Tony Blair think-tank warns Labour should ramp up North Sea oil and fuel after Middle East disaster as an alternative of obsessing about Net Zero targets
Britain must ramp up North Sea oil and gas production and stop ‘outsourcing’ Britain’s energy security, Tony Blair‘s think-tank insisted today.
The TBI’s energy policy expert Tone Langengen said the Middle East crisis showed the need to minimise the country’s reliance on imports.
The intervention, in an article for the Daily Mail, came as ministers scramble to deal with the fallout from the US-Israeli war against Iran.
Oil prices have been spiking over $100 a barrel, while natural gas costs have also been soaring. The effects are already being felt in UK pump prices, with fears of a looming inflation surge on a swathe of essential goods and services.
Rachel Reeves has been urged to ease the pressure on North Sea operators by lowering taxes and allowing new drilling licences to boost energy production at home.
The Chancellor re-committed to scrapping the so-called ‘windfall tax’ on oil and gas companies in 2027 at a meeting with bosses last week, after criticism she had not acted in the Spring Statement.
The TBI’s energy policy expert Tone Langengen said the Middle East crisis showed the need to minimise the country’s reliance on imports. File picture of a drilling platform in the North Sea
Keir Starmer and Ed Miliband (right) have overseen a ban on exploration licences in the North Sea
The levy has been in place since 2022 in response to record profits following the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
However, government sources have also warned about ‘real-time consequences’ of the Middle East chaos for oil and gas prices, saying it is ‘right that we respond to this’.
In her article, Ms Langengen wrote: ‘When missiles fly in the Middle East, energy prices spike. That’s the harsh reality of the world we now live in.’
She said of the ongoing turmoil, which has seen the critical Strait of Hormuz effectively shut: ‘If this continues, it won’t just be numbers on a trading screen. It will mean higher bills, more pressure on businesses and another hammer blow to economic growth.
‘Britain cannot escape global energy markets. We cannot control global prices. But we can decide how much of the energy we rely on is produced at home.’
Ms Langengen said the ‘lesson staring us in the face’ was that ‘energy isn’t just about climate targets’. ‘It’s about national power,’ she added.
She wrote: ‘Right now, Britain already imports about half the oil and gas we use. Without new investment in the North Sea, that could rise to 80 per cent by 2030.
‘And let’s be clear: shutting down production here doesn’t reduce demand overnight. It just means we buy more from somewhere else. That is not a long-term strategy. It’s outsourcing.
‘The North Sea should be treated as the strategic national asset it is. Instead, it has been trapped in uncertainty.’
The energy expert said ending the Windfall Tax would ‘send a clear signal’ that Britain backs ‘long-term investment, competitiveness and energy resilience’.
The government has banned new exploration licences in the North Sea, saying it wanted to be ‘at the forefront of global efforts to tackle the climate crisis’. Ministers have pointed to ‘declining oil and gas reserves’.
Ed Miliband reiterated the position this morning, insisting the ‘one clear lesson’ of the crisis was to ‘get off the fossil fuel rollercoaster’.
‘New exploration licences in the North Sea will not take a penny off people’s bills’ he told the BBC.
But Ms Langengen said that restriction should be ditched. ‘Managed responsibly, new projects can protect jobs and strengthen security while we build the clean energy system of the future,’ she said.
‘None of this means abandoning Net Zero by 2050. Britain should stay committed to cutting emissions. But rather there is a realistic and pragmatic way to do it.
‘We can move towards cleaner energy while recognising that oil and gas remain part of our system – and will for years to come.
‘The choice is not between Net Zero and the North Sea. It is between managing the transition sensibly or making ourselves more dependent on imports.’
