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Original Bramley apple tree ‘at risk’ after site where it grows put up for sale

2 days ago
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The future of the original Bramley apple tree, which is responsible for one of the world’s most popular cooking apples, is at risk now that the site where it grows has been put up for sale, campaigners have warned.The tree is situated in the back garden of a row of cottages in Southwell, Nottinghamshire, which has been owned by Nottingham Trent University since 2018 and has been used as student accommodation.The university said the site was for sale due to the “age and configuration” of the cottages, which made them no longer suitable for accommodation.The great granddaughter of the man who first introduced the Bramley apple commercially said she was “very concerned” for the future of the tree and it needed to be protected.“It’s a very famous tree.

It’s a very well-loved tree and it means a lot,” Celia Steven, 85, said.“Sadly people are a bit prone to cut down trees and think about it later so I find it very disturbing.”The more than 220-year-old tree was grown from a pip planted by Mary Anne Brailsford between 1809 and 1815.Its apples were discovered nearly 50 years later by local gardener Henry Merryweather in a garden owned by Matthew Bramley.Merryweather was given permission to take cuttings from the Bramley seedling as long as the apples he sold bore Bramley’s name.

Steven said her great-grandfather, Merryweather, “believed in that apple, he commercialised it, he marketed it, he promoted it … he called it the ‘King of Covent Garden’”.Since then, it has become one of Britain’s best-loved cooking apples.Despite the historic nature of the tree, it has never been granted a tree preservation order, which would protect it under law and prevent it from being chopped down.It has, however, been recognised by the royal family.In 2002, the queen’s golden jubilee cited the Bramley as one of the 50 “great British trees” and two decades later it was recognised as part of a selection of 70 ancient trees dedicated to the queen for the platinum jubilee.

Steven said: “Our ancient trees are not protected in the way they should be.They’re not revered in the way they should be.They’re very special to this country and when we have got such things we do need to look after them and protect them for the future.”Dan Llywelyn Hall, the founder of the Mother Bramley legacy fund, said such heritage trees should never be at risk like this.The 45-year-old artist, who is hoping to fundraise £400,000 with the Merryweather family to buy the site, said the tree had been “in a state of neglect” since the university bought the cottages.

Despite this, and the fact the Bramley was diagnosed with an incurable honey fungus, it is still alive and producing apples, he said.“It can’t be understated, it’s the most important, most famous apple tree in the world.It’s produced a million-in-one apple which is highly regarded in the culinary world.The fact we have the original still alive is quite an extraordinary thing,” he said.“It brings a bigger national discussion up here as to why we are terrible in this country at looking after our heritage trees,” he said.

A Nottingham Trent University spokesperson said: “NTU is proud to have been the latest custodian of the Bramley apple tree and to have played a part in helping to safeguard and celebrate its legacy,“When the university became custodian it was well known that the tree had outlived its natural lifespan by quite some time,We have worked hard using our academic expertise to maintain it in the most careful and appropriate way for a tree of this age and condition and been delighted to provide access to members of the public and for annual events such as the Bramley apple festival and Heritage Open Days,Without the dedication and hard work of our colleagues, we believe it would have deteriorated significantly further,“We were visited by an independent tree specialist last year who paid tribute to the work we have done to both maintain and celebrate it.

We also reached out individually to people in Southwell with a special connection to the tree before the cottages were listed for sale and, again, people expressed support for the work we have undertaken,“The university aims to ensure that the tree will remain in the care of a responsible custodian,We will also continue to provide expert guidance and support to them on how to care for the tree,”
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Elon Musk’s xAI faces second lawsuit over toxic pollutants from datacenter

Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence company xAI is facing a second lawsuit alleging it is illegally emitting toxic pollutants from its enormous datacenters, which house its supercomputers and run the chatbot Grok.The new pending suit alleges xAI is violating the Clean Air Act and was filed Friday by the storied civil rights group the NAACP. The group’s 40-page notice of intent to sue alleges xAI has been polluting Black communities near its facility in Southaven, Mississippi. The pollution comes from more than a dozen portable methane gas generators that xAI set up without permits, the notice alleges.The NAACP’s first notice of intent to sue was filed last June and involves similar allegations regarding the company’s datacenter in Memphis, Tennessee

2 days ago
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AI is indeed coming – but there is also evidence to allay investor fears

The message from investors to the software, wealth management, legal services and logistics industries this month has been clear: AI is coming for your business.The release of new, ever more powerful AI tools has coincided with a stock market slide, which has swept up sectors as diverse as drug distribution, commercial property and price comparison sites. Advances in the technology are giving increasing credibility to predictions that it could render millions of white-collar jobs obsolete – or, at least, eat into the profits of established companies.Carl Benedikt Frey, the author of How Progress Ends and an associate professor of AI and work at the University of Oxford, says investors are reassessing the value of companies that rely heavily on selling software or specialist knowledge.“AI turns once-scarce expertise into output that’s cheaper, faster, and increasingly comparable, which compresses margins long before whole jobs disappear

2 days ago
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Anthropic raises $30bn in latest round, valuing Claude bot maker at $380bn

Anthropic, the US AI startup behind the Claude chatbot, has raised $30bn (£22bn) in a funding round that more than doubled its valuation to $380bn.The company’s previous funding round in September achieved a value of $183bn, with further improvements in the technology since then spurring even greater investor interest.The fundraising was announced amid a series of stock market moves against industries that face disruption from the latest models, including software, trucking and logistics, wealth management and commercial property services.The funding round, led by the Singapore sovereign wealth fund GIC and the hedge fund Coatue Management, is among the largest private fundraising deals on record.“Anthropic is the clear category leader in enterprise AI,” said Choo Yong Cheen, the chief investment officer of private equity at GIC

2 days ago
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How to deal with the “Claude crash”: Relx should keep buying back shares, then buy more | Nils Pratley

As the FTSE 100 index bobs along close to all-time highs, it is easy to miss the quiet share price crash in one corner of the market. It’s got a name – the “Claude crash”, referencing the plug-in legal products added by the AI firm Anthropic to its Claude Cowork office assistant.This launch, or so you would think from the panicked stock market reaction in the past few weeks, marks the moment when the AI revolution rips chunks out of some of the UK’s biggest public companies – those in the dull but successful “data” game, including Relx, the London Stock Exchange Group, Experian, Sage and Informa.Relx, the former Reed Elsevier, whose brands include the Lancet and LexisNexis, is the most intriguing in that list. The company’s description of itself contains at least five words to provoke a yawn – “a global provider of information-based analytics and decision tools for professional and business customers” – but the pre-Claude share price was a thing of wonder

3 days ago
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Share values of property services firms tumble over fears of AI disruption

Shares in commercial property services companies have tumbled, in the latest sell-off driven by fears over disruption from artificial intelligence.After steep declines on Wall Street, European stocks in the sector were hit on Thursday.The estate agent Savills’ shares fell 7.5% in London, while the serviced office provider International Workplace Group, which owns the Regus brand, lost 9%.The UK’s two biggest property developers, British Land and Landsec, dropped 2

3 days ago
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Elon Musk posted about race almost every day in January

Elon Musk’s longtime fixation on a white racial majority is intensifying. The richest man in the world posted about how the white race was under threat, made allusions to race science or promoted anti-immigrant conspiracy content on 26 out of 31 days in January, according to the Guardian’s analysis of his social media output. The posts, made on his platform X, reflect a renewed embrace of what extremism experts describe as white supremacist material.“Whites are a rapidly dying minority,” Musk said on 22 January, a short time before taking the stage at the World Economic Forum in Davos, while reposting an Irish anti-immigrant influencer’s video about demographic change.Musk’s posts included him repeatedly claiming white people face systemic discrimination, endorsing the conspiracy that there is an ongoing genocide against white people in countries around the world and promoting a claim that white people would be “slaughtered” by non-whites if they become a demographic minority

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