Ed Miliband just turned Britain into a bad joke – here are five reasons no one’s laughing | Personal Finance | Finance
As uncertainty over Iran drags on, global oil and gas prices are climbing rapidly. On Monday, April 6, a barrel of Brent crude traded at almost $109. Thatโs close to double the $60 it cost before the Middle East blew up. Prices have eased slightly as hopes grow that the fragile ceasefire might hold, and that Iran will loosen its grip on the vital Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the worldโs oil supply passes.
But even if the tankers start moving again, shortages are building. Drone strikes have knocked out oil and gas capacity, and weeks of disruption have created a massive global backlog. British motorists are paying the price. Unleaded petrol is heading towards ยฃ1.60 a litre and diesel has accelerated past ยฃ1.90. Household energy bills are forecast to jump by ยฃ288 from July to around ยฃ1,929 a year. They could leap again in October.
The UK economy has already stalled under Rachel Reeves and now risks sliding into stagflation or recession. Yet there is one bright spot. North Sea oil, the type Britain can produce, has just hit a record high. We should count ourselves lucky for once.
Brent crude reflects contracts for future delivery, but countries canโt wait. They want physical supply now. Forties Blend, the benchmark for North Sea oil thatโs ready for use, has surged above $146 a barrel, according to Reuters. Thatโs the highest level since the run-up to the 2008 financial crisis. North Sea crude has become especially valuable because itโs accessible, reliable and close to key markets.
We’re sitting on a goldmine, in the middle of a gold rush. Thereโs just one small problem. His name? Ed Miliband. Britain finds itself with the only energy secretary in the world who thinks itโs sensible to hold back domestic oil and gas production in the middle of what may be the biggest energy shock in history.
Miliband argues that increasing domestic production wonโt cut prices because oil and gas are traded globally. Thatโs true as far as it goes, but itโs also a sleight of hand. I quickly found five clear reasons to keep drilling.
First, more North Sea output would strengthen energy security. Second, every molecule of gas produced here goes straight into British homes, and there are 26 million boilers relying on it. Third, producing our own energy instead of importing it would improve the balance of payments, which has been weak for years. Fourth, it would support the pound. Fifth, it would generate around ยฃ2.5 billion a year in tax revenues, badly needed as public finances creak.
I’ve found a sixth bonus benefit. It’ll create well-paid jobs. And a seventh. One that should even satisfy Ed Miliband. It would cut our emissions by reducing reliance on more carbon-intensive imports.
Miliband and his acolytes reckon it’s only right-wingers like Nigel Farage and Kemi Badenoch who want us to access our own oil resources. That’s rubbish.
Britain is sitting on a valuable resource during a global supply crisis, yet refuses to use it. Miliband prefers to showcase green credentials rather than apply common sense. But he wonโt. Which is daft. But not as daft as our feeble PM Keir Starmer, who lets him get away with it. We’re a global joke, and it’s not at all funny.
