
Government ‘putting its money where its mouth is' with £200m for Acorn scheme
The scheme, which proposes storing emissions from across Scotland under the North Sea, had previously been overlooked for support despite repeated calls from the Scottish Government and others for it to be backed.
With the UK Government also pledging to support the Viking Carbon capture and Storage (CCS) project in the Humber, Mr Miliband insisted the two schemes would help 'support industrial renewal' with 'thousands of highly skilled jobs'.
According to the sector, Acorn could support about 15,000 jobs at its peak, with up to 20,000 jobs at the Viking project.
And as it develops, it is planned that the Acorn site will link up with the former oil refinery at Grangemouth via more than 200 miles of pipelines.
An existing 175 miles of gas pipes will be repurposed for this, with 35 miles of new pipeline also being built, alllowing CO2 from the Grangemouth site to be transported to Acorn's storage facilities under the North Sea – a move which is seen by many as being key in securing a future for the facility, where some 400 workers were recently made redundant.
Speaking as he visited the Aberdeenshire site, Mr Miliband said: 'This Government is putting its money where its mouth is and backing the trailblazing Acorn and Viking CCS projects.
(PA Graphics)
'This will support industrial renewal in Scotland and the Humber with thousands of highly-skilled jobs at good wages to build Britain's clean energy future.'
The Energy Secretary added: 'Carbon capture will make working people in Britain's hard-working communities better off, breathing new life into their towns and cities and reindustrialising the country through our Plan for Change.'
Mr Miliband visited the site the day after Rachel Reeves promised funding for Acorn in her spending review – although the Chancellor did not put a figure on how much support would be given in her statement to MPs.
Tim Stedman, chief executive of Storegga, the lead developer of Acorn, said: 'We warmly welcome the UK Government's support for the Acorn project and the commitment to development funding that will enable the critical work needed to reach Final Investment Decision (FID).'
He added that the 'milestone' was 'key not only for Acorn but for establishing Scotland's essential CCS infrastructure needed to grow and scale the UK's wider carbon capture and storage industry'.
Labour will make Scotland home to the green jobs of the future. pic.twitter.com/tGHJEWMpri
— Scottish Labour (@ScottishLabour) June 11, 2025
Mr Stedman continued: 'We look forward to working with Government in the months ahead to understand the details of today's commitment, and to ensure the policy, regulatory and funding frameworks are in place to build and grow a world-leading UK CCS sector.'
Meanwhile Graeme Davies, the executive vice president at Harbour Energy, which is leading the Viking project, said the commitment from Chancellor Rachel Reeves' spending review 'sends a strong signal' that the project was 'an infrastructure-led economic growth priority' for the Parliament.
He added: 'We will work with Government on the critical steps needed to progress Viking CCS towards a final investment decision'.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Glasgow Times
4 minutes ago
- Glasgow Times
Farage's Reform will ‘let the SNP in', Badenoch warns
She said 'Scottish people deserve better' than another five years of John Swinney's party in power at Holyrood. Hitting out at Reform – which claimed on Friday to now have 11,000 members in Scotland – she said for Mr Farage's party, the union between Scotland and England is 'just not that important'. In contrast, Mrs Badenoch stressed the Conservatives will 'always be proud' of the union. 'Our party will always be ready to protect Scotland's place in the United Kingdom,' she added. Kemi Badenoch said the Tories are 'under new leadership' with her in charge of the UK party and Russell Findlay as the Scottish leader (Andrew Milligan/PA) She claimed for Labour and Sir Keir Starmer, belief in the union is 'negotiable', like 'every so-called promise' the Prime Minister makes. Speaking at the Scottish Conservative Party conference in Edinburgh on Friday, Mrs Badenoch said: 'We know that when it really matters, like on gender or free speech or taxes, Labour will fold and vote with the SNP.' She went on to say: 'In April this year, Nigel Farage said he would be fine with the SNP winning another five years in power. 'He's fine with another five years of higher bills, longer waiting lists, declining school standards, gender madness, and ultimately, independence.' Addressing her first Scottish conference since taking on the top job, Mrs Badenoch claimed: 'Reform will vote to let the SNP in, Conservatives will only ever vote to get the nationalists out.' Her speech came just over a week after a Holyrood by-election in which the Tories came fourth, well behind Reform in third. Meanwhile an opinion poll has suggested Mr Farage's party could come second in next May's Holyrood election. Kemi Badenoch was speaking at her first Scottish Conservative conference since becoming UK party leader (Andrew Milligan/PA) In that ballot, Mrs Badenoch said Scottish Tory leader Russell Findlay will 'put forward a different way of doing things to the SNP and Labour'. She promised the Tories will fight the election on a platform of 'positive new policies to fire up economic growth, create opportunities for workers and businesses, reward aspiration with lower taxes, and improve school standards'. Mrs Badenoch told the conference: 'Under my leadership, and with Russell Findlay in charge in Scotland, my party knows where it stands. 'With your help, we will renew Conservative policies with common sense.' She accepted in her speech the Tories in power at Westminster 'didn't always get things right'. But Mrs Badenoch insisted her election, coupled with Mr Findlay taking over to head the Scottish party last year, mean they are 'under new leadership'. She told supporters the Tories will 'once again represent everyone across Scotland and the United Kingdom who believes the same things that we do'. Adding that she is 'renewing this party', she declared: 'This speech isn't about looking back. It's about the future. Our future.' 🗣️ @KemiBadenoch: "The Conservative & Unionist Party is ready to fight for a common-sense future for Scotland and an even stronger United Kingdom."#SCC25 — Scottish Conservatives (@ScotTories) June 13, 2025 Part of that 'positive vision of the future' includes 'standing up' for the North Sea oil and gas industry, with Mrs Badenoch claiming that by increasing the energy profits levy – also known as the windfall tax – the Tories had introduced, Labour is 'killing the oil and gas industry'. Speaking about the levy, she said: 'Frankly if it is allowed to remain in place until 2030, as is Labour's current plan, there will be no industry left to tax. 'Thousands will have been made unemployed and all the while we import more gas from overseas – from the very same basin in which we are banned from drilling.' She called on the UK Government to remove the energy profits levy, as she added that the Tories would also 'scrap the ban on new licences' for oil and gas developments that has been imposed since Labour came to power. 'We will champion our own industry,' Mrs Badenoch told supporters. 'We will let this great British, great Scottish industry thrive, grow and create jobs – ensuring our energy security for generations to come and making Scotland richer in the process.' She also pledged the Tories will spend more on defence, saying this is crucial as 'our world becomes even more dangerous'. Citing conflict in the Middle East as well as in Ukraine, Mrs Badenoch said it 'becomes even harder to understand why Labour didn't use the spending review this week to set out a clear plan to get to 3% on defence spending'. The Tories, she insisted, will 'stand by Scotland's defence industry to build the security equipment and systems that keep us safe'.


Telegraph
8 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Watch: Minister jeered for claiming most Channel migrants are children and women
A Cabinet minister was jeered by a BBC Question Time audience after claiming that most Channel migrants are 'children, babies and women'. Darren Jones, the Chief Secretary to the Treasury, said: 'The majority of the people in these boats are children, babies and women', adding that he felt it was a 'controversial' thing to say. But statistics for the year to March 31 last year from the Migration Observatory showed 75 per cent of those arriving in Britain in small boats were adult men. Separate Home Office data showed that 83.6 per cent of arrivals over the year to this March were men, with 12.5 per cent women and the rest of undetermined gender at the time of the release. When he was jeered, Mr Jones rebutted: 'You're told not to challenge the audience on Question Time – but I'm going to. 'Let me tell you, when you're there on the site seeing these dinghies put together by these organised criminal gangs, which are clearly not safe, and when you see that the majority of the people in these boats are children, babies and women.' Zia Yusuf, the head of Reform UK's 'Doge' cost-saving unit, interrupted Mr Jones to say: 'No, they're not. No, they're not.' The audience applauded when he added: 'North of 90 per cent of them are adult men.' Mr Jones said: 'I'm saying that this is controversial for a reason. Let me tell you the story. 'When there are babies and children, put into that position by human-trafficking gangs, who are coming across in the Channel with skin burns from the oil from those boats mixing with the salt sea water, I would ask any of you to look at those babies and children and say, 'go back to where you came from'. 'It's right that we take a humanitarian response for those people who are put in those positions, and as the Government's policy states, dealing with the criminal gangs who are exploiting vulnerable children to use that route, and then tackling the people who should not be using it, and making sure that they're not staying in this country. 'You can do both of those things without politicising it.' 'The focus is tackling these vile gangs' Downing Street failed to provide any evidence to back up Mr Jones' comments. No 10 said Sir Keir Starmer had confidence in the Chief Secretary to the Treasury. Asked to provide evidence, the Prime Minister's official spokesman said: 'The Government is absolutely focused on tackling these vile smuggling gangs that risk lives in the Channel.' Asked again, he said: 'The focus of the Government is tackling these vile gangs that deal in human misery. That is why our joint work with the French is vital to tackle these gangs.' When it was suggested to him that Mr Jones was effectively gaslighting the nation with his remark, the spokesman said: 'Again, our focus is on tackling the gangs.' Chris Philp, the shadow home secretary, said Mr Jones 'is completely out of touch with reality', adding: 'Since 2018, 73 per cent of small boat arrivals have been single adult men. Yet Labour MPs like Jones still push the fairytale that these boats are full of women and babies. It's a dangerous distortion of the truth.' The UN's International Organisation for Migration estimates that a record 82 migrants, including 14 children, died in attempts to cross the Channel last year. But officials believe this is an underestimate, with dozens more reported missing over recent months. At least 12 have died so far this year. Some 14,812 migrants have crossed the Channel so far this year in more than 260 boats, a record high for the first six months of any year since boats started arriving in 2018. Last month, Sir Keir Starmer came under fire after using a speech to declare that the UK risks becoming an 'island of strangers' unless it introduces stricter immigration controls. Several of his own backbenchers, including veteran MP Diane Abbott, expressed outrage at the remarks, for which the Prime Minister appeared to express regret this week. Downing Street set out an immigration white paper last month, which Sir Keir said would see his Government 'take back control of our borders' and bring net migration down. It was seen as a move to combat the rise of Nigel Farage and Reform, which had sweeping gains at local elections last month.


Telegraph
8 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Don't force us to ‘enable Israel's genocide', say civil servants
British civil servants must stop helping Israel with 'potential war crimes' in Gaza, union bosses have demanded. The Public and Commercial Services (PCS) union, which represents almost 200,000 civil servants across Whitehall, has advised members to 'stop all work within the civil service and its related areas which in any way potentially enables acts of genocide'. It has pledged to support civil servants who refuse to work on Israel and demanded that mandarins be given legal immunity for aiding potential 'war crimes'. Union chiefs want an urgent meeting with the Cabinet Office and have written to officials to 'seek assurances that members are protected from legal liability for any acts carried out by the state of Israel'. The move comes just days after about 300 Foreign Office officials were told to consider resigning after sending a letter to David Lammy, the Foreign Secretary, warning against 'complicity' in Israel's actions. The letter cited the killing by Israeli forces of 15 aid workers in March and the blockade on aid into Gaza as examples of concerns. Sir Olly Robbins and Nick Dyer, two of the most senior mandarins in the Foreign Office, suggested that the complainants step down if they disagreed with the Government's policy. The response was said to have been met with fury in Whitehall, with one insider telling the BBC that there was a 'deep sense of disappointment that the space for challenge is being further shut down'. In a letter sent on Friday to Cat Little, the Cabinet permanent secretary, the PCS union said the Government's response to the concerns raised this week by civil servants was 'dismissive and inadequate'. It argued that the Government 'may be putting UK civil servants at risk of liability for crimes committed by the Israeli state and placing them in a position of conflict given their obligations under the civil service code'. Fran Heathcote, the general secretary of the PCS, said the union was 'extremely concerned that the Government continues to ignore our members' concerns that they may be held liable under international law for the war crimes being committed daily by the state of Israel'. Ministers' official line is that Israel is 'at risk' of breaching international law with its actions in Gaza, with 30 out of about 350 arms sales licences to Israel halted in September out of fear that the weapons may be used for war crimes. However, union bosses called on the Government to go further. Ms Heathcote said: 'Given the scale of the death toll and the depth of the destruction to Palestinian society in Gaza, this matter is urgent and government officials need to act quickly.' She argued that it was 'time for the UK Government to wake up and listen to its own workers'. Foreign Office bosses are said to back a 'healthy challenge' to policy, but have argued that it is up to civil servants to deliver the will of the Government. The PCS union has pledged to 'fully back any member facing any sort of disciplinary action for refusing to action or work on any arms export license to Israel'. A Foreign Office spokesman said this week that 'since day one, this Government has rigorously applied international law in relation to the war in Gaza' adding that it is 'the job of civil servants to deliver on the policies of the government of the day and to provide professional, impartial advice'. The Cabinet Office has been approached for comment.