Sir Keir Starmer slammed as ‘naive’ over his plans to ban North Sea oil and gas production
SIR Keir Starmer was branded "naive" and "wrong" over his North Sea oil ban by one of his top union backers.
The GMB savaged the Labour leader's policy of ending offshore drilling - amid a row over donations to Labour from Just Stop Oil bankroller Dale Vince.
GMB union general secretary Gary Smith said Labour's policies "are going to create a cliff edge with oil and gas extraction from the North Sea".
Speaking on Sky News on Sunday morning after shadow business secretary Jonathan Reynolds defended plans to ban oil and gas production, Mr Smith described Labour as "naive".
He called on the party to stop putting what was "popular" ahead of what was right for the country and said that workers in the industry were "very worried" about the plans.
The proposals, confirmed by Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer last week, would ban new licences for oil and gas extraction in the North Sea but still allow existing projects to continue until 2050 as part of the party's push towards a green energy transition.
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Speaking ahead of the GMB annual congress in Brighton on Sunday, the general secretary told Sky's Sophy Ridge: "Their policies are going to create a cliff edge with oil and gas extraction from the North Sea.
"There is a lot of oil and gas in the North Sea and the alternatives facing the country are that we either produce our own oil and gas - take responsibility for our carbon emissions - or we are going to import more oil and gas.
"I think workers in the petrochemical industry … are going to be very worried about what Labour are saying and I think it is time for Labour to focus on the right thing rather than what they think is the popular thing."
He said that the sector had been promised "tens of thousands of jobs" in renewable energy "time and time again" but that they "simply have not emerged", adding: "That has been the sorry state of the renewables industry around the country."
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Mr Reynolds stood by the plans, telling BBC's Laura Kuenssberg that energy extraction in the North Sea would continue until 2050, protecting the 28,000 workers in the sector.