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    Home»World Economy»Britain Desperate For Oil | Armstrong Economics
    World Economy

    Britain Desperate For Oil | Armstrong Economics

    Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteBy Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteMay 21, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Britain is now discovering you cannot dismantle your industrial and energy base, wage war on domestic production, impose endless climate regulations, and still expect to maintain a functioning economy. Reality eventually arrives no matter how many politicians attempt to legislate against it.

    The UK is quietly loosening oil and gas restrictions because the country is becoming desperate. After years of aggressively pushing Net Zero policies, discouraging North Sea investment, raising windfall taxes on producers, and pretending renewable systems alone could carry an advanced industrial economy, Britain is being forced to confront the simple reality that energy shortages destroy economies from the inside out.

    The North Sea once represented one of the great strategic advantages for Britain. During the peak years around the late 1990s and early 2000s, the UK was producing nearly 4.5 million barrels of oil equivalent per day. That production has collapsed by more than 70% over the past two decades. At the same time, Britain became increasingly dependent on imported energy while shutting down domestic capacity.

    What politicians never understand is that energy is not just another sector of the economy. Energy is the economy. Every industry depends upon it. Food production depends on it. Transportation depends on it. Manufacturing depends on it. Once energy prices rise high enough, inflation spreads through the entire system because energy sits underneath every layer of economic activity.

    Britain now faces exactly the trap I warned Europe was heading toward. Deindustrialization combined with rising debt and declining living standards. Manufacturing weakens, capital flees, energy costs rise, and governments respond with more taxation and regulation which only accelerates the collapse further. This becomes a vicious cycle.

    The desperation is now becoming obvious. The UK government is reportedly reconsidering restrictions on North Sea drilling and attempting to stabilize investment conditions because energy firms were already beginning to abandon projects entirely. The punitive tax structure imposed on producers created massive uncertainty while investment dried up. Companies simply stopped committing capital because governments kept changing the rules in the middle of the game.

    Europe is in a depressionary phase while capital continues moving toward countries with stronger energy and industrial positions. You cannot build an economy entirely on financial services, bureaucracy, migration, and government spending while destroying the productive base underneath society itself.

    Even renewable infrastructure itself depends heavily on fossil fuels and industrial production. Wind turbines require steel, concrete, copper, rare earth minerals, transportation networks, diesel-powered construction equipment, and stable backup generation systems. Politicians sold the public a fantasy that complex industrial systems could be replaced almost overnight without economic consequences.

    The broader issue is sovereign debt. Europe’s governments are drowning in debt obligations while simultaneously facing aging populations, rising social costs, migration pressures, and slowing growth. Under those conditions, governments become increasingly desperate for revenue and increasingly hostile toward productive industry because they need someone to tax. Britain’s windfall taxes on energy producers were a classic example of short-term political desperation undermining long-term strategic stability.

    What we are witnessing is not simply a policy adjustment. It is the collapse of an entire economic assumption that nations could deindustrialize, outsource production, restrict energy development, accumulate endless debt, and still maintain rising living standards indefinitely.



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