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UK failure to seal EU tax exemption hands industry mountain of paperwork

about 24 hours ago
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UK manufacturers are to be hit with mountains of Brexit-style paperwork in January on £7bn worth of exports to the EU after the government failed to secure an expected exemption from new green taxes.The UK had hoped to secure a carve-out by Christmas on the carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM), but EU commissioners have confirmed this is not going to happen.UK Steel says the exemption is unlikely to be in place before Easter, resulting in detailed paperwork for exporters in a repeat of Brexit when they were hit with paperwork on customs and standards of their goods.The documentation requires exporters to provide a detailed paper trail of carbon emissions generated during the manufacturing process.It will apply to scores of products made with steel and aluminium, including washing machines and car parts, under plans Brussels announced on Wednesday.

It will also apply to fertiliser, cement and energy exports.While the UK privately expressed hopes of a deal before Christmas, industry insiders say it was never in the realms of political reality.The EU signed off the mandate on negotiations only in early December, making any deal outside a high-level political agreement involving all 27 member states, some of which have little interest in the UK, impossible.A government insider said it would now be “prudent for businesses to prepare on the basis that the EU CBAM will be in force” from January, with support and information available from the Department for Business and Trade.Make UK, the manufacturing trade body, said the paperwork would be “extensive” and hit businesses badly.

Frank Aaskov, the director of energy and climate change policy at UK Steel, said: “It is going to have significant negative impact,The paperwork is definitely significant,It will be quite a burden on SMEs [small and medium-sized enterprises],”Aaskov said the taxes, set, for example, at €13 (£11) a tonne for “hot rolled wire”, a raw material for construction, fencing and engineering, would be significant for the steel industry,“That kind of steel costs about €650 per tonne, so it seems like a small cost, but the steel business is ruthless, with imports from China very competitive, and anything up to €5 per tonne can be the difference between getting a contract and losing a contract.

”While the taxes do not have to be paid until 2027 and could be cancelled until a potential deal next year, it adds to the nightmare the UK steel is already facing with the EU.Under the bloc’s rules, talks will now proceed in two stages, the first a formal discussion to decide the terms of reference and the second on emissions trading systems.Months ago the EU announced it would match Donald Trump’s tariffs on steel, doubling levies on imports from third countries such as the UK to 50%, in a decision condemned as an “existential threat” to the beleaguered British steel industry.The EU’s climate commissioner, Wopke Hoekstra, said on Wednesday: “We are in very good conversations with our UK friends.” He played down the significance of the 1 January deadline, saying “the price [the UK] will be paying is actually minimum” because decarbonisation efforts in Britain were well under way.

Pressed on the UK talks, Hoekstra said negotiations on the two opposing emissions trading systems had to take place first.“This is really a matter of doing things in the right order, step by step, chiffre par chiffre, pas à pas,” he said.A UK government spokesperson said: “Our priority remains securing a carbon linking agreement as soon as possible, which would save UK industry from paying the charge on £7bn worth of UK exports.”
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Jimmy Kimmel on a tumultuous year: ‘Don’t know what the American way even is any more’

Late-night hosts reflected on a rollercoaster 2025 and Donald Trump’s combative, primetime year-end address to the nation.Jimmy Kimmel opened his final monologue of 2025 with an emotional reflection on a tumultuous year. “This has been a strange year. It’s been a hard year,” he said. “We’ve had some lows

3 days ago
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Jimmy Kimmel on Trump’s speech: ‘Surprise primetime episode of The Worst Wing’

Late-night hosts discussed – or ignored – Donald Trump’s surprise primetime address and dug further into the explosive new interview the White House chief of staff, Susie Wiles.Jimmy Kimmel opened his Wednesday night show with an acknowledgment of the president’s 9pm ET national address, also known as a “surprise primetime episode of The Worst Wing tonight on every channel”.Trump announced only on Tuesday that he would deliver an impromptu fireside chat during the season finales of Survivor and The Floor. “It’s weird to think that had a couple of states just gone the other way, he’d be hosting one of those shows,” Kimmel joked. “Trump shouldn’t be pre-empting The Floor

4 days ago
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Stephen Colbert on Susie Wiles’s candid interviews: ‘She dished, bish’

Late-night hosts reacted to White House chief of staff Susie Wiles’s revealing interview with Vanity Fair.“If there’s one thing Donald Trump wants, it’s a hamburger,” said Stephen Colbert on Tuesday’s Late Show. “If there’s a second thing, though, it would be to make you think that you’re crazy. That’s why periodically, I like to remind all of you that you’re not crazy. What’s happening is crazy

5 days ago
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The 50 best albums of 2025: No 3 – Blood Orange: Essex Honey

Dev Hynes’ deeply personal response to his mother’s death embodied the many unexpected shades of grief in pastoral hymnals and post-punk The 50 best albums of 2025 More on the best culture of 2025There’s a lot of grief across the best albums of this year. It’s unsurprising: 2025 has felt like a definitive and dismal break with government accountability, protections for marginalised people and holding back the encroachment of AI in creative and intellectual fields, to cherrypick just a few horrors. Anna von Hausswolff and Rosalía reached for transcendence from these earthly disappointments. Bad Bunny and KeiyaA countered colonial abuse and neglect with writhing resistance anthems. On a more personal scale, Lily Allen and Cate Le Bon grappled with disillusionment about mis-sold romantic ideals

5 days ago
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Arts funding in England must be protected from politics, Hodge report urges

Arts Council England must ensure funding is protected from politicisation and simplify its application process in order to regain trust, a damaging report has found.The investigation into the national body for arts funding found there had been a “loss of respect and trust” for ACE among those it backed, in part because of “perceived political interference in decision-making”.The report was written by the Labour peer Margaret Hodge, who recommended that ACE be retained but with the arm’s-length principle strengthened at all levels of government “to ensure that arts funding is protected from politicisation”.She said: “There have been attempts to exert more political control over ACE decisions in recent years and this has to stop. The Arts Council must remain free from political interference

6 days ago
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The Hodge report into Arts Council England: ‘Not exactly a ringing endorsement’

The arts in England are underfunded, and were dealt a blow by Covid from which many organisations have not yet recovered. But that has been only part of the story. The sheer weight of required form-filling, the endless bureaucracy, the impracticable length of time it takes to simply be funded by Arts Council England (ACE) have caused universal frustration among those working in the arts. There is much talk of exhaustion and burnout.Many organisations have felt frustrated, too, by the strictures of ACE’s flagship strategy, Let’s Create, which, though admirable in principle, with its focus on participation in the arts, is perhaps tilted too far from recognising the expertise and individuality of artists and arts institutions

6 days ago
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Gold and silver hit record highs amid rate-cut bets and Venezuela tensions – business live

about 2 hours ago
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Toy touts, random spins and frantic bidding: the murky side of live auction site Whatnot

about 4 hours ago
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Extremists are using AI voice cloning to supercharge propaganda. Experts say it’s helping them grow

about 21 hours ago
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A tape measure, a metal detector and a spirit level: 25 surprisingly useful things you can do with your phone

about 22 hours ago
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Mitchell Starc urges ICC to take action on Snicko as confidence in system dwindles

about 5 hours ago
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NFL week 16: Steelers edge Lions in thriller, Jaguars stun Broncos, Panthers beat Bucs – as it happened

about 9 hours ago