Norwegian state oil company Equinor has delivered its yearly profits announcement. And campaigners from Fossil Free London have been quick to respond. They’ve accused Equinor of getting “filthy rich” and say it’s “the UK public [that] foots the bill”.
Equinor and Rosebank
Equinor is the majority owner of the Rosebank oil field. Rosebank lies in UK waters and in 2023, then-PM Rishi Sunak said that developing it would help secure UK oil supplies. However, any oil or gas from the field wouldn’t go directly to UK refineries. The owners would sell it on the global markets, meaning the UK could potentially see none of the product or the profit.
Despite this, as the Canary has previously reported, UK public funds are carrying most of the development costs. So the UK is potentially taking a massive loss and creating enormous greenhouse gas emissions for negligible benefit.
Ahead of Equinor’s announcement, activists from Fossil Free London staged a striking ‘oil spill’ protest outside the company’s London HQ. Wearing rose-themed dresses and dripping in treacle, to mimic oil, they called attention to its role in Rosebank.
Commenting on Equinor’s results, Robin Wells, director of Fossil Free London, said:
Equinor are getting filthy rich from filthy fossil fuels, whilst the UK public foots the bill. And it’s never been more of a rip off. As Equinor drives Rosebank forward, they’ve newly buddied up with Shell in a new North Sea venture to dodge £1.3bn in tax.
It’s clear that we cannot afford to neglect climate action. The UK will face over a trillion pounds in costs as the result of the climate crisis in the next decade.
The UK Government must not back Big Oil’s Big Money and support climate denial. They must back people’s survival, and stop this carbon bomb. They must stop Rosebank.
Featured image by Jack Taylor













“Equinor are getting filthy rich…”
But not so filthy rich as to avoid running into heavy financial weather, according to Reuters today:
https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/equinor-q4-profit-falls-less-than-expected-2026-02-04/
“…it said on Wednesday as it posted a 22% drop in fourth-quarter profit, hit by weaker oil and gas prices. Share buybacks and hefty dividends have supported share prices of global oil majors in recent years, with many analysts saying such shareholder returns are unsustainable in the face of low oil prices.”
The Treasury – as you rightly say are taking little in return. Less than nothing. According to Energy Voice (paywall) it reported last December that the Norwegian company paid no UK taxes last year. The fees for the entire concession are swallowed by the tax breaks, and always were going to be. The FT (also Paywall) reported last autumn “Given “generous” investment allowances, the UK Treasury would only make money on the field if oil prices were to remain higher than $70 a barrel for many years”.
But that implied that Russian oil could be entirely and permanently taken off the market.