Drilling has become a controversial topic for the Labour party after the 2024 manifesto pledged to not issue new licences.

The announcement will form part of a flurry of policy measures from the incoming prime minister Andy Burnham will announce plans for new oil and gas drilling in the North Sea when he becomes prime minister on Monday, the BBC has been told. The Labour Party's 2024 manifesto - which the new leader said he would follow - had pledged to not issue new licences but to honour existing ones. At the heart of the debate are two oil and gas fields in Scotland - Rosebank and Jackdaw - which regulators approved in 2022 and 2023 under the then Conservative government, but were overturned in 2025 after a legal challenge. The announcement will form part of a flurry of measures from Burnham, including plans to take water and energy companies under public control and a new council house-building programme. He is also expected to outline new measures that will give "people breathing space on the cost of living" and intends to make a "dynamic start... focused on delivering tangible change to people's lives as soon as possible". While details of the new oil and gas plans are not clear, the North Sea row has been longstanding, and Sir Keir Starmer has faced criticism for his opposition to drilling. He argued that new licences did not translate into cheaper bills for consumers and said it was more important to transition to renewable sources for secure energy supplies in the future.