Tag: 2023

  • PRESS RELEASE : New funding for National Parks announced [March 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : New funding for National Parks announced [March 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs on 1 March 2023.

    England’s national parks are set to benefit from new additional funding announced by the government today (01 March 2023). £4.4 million will be provided to the country’s ten National Park Authorities to support services such as visitor centres and park rangers.

    The funding award is in recognition of the vital role that our national parks play in protecting our precious wildlife and landscapes and the importance they have for tourism, the regional economy, and public access. Each authority will be awarded an equal share of the grant.

    Environment Secretary Thérèse Coffey said:

    Our National Parks are the jewel in our cherished landscapes. They support thriving communities, economies, wildlife and are important places for public health and wellbeing.

    This additional £4.4 million of funding will support the important work that National Park Authorities do across our countryside, and allow local people and visitors to enjoy these much loved spaces

    The funding will help protect vital assets, such as education centres and ranger services, and will provide more opportunities for people to enjoy National Parks. It could also be used to support the creation of new trails, residential programmes and mobility schemes. It will also support access and engagement programmes helping to conserve the natural beauty, wildlife and cultural heritage of these protected landscapes.

    The Farming in Protected Landscapes scheme, currently delivered across 10 National Parks and 34 Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONBs) since 2021, will also be extended until March 2025. This will enable National Parks and AONBs to continue delivering outcomes for nature, climate, people and place.

    Further information:

    • The 10 National Park Authorities to benefit from an equal share of the £4.4 million grant are: Broads, Dartmoor, Exmoor, Lake District, New Forest, North Yorkshire Moors, Northumberland, Peak District, South Downs and Yorkshire Dales.
  • PRESS RELEASE : Message from Welsh Secretary on St David’s Day [March 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Message from Welsh Secretary on St David’s Day [March 2023]

    The press release issued by the Welsh Office on 1 March 2023.

    The Secretary of State for Wales David TC Davies marks the first St David’s Day since his appointment.

    Secretary of State for Wales David TC Davies celebrates Wales and looks ahead to an exciting year to come in his first St David’s Day message since his appointment as Welsh Secretary.

    Welsh Secretary David TC Davies said:

    I’m delighted to deliver my first St David’s Day message as the Secretary of State for Wales and I’d like to send my best wishes to everyone celebrating our national day in Wales and around the world.

    The future looks bright for our nation in spite of the challenges that we are all facing. The war in Ukraine has meant high energy costs, making life difficult for many. But it has also brought out the best of the community spirit that Wales is so famous for. So many people have welcomed Ukrainian people into their homes, providing sanctuary and a place to call home for those desperately in need.

    And it is that same community spirit, coupled with hard work and determination, that is helping us recover from the Covid pandemic and build a prosperous future for Wales.

    The UK Government is doing all it can to deliver for the people of Wales. We will soon announce the successful bid for the first Freeport in Wales, which will create jobs and drive growth and prosperity. And earlier this year we announced £208 million for eleven more major Levelling Up projects across Wales, adding to the £160m previously committed to more than 170 Welsh levelling up projects and around £790 million to progress growth deals covering every part of the country.

    Wales has an incredibly important part to play in future green technology, with the huge potential for floating offshore wind in the Celtic Sea, marine energy, nuclear and industrial decarbonisation.

    We have the world’s first compound semiconductor cluster in South Wales, supported by investment from the UK Government, and fast-growing media production and FinTech industries. And our famous food and drink sector continues to thrive.

    And of course we have wonderful countryside, a beautiful coastline and vibrant cities and towns which make Wales such an attractive tourist destination.

    But this exciting future for Wales is only possible because of the people who contribute their energy and passion to making our communities great places to live. Happy St David’s Day to you all.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Department for Business and Trade unveils new ‘Help to Grow’ site to support businesses and grow the economy [March 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Department for Business and Trade unveils new ‘Help to Grow’ site to support businesses and grow the economy [March 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Business and Trade on 1 March 2023.

    The Department for Business and Trade (DBT) has unveiled a new centralised website, targeted at helping the UK’s 5.5 million businesses.

    The new ‘Help to Grow’ site from DBT is aimed at upskilling both big and small businesses across the country by helping them to:

    • Learn new skills
    • Reach more customers
    • Boost business profits

    Businesses have told us that they need easy to find information from the Government, which is why this centralised page will make it simpler for firms to find, access and use the information and support they need in one central space. This site also brings together the wealth of expertise that the newly formed department has to offer.

    DBT and the UK Government is committed to growing the economy, as the Prime Minister outlined in his priorities for 2023, which is why this new website will be a pivotal tool to help firms reach their business ambitions, whether that’s learning new digital skills, learning to export globally and courses in effective management.

    ‘Help to Grow,’ which is now live for use, is targeted at helping firms especially the UK’s 5.4 million small businesses that drive the economy and is a unique proposition stemming from the newly-created department, taking businesses from start-ups, to scaling-up and then exporting their goods and services across the globe. The website will offer support and guidance every step of the way, helping to unlock global markets for British businesses.

    Business and Trade Minister Kevin Hollinrake MP said:

    “When businesses are given the right tools to grow, it boosts profits, increases well-paid jobs and lifts the whole UK economy. This Government is committed to supporting small businesses and the self-employed who are at the heart of our communities.

    “So, I am pleased to launch the ‘Help to Grow’ website today, which will hopefully become a vital tool in helping businesses to thrive and succeed both in the UK and trading across the world.”

    The centralised site will enable more businesses to reach their trading ambitions, by boosting exports in our race to £1 trillion a year, increasing inward investment and removing business trade barriers.

    The ‘Help to Grow’ website will offer advice, guidance, services and support from the UK Government – bringing together a range of support and help that already exists across Government websites.

    DBT will be continuously updating and improving ‘Help to Grow’ by working across Government as well as listening to the business community and their feedback.

    You can find the new site at ‘Help to Grow’.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Foreign Secretary in India to forge stronger economic and tech ties in Indo-Pacific [March 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Foreign Secretary in India to forge stronger economic and tech ties in Indo-Pacific [March 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 1 March 2023.

    James Cleverly will launch an exchange scheme for young professionals and, at a foreign ministers’ meeting, will urge G20 partners to tackle global challenges.

    • Foreign Secretary to launch new exchange scheme for young British and Indian professionals to live and work in the 2 countries
    • James Cleverly will also announce the UK is to appoint a Tech Envoy to the Indo-Pacific region
    • he will continue to call out Russian aggression in Ukraine at a foreign ministers meeting for India’s G20 Presidency and urge partners old and new to work together to tackle the most urgent global challenges

    Foreign Secretary James Cleverly is visiting India to mark a new scheme allowing young Brits and Indians to live and work in each other’s countries for up to 2 years, which was announced by the Home Secretary earlier this week.

    The Foreign Secretary will today (1 March) meet his counterpart, External Affairs Minister Dr Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, ahead of foreign ministers gathering in New Delhi tomorrow (2 March). They are expected to discuss progress on the UK-India 2030 Roadmap, which aims to bolster the 2 countries’ ties in defence and security, trade and investment.

    During a visit to the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) in Delhi today (Wednesday), the Foreign Secretary will mark the opening of the Young Professionals Scheme, an ambitious new partnership between the UK and India which allows up 3,000 Brits and 3,000 Indians a year the right to live and work in the other country for up to 2 years.

    The Foreign Secretary will also announce the creation of the UK’s first Tech Envoy to the Indo-Pacific region, who will boost ties with India as a priority. This envoy is the second of its kind to be announced by the UK (after the appointment of a Tech Envoy to the US in late 2020) and demonstrates our commitment to the region and tech-diplomacy.

    The new Tech Envoy role will boost the UK’s status as a science and tech superpower. The envoy will work with our partners in the region on areas of shared interest, including setting global technology standards and helping to solve challenges through innovative technology.

    Foreign Secretary James Cleverly said:

    India is a hugely important partner to the UK and the deeper ties we are forging now will help to grow the UK economy and boost our industries for the future. This landmark migration scheme will enable the brightest and best in both our countries to benefit from new opportunities.

    India is also an emerging global leader on technology and there are immense opportunities for better collaboration between us in this sector. That is why we will be sending our first Tech Envoy to the Indo-Pacific region, to maximise the tech expertise of both countries.

    India has the world’s third highest number of tech unicorns and start-ups, with 108 start-ups gaining the unicorn status of a private company valued at over $1 billion. This announcement illustrates the UK’s clear commitment to boosting partnerships in India and across South Asia.

    On Thursday the Foreign Secretary will attend the G20 Foreign Ministers meeting to work with partners to advance global efforts on food and energy security, climate change and development. He will also continue to call Russia out at the G20 and work with partners to mitigate the global impacts of Russian aggression in Ukraine. If the war were to end today, the effects of the exacerbated food insecurity would still run into 2027.

    The Foreign Secretary will also address an India-Europe business event in the capital where he will reaffirm the UK’s commitment to conclude a Free Trade Agreement with India. With more links than almost any country in the Indo-Pacific region, the UK-India trading relationship is already worth £34 billion, growing by £10 billion in 1 year.

  • Kemi Badenoch – 2023 Speech at the Launch of the Legatum Institute’s Prosperity Index

    Kemi Badenoch – 2023 Speech at the Launch of the Legatum Institute’s Prosperity Index

    The speech made by Kemi Badenoch, the Secretary of State for Business and International Trade, in London on 28 February 2023.

    It’s a pleasure to be here at Legatum and launching this year’s Prosperity Index.

    The Index was created, as we have just seen, to help decision-makers across the world think about domestic growth and development, seeking policy solutions to drive improvements in prosperity.

    When I received the invitation to speak tonight it was as the Secretary of State for International Trade.

    Now, I am the Secretary of State for Business and International Trade, and my newly formed Department for Business and International Trade will enable me to achieve a lot more.

    As much as I enjoyed the trade brief, I lacked some of the levers to really drive forward the growth advantages of international free trade on a domestic market.

    There is so much to look forward to now that I’m looking after this brief.

    However, today we are here to discuss global prosperity. So I will be speaking about my five priorities on trade, where the focus is on global rather than just on domestic prosperity.

    My first priority is removing barriers that stop businesses succeeding.

    Domestically, this means not about taking away any safety nets. It’s about ensuring that we have a modern, dynamic, nimble economy where the regulations are fit for purpose and actually help businesses to start up, grow and export.

    Internationally, we want to remove barriers to trade, in particular remove barriers to our exporters.

    Leaving the EU was not an end itself, now it is incumbent upon us to realise the opportunities that Brexit has enabled.

    One of the things that we can now do with our independent trading policy is make sure that the global trade rules work for the UK, not just the UK and 27 other countries.

    So we identify the blockers faced by UK businesses in getting their goods and services into other countries, and we get rid of them.

    That’s meant, for example, getting Welsh lamb back on US dining tables for the first time in 20 years. And also opening up China’s huge beauty industry to cruelty-free UK cosmetics.

    So we’ve identified, in my department, over 100 key barriers to trade, and we are taking them down one by one.

    I know that this is something that Legatum cares very much about so I thought you would be pleased that was the first priority.

    The second priority is increasing our exports every year until we hit £1 trillion by 2030.

    Exports are a huge driver of economic growth, but, historically, we have fallen behind some of our competitors.

    And this is because compared to smaller countries like Sweden, we already have a large domestic market, which means many businesses don’t feel the need to export the way that their comparative businesses would do in smaller countries.

    We should be doing better. Not least because English is the international language of business and we aren’t capitalising on it as much as we should do.

    So, our job is twofold. At one end, it’s encouraging smaller businesses and showing them that there are markets for their products and services overseas.

    At the other, it’s about supporting our world-leading companies. Just as we did with Airbus and Rolls Royce this month in landing the biggest aircraft export deal in the history of global aviation.

    In removing market barriers, we make exporting more efficient. So my top two priorities work hand-in-hand.

    Thirdly, I want to make the UK the top investment destination in Europe.

    And this is important for many reasons.

    Without investment, businesses cannot grow. And, without growth, they will not export.

    So, in building a business-friendly environment in the UK, we need to keep barriers to investment under constant review.

    There are so many reasons why companies, and in fact other countries, want to invest in the UK (our position in the Prosperity Index is one of them, by the way, which is why we need to make sure that we keep doing well).

    These reasons come together in the unique offer we have, which is a strong rule of law and stable economic environment; world class institutions and a highly skilled labour force; and our history of innovation and creativity.

    There is so much about the UK that will ensure we have a prosperous future, but we don’t shout enough about it.

    When I was at the World Economic Forum last month, I was struck by how other countries played as a team and pitched their strengths across public and private sector.

    By contrast, UK ministers were alone in trumpeting the immense value of the UK, while our business groups and former politicians were complaining about the country and trying to relitigate Brexit.

    So I’ll give you an example. We are constantly being told that our exports are falling. And yet the opposite is true. We’ve just broken the £800bn mark for the first time and are well on the path to our £1tn export ambition.

    So some will tell you that all is doom and gloom and we are in decline.

    This is nonsense.

    Britain remains the unicorn capital of Europe – with more privately held start-up companies worth over a billion pounds more than France and Germany combined.

    Of the major economies, we are the per-capita Nobel Prize champions of the world.

    Domestic investment was up nearly 10% last year. And inward international investment stock broke the £2tn mark for the first time. So there is a lot to be happy about and a lot to be proud of.

    My fourth priority is signing high-quality trade deals.

    At the moment I’m currently negotiating our accession into the Trans-Pacific Partnership – this is one of the largest free trade areas in the world, it spans the Asia-Pacific and the Americas, and includes some of the world’s biggest current and future economies.

    So, the UK’s membership will add another like-minded partner and strong voice to this powerful alliance, and takes the trade bloc’s GDP to £11 trillion.

    But it’s not just about exporting goods or even services. The Trans-Pacific Partnership is also about the geostrategic shift to the Indo-Pacific as set out in the government’s Integrated Review and this really matters for our long-term security.

    It also matters for our long-term growth – this is where the global middle class of the future will come from and we need to be a player.

    That’s also why we’re pursuing a great trade deal with India. A deal to cut tariffs and open opportunities for UK services, making it easier for British businesses to sell to an economy set to be the world’s third largest by 2050. There are other trade deals in the pipeline – Israel and Switzerland, like us, services superpowers with complementary economic strengths. The Gulf countries too, and many others to follow.

    So, you may wonder why trade deals are my fourth priority and not my first. And, I’m going to repeat an analogy I’m sure some of you have heard me use before.

    Trade deals are like motorways. They are only useful if there are cars to drive on them, and the cars are exports and investments. That’s what trade is really, and that’s my main focus.

    So we are not just the department for getting deals, taking pictures, signing bits of paper. And that will become even more key as I flesh out our role as the Department for Business and International Trade.

    And my fifth and final priority is probably the one that is most relevant to all of you here at Legatum this evening.

    Free and fair trade is what global prosperity and security are based on. And it is not an empty platitude.

    Too often people of think of fair trade as just giving money to poor countries. Fair trade, for me, means ensuring that the rules-based trading system continues to thrive and does not collapse in the face of protectionism.

    Trade means treating companies and countries equally and making sure that the rules are abided by. That is what’s going to work for the UK and for the rest of the world.

    You will, I’m sure, have heard about the US Inflation Reduction Act. I made my opinions on this clear. We should not have a global subsidies arms race.

    Interventions like the IR Act may look good in the short term. But, in the long term, it runs the risk of becoming self-defeating, not least by creating a single point of failure on supply chains.

    We won’t deal with the economic challenge that we face from China by acting alone. There are many countries with similar views, not just the UK, the EU, Japan, South Korea or Australia.

    The countries who believe in free trade will be stronger acting together. And we have been promoting this as the UK for 70 years since the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade was agreed.

    And I will carry on speaking out on the world stage to promote free trade.

    So, my priorities will contribute not just to UK prosperity, but global prosperity.

    If we deliver on these, the Department for Business and International Trade will actually become the Office for Economic Growth, which I’ve always wanted us to be. And we will ensure that British values are promoted, perhaps even adopted, across the world, and that will deliver for the people of the United Kingdom.

  • Lucy Frazer – 2023 Speech at the Creative Coalition Festival

    Lucy Frazer – 2023 Speech at the Creative Coalition Festival

    The speech made by Lucy Frazer, the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, on 28 February 2023.

    I’m absolutely delighted to be here – and I want to thank Caroline and Creative UK for inviting me to speak at today’s event.

    As you might have realised, it’s been a whirlwind few weeks in government and during that time we’ve seen departments being broken up, and new ones created.

    But I think those changes have left my department, DCMS, in really a strong position.

    We can now dedicate all of our energy on the sectors at the heart of our portfolio – particularly the creative industries.

    They are a key priority for the Prime Minister.

    They are a priority for the Chancellor, who has highlighted the creative industries as one of his key growth sectors for the UK economy.

    And they are a priority for me as Culture Secretary.

    In my first few weeks in the role, I’ve been lucky enough to go on a whistlestop tour of Britain’s creative landscape.

    I’ve been up to the Corrie set, and to the Brits.

    I’ve sat on the front row at London Fashion Week, and cheered on UK filmmaking at the BAFTAs.

    And during those last few weeks I’ve seen with my own eyes just how much talent we have in this country:

    the writers, the musicians,

    the lighting and sound technicians, the designers and the producers.

    But those people aren’t just making nice things.

    They are the workforce powering our country – pumping £116 billion into the national purse every year.

    The creative industries enrich our lives in every sense of the word.

    When they thrive, the country thrives.

    And while I’m new to DCMS, as a minister in other departments, I’ve seen just how much the arts can affect lives.

    As prisons minister I saw firsthand how pivotal drama and art can be to rehabilitation,

    in helping people find purpose, meaning and hope, and improve their skills for life outside their four walls.

    As the housing minister, we constantly talked about the importance of “place”…

    …how the quality of the buildings we inhabit and the beauty of the architecture around us affects the way we feel about our home towns and cities.

    And at the Treasury I saw how we can support companies to grow, expand and recruit.

    I am going to bring that experience to bear in this role, to push the creative industries to a new level of growth in the coming years.

    Now, it’s worth noting the huge level of support that the government is already giving to the creative industries.

    We are currently spending:

    Over £21 million through the UK Global Screen Fund, to promote the independent screen sector.

    Over £8 million to support new video games businesses to develop new products and talent through the UK Games Fund.

    £17 million to boost creative investment in six regions across England.

    Over £100 million in funding from UK Research and Innovation, to help us become world leaders in virtual production, and support smaller businesses to experiment and innovate.

    And today I can announce that we are spending another £2.5 million to support R&D in the creative industries in different places across the UK.

    Those are the things we are already doing to get the sector firing on all cylinders.

    But to push things to the next level, I’m going to focus on at least two things:

    People.

    Places.

    On people, I know that a key challenge for the sector is skills.

    Our film and TV industries, for instance, are booming.

    They’re creating thousands of jobs. Now we need people to fill them.

    Yet a recent survey of young people by the BFI and careers app ERIC found only 6 per cent believed a career in the screen industries, for example, was achievable.

    So we need to work together to give people the right skills and awareness from a young age, so that they can join these booming industries and enjoy fulfilling, well-paid jobs.

    On places, I want to use the creative industries to drive growth in every corner of the UK.

    Right now, more than half of creative jobs are in London and the South East.

    And we can do so much more.

    This is one of our strongest industries, and we need the entire country to feel its benefits.

    And there’s a clear route to doing that.

    Right now, there are certain hotspots outside London and the South East where creativity is absolutely booming.

    Where certain creative industries form natural “clusters”.

    So Leamington Spa, for instance, has become one of the video game capitals of the UK,

    While Belfast is a hub for film and TV production.

    I’m very interested in how we can boost those clusters,

    And a need to work across government so that we build homes and train stations in areas where our creative industries are thriving.

    I’m interested in how we can give businesses in those areas even more opportunities to innovate, to access investment, and to export the best of British creativity abroad.

    And finally, I want to understand how the tax system can best support the creative economy, and how it can encourage people all over the country to start and expand their own creative businesses.

    And I will set out how I intend to deliver them through the upcoming Creative Industries Sector Vision.

    DCMS has worked very closely with industry on the Sector Vision, and last week I met with some of the leading voices of the sector to discuss that project,

    during the first face-to-face meeting of the Creative Industries Council since before the pandemic.

    And when the Sector Vision is published, it will kickstart a whole new round of engagement together.

    It will outline how we will continue to work together, both government and industry, on a range of issues affecting creative businesses.

    It will give us the framework to partner up with the new Department for Science, Innovation and Technology on research and development…

    …and to work with the Department for Education on building a highly skilled and innovative workforce.

    And it will lay out how we intend to capitalise on this really exciting era for the creative industries…

    …An era where film and TV alone are now worth more than the entire car industry in the UK.

    This is where the jobs are, this is where growth is.

    So I want to capitalise on that moment, and use it to drive the sector to new heights, for the benefit of the entire country.

    So look out for its publication.

    And in the meantime, I want to thank everyone in this room for all the dedication and passion you bring to your work every single day.

    I know creative work can be a real labour of love.

    And it’s one of the reasons why I’m looking forward to working with all of you in the coming months.

  • PRESS RELEASE : The people of Syria deserve a sustainable, inclusive and just peace [February 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 28 February 2023.

    Statement by Ambassador Barbara Woodward at the Security Council briefing on Syria.

    Thank you President, and let me join others in thanking SRSG Pedersen and USG Griffiths for their briefings. Ms Muhrez, can I start by offering condolences on the tragic loss of your cousins, but also thank you for your valuable insights and your powerful testimony in describing in particular the impact of the earthquake on children and their families.

    I again want to express the UK’s deepest condolences to all those impacted by the deadly earthquakes that hit Turkiye and Syria this month. The UK acted immediately, providing additional funding to first responders in North-West Syria. Announcing a further $30 million in emergency relief to the UN and humanitarian partners across Syria and Turkiye, and in issuing a general license exempting further aid from sanctions. This has provided much needed assistance, including shelter to thousands in freezing conditions.

    We welcome the UN’s urgent efforts to scale up the humanitarian response, and the opening of crossings at Bab Al Salam and Al Rai. This latest tragedy has brought into sharp focus the importance of unhindered and predictable access, without conditions, into North-West Syria. This Council must continue to monitor this closely in the light of ongoing concerns that the regime continues to divert and interfere with aid deliveries.

    President, colleagues, even before the earthquake hit, needs were already at their highest levels ever after more than a decade of conflict, during which the Assad regime has acted with complete disregard for the wellbeing of Syria and its people. We cannot allow the regime to use this latest tragedy to avoid taking responsibility for their actions.

    Just this month, this Council heard further evidence of the regime’s criminal use of chemical weapons against the civilian population in Douma in 2018. Thousands of families are left without answers about loved ones who have been disappeared into Assad’s prison system.

    At the same time, the regime continues to project instability to the region, including through the production and smuggling of captagon. This illegal narcotic industry, worth tens of billions of dollars, funds a luxury lifestyle for a regime whose people, as Martin Griffiths said, are packed into tents in freezing conditions.

    President, the people of Syria’s immediate need is for humanitarian support. But they deserve a need more than that. They deserve a sustainable, inclusive and just peace. As Ms Muhrez said we owe that to them.

    The UN’s political process set out in UNSCR 2254 remains the only viable route to deliver this. We welcome meaningful efforts to progress this, including important efforts in the region. We urge the regime to engage immediately and in good faith.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Baroness Nicholson of Winterbourne visits Kazakhstan to progress bilateral trade [February 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Baroness Nicholson of Winterbourne visits Kazakhstan to progress bilateral trade [February 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 28 February 2023.

    The UK Prime Minister’s Trade Envoy to Kazakhstan, Baroness Nicholson, arrived in Kazakhstan on 28 February for a 4 day visit. She will visit Astana, Almaty and North Kazakhstan. The visit aims to strengthen relationships between the UK and Kazakhstan and further consolidate progress on bilateral trade issues.

    In Astana, Baroness Nicholson’s programme will start with a series of ministerial meetings to discuss the UK-Kazakhstan trade priorities. She will also meet CEOs of national welfare fund Samryk Kazyna and the national Chamber of Entrepreneurs Atameken.

    Baroness gave an opening address at the Alumni Awards, an annual event in partnership with UK universities, to recognise the huge importance the alumni from Kazakhstan hold, as future leaders across society.

    In North Kazakhstan, a region famous for its agricultural industry, Baroness Nicholson will visit Eurasia Group, exclusive dealers of British manufacturer JCB’s agricultural machinery to see the launch of JCBs latest project. She will also travel to KazBeef Farm and meet with the Kazakhstan Republican Angus Chamber to discuss cooperation between UK and Kazakh farmers.

    In Almaty, Baroness Nicholson will meet major domestic investors in the education sector and visit De Montfort University, one of the UK’s greatest recent success stories, for a roundtable on education standards. She will also meet British businesses operating in Kazakhstan to see the range of opportunities that await international investors in the Kazakh market.

    Speaking about the visit, Baroness Nicholson said:

    I am delighted to visit Kazakhstan, which is an important bilateral trading partner for the United Kingdom. Since my last visit in 2019, we have seen British business activity in Kazakhstan grow to new heights, supporting investment, training, and jobs for the local economy. In particular I’m excited to see the UK contribution to the agriculture and education sectors here – 2 areas where British expertise and technology is truly world-leading.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Businesses urged to get ready for reforms to cut packaging waste [February 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Businesses urged to get ready for reforms to cut packaging waste [February 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs on 28 February 2023.

    Reporting requirements for the Extended Producer Responsibility scheme for packaging come into force today.

    Plans to make it easier for consumers to recycle packaging waste move a step closer today, as reporting requirements for Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) come into force.

    Extended Producer Responsibility for Packaging (pEPR) will make firms that supply household packaging responsible for the costs of dealing with packaging waste, moving costs away councils and council taxpayers.

    Producers will be required to pay for the collection and disposal costs of household packaging they supply when it becomes waste. This will encourage producers to reduce the amount of packaging they place on the market, and to improve the recyclability of their packaging – in turn ensuring less waste ends up in the natural environment.

    From today, all obligated packaging producers in England, Northern Ireland and Scotland must collect information on the amount and type of packaging they have supplied during 2023. Wales will follow shortly.

    Producers with a turnover of greater than £2 million and who handle more than 50 tonnes of packaging each year must also report this information to the Environment Agency twice a year.

    The first reports must be submitted from 1 October 2023.

    Environment Minister Rebecca Pow said:

    We need to stem the flow of packaging which goes unrecycled and instead is lost forever to landfill and incineration.

    As set out in our Environmental Improvement Plan, these reforms will encourage businesses to increase their use of recyclable materials, shifting costs away from the taxpayer and supporting our work to protect the environment from the scourge of waste.

    Deep Sagar, chair of the Advisory Committee on Packaging, said:

    Packaging materials that are not recycled back into new packaging harm our natural environment. Councils have to spend more managing that waste and the public cannot enjoy spaces such as parks and high streets as they should.

    Extended Producer Responsibility will reduce that waste. It will make goods producers pay for collection of all packaging waste encouraging them to reduce or recycle more packaging. I look forward to supporting government and industry in making this smart policy work for the public and improving the environment.

    Claire Shrewsbury, Director of Insights and Innovation at the Waste and Resources Action Programme, said:

    The introduction of an EPR for packaging could be a game-changer. If done effectively, it could reduce the impact packaging has on the environment by regulating material use and increasing recycling.

    For EPR to work it must serve all – producers, local and central government, recyclers, and the public. We’ve been working with these key groups since 2018 to help collaboration on pEPR.

    In 2020, 12 million tonnes of packaging was placed on the UK market, some of which contains plastics that are hard to recycle. Incentivising producers to use better, more recyclable materials will help to stem this tide of waste.

    Producers will be required to pay an EPR fee towards the costs of collecting and managing household packaging waste, currently borne by local authorities. This shift of cost is estimated to be around £1.2 billion per year across all local authorities, once EPR is fully operational.

    Before decisions are made about the final shape of the scheme, we need to gather information from businesses that will be affected. This data will provide the basis for establishing the packaging waste management fees individual producers will pay in 2024, when pEPR comes into force.

    We are engaging with businesses and local authorities to shape the future vision of waste reforms through industry-wide sprint events, deep dive sessions and fortnightly forums. This will help ensure business readiness for our planned reforms from 2024, ensuring industry are involved in shaping the long-term future of EPR.

    These plans build on our wider efforts to eliminate avoidable plastic waste. Earlier this year we announced that a ban on single-use plastic plates, trays, bowls, cutlery, balloon sticks, expanded and extruded polystyrene food and drinks containers, including cups, will be introduced in England from October 2023.

    We have also announced further details on the implementation of our Deposit Return Scheme for drinks containers to boost recycling and clamp down on plastic pollution and litter.

    We have already introduced a ban on microbeads in rinse-off personal care products, restrictions on the supply of single-use plastic straws, drink stirrers and cotton buds, and our world-leading Plastic Packaging Tax introduced last year.

    Meanwhile, our single-use plastic carrier bag charge has successfully cut sales by over 97% in the main supermarkets.

    For further information, please see our specific guidance on collecting data for packaging EPR, along with our wider guidance for industry on GOV.UK.

  • PRESS RELEASE : New cultural exchange scheme opens to young talent in the UK and India [February 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : New cultural exchange scheme opens to young talent in the UK and India [February 2023]

    The press release issued by the Home Office on 28 February 2023.

    The Young Professionals Scheme is now open to eligible young Indian and UK professionals.

    From today (28 February), young professionals from India and the UK can apply to live, study, travel and work for up to two years in each other’s country, the UK government has announced.

    The first of its kind, the reciprocal Young Professionals Scheme is a new opportunity granting Indian and UK nationals a chance to benefit from new cultural experiences and inject expertise into both economies.

    Indian nationals eligible for the scheme can now enter a 48 hour ballot free of charge from which 2,400 randomly selected applicants will then be invited to submit their visa applications. Those eligible to apply must be between 18 and 30, be an Indian national and hold a degree. A further ballot will be held later in the year.

    Interested eligible British nationals do not need to apply through a ballot process and are welcome to apply to the Young Professionals Scheme at any time.

    The UK encourages young professionals from both countries to experience each other’s nations and participate in this cultural exchange.

    Immigration Minister Robert Jenrick said:

    The Young Professionals Scheme is a unique opportunity for British and Indian graduates to experience the richness of a new culture and way of life while building their professional experience and expertise. This new scheme illustrates the importance of our relationship with India and will bring great benefits to both countries.

    I encourage young professionals from India and the UK who want to share their skills and talents to apply.

    The Young Professionals Scheme highlights the strength of the UK-India economic and cultural relationship and is a key part of the UK-India Mobility and Migration Partnership, which was signed in May 2021.

    As well as the Young Professionals Scheme, the Partnership includes a range of commitments to enhance arrangements on migration issues such as measures to strengthen our ability to remove immigration offenders and ensure greater co-operation around organised immigration crime.