Ministers confirm locations for seven new towns in England

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Ministers have confirmed the locations for seven new towns, which include under-developed inner-city land, a historic village and an existing new town,The programme is being billed by the housing and communities department as the most ambitious housebuilding project in England for half a century, with the planned construction of between 15,000 and 40,000 homes in each new town,The new towns are intended to be designed in a coordinated way, with schools, access to healthcare, public transport links and walking and cycling paths to be created at the same time as the homes,Only one of the locations will be created around a small existing community, as was the case with the various generations of new towns built after the second world war,Up to 40,000 homes are planned around the Bedfordshire village of Tempsford, which is near the A1, with the new building on a former RAF base.

It will also have a major station interchange, linking the adjoining east coast mainline with a new east-west link between Cambridge and Oxford,Five of the projects are within or on the edges of major cities, including two in London,Up to 21,000 homes are planned in the Crews Hill and Chase Park new town in Enfield on the northern edge of the capital, and 15,000 homes in Thamesmead, south-east London, helped by extending the Docklands Light Railway,Two of the urban projects will be relatively central: Victoria North in Manchester, with about 15,000 homes; and Leeds South Bank, with a planned 20,000 homes,The cumbersomely named Brabazon and the West Innovation Arc, with 40,000 homes, is in the north of Bristol.

The final project would include 40,000 new homes in Milton Keynes, itself created from Buckinghamshire farmland and villages as one of the second generation of postwar new towns, and which is now a city.The seven chosen locations were among a shortlist of 12 unveiled in September.The five other places – Adlington in Cheshire; Heyford Park in Oxfordshire; Marlcombe in East Devon; Plymouth; and Wychavon Town on the edge of Worcester – will not become new towns but are eligible for support through other means, as is a 13th location, South Barking on the eastern edge of London.Steve Reed said the plan “marks a turning point in how we build for the future”.The housing secretary said: “From the ground up, we’re planning whole communities with homes, jobs, transport links, and green spaces designed together – so we can give families the security and opportunities they deserve.

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Starmer says ‘every lever’ will be explored to ease rising costs of living from Iran conflict

Keir Starmer has promised to look at using “every lever that’s available to the government” to help people cope with the impact on the cost of living of the US-Israel war against Iran, as he prepares for an emergency meeting with senior ministers.The prime minister will chair a meeting of the Cobra committee to discuss possible contingency measures on Monday afternoon, joining Andrew Bailey, the governor of the Bank of England, Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, Ed Miliband, the energy secretary, and Yvette Cooper, the foreign secretary.Speaking to reporters during a visit to a school in London, Starmer said he wanted to reassure Britons that everything was being done to mitigate the economic effects of the conflict, which has resulted in energy prices soaring and the cost of government borrowing also rising.“Cobra is the opportunity at the highest level to bring people together on matters of real, significant national importance,” Starmer said.“Obviously, Cobras are usually used for military considerations, consular considerations, but I think with the Iran war, most people are very concerned now, not only what they’re seeing on their screens in relation to the conflict itself, but also that question of ‘How is it going to affect me and my family?’“And so today we’re looking at the economic impact, and I am asking for every lever that’s available to the government to deal with the cost of living to be discussed at Cobra

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Idris Elba-backed firm Huel bought by Danone in €1bn deal

Huel, the protein shake maker which counts the actor Idris Elba among its investors, has agreed to be acquired by the French consumer goods group Danone in a deal worth about €1bn (£870m).The British company, which makes food powders, snack bars and meals from a blend of plant-based ingredients and fortified with vitamins, started out selling its powders online. It is now available in more than 25,000 stores around the world.The Huel co-founder Julian Hearn will make about £400m from the deal, according to filings at Companies House.He started the business in 2015 with the nutrition specialist James Collier, and remains one of the biggest shareholders in the business

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Australia’s generation Alpha faces $185k bill over lifetime without urgent action on climate crisis, report finds

The next generation of Australian workers will cop a $185,000 bill over their lifetimes if the country does not act more urgently to address the climate crisis, according to new modelling by a team of young economists at Deloitte.The new report finds that global heating consistent with the current projections would cost the average millennial about $130,000 over the rest of their lives, increasing to $165,000 for gen Z.A gen Z Australian’s lifetime income could be $165,000 lower by 2070 without further global action.For generation Alpha, the eldest of whom turn 16 this year, the bill stretches to $185,000 a person by 2070.The report estimates the damage to worker productivity, infrastructure and property, as well as increased health risks and healthcare costs

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UK mortgage interest rates expected to rise despite Trump’s Iran pause

Homeowners’ choice of mortgage deals has shrunk and interest rates on home loans are expected to rise this week despite financial markets reacting positively to Donald Trump’s pause on his threat to attack Iranian power plants.Early on Monday, as the end of a two-day deadline set by Trump for a deal with Iran grew closer, financial market data implied that investors believed the Bank of England would attempt to tackle rising prices with four quarter-point increases in rates before the end of December.After Trump instructed US defence officials to postpone airstrikes against Iranian energy infrastructure for five days, investors reduced the number of rate rises they expect to two quarter-point increases, from 3.75% to 4.25% this year

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Workers who fall for ‘corporate bullshit’ may be worse at their jobs, study finds

Ever sat in a meeting where someone declares that your company is “growth-hacking” and “working at the intersection of cross-collateralization and blue-sky thinking” and called bullshit? Turns out you were right.A new study out of Cornell University published in the journal Personality and Individual Differences found workers most excited and impressed by corporate speak may be the least equipped to make effective, practical business decisions, and it can leave companies with dysfunctional leaders.Academically, “bullshit” is broadly defined as “a type of semantically, logically or epistemically dubious information that is misleadingly impressive, important, informative or otherwise engaging”, according to the study.“Corporate bullshit” is a specific type of bullshit that uses puzzling corporate buzzwords and jargon and is ultimately “semantically empty and often confusing”, according to the research. It is often used by management to persuade and impress, sometimes to inflate perceptions of the company to workers and investors

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World’s broadcasters urge EU to tighten rules for big tech in smart TV battle

The world’s largest broadcasters have pushed for the EU to enforce its toughest regulations against virtual TVs and smart assistants built by Google, Amazon, Apple and Samsung.The call came in a letter from the Association of Commercial Television and Video on Demand Services in Europe (ACT), whose members include Canal+, RTL, Mediaset, ITV, Paramount+, NBCUniversal, Walt Disney, Warner Bros Discovery, Sky and TF1 Groupe.The letter argues that big tech companies have growing control over the operating systems of smart TVs and voice assistants, allowing them to act as “gatekeepers” funnelling users towards some content and away from others.Services such as Amazon’s Fire TV and Google TV have recommendation systems, as well as search functions, that may prioritise some content over others. These systems, built into many smart TVs, stand to shape how millions of users consume television