meet UK needs. His response was to set up the British National Oil Corporation, a state-owned enterprise, to ensure that the country would derive maximum benefit from the development of new oilfields and to press for a North Sea oil development fund.
Benn wanted oil revenues to be ring-fenced for industrial regeneration and not used to finance short-term tax cuts. He also believed that an oil-rich Britain would be in a stronger economic position outside the EEC.
Sadly, Benn's far-sighted strategy was abandoned by the incoming Conservative administration of 1979. The BNOC was sold off, with Energy Minister Nigel Lawson proudly announcing that the Government's energy policy was that it didn't have one.
Norway had the wisdom to follow the much-derided Bennite path of state intervention and will reap the benefit for generations to come. Britain meanwhile relies on a service-based, debt-fuelled economy. If only we'd listened to Wedgie. 
FIRST POSTED MAY 29, 2006
The truth about global oil supplies