Firms across the UK’s oil and gas supply chain have expressed “grave concern” about government plans to hike windfall taxes and eliminate investment incentives to an industry that supports 200,000 jobs. In an open letter to HM Treasury, seen by the BBC, 42 companies have warned that official plans threaten £200bn of investment in all forms of domestic energy, including renewables.
The signatories include manufacturing, engineering and technology companies. The Treasury said, however, that its industrial strategy would create “thousands of new jobs in the industries of the future. The government currently plans to increase windfall taxes on oil and gas profits from 75% to 78%, extend the tax until 2030 and abolish tax incentives for further investment.
In the letter, issued by Offshore Energies UK, firms express concern that reduced investment and greater uncertainty would be felt throughout the supply chain “through jobs, and the communities this industry supports, both directly and indirectly. They also argue that oil and gas revenues are helping fund investment in renewable energy.
A hostile tax environment would threaten not only the oil and gas industry, but also the firms who invest in renewable energies using cash generated through fossil fuels, the letter suggests. The companies investing in nascent opportunities like floating offshore wind and carbon capture and storage will require the cashflow from a stable and predictable oil and gas business to fund these opportunities,” it says.
Sufficient investment in the UK energy transition can only happen if we support, not undermine our domestic oil and gas sector. The new government’s plans to increase and extend windfall taxes while reducing investment allowances was clear in the Labour manifesto. But the offshore energy industry had hoped for a consultation with the new government and are calling for a role in its industrial strategy council.
Source: BBC