Aberdeen ‘should be booming’ in call for UK to ‘drill, baby, drill’ for North Sea oil

With oil prices skyrocketing after the Strait of Hormuz blockade, Donald Trump is grasping at the ‘special relationship’ for a solution. The US President, fresh from comparing himself to Jesus, took to social media to mock the United Kingdom for refusing to drill in the North Sea and preferring rene...

Aberdeen ‘should be booming’ in call for UK to ‘drill, baby, drill’ for North Sea oil
Aberdeen ‘should be booming’ in call for UK to ‘drill, baby, drill’ for North Sea oil Photo: Metro UK

With oil prices skyrocketing after the Strait of Hormuz blockade, Donald Trump is grasping at the ‘special relationship’ for a solution.

The US President, fresh from comparing himself to Jesus, took to social media to mock the United Kingdom for refusing to drill in the North Sea and preferring renewable sources of energy.

Trump posted on Truth Social: ‘Europe is desperate for Energy, and yet the United Kingdom refuses to open North Sea Oil, one of the greatest fields in the World.

Tragic!!!

Aberdeen should be booming.’
The former Apprentice host claimed instead Norway is selling its North Sea oil back to Britain ‘at double the price’.

He added: ‘They are making a fortune.

UK, which is better situated on the North Sea for purposes of energy than Norway, should, DRILL, BABY, DRILL!!!


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‘It is absolutely crazy that they don’t… AND, NO MORE WINDMILLS!’
Drilling in the North Sea is notoriously difficult with high winds, huge waves and uneven seabeds sometimes 500m deep.

You need expensive specialised rigs, whereas drilling in the Middle East is on land and has been, before the Iran war, far easier.

Despite this, Nigel Farage and Kemi Badenoch have already called for the black gold below us to be exploited.

Trade body Offshore Energies UK has said similar, arguing that failing to take advantage of the North Sea leaves us ‘more exposed to global volatility and higher emissions’.

But Energy Secretary Ed Miliband has maintained cracking open the new oil and gas fields wouldn’t take a penny off UK energy bills, as the price is set on international markets.

The government says the shift to renewable and nuclear energy additionally makes sense because the North Sea is maturing and has been in decline for more than 20 years, so Britain should get well-prepared for a future where we can’t rely on what’s beneath it.

‘Sort out his own mess’


Tessa Khan, Executive Director of Uplift, a pressure group focussing on the transition to green energy, said Trump is ‘unsurprisingly ill-informed’ on UK energy policy.

She told Metro: ‘The Iran crisis does not change the fact that the UK has burned most of its gas and most of what is left in the North Sea is oil, the majority of which is exported.

‘It also makes no sense to take Trump’s advice when we’re facing high energy bills and financial hardships because of a conflict he helped start, to say nothing of the war’s broader consequences.

Trump should stop trying to play god in the politics of other countries and focus on sorting out the mess he created.’
Stephen Flynn, the SNP’s Westminster leader, said: ‘Scotland’s energy should be in Scotland’s hands and it is not for Donald Trump or anyone else to tell us what to do with it.

‘For too long has our natural resources been asset stripped and used as a cash cow by Westminster with no benefit to the people of Scotland – that has been crystallised by events in the Middle East.

‘The solution to that is not the extreme position advocated by Trump, it is to give us the power to protect our oil industry of today and create the renewables jobs of tomorrow – that’s how you bring down bills, drive forward our economy and ensure our energy security.

‘That only happens through an SNP majority and the fresh start of independence – that’s what’s on the ballot in May.’
A spokesperson for the UK Government’s Department for Energy Security and Net Zero said: ‘We are taking action to bear down on the cost of living, including taking £117 off average energy bills this month and supporting de-escalation in the Middle East.

Source: This article was originally published by Metro UK

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