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Total's Elgin PUQ platform (L) and the Rowan Gorilla
V drilling rig (R) in the North Sea.(AFP Photo / Total E&P UK)
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Thousands of British workers are to lose their jobs
as the oil and gas industry declines, a new report suggests.
Commissioned by
the industry body Oil & Gas UK, safety body Optio, and the Department for
Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS), the report claims around 35,000 jobs
will be lost in the sector by 2019.
The study, titled ‘Fuelling the Next Generation',
said the industry will shrink as the government reduces spending in oil and
gas, and focuses on alternate energy sources, including shale and ‘clean’ energy
in the form of renewables.
The report follows comments made in the 21st
Biannual Oil and Gas Survey, published last month, which showed a number of
energy companies were losing confidence in the North Sea oil reserves – the
main base where the UK extracts fossil fuels.
The report claimed that investment into the
industry, which currently stands at around £13 billion, could halve by 2016 as
a result of low exploration levels and rapidly declining crude oil prices.
However,
development director at Oil & Gas UK Stephen Marcos Jones said the industry
would still be able to supply jobs to the UK.
“Almost
43 billion barrels of oil and gas have been extracted from the North Sea, and
with potentially some 24 billion still to come, this industry will continue to
provide careers here in the UK for many decades to come,”
he said.
“As
one of the most expensive offshore basins globally, with development costs per
barrel having increased five times over in the last 10 years, this report
couldn't have come at a more crucial time for the sector and we believe its
guidance will prove invaluable in setting the skills agenda for the sector.”
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AFP Photo / Ben Stansall
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Oil
& Gas UK also claims around 12,000 new jobs may be created in the role of
decommissioning, while new workers will be required to take full advantage of
alternate energy production.
Earlier
this week, oil giant BP said it was planning to “accelerate” its redundancy program as part of a US$1
billion savings effort, widely seen as a reaction to the steep decline of oil
prices in recent months.
Earlier this week,
investment bank Morgan Stanley predicted global oil prices could fall to US$43
per barrel by next year unless something is done to restrict supply.


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