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GB Energy ‘must be located in Aberdeen’ – business leaders demand

Aberdeen and Grampian Chamber of Commerce laid out their case in an open letter to Keir Starmer, Ed Miliband and Anas Sarwar.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer (left) with Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar, during a visit to St Fergus Gas Terminal, a clean power facility in Aberdeenshire. Image: Jeff J Mitchell/PA Wire
Prime Minister Keir Starmer (left) with Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar, during a visit to St Fergus Gas Terminal, a clean power facility in Aberdeenshire. Image: Jeff J Mitchell/PA Wire

As the new Labour Government looks to get the ball rolling on Great British Energy, Aberdeen and Grampian Chamber of Commerce (AGCC) have called for the firm to be based in the north-east of Scotland.

The chamber said that the publicly owned energy company “must be located in Aberdeen” in an open letter to Keir Starmer, Ed Miliband and Anas Sarwar.

AGCC is calling for local businesses to sign the letter and show support for GB Energy setting up shop in the Granite City, something it says there has been “overwhelming public support for”.

Aberdeen and Grampian Chamber of Commerce chief executive Russell Borthwick.
Russell Borthwick, of Aberdeen and Grampian Chamber of Commerce. Image: AGCC

Call for Aberdeen to host GB Energy project

“GB Energy must be co-created with industry if it is to stand the best chance of success,” the letter penned by Russell Borthwick, chief executive of AGCC, outlines.

“You have been clear that you want to work with the energy sector to ensure that GB Energy delivers effectively for the whole UK.

“That industry is largely based here in the North-east of Scotland. We have the largest cluster of energy supply chain companies anywhere in the UK, harbouring the largest concentration of subsea engineering capabilities anywhere in the world.”

The chamber points to Aberdeen’s close proximity to many of the wind farms that secured licences in the Scot Wind round as well as the Acorn carbon capture storage project which is receiving UK government funds under the Track 2 process.

In addition to this, the chamber sates: “Aberdeen will continue to be a major base for ongoing production in oil and gas throughout the transition.”

Port of Nigg
Port of Nigg. Image: Port of Nigg.

Highlands plea for GB Energy

The chamber letter follows another sent to energy secretary Ed Miliband by Inverness Chamber of Commerce (ICC) setting out the case for establishing GB Energy in the Highlands.

It was signed by business and civic leaders including ICC chief executive Colin Marr, Highland Council CEO Derek Brown, Highlands and Islands Enterprise CEO Stuart Black, University of the Highlands and Islands director Alison Wilson and Inverness and Cromarty Firth Green Freeport (ICFGF) CEO Calum MacPherson.

GB Energy in Aberdeen would create job security

GB Energy has been the Labour party’s answer to criticism from the industry over plans to raise and extend the windfall tax and remove incentives and so-called “loopholes” for oil and gas firms.

The energy industry particularly in the north-east of Scotland has issued dire warnings on the impact these policies will have on jobs and investment.,

Following last week’s general election result, Mr Borthwick told Energy Voice: “We need the PM to deliver on his commitment to forge a new partnership with business to boost growth and to work with his government to ensure that Aberdeen and Grampian is in pole position to deliver an energy transition that secures investment, jobs and creates the opportunities everyone covets in the clean industries of the future.”

Oil platform
The North Sea oil and gas industry faces an uncertain future as politicians of all hues argue the ins and outs of continued production and new projects. Image: Jane Barlow/PA Wire

The chamber is also calling for the new UK government to protect UK jobs with its proposed energy firm.

The letter explains that the UK oil and gas market is mature and that the country’s basin is in decline, therefore jobs from the fossil fuels industry must be safeguarded.

Borthwick writes: “Headquartering a state-backed energy company in the city can help to ensure that jobs in the sector are retained and created here.”

There is still some confusion around what GB Energy will become, however.

Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar described it as a “publicly owned energy generation company” while the incoming prime minister Keir Starmer said it would be an “investment vehicle, not an energy company”.

This story was written and published by our sister title Energy Voice.

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