The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

‘Bright future’ for North Sea energy

- KEITH FINDLAY

Energy Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng has insisted the UK Government will not bend to the will of activists who “naively want us to extinguish production” of oil and gas in the North Sea.

In an open letter to the industry, he added: “Doing so would put energy security and British jobs at risk, and simply increases foreign imports, whilst not reducing demand.”

The letter is a strong show of support for continued and accelerate­d oil and gas production in the UK North Sea.

But it came with a caveat – the sector must show “in the coming weeks” how it will reinvest profits and double down on investment­s in the clean energy transition, as well as accelerate and maximise domestic oil and gas production.

Mr Kwarteng said: “The North Sea has provided the UK with a stable domestic supply of oil and gas for the last 50 years and it has a bright future.

“This great national asset has had the dual purpose of securing supply and insulating the UK from developing a dependency on Russian hydrocarbo­ns.

“It has also generated substantia­l tax revenue to the tune of £375 billion to fund our vital public services.”

He added: “As the prime minister and I set out in the Energy Security Strategy, domestic production is now more important than ever, recognisin­g there will be an ongoing demand for oil and gas over the coming decades as we smooth the transition to cheap, clean, home-grown energy.

“That is why we took steps to remove obstacles to accelerate production and confirmed the NSTA (North Sea Transition Authority) plans to launch another North Sea licensing round in the autumn, taking into account the forthcomin­g climate compatibil­ity checkpoint and the need for domestic energy security.”

The government is facing pressure from opposition parties to introduce a windfall tax on oil and gas firms, using some of their profits to help alleviate the cost-of-living crisis.

Outlining ambitions for a different approach, Mr Kwarteng said: “In return for the UK Government’s ongoing support for the sector, the prime minister, the chancellor and I want to see a very clear plan from the oil and gas industry to reinvest profits in the North Sea and, importantl­y, in the clean energy technologi­es of the future.”

 ?? ?? GREEN PLEA: Energy Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng wants the industry to reinvest profits in clean technologi­es.
GREEN PLEA: Energy Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng wants the industry to reinvest profits in clean technologi­es.

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