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UK North Sea Oil Lobby Warns of Investment Slump Due to Windfall Tax Increase

UK

The UK’s new tax regime for North Sea oil and gas could lead to an investment slump of more than 80%, the industry lobby group warned.

Changes already announced by the new Labour government, including an increase in a windfall tax and removal of an investment allowance, could mean a drop in capital spending on UK projects from 2025 to 2029 to just £2.3 billion ($3 billion), compared with an estimate of £14.1 billion under the current fiscal regime, Offshore Energies UK said in a report on Monday.

The tax changes “will trigger an accelerated decline of domestic production, and a corresponding reduction in taxes paid, jobs supported, and wider economic value generated,” David Whitehouse, chief executive officer of OEUK, said in a statement.

Over the next five years, almost half of the additional oil and gas production that could have be given the go-ahead under the current tax regime would be uneconomic under the new proposals, according to the OEUK report. That puts more than 35,000 jobs at risk in 2029 due to projects not going ahead, it said.

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