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Revealed: 13,000 Scots oil and gas jobs disappear in a year

Revealed: 13,000 Scots oil and gas jobs disappear in a year

The UK government has been standing firm on the denial of future oil and gas exploration licences which it was felt was required to meet global warming targets - while it has emerged that Scotland has been losing on average 37 oil and gas jobs every day.
According to the trade association, Offshore Energies UK (OEUK) the number of jobs both directly and in the broader supply chain in North Sea oil and gas in Scotland has dropped by nearly half since 2013 from 117,900 to just 60,700 in 2023. And in the last full year tracked there was a loss of 13,400 jobs with hundreds more expected to be shed with the closure of Scotland's only oil refinery.
And the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) analysis for the first quarter of this year shows that net energy import dependency - which measures how much the UK needs to buy in after accounting for exports is at 47%. That's nearly 10% more than in 2019 - when net import dependency was at 38.7%.
Overall, energy production in the first three months of this year is 25% lower than in the pre-pandemic year of 2019.
And production of petroleum products dropped by 7.1% in a year. The department has put that down in part to winding down operations at the Grangemouth oil refinery which stopped processing crude oil after a century of operations in April.
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Owners Petroineos is planning a transition of the site to become an import terminal for finished fuels.
It is being closed down with the loss of 430 of the 2,000 jobs based at the sprawling 1,700-acre industrial complex with around 100 currently remaining.
Unions fought to save Scotland's last oil refinery (Image: Andrew Milligan) OEUK has told the UK Government, which is discussing the future of the [[North Sea]], that issuing no new oil and gas licences for the exploration of new fuels will result in the UK being more reliant on imports of oil and gas to meet energy demands.
They warned in a briefing: "This is not in the national interest and undermines UK energy security and climate goals."
Their analysis says that UK Government advisers, The Climate Change Committee (CCC), estimate the UK will require 13-15 billion barrels of oil and gas equivalent (boe) in the period 2025 to 2050 to meet its energy needs.
But they say the North Sea Transition Authority forecasts the UK to produce only 4 billion barrels of oil and gas in the period 2025 to 2050 less than one third of the balanced path.
They warn that importing energy takes away support for production at home to support the Scottish and UK economy with the spin off on endangering jobs and therefore less tax to the Treasury.
But it also says that relying on imported energy instead of domestic North Sea supplies can increase the carbon footprint by up to four times because it has to be transported.
"OEUK do not support the premise that no longer awarding future oil and gas licences is climate leadership," they said.
"The award of new licences is part of managing the UK basin and support for this provides a clear signal that investment in future oil and gas is welcomed by this government. Without access to new licences, investment in the basin will fall and the life of existing fields and assets will be shortened."
It comes as oil and gas business leaders discovered they had an ally in US president Donald Trump who has supported more [[North Sea]] oil and gas production.
During his visit to Scotland he called the North Sea a 'treasure chest' and attacked the UK's tax regime for oil and gas companies.
Donald Trump walks onto the first tee for the official opening of the New Course, the second championship course at Trump International Golf Links on the Menie Estate in Balmedie, Aberdeenshire.(Image: Jane Barlow) He wrote on his Truth Social account during his visit: "They have essentially told drillers and oil companies that 'we don't want you'. Incentivize the drillers, FAST. A VAST FORTUNE TO BE MADE for the UK, and far lower energy costs for the people!'
The oil and gas industry has repeatedly criticised the windfall tax, which was introduced in May 2022 and subsequently extended and increased.
OEUK has called on Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer to remove it by 2026.
Mike Tholen OEUK policy director told the Herald that the skills and expertise of workers was "driving innovation in cleaner energy production".
He said the UK oil and gas industry has more than halved methane emissions since 2018 and reduced overall emissions associated with the production of oil and gas by 28% in the same time frame.
And he said this means the UK will achieve targets agreed with government for methane reduction seven years ahead of the 2030 deadline and exceed the 25% reduction target for production emissions four years ahead of schedule.
And in a warning to UK ministers the body added: "The North Sea is a strategic national asset that has powered the UK economy and homes through oil and gas for the past 50 years and it is only right that it is managed as such.
"The North Sea is uniquely placed to support our energy future boasting the second largest offshore wind capacity in the world and the geology to store over 78 gigatons of carbon dioxide in our reservoirs to decarbonise hard to abate sectors in the UK and beyond whilst responsibly producing oil and gas.
"With supportive policy, the North Sea will continue to power the country through responsible production of oil and gas alongside the build out of the renewable energy. The successful path for the UK is one that recognises the role of both oil and gas plus renewables; and not one versus the other, to deliver an integrated energy system that can respond to the UK's needs. Homegrown energy production must be prioritised over imported energy."
They say without issuing new licences to explore new fields there and to supplement a cut in UK energy production reduction, there will have to be an increase in "carbon intensive" liquefied natural gas imports to meet demand.
And they warn that in the past any rise in LNG imports has led to a rise in the wholesale price of gas and that action would be needed to ensure consumers do not pay significantly more on energy bills.
There have been protests over plans for the Rosebank oil and gas development "The UK will continue to need oil and gas as part of an integrated energy mix for decades to come and this decision [to no longer award future oil and gas licences] will mean UK demand will be increasingly filled with carbon intensive LNG imports. For those working in the UK oil and gas sector, and more widely in industrial Britain, this is not a definition of climate leadership that is recognised," the OEUK warned.
A court has rule that consent for two new major Scottish oil and gas fields was granted unlawfully and their owners must seek fresh approval from the UK government before production can begin.
A judgment on the Rosebank and Jackdaw fields came after a case brought by environmental campaigners, Uplift and Greenpeace, at the Court of Session in Edinburgh found that a more detailed assessment of the fields' environmental impact was required, taking into account the effect on the climate of burning any fossil fuels extracted.
It said work on both fields could continue while the new information was gathered but no oil and gas could be extracted unless fresh approval was granted.
Shell's Jackdaw gas field in the North Sea was originally approved by the previous UK Conservative government, and the industry regulator, in summer 2022.
Permission for the Rosebank oil development, 80 miles west of Shetland in the North Atlantic, was granted in autumn 2023.
Uplift, the campaign group that campaigns for a rapid and fair transition away from oil and gas said that the reliance on foreign gas was going to rise unless there is a shift to renewable energy, like wind.
Tessa Khan, executive director, said: "It's a bit rich of the industry to turn round and blame job losses on this government's future plans, when the last couple of years have seen the highest industry profits but the lowest level of industry investment in the basin in five decades. These aren't being invested in the UK's shift to clean energy – the majority of North Sea operators invest nothing in UK renewable energy with some ruling it out altogether – they are going to shareholders.
'The fact is, as the basin declines, so have the number of jobs supported by the industry... in the past decade... even though the government has issued hundreds of new licences in this period.
"The industry knows all this. That it is using the very serious issue of job losses to lobby against taxes on its profits and an end to licensing, is unedifying if unsurprising.
"This government must put the needs of workers for secure jobs with a future – and the public for affordable, clean energy – ahead of the self-interested lobbying of oil and gas companies."
A DESNZ spokesperson said: 'We have taken rapid steps to deliver the next generation of good jobs for North Sea workers in a fair and orderly transition as part of our Plan for Change, including by making the biggest investment in offshore wind and two first-of-a-kind carbon capture storage clusters.
'This comes alongside Great British Energy, which has already announced £1 billion in investment in British supply chains, unlocking significant investment and helping to create thousands of skilled jobs, progressing our mission to make the UK a clean energy superpower.'
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Inside SNP's internal battle as ‘real reason' for Kate Forbes resignation revealed
Inside SNP's internal battle as ‘real reason' for Kate Forbes resignation revealed

Scottish Sun

time7 minutes ago

  • Scottish Sun

Inside SNP's internal battle as ‘real reason' for Kate Forbes resignation revealed

Her Scottish Government critics have been described as a 'nest of vipers' Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) KATE Forbes decided to quit Holyrood after tiring of being undermined by Cabinet colleagues, insiders have claimed. The Deputy First Minister revealed she will depart in May for more time with husband Alasdair and daughter Naomi. Sign up for the Politics newsletter Sign up 3 Kate Forbes will stand down as an MSP next year 3 MSP Kate Forbes plays with her daughter Naomi at nursery in Scottish Parliament Credit: Euan Cherry - Commissioned by The Times 3 Kate Forbes with husband Ali and their daughter Naomi Credit: EPA It came as a source described her critics in the Scottish Government as 'like a nest of vipers" who made her life "as difficult as possible." The Deputy First Minister chose daughter Naomi's third birthday to tell boss John Swinney she was ditching the cauldron of Holyrood to enjoy 'the precious early years of family life'. But party sources said Ms Forbes had also grown tired of being 'undermined' by cabinet colleagues who saw her as a threat to Housing Secretary Màiri McAllan — seen as a future Nats leader. One insider said: 'Perhaps if Kate hadn't been getting tripped up at every step by people who are meant to be on her side then she would have stayed on. 'But given the personal sacrifices, it is clearly not worth the effort any longer. 'The family issues are clearly a huge factor for Kate but may not have been insurmountable if other things were different.' In her letter to the First Minister, Ms Forbes, 35, said she had given 'careful thought' to her future before deciding she 'does not wish to seek re-election' at next May's Scottish Parliament elections. And she told broadcaster LBC of a lack of 'support' for parents at Holyrood. She added: 'I'm not the first mum who's also an MSP to cite motherhood as a reason for standing down.' The Skye, Lochaber and Badenoch MSP since 2016 said: 'It is partly because of the eight-hour return drive I do every week, and the minimum five-hour drive across the constituency. Kate Forbes picks her biggest scandal of the SNP's time in power 'It's one thing to try to get home every night to see them, it's another to face the prospect of going full weeks without being there.' Another source said: 'John Swinney simply saw Kate as window dressing for a certain section of the Scottish electorate. 'Swinney has not had the courage to stand up to the likes of McAllan and [Education Secretary] Jenny Gilruth. "They will think they've won, but the SNP will be in a worse place and in a worse position electorally without Forbes.' And former SNP special adviser Geoff Aberdein said there was 'no doubt' Ms McAllan has ambitions to rival Westminster chief Stephen Flynn as Mr Swinney's heir apparent — but both lacked Ms Forbes' economic competence. Mr Aberdein told the Holyrood Sources podcast: 'I'm not saying there aren't people in the party who are viewed as credible in the business community, but nowhere near as credible as Kate Forbes. 'There will be some in the party who will be quite pleased by this decision which really frustrates me because, whether you agree with her brand of politics or not, she is a huge electoral asset.' Now a managing partner at the True North think tank, Mr Aberdein said he has been inundated with messages from business leaders lamenting Ms Forbes' departure. He said: 'She's extremely credible to the business community and that is a gap that John Swinney is going to have to fill. 'That is a major problem and I hope it is not a major recalibration, because if you don't have voices within your party that can speak to that then that is a huge weakness.' A senior Scottish Government source rejected the claims that cabinet rivalry was a factor in Ms Forbes quitting. They said: 'This is utter rubbish. Kate has set out her reasons for standing down.' And Social Justice Secretary Shirley-Anne Somerville dismissed claims that Ms Forbes threw in the towel because she had become disenchanted with the SNP. She said: 'Political hacks are trying to find another angle but maybe, just maybe, it's about someone doing what's best for her and her family.' Ms Forbes, who married husband Alasdair MacLennan in 2021, became the Scottish Government's youngest Finance Secretary when she succeeded shamed Derek Mackay in 2020. She came under fire for her views on gay marriage, abortion and trans rights. And she publicly opposed Nicola Sturgeon's doomed plan to allow people to legally change sex through self-declaration. Several senior Scottish Government figures rejected Ms Forbes' stance, including Mr Swinney, despite his own Christian faith. Her profile continued to rise, however, and in 2023 she narrowly lost to Humza Yousaf in a bitter SNP leadership race. Former SNP MP Joanna Cherry acknowledged the Deputy First Minister's announcement that she was stepping down to spend more time with family but said there is 'probably a bit more to it than meets the eye'. She said: 'I have the utmost respect for Kate and I think it's a bit of a disaster for the SNP.' Former SNP MP Angus MacNeill, said: 'Kate wouldn't be walking away if there was a prospect of the SNP delivering independence.' He added: 'When there is no strategy, just cluelessness, a groundhog five years at Westminster's devolved parliament ain't so appealing.' Mr Swinney said: 'I pay tribute to Kate for her invaluable contribution to public life over the last ten years. "The challenges of frontline politics are considerable, and I understand the decision she has made, although I wish it was not the case.'

SNP in disarray as Deputy First Minister becomes latest to flee sinking ship
SNP in disarray as Deputy First Minister becomes latest to flee sinking ship

Daily Mail​

time8 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

SNP in disarray as Deputy First Minister becomes latest to flee sinking ship

The SNP is in disarray after the Deputy First Minister announced she will quit at next year's elections, sparking claims she is deserting a 'sinking ship'. Kate Forbes announced her decision not to seek re-election as her daughter turned three, saying she does not want to 'miss any more of the precious early years of family life'. Allies of Ms Forbes claimed that her decision to quit may have been partly down to 'disgraceful' treatment during her leadership contest against Humza Yousaf, when senior figures including Mr Swinney and Nicola Sturgeon raised concerns about her stance on issues like same-sex marriage. Her announcement is a further blow to Mr Swinney ahead of the election, as she is widely regarded as one of his most capable ministers and has helped try to repair the SNP's relationship with the business community. Scottish Conservative MSP Meghan Gallacher said: 'Despite our political differences I completely understand and appreciate Kate Forbes reasons for standing down. I wish her and her family well for the future. 'However, the departure of his Deputy First Minister will come as a hammer blow to John Swinney ahead of next year's election. 'He made the choice to bring her back into the heart of the government last year and would have wanted her to play a key role in the campaign. 'Kate Forbes is the latest senior figure to desert the SNP's sinking ship and clearly has no wish to hear voters' anger after 18 years of the nationalists' failing Scots on so many issues. 'If Scotland is to move on from the SNP's never-ending obsession with independence, then we must remove them from office next year and get the focus back on Scotland's real priorities.' Fergus Ewing, who backed Ms Forbes' previous leadership bid and is now an independent MSP, suggested that her treatment by senior figures in the previous contest, including Mr Swinney questioning whether her opposition to same-sex marriage made her an appropriate candidate to be First Minister, had played a part in her decision. Mr Ewing said: 'With Alex Salmond's death the SNP lost the best leader it has ever had, with Kate Forbes' decision to stand down the SNP has lost the best leader it should have chosen. 'As a dear friend of Kate's, I absolutely understand her decisions to bring up her family but the way that Kate was treated during the leadership election between herself and Yousaf was disgraceful. 'Yet despite being attacked by John Swinney and Nicola Sturgeon during that campaign because essentially they argued her Christian beliefs somehow disqualified her from being SNP leader, Kate turned the other cheek and did so with astonishingly good grace. 'The SNP has now lost the outstanding talent of her generation and perhaps that loss resulted from the SNP ceasing to be a broad church, tolerant of different views, and latterly descended into a form of cult or sect where dissent was unacceptable and rational argument was almost absent from debate.' Ms Forbes, who narrowly lost a fractious leadership contest to Humza Yousaf in 2023 but was brought back into government last year as Mr Swinney sought to heal divisions in the party, said she has 'consistently put the public's needs ahead of my family's' and now does not want to 'miss any more of the precious early years of family life'. Including Fergus Ewing and John Mason, who were both elected as SNP candidates in 2021 and have since left the party, Ms Forbes becomes the 25th Nationalist to step down from the party at next year's elections. Others include former First Ministers Nicola Sturgeon and Humza Yousaf. SNP Westminster leader Stephen Flynn and a score of former failed MPs have been accepted as potential candidates for the 2026 election. Anne McLaughlin, Kirsten Oswald, Anum Qaisar and Tommy Sheppard have also been named on the approved list. It comes after the SNP suffered a damaging defeat in the recent Hamilton by-election. Labour's Davy Russell won the SNP seat with 8,559 votes, a majority of 602 over the Nationalists. The vote followed the death of SNP MSP Christina McKelvie, who had represented the constituency since 2011. Ms Forbes came under attack from a range of SNP MSPs during the 2023 leadership contest for her position on same-sex marriage and other beliefs she holds as a member of the Free Church of Scotland. In a radio interview in 2023, Mr Swinney, then the Deputy First Minister, urged party members 'to decide if someone who holds those views would be an appropriate individual to be SNP leader and first minister'. She had been expected to put her name forward as a candidate to be Mr Yousaf's successor when he resigned but instead agreed to join Mr Swinney's team rather than standing against him, in what opponents billed as a 'stitch-up'. Ms Forbes was a prominent critic of the proposed gender reforms when Ms Sturgeon was First Minister, signed a letter raising concerns about them and said she wouldn't have voted for them. She also recently confirmed that she 'unequivocally' backs the protection of single-sex spaces. Other prominent internal opponents of the SNP's self-ID agenda included Joanna Cherry, who lost her seat in last year's general election and does not intend to stand for Holyrood next year, Ash Regan, who defected to the Alba Party, and Fergus Ewing, who will stand for election as an independent candidate for Inverness and Nairn. Scottish Labour deputy leader Jackie Baillie thanked Ms Forbes for her service over a decade in parliament and wished her well in future endeavours and spending time with her family, but added: 'But it cannot have escaped the notice of voters that many of the SNP's former rising stars are abandoning the stage, often to be replaced by defeated names of yesteryears and anonymous party apparatchiks. 'Kate Forbes was the future once - but now, like many of her counterparts in the SNP, she can see the writing on the wall. The truth is this is a tired government with no vision and no ideas.' In a statement which shocked Scottish politics yesterday morning, Ms Forbes said she had informed her local constituency association that she would not seek re-election next year. She said she is 'wholly supportive' of Mr Swinney and will campaign for the SNP in next year's election. But the Deputy First Minister, who is also Economy Secretary, said: 'I have grown up in the public eye, getting married, having a baby and raising a young family. I have consistently put the public's needs ahead of my family's during that time. 'I am grateful to them for accommodating the heavy demands of being a political figure. Looking ahead to the future, I do not want to miss any more of the precious early years of family life - which can never be rewound.' In his letter responding to her resignation, Mr Swinney said he is sorry she has taken the decision 'but recognise and understand the reasons for doing so'. He said: 'You have made a huge contribution to public life in Scotland and have been instrumental in making progress on economic issues for my Government. 'You have much to be proud of in all of the work you have undertaken but I am especially heartened by the effect of your leadership on advancing support for the Gaelic language. 'We all wrestle with the inevitable conflicts between family and public life and I sympathise with the dilemmas you have faced. I wish you, Ali and your family well and much happiness in the years ahead.' At an event in June, Ms Forbes admitted she was 'unsuccessfully' trying to juggle bringing up her daughter and her Cabinet job and raised fears that childcare issues may have contributed to many female MSPs leaving politics. She also urged the Scottish Parliament to follow the lead of the House of Commons and set up its own nursery.

STEPHEN DAISLEY: Forbes was the voice of moderate SNP politics...but they treated her like an embarrassment
STEPHEN DAISLEY: Forbes was the voice of moderate SNP politics...but they treated her like an embarrassment

Daily Mail​

time8 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

STEPHEN DAISLEY: Forbes was the voice of moderate SNP politics...but they treated her like an embarrassment

The decision by to stand down at next year's Holyrood elections is a personal one and reflects her wishes for her family life. But it also marks the final nail in the coffin of SNP centrism. The Deputy First Minister was the last woman standing for anyone who hoped the Nationalists could cut a more moderate path on the economy, social issues and the constitution. Forbes entered the Scottish Parliament just nine years ago, young and idealistic about independence. Yet she brought a maturity that many political old-timers in the SNP could not match. When she spoke, she understood that her audience was not the flag-waving faithful but the electorate at large, with its doubters and undecideds and people far too busy to have given much consideration to the great issues of the day. Nothing demonstrated that maturity like her handling of the 2020 Budget. With just hours to go before the annual costs were placed before Holyrood, finance secretary Derek Mackay abruptly resigned over text messages to a 16 year old. Forbes, his deputy, stepped up instantly and won plaudits for the aplomb with which she delivered a speech she had barely had a chance to read. Taking over for Mackay, she proved herself to be disciplined, rigorous and determined to strike a balance between growing the economy and redistributing resources to alleviate poverty. For this sensible, middle-ground approach to politics, she was branded a right-winger, an indication of just how out of touch the Scottish parliament is with the nation it theoretically represents. But what truly put Forbes beyond the pale were her devoutly held Christian beliefs. In an age in which tolerance is on everyone's lips, there was little shown for Forbes's Free Presbyterian faith. When she contested the leadership in 2023, following the abrupt resignation of Nicola Sturgeon, there was a concerted effort to make the entire contest about her suitability for office given her Christian principles. It was an outrageous exercise in bias and prejudice that, had it been applied to any other religion, would have been readily acknowledged as such. Christians, however, are fair game, especially if they believe in such heresies as biological sex. The Deputy First Minister signalled early on that she disbelieved in the gender identity ideology, and even though she was on maternity leave when Holyrood was voting through the Gender Recognition Reform Bill, she made clear during her joust with Humza Yousaf for the Nationalist crown that she rejected the notion that a man could 'self-identify' himself as a woman and that the law should change to reflect this. She was right, as a series of legal cases, culminating in the Supreme Court judgment in For Women Scotland, would go on to verify. Had Sturgeon and Yousaf listened to her, a great deal of division could have been avoided, not to mention costly legal fees. As well as canny discernment, she earned a reputation for cutting putdowns that lingered on opponents. She branded Yousaf the 'continuity candidate' and told him during one TV debate: 'You were a transport minister and the trains were never on time, when you were justice secretary the police were stretched to breaking point, and now as health minister we've got record high waiting times.' Yousaf may have defeated her for the leadership, but he wasn't able to emerge from the shadow of those barbs. That John Swinney chose her as his deputy first minister speaks volumes about her significance as a voice of moderate SNP politics. She stressed that wealth redistribution was only possible if first there was wealth generation. She urged fellow Nationalists to stop hectoring the public on independence and try to persuade them instead. Neither counsel was taken on board and the SNP remains distant from the aspirational, sceptical voters it would need to secure and make a success of independence. For advocating for Scotland in Europe and for Scotland to be in Europe, Winnie Ewing, an earlier figure on the mainstream wing of the SNP, was dubbed 'Madame Ecosse'. Forbes, who advocated for the Nationalists among the Don't Knows, the Unionists and even the Tories, is the SNP's Ms Middle Scotland. An opportunity to bring in voters who would never before have considered a vote for the Nationalists. Voters who might even be willing to listen on independence. And they treated her as an embarrassment, that is when some weren't trying to push her out of the party altogether. Sometimes — oftentimes — politicians are the most clueless practitioners of politics. Forbes's exit clears the way for Stephen Flynn, the SNP's Westminster leader, to become John Swinney's heir apparent. A blokey, lefty, loudmouth who would drag Scotland back to rancorous divisions over independence. With Forbes going, he will be the future now. She would have made the better first minister for Scotland, he would push all the right buttons to get the party faithful cheering. Was there ever any doubt which would prosper in the SNP? Forbes says she is standing down because she wants to see her children grow up. We should also think about that. If our politics makes it impossible to be a parent and a parliamentarian, then our politics are broken. Do we want a Holyrood stuffed with MSPs who have no first-hand knowledge of raising children? Because that's the way we're heading unless things change. Kate Forbes's choice should be a wake-up call for the SNP, but not only the SNP.

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