Market takes heart from UK government’s North Sea commitment
Renewed backing for project sanctions boosts UKCS mood
UK finance minister Rishi Sunak laid out in early February the Johnson administration’s most unequivocal public backing for continued UK continental shelf (UKCS) drilling. And this, combined with as-yet unsubstantiated press rumours that Sunak is leaning on the energy ministry to fast-track projects in the permitting stage, has already lifted the spirits of the country’s upstream industry. “There are £11bn-worth of projects waiting to get going. I would like to see those projects go ahead, which will be good for the country’s energy security, good for our economy and good for jobs,” Sunak told the UK lower house on 3 February, citing 200,000 jobs supported by the oil and gas industry. “I kno
Also in this section
16 January 2026
The country’s global energy importance and domestic political fate are interlocked, highlighting its outsized oil and gas powers, and the heightened fallout risk
16 January 2026
The global maritime oil transport sector enters 2026 facing a rare convergence of crude oversupply, record newbuild deliveries and the potential easing of several geopolitical disruptions that have shaped trade flows since 2022
15 January 2026
Rebuilding industry, energy dominance and lower energy costs are key goals that remain at odds in 2026
14 January 2026
Chavez’s socialist reforms boosted state control but pushed knowledge and capital out of the sector, opening the way for the US shale revolution






