UK locks in 78% North Sea tax as Industry Warns of 66 Billion Dollar Investment Hole

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The UK government has confirmed that the Energy Profits Levy will stay in place until March 2030, keeping the headline tax rate on North Sea oil and gas profits at around 78 percent. Industry body Offshore Energies UK (OEUK) says the decision will deter about 50 billion pounds, roughly 66 billion dollars, of upstream investment, speeding up production decline and pushing projects, jobs and supply chain work out of the UK continental shelf.
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North Sea tax in 30 seconds
The UK is keeping its Energy Profits Levy on North Sea oil and gas in place to 2030, holding the effective tax rate on profits around 78%. Industry group forecasts suggest this could deter about 50 billion pounds of upstream investment, close to 66 billion dollars, as companies redirect capital to lower tax basins. Less capex over time means fewer new projects and a faster production decline, with more of UK demand met by imported crude, products and LNG instead of domestic barrels.
- Operators favour low capex tie backs into existing hubs over new standalone fields.
- Drilling and construction campaigns tilt toward short subsea scopes and targeted well work.
- OSVs, subsea vessels and heavy lift units see more stop start utilisation and shorter contracts.
- Pipeline of new North Sea projects thins as investment is redirected to lower tax basins.
- Decommissioning, removal and life extension work gradually take a larger share of offshore spend.
- Specialised heavy lift and subsea contractors gain selective upside, while generalist tonnage sees less predictable demand.
| Stakeholder | Directional positives | Directional pressures |
|---|---|---|
| Offshore support vessel owners |
• Tie back campaigns and integrity work still require PSVs, AHTS and walk-to-work tonnage. |
• A thinner project slate reduces multi-year charter cover from North Sea operators. |
| Subsea, engineering and heavy lift |
• Decommissioning pipelines create recurring lifts and subsea scopes on aging platforms and pipelines. |
• Loss of large greenfield projects removes some of the biggest single contracts from the region. |
| Ports, yards and coastal economies |
• Decommissioning, repairs and life-extension work keep some fabrication, laydown and storage areas active. |
• Fewer large projects reduce hotel nights, local spending and cargo throughputs in traditional oil hubs. |
| Deepsea tanker and LNG trades |
• Declining UK North Sea output can lift long-haul import demand for crude, products and LNG. |
• The shift from domestic production to imports weakens the strategic position of UK-based offshore fleets. |
- Use mixed oil, gas and decommissioning portfolios to smooth out the weaker North Sea development pipeline.
- Position tonnage and teams for tie back, integrity and removal work rather than only large greenfield projects.
- Leverage North Sea credentials in other mature basins that value experience in high tax and high regulation environments.
- Whether the government brings forward any reform before 2030 that improves visibility for long life projects.
- How fast North Sea focused fleets can diversify into offshore wind, interconnector work or other regions.
- How quickly rising import dependence reshapes trade flows into the UK and the role of UK ports in those chains.
Keeping the UK Energy Profits Levy through 2030 effectively locks in a high marginal tax rate at a time when North Sea fields are already in decline. Industry modelling now frames the cost not only in terms of operator profits but also as roughly fifty billion pounds of upstream investment that may not land in the basin, along with a projected forty percent drop in output by 2030 and the loss of around a thousand jobs each month if there is no earlier reform.
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