Tag: 2022

  • Volodymyr Zelenskyy – 2022 Statement on the Situation in Ukraine (26/10/2022)

    Volodymyr Zelenskyy – 2022 Statement on the Situation in Ukraine (26/10/2022)

    The statement made by Volodymdr Zelenskyy, the President of Ukraine, on 26 October 2022.

    Good health to you, fellow Ukrainians!

    Today we had a very active diplomatic day, events for Ukraine at all levels – the highest, governmental, parliamentary.

    In the morning, I addressed the participants of the Berlin conference, which is dedicated to the reconstruction and modernization of our country. This is already the second such conference, after the Swiss one, which took place in the city of Lugano. We are working to obtain resources for the rapid restoration of our infrastructure, social facilities, and housing for Ukrainians.

    I am grateful to German Chancellor Scholz and President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen for making today’s event in Berlin very meaningful. We are waiting for specific decisions. Time cannot be stopped, and winter is coming.

    The Crimea Platform started working in Croatia today – at the parliamentary level.

    This is an additional and very powerful level of functioning of our instrument for the deoccupation and reintegration of Crimea.

    The Parliament always embodies democracy, represents different communities of each country. Therefore, when parliaments help restore territorial integrity, when, thanks to parliamentary cooperation, expert work and exchange of experience can be directed in the right direction, it is very powerful.

    We will definitely liberate Crimea. We will return this part of our country not only to the all-Ukrainian space, but also to the all-European space. This was confirmed once again today. And I am grateful to all our partners – almost 50 states and international organizations – who help in the parliamentary format. I am also grateful to Croatia separately for the hospitality towards our Crimea Platform.

    Today I held a meeting with representatives of the Jewish community – American, European and, of course, Israeli.

    We talked primarily about the protection of our people, about the need to make Russian terror impossible and to end this war as soon as possible by guaranteeing complete security and freedom for all Ukrainians throughout the territory of Ukraine.

    The sooner peace is achieved on our land thanks to the Ukrainian victory, the less evil Russia will bring to other regions, including the Middle East in its cooperation with Iran. I believe that one day Israeli politicians will hear this position, as Israeli society has already done – we feel it.

    The protection of historical memory in Ukraine was discussed separately. Despite the war, we must continue to implement our programs that restore historical justice. We started the implementation of an important project commemorating the victims of Nazism – the construction of a memorial in Babyn Yar. We will definitely complete it.

    I held extremely meaningful negotiations with the President of Germany, who arrived in Ukraine. Today, President Steinmeier visited the Chernihiv region – the districts that were under occupation. While he was there an air alert started. And actually the Russian missile terror, the enemy’s use of Iranian drones was one of the key topics at our negotiations.

    We are deeply grateful to Germany for the modern and effective air defense system already provided to us. We are looking forward to new similar systems.

    We discussed the entire range of our cooperation – defense, political, financial.

    Significant attention was paid to reconstruction – and I am grateful to President Steinmeier for his willingness to personally patronize this work. We will enhance cooperation with Germany in the field of reconstruction. And at the local government level, it will also receive presidential patronage.

    And one more thing.

    Just before recording this address, I spoke with new British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak. I believe that the partnership between our countries and the already traditional British leadership in the defense of democracy and freedom will be further strengthened.

    Ukraine and Britain have achieved the best relations so far, but there is still potential to increase our cooperation to bring more benefits to our societies. I invited the Prime Minister to visit Ukraine.

    I am grateful to everyone who helps us fight for freedom!

    I am grateful to everyone who fights and works for our victory!

    I am grateful to all our warriors who are now holding their positions, destroying the occupiers and giving Ukraine the most important feeling: a feeling of confidence in our future.

    Glory to Ukraine!

  • Volodymyr Zelenskyy – 2022 Statement on the Situation in Ukraine (25/10/2022)

    Volodymyr Zelenskyy – 2022 Statement on the Situation in Ukraine (25/10/2022)

    The statement made by Volodymyr Zelenskky, the President of Ukraine, on 25 October 2022.

    Strong people of our indomitable country!

    Today is exactly 8 months of full-scale war. What has been achieved over this time?

    We have defended the independence of our state – and Russia cannot change that already. We are liberating the Ukrainian land step by step. Donbas, Kharkiv region, Kherson region are now heard. But Zaporizhzhia region and Crimea will be heard as well – the time will come and all of Ukraine will be free.

    Ukraine is breaking the so-called “second army of the world” – and from now on, Russia will only be a beggar. They are begging for something in Iran, they are trying to squeeze something out of Western countries making up various nonsense about Ukraine, intimidating, deceiving…

    Never again will Russia be a subject that can dictate something to someone. It no longer has the potential to dictate. The world sees that. Russian potential is being wasted now on this madness – on a war against our state and the entire free world.

    There was gas influence – not anymore. There was military influence – it is evaporating. There was political weight – now there is an increasing isolation. There were ideological ambitions – now there’s only disgust.

    And this is a very important change in the configuration in our part of Eurasia – the more of its potential Russia loses now, the more real freedom all peoples will get both next to Russia and within its borders. Ukraine – first of all.

    On February 24, the Kremlin could not even think about it, although they should have. But now, on October 24, there is no Russian official or propagandist who does not understand where all this is going for them. They started to recall 1917 long ago. The feeling of failure in Russia is getting stronger.

    But, realizing all this, we have no right to relax. We still have to go the way to Ukrainian victory. This is a difficult path.

    We’ll have to pass this winter, which will be the most difficult in our history. To do the necessary part of the work in autumn, winter and spring in order to get the desired results for the state. To maintain the maximum mobilization of our partners for the sake of the struggle for freedom and not allow our common enemy to split the global pro-democracy coalition.

    This is what we do, all Ukrainians, Europeans, all people of the world who value freedom.

    I held another meeting of the Staff of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief today.

    We help the active actions of our warriors on the frontline, provide them with everything they need, strengthen the protection of infrastructure facilities, and establish defense against missile and drone threats.

    The military, intelligence, and government representatives delivered reports. Separately and in great detail, we are dealing with the system of territorial defense.

    I addressed the people of Israel today in the framework of the Conference on Democracy, organized by Haaretz newspaper. This is a very important media – the oldest newspaper in Israel.

    There I presented the Ukrainian point of view on the rapprochement between Russia and Iran, on why this rapprochement became possible and what threats it poses to our peoples. I called on Israel to join other democratic countries that already support Ukraine.

    We are preparing for very important events tomorrow. The first is the parliamentary summit of the Crimea Platform. Dozens of partner states, hundreds of politicians and public figures. This will be another step in our preparation for the de-occupation of Crimea.

    The second event is a summit in Germany dedicated to the reconstruction of Ukraine. We are doing everything to get the necessary resources for the restoration of our country right now, for the development of the social and economic sphere right now. And I sincerely thank all our partners who support Ukraine in this work.

    And one more thing.

    Today the world celebrates United Nations Day. It was on this day in 1945 that the UN Charter entered into force. It was not written and adopted as something ritualistic – it is not an empty formality. It is one of the basic documents that should work to maintain peace and international legal order.

    It should work. And it will work. In particular, we are achieving this through our struggle against illegal and unprovoked Russian armed aggression. Everyone who tries to restore peace for Ukraine is also fighting for peace and security to be possible for all other peoples on earth.

    And I want to thank Mr. António Guterres, the Secretary-General of the United Nations, for our cooperation, for the fact that he truly defends the Charter of the United Nations and global peace.

    We have already achieved good results together – this is the release of our prisoners who were held in Russia, this is the grain export initiative, which makes it possible to alleviate the acuteness of the food crisis in the world, this is multifaceted cooperation in UN structures. Thanks for all your help with this! And I believe that we can achieve even more.

    Thank you to everyone who fights and works for Ukraine! Eternal glory to our warriors! Eternal glory to our strong people! Eternal gratitude to our friends!

    Glory to Ukraine!

  • PRESS RELEASE : Taking a hammer to the Belfast Agreement is unlikely to fix our problems warns Lord Empey [October 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Taking a hammer to the Belfast Agreement is unlikely to fix our problems warns Lord Empey [October 2022]

    The press release issued by the Ulster Unionists on 31 October 2022.

    Ulster Unionist Peer Lord Empey has warned the Taoiseach to be very careful following weekend comments in which he described Northern Ireland’s governance system as ‘not fit for purpose.’

    Lord Empey, who was one of the Ulster Unionist Party’s lead negotiators at the time of the Belfast Agreement, said:

    “I would urge caution to the Taoiseach in his comments. The Belfast Agreement managed to strike a balance that had previously proved elusive. It created institutions that allowed both of the main communities here to have a hand on the steering wheel. The vandalism that has been caused to those institutions was facilitated by both the Irish and UK Governments as they bent over backwards to placate the DUP and Sinn Fein since 2003.

    “Ironically if it hadn’t been for the changes made at St Andrews, there would have been a DUP MLA in line to be nominated as First Minister following the last Assembly election because Unionism is still the largest designation in the Assembly. Both Governments are as complicit in the current stalemate as any of the Northern Ireland political parties.

    “We are in the current scenario due to a mechanism put in place by both Governments in ‘New Decade, New Approach’ which was supposed to improve the sustainability of the institutions.

    “The Belfast Agreement has a review mechanism, this is correct. But to simply take a hammer to parts of the Agreement is unlikely to fix the problem. Indeed, it could be that success lies in returning to the Agreement’s factory settings.

    “It was clear throughout the 1996-1998 negotiations that the Irish Government was not involved in Strand 1 Talks (the internal affairs of Northern Ireland) and it is my firm conviction that this must be respected in any future discussions.”

  • Martyn Day – 2022 Speech on Public Ownership of Energy Companies

    Martyn Day – 2022 Speech on Public Ownership of Energy Companies

    The speech made by Martyn Day, the SNP MP for Linlithgow and East Falkirk, in Westminster Hall on 31 October 2022.

    I beg to move,

    That this House has considered e-petition 608056, relating to public ownership of energy companies.

    It is a pleasure to see you in the Chair, Mrs Murray. I am grateful for the opportunity to present this important and prevailing issue—so prevailing that, within one week of the petition closing, another one, with the same title, was opened. I encourage anyone who supports the call for the Government to take back ownership of strategic energy assets to consider signing the new petition, because the issue is clearly not going away any time soon, and Parliament will undoubtedly be asked to revisit it. The new petition will remain open until 1 March next year.

    The petition before us closed on 9 August and attracted over 109,000 signatures, including over 200 from my constituency. Before moving on to the essence of the debate, I thank the signatories to the petition and I particularly thank David Abrahams-Edley for starting it. It is David’s action that brought us here today for what I am sure will be an enlightening discussion. It is worth mentioning that David’s petition was started in February this year, just after Ofcom—Great Britain’s energy regulator—announced there would be a substantial, 54% price cap increase from 1 April. The fact that the petition was started before the announcement of an additional, eye-watering rise of 80% from 1 October shows a foresightedness that appears to have largely escaped the Government. I will say more about that later.

    The petitioners call for the Government to

    “take back ownership of strategic energy assets”

    and

    “accept that the Free Market has failed the energy sector”.

    They believe that

    “it is in the national interest to renationalise our energy assets”

    because, even back in February, people were

    “having to choose whether to heat or eat.”

    Margaret Ferrier (Rutherglen and Hamilton West) (Ind)

    In August, the Financial Times estimated that if a buyer was not found for Bulb the cost to the public purse could have reached £4 billion by spring next year, although transfer of ownership has now been agreed. Does the hon. Member share my concern that bailing out privately owned companies in this way could have a catastrophic impact on the public finances, whereas nationalising them could be much cheaper?

    Martyn Day

    The hon. Lady makes a good point. It is reasonable to say that UK Governments of all stripes have overseen the deeply dysfunctional system of privatised energy companies, and we are where we are today. We need to get out of the hole that we are in.

    It goes without saying that the situation that people are now facing has worsened considerably. In September, inflation exceeded 10%—its highest rate in 40 years.

    It would be helpful if we quickly reminded ourselves what a free market is or is meant to be. Voluntary exchanges take place, accounting for supply and demand, and that is the basis of an economic system without Government intervention, with a key feature being the absence of coerced transactions or conditions on transactions. However, we all know that free market economies do not exist in the real world, because all markets are constrained in one way or another, with Ofgem and the introduction of the price cap being the obvious interventions in the market we are debating, and that is before the current energy crisis triggered even more interventions. So when the opening paragraph of the Government’s response to the petition states:

    “Properly regulated markets provide the best outcome for consumers as a driver of efficiency and innovation”,

    it raises various questions. Clearly, consumers are not benefiting from the best outcome. Does that therefore signal that the free market has indeed failed the energy sector, as the petitioners believe, or that the energy market is not being properly regulated? Either way, something is not working. Will the Minister tell us what the Government can do to fix it, if he does not agree that nationalisation is the right approach?

    It is reported that economists who measure the degree of freedom in markets have found a generally positive relationship between free markets and measures of economic wellbeing. Unfortunately, most people in the UK are not enjoying economic wellbeing—we only have to look at the end of the Government response, which details what is described as the “unprecedented scale” of financial support that the UK Government are providing, to see that. Consequently, although Government intervention in this regard is welcome—indeed, necessary—it also serves as evidence that

    “the Free Market has failed the energy sector”,

    as the petitioners say.

    At this point, a bit of background about the Government action in relation to the current energy crisis would be helpful. We likely all remember that the proposed solution of the right hon. Member for Richmond (Yorks) (Rishi Sunak) to situation at the time was to reduce every domestic electricity bill by £200 and then recover it over a five-year period. That initial intervention was the

    “token gestures of mandatory loans”

    mentioned in the petition. In case anyone is confused by the revolving doors at the top of this Government, the right hon. Member for Richmond (Yorks) was the Chancellor when David’s petition was started, not the third Prime Minister we have seen this year, as he is today.

    Thankfully, that part of the petition was addressed by the then Chancellor, and his so-called loan-not-loan was ditched and replaced by the energy bills support scheme, under which domestic electricity consumers were to receive £400 of support with their energy bills, paid as a grant over six months, starting from the beginning of this month.

    Then our second Prime Minister this year, the right hon. Member for South West Norfolk (Elizabeth Truss), announced the two-year energy price guarantee—an intervention in an intervention—which superseded the proposed energy price cap increase of 80% and limited the price that suppliers can charge customers for units of gas from 1 October. That move was of course widely welcomed, not least as the right hon. Member for South West Norfolk was reported to be acting

    “so people and businesses are supported over the next two years”,

    but it was simultaneously criticised for being misleading. A UK Government press release on 8 September stated:

    “a typical UK household will pay no more than £2,500 a year on their energy bill for the next two years from 1st October”.

    However, the MoneySavingExpert Martin Lewis, who is arguably the most trusted man in Britain, commented:

    “I’ve seen a lot of confusion, so let me start by saying there’s NO MAXIMUM ENERGY BILL.”

    Not surprisingly, that confusion continues.

    Exactly two weeks ago, the right hon. Member for South West Surrey (Jeremy Hunt), our fourth Chancellor this year—so far—announced that, instead of lasting two years, the energy price guarantee would last only until April next year. In just over five months, many could be placed back on the energy regulator Ofgem’s price cap. According to energy analysts Cornwall Insight, that means another massive hike in bills for millions of people. The current prediction under Ofgem’s existing cap methodology is an increase of 74% more than the energy price guarantee.

    I hope everyone here is keeping up with the Government actions taken so far to manage the UK’s energy crisis. Recapping on these recent events demonstrates that the energy crisis could have been handled in a more straightforward way if strategic energy assets were not open to the free market economy but owned by the Government, as the petitioners call for.

    In the previously mentioned UK Government press release of 8 September, the right hon. Member for South West Norfolk was reported to say:

    “Decades of short-term thinking on energy has failed to focus enough on securing supply”.

    I am sure that that is a sentiment the petitioners wholeheartedly agree with. Indeed, they call for a 25-year strategic plan. However, like me, I do not think they would agree that launching

    “a new oil and gas licensing round”

    and lifting

    “the moratorium on UK shale gas production”

    is the way forward. That is regressive and builds on a nonsensical investment allowance that, unbelievably, incentivises investment in fossil fuel extraction instead of a just transition. Investment in energy security should be targeted at renewables, carbon capture and storage, and our net zero future. Have the Government forgotten the commitments they made to the world at COP26 last November? Additionally, the press release was entitled,

    “Government announces Energy Price Guarantee for families and businesses while urgently taking action to reform broken energy market.”

    If that reference to a broken energy market does not align with the petitioner’s claim that

    “the Free Market has failed the energy sector”,

    I fail to see what would.

    Returning to a question I posed earlier about whether the energy market is being properly regulated, will the Minister explain why the Government’s response states that they continue to believe

    “that properly regulated markets…provide the best outcome for consumers and promote market competition as the best driver of efficiency, innovation and value”?

    Aside from the fact that market competition has all but disappeared, with the removal of lower-price tariffs from the market, and with around 24 million households out of 28 million on standard variable tariffs at the end of August, I do not think people across the UK believe they are getting value from the energy market, not least because of the punishing standing charges that are levied before even a kilowatt of power is used. Perhaps the Minister can come up with something to change my mind on that.

    The Government response also mentions that

    “properly regulated markets…incentivise private capital to invest in the energy system”.

    My basic understanding of investment is that private capital is invested to make money for the people who have money to invest in the first place. Would it not therefore make more sense if those energy assets were in public ownership, so that the return on investment came back to the public purse, not the coffers of the energy companies? Of course, the temporary energy profits levy gains 25% of profits from oil and gas firms, and it is reported that it will raise £5 billion in its first year. That will help, but does the Minister agree that 100% of profits would help more?

    The Government response stated that

    “if the Government renationalised energy companies, the British taxpayer would have to compensate directors, shareholders, and creditors to the tune of tens of billions of pounds—money that would be better spent supporting families.”

    This is where I return to the Government’s lack of foresightedness. Have they considered that the taxpayer has already been saddled with the burden of paying for the Government’s cost of living support for years to come? Has any assessment been done comparing a one-off payment to directors, shareholders and creditors with the repeated, ongoing costs that have been forced on the taxpayer? Why should the public be paying for energy costs while companies rake in significant increases in profits earned from UK oil and gas extraction?

    Earlier this month, the chief executive of Shell said:

    “The solution should not be government intervention but protection of those who need protection.”

    That was before Shell’s third-quarter profits of $9.5 billion were reported just last week—eye-watering profits for the super-rich, compared with eye-watering bills for those who can least afford them. The Government are making the rich richer at the expense of low-income and middle-income households. Can they take immediate and prudent action to protect those most impacted by this energy crisis, now and in the future?

    I am reminded of a famous George Bernard Shaw quote:

    “Success does not consist in never making mistakes but in never making the same one a second time.”

    Can the Minister convince me, as well as David and the other petitioners, that the Government’s refusal to nationalise the country’s strategic energy assets is not, in fact, an ideological blind spot? A nationalised energy sector would have the potential to deliver an integrated approach, guiding the country away from its dependency on unstable fossil fuels, thereby tackling climate change while, at the same time, protecting consumers. Are this Government capable of using some foresight?

    I feel I have barely scratched the surface of the issues surrounding today’s petition, but I look forward to hearing the contributions of the other speakers. I particularly look forward to hearing what the Minister has to say in response.

  • Lindsay Hoyle – 2022 Statement on Bullying During Fracking Vote

    Lindsay Hoyle – 2022 Statement on Bullying During Fracking Vote

    The statement made by Lindsay Hoyle, the Speaker of the House of Commons, in the House on 1 November 2022.

    I would like to make a short statement about the outcome of the inquiry into events during the Division on Wednesday 19 October. At my instruction officials interviewed or took statements from over 40 Members and officials who were there. The report of their investigation will be published shortly and copies made available in the Vote Office. The key findings are as follows.

    The atmosphere was tense and Members were raising their voices to make themselves heard, but there is no evidence of any bullying or undue influence placed on other Members. The crowding made it hard to see what was really taking place.  While some Members thought that physical contact was being used to force a Member into the Lobby, the Member concerned has said very clearly that this did not happen. Those with the clearest views of the incident have confirmed this. Several Members took photos during the Division, some of which were posted on social media. I would like to remind Members that taking photos during proceedings is prohibited.

    It is important that we treat each other with respect. I take allegations of bullying extremely seriously, and will take swift action wherever necessary to address any improper behaviour in the Chamber or in the Lobbies.

  • Ann Widdecombe – 2022 Comments on Matt Hancock Going on I’m a Celebrity

    Ann Widdecombe – 2022 Comments on Matt Hancock Going on I’m a Celebrity

    The comments made by Ann Widdecombe, the former Conservative Prisons Minister, on Sky News on 1 November 2022.

    The fact is that he will say that he’s got people working for him in his office and so he’s still supplying the same service. So I think that’s rather a difficult question. As far as I’m concerned, no serving MP should disappear onto a reality programme, whether it’s Big Brother, Strictly or the Jungle for weeks on end, which is what it is unless of course he gets kicked out early. That’s what it is, weeks on end just disappear and who will pick up your work? Does he have an arrangement with a neighbouring constituency MP, for example, which is what you would do if you were ill or some other real necessity took you away? Who’s going to do it? What happens if there’s an emergency in his constituency tomorrow morning?

  • PRESS RELEASE : Thousands in last year of life to have disability benefits fast-tracked [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Thousands in last year of life to have disability benefits fast-tracked [November 2022]

    The press release issued by the Department for Work and Pensions on 1 November 2022.

    • Fast-tracked access to Personal Independent Payments (PIP), Disability Living Allowance (DLA) and Attendance Allowance (AA) will be extended to people who are in their final year of life.

    Thousands more people nearing the end of their life will have fast-tracked access to financial support through the benefits system, thanks to landmark legislation passed last week.

    In one of his first major legislative acts as monarch, King Charles III has granted Royal Assent to the Social Security (Special Rules for End of Life) Bill.

    This means that people who are thought to be in the final year of their life will be able to receive fast-tracked access to certain benefits, six months earlier than they were able to previously.

    This will apply to Personal Independent Payments (PIP), Disability Living Allowance (DLA) and Attendance Allowance (AA).

    Secretary of State for Work and Pensions Mel Stride MP said:

    It’s hugely important that people in the last year of their life are treated with dignity and receive the financial support they need and deserve quickly.

    Extending this support confirms our commitment to alleviating the pressures faced by those who are nearing the end of their lives, and their families.

    The Special Rules changes to PIP, DLA and AA will come into effect as soon as practical and follow the same changes made to Universal Credit (UC) and Employment and Support Allowance (ESA) earlier this year.

    Those who are eligible will not be required to attend a medical assessment, and in the majority of cases they will receive the highest rate of benefits.

  • Kemi Badenoch – 2022 Speech at Green Trade and Investment Expo

    Kemi Badenoch – 2022 Speech at Green Trade and Investment Expo

    The speech made by Kemi Badenoch, the Secretary of State for International Trade, in Gateshead on 1 November 2022.

    Welcome to the Green Trade and Investment Expo.

    Let’s talk about Blyth. Blyth is a coastal town 16 miles from here. Coal mining was its lifeblood.

    But when Blyth’s last colliery closed three decades ago, around 1,700 jobs disappeared. Some people thought that the town would be left behind.

    It is true that the past years have been difficult and challenges still exist.

    Yesterday I took some of you to see how the town is becoming one of the country’s most important bases for clean energy.

    It’s home to the Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult, where the biggest turbine blades in the world are put through their paces.

    Another company called JDR is transforming the site of Blyth’s old coal fired power station into a next generation offshore cable factory.

    So, a town once powered by coal is now powered by wind. And all this is creating hundreds of jobs.

    Blyth illustrates the promise of the clean energy revolution.

    And the Government want to see this story of opportunity, growth and revitalised communities replicated across the UK, because at the end of he day what we are about is helping people live better lives.

    That’s where my department comes in. We believe that green trade and investment will be the future-proofing force that will help us create a better tomorrow, and I’ll give you three reasons why:

    First, we know that growing our green industries is crucial to reaching net zero.

    Some people raise awareness of climate change by throwing soup at paintings in museums or gluing themselves to the road. That’s not really my style.

    We in this room know that we can only tackle climate change by using free trade and investment to accelerate green technological progress. And we must do this in a way that does not impoverish the UK.

    Second, to protect our energy security we need to grow our own industries.

    Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has made it quite clear that relying on authoritarian regimes can make it tougher to heat our homes.

    Our trade relationships will help secure our energy supply. But it’s long-term investment in nuclear and renewables that will reduce our dependence on fossil fuels and keep down consumer costs.

    And third, as we are seeing in Blyth, green trade and investment acts as a future-proof by creating those jobs of tomorrow.

    The jobs that will drive economic growth and keep communities alive.

    And this economic angle is the subject I want to focus on today.

    Like many governments around the world, we’re dealing with low growth. We need to find our way through it. Because we owe it to our children and grandchildren to build a better, more prosperous future.

    A lot of this growth will come from the ideas being developed by green industries. We know firms that innovate, expand faster than those that don’t.  And the UK is quickly becoming the green creativity capital of the world.

    Let me give you some examples:

    Imagine being suspended on ropes 40 metres above the North Sea, balanced on wind turbine blade. That’s not just nerve-wracking, it’s also risky. But until recently that was the only way for wind power firms to identify and fix a technical fault.

    That’s now changing after an engineer called Chris Cieslak first designed a robot in his garage.

    His invention, BladeBUG, means a person no longer always has to climb onto the blade to identify a fault. And in some cases, BladeBUG can fix the fault too. This improves safety and boosts efficiency by keeping turbines turning.   That’s an idea that could not only benefit our own wind energy industry but those of other countries too.

    Steamology is a company developing zero-emission hydrogen steam engines from its workshop in Salisbury. An innovation that will prevent rail and lorry operators having to scrap valuable existing vehicles if they decarbonise – saving them money and avoiding waste.

    And it’s becoming safer for people to work in our offshore energy industry, thanks to innovations from Zelim, a company based in Edinburgh.

    When someone falls into the sea, every second counts, and Zelim’s AI-powered technology spots and tracks people in the water, and then its unmanned boat rescues them.

    All these businesses have been supported by our Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult in Blyth.

    There are so many other brilliant ideas like ones you’ve just heard about.

    The challenge now is how to capitalise on them.

    And we’ll do that through attracting the investment that will get these innovations off the ground and help businesses to export. Because this is a virtuous circle: Innovation needs investment to flourish, investment leads to exports, exports create growth and new jobs, and more innovation.

    And if we get our strategy right, the impact could be transformational on places like Blyth and the rest of the country.

    Our analysis shows that by the end of this decade, our green industries could create up to £170 billion of export sales.

    And according to figures from the Office for National Statistics, by 2050 we could generate 1.4 million green jobs across the UK. That’s one for every person in Birmingham.

    As the Prime Minister said last week, green jobs are the jobs of the future.

    But if we get our strategy wrong, we risk being left on the backfoot as other countries seize the advantage.

    So we need to act now and act fast. Here’s how:

    First, we’re focused on building our green industrial base.

    Right now, we’re creating a pipeline of brilliant opportunities for investors. In our British Energy Security and Net Zero Strategies we set out plans to drive £100 billion worth of private sector investment into green industries, including offshore wind by 2030.

    As you’ve already heard this morning, we’ve given ourselves an ambition of up to 50GW of offshore wind capacity by that same date – more than enough to power every home in the UK.

    Those of you who visited Teesside yesterday will see how we’re supporting development of technology like carbon capture and storage, as well as low-carbon hydrogen. And we’re doing some pioneering work in nuclear.

    But it’s not enough to create these opportunities, we need to tell investors about them too.

    So last year we launched our Investment Atlas, which showcases all the UK has to offer…

    From supporting North East Scotland to becoming a global centre for low carbon hydrogen, to building an electric vehicle charging network powered by solar energy.

    We’re bringing together people, businesses and ideas at events like this and at the Global Investment Summit we held last year.

    The Office of Investment, run by my department, has also helped to land billions of investment in clean technology.

    It’s also recently supported the Qatar Investment Authority to inject £85 million into Rolls Royce’s Small Modular Nuclear Reactors – each of which could power a city the size of Leeds.

    And the UK’s Freeports, which I know are of particular interest to many of you here today, are fast becoming hubs for trade, investment and innovation.

    We’re also building a pro ambition, pro enterprise environment in this country – a place where businesses can thrive and enjoy the stability and certainty for which we’re known around the world.

    With every idea, with every ambitious plan and with every transformed town, we are proving to global investors that the path to a green and prosperous future starts here in the UK.

    I’m proud that my department is helping the world wake up to that message.

    In just two years, DIT has helped to secure nearly £20 billion of green investment globally, creating 11,300 jobs.

    And businesses here today, from Spain to South Korea, like SeAH Wind, JDR, Smulders and Siemens Gamesa, are among those backing Britain and changing lives.

    Apart from growing our green industrial base, we also want to grow our exports.

    There are some fantastic businesses in this room that are already selling to the world, and I know there are more who want to join them.

    One of my biggest priorities as Secretary of State is to help you do that, so my department has set itself a goal of accelerating towards a trillion pounds worth of exports a year earlier than forecast.

    We know that many businesses that could export don’t, so our Export Strategy sets out our roadmap for getting you there.

    We’re also very aware that firms need money to grow. And my colleagues at UK Export Finance will help you get the loans and guarantees you need.

    Outside this building you’ll see the first hydrogen-powered double decker bus in the world, manufactured by Wrightbus, a company from Ballymena in Northern Ireland.

    Thanks to a guarantee from UK Export Finance, Wrightbus has been able to access a £26 million facility from Barclays bank.

    This will mean it can export its vehicles around the world, while supporting green jobs at home. And I was very impressed when I spoke to the team today – I hope to see more of this around the country.

    So we’re sitting at what was two centuries ago the epicentre of the industrial revolution.

    Just a mile from here Robert and George Stephenson built some of the world’s first locomotives from their workshop on South Street – the SpaceX of the 1820s. I hear it’s now a gig venue for those of you who like that sort of thing – it’s not really me, but what you will see here today is that the talent for finding innovative solutions is very much alive and kicking in the North East as it was then, and not just the North East, but the UK.

    So, I hope the investors among you will learn what this country’s green industries have to offer. And the businesses will discover how my department can open new markets for you. I look forward to working with you all.

    Thank you.

  • Lucy Powell – 2022 Comments on Matt Hancock Going on I’m a Celebrity

    Lucy Powell – 2022 Comments on Matt Hancock Going on I’m a Celebrity

    The comments made by Lucy Powell, the Labour MP for Manchester Central, on Twitter on 1 November 2022.

    While his constituents need help with the cost of living and want answers about the economy his party has just tanked, Matt Hancock is jetting off to Australia to eat kangaroo testicles. Sums them up really.

    No doubt he’ll be voted off first, as this never ends well for MPs.

  • Apsana Begum – 2022 Comments on BP’s Profits

    Apsana Begum – 2022 Comments on BP’s Profits

    The comments made by Apsana Begum, the Labour MP for Poplar and Limehouse, on 1 November 2022.

    BP have just announced quarterly profits of £7.1 billion — more than double what they made this time last year. A windfall tax & public ownership of energy would slash bills and improve living standards. But Tory MPs repeatedly vote this down in the interests of the super-rich.