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Nigerian refinery accused of sacking union members is key to UK plan to tackle jet fuel shortage

about 1 hour ago
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A refinery in Nigeria accused of dismissing workers for joining a union has emerged as key to the UK government’s hopes of saving the summer holiday amid a jet fuel shortage,Heidi Alexander, the transport secretary, said at the weekend that part of the answer to the strait of Hormuz crisis was to import more fuel from the US and west Africa,The main refinery on the west coast of Africa exporting fuel to the UK for commercial flights is Dangote in Lagos, which started producing aviation fuel in January 2024,According to the market data company Kpler, about 130,000 tonnes of jet fuel was imported into the UK in March from the huge Nigerian plant,Owned by reputedly the richest man in Africa, Aliko Dangote, the refinery has been accused by unions of being a “plantation of exploitation”.

Last autumn, the government had to mediate in a dispute when the company was accused of sacking workers after they had joined the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (Pengassan) union.It was alleged that more than 800 Nigerian workers had been fired after voluntarily joining the union and that some had been replaced with foreign nationals, mostly from India.This was denied by the company, which said a limited reorganisation had targeted a small number of workers who were disrupting operations and undermining the stability of the facility.Dangote maintained that over 3,000 Nigerians remain employed and that the company did not block union participation.At the time of the dispute, Pengassan directed its branches at major oil firms to enforce an immediate halt to crude oil and gas deliveries to the refinery.

The Nigerian Labour Congress claimed that Dangote had a “consistent record of union-busting, exploitative labour practice”,“We have it on good authority that Dangote refinery pays one of the lowest wages in the oil and gas sector in Nigeria today and treats its staff members beneath acceptable standards,” it claimed at the time,The government stepped in and confirmed the right to union membership, adding in a statement that it had been agreed that the “management of Dangote Group shall immediately begin the process of redeploying the disengaged staff to other companies within the Dangote Group, with no loss of pay”,An internal company memo was reportedly sent last week confirming that affected staff were being recalled,A spokesperson for Dangote Industries said the workers had been reabsorbed into the company in different sectors within the firm, including salt, sugar and cement, and denied that they had been dismissed for union membership.

He said: “We have free association and we respect it.“Unions can use any foul language to appeal to the masses that their rogue [leadership] claim to protect.Such buzzwords attract headlines and try to mask their ineptitude.We don’t have problems with unions.“The picture is clear today.

The same unions are extolling our industrialisation strategy and … vision for rescuing the country from perennial fuel shortage, long queues at the fuel stations , wasteful man-hours, substandard and dirty fuel imports,”Fossil fuels from the Gulf have effectively been at a standstill since 28 February, after the de facto closure of the shipping channel the strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world’s oil and gas flows,British refineries have already been asked to maximise jet fuel supply as part of government contingency planning, amid growing fears that planes will be grounded this summer,There are four remaining refineries in the UK, after closures at Grangemouth and Lindsey in 2025: Fawley in Hampshire, owned by ExxonMobil Humber in Lincolnshire, owned by Phillips 66, Valero’s Pembroke refinery near Milford Haven, and Essar’s Stanlow site in Cheshire,Speaking over the weekend, the transport secretary conceded that the output from these refineries would not be sufficient and that other sources were being sought, but she was “confident” that it would be a normal summer for a “majority” of holidaymakers.

She said: “We’re importing a lot more jet fuel from the US, we have also asked the refineries here to maximise production, we’ve got fuel for refineries that produce jet fuel here, we’ve got more oil, jet fuel coming from refineries on the west coast of Africa as well.”Matt Stanley, the head of market engagement at Kpler, said Dangote was producing aviation fuel to its maximum capacity after recent internal problems.He said: “In March, [the UK] bought 130,000 tonnes.There is 60,000 tonnes that is on the way now and should arrive tomorrow [Tuesday].The main import hub for … Heathrow is in the Isle of Grain.

“With jet fuel, you will pay what you have to pay,I think the winners, if you like, those who will pick up market share, will be the US refineries, for sure, and Dangote,You go to whoever has got the barrels,It’s less about pricing, it’s about volume, and they just want to keep the wheels turning,”
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How does live facial recognition work and how many UK police forces use it?

The Labour government thinks facial recognition technology is “the biggest breakthrough for catching criminals since DNA matching”. It wants all police forces to use it and recently announced 40 new vans rigged with live facial recognition cameras to be deployed in town centres across England and Wales.Supporters say it streamlines police work and catches criminals. Opponents fear it violates civil liberties and can be biased against minorities.The simplest systems check faces captured on CCTV, mobile phones, dashcams, social media and doorbell cameras against mugshots held on the police national database

1 day ago
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UK ‘invention agency’ grants £50m of public money to US tech and venture capital firms

Britain’s “invention agency” has pledged £50m of UK taxpayer money to US tech companies and venture capital projects.Dreamed up by Dominic Cummings to fund “crazy” ideas, the Advanced Research and Invention Agency (Aria) is meant to “restore Britain’s place as a scientific superpower”.But a joint investigation by the Guardian and Democracy for Sale, an investigative website, has established that more than an eighth of the agency’s £400m in research and development funding over the past two years has gone to 14 US tech companies and venture capital groups, in some cases, with no clear return for the UK or Aria.One of these companies, Rain Neuromorphics, is also backed by the OpenAI chief executive, Sam Altman, and was reported to be near collapse last year, shortly after winning Aria money. It did not respond to a request for comment; two of its founders appear to have left the company

1 day ago
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Under a cloud: the growing resentment against the massive datacentres sprouting across Australian cities

Residents say AI factories with unknown environmental impacts are being rushed into development as proponents argue Australia must ride the data boom or be left behindFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastWhen West Footscray resident Sean Brown takes his 19-month-old boy to the park, their walk passes an imposing new building cheerily spruiked as “Australia’s largest hyperscale AI factory”, a datacentre called M3.He hates it: the construction noise from its constant expansion, the looming towers and the insistent background hum, the exhaust from the growing array of diesel generators that can help power the ranks of servers inside.And he worries what it represents for his young child’s future.“He is growing – neurologically, pulmonarily, physically – in the shadow of a facility whose cumulative environmental impact … has never been assessed,” Brown says.“They’re building something which is, frankly, terrible for the community

2 days ago
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Parents already have controls over smartphones – they should use them | Letters

A crucial facility seems to be missing from the coverage of smartphones in schools – and outside (I was wrong about the danger of smartphones in schools. It’s far, far worse than I thought, 22 April). Parental controls, which both Apple and Android have, enable downtimes to be set to ensure phones don’t work in school. They can also set downtimes for outside school and block inappropriate apps.We use these for our 14-year-old daughter to keep her safe and manage the addictive effects of phone use

3 days ago
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‘Awkward and humiliating’: UK job hunters share frustration with AI interviews

Nearly half (47%) of UK job seekers have had an AI interview, research from the hiring platform Greenhouse has found.In its survey of 2,950 active job seekers, including 1,132 UK-based workers, with additional respondents from the US, Germany, Australia and Ireland, it found that 30% of UK candidates had walked away from a hiring process because it included an AI interview.We asked people about their experiences of AI interviews. The responses included those who found it “awkward” and “humiliating”. Others spoke of wanting a human element in the interviews, and said they were not sure if their interview had even been reviewed

3 days ago
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Tim Cook takes victory lap as Apple’s financial results soar past Wall Street expectations

Apple blew past Wall Street expectations in its first earnings report since it announced CEO Tim Cook would be stepping down.Cook shared his thoughts about the leadership transition on Thursday, saying: “There’s no one on this planet I trust more to lead Apple into the future” than incoming CEO John Ternus. Asked by an investor what advice he has given Ternus, Cook said: “Never forget the north star for the company. You know, we’re about making the best products in the world that really enrich other people’s lives.”Ternus spoke briefly, too, praising Cook’s thoughtfulness in financial decision-making and saying: “This is the most exciting time in my 25-year career at Apple to be building products and services

4 days ago
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Guy Montgomery: ‘One fan took us back to his house and showed us all his guns’

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‘We have to mock the site’s insanity’: comedian Tim Heidecker on the allure of becoming Infowars’ new boss

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Prince’s death made me upend my life and move to his home town

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The Devil Wears Prada 2 to Lenny Henry: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

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Peter Kay show stopped and 19-year-old in custody after ‘suspicious bag’ found

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Jimmy Kimmel: ‘Trump has three wars going on right now – Iranians, Ukrainians and comedians’

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