Climate campaigners have accused Donald Trump of attacking Britain’s energy policies on behalf of the fossil fuel industry, which made record donations to his presidential campaign.
The US president-elect wrote in a social media post on Friday that the British government was “making a very big mistake” by cracking down on North Sea oil and gas producers – and added that the UK should “get rid of windmills”.
The broadside appeared to be a clear condemnation of the Labour government’s decision to raise taxes for oil and gas producers while granting record subsidies to new wind power projects.
The UK plans to double its onshore wind generation and quadruple its offshore wind capacity by the end of the decade to help meet its target to run a clean power system by 2030 and hit legally binding climate targets. At the same time it has ruled out granting any new oil and gas licences.
“The UK is making a very big mistake,” Trump said in a post on his social media platform Truth Social. “Open up the North Sea. Get rid of Windmills!”
Tessa Khan, the executive director at Uplift, a group that campaigns for swift but fair transition away from oil and gas production in the UK, said Trump was “clearly looking after the interests of US oil and gas firms”.
“His team is shot through with oil and gas interests that want the rest of the world, the UK included, to slow its transition to clean energy and remain hooked on oil and gas for years to come just so they can keep profiting,” Khan said.
The exact catalyst for Trump’s intervention was unclear but the social media post linked to an announcement from November in which the US oil firm Apache blamed the UK’s windfall tax for its decision to leave the North Sea before the end of the decade.
John Christmann, the chief executive of Apache’s parent company, APA, said the “onerous financial impact” of the windfall tax combined with a string of new regulations to reduce harmful climate emissions would make its British business “uneconomic” by 2029.
The Texas-based firm set out its plans to leave the ageing oil basin weeks after the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, used her October budget to push the headline rate to almost 80% for oil and gas companies.
Apache became the latest in a string of oil companies to turn its back on the North Sea after the Labour party came to power in July with the promise to end new oil and gas licences and raise taxes for the high-polluting sector.
The US oil company Exxon completed its exit from the North Sea that month, while the independent oil and gas producers Harbour Energy and Deltic Energy have set out plans to sell some of their assets in the basin.
Khan said: “For the UK to be free from fossil fuel politics, it must take advantage of the immense opportunities at its fingertips in wind power, which offers a long-term solution to energy security and job creation, and continue to tax the energy giants who have driven millions into fuel poverty accordingly.”
She added that the UK, and Scotland in particular, could use “some of the best wind resources in the world” to help secure Britain’s energy supplies as the North Sea oil and gas basin declines.
“Ill-informed attacks on the UK’s efforts to become a clean energy superpower will not change reality – the nation has burnt most of its gas, and what’s left of our oil is mainly exported,” Khan said.
The government was approached for comment.