Tag: 2022

  • PRESS RELEASE : Government launches £1.5 million AI programme for reducing carbon emissions [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Government launches £1.5 million AI programme for reducing carbon emissions [November 2022]

    The press release issued by the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, on 22 November 2022.

    • The Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy launches new innovation programme supporting the use of artificial intelligence to reduce carbon emissions
    • the AI for Decarbonisation programme forms part of the government’s £1 billion Net Zero Innovation Portfolio
    • the programme aims to stimulate further innovation in the UK in AI, to drive growth and achieve Net Zero targets

    Today (Tuesday 22 November) the government has launched a new innovation programme which will support the use of artificial intelligence (AI) to reduce the UK’s carbon emissions.

    The AI for Decarbonisation Programme, backed by £1.5 million in funding, forms part of the government’s £1 billion Net Zero Innovation Portfolio, and comprises separate streams of grant funding to be launched in 2 initial stages.

    Stream 1, worth up to £500,000, will be made available to co-fund a virtual centre of excellence on AI innovation and decarbonisation through to March 2025, while Stream 2, worth up to £1 million, will fund innovation projects which further the development of AI technologies to support decarbonisation.

    Later in 2023, the government intends to make additional funding available to support priority areas in AI innovation identified by the virtual centre of excellence as being critical for achieving net-zero.

    Science Minister George Freeman said:

    The UK is one of the world’s most advanced AI economies, and AI technology is already having a transformative impact on our economy and society. But there is tremendous potential to do more.

    The AI for Decarbonisation programme offers an exciting opportunity to leverage and develop the UK’s outstanding expertise in the field. Putting this rapidly-evolving technology into action will enable us to save energy costs for businesses and households, create high-value, skilled jobs, and kickstart millions of pounds of private investment while supporting our net zero targets.

    The programme’s objective is to stimulate further innovation in the UK in the AI sector, to drive growth and achieve our net zero ambitions by encouraging collaboration in the field across the technology, energy and industrial sectors. The programme builds on ideas developed in the National AI Strategy  published last year which set out the ways in which AI is able to support the UK in meeting its decarbonisation targets.

    Projects specifically encouraged to bid for funding include uses of AI which could enable a faster transition to renewable energy, decarbonise industry by improving energy productivity and fuel switching, and decrease emissions in the agricultural sector.

    The AI for Decarbonisation Programme is anticipated to increase market growth in the UK, reduce the cost of energy for a more competitive UK industry, leverage private investment in AI, and increase the consideration of ethics, bias and equity in AI technologies with decarbonisation applications.

  • IPSA – Statement on Taxpayer Funded Christmas Parties

    IPSA – Statement on Taxpayer Funded Christmas Parties

    The statement made by IPSA on 22 November 2022.

    We are aware of concerns regarding the rules for MPs’ festive and celebratory claims. Our rules have not changed. MPs employ, on average, five members of staff in their local constituencies to deal with casework from members of the public. These cases are often distressing for the constituent and staff member alike and working in that environment day in and day out is very challenging.

    As employers, it is entirely appropriate that MPs should, if they see fit, reward their staff with a modest gathering at Christmas. We are clear that alcohol is not included, that any event must represent value for money, is subject to publication for transparency and must not be party political in nature. It must be funded within existing budgets.

    To suggest that there is anything inappropriate in this is simply incorrect. We are disappointed with the interpretation of this normal employment practice at a time when MPs are receiving large amounts of abuse, particularly on social media.

  • Chris Bryant – 2022 Comments on IPSA Guidelines Allowing MPs to Claim for Christmas Parties

    Chris Bryant – 2022 Comments on IPSA Guidelines Allowing MPs to Claim for Christmas Parties

    The comments made by Chris Bryant, the Labour MP for Rhondda, on Twitter on 22 November 2022.

    I don’t know of a single MP who asked for this or intends to use it. It is totally inappropriate and I shall certainly not be taking it up.

  • Jess Phillips – 2022 Comments on IPSA Guidelines Allowing MPs to Claim for Christmas Parties

    Jess Phillips – 2022 Comments on IPSA Guidelines Allowing MPs to Claim for Christmas Parties

    The comments made by Jess Phillips, the Labour MP for Birmingham Yardley, on Twitter on 22 November 2022.

    Just want to say no one asked for this, no one I know will use it. The guidance wasn’t made by MPs and yet we will be pilloried for it. I think it’s really irresponsible to issue this guidance as if MPs have been clamouring for it when I’ve literally never heard anyone do that.

  • Tony Lloyd – 2022 Parliamentary Question on the Situation in Afghanistan

    Tony Lloyd – 2022 Parliamentary Question on the Situation in Afghanistan

    The parliamentary question asked by Tony Lloyd, the Labour MP for Rochdale, in the House of Commons on 17 November 2022.

    Tony Lloyd (Rochdale) (Lab)

    It is not so many months ago that any international conference such as the G20 would have been seized with the situation in Afghanistan. Afghanistan has now gone off the agenda, but the humanitarian crisis there is moving into absolute tragedy as people are facing starvation. Can the Prime Minister tell us what conversations took place about Afghanistan? In any case, will he now reconvene the kind of donor conference that could make a material difference to starvation in that country?

    The Prime Minister

    The hon. Member is right to highlight that Afghanistan continues to experience one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises. That is why earlier this year we co-hosted a UN pledging summit, together with Germany and Qatar, that helped to raise over $2 billion for Afghanistan, but he is right to put it on the agenda. I will make sure that we continue to do what we can to support the people there.

  • Keir Starmer – 2022 Speech at the CBI Conference

    Keir Starmer – 2022 Speech at the CBI Conference

    The speech made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, at the CBI Conference in Birmingham on 22 November 2022.

    Thank you Brian, and thank you, conference.

    It’s a privilege to be here in Birmingham to address you at such a pivotal moment for our country.

    And here at the Vox, in the NEC, a place where so many greats of music and theatre have played.

    Bob Dylan, David Bowie, Justin Bieber – he’s coming here soon – and who could forget in 2019 the all-time favourite of the CBI – Peppa Pig. Yes, she played here too.

    But look – I’m here today to talk about Labour’s plan for Britain.

    How together, we can build a fairer, greener, more dynamic country.

    A nation where working people succeed, where aspiration is rewarded. A Britain with its confidence, its hope and its future – back.

    I come with a simple message: Labour is ready.

    Ready to give Britain the clear economic leadership it needs. Ready to work with you to drive our country forward.

    Not just a pro-business party but a party that is proud of being pro-business. That respects the contribution profit makes to jobs, growth and our tax base, that gets that working people want success as well as support, understands that backing private enterprise is the only way Britain pays its way in the world.

    Mark my words: this is a matter of conviction for me and I’ve united my party behind it.

    Anyone who came to our conference in the summer, anyone I’ve met since being leader, more than a hundred CEOs in the last six months alone, knows this already.

    This is a different Labour Party and there is no going back. We’re ready for partnership.

    And let’s be frank – because we need to be.

    Partnership is not a “nice to have”, it’s now an economic imperative.

    I don’t want to waste too much time today talking about the Government but the economic damage they’ve done to our country is immense.

    They’ve put our public finances in a perilous position, wasted the chance to transform our potential in an era of low interest rates, created an economy with weak foundations.

    This isn’t about global shocks – that’s just an excuse.

    Nobody criticises the Government for not anticipating the war in Ukraine or denies the war was the spark for the cost-of-living crisis.

    But the war didn’t ban onshore wind, the war didn’t scrap home insulation, and the war didn’t stall British nuclear energy.

    And when it comes to economic growth the verdict of the former chancellor is right – they’ve created a “vicious cycle of stagnation” and that’s why every crisis hits Britain harder than our competitors.

    The only country in the G7 still poorer than it was before the pandemic.

    Disposable income back to 2013 levels.

    The worst decade for growth in two centuries.

    That’s why we need a new partnership.

    Economic growth is the oxygen for our ambitions – the lifeblood of a strong society and a dynamic economy.

    But we have to confront the reality of our position.

    The lessons of the past twelve years can’t be ignored.

    I mean – just stop for a moment and think what working people have been through.

    How they were told “we’re all in it together” – then they paid for a mess made by banks.

    They cried out for economic change in a referendum, but saw their calls go unanswered.

    And they united to defeat a deadly virus, only to see the Government break the rules that they respected.

    And now – a winter like no other.

    The biggest hit to living standards in British history.

    Where millions, the length and breadth of our country, will go without food or heating.

    Once again asked to pay the price.

    Don’t get me wrong – I know people in this room are struggling too.

    Your borrowing rates – through the roof, energy costs – astronomical, more small businesses going under now than at any time since records began.

    And I know that every single one is a personal tragedy – an ambition, a dream, an investment in a better future – gone.

    No mistake – it’s tough and it will be tough for a while.

    But that’s why we need to answer the burning question – what will we do differently?

    How will we help restore the contract that says:

    “Work hard and Britain will give you a fair chance”.

    Because let me tell you that’s not how working people feel about our country right now – not this winter.

    So this has to be a turning point. Britain needs a new business model and that will be hard.

    Changing a business model is hard – you all know that.

    Nonetheless, it’s time for all of us – government, business, trade unions – to get behind the idea, both basic and radical, that our country can grow in a way that serves working people, that higher productivity can come from unlocking their potential, that we can work together to put their interests first.

    This has to be the common goal of our partnership.

    And it must set a new direction on growth, a new way of governing that at times will challenge our instincts.

    No more trickle-down experiments – that idea has been tested to destruction.

    But equally – if the South East races ahead, “redistribution” can’t be our one-word plan for the rest of Britain.

    You can still grow an economy that way – of course you can. But it’s not enough.

    Working people want growth from the grassroots – jobs that are well paid and secure, communities standing on their own feet, public services strong enough to help them succeed.

    So I promise you now, my Labour Government will care – must care – as much about raising productivity everywhere, as we have done in the past about redistribution.

    We’re going to throw everything at growing our collective contribution – our productive capacity – in every community.

    And that takes us inevitably to the supply-side of the economy.

    That’s why our first priority on tax has always been to scrap business rates.

    We will level the playing field for our high streets.

    And, with help from Lord Jim O’Neil, we’ll make Britain the best place in the world to start a new business.

    But we also need to look at the supply-side differently – it’s not just about tax and enterprise.

    Take the current state of our labour market.

    So much of this comes back to public services.

    Yes, there are other factors but you can’t tell me the number of older people falling out of work has nothing to do with the millions stuck on NHS waiting lists, or that the growing number of people suffering with mental health isn’t a drag on our productivity.

    No – the state of our public services is an economic crisis just as much as a social crisis.

    So we will launch the biggest training programme since the creation of the NHS – increase capacity with more doctors, more nurses, more health visitors, reform the employment service to get more people back to work, give everyone who needs it access to mental health treatment within four weeks, and build a modern childcare system that supports parents – especially women – to flourish.

    This is what the US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen calls: “modern supply-side economics”.

    And that’s the philosophy that will drive us to do the hard yards on growth.

    But we’ll also need to be pragmatic on the basic lack of people.

    We won’t ignore the need for workers to come to this country. We can’t have a situation, as we did with HGV drivers, where temporary shortages threaten to cripple entire sectors of our economy. That would be anti-growth and anti-business.

    But I want to be clear here – with my Labour Government, any movement in our points-based migration system – whether via the skilled worker route, or the shortage occupations list – will come alongside new conditions for business.

    We will expect you to bring forward a clear plan to boost skills and more training, for better pay and conditions, for investment in new technology.

    We can talk about how this is done – dialogue is at the heart of partnership but negotiation with trade unions will be part of it.

    I said at the TUC conference: my Labour Party is unashamedly pro-business and I say here today – that trade unions must be a crucial part of our partnership.

    But our common goal must be to help the British economy off its immigration dependency to start investing more in training workers who are already here.

    Migration is part of our national story – always has been, always will be and the Labour Party will never diminish the contribution it makes to our economy, to public services, to your businesses and our communities.

    But let me tell you – the days when low pay and cheap labour are part of the British way on growth must end.

    This isn’t about Brexit.

    All around the world, business is waking up to the fact we live in a new era for labour.

    And while they’re adapting, our low-wage model is holding us back.

    It’s why we’ve set out a New Deal for Working People that will deliver higher pay, stronger rights and better work – not just for social justice, but also for the new reality on growth.

    Let me give you an example – technology.

    Britain has fewer industrial robots than almost every comparable countries.

    We’re behind Germany, France, Spain, Slovenia, Slovakia, Belgium – it’s a long list.

    And in terms of competition over the long run, one that borders on a disaster.

    Now, I know most businesses get this.

    I’ve seen for myself how you invest in your people and their productivity.

    At Vaillant in Derbyshire, I met the apprentices using their skills in conjunction with the new technologies of heat pumps.

    That technology will continue to adapt and those apprentices will be at the forefront of that change. Working today, training for the opportunities of the future.

    But when we look at the economy as a whole it can seem like we’re more comfortable hiring people to work in low paid, insecure, sometimes exploitative contracts, than we are investing in the new technology that delivers for workers, productivity and our country.

    And we can’t compete like that.

    Britain’s low pay model has to go.

    It doesn’t serve working people.

    It’s not compatible with grassroots growth.

    So let me tell you what is. The three big priorities for my Labour Government, the principles our partnership must deliver to drive Britain forward.

    They are:

    One – economic stability.

    Two – higher skills.

    Three – green growth.

    Let me take them one by one, starting with economic stability.

    Because, as you know, stability is the bedrock – everything else depends on it.

    If we’ve learnt nothing else these past 12 years, it’s that chaos has a cost.

    That’s why every policy my Labour Party announces will always be fully costed.

    We’re determined to reduce debt as a share of our economy – sound money in our public finances must come first.

    And we accept what this means – accept that we won’t be able to do things – good Labour things – as quickly as we might like.

    The lesson of the last few months is stark – lose control of the economy and its businesses and working people who pick up the bill.

    And I won’t let that happen again.

    But real economic stability has to be about much more than public finances.

    It has to be about providing the right conditions to plan and invest, to think about long-term strategy, not just short-term fixes, to create confidence through certainty.

    That’s the argument for partnership – it’s why we’re so committed to a modern industrial strategy.

    It’s not about the size of the state – it’s about what the state does, how it supports businesses to innovate and grow.

    Brings in the creative brilliance of our scientists and universities.

    Applies them to creating the industries of the future and uses whatever tool the job requires.

    Procurement, R&D investment, patient finance, a strategic plan for infrastructure and supply chains, led by an institution – a new Industrial Strategy Council – that sits outside the political cycle.

    I know this isn’t the sort of stuff that sets Westminster pulses racing – not a bit of it.

    But I tell you this – in every one of our competitors, it’s the bread and butter of responsible economic management.

    Yesterday, I went on the gov.uk website in search of the Government’s Industrial Strategy. This is what I found:

    “The aim of the Industrial Strategy was to boost productivity by backing businesses to create good jobs”.

    “Was”!

    And scratched across the top is one word: ‘ARCHIVED’

    Doesn’t that just tell you everything? This Government has archived Britain’s growth.

    That’s why situations like British Volt keep happening.

    Why the CEO of Johnson Matthey says we’re falling behind in the race for clean Hydrogen.

    Why electric car manufacturers are leaving Britain in droves.

    Our aversion to proper, long-term industrial strategy is costing us billions already but even worse – it’s costing us the foundations of a more prosperous future.

    And conference – so will the status quo on skills.

    Any serious plan for growth must accept the need to transform how our country trains people for work.

    That’s why we’re committed to changing the way government supports businesses to get the skills that you need.

    At this conference last year, I announced that Lord Blunkett would lead our Council of Skills Advisors.

    And this year, I’m pleased to announce that he’s delivered that report and we are going to deliver on skills.

    The Apprenticeship Levy is not flexible enough.

    Don’t get me wrong – apprenticeships are a gold standard qualification.

    Their record in tackling the cultural snobbery associated with vocational learning is second to none.

    But alongside them, we also need to fund the training that works for you.

    The need for technology short courses that train coders in weeks, that help younger workers get promoted, the training that supports older workers to flourish, or re-train as something new.

    And let me tell you from personal experience – there’s nothing wrong with changing career in your fifties.

    But the bottom line is this.

    You need more control over what training your levy can buy, with Labour that’s exactly what you’ll get.

    And we’ll devolve the power and money on adult skills budgets as well.

    Decisions that drive growth in communities should be made by people with skin in the game.

    I profoundly believe that the people and businesses of Birmingham, know what training the economy of Birmingham needs.

    And the same is true in Wolverhampton and Wrexham, Peterborough and Portsmouth.

    The next Labour government will spread economic power to the grassroots.

    And our central industrial mission – clean power by 2030 – will help us do it.

    Climate change is the defining social challenge of our times – there’s no question about that.

    I’m sure it scores highly on the risk register of every company in this room.

    But if you only take one thing from today, let it be this.

    I don’t see climate change as a risk, I see it as an opportunity.

    The biggest chance we’ve had in a generation to make our economy work for working people.

    That’s what our Green Prosperity Plan is all about.

    A plan to make Britain a green growth superpower – to invest in wind, solar, nuclear, hydrogen, green steel and carbon capture; new opportunities for plumbers, electricians, engineers, software designers, technicians, builders; insulation for 19 million homes; and Great British Energy – a new national champion that will take advantage of the opportunities in clean British power and turn them into good, secure, well-paid British jobs.

    You can never say it enough – Clean British power is cheaper than imported fossil fuels. Nine times cheaper.

    If we have more of it, businesses and working people get cheaper bills, the country enjoys independence from tyrants like Putin and we give every community a shot at the green jobs of the future.

    Clean hydrogen in South Yorkshire, Merseyside, the East of England, offshore wind in Scotland, Teesside, East and North Yorkshire, solar power growing rural communities in the South East, South West and – yes – here in the Midlands.

    It won’t be easy – we know that.

    On planning, on Ofgem’s remit, on getting ahead of demand issues with the grid, we not only see the battles ahead. We’ll run towards them.

    Because nothing reeks of decline more than the idea Britain no longer knows how to build things – I won’t accept that.

    And with real partnership, we’ll win.

    The same is true on finance.

    Big ambitions require public investment and we will provide it.

    But we know that the real game-changer is private investment.

    And that this is a perennial challenge for British productivity.

    That’s why we’ll also set up a National Sovereign Wealth Fund, and use it to manage risk on the critical investments we need to become a green growth superpower.

    But also – to create spill-over opportunities for businesses and supply chains right across the country in manufacturing and services.

    That is what industrial strategy and partnership must deliver – in a nutshell.

    A new way of managing our economy, a fresh start for Britain and it’s a divide with the Government.

    Last week, you saw the sum total of their offer on growth.

    Stagnation dressed up in the clothes of stability, decline paraded as tough decisions.

    ‘Tough decisions’ would be challenging their party on planning, on onshore wind, on industrial strategy, but they don’t have it in them.

    Don’t understand that to be a careful steward of the economy in a volatile world, you need to be proactive.

    Need to intervene to secure stability and growth.

    I’ll put it simply: every business in this room has a strategy for growth, a nation needs one too.

    Because the headwinds we face – climate change, artificial intelligence, caring for an ageing society, mean that a hands-off approach just isn’t fit for purpose anymore.

    And I’m not going to give up on growth that easily.

    I believe in our country, I believe in our businesses and I believe in our people.

    Britain deserves better.

    A new partnership for prosperity.

    The path to a greener, fairer, more dynamic country.

    To higher wages, higher skills, higher productivity.

    To leading the world on the greatest challenge facing our planet.

    To giving working people a sense of hope, aspiration and possibility once again.

  • Gillian Shephard – 2022 Comments on Announcement of Chloe Smith Standing Down

    Gillian Shephard – 2022 Comments on Announcement of Chloe Smith Standing Down

    The comments made by Gillian Shephard, the former Education Secretary, on 22 November 2022.

    Chloe Smith has been an outstanding Member of Parliament for Norwich North since her election in 2009, when at only 27 she became the youngest member of the House of Commons.  Since then she has served as a minister in the Treasury, the Cabinet Office, as Minister for Disabled People, and finally as Secretary of State for Work and Pensions.  She has worked tirelessly on behalf of her constituents in Norwich North, and in Norwich and Norfolk as a whole, while at the same time bringing up a young family with her husband and successfully fighting breast cancer.  She will be enormously missed by the many, many people she has helped in her time as a local MP, by her constituency members and her local colleagues. Nationally, her quiet competent presence will also be greatly missed. We will all miss her support and loyal friendship.

  • Gordon Brown – 2022 Comments on Afghan Girls Attending School

    Gordon Brown – 2022 Comments on Afghan Girls Attending School

    The comments made by Gordon Brown, the former Labour Prime Minister, on Twitter on 22 November 2022.

    All who are travelling to the World Cup in Qatar should come together to protest the Taliban’s ban on Afghan girls attending school. The Muslim world outside Afghanistan welcomes and encourages girls education. By coming together, we can change millions of lives for the better.

  • Toby Perkins – 2022 Parliamentary Question on the Australian Trade Deal

    Toby Perkins – 2022 Parliamentary Question on the Australian Trade Deal

    The parliamentary question asked by Toby Perkins, the Labour MP for Chesterfield, in the House of Commons on 17 November 2022.

    Mr Toby Perkins (Chesterfield) (Lab)

    The Prime Minister laid out his approach to trade deals in his statement. He will be aware that while he was at the G20 the right hon. Member for Camborne and Redruth (George Eustice) was describing the trade deal with Australia as

    “not actually a very good deal for the UK”.—[Official Report, 14 November 2022; Vol. 722, c. 424.]

    Does the Prime Minister agree with the right hon. Member, who was formerly the Environment Secretary, and if so what will the Prime Minister do about it?

    The Prime Minister

    Thank you, Madam Deputy Speaker. Maybe not as important as what is about to come from the Chancellor.

    All trade deals involve give and take on both sides. The Australia trade deal will open up new markets for 3 million British jobs, which is fantastic, reduce prices for Australian goods and make it easier for young people to move back and forth between the two countries. Going forward, we will ensure that our trade deals work for the UK. That is what we will deliver.

  • Kevin Brennan – 2022 Parliamentary Question on Solving Problems with Northern Ireland Protocol

    Kevin Brennan – 2022 Parliamentary Question on Solving Problems with Northern Ireland Protocol

    The parliamentary question asked by Kevin Brennan, the Labour for Cardiff West, in the House of Commons on 17 November 2022.

    Kevin Brennan (Cardiff West) (Lab)

    On Northern Ireland, it is reported today in The Times that the Prime Minister promised President Biden that the issues surrounding the Northern Ireland protocol would be solved by next April. Did he give that commitment to President Biden? The people of Northern Ireland face a long hard winter without a Government in place there, so should there not be a greater sense of urgency from the UK Government to sort it out?

    The Prime Minister

    As I have said publicly and clearly, I want to see a resolution to this issue as soon as possible. That is why I spoke to my counterparts in Ireland and the European Commission, and others, on almost the first day I took office. I am working very hard to try to bring about a negotiated settlement to the challenges we face, but those challenges on the ground are real: businesses, families and communities are suffering as a result of the protocol. I have made that point loudly and clearly to all our counterparts, and I have urged them to show flexibility and pragmatism in their response so that we can get the situation resolved on the ground and get the Executive back up and running, because that is what the people of Northern Ireland deserve.