UK North Sea threatened by cost escalation
The oil price fall points a spotlight on the UK’s out-of-control operating costs
In 2009, Brent Blend crude was selling for an average price of $61.46 a barrel and the UK’s North Sea oil and gas were costing $13.20 a barrel of oil-equivalent (boe) to produce. Move forward six years and the Brent Blend price is much the same - but the operating cost has escalated to $30.53/boe, according to the producers’ and suppliers’ association, Oil & Gas UK (OGUK). "Inadequate stewardship coupled with an unstable fiscal regime and a steep production decline have made the UK continental shelf, on a unit of production basis, one of the least competitive places to operate in the world”, according to OGUK’s chief executive, Malcolm Webb. The organisation’s Activity Survey 2015, publ
Also in this section
22 April 2026
The failure of OMV Petrom’s keenly watched exploration campaign at Bulgaria’s Han Asparuh block highlights the Black Sea’s uneven track record, despite major successes like Neptun Deep and Sakarya
22 April 2026
Sustained strikes on ports, terminals and refineries are testing the resilience of Russia’s oil export system, yet rapid repairs, rerouting and surging prices mean the campaign has yet to deliver a decisive blow
21 April 2026
After overcoming a COVID-induced demand collapse with several years of successful market management, geopolitical events have conspired to provide the pact’s biggest test to date
21 April 2026
The regime’s policy of using nuclear ambiguity as a deterrent may have failed but it has realised it has other cards to play, while its neighbours are reappraising their approach to security






