More than £17bn will be spent on decommissioning North Sea oil platforms over the next decade, according to a report.

Between the UK and Norwegian continental shelves more than 100 platforms will be completely or partially removed, with around 1800 wells scheduled to be plugged and 7500km of pipeline forecast to be decommissioned, Oil and Gas UK said.

Growth in the decommissioning industry has been welcomed along with calls to develop a bigger decommissioning capacity to "make the most of the opportunity".

Decommissioning Insight 2016, published by Oil and Gas UK, said the market was worth more than £2bn last year.

The total amount forecast to be spent on decommissioning on the UK Continental Shelf (UKCS) between now and 2025 is £17.6bn, up from £16.9bn for the 2015-24 forecast.

The Scottish Government believes there are "very real economic benefits" to come from decommissioning.

Mike Tholen, Oil and Gas UK's upstream policy director, said: "Of the estimated £17.6bn of decommissioning expenditure on the UKCS over the next 10 years, more than 50% of this market will be found in the central North Sea.

"The UK's supply chain will need to focus on developing a high-quality, cost-efficient and competitive decommissioning capacity to make the most of the opportunity and provide a range of goods and services that can not only be deployed in the UK but also exported overseas."

Despite the expected growth, the report warns against "premature decommissioning", with up to 20 billion barrels of oil and gas still said to be recoverable from the North Sea.

Mr Tholen added: "If the UK is to continue to gain the full economic benefit from its oil and gas resource, it is important that the industry continues to work with the Oil and Gas Authority as well as with HM Treasury to attract fresh investment, avoid premature decommissioning, retain the critical infrastructure needed to access future reserves and ensure decommissioning is carried out in a timely and most cost-effective way.

"We are now working with HM Treasury to explore further avenues in its Driving Investment fiscal strategy for the sector, including the possibility of transferring tax relief on decommissioning costs with the sale of assets."

Scotland's energy minister Paul Wheelhouse said: "We agree with Oil and Gas UK that there are very real economic benefits for Scotland to come from decommissioning and we are well placed to capitalise on them - indeed we believe Scottish suppliers are already well established in areas of decommissioning, such as high value well plugging and abandonment activity.

"I will be in the north east later this month to focus on the opportunities of decommissioning and to follow up on the commitments the First Minister set out in our Programme for Government."

Lang Banks, director of environmental charity WWF Scotland, said: "With the right kind of support from politicians, Scotland could secure a big slice of the employment and economic opportunities highlighted in this report from cleaning up after the North Sea oil and gas industry.

"In the interests of tackling climate change, we need to see a sensible transition away from fossil fuels, harnessing the skills of those currently employed in the sector in clean energy technologies as well as decommissioning.

"If done right it could herald the start of a whole new chapter in the economy of the North Sea."