BP has announced a dramatic reversal of its earlier retreat from the North Sea, committing £2bn to build two carbon capture and storage (CCS) hubs off the coast of Scotland and England. The move, revealed exclusively to The British Wire, signals a strategic pivot from oil and gas extraction to carbon management, but raises questions about the economics and environmental impact of such projects.
The company, once a vocal advocate for diversifying into renewables, will now repurpose existing offshore infrastructure to capture emissions from industrial clusters in Teesside and Grangemouth. According to sources close to the negotiations, the hubs aim to sequester up to 10 million tonnes of CO2 annually by 2030.
“This is not a return to business as usual,” insisted Sir John Manzoni, BP’s chairman, in a statement. “We are using our engineering expertise to tackle hard-to-abate sectors.” Critics remain unconvinced, pointing to the company’s record of underdelivering on clean energy promises.
The investment marks a sharp U-turn from BP’s 2020 strategy to slash oil output by 40% and pivot to solar and wind. That plan was shelved after investor backlash and soaring energy prices following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Now, the company is betting on CCS, a technology that has struggled to scale commercially.
Industry analysts have welcomed the commitment. “BP is positioning itself as a leader in a growing market,” said Fiona Robb of Energy Economics London. “But the real test will be whether these hubs actually reduce emissions or simply prolong the life of fossil fuel operations.”
The Teesside hub, dubbed Net Zero Teesside, is already backed by the UK government and partners including Equinor. The second hub, Acorn, off the coast of St Fergus, will use a depleted gas reservoir. BP will operate both, leveraging its expertise in subsea engineering.
Environmental groups are divided. “Carbon capture is a dangerous distraction from the urgent need to phase out fossil fuels,” said Mel Evans of Greenpeace. Others, like the Climate Change Committee, argue that CCS is essential for reaching net zero by 2050.
The government has been courting private investment in CCS through its £1bn business model for carbon capture. BP’s commitment could unlock further funding and accelerate project timelines. “This is exactly the kind of investment we need to decarbonise our industrial heartlands,” a spokesperson for the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero said.
Yet the economics remain uncertain. BP has not disclosed the expected return on investment, but CCS projects have historically suffered from cost overruns and technical failures. A 2022 report from the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis found that of 13 major CCS projects globally, only 2 met their targets.
BP’s share price rose 2% on the news, indicating investor confidence. However, the company faces pressure from activist shareholders to align with the Paris Agreement. The announcement comes weeks before its annual general meeting, where climate resolutions are expected.
For the North Sea, the shift is profound. Once the engine of UK oil and gas, the basin is now being reimagined as a carbon sink. Thousands of jobs could be created in construction and operation, but the long-term viability hinges on policy support and technological breakthroughs.
Alastair Vance, The British Wire







