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London congestion charge to rise to £18 – and electric vehicles will have to pay

about 16 hours ago
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London’s congestion charge will rise by 20% in January from £15 to £18 and electric vehicle drivers will be liable to pay to enter the heart of the capital for the first time,EVs will no longer be exempt from the levy, Transport for London said, but will pay a lower rate,Electric car drivers will get a 25% discount, paying £13,50 a day, while electric vans and HGVs will pay £9 – 50% of the full charge,Motoring groups criticised the changes as a backward step.

The London mayor, Sadiq Khan, said that without the shake-up, another 2,200 vehicles would be driving in the zone on an average weekday, making it no longer fit for purpose.The charge was introduced in 2003 with the aim of reducing traffic on London’s congested streets.Six times as many electric vehicles – almost 120,000 – are now registered to drive in the zone compared with 2019, when the full discount for EVs was introduced.It was scheduled to expire at the end of the year.Khan said: “Keeping London moving by reducing congestion is vital for our city and for our economy.

While the congestion charge has been a huge success since its introduction, we must ensure it stays fit for purpose, and sticking to the status quo would see around 2,200 more vehicles using the congestion charging zone on an average weekday next year.”He said substantial incentives would remain in place for Londoners who switch to cleaner vehicles.The 90% discount for all residents of the zone will only apply to EV owners from March 2027, and car clubs for vehicle sharing will be given a full exemption for EVs.The moves were criticised, however, for making EVs less attractive.Labour’s transport spokesperson on the London assembly, Elly Baker, said it would “make it harder for people to go green when they need a vehicle to do their jobs”, and that minicab drivers who had “done the right thing by switching to an EV will be penalised by this”.

The AA president, Edmund King, urged Khan to reverse the decision,“This is a backward step which sadly will backfire on air quality in London,” he said,“Many drivers are not quite ready to make the switch to electric vehicles so incentives are still needed to help them over the line,The mayor needs to reconsider to continue to help more essential van and car journeys in the capital go electric,”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 congestion charge applies to central London between 7am and 6pm on weekdays, and between noon and 6pm at weekends and on bank holidays.

There is a separate levy for London’s ultra-low emissions zone (Ulez), which covers all of Greater London,The oldest, most-polluting vehicles have to pay a daily charge to drive in the area – £12,50 for cars and more for older coaches and lorries – although the majority of cars are exempt,Speculation is growing that EV drivers may face additional charges across the UK,The chancellor, Rachel Reeves, is reportedly considering a pay-per-mile scheme for EVs in her November budget, given that the vehicles are not liable for fuel duty.

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Old is M Night Shyamalan at his best: ambitious, abrasive and surprisingly poignant

In August 2002, Newsweek boldly anointed the stern-faced man pictured on the cover of its splashy summer issue as “The Next Spielberg”. While some might have called this an unfair comparison to one of cinema’s most legendary figures, for a then 31-year-old M Night Shyamalan, it was a childhood dream come true. The Indian-born, Pennsylvanian-raised film-maker had whetted his cinematic appetite on the images of Jaws and Raiders of the Lost Ark, and for better or worse, would find himself chasing that same level of stratospheric fame in the early days of his career.Despite the initial acclaim of The Sixth Sense, though, Shyamalan’s reputation and audience goodwill would soon begin to nosedive as his idiosyncratic directing style rubbed against the grander ambitions of his movies. But after a temporary exodus from Hollywood and a retreat to his roots in independent cinema, Shyamalan finally returned to studio film-making in 2021 with the release of Old, a masterful high-concept thriller that rekindled the director’s longtime fascination with family, parenting and the mystifying possibility of the unknown

3 days ago
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‘Harlem has always been evolving’: inside the Studio Museum’s $160m new home

The iconic museum, which was founded in 1968, has been rehoused in 82,000-sq-ft building providing a new destination for Black art in New York CityCall it the second Harlem renaissance. On Manhattan’s 125th Street, where a statue of Adam Clayton Powell Jr strides onwards and upwards, and a sign marks the spot where a freed Nelson Mandela dropped by, there is bustle and buzz.The celebrated Apollo Theater is in the midst of a major renovation. The National Black Theatre is preparing to move into a $80m arts complex spanning a city block. In September the National Urban League opened a $250m building containing its headquarters, affordable housing and retail space with New York’s first civil rights museum to come

3 days ago
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‘Most of it was the conga preset on Prince’s drum machine’: how Fine Young Cannibals made She Drives Me Crazy

‘Prince’s Purple Rain guitar was in the corner of the studio and his lava lamps were everywhere. You couldn’t help but be inspired’I was in a band in Hull called Akrylykz. When the Beat came to play at the Welly club we gave them a demo tape. Then they invited us to tour with them. Later, after they split up, Andy Cox and David Steele were looking for a singer for a new band and they remembered me

4 days ago
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Groundbreaking British Museum show set to challenge samurai myths

A groundbreaking samurai exhibition that promises to challenge “everything we think we know about Japan’s warrior elite” spanning a millennium of myth and reality is to open at the British Museum next year.Titled Samurai, the blockbuster exhibition will reveal a world beyond armour-clad warriors and epic duels, as popularised by the noble, katana-wielding heroes of Akira Kurosawa’s classic action films and PlayStation’s hit video games.Much of the samurai myth – including even the word “samurai” – was invented long after their heyday, a modern phenomenon linked to mass media and pop culture.The exhibition, which opens in February, will also show that, far from being a male warrior cult, samurai women were educated, governed and even fought.Rosina Buckland, the exhibition’s lead curator, told the Guardian: “This is the first exhibition to tackle the myths

5 days ago
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Paul Kelly: ‘Imagine by John Lennon is probably one of the worst songs ever written. I can’t stand it’

Your new album is called Seventy. You are 70 years old. And I hear you like the number 70.It’s a biblical number. It’s a very pleasing number to me

5 days ago
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The Guide #216: Celebrity Traitors was a watercooler-moment smash-hit – but how long will audiences stay faithful?

That’s it then. The curiously pristine SUVs are back in the garage, the cloaks are off to the dry cleaners and your favourite hits of the 80s and 90s are safe, for a few months at least, from those absurdly melodramatic cover treatments. Yes, The Celebrity Traitors is over, having served up a finale that had just the right amount of intrigue, double-crossing and slack-jawed looks to camera from the terminally outwitted. We won’t ruin things here for anyone who hasn’t watched it yet, but for a full spoiler-filled debrief you can read Lucy Mangan’s review of last night’s drama here.It was a fitting capstone to a remarkably successful first Celebrity Traitors outing

6 days ago
societySee all
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‘Are you building communities or just houses?’: human cost of Birmingham council’s plans for Druids Heath estate

about 14 hours ago
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Ultra-processed foods may help explain rising bowel cancer in under-50s, study suggests

about 14 hours ago
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Council staff visited wrong address day before Sara Sharif’s murder, review finds

about 20 hours ago
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The rapid rise of renters in their 60s: ‘I hate the idea of house-sharing – but I have no choice’

1 day ago
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Deaths linked to antibiotic-resistant superbugs rose 17% in England in 2024

1 day ago
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High blood pressure rates in children nearly doubled in 20 years, global review finds

1 day ago