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SEI report

Lessons from oil and gas transitions in the North Sea

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SEI report

Lessons from oil and gas transitions in the North Sea

This report considers how the three North Sea oil- and gas-producing countries of Denmark, Norway and the UK can move towards pathways compatible with climate goals and a just transition. It shows that governments have adjusted approaches that favour of the fossil fuel industry in response  to declining North Sea extraction and to the economic impacts of the pandemic and Russian invasion of Ukraine. The authors argue that governments should play a central role in phasing out fossil fuels.

Felipe Sanchez, Björn Nykvist, Olle Olsson, Linus Linde / Published on 2 August 2023

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Citation

Sanchez, F., Nykvist, B., Olsson, O., & Linde, L. (2023). Lessons from oil and gas transitions in the North Sea. SEI Report. Stockholm Environment Institute, Stockholm.

This report presents findings from the Oil and Gas Transitions programme, which aims to accelerate just transitions amongst producers in the North Sea. The report offers insights gained from co-production workshops on fossil fuel transition scenarios, held with stakeholders from industry and civil society in Denmark, Norway and the UK. It sets out related policy considerations that focus on supply-side interventions related to the pursuit of just transitions and that are relevant for countries in other regions of the world seeking to make similar transitions.

The authors argue that these governments should play a central role in phasing out fossil fuels – particularly given that the North Sea is a mature region of production where countries have ambitious carbon-neutrality targets. The authors contend that these producers should already be putting in place transition strategies to ensure that no one is left behind. The report itself indicates that, in response to crises (the pandemic and the war in Ukraine), countries have instead adopted measures that support the fossil fuel industry; such state interventions lock in emissions for decades to come and help maintain global dependency on oil and gas resources.

The authors underscore that long-sighted political leadership is needed for governments to take decisive first steps, such as scaling up investments into clean energy and transition technologies, and removing fossil fuel subsidies and skewed taxation policies. The energy and cost-of-living crises unleashed by recent oil and gas price volatility and the deadly impacts of global warming provide a glimpse at the long-term costs of inaction, the report notes.

The authors emphasize the need for governments to establish participatory planning processes with a range of stakeholders needed to chart the way forward and overcome resistance to the transition among the public and within the oil and gas industry itself.

This is the final report of wider Oil and Gas Transitions programme, which aims to accelerate just transitions amongst producers in the North Sea. The programme is part of the wider Oil and Gas Transitions research project, co-led by Climate Strategies and the Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI). The research project seeks to improve understanding of how countries that produce oil and gas can move away from fossil fuel production towards pathways compatible with global climate goals and a just transition.

Visit the Oil and Gas Transitions project website for more information and reports.

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Download the report / PDF / 779 KB

Download

Download the related press release by Climate Strategies / PDF / 216 KB

SEI authors

Felipe Sanchez
Felipe Sanchez

Policy Fellow

SEI Headquarters

Bjorn Nyqvist
Björn Nykvist

Team Leader: Energy and Industry Transitions; Senior Research Fellow

SEI Headquarters

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