POLITICS: Aberdeen Pays Price For Net Zero – USSA News

🔴 Website 👉 https://u-s-news.com/
Telegram 👉 https://t.me/usnewscom_channel

By Paul Homewood

 

h/t Ian Magness

 

From the Telegraph:

So much for all those green jobs we were promised!

 

Just over a decade ago, Aberdeen was thriving.

It was the gateway to Britain’s North Sea oil and gas industry. Average weekly earnings were higher only in London and it consistently ranked among the top UK cities for business and jobs growth.

At £215,000, property prices were nearly double the Scottish average, having risen 165pc in just 10 years as the area boomed.

Following the scent of oil and gas, new arrivals appeared in their droves to fill highly paid positions. Between 2004 and 2015, the population jumped by nearly 20,000 and local businesses flourished.

The picture is starkly different today. Tumbling oil prices, punitive taxes and the underwhelming advance of renewables have tipped the North Sea energy industry into a spiral of accelerated decline that is taking Aberdeen’s property market down with it.

Energy Secretary Ed Miliband’s pledge to deliver a net zero transition for the area – in which jobs in oil and gas are replaced by ones in clean energy – has also fallen flat.

Rather than a renewables energy boom, some of the biggest companies in the region have scaled back investment or withdrawn entirely, seeking more profitable opportunities in other places as far-flung as the Persian Gulf.

Many of the most skilled workers have gone with them.

Around 18,000 jobs have disappeared from Aberdeen since 2010. Without intervention, the local economy will lose the equivalent of 1,000 workers a month between now and 2030, according to trade association Offshore Energies UK.

As more people flee the region, homeowners in Aberdeen watch with a mixture of anger and dismay as the value of their homes sinks while a glut of properties hits the market.

‘Ridiculous net zero policies have played a huge part’

More than two thirds of homes in Aberdeen fell in value last year, according to Zoopla. The average home now sells for just £136,000 – the lowest price since 2006.

At the same time, many have found their livelihoods hit by the energy sector’s declining activity. Falling profits at some of the region’s biggest employers have left residents directly employed in oil and gas, who account for more than one in 10 locals, at risk of losing their jobs. Many more in adjacent roles face the same fate.

Some of those who bought at the peak of the housing market in 2014 have taken house price hits as high as £90,000, blasting a hole in retirement plans. By contrast, UK house prices have risen on average by more than 53pc since 2014.

Many of those who hoped the market might recover are now cutting their losses after the Government introduced a ban on new drilling licences and extended the windfall tax on companies to 2030. Some experts said this would condemn the region to terminal decline.

Full story here.

 

The crisis has been brewing for several years, of course. The previous government was equally at fault, but maybe none more so than the SNP.

It was Alex Salmond who was the first to coin the phrase, “Saudi Arabia of Wind”, to describe Scotland’s wind resources. And it was the SNP who for so long were at the forefront of the obsession with Net Zero.

This content is courtesy of, and owned and copyrighted by, https://notalotofpeopleknowthat.wordpress.com and its author. This content is made available by use of the public RSS feed offered by the host site and is used for educational purposes only. If you are the author or represent the host site and would like this content removed now and in the future, please contact USSANews.com using the email address in the Contact page found in the website menu.



Source link

Exit mobile version