Conservatives force critical vote in Parliament on new oil and gas
fields Vote comes day after reveal of by-election date for Aberdeen
South Badenoch: “Labour and SNP MPs can either stand up for workers
in Aberdeen… or continue to follow Miliband and Starmer as they
cause untold damage to one of our critical national industries” The
Conservatives will today [Tuesday 19 May] force a vote
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Conservatives force critical vote in Parliament on new oil
and gas fields
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Vote comes day after reveal of by-election date for Aberdeen
South
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Badenoch: “Labour and SNP MPs can either stand up for workers
in Aberdeen… or continue to follow Miliband and Starmer as
they cause untold damage to one of our critical national
industries”
The Conservatives will today [Tuesday 19 May] force a vote
in Parliament calling on the Government to approve the Rosebank
and Jackdaw oil and gas fields, in a direct challenge to policies
that threaten Scotland's offshore energy industry and the 128,400
jobs it supports.
24,000 people are directly employed in oil and gas in Aberdeen
and Aberdeenshire, where the impact of declining investment is
being felt most sharply.
The amendment to the King's Speech calls on the Government to
drop its opposition to new oil and gas licences and instead
support a presumption in favour of approval.
Scotland's offshore energy sector supports 128,400 jobs,
including 111,800 in oil and gas alone, and contributed more than
£24 billion to the Scottish economy in 2024.
Today's vote will test whether Labour and SNP MPs are prepared to
back the workers and communities that rely on the North Sea
industry.
The Government's proposed Energy Independence Bill would ban new
oil and gas licences. The Conservatives say this policy has
already accelerated the decline in investment, with no
exploration wells drilled in the UK in 2025 for the first time
since 1964.
They contrast this with Norway, which awarded 57 new licences to
19 companies in January 2026 under a Labour Prime Minister.
Aberdeen and the North East of Scotland have been particularly
affected. The offshore energy industry supports local supply
chains, engineering firms, ports and fabrication yards across the
region. Without further exploration and investment, millions of
pounds of economic activity could be lost.
Today's vote gives Labour and SNP MPs the opportunity to back
Scottish workers and support continued oil and gas exploration in
the North Sea and comes ahead of the Aberdeen South
by-election which is set to be a straight fight between the
Conservatives, who have a plan to Get Britain Drilling and the
SNP who have a presumption against new licenses.
MP, Leader of the
Conservative and Unionist Party, said:
"Labour and are killing our oil and gas industry for no good
reason. Drilling our own oil and gas is good for energy security,
it's good for economic security, it's good for our national
security. Today, Labour and SNP MPs can choose to stand up for
workers in Aberdeen and across the North East of Scotland and
protect the jobs and livelihoods of tens of thousands, or they
can continue to blindly follow Miliband and Starmer as they cause
untold damage to one of our critical national industries."
MP, Shadow Secretary of
State for Energy Security and Net Zero, said:
“Ed Miliband is deluded if he thinks shutting down the North
Sea gives us energy independence. We are losing thousands of jobs
across Scotland, hammering the local economies in Aberdeen and
the North East, and sending billions of
pounds to Norway for the same gas we could drill
ourselves. It is the ultimate hairshirt climate policy
which isn't helping the environment or
the economy.
“Today we are forcing a vote so that Labour and
SNP MPs have the chance to back Scottish
workers, a common-sense approach to energy
and to send and his dangerous ideology packing.”
MP, Shadow Secretary of State
for Scotland, said:
“Aberdeen and the North East of Scotland have built their
prosperity on the North Sea, but under Labour and the SNP that
legacy is being undermined.
“The Conservatives know Scotland's energy future is not a choice
between prosperity and sustainability. That is why we must get
Britain drilling, supporting jobs and investment in Aberdeen,
Aberdeenshire and across the North East.
“Only and are serious about getting
Britain drilling.”
ENDS
Notes to Editors:
Labour will ban new oil and gas drilling in the North
Sea:
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At the King's Speech, Labour announced that the Energy
Independence Act will be used to block new oil and gas
licences. ‘Manage existing oil and gas fields for
their lifetime through legislation to introduce Transitional
Energy Certificates, and show climate leadership by meeting the
manifesto commitment not to issue new licences to explore new
fields, including delivering the commitment to ban fracking'
(PMO, The King's Speech 2026: Briefing, 13 May 2026,
link).
Labour's new oil and gas ban will devastate
Scotland's economy:
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24,000 people are employed in Aberdeen and
Aberdeenshire directly in the oil and gas
sector. Analysis of the Business Register and
Employment Survey for Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire shows that
9,000 people are employed in ‘extraction of crude petroleum and
natural gas' and 15,000 are employed in ‘mining support service
activities' (Nomis, Business Register and Employment
Survey/Annual Business Inquiry, accessed 18 May 2026,
link).
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128,400 people are employed in Scotland's offshore
energy sector which contributes £24 billion a year to the
Scottish economy. ‘Scotland's offshore energy sector
remains a cornerstone of the Scottish economy, supporting
128,400 jobs and contributing £24 billion in economic value
each year. Over 110,000 of those jobs are in oil and gas –
sustaining supply chains, ports, manufacturers, engineering
firms and regional communities across Scotland' (OEUK,
News, 5 May 2026, link).
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One in seven people in Aberdeen are directly employed
in oil and gas. Between 13 and 17 per cent of people
in Aberdeen City are employed directly in oil and gas
(Hansard, Vol 765 Col 404WH, 23 April 2025, link).
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Britain issued did not drill any new exploration wells
for the first time in 60 years, meanwhile Norway issued 57 new
licences. In 2025, Britain no new exploration wells
were drilled in the UK for the first time since 1964. In
comparison, Norway awarded 57 new licences to 19 companies in
its annual licensing round in January 2026 (Reuters,
13 January 2026, link; The Daily
Telegraph, 2 November 2025, link).
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David Whitehouse, CEO of Offshore Energy UK, has warned
that 1,000 jobs will be lost every month in the oil and gas
industry between now and
2030. WHITEHOUSE: ‘Today, we are seeing
skilled jobs being lost on a scale that would be unacceptable
in any other sector. Almost 1,000 direct and indirect jobs in
the UK oil and gas sector are set to be lost every month
between now and 2030. But with supportive government policies,
it doesn't have to be this way' (OEUK, Press Release,
18 August 2025, link).
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Analysis by Offshore Energy UK (OEUK) and Westwood
Global Energy Group found that 7.5 billion barrels of oil and
gas could still be produced from UK waters, around half of our
oil and gas need. The analysis found the UK could meet
half of its oil and gas needs from the North Sea with
potentially 7.5 billion barrels of oil and gas able to be
produced from UK waters – 3.2 billion more than current
estimates. This could add £165 billion in economic value (OEUK,
Press Release, 23 June 2025, link).
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Offshore Energy UK (OEUK) has warned that without
further investment, Britain will be reliant on imports for 80
per cent of its oil and gas needs by 2030. Oil and gas
production has fallen to a record low of 40 per cent of
consumption for the third quarter in 2024. OEUK has warned this
could fall to 20 per cent by 2030 without further investment
(OEUK, Press Release, 24 February 2025, link).
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Labour hiked taxes on the oil and gas industry leading
to a £25 billion fall in revenue for the Exchequer by
2035. At Autumn Budget 2024, the Chancellor increased
the rate of the Energy Profits Levy (EPL) by 3 per cent and
extended it to 2030. Stifel, an investment bank, predicted that
tapering down the EPL by 2027 would raise an additional £1-2
billion per year in tax revenue, rising to a total of £25
billion cumulatively across 2030-35 (Stifel, Written
Evidence, January 2026, link).
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Jackdaw and Rosebank fields have been delayed – they
would have provided enough fuel to heat 1.6 million
homes. Rosebank is the largest known undeveloped
oil and gas field in UK waters and is estimated to contain
between 300 million and 500 million barrels of oil. Jackdaw was
expected to produce 6.5 per cent of the UK's gas production and
provide enough fuel to heat 1.6 million homes (The
Sun, 19 March 2026, link).
The Conservatives will back Scotland's North Sea oil
and gas industry:
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Repeal the ban on new oil and gas licences to unlock
2.9 billion barrels. Labour's ban on new oil and gas
licences called time on Britain's oil and gas industry leaving
2.9 billion barrels in the ground and risking 200,000
jobs. We will extract this oil and gas,
creating £165 billion in economic value (OEUK, Key
facts, accessed 31 August 2025, link; OEUK,
Press Release, 23 June 2025, link).
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Repeal the Energy Profits Levy to maximise investment
in British oil and gas production. The Energy Profits
Levy, an additional 38 per cent levy on the upstream production
of oil and gas, is set to expire on 31 March 2030. The
Conservatives have pledged to remove it once elected and called
on the government to remove it immediately (HMRC, Policy
Paper, 30 October 2024, link).
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Replace the North Sea Transition Authorities (NSTA)
mandate to ‘maximise the extraction of our oil and
gas'. The NSTA requires oil and gas companies to
fulfil a range of net zero obligations such as connecting oil
rigs to the grid and reducing flaring, venting, and emissions.
We will change this to one sole mandate of maximising oil and
gas extraction and rename the NSTA to the North Sea Authority
(The Daily Telegraph, 30 August 2025, link).
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Reverse the ban on government support for the export of
oil and gas technology to unlock billions in oil and gas
technology exports. UK Export Finance (UKEF) supported
on average £5 billion of oil and gas technology exports
annually before government support for it was banned. We will
reverse this ban to create jobs and unlock billions of exports
(PMO, Press Release, 12 December 2020, link; UKEF,
Guidance, 17 August 2021, link).
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