Oil & gas
North
Sea oil industry will recover - Ian Wood
Picture: submitted
by SCOTT
MACNAB
GROWING fears over the
future of Scotland’s oil and gas industry are “over the top”, according to one
of its leading figures.
Sir Ian Wood insisted
the industry will eventually recover – but warned thousands of jobs could be
lost in the next year as the price of crude continues to stagnate at around $60
a barrel.
His intervention
follows concerns by the explorers’ association this week that the industry was “close to collapse”.
Sir Ian said: “These
comments are over the top for an industry which thinks and plans long-term.
It’s important to have a balanced perspective at this time. The UKCS [UK
Continental Shelf] does face a very difficult year to 18 months which will see
a slowdown in investment, the loss of some offshore production, up to 10 per
cent, and the possible loss of around 15,000 jobs within an industry which
employs 375,000, although this is difficult to estimate.
“It will be a tough
time for the industry and the people that work in it, but we are entering a
downturn from which we will recover.”
The price of oil is
likely to bounce back in 2015 or early 2016, he added.
Chief Secretary to the
Treasury Danny Alexander said the government must accept lower taxes from the
North Sea in future to create jobs and boost investment.
The Highland MP added:
“This is an industry used to dealing with very volatile prices, but clearly
this is very concerning.”
He said the government
must keep improving regulation of the North Sea, drive down taxes and continue
with support measures such as decommissioning, investment and exploration
allowances.
The industry also has
a responsibility to reduce costs and maximise efficiency, he added.
“Obviously, we have
started to reduce the headline rate of tax, and that is now in a downward path
over the next few years,” he said.
“We have to accept
that there is going to be significantly less tax from North Sea oil and gas
because that is necessary to get the investment, to continue to create the jobs
and support what is one of the most important employers, not just in Scotland,
but across the whole of the UK.”
First Minister Nicola
Sturgeon yesterday stepped up pressure on the UK government to provide more
help.
She said: “I think we
need more from the UK government around tax incentives, we need more detail
about the implementation of the proposed new investment allowance, we need to
be supporting exploration.
“We need serious and
very definite measures from the UK government to help.”
Scottish Labour leader
Jim Murphy has written to the First Minister, after meeting her last week,
calling on her to set out a tax cut needed to save oil jobs.
“I am keen to
understand specifically the scale of what you are calling for,” he said. “We
need to understand how much extra support would be needed if the oil price
continued to fall.”
Source: http://www.scotsman.com/news/environment/north-sea-oil-industry-will-recover-ian-wood-1-3639439
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