Enprox Overseas / News

Oil, gas to be park of UK energy mix “for many years,” UK opposition leader says

(Bloomberg) –Oil and gas will be part of the UK energy mix “for many, many years” opposition leader Keir Starmer said as he sought to reassure union critics of his Labour Party’s plans to phase out fossil fuels from the North Sea.

The Labour proposals to ban all new North Sea oil and gas licenses are “naive” and would create a “cliff edge” for the industry that will hit jobs, GMB union General Secretary Gary Smith told Sky News on Sunday. That came after Sharon Graham, who heads the Unite union, said on Twitter that there needs to be a properly-planned transition “that will guarantee jobs, pay and conditions for all the tens of thousands of workers in the North Sea and supporting industries.”
The criticism from the unions will be of concern to Starmer as he gears up to fight a general election by January 2025. That’s because the unions are major funders of the Labour Party, with GMB contributing more than £1.2 million ($1.5 million) last year, and Unite more than £750,000, according to Electoral Commission data. On current polling — Labour enjoy a double-digit lead over the ruling Conservatives — the opposition would win a national vote.
“We have a once-in-a-generation opportunity now to seize the jobs of the future,” Starmer told reporters on a visit to the Hinkley C nuclear power project in western England on Monday. “Oil and gas will be part of that, because where there are existing licenses; they will go on to the 2050s and so oil and gas will be part of our energy mix for many, many years to come.”

Starmer went on to say that the “next generation” of jobs will be in renewable energy and in nuclear power. Those are two industries the opposition party has long advocated, and under its “Climate Investment Pledge,” a Labour government would invest £28 million a year in green industries, including targets for onshore and offshore wind, solar, tidal and nuclear power and hydrogen.

Source: www.worldoil.com
Author: Kitty Donaldson, Bloomberg