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Tesla’s EU sales slump continues as Chinese rivals thrive

about 5 hours ago
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Tesla continued a run of weak sales in the EU in November, with new car registrations of Elon Musk’s brand down a third, while Chinese carmakers’ sales soared.Tesla sold 12,130 new cars across the EU last month, down from 18,430 in November 2024, shrinking its market share from 2.1% to 1.4%, according to data from the European Automobile Manufacturers’ Association (Acea), a lobby group.The Chinese carmaker BYD recorded by far the fastest sales growth, with registrations across Europe almost tripling year on year up to November, to 42,500.

Chinese state-owned SAIC, the owner of the MG brand, recorded sales increases of 26% to push sales to 217,000,Both brands make battery cars but also hybrids, which combine a smaller battery with a petrol or diesel engine,Hybrid car sales, including plug-ins with the ability to use charge points, accounted for 44% of all sales, amid a push by European carmakers to sell more of the vehicles, which are more profitable for them,The rise in hybrids has coincided with a strong lobbying push by European carmakers to persuade the EU to weaken electric car sales targets,Last week the EU confirmed it would do so, allowing 10% of car sales to have internal combustion engines after 2035.

Despite the intensive lobbying, battery electric cars accounted for 18.8% of the European market, or 2.3m cars, in the first 11 months of the year, up from 15% in the same period last year.That rise in market share came even amid struggles for Tesla, the only pure electric brand among those whose sales are tracked by Acea.Tesla’s sales slowdown started late last year, around the time when Musk, the world’s richest man, started to try to intervene in European politics.

He backed Germany’s far-right Alternative für Deutschland and appeared virtually at campaign events for them and British far-right groups.He also had a prominent alliance with Donald Trump, only to fall out spectacularly with the US president in the summer, in part over the withdrawal of subsidies and supportive regulations for electric cars.Despite the sales slowdown, Musk’s net worth on paper remains far higher than any other person’s.The Bloomberg billionaires index puts his wealth at $647bn (£480bn), with the rocket company SpaceX the largest component of his wealth, followed by a Tesla shareholding worth about $200bn.Tesla’s market value is more than $1.

5tn, more than all the other western carmakers combined, although much of that valuation is thought to stem from investors’ backing for Musk’s vision of robotics and AI rather than the fundamentals of its car business.Overall, EU sales of new cars rose by 1.4% in the year to November compared with last year, a fifth consecutive monthly rise in a row.Sales rose by 1.9% to 12.

1m for the first 11 months of the year when including the European Free Trade Area and the UK.
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Prosecutions for strangulation in England and Wales increase sixfold in three years

The number of suspects charged for strangulation and suffocation in England and Wales has increased almost sixfold in the three years since the offence was first introduced, Crown Prosecution Service data has revealed.Brought in under the Domestic Abuse Act, which came into force in 2022, the legislation closed a gap in the existing law, giving courts much greater sentencing powers.Kate Brown, the CPS’s lead prosecutor for domestic abuse, said that previously there had been “a lot of cases for which it didn’t seem like we had the right offence”, and the new legislation marked “a significant shift in recognising the serious nature of the offence”.“There were some thoughts that it might not be necessary and that the act of strangulation or suffocation could be covered by other offences,” she said, but added that the options previously open to prosecutors “didn’t really hit the mark in terms of the seriousness, because strangulation is a really serious offence”.Suffocation and strangulation carries a maximum sentence of five years’ imprisonment, whereas previously, except for the most serious cases which could be charged as grievous bodily harm or attempted murder, prosecutors were having to charge offenders with common assault, which carries a much lesser maximum sentence of six months

about 14 hours ago
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Britons reported to be drinking less, as data shows consumption at record low

People in Britain are drinking less alcohol than in previous years, according to reports.The average UK adult consumed 10.2 alcoholic drinks a week last year, the lowest figure since data collection began in 1990 and a decline of more than a quarter from the peak of 14 two decades ago, according to figures published in the FT from research company IWSR.However, total abstention is not on the rise despite the decline in consumption, which suggests more moderate drinking habits have driven the trend.“The population is ageing and older consumers physiologically can’t drink as much,” Marten Lodewijks, the IWSR president, told the newspaper

1 day ago
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Resident doctors say they will resume talks to avoid further strikes with ‘can-do spirit’

Resident doctors have said they will approach talks with Wes Streeting with a “can-do spirit” to avoid further strikes in the new year, as their five-day action ended on Monday morning.The British Medical Association called on the health secretary to come to the table with the same “constructive” attitude, saying the tone of 11th-hour talks before their stoppage had been encouraging but too late to avoid the strike in England.Streeting also signalled his determination to get back to the talks, saying he did “not want to see a single day of industrial action in the NHS in 2026”, and that he would “be doing everything I can to make this a reality”.“My door remains open, as it always has done, and I’m determined to resume discussions with the BMA in the new year to put an end to these damaging cycles of disruption,” he said.Streeting and Keir Starmer have taken a tough line towards the strike, with the prime minister saying it was “beyond belief” that it should go ahead when the flu-hit NHS was facing its worst crisis since Covid

1 day ago
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One in eight of 14- to 17-year-olds in Great Britain say they have used nicotine pouches

One in eight teenagers aged 14 to 17 have used nicotine pouches, a survey has found, adding to health experts’ concern about their growing popularity.Users hold the small sachets, which look like mini-teabags and are often flavoured, in their mouths to enjoy the release of the nicotine they contain. They are also known as “snus”.Unlike smoking the pouches do not raise the risk of cancer, but they have caused alarm because of the fear that users could become addicted to nicotine and suffer mouth and dental problems.A survey of 500 teenagers aged 14 to 17 in England, Scotland and Wales found that 13% have used a nicotine pouch, of whom 30% said they did so at least once a week

2 days ago
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From Charles Darwin to Noel Gallagher, here’s inspiration for young stammerers

What a great piece by Ross Coleman about embarking on his speech therapy programme for stammering (My cultural awakening: Jonathan Groff inspired me to overcome my stammer, 6 December). Coleman was inspired by the example of Jonathan Groff, who is not a stammerer, tackling something head-on.The McGuire Programme that Coleman signed up for seems to have helped many people. While Groff served as his inspiration, there are no shortage of actual stammerers who have compelling stories to motivate people as they navigate the choppy waters caused by their speech.The Stuttering Foundation’s website has an intriguing “celebrity corner” with biographical articles of famous stammerers including Marilyn Monroe, Bruce Willis, and BB King

2 days ago
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Starmer has no coherent social mobility plan, says top government adviser

Keir Starmer has no coherent strategy to tackle entrenched inequalities harming the life chances of millions of people, the government’s social mobility commissioner has said.A report warned last week that young adults in Britain’s former industrial heartlands were being left behind as a result of failed or abandoned promises by successive governments.The Social Mobility Commission (SMC), a government advisory body, said big cities such as Manchester, Edinburgh and Bristol were starting to thrive but that opportunities were “overconcentrated”.In a Guardian interview, the commission’s chair, Alun Francis, urged Starmer to outline a bold vision to tackle “the defining social mobility challenge of our generation”.He said: “We have a government that talks quite a lot about social mobility, but mainly about individuals – often about [the] social mobility of themselves or their colleagues … But what we don’t have is a coherent approach to social mobility as a useful concept that you can build a strategy around

2 days ago
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Tesla sales fall across Europe again as BYD surges; Ryanair to appeal €256m fine from Italy’s competition authority – business live

about 2 hours ago
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Ryanair fined €256m over ‘abusive strategy’ to limit ticket sales by online travel agencies

about 4 hours ago
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Activist group says it has scraped 86m music files from Spotify

about 17 hours ago
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Chinese robotaxis due in London next year as Lyft and Uber reveal tie-ups

1 day ago
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The Breakdown | Chile coach Pablo Lemoine: ‘Rugby is in trouble, even in countries like Wales’

about 3 hours ago
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A brutal schedule, merciless crowds and always on the road: is professional darts all it’s cracked up to be?

about 6 hours ago