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‘We’ve future-proofed’: how UK’s biggest car factory upgraded for EV revolution

about 14 hours ago
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Nissan builds in capability to go fully electric at Sunderland plant amid scaling back of transition targets across EuropeCar bodies suspended from overhead rails move through Nissan’s factory in Sunderland, with workers stepping in to fit parts at different stations.At the newly installed battery “marriage station”, lifting machines push the most crucial component up into the body.Robots fit and tighten 16 bolts in under a minute – quick enough to ensure the constant flow of vehicles around Britain’s biggest car factory.The electric cars in question are the third generation of Nissan’s Leaf, after the Japanese carmaker this week launched production following £450m of upgrades.Beside the brightly lit final-inspection line, the industry minister Chris McDonald hailed the investment as an important part of the UK industry’s transition to electric vehicles.

The Leaf remains – for now – the only electric car to be built in large volumes in Britain.However, the launch does not come at an auspicious moment for electric cars.Carmakers around the world have delayed models, complaining that sales have not grown as fast as expected.On the same day as the Leaf’s launch, the EU announced it would water down a 2035 ban on petrol and diesel cars, proposing instead to allow 10% of European car sales to have internal combustion engines after that point.Nissan has joined the retreat.

Just two years ago it had pledged to sell only electric cars in Europe by 2030,However, Nissan’s boss in Europe, Massimiliano Messina, said in Sunderland that he was unwilling to commit to a date for the transition to be completed,“If I might give a number, it will be wrong,” he said, when asked when Nissan would be all-electric in Europe,“I cannot give you a date by when,But I’m more confident that we talk about 2050.

”The EU, a key market for the cars from Sunderland, was the last domino to fall in a global move to slow the transition, after a global barrage of lobbying by the politically powerful car industry,The UK weakened its zero-emission vehicle (ZEV) mandate in April – and will examine further changes,Canada paused its EV sales mandate in September,Meanwhile, Donald Trump has torn up any policy with a hint of support for electric vehicles – despite his short-lived alliance with Tesla’s boss, Elon Musk,That has cost US carmakers including Ford and General Motors billions of dollars in abandoned investments and lost sales.

European and British manufacturers will still have to switch to electric sales, but carmakers including Volkswagen have expressed relief at the EU’s changes.That will give them greater leeway to sell more hybrids, which combine a smaller battery with a polluting petrol engine.Electric-focused carmakers have strongly opposed the changes, and some in the EV industry have argued that it will just leave the way clear for manufacturers from China, the rising EV manufacturing superpower.Part of the Sunderland investment was to make sure it could sell more hybrids if needed.The new Leaf cars are now being manufactured on the same kilometre-long line that builds hybrid Qashqai and Juke models.

“We’ve future-proofed for the transition to fully electric vehicles – when the time comes,” said Guy Reid, the engineering general manager at Sunderland, on a platform overlooking the battery conveyor belt.“When we introduce more electric vehicles, we don’t have to modify this facility again.”Each station completes 60 jobs an hour in order to be able to make up to 600,000 cars a year.However, in 2024 the plant made only 282,000 cars, down 14% from the year before.The batteries themselves are manufactured next door, in a new plant built by the Chinese-owned company Automotive Energy Supply Corporation (AESC).

As the new Leaf was launched, high-precision robotic arms stamped and trimmed battery cells to be assembled into packs, although only one out of four lines was operational as it waited for demand from Nissan to increase,AESC has also had to scale back its ambitions for Sunderland,Its new battery factory is capable of making 15,8 gigawatt hours (GWh) of batteries a year, enough for about 300,000 electric cars, but well short of initial plans for 38GWh,Nissan’s change in direction is not just following the global automotive mood.

It is in the middle of a third turnaround plan after years of leadership turmoil,The company’s former chief executive Carlos Ghosn tried to make an alliance of France’s Renault, Nissan and Japan’s Mitsubishi into the world’s biggest carmaker,However, he was arrested in 2018,He dramatically fled house arrest, leaving behind years of leadership chaos at Nissan, and an abandonment of world-spanning ambitions,Nevertheless, in 2023 Makoto Uchida, one of Ghosn’s successors, had enough confidence to pledge only electric sales in Europe by 2030.

He said: “Nissan will make the switch to full electric by 2030 in Europe – we believe it is the right thing to do for our business, our customers and for the planet.”Sunderland was a key part of that plan.Nissan also said that year it was considering three electric models: a new Leaf hatchback, plus replacements for the Juke and Qashqai crossover SUVs (although the latter has yet to be confirmed).Securing the new electric models in Sunderland was seen as a huge priority for the previous Conservative government – partly to avoid a rerun of 2016, when the plant became a symbol of the potential economic harms of Brexit.The government secretly agreed to give state aid worth £61m.

Brexit is no longer the main concern of the car industry, but carmakers are still able to win significant support,State aid disclosures show that Boris Johnson’s government in 2022 gave Nissan £101m towards the plant in direct grants for a “new all-electric vehicle”, one of the largest subsidies given to a manufacturer since the UK’s departure from the EU,Nissan said it had invested £450m itself in upgrading the plant,Johnson’s government said the grant was justified because it “secures a strategically important internationally mobile investment”,Carmakers often play different governments off against each other when seeking support for factories.

The support may have helped Sunderland avoid the axe when Uchida was forced out earlier this year.In May, Nissan’s current chief executive, Ivan Espinosa, announced the closure of seven factories, with the loss of 20,000 jobs – but spared the UK.Yet Nissan still faces questions over whether it can fill the plant again.One suggestion aired by Espinosa was to build cars for Dongfeng, a Chinese manufacturer and partner in a joint venture with Nissan in Wuhan, China.Messina said Nissan was still looking at “opportunities”, but added that there was “nothing concrete”.

He insisted the company’s main focus would be on winning back market share with new models, starting with the Leaf.“For the time being, we are looking at ourselves because we want to make sure we secure our own footprint with our vehicles,” he said.
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Badenoch says teaching boys about misogyny shouldn’t be a priority because migrants more dangerous to women and girls – UK politics live

Kemi Badenoch has dismissed the government’s VAWG strategy as a “complete distraction”, arguing that teaching boys to respect women should not be a priority because migrants post a more serious threat.In a post on social media, and comments quoted by the Telegraph, she backed up the arguments used by Katie Lam in the Commons (see 2.29pm) – but went further, dismissing the long-awaited policy document as “just a big mess”.Badenoch said:It’s not 11-year-old boys who are committing violence against women and girls.We need to get people who have come from cultures that don’t respect women out of our country! Not all cultures are equally valid

about 14 hours ago
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Megan Davies obituary

My partner, Megan Davies, who has died aged 67, was for many years Cardiff’s highly regarded branch secretary of the Society of Telecom Executives, now part of the Prospect union.She was a lifelong socialist, a supporter of Socialist Worker and, until her recent ill health, was a regular at Palestine, anti-war and anti-racist protests. At her funeral Cor Cochion, a socialist choir, gave a passionate rendition of Nkosi Sikelel’ iAfrika, the South African national anthem. She used to sing it with Jen O’Keefe, her vocalist partner, at the Blue Dragon folk club and Frank Hennessey’s folk club at BBC Cardiff.Born in Belsize Park, north London, to Jean (nee Roderick), a teacher, and Owen Davies, an academic, Megan attended Camden school for girls

about 14 hours ago
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Sir John Stanley obituary

John Stanley, who has died aged 83, was one of the longest-serving postwar MPs, representing the Kent commuter belt constituency of Tonbridge and Malling for 41 years, but had a hapless reputation as a minister.Although he never became a cabinet minister, Stanley played a part in some of the most contentious issues of the Thatcher years. An ultra-loyalist, even before he became an MP he was one of the originators of the policy of selling council houses, and steered the legislation through the Commons as housing minister. Moved to the Ministry of Defence after the Conservatives’ post-Falklands general election landslide in 1983, he became embroiled in the Belgrano affair and the prosecution of the civil servant Clive Ponting.Some of these events may not have been his fault, but colleagues tended to believe that he made them worse by a seeming arrogance

about 14 hours ago
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Keir Starmer planning new king’s speech after May elections

Keir Starmer is planning for a new king’s speech after crunch elections in May next year as a reset moment for the government amid speculation over the prime minister’s future.Senior sources in parliament said planning was under way to end the parliamentary session the week after local elections in England and parliamentary elections in Wales and Scotland in May, making it a significantly longer session than normal, and nearly two years since Labour first set out its legislative agenda.Starmer will hope the timing of the speech will allow Labour to swiftly change the narrative to its new legislation straight after the difficult elections and try to maintain discipline among MPs.But it is a high-stakes move because votes on the king’s speech are usually considered confidence votes in the government. Starmer suspended several Labour MPs for voting for a Scottish National party (SNP) amendment on the two-child benefits limit after the last king’s speech

about 19 hours ago
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Teachers in England face growing misogyny and need help dealing with sexual aggression, says Phillips

Schools are reporting growing misogyny from pupils towards teachers and a lack of avenues to seek help about sexually aggressive behaviour, the safeguarding minister, Jess Phillips, has said.Phillips’ comments came as the government was due to launch its long-awaited violence against women and girls strategy. Children as young as 11 who demonstrate misogynistic behaviour will be taught the difference between pornography and real relationships, as part of a multimillion-pound investment to try to tackle misogyny in England’s schools.“I go into schools all the time, and what teachers have been saying to me for a number of years … is that they are seeing growing concerns around … the access to the pornography that their pupils see, and some of the attitudes that come from what they are seeing, misogynistic attitudes displayed towards teachers,” Phillips told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.“I have seen so many cases that have led to total tragedy in the sharing of intimate images, for example, and parents desperate for resources

about 22 hours ago
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MPs warn that UK agreements with Donald Trump are ‘built on sand’

Ministers and senior MPs have warned that the UK’s agreements with Donald Trump are “built on sand” after the Guardian established that the deal to avoid drug tariffs has no underlying text beyond limited headline terms.The “milestone” US-UK deal announced this month on pharmaceuticals, which will mean the NHS pays more for medicines in exchange for a promise of zero tariffs on the industry, still lacks a legal footing beyond top lines contained in two government press releases.Concerns over the basis of the agreement have been heightened by Washington’s decision to suspend the £31bn “tech prosperity deal”, which had been hailed as “a generational step-change in our relationship with the US”. The deal was paused after the US claimed a lack of progress from the UK in lowering trade barriers in other areas.It has also emerged that concessions to British farmers made in the first tariff deal with Trump, which were hailed as “historic” by Keir Starmer in May, have yet to be signed off by the US despite a looming January deadline

1 day ago
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MPs to question Vodafone on ‘unjust’ treatment of store franchise owners

about 12 hours ago
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BP opts for culture shock with new CEO appointment, but the timing is odd

about 14 hours ago
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TikTok signs Trump-backed deal to sell US entity to American investors

about 7 hours ago
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Facebook tests charging users to share links in potential blow for news outlets

about 14 hours ago
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Australia v England: Ashes third Test, day three – live

about 4 hours ago
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Rory McIlroy named BBC Sports Personality of the Year 2025 – as it happened

about 10 hours ago