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Ed Miliband needs a plan now to help industry weather UK transition to net zero | Phillip Inman

2 days ago
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Ed Miliband may want his political legacy to be a transition to net zero, but he could find his eventual political epitaph includes words on how he helped bury UK industry under the weight of high electricity charges.Industrial ovens are being switched off and turbines spun for the last time as businesses add up the cost of powering their factories and decide it’s not worth the time and trouble.It would be harsh to blame the energy secretary for a crisis he inherited and a decline in manufacturing that has been going on for four decades.But the way the transition to renewables was managed under the Tories, and now under Miliband can only be described as a disaster that will see much of UK industry depart for an easier life elsewhere.The decline is not new.

Each time a government has allowed the pound to rise in value – making exports more expensive – or ministers have opened the door to cheap imports, the number of UK factories has shrunk.On a graph the decline appears as a series of cliff edges, with manufacturing taking a step down each time the government’s protective spirit fails.Analysis published by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) in May charted the more recent lurch downwards in output in the UK’s energy-intensive manufacturing industries.Output at the end of 2024 was at its lowest in 35 years.This large disparate group includes companies – most of them operating in international markets – that make paper, chemicals, plastic, processed food and all kinds of metal products.

The ONS said: “Collectively, the volume of output in these industries has fallen by one-third since the start of 2021 and is now at its lowest level since the start of the available time series in 1990.”That is great for UK carbon emission figures, but terrible for the future of the country’s industrial base.A short-term solution would be to restore pandemic-related subsidies.Without bigger handouts to cover sky high electricity bills, factory owners, most of whom operate on thin profit margins, will need to put up their prices, and if that is not possible, cut production as they clearly have in recent years.Miliband could shell out if he had the money, but the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, is feeling the pinch and prefers to subsidise other thingsMeanwhile, factory owners face further cost increases as they are asked to pay the extra bill for upgrading the country’s electricity grid through higher network charges.

Worse, a scheme to protect the 500 most-intensive energy users from next year will be funded by all factories and businesses, making a bad situation worse for the vast majority.The UK is not alone in paying a heavy toll for travelling haphazardly along the road to net zero.Germany is going through the same pain barrier after a series of energy price increases since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.By some measures, German electricity prices are the highest in Europe, marginally ahead of those in the UK.Both countries charge industry more than four times the average electricity price in the US.

To keep subsidies to a minimum, they need a long-term solution to be implemented now that will reduce costs over the longer term,The problem for Reeves is that, like so many areas of government, it means a large upfront cost,Still, that should not be an impediment,Miliband has already spent more than £2bn this year balancing the electricity system as renewables produce too much in some places and periods, while shortfalls from green energy elsewhere (when the wind refuses to blow) mean expensive gas plants must fire up,Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotionThe system pays windfarm operators to switch off their turbines and more importantly, gas operators to step in at short notice.

Usually at huge cost.Miliband could adopt a plan put forward by the Stonehaven consultancy, backed by Greenpeace, which would more closely regulate price-gouging gas plants.“Gas provided just 30% of the UK’s total electricity generation last year, however gas-fired power stations set the wholesale price of electricity the vast majority of the time – 97% in 2021 – enabling them to extract ‘scarcity rents’ and push up energy bills,” said Greenpeace.Subsidies today and major investments, funded by the taxpayer, to bring down business electricity prices may seem like an unaffordable gift to factory owners.But that would be to misunderstand the way heavy industries operate.

These companies are mobile and considered by other countries to be prized assets, often forming part of vital supply chains.While they can be loss-making when global prices fall, they support other manufacturing businesses and service industries that form the bedrock of an economy.The UK’s modern industrial strategy, which was published in the summer, pays lip service to industry when action is needed.Miliband, and more importantly Reeves, seem paralysed by indecision.They need to adopt the Stonehaven report or better still, take ownership of the gas supply industry.

Labour has had 18 months to decide,Without a plan, the transition to net zero could wreck the manufacturing sector,
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Gucci owner Kering to sell beauty division to L’Oréal for €4bn

The Gucci owner, Kering, is selling its beauty division to L’Oréal for €4bn (£3.5bn), as its new chief executive, Luca de Meo, seeks to turn around the French luxury company.The deal will give the French beauty group L’Oréal Kering’s fragrance line Creed, which was founded in 1760. The deal also includes rights to develop fragrance and beauty products under Kering’s fashion labels Gucci, Bottega Veneta and Balenciaga under a 50-year exclusive licence.In a significant shift in strategy, de Meo is trying to reduce Kering’s debt burden and refocus on its core fashion business

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B&M ousts finance chief as it warns again on profits after £7m accounts error

The discount retailer B&M has ousted its finance chief after reporting a £7m accounts blunder that will cut its annual earnings – its second profit warning within two weeks.The company told investors it looking for a successor to Mike Schmidt, who is stepping down as chief financial officer, after the accounting error.The company, which sells things ranging from DIY, electricals and garden products to toys, pet food and everyday essentials, discovered that £7m of overseas freight costs were not “correctly recognised in cost of goods sold,” after an update to its operating system earlier this year.This means that adjusted profits for the year to March 2026 are now expected to be between £470m and £520m, down from its previous estimate of between £510m and £560m. For the first half, B&M expects profits of £191m, down from £198m

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‘The wire began to smoke’: how to avoid counterfeit scams on Vinted and other resale sites

When Maheen found a brand-new Dyson Airwrap for the bargain price of £260 on the resale website Vinted, she was thrilled. The seller’s reviews were all five-star, and she trusted in the buyer-protection policy should something go wrong.Sold new, an Airwrap costs between £400 and £480, but Maheen did not suspect anything was amiss. “I had used Vinted many times and it was simple and straightforward. Nothing had ever gone wrong,” she says

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‘I lost 25 pounds in 20 days’: what it’s like to be on the frontline of a global cyber-attack

The security chief of SolarWinds reflects on the Russian hack that exposed US government agencies – and the heart attack he suffered in the aftermathTim Brown will remember 12 December 2020 for ever.It was the day the software company SolarWinds was notified it had been hacked by Russia.Brown, the chief information security officer at SolarWinds, immediately understood the implications: any of the company’s more than 300,000 global clients could be affected too.The exploit allowed the hackers remote access to the systems of customers that had installed SolarWinds’ network software Orion, including the US treasury department, the US department of commerce’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration, along with thousands of companies and public institutions.Brown says he was “running on adrenaline” in the first few days after the attack

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Sumo wrestling at the Royal Albert Hall – picture essay

Athleticism, power and ceremonial splendour were all on display at London’s Albert Hall last week as sumo wrestling returned to the storied venue for the first time in 34 years. The ancient Japanese sport has roots tracing back more than 1,500 years, but this was only the second time that a major event had been hosted abroad. It was a remarkable spectacle inside and outside the sacred dohyo ring.A sumo wrestler, wearing the traditional topknot hairstyle called the oicho, pictured outside the Royal Albert Hall.Before the start of the five-day Grand Sumo Tournament, the wrestlers, known as rikishi, visited several London landmarks dressed in their silk kesho-mawashi robes

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With his top weapon sidelined, Sean McVay proves the ultimate chameleon

Missing star receiver Puka Nacua, Sean McVay reinvented the Rams’ offense with heavy 13 personnel as Matthew Stafford threw five TDs in a Wembley rout of the JaguarsWhen the Los Angeles Rams took the field on Sunday at Wembley Stadium to face the Jacksonville Jaguars, they did so without their best offensive weapon in receiver Puka Nacua, who was out with a sprained left ankle. Given that the Jaguars’ defense has been spicy at times under first-year coordinator Anthony Campanile, perhaps Jacksonville could come out with a win that would send them to 5-2 on the season.That was … not how things transpired. The Rams won going away, 35-7, and Los Angeles quarterback Matthew Stafford completed 21 of 33 passes for 182 yards, five touchdowns, no interceptions, and a passer rating of 117.7

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Jimmy Kimmel on the Republicans: ‘So much greed and hypocrisy and duplicity’

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Laurence Fox’s libel claim over racism accusations to go to retrial

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Blue plaque to be unveiled at home of Thomas the Tank Engine creator

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Jimmy Kimmel: ‘Trump’s inner circle knows how dangerous the incessant misinformation from Fox News can be’

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