Andy Burnham urged to stick to Labour manifesto on North Sea oil


Andy Burnham has been urged to stick to Labourโ€™s manifesto and block further drilling in the North Sea amid reports he is considering backing new oil and gas projects.

Allies of the new Labour leader have said he intends to make a โ€œdynamicโ€ start to his premiership on Monday, when he formally takes over from Sir Keir Starmer.

In a speech in Downing Street, he is expected to set out plans to provide โ€œbreathing spaceโ€ on the cost of living and bring economic growth to every part of the UK, but details of his plans remain unclear.

Media reports have suggested that could involve approving new oil and gas drilling in the North Sea, with Mr Burnham said to be โ€œopen-mindedโ€ about such a move.

But Labourโ€™s 2024 manifesto, which Mr Burnham has promised to honour, said the party would not issue new North Sea licences, arguing they would โ€œnot take a penny off billsโ€ or improve energy security while accelerating climate change.

Senior Green Party figures on Saturday urged the incoming prime minister not to break โ€œone of Labourโ€™s flagship manifesto commitmentsโ€.

Green MP Adrian Ramsay said: โ€œAndy Burnham says he takes the climate and nature crises seriously, but words are no substitute for action.

โ€œWith heatwaves causing deaths, wildfires and extreme weather across the country, approving new oil and gas drilling is exactly the wrong response and will do nothing to bring down energy bills.โ€

The past week has seen a significant lobbying effort in favour of new licences, with energy industry leaders and trade union bosses publishing an open letter to Labour MPs calling for them to back North Sea oil and gas.

They argued this would reduce reliance on fossil fuel imports from โ€œvolatile regionsโ€ that involved higher emissions, making it a โ€œmore responsible choice for the climateโ€.

Opponents of further drilling say the global oil market means extra production in the North Sea would make no difference to energy bills, while being more expensive to extract.

There is also no guarantee that additional North Sea oil will be used in the UK, which exports most of the oil it already produces.

Arguments over North Sea oil have proved a flashpoint throughout Sir Keirโ€™s premiership, with Conservative backing for more drilling helping the party win its first parliamentary by-election in Scotland for almost 50 years last month.

Support for new drilling could also complicate Mr Burnhamโ€™s choice of chancellor, a decision he said on Friday he had not yet made.

One of the leading candidates is thought to be Energy Secretary Ed Miliband, who has been a strong supporter of Labourโ€™s manifesto commitment on the North Sea, while reports suggest Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood may be in line for the crucial role instead.

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