The discovery of North Sea oil changed Aberdeen's harbour and waterfront. Alamy
The discovery of North Sea oil changed Aberdeen's harbour and waterfront. Alamy
The discovery of North Sea oil changed Aberdeen's harbour and waterfront. Alamy
The discovery of North Sea oil changed Aberdeen's harbour and waterfront. Alamy

Rest in peace - or rebirth? What going green means for the oil town of Aberdeen


Tim Stickings
  • English
  • Arabic

Half a century ago, a North Sea oil boom transformed Aberdeen’s skyline and the fortunes of the north-east of Scotland.

A medieval harbour once known for herring and whaling became dotted with white storage cylinders and brightly coloured supply vessels, ferrying cargo to North Sea oil rigs. Shell built a modernist five-storey HQ as wealth and people flowed into the city. An Aberdeen team managed by Sir Alex Ferguson even beat Real Madrid to win football's European Cup Winners’ Cup in their 1980s heyday.

A local joke was that oil and gas workers recruited from abroad "used to complain about being sent to far north Aberdeen, the Granite City, and then they moaned even more when they were told they had to leave,” recalls Fergus Mutch, an adviser to local businesses.

Aberdeen through the years – in pictures

Not all of Aberdeen felt the boom. The fishing village of Old Torry was demolished in the 1970s to make way for the oil industry. Torry today is a deprived tenement neighbourhood in the shadow of warehouses and storage tanks, where council workers report problems from unsafe roads to tooth decay.

Shell demolished its symbolic Aberdeen HQ in August, abandoning it for nondescript offices on Union Street. The historic shopping thoroughfare is in need of regeneration, with many units lying empty. House prices have been in decline for much of the past decade.

Aberdeen is anxious to change the narrative as North Sea drilling declines and a climate-conscious era takes shape in Britain and the world, making the city a test case for whether workers and communities will be left behind by the global energy transition.

Another change to the skyline hints at better days ahead for the self-described oil capital of Europe. Eleven 191m wind turbines run by the Swedish energy giant Vattenfall spin directly off Aberdeen’s coast, visible from the promenade where waves crash into the beach – a landscape that could also make the area suitable for tidal power.

If oil and gas can be combined with wind, tidal, carbon capture and hydrogen, there is “actually more energy potential in the North Sea in future than we had in the past,” says Paul de Leeuw, a former Shell and BP employee turned professor at an Energy Transition Institute at Aberdeen’s Robert Gordon University.

The fear is that oil and gas will disappear too fast, before the greener alternatives are ready. “If you do it just right, in the Goldilocks zone, you can take the supply chain, the workforce, all the capabilities from one industry and actually accelerate the other industry,” said Prof de Leeuw. “The alternative is accelerated decline, where you basically stop everything and you live with the consequences.”

Professor Paul de Leeuw says Aberdeen should aim to land its energy transition in a 'Goldilocks zone' where jobs and supply chains are preserved. Photo: Robert Gordon University
Professor Paul de Leeuw says Aberdeen should aim to land its energy transition in a 'Goldilocks zone' where jobs and supply chains are preserved. Photo: Robert Gordon University

Budget watch

That made it an anxious wait for Aberdeen to see whether Britain's new Labour government would put its foot on the accelerator in Wednesday's Budget, in which Chancellor Rachel Reeves raised taxes by £40 billion ($51.9 billion).

Aberdeen's chamber of commerce said business confidence is lower than during the financial crash of 2008 or the height of Covid-19. Mr Mutch, who advises on policy at the chamber, had warned that any tax rise would be "simply too much to bear" for some operators.

The contents of Ms Reeves's red box were mixed for Aberdeen. A profits levy was raised to 38 per cent, as expected. An end date of 2030 was offered along with a consultation next year on how windfall taxes will work in future, addressing concerns about a never-ending tax.

Brightly coloured supply ships dominate the skyline of Aberdeen's harbour, once better known for fishing and whaling. The National
Brightly coloured supply ships dominate the skyline of Aberdeen's harbour, once better known for fishing and whaling. The National

An allowance for investment in the tax rules was partially extended in a "signal that the government was listening", said the chamber's chief executive Russell Borthwick. But he said there was "no justification for a super tax on ‘windfall profits’ which no longer exist".

Although Labour’s plan for a new state-owned clean power investor, GB Energy, to have its headquarters in Aberdeen has gone down well locally, there is uncertainty about what it will do, said Mr Mutch. About one in five workers in the north-east of Scotland have jobs linked to the offshore industry. “There’s a decline in the number of oil and gas jobs required in the North Sea. There is an uptick, but not at anything like the same rate in employment in renewables,” he said.

Green initiatives

There are plenty of plans to make the green switch happen in Aberdeen. A floating Aberdeenshire wind farm called Green Volt, billed as the world’s largest, was given the go-ahead in April. The new GB Energy comes armed with £8.3 billion ($10.78 billion) to invest in clean power. In July the energy giant BP committed to a new hydrogen hub in Aberdeen to produce and store the clean fuel.

Labour is putting billions more into a new National Wealth Fund to spend on ports, green hydrogen and carbon capture. There are sustainable farming efforts in Aberdeenshire, and salmon rivers frequented by King Charles III are being restored to protect local wildlife from climate change. Decommissioning oil rigs is an industry in itself.

Wind turbines run by Swedish energy giant Vattenfall spin directly off Aberdeen’s coast. Getty Images
Wind turbines run by Swedish energy giant Vattenfall spin directly off Aberdeen’s coast. Getty Images

David Innes, a retired head teacher and chairman of an organisation called Aberdeen for a Fairer World, said there were some “really excellent examples in the north-east of Scotland” of work being done on sustainable development. “Perhaps we could actually be doing more to bring out more of the good stories, more of the potential and actually be seen to be at the leading edge,” he said.

But there is an awareness among green-minded locals that oil and gas holds a certain sway over politics. North Sea drilling has become part of Aberdeen’s heritage, celebrated at a museum where workers in hard hats tell children about life offshore. “Ensuring a continued supply of hydrocarbons is very important for our economy,” explains an installation manager on the Tern Alpha platform.

Lisa Heinzler and David Innes, sustainability campaigners who would like to see more environmentally friendly activities in Aberdeen. The National
Lisa Heinzler and David Innes, sustainability campaigners who would like to see more environmentally friendly activities in Aberdeen. The National

Lisa Heinzler, a student who has researched sustainability work in the Aberdeen area, said she struggled to get oil and gas companies to speak about the subject beyond their public releases. “They seem kind of OK with the fact that they are at the starting point of their sustainability journey”, she said.

Britain passed peak oil in 1990 and production has fallen back into steady decline after a brief spike in fossil fuel trading while Europe looked for alternatives to Russian gas. A worldwide race for clean power is on after almost every country agreed at Cop28 in the UAE to treble the world’s renewable energy firepower by 2030.

What Aberdeen has is an industrial supply chain and expertise in sub-sea engineering. Applications opened last week for companies seeking a slice of the offshore wind supply chain to be certified as up to the task. Out of 135 UK companies involved in an earlier round of the scheme, 75 were in the north-east of Scotland. Experts believe 90 per cent of the North Sea workforce has skills that would be transferable to green industries.

Making an energy transition work requires a workforce, a supply chain and an integrated energy ecosystem, all of which "exists plentifully in the north-east of Scotland and Aberdeen," Prof de Leeuw said. "If you want to make an energy transition work, you cannot have a better starting point than we have now."

“If we get it right, this will be an energy powerhouse for decades and decades to come," he said. That is the big opportunity but also the big challenge. Get it wrong and you lose the capacity. People will go and do other jobs.” For Aberdeen, the opportunity to reinvent itself once more is there to be grasped.

Despacito's dominance in numbers

Released: 2017

Peak chart position: No.1 in more than 47 countries, including the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia and Lebanon

Views: 5.3 billion on YouTube

Sales: With 10 million downloads in the US, Despacito became the first Latin single to receive Diamond sales certification

Streams: 1.3 billion combined audio and video by the end of 2017, making it the biggest digital hit of the year.

Awards: 17, including Record of the Year at last year’s prestigious Latin Grammy Awards, as well as five Billboard Music Awards

About Takalam

Date started: early 2020

Founders: Khawla Hammad and Inas Abu Shashieh

Based: Abu Dhabi

Sector: HealthTech and wellness

Number of staff: 4

Funding to date: Bootstrapped

MATCH INFO

Rugby World Cup (all times UAE)

Final: England v South Africa, Saturday, 1pm

The National's picks

4.35pm: Tilal Al Khalediah
5.10pm: Continous
5.45pm: Raging Torrent
6.20pm: West Acre
7pm: Flood Zone
7.40pm: Straight No Chaser
8.15pm: Romantic Warrior
8.50pm: Calandogan
9.30pm: Forever Young

500 People from Gaza enter France

115 Special programme for artists

25   Evacuation of injured and sick

Company%20profile
%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3ECompany%20name%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20FinFlx%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EStarted%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20January%202021%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EFounders%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Amr%20Yussif%20(co-founder%20and%20CEO)%2C%20Mattieu%20Capelle%20(co-founder%20and%20CTO)%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EBased%20in%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Dubai%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EIndustry%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20FinTech%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EFunding%20size%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20%241.5m%20pre-seed%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EInvestors%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Venture%20capital%20-%20Y%20Combinator%2C%20500%20Global%2C%20Dubai%20Future%20District%20Fund%2C%20Fox%20Ventures%2C%20Vector%20Fintech.%20Also%20a%20number%20of%20angel%20investors%3C%2Fp%3E%0A

Duterte Harry: Fire and Fury in the Philippines
Jonathan Miller, Scribe Publications

Countries recognising Palestine

France, UK, Canada, Australia, Portugal, Belgium, Malta, Luxembourg, San Marino and Andorra

 

What is hepatitis?

Hepatitis is an inflammation of the liver, which can lead to fibrosis (scarring), cirrhosis or liver cancer.

There are 5 main hepatitis viruses, referred to as types A, B, C, D and E.

Hepatitis C is mostly transmitted through exposure to infective blood. This can occur through blood transfusions, contaminated injections during medical procedures, and through injecting drugs. Sexual transmission is also possible, but is much less common.

People infected with hepatitis C experience few or no symptoms, meaning they can live with the virus for years without being diagnosed. This delay in treatment can increase the risk of significant liver damage.

There are an estimated 170 million carriers of Hepatitis C around the world.

The virus causes approximately 399,000 fatalities each year worldwide, according to WHO.

 

Sheikh Zayed's poem

When it is unveiled at Abu Dhabi Art, the Standing Tall exhibition will appear as an interplay of poetry and art. The 100 scarves are 100 fragments surrounding five, figurative, female sculptures, and both sculptures and scarves are hand-embroidered by a group of refugee women artisans, who used the Palestinian cross-stitch embroidery art of tatreez. Fragments of Sheikh Zayed’s poem Your Love is Ruling My Heart, written in Arabic as a love poem to his nation, are embroidered onto both the sculptures and the scarves. Here is the English translation.

Your love is ruling over my heart

Your love is ruling over my heart, even a mountain can’t bear all of it

Woe for my heart of such a love, if it befell it and made it its home

You came on me like a gleaming sun, you are the cure for my soul of its sickness

Be lenient on me, oh tender one, and have mercy on who because of you is in ruins

You are like the Ajeed Al-reem [leader of the gazelle herd] for my country, the source of all of its knowledge

You waddle even when you stand still, with feet white like the blooming of the dates of the palm

Oh, who wishes to deprive me of sleep, the night has ended and I still have not seen you

You are the cure for my sickness and my support, you dried my throat up let me go and damp it

Help me, oh children of mine, for in his love my life will pass me by. 

RESULTS
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Updated: November 01, 2024, 6:00 PM