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English and Welsh winemakers report sharp rise in production in 2025

English and Welsh winemakers have reported a sharp rise in production, after the hot, dry summer in 2025 and an increase in vineyard planting resulted in the third-largest UK harvest.The equivalent of 16.5m bottles were produced across the UK last year – or 124,377 hectolitres – according to figures from the wine regulator, the Food Standards Agency (FSA).This represents a 55% increase on the volumes produced a year earlier, the result of favourable growing conditions throughout the season that delivered good fruit quality and yields not seen for many years.It followed a sharp fall in 2024, when production halved to 10

about 10 hours ago
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Ministers rebuff trade body’s call to boost North Sea oil and gas production

The UK government has dismissed a warning from an energy trade body that failing to produce more homegrown North Sea oil and gas will leave the UK increasingly reliant on imports at a time of rising global instability.The industry group, Offshore Energies UK, has said the UK “urgently” needs a greater supply of domestically produced energy or consumers will be left “more exposed to global volatility and higher emissions”.The warning came as the war in the Middle East entered its fourth week. The escalating conflict has triggered the biggest oil and gas supply shock in the history of the market and caused UK gas prices to more than double in under a month.But the industry’s call for more support to help slow the decline of the North Sea as a provider of energy was rebuffed by the government

about 10 hours ago
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Amount of AI-generated child sexual abuse material found online surged in 2025

The amount of AI-generated child sexual abuse material found online rose by 14% last year, with the majority of videos showing the most extreme type of content, according to a safety watchdog.The Internet Watch Foundation said it identified 8,029 AI-made images and videos of realistic child sexual abuse material (CSAM) in 2025. It added that there had been a more than 260-fold increase in videos.The IWF said 65% of the 3,443 videos were classified as category A, the term for the most severe material under UK law. The corresponding figure for non-AI videos was 43%, said the watchdog, showing that the technology was being used to create more violent content

about 4 hours ago
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MPs urge UK government to halt contract giving Palantir FCA data access

MPs have urged the government to halt its latest contract with Palantir after the Guardian revealed that the US spy-tech company is to gain access to a trove of highly sensitive UK financial regulation data.The Financial Conduct Authority, the watchdog for thousands of financial bodies from banks to hedge funds, has hired Palantir to apply its AI systems to two years’ worth of internal intelligence data to help it tackle financial crime.But the Liberal Democrats on Monday called for a government investigation into the contract, which the party said could be “a huge error of judgment”, while the Green party said it should be blocked over Palantir’s links to Donald Trump.Questioned on whether the UK was becoming “dangerously overreliant” on US tech companies including Palantir, Keir Starmer told parliament he would prefer to have more domestic capability but added: “I don’t think we’re overreliant.”Palantir was founded by the Trump-backing billionaire Peter Thiel and it supports the US and Israeli militaries and the ICE immigration crackdown

about 16 hours ago
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Victoria Mboko and Mirra Andreeva lead new generation of friendly rivals

Victoria Mboko and Mirra Andreeva, the two highest-ranked teenagers in the world, prepared for their marquee Miami Open fourth-round match in an unusual manner. Aside from being the two protagonists of the freshest rivalry in women’s tennis, they are also great friends, and so they spent the afternoon before their big match against each other competing on the same side of the net in doubles.This was an opportunity to giggle, relax and enjoy themselves on one of the smaller courts in Miami, but Mboko and Andreeva are ranked No 9 and No 10 in the world for a reason. Two fiercely competitive beings determined to win every time on the court, they fought desperately and emerged with an impressive result. After trailing 0-5 against the eighth seeds, Demi Schuurs and Ellen Perez, in the opening set and facing eight set points scattered across the set, they somehow emerged from the match with a straight-sets win

about 12 hours ago
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ECB has taken a risk keeping McCullum and Key – who must now placate the public | Ali Martin

Having endorsed Brendon McCullum’s continuation as men’s head coach after an Ashes defeat riddled with self‑owns and kept Rob Key above him as team director, the England and Wales Cricket Board could in one sense be viewed as having taken the path of least resistance.McCullum’s contract runs to the end of 2027 and it would cost a pretty penny to cut him loose. The players enjoy the pair’s methods and tend to call the shots in the modern era. There may not be an all-format candidate for head coach out there. Besides, look over there: the Hundred returns in July, ready to overload your eyeballs with multicoloured content

about 14 hours ago
foodSee all
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Cooking with Angela Hartnett: ‘I love food, but I don’t need to talk about it 24/7’

2 days ago
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Slop it like it’s hot: the rise of build-your-own takeaway salad bowls

2 days ago
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Osteria Vibrato, London W1: “Worth singing loudly about” – restaurant review | Grace Dent on restaurants

2 days ago
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I lost my love of cooking after 12 years as a chef. Moving to a pig farm restored it

3 days ago
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Lamb shanks with orzo and rhubarb galette: Anna Tobias’ Easter recipes

3 days ago
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Best thing I ever ate? My first In-N-Out burger in LA

3 days ago

EasyJet bookings fall because of Iran war as boss warns of air fare rises

about 19 hours ago
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The boss of easyJet has said the war in the Middle East has started to hit flight bookings, while the soaring price of oil would probably mean a rise in air fares by the end of the summer,The chief executive, Kenton Jarvis, said that while the airline had hedged much of its fuel into next year, avoiding soaring kerosene prices, it was “unavoidable” that some of the costs would be passed on in fares,He said forward bookings for summer had started to slow,With their proximity to the conflict, flights to Turkey, Cyprus and Egypt had been hit by the biggest drop in bookings, Jarvis said, and passengers had instead turned to the “usual suspects” of Spain, Greece and Portugal, which were “holding up pretty firmly”,He said: “We have seen a drop in bookings.

If it’s the same as the Ukraine crisis or after the Hamas attacks on Israel, that tends to lasts about six weeks, until, terrible though it is, the news is off the front pages.”Tui, Europe’s biggest holiday operator, said earlier this month that demand had risen for holidays in Spain, Portugal, Greece and Cape Verde this summer as customers opted for “familiar, easy‑to‑reach locations”.EasyJet’s hedges meant it was paying $700 (£520) a tonne for jet fuel but current spot prices had reached $1,850, Jarvis said, and it was likely that fares would rise by the end of peak season.“Luckily most European airlines are extremely well hedged,” he said.“You can still get a price of $1,000 in six months – the view of the markets is that fuel comes down in price.

But the reality is that prices will start feeding in to the consumer over the back end of summer.”Jarvis was speaking at Newcastle airport, where easyJet has reopened a base, with three stationed aircraft, that it closed down in 2020 when Covid struck.He said the base would bring 140 jobs for pilots, cabin crew and engineers, and would support more than 1,000 new jobs in the wider north-east, as well as flying up to 800,000 holidaymakers out of Newcastle this summer.The region’s mayor, Kim McGuinness, said she hoped that the new flights would also lure more visitors into the area, too.She said the airport was “not just where holidays begin”, adding: “Tourism is a key part of my growth plans for the region and why I’m pleased to welcome easyJet’s investment back into our region, and the strength in our region’s tourism that it represents.

”The new routes are mainly to southern Europe and Mediterranean destinations but also Turkey and Egypt,Jarvis said the airline might look to reallocate capacity if the war continued,EasyJet will continue daily flights to Bristol but not operate to London,Campaigners have urged airlines to curb domestic flights where a train alternative exists,The chief commercial officer of easyJet, Sophie Dekkers, said: “If the train journey is two-and-a-half hours or less, we don’t operate a flight.

” Newcastle to Bristol by train typically takes about five hours.The airline, however, said it expected to curb emissions with lighter seats.It has switched supplier for future Airbus plane deliveries to a British company, Norfolk-based Mirus Aircraft Seating, which manufactures products that weigh about 20% less than its current seats.