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The BP ETAP oil platform in the North Sea, around 100 miles east of Aberdeen
The BP ETAP oil platform in the North Sea, around 100 miles east of Aberdeen. Photograph: Wpa Pool/Getty Images
The BP ETAP oil platform in the North Sea, around 100 miles east of Aberdeen. Photograph: Wpa Pool/Getty Images

Scotland advised not to take North Sea oil for granted

This article is more than 9 years old
Sir Ian Wood says SNP should focus on improving Scotland and shelve independence plans for the foreseeable future

The North Sea oil industry is winding down and politicians and workers must start planning for the future “pretty quickly”, a senior industry figure and government adviser has warned.

Sir Ian Wood, the founder of the Wood Group who conducted a recent review of offshore oil and gas recovery for the UK government, said workers in Aberdeen have taken oil for granted but now need to change their thinking.

He has urged the SNP – who he praised as an able Scottish government – to put their ambitions for Scottish independence “on the back burner for a long, long period of time” and focus on using their “significant additional powers” to make Scotland a better place.

“I had known Aberdeen pre-oil. I won’t know Aberdeen post-oil, I will have gone, but there are generations out there who have always just taken it for granted, and who have become very, very dependent on the oil and gas industry,” he told The Times’s Scottish edition.

“They need to change their thinking. There is a potential way [forward] with the right kind of plan, and the right kind of people, and the right kind of local authority and the right kind of reception from the Scottish and UK governments to work our way through this.

“But we need to get started pretty quickly. We have this notion that in some undefined time, say 30 or 40 years, oil will begin to wind down.

“The fact is that it will begin to wind down in the next ten years. The fact is it is winding down now, actually, but very slowly.

“So you need to start taking that on board. But it needs a plan, it needs some resources.”

He said Aberdeen has become a cosmopolitan, enterprising, exciting place to do business but must “stop looking backwards, look forwards, look at the challenges we have and how we are going to deal with them.”

He added: “I kind of hope now, when we have got the macro devolution details sorted out, that the SNP government will say, ‘Well, now we’ve got significant additional powers, let’s go ahead and solve a lot of Scotland’s problems and let’s make Scotland a better place to live in’.

“And let’s put that divisive referendum away on a back burner ... for a long, long period of time.”

More on this story

More on this story

  • Questions over value of Scotland's oil highlighted by Sir Ian Wood forecast

  • SNP accused of exaggerating North Sea oil reserves by up to 60%

  • An independent Scotland 'stronger' using the pound without permission

  • Orkney and Shetland islanders already winning Scotland’s independence debate

  • Yes or no, Scots will 'just get on with it', says Scotland's first billionaire

  • Salmond's chief economic adviser says Scotland could renege on UK debt

  • Lord Birt says Scotland would lose many BBC services after yes vote

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