The North Sea Transition Authority (NSTA) has published its Corporate Plan, outlining its priority areas for the next five years (2022-2027).
The previous Plan was produced in 2019 and, since then, the NSTA has revised its Strategy to fully incorporate net zero into its work, alongside optimising domestic production of oil and gas in the interest of energy security. Our organisation also changed its name – from the Oil and Gas Authority – to better reflect our growing role in the energy transition.
In addition, the UK upstream oil and gas industry is allocating more time and resources to lowering its carbon footprint, while continuing to provide secure supplies of oil and gas, with our support.
The Corporate Plan sets out how the NSTA will support the industry and how we are putting our Strategy into action. It provides a clear operational framework allowing the NSTA to adapt to changing circumstances and identifies key performance indicators (KPIs) to measure success and hold industry to account.
To deliver the plan, the NSTA will use its regulatory powers and growing range of capabilities. These include petroleum licensing rounds – taking into account the climate compatibility checkpoint, stewardship of new and existing production, management of consents, guidance and expectations, and benchmarking and monitoring.
There is a firm focus on realising targets agreed in the North Sea Transition Deal, including halving production emissions and eliminating routine flaring by 2030, and making sure 50% of investment in new UKCS energy projects goes to UK suppliers.
The NSTA will also work closely with government, industry and other regulators on North Sea energy integration. We expect to see real progress on electrification, with at least two projects to be commissioned by 2027. Our organisation will also run the UK’s first carbon storage licensing round to support the capture of 20-30 million tonnes of CO2 per year by 2030.
The NSTA also shares high-quality data via its Digital Energy Platform and promotes good environmental, social and governance standards to unlock value, encourage investment and support jobs.
Importantly, the Corporate Plan emphasises our values, which require us to be accountable, considerate, fair and robust. These apply as much to engagement with external stakeholders, as within our organisation, which will continue to be a great place to work.