Most Scots in every age group are backing the UK Government's decision to develop the Rosebank oil field.
The largest untapped oil field in the North Sea has been at the heart of heated debate over the last year with green campaigners claiming it's "environmental vandalism".
The field, located North-west of Shetland, has the potential to produce 69,000 barrels of oil a day, which would equate to roughly 8% of the UK's projected daily output between 2026 and 2030.
It will also play a vital role in protecting the Scotland and the UK's energy security and will enable the UK to support Europe's energy security.
Scotland behind the project
A Savanta poll for The Scotsman interviewed 1,002 people at the start of October.
51% of interviewees said they backed the project and only 22% said they were opposed to it. 27% of respondents said they did not know or had no opinion on Rosebank.
Every age group metric supported the project, with the strongest coming from those over 65 and the lowest from those aged between 25 and 34.
Country in favour of Sunak's net zero roll back
The Rosebank decision came around the time that Prime Minister Rishi Sunak put the brakes on a number of net zero measures, many of which the people of Scotland are also in favour of.
Most (53%) think Sunak was right to delay banning the sale of petrol and diesel cars, pushing the date back from 2030 to 2035.
A delay on the ban of fossil fuel boilers was supported by 51% of Scots.
Who said what?
The controversial project has split opinion, even within parties.
Humza Yousaf said: "What I would say is I think Rosebank is the wrong decision. The decision that has been made today it is not the right decision to be made."
However, Fergus Ewing, who was later suspended from the party, has been vocal about opposing the SNP's preference to end oil and gas extraction.