No new North Sea oil wells for first time since 1960s
No new oil wells are to be drilled in the British North Sea this year for the first time since 1964 as Labour’s crackdown on profits and exploration hammers the sector.
A survey of offshore operators has found that zero exploratory wells – the vital first stage of discovering new resources – have been drilled so far in 2025, with no plans for the final two months of the year.
By contrast Norway, whose geology is similar and whose government takes a very positive approach to oil and gas, has seen 30 new exploration wells drilled so far in 2025, with up to nine more expected before year end.
The collapse of exploration in British waters comes in response to a windfall tax on oil and gas profits, which Labour raised to 78pc, and a ban by Ed Miliband on licences for exploratory drilling in new areas.
Exploratory drilling is still allowed in areas licensed before the ban, but industry say the threat of a future raid by government means few are willing to risk investing in new developments.
This year is now on track to be the first in the industry’s history when no new wells are drilled.
The first offshore wells were drilled after the UK Continental Shelf Act in 1964, with the first commercial gas field discovered the following year by BP. The first commercial oil field was discovered in 1969 by Amoco.
The research, carried out by analysts at Westwood Global Energy, comes amid rising political tension over the future of North Sea oil and gas.
Mr Miliband, the Energy Secretary, is due to publish a revised North Sea strategy before the Budget, aimed at restarting some drilling. Rachel Reeves separately is considering ending the windfall levy early.
Westwood’s findings suggest any changes may come too late, with the UK oil and gas industry in rapid decline.
Alyson Harding, at Westwood Global Energy, said: “Our dataset shows that in 2025 to date, oil and gas companies in the UK have not initiated the drilling of any offshore exploration wells.
“This is the first such year since 1964 when the first offshore exploration well was spudded. Investor sentiment … is at an all-time low, due to the current tax regime and uncertainties around government policies and regulation.”
Most UK reservoirs only last for a relatively short time before becoming depleted, so constantly finding and drilling new fields is essential to maintain production.
The slowdown in drilling is one reason that last year the UK had to import 43 million tonnes of crude oil plus another 31 million tonnes of refined oils such as petrol, diesel and jet fuel.

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