Tories would maximise North Sea oil and gas extraction, Badenoch to say | Kemi Badenoch

The Conservative Party is expected to announce the ilk to maximize the removal of oil and gas in the North Sea if it gains strength, and is expected to announce Kemi Badenoch.
Sunday Telegraph said that Badenoch would use a speech in Aberdeen to determine as much oil and gas extraction plans as possible instead of getting away from fossil fuels in the coming days.
The Tories plan will announce the plan to overcome the North Sea transition authority, which controls the licenses, releases the transition word and replaces the 12 -page task with a simple order to remove the possible maximum fossil fuel.
Badenoch said that Britain cannot do anything to get hydrocarbons out of the ground to increase growth.
He said: “Neighbors like Norway remove them from the same sea base, and we are in a ridiculous state where our country left the vital resources empty.
“England has been more indecisive than all other major economies since 1990, but we have encountered some of the highest energy prices in the developed world.
“This is not sustainable and cannot continue. So until 2050, I am looking for time for this unilateral economic disarmament and the impossible zero ideology of the Labor Party.
“So, a future conservative government will engrave all tasks for the North Sea, beyond maximizing the extraction.
“It is time for common sense, economic growth and national interests to come first, and only the conservatives will provide this. We will remove all our oil and gas from the North Sea.”
Last month, EN MİLİBAND, Energy and Net Zero Secretary, accused the conservatives of abandoning a political consensus in Net Zero of being a “anti -science”.
After the bulletin promotion
In the first promised as the annual “Climate Status” report, the Labor Party deputy revealed the findings of a study led by Met Office, which details how England is already warmer and more wet and faced more extreme weather events.
In 2019, Miliband quoted the former Prime Minister Theresa May, who put the net zero target into the law and argued that the real climate zealots were “populists that only offer easy answers to complex questions. “I couldn’t put myself better.”




