I'm not surprised. He's obviously been scared by the propaganda
So all these Scottish companies saying they they will pull out of Scotland if it becomes independent and relocate to England; and all the supermarkets coming out saying their prices will be higher in an independent Scotland, are all lying are they?
It's not the businesses that are lying to the Scottish people. It's Alex Salmond and the SNP.
Even better, transit fees with no development of repair costs.
'The deal' isn't about what you can cut off the deal will be how fast Scotland can replace those items and if it is at a better deal then London looks stupid. If the UK knew any method other than brutish rule they would have been doing it by now.
That supposed "brutish" rule is the very rule that has transformed Scotland from a backward, penniless, war-torn nation into a wealthy nation. Had it not been for the fact that Scotland unified with England and Wales in 1707 it would have remained backward and penniless. The ungrateful Scottish nationalists need to remember that they have a lot of reason to be grateful to the Union with generous England which made Scotland rich.
Ireland not long ago is their idea of 'keeping the peace', create a problem and come in with the only option that will work, Military Occupation where nobody has any civil rights and a bomb or two going off at random in civilian areas will show that that level (and more) is appropriate for the long haul.
Kiev did the same thing to Crimea, first thing, cut off the heat to the civilians as a way to pressure the Govt. If you want the attention of the Govt cancel all their debit cards for 24 hours. Creating problems for the voters only makes the phone ring more times a day, it doesn't get answered more time in a day if that means anything about how effective they are.
Comparing the situation in Scotland to the situation in Ukraine is a little bit silly.
Scotland is a wealthy, democratic people who are part of a nation state which has long been a beacon of democracy and freedom to millions around the world. The Scots enjoy freedoms that people in most parts of the world can only dream of.
What is the English plan on how to deal with this Crimea like situation?
What is the English plan on how to deal with this 'Arab Spring' where Muslims take legal control of the Government positions?
There is no "English" plan. England isn't an independent sovereign state. It is just one of the four major constituent parts of the UK, like Scotland.
when that unit is quite likely somewhat anti-monarchy
Have you got any evidence for that? The Queen's mother, don't forget, was a Scot.
They have better projects for the little money they have.
Like what?
Scotland would see it's borders go straight east from the land, you sure that doesn't alter who 'owns the fields?
Why oil is not a good argument for Scottish independence
A mountainous, tribal, oil-producing country is shortly to hold a referendum on becoming independent. Not Kurdish Iraq, but Scotland. But as with the Kurds, the Scottish question hinges on oil – are revenues enough to underpin independence?
Scotland is still a significant oil producer – waters under its likely control yield about 800,000 barrels per day. The Scottish National Party (SNP) has estimated the value of a speculative 24 billion barrels of oil and gas resources at £1.5 trillion (Dh8.96tn) – ignoring the costs and time to extract them.
But production has declined steeply in recent years, down from about 2.6 million bpd in 1999. Contradicting the SNP figures, Sir Ian Wood, a leading oilman, said a “best outcome” for remaining resources was 15 billion to 16.5 billion barrels.
Most of the producing fields are mature, and many will shut down over the next few years. At the moment, the taxpayer is liable for a share of the decommissioning costs. New fields are smaller, more risky or located in the deep and stormy waters of the Atlantic Margin off to Scotland’s west.
With oil prices falling recently below US$100 per barrel, petro-pounds are a volatile and uncertain currency if not cushioned within the much-larger UK economy. And all of the SNP’s six forecasts for future oil income assume prices higher than today’s. They also contain a contradiction – investment (and hence corporate tax deductions) is lower, yet production is higher than in UK government forecasts.
The process of independence would be likely to deter oil companies for several years while the details are worked out – the division of cross-border fields and infrastructure, the establishment of a new legal and regulatory system for the industry. Although there might be room for some improvement, it is not obvious that Edinburgh would manage its oil industry dramatically better than London has.
And operating off Scotland is expensive by global standards. Recovering all the available oil from the remaining fields will need investment in enhanced oil recovery and extending the life of existing infrastructure – probably requiring easing tax levels.
Yet to fund its aspirations, a new Scottish government would be more likely to have to raise taxes on oil production, deterring new projects. Beyond oil, green technologies such as renewable energy and carbon capture and storage also depend on support from more numerous consumers and taxpayers in the rest of the UK.
Proponents of independence wish to spend the oil money at least twice – on improved social services and investment, and on a sovereign wealth fund like Norway’s. But the analogy with Scotland’s Nordic neighbours is misleading. Norway has more oil and, especially, more gas. Both countries started producing oil about 40 years ago – a better moment for independence that has now passed.
A possible Scottish National Oil Company has also been mooted, along the lines of Norway’s very successful Statoil. But ScotOil would either have to use public funds to buy producing fields, with the risk of overpaying, or venture into the risky and difficult game of exploration, or be given a mandatory share of new fields – which would put off private oil companies.
Beyond all these considerations are philosophical ones. Should the independence of any country be conditioned on a lucky bounty of natural resources? What happens when those resources are depleted? Is there any responsibility to the larger political unit that provided, in many cases, capital, expertise and legal security to find and develop the resources? And should decisions on independence be decided solely on cold actuarial calculations of economic advantage?
There may be good emotional, cultural or political arguments for Scottish independence. But economics – and particularly oil – is not one of them.
Robin Mills is the head of consulting at Manaar Energy and the author of The Myth of the Oil Crisis