The Sunday Post (Inverness)

MoD’s secret block on west coast oil bonanza

Hidden papers reveal huge drilling plans

- By Andrew Picken

THE Ministry of Defence killed off a potential oil boom off the west of Scotland in the 1980s.

Declassifi­ed Government papers show MoD chiefs “pulled out all the stops” to prevent drilling in the Firth of Clyde.

A POTENTIAL oil boom off the west coast of Scotland was blocked by Westminste­r defence chiefs, The Sunday Post can reveal.

Declassifi­ed UK Government papers from the 1980s show for the first time how the Ministry of Defence was prepared to “pull out all the stops” to prevent any North Sea-style bonanza in the Firth of Clyde.

Ministers at the time said oil firms were “expecting something exploitabl­e” following as eries of geological surveys of the area.

But MoD bosses objected to energy giant BP installing rigs just south of Arran because of fears it would interfere with a vital training and exercise area for nuclear submarines.

Documents from 1983 show how the MoD’s “blanket refusal” to allow test drilling effectivel­y ruled out establishi­ng the full scale of any reserves in the Firth of Clyde.

Chic Brodie, SNP MSP for the South th of Scotland, last night accused the UK K Government of a “massive cover up”.

He said: “We now have clear eviidence the MoD in the early 1980s made it very clear to the Department of Energy it would not tolerate oil drilling and production in the Firth of f Clyde.

“This is another McCrone-type deception of the potential use of Scotland’s natural assets.

“I am angry that the people of the West Coast of Scotland, and indeed Scotland as a whole, have been deprived of the economic benefits and income that would have flowed from oil and gas production.”

Last month The Sunday Post reported the claims of David Lambie, a Labour MP in Ayrshire between 1970 and 1992, that he’d been told by key figures in Margaret Thatcher’s Government there was oil in the Firth of Clyde but any further exploratio­n was blocked by the MoD.

Now the claims have been substantia­ted by a cache of UK Government documents, letters and internal briefings from the early 1980s lodged at the National Archives of Scotland.

The files show three firms, including BP and the then state-owned British National Oil Corporatio­n, undertook seismic surveys in area south of Arran and east of Kintyre in early 1981.

BP then applied for a production licence in thes ummer of that year for a large area of sea spanning the breadth of the Firth of Clyde.

Letters between the Department for Energy and MoD show defence chiefs asked for no drilling rigs in this area and BP did not pursue its applicatio­n.

An internal briefing paper from the Industry Department for Scotland in 1984 shows how it was not told why the applicatio­n was withdrawn but states “it is a reasonable assumption that opposition from MoD and others (including the Scottish Office) played a large part in the decision”.

A separate document from the Department for Energy states this original plan would have “undoubtedl­y been the subject of sustained objection from the MoD”.

Speculatio­n over the oil off the Ayrshire coast never went away and in June, 1983 the then Scottish Secretary of State George Younger told The Times newspaper: “The oil companies are playing their cards pretty close to their chests, but they are expecting something exploitabl­e.”

The papers show BP at that time had submitted a revised applicatio­n for a production licence in a smaller, 92 square mile area south of Arran.

A confidenti­al briefing for Mr Younger from November 1983 concedes the “possibilit­y of finding oil or gas in exploitabl­e quantities cannot be confirmed until exploratio­n drilling has taken place” but added the “MoD are known to be very strongly opposed to any drilling taking place in the Firth of Clyde”.

A handwritte­n note by one of the officials preparing the report said he’d been told by a counterpar­t in the MoD that “his department’s position was they saw the Clyde as being of immense strategic importance and they would pull out all stops to prevent any exploratio­n activity.”

Further documents from 1983 show the Department for Energy asked the MoD to overturn its ban on drilling rigs, which stemmed from the original 1981 BP applicatio­n, in light of the firm’s revised plans.

The letter to defence chiefs states: “This blanket refusal to agree to any rig under any circumstan­ces rules out testing the area’s hydrocarbo­n potential and I would expect that only very compelling reasons would lead the MoD to [accept] such a request.”

Five months after this request, a production licence was issued to BP for the revised area but with “restrictio­ns — crucially, including no drilling rigs.

Both BP and the UK Government have confirmed that no drilling took place, meaning the full extent of any exploitabl­e reserves in the Firth of Clyde remains unknown.

Labour Peer Lord Foulkes, who at the time was MP for Carrick, Cumnock and Doon Valley, said a constituen­t approached him with draftmapsw­hichshowed­thegeology of the Firth of Clyde indicated major deposits of oil and gas.

He said: “We knew the blockage was down to the MoD so it is nice to be finally vindicated.

“David [Lambie] and myself were pressing hard on this because we saw it as a potential economic bonanza — the willing workers, ports, rail and road infrastruc­ture were all there.”

An MoD spokesman said it was not appropriat­e for them to comment at this stage as they have not seen the documents.

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