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

about 9 hours 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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Australia selector confident Pat Cummins will play major part in Ashes

Australia’s chair of selectors is confident that Pat Cummins will play in the Ashes series against England. The 32-year-old has not bowled since Australia’s 3-0 series defeat of West Indies in July because of a stress injury in his back. Cummins had admitted he was unlikely to play in the Ashes opener in Perth on 21 November.However, George Bailey said: “We know time is getting short and there’s permutations around that, not just around the back, but other factors as well. It’s positive

about 11 hours ago
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Curran and rain to England’s rescue against New Zealand in T20 opener

Even before the rain fell, the start of England’s winter had become something of a damp squib. On a cool Christchurch evening their batters had been surprised by movement off the seam – “You don’t expect that in white-ball cricket, so when it does do a little bit it’s almost a shock,” said Harry Brook – and becalmed by the spin of Mitchell Santner and Michael Bracewell. They duly wobbled their way to 81 for five before Sam Curran seemed to rescue them and then the weather definitively did.Only two batters scored more than 20, with the dismissal of Jos Buttler for 29, the former captain becoming the fifth man to fall, concluding a feeble start to the innings before Curran’s 49 improved their outlook.“He’s a very valuable player to us now with bat, ball and in the field,” said Brook

about 13 hours ago
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New Zealand v England: first men’s T20 cricket international hit by rain – as it happened

That’s it from us today, a washout to start the series but plenty more cricket in store over the coming days, weeks and months. Thanks for tuning in, goodbye.The Captains have a quick word:Harry Brook: “The pitch did a little bit to start with. Matt Henry, especially, made the most of the surface. We obviously want to adapt to the situation and the surface but with the depth of batting we’ve got, we can go hard all the way through

about 14 hours ago
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Unbeaten England eye place in semis but results have masked woeful batting | Raf Nicholson

England find themselves in a curious position at the halfway point of their World Cup campaign as they prepare to face the hosts, India, on Sunday. They are unbeaten, sit third in the points table, and – partly because India have already lost twice – have a 98% chance of qualifying for the semi-finals. One more win would seal their progress to the knockouts.Yet their batting has been woeful. With the honourable exception of Nat Sciver-Brunt, England’s top seven have looked desperately lacking in the technique and temperament that is required on tricky batting tracks at Guwahati and Colombo

about 17 hours ago
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Risk of wheel bashing and strategy sets up complicated US Grand Prix

At the mid-point of this season it might have been considered that the title fight between McLaren’s Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri would simply be decided by which driver had the edge to take the flag at each remaining meeting. Going into this weekend’s US Grand Prix, however, the contest has become far more complicated and far more interesting.While only 22 points separate the pair neither has now won for three races, the team’s longest drought of the season. Moreover, they have been beaten on merit across a variety of tracks. At the fast, low downforce challenge of Monza and Baku, where Red Bull’s Max Verstappen took the flag, and the slow, high downforce of Singapore, where Mercedes’ George Russell more than had their measure

1 day ago
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Taunts add spice as big three vie for Champion Stakes in thrilling Ascot finale

If you were to sit down with a blank piece of paper to design an ideal finale for the 2025 Flat season, the result would probably be a race with a striking resemblance to Saturday’s Champion Stakes at Ascot.It will be run over a mile-and-a-quarter, an ideal test for speed and stamina, and on good ground, with three of the world’s top-10 racehorses on ratings going head-to-head. The double-figure field also includes some very live “dark” horses that could spring a surprise, and a runner apiece for Ireland, Britain and France, European racing’s leading nations, among the three main contenders. The strength and depth of the competition is so high that punters who successfully unravel the puzzle can expect at least a 180% return on their stake, in the space of a couple of minutes.There is even a little needle to add further spice, after Aidan O’Brien, the trainer of Delacroix, suggested to a media briefing on Thursday that John Gosden, who trains Ombudsman, the favourite, “can whinge a little bit after races, whether he wins or he loses”

1 day ago
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Rachel Roddy’s recipe for baked leek and egg gratin | A kitchen in Rome

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How to turn scallop roe into a delectable butter – recipe | Waste not

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Rukmini Iyer’s quick and easy recipe for lime dal with roast squash and chilli cashews | Quick and easy

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