Published on 12:00 AM, February 11, 2018

British pipeline outage puts drain on economy

Britain's industrial output plunged in December and the trade deficit widened following a shutdown of a major North Sea oil pipeline, official data showed on Friday.

Industrial production dived 1.3 percent compared with activity in November, the Office for National Statistics said in a statement.

That was the largest decline since 2012 and was worse than market expectations of a 0.9-percent drop. It also followed a 0.3-percent increase in November, the ONS said.

"Mining and quarrying provided the only downward contribution, falling by 19.1 percent as a result of the shutdown of the Forties oil pipeline for a large part of December," the statistics office added.

However, manufacturing output, which excludes mining and quarrying, electricity, gas and water supply, grew by 0.3 percent.

The Forties pipeline system, which normally carries 40 percent of UK oil and gas production in the North Sea, was offline for three weeks.

Over the whole year, industrial production expanded by 2.1 percent compared with 2016. That was the strongest increase since 2010 when it grew 3.2 percent.