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Kemi Badenoch will visit an oil rig on Monday as she launches a campaign to โ€œget Britain drillingโ€. The Tory leader has branded Labourโ€™s refusal to grant new oil and gas drilling licences as โ€œstupidโ€ and โ€œcompletely crazyโ€ as global markets are rocked by the conflict in Iran.

The future of Britainโ€™s remaining oil and gas reserves in the North Sea is now one of the key dividing lines in UK politics, and the Conservative leader is adamant the country should โ€œmaximiseโ€ domestic production. Mrs Badenoch said the โ€œreal reason Labour are refusing new licences is that [Energy Security and Net Zero Secretary] Ed Miliband is now running the governmentโ€.

In a new advertising campaign, the Tories will claim Labourโ€™s โ€œban on new oil and gas licencesโ€ has โ€œleft 2.9billion barrels in the ground and risks 200,000 jobsโ€. The party is also demanding an end to the energy profits levy โ€“ the so-called windfall tax โ€“ which it blames for stopping investment. Under its plans a new North Sea Authority would have a โ€œsingle focus on maximising oil and gas extractionโ€, replacing the North Sea Transition Authority.

Pushing for a change in direction, the Tories state: โ€œContinuing down this path of higher energy bills, job losses, and lower economic growth will make us a warning, not an example, to the rest of the world. We must put cheap, reliable energy and a stronger economy first.โ€

The party argues the UK could be โ€œimporting as much as 82% per cent of its gas by 2035, leaving bill-payers vulnerable to shifts in oil priceโ€. There is further concern Britain could suffer another blow to energy security if transatlantic supplies of liquified natural gas (LNG) were curtailed.

Mrs Badenoch said: โ€œLabour’s ban on new oil and gas drilling licences was stupid when they put it in their manifesto; in the middle of an energy crisis it’s completely crazy. Drilling our own oil and gas is about energy security, it’s about financial security, it’s about national security. It’s more jobs, good for business and provides tax revenues that could be used to bring down bills.โ€

She added: โ€œWe need to get Britain drilling. A strong economy relies on cheap, abundant energy.โ€

There is concern across the political spectrum about Britainโ€™s dependence on energy imports.

When approached earlier in the week, a spokesman for the GMB union said: โ€œIt is absolutely critical for the UKโ€™s national security that we have a strong manufacturing base and secure supply of domestic oil and gas. Relying on imports from other countries for the essential elements that power our economy and keep the country going leaves us worryingly exposed.โ€

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