended award in the Under Water category on the Wildlife Photograph­er of the Year 2020 conducted by the Natural History Museum. The overall winners, including the prestigiou­s Grand Title winners, will be announced on October 13
This dramatic image of a grey reef shark and molluscs, titled The Night Shift, was taken by Laurent Ballesta and has won a Highly Commended award in the Under Water category on the Wildlife Photograph­er of the Year 2020 conducted by the Natural History Museum. The overall winners, including the prestigiou­s Grand Title winners, will be announced on October 13

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