Geology Could Crush North Sea Oil & Gas Extraction Hopes

by Priya Shah – Business Editor

North ⁢Sea Oil Hopes Face Geological Reality⁤ Check

LONDON -​ Political calls to maximize North Sea⁤ oil and ⁤gas extraction ​are colliding with the fundamental⁢ limits of​ geology, experts ​warn.⁢ Despite renewed interest from ⁢political figures including US president Donald Trump, who⁤ recently ⁢urged‍ the UK to “drill, baby, ‌drill,” and UK Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch, who has pledged​ to “maximise‌ extraction,” the potential for significantly increasing production is constrained by⁣ dwindling ‍resources.

Oil⁢ and gas production ⁤in the North Sea peaked in‌ 1999 and has⁤ as declined by more than half.Remaining fields ⁣are typically ⁢smaller, more remote,​ and present greater technical challenges than earlier discoveries.

“Even if a future government relaxes exploration licensing rules,⁤ geology will remain⁤ the ⁢bigger constraint,”‌ explains Dr. Mark ireland, an‌ energy ⁢expert at Newcastle ​University, in ‍an ⁣article for The Conversation. ⁣

while granting new‍ exploration licenses could yield a modest increase in production, competition from more accessible reserves⁣ in regions like the Middle East ⁤and ⁣North⁢ Africa poses⁣ a‍ challenge. Furthermore, a lack‌ of investment and diminishing ‌oil reserves‌ could render increased North Sea production a ⁤largely ⁤symbolic⁤ goal, according‌ to Nils Pratley, financial editor at ‌ The Guardian, ‍who ⁣has argued for a temporary‌ and‌ strategic ‌boost ⁣to production to reduce reliance on ‍imported ⁢gas while ‍renewable energy capacity is expanded.

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