Tag: 2023

  • Rachel Reeves – 2023 Speech at the Fabian Society New Year Conference

    Rachel Reeves – 2023 Speech at the Fabian Society New Year Conference

    The speech made by Rachel Reeves, the Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer, on 21 January 2023.

    Friends, what a pleasure it is to be with you all again.

    This might come as a surprise, but I can’t help but feel it’s been a slow start to the political year.

    After the procession in and out of No.11 last year, it’s already the 21st January and I’ve still only faced one Chancellor.

    Last year I faced four in six months.

    If Jeremy Hunt lasts until the budget, he’ll be the longest serving Chancellor since the current Prime Minister.

    Now I have been a Fabian almost as long as I have been a member of the Labour Party.

    As Secretary of the Young Fabians, I remember meeting in the old offices on Dartmouth Street, and feeling a real connection to our history; every time Labour has won power and achieved meaningful change.

    Take one of my heroes: Beatrice Webb.

    As a social investigator, reforming campaigner, and an economist too, Webb spent a lifetime fighting to build an economy that worked for ordinary people, in the knowledge that this was not just a moral cause, but a route to a stronger, more prosperous country.

    As our economy, our society and our politics have changed, so our solutions must change too.

    This morning I want to tell you about how the next Labour government will bring that Fabian spirit to bear on the challenges ahead.

    As we look ahead to the next General Election, the questions the British public will be asking are simple:

    Are me and my family better off than thirteen years ago?

    Do our hospitals, our schools and our police work better than they did thirteen years ago?

    Frankly, does anything work better than when the Conservatives came into office?

    And if the answers to these questions are no – then you know it is time for a change.

    The Conservatives have brought our public services to breaking point.

    Three years ago they clapped our nurses; but with our NHS on the brink, their solution is to sack them for taking industrial action.

    They crashed the economy, landed homeowners across the country with eye-watering increases to their mortgages, and now they want to tell us all that last year was just a bad dream.

    And they have presided over more than a decade of stagnant living standards.

    Thirteen wasted years.

    Never again let the Conservatives claim to be the party of sound economic management.

    Never again let them claim to be the party of aspiration.

    And never trust the Tories with our public services.

    And to add insult to injury, this week they showed us the depth of their commitment to their own levelling-up rhetoric.

    The Prime Minister gave the game away last year, when he bragged about fiddling funding formulas to divert cash from the North to Tunbridge Wells.

    And then what did we get this week, when the results of this round of the Levelling Up Fund were announced?

    Money funnelled into Tory-held seats.

    £19 million for the Prime Minister’s own constituency.

    But nothing for the entire city of Leeds.

    Ministers have broken promises and they have wasted councils’ time.

    It’s not that the Tories have failed in their efforts to level up the country.

    They haven’t even bothered.

    And worst of all it is clear that they never intended to either.

    Friends, it is time for change.

    It is time for a Labour government.

    While the causes of the cost of living crisis are largely global.

    But our unique exposure to global events – to pandemic, war and economic crisis – has been the result of the choices of Conservative governments.

    Our present crisis is just one chapter in a longer story: more than a decade of weak growth, productivity and pay, and of the eroding of Britain’s economic resilience.

    The effects of Putin’s war have reverberated around the world, and we will not waver in our support for Ukraine.

    But it wasn’t Russia’s invasion of Ukraine that caused home insulation rates to collapse.

    It wasn’t Russia’s invasion of Ukraine that caused a decade of inaction on nuclear and renewable energy.

    And it wasn’t Russia’s invasion of Ukraine that closed our gas storage facilities here in Britain.

    Those are the consequences of a thirteen-year Tory experiment, in unilateral energy disarmament.

    And we are all paying the price.

    We desperately need a plan to repair Britain’s economic and energy security, and bring energy bills down; a plan to end our reliance on fossil fuels.

    But we also need a plan, for the weeks and months ahead.

    Because while the Prime Minister buries his head in the sand, for ordinary people the cost of living crisis hasn’t gone away.

    That is why we have called on the government to rule out any rise in fuel duty in the upcoming budget.

    Because it cannot be right, in the midst of a cost of living crisis, that nurses driving from shift to shift, supermarket workers doing the night shift and the millions of people around the country without access to decent public transport should be left to face the biggest ever hike in petrol prices.

    And today I can tell you more about the immediate action we would take to address the consequences of this crisis.

    Millions of households are still looking to a 40 percent increase in their energy bills, in April.

    On a week when temperatures fell below zero, I know many families and pensioners will be feeling the pressure particularly acutely.

    At the same time, energy companies continue to enjoy record profits.

    Over the last year, North Sea oil and gas profits have tripled.

    That cannot be right.

    So today, I can announce what a Labour government would do.

    We would hold to that most basic of principles: that those who have profited from the windfalls of war should shoulder their share of the cost, so ordinary people do not have to bear the brunt of a crisis that they did not cause.

    We will extend the windfall tax, closing the fossil fuel investment loophole and taxing oil and gas profits at the same rate as Norway.

    By backdating this from the start of 2022, when oil and gas giants were already making historically large profits, we can raise more than £13bn.

    A Labour government would pass those savings onto families immediately, to keep energy bills down this year.

    Our plan will save a typical household up to £500 on their energy bills from April, compared to the government’s plan, by keeping the energy price guarantee at its current level of £2,500, rather than letting it rise to £3,000.

    But let me be clear: this is a maximum.

    If wholesale prices fall further, the cap must come down too.

    And it is a scandal that those with the least are often forced to pay the most for their energy.

    So we would eliminate the premium paid by households on prepayment meters.

    And the forced installation of prepayment meters all too often lead to the most vulnerable households going without heating entirely.

    So Labour are calling on government to bring in a moratorium on that practice.

    Let me say to those companies that are doing this:

    It is wrong.

    It punishes the most vulnerable households.

    And under Labour, it will not happen.

    That is what a Labour government would do.

    That is a plan for today’s crisis.

    But as Keir said earlier this month:

    Sticking plaster politics is not enough.

    We cannot persist with walking into a crisis unprepared, and at the last minute producing hugely expensive fixes to get us through, while the underlying problems – those weakened foundations – remain untouched.

    We will take urgent action to help millions of households through the ongoing energy crisis – because we must.

    And Labour will act to keep energy prices down for good.

    That is why Labour has a plan to reach one hundred percent clean power by 2030, and retrofit millions of homes.

    These policies could save a typical household up to £1,400, generating savings not just for one year, but for every year to come.

    A response to today’s crisis and a plan to prevent tomorrow’s crisis.

    That is what a Labour government will do.

    Climate transition is a moral responsibility – we all know that.

    It is an economic necessity.

    Because the costs of action today are far less than the costs of action tomorrow.

    And it is an opportunity.

    Because whatever ideologues on left and right might tell you, we do not have to choose between going green and going for growth.

    In the 2020s and 2030s, the two go hand-in-hand.

    To some on the right, climate change is nothing more than a cost or even a con.

    Some on the left meanwhile will claim that the only way to tackle the climate crisis is nothing short of a command economy, or the overthrowing of capitalism itself.

    And then there are those on the fringes of the green movement who shudder at the very prospect of economic growth.

    I reject all those assessments, and their ideological cul-de-sacs.

    More innovation, more investment and more enterprise will be crucial to our green transition.

    And there is a global race on for the jobs and industries that will power that transition.

    We do not to have choose between letting the planet burn, or accepting a future of diminishing living standards in a poorer country.

    If these were the extent of our ambitions, we might as well give up now.

    Climate transition isn’t about putting a lick of green paint on a stagnant and insecure economy;

    It’s about new jobs and new industries, lower bills and higher living standards, and economic growth.

    Pro-worker; pro-business; and pro-climate.

    We know some country is going to lead in offshore wind, in green hydrogen, in carbon capture and storage, and in so much more.

    Why not Britain?

    From Rolls Royce, developing carbon neutral aviation in Derby, to Tred in Leeds, which has launched the UK’s first green debit card, to Fife Renewables Innovation Centre, housing businesses at the frontier of the clean energy revolution – the potential is there.

    But in too many places and too many industries, it is going unrealised.

    Meanwhile the Biden administration’s Inflation Reduction Act has galvanized green energy in the United States.

    And at the World Economic Forum this week, Ursula von der Leyen announced plans for an EU Net-Zero Industry Act to allow European nations to compete.

    But our government is sat carping from the sidelines.

    Grant Shapps, the Business Secretary, says these measures are ‘dangerous’.

    But I’ll tell him what’s dangerous: doing nothing.

    The choice is simple: we can sit by while our peers steam ahead in the global race for the jobs and industries of the future; or we can use all the powers at our disposal to let British businesses and working people compete in that race.

    That is why our Green Prosperity Plan forms the very centrepiece of Labour’s economic policy.

    That is the choice Labour will make.

    That is what a Labour government will do.

    This morning I can tell you more about a core part of our Green Prosperity Plan:

    Our world-leading pledge, to be the first major economy to have 100% zero-carbon power by 2030.

    We don’t make that pledge lightly.

    It will take choices; hard choices, that a Labour Government will make in the national interest.

    Take just one example: our planning system.

    A system now defined by delay.

    It currently takes up to 13 years to develop a new offshore wind farm.

    Up to 4 of those years are spent fighting through the planning system.

    The Hornsey 1 wind farm off the Yorkshire coast was commissioned under the last Labour Government, but didn’t come online until 2019.

    Its cheap, clean power that now supplies a million homes couldn’t be provided until years of bird data and other planning requirements had been collected and assessed.

    ​​Since 2017, not a single offshore wind farm has been recommended for approval by the Planning Inspectorate; in every case they have had to be overruled by the Secretary of State.

    But it adds further delay when that same Secretary of State lets that approval decision sit on their desk for almost 2 years, as they did with Hornsey 3, which will be the world’s biggest wind farm when it’s finally completed later this decade.

    Those delays are depriving a further 3.2 million homes from that cheap, clean power.

    And that’s before you consider the years offshore wind farms have to wait for a connection from the National Grid, so that that power can get from the North Sea to people’s homes and businesses.

    This backlog has now got so bad that projects from the latest leasing round last year have been told they will not get a grid connection until 2033 – over a decade later.

    Meanwhile, what are the Tories doing?

    Reforming the planning system?

    Sorting out the grid backlogs?

    Not a bit of it.

    They’re using these critical months and years to argue about whether they should continue to ban onshore wind completely, or simply set up a special, uniquely-restrictive planning regime for it instead.

    With Labour, that won’t stand.

    If we’re going to double onshore wind capacity, triple solar, and quadruple offshore wind, all within the next 7 years, we will need to reform that planning system.

    We’d ensure net zero is embedded through it and our whole energy system; bring planning restrictions for onshore wind in line with other infrastructure; impose tough new targets to get planning decisions on renewables down from years to just months; reform the grid system to cut the delays and get on with delivering more clean power capacity to turbocharge the transition; and ensure these decisions are prioritised so that agencies can meet them.

    We’ll look at how to ensure that communities that host infrastructure in the national interest feel its benefits; end the farce of planning decisions languishing on Ministers desks and crack down on Whitehall blocking developments; and require Local Authorities to proactively identify land for renewable energy opportunities and improve access to data.

    That’s just one example.

    But we will remove those barriers, wherever they are.

    That is what a Labour government will do.

    That work is ongoing, led by Ed Miliband, and there will be much more for us to announce ahead of the next election.

    Now, the Prime Minister made clear the depth of his own commitment to net zero this week, when he chose to fly by RAF jet from Teesside to Blackpool.

    I understand the air stewards had to do the seatbelt demonstration a few times before it really sank in.

    When you look back on the next Labour government, I ask you to judge us on this:

    Are energy bills down – for good?

    Is Britain more secure from the effects of global fluctuations in the energy market?

    Are we on course for net zero?

    Have we created hundreds of thousands of jobs in Britain, in new and growing industries, in our ports, our steel towns and across our industrial heartlands?

    I will campaign with everything I’ve got to see that Labour government elected.

    I will give all I’ve got to be your next Chancellor.

    And I make this pledge to you:

    That I will be Britain’s first green Chancellor.

    Our Green Prosperity Plan forms one part of a wider approach.

    The Tories may bury their heads in the sand, but around the world, economic common sense has moved on.

    Inequality does harm economic growth.

    Markets alone cannot deliver the strategic investment we need.

    And as well as the success of industries at the frontier, the state of our everyday economy – of care, retail, and more – is crucial to sustainable growth.

    To fail to learn these lessons, is to follow the path of managed decline.

    The alternative is what the US Treasury Secretary, Janet Yellen, calls ‘modern supply side economics’.

    It is based on the knowledge that strong and inclusive economic growth cannot be achieved without active government creating the foundations for a dynamic private sector to build on.

    It is time for a British ‘modern supply side’ approach.

    Let me explain what I mean.

    It starts with the acceptance that neither of the big ideas which defined British economic policy over much of the last eighty years are adequate for today’s challenges.

    Because although we would be in a far better place today had the Tories 10 years ago paid more heed to Keynes’ insights, Keynesian pump-priming on the demand side does not hold the answers to stagflation, and supply-side problems require supply-side solutions.

    That was true in the 1970s, and it remains so today.

    But the old supply side economics was based on a misplaced faith, that deregulation and tax cuts for the wealthiest would stimulate economic growth and their benefits would ‘trickle down’ to everybody else.

    Not only did that approach widen inequality between places and people.

    It had diminishing returns for growth and productivity.

    The Truss experiment was the last gasp of a failed economic philosophy.

    A modern supply side approach means government taking on a more strategic role, to expand the productive capacity and the resilience of our economy:

    First, by providing catalytic investment and strategic partnership with business, through our Green Prosperity Plan, through our modern industrial strategy, and through the work of our start-up review.

    Second, by boosting our labour supply – by supporting strong public services and helping people back into work.

    And third, by repairing our economic resilience, extending economic security with a real Living Wage and our New Deal for Working People – led by the work of Angela Rayner – and reducing our dependence on fragile international supply chains with our plans to buy, make and sell more in Britain.

    Together these plans comprise a modern supply-side economics; a new approach, for economic growth felt in every part of Britain.

    That is what a Labour government will do.

    The success of this approach will require honesty about the limits of what national government can achieve alone.

    First, because we cannot achieve our ambitions with the pull of a lever in Whitehall, and so we will give local, regional and national leaders the powers they need to support thriving local economies.

    And second, because any government serious about growth and improving the supply-side capacity of our economy needs to fix the mess that is this government’s Brexit deal and forge a closer trading relationship with the European Union.

    Our agriculture and our food industries rely on trade right across Europe, but we have a deal which doesn’t even include a veterinary agreement.

    We are pioneers in creative industries, but we have a deal which ties them in knots over visas.

    We are the second largest exporter of services in the world, but we have a deal that doesn’t include the mutual recognition of professional qualifications.

    And we have the best universities in Europe, but we have a deal which cuts us out of the Horizon research initiative.

    So we will fix the holes in the government’s patchwork Brexit deal.

    And instead of picking needless fights with our largest trading partner, we will work together with our neighbours and allies, to get a deal that works for the British economy.

    That is what it means to stand up for the national interest.

    And one final thing:

    Modern supply side economics recognises that a strong economy rests on strong public services.

    So be in no doubt: there can be no return to austerity.

    It has left our country poorer, our public services at breaking point, and our public finances in tatters.

    Labour will make sure public services have the investment they need;

    And reform, too – to meet the challenges of an ageing society; to equip young people with the skills for a new economy; and seize opportunities presented by advances in artificial intelligence and robotics.

    Good public services must be paid for.

    Labour will not waver in our commitment to fiscal responsibility.

    I have been clear about the absolute importance of ensuring every line of our next manifesto is fully costed.

    So let me tell you what a Labour government will do.

    We will end the tax break which exempts private schools from paying VAT and business rates.

    Because friends, private schools are many things, but they are not charities.

    We will put that money where it belongs, into all our children’s futures: into our state schools.

    And we will end the non-dom tax status.

    Because if you make Britain your home, you should pay your taxes here too.

    And under Labour you will.

    We will put that money into one of the largest workforce expansions in the history of our NHS.

    More doctors; more nurses; more midwives; more health workers.

    That is what a Labour government will do.

    I know that, in the months to come, many of you will play your part in making our shared ambitions a reality.

    Together, we will change Britain again – in that Fabian spirit.

    We will rescue our public services from Tory neglect.

    Restore economic security to working people.

    Support British businesses to lead in the global race.

    And build that fairer, greener Britain.

    That is what a Labour government will do.

    And friends, be in no doubt:

    That government is coming soon.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Minister pledges UK support at Africa summit to fight food insecurity [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Minister pledges UK support at Africa summit to fight food insecurity [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 24 January 2023.

    The Minister for Development and Africa emphasises the importance of the UK working with African countries on a two-day visit to Senegal.

    • Minister for Development and Africa will hold discussions with African leaders this week on rising food insecurity.
    • Andrew Mitchell will explore opportunities to expand British Investment into African countries to tackle this challenge.
    • He will meet Senegalese President and current African Union Chair Macky Sall during his visit, which will celebrate the UK’s growing partnership with a fast-growing, democratic, and stable regional power.

    The UK Minister for Development and Africa will emphasise the importance of the UK working with African countries to grow economies and boost food security – on a two-day visit to Senegal, starting today (Tuesday 24 January).

    Arriving in Dakar, Andrew Mitchell will hail the important relationship between the UK and Senegal, a country, with huge economic potential.

    He will meet key Senegalese government figures on his visit, including current African Union Chair and Senegal President Macky Sall. He will also set out the UK’s vision of a stronger partnership between the UK and Senegal that delivers mutual prosperity and security, and tackles global issues such as health and climate change. He will sign the first ever Memorandum of Understanding between the UK and Senegal, a symbol of our growing partnership.

    Mr Mitchell will see first-hand the impact of British investment in Senegal, including how UK-funded projects are supporting women and girls, and helping to build Senegal’s vaccine production facilities to tackle the next pandemic.

    Representing the UK at the Dakar 2 Feed Africa Summit, an African-led initiative, the Minister will listen to African leaders talk about the causes of rising food insecurity and hear their vision for accelerating agricultural transformation, with the aim of maximising the UK’s impact in alleviating food shortages across the continent. The UK is working with regional organisations like AGRA, Regional Economic Communities and the Africa Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) to help strengthen food trade in Africa.

    Minister for Africa, Andrew Mitchell, said:

    Many Brits know Senegal for its world-class football team. They may not know that our partnership with Senegal reaps benefits for people in both our countries, delivering economic growth and tackling common security and health threats. We hope to deepen this partnership over the long-term.

    As a leading supporter of the African Development Bank I am delighted to participate in the Dakar 2: Feed Africa Summit on an issue that we all need to work together on.

    With Russia’s war in Ukraine exacerbating the already drastic impacts of regional conflict in Africa and climate change on food security, I also want to hear directly from Macky Sall and other African leaders about the issues the continent is facing and understand how the UK can further support African countries as we face those challenges, together.

    Senegal is a leading stable and democratic country in the region, growing in significance and influence, and the UK hopes to build a closer partnership and greater trade and investment ties over the long-term.

    Economic development is crucial to tackling challenges like food insecurity and climate change and on his visit Mr Mitchell will explore opportunities to expand UK investment into the country to make a real and lasting positive impact. The UK-Africa Investment Summit in 2020 announced 27 deals worth over £6.5bn from across Africa. It also announced £9bn worth of investment decisions.

    During his visit, he will see the impact of such investment to date, including a $1.7bn partnership between British International Investment and DP World which features a new container port at Ndayane, Senegal’s largest onshore investment. The port will enable the creation of over 20,000 new jobs and help unblock barriers to greater economic growth.

    He will see the British Council’s landmark English Connects programme and visit the Women’s Integrated Sexual Health Programme (WISH) clinic where our delivery partner Marie Stopes International is increasing access to voluntary family planning, reaching those most in need.

    Andrew Mitchell will also visit Institut Pasteur de Dakar to hear about their plans to develop vaccines for Covid and other deadly diseases.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Rishi Sunak call with Taoiseach Leo Varadkar [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Rishi Sunak call with Taoiseach Leo Varadkar [January 2023]

    The press release issued by 10 Downing Street on 23 January 2023.

    The Prime Minister spoke to the Irish Taoiseach Leo Varadkar this afternoon.

    The leaders reflected on the close relationship between the UK and Ireland, and the Prime Minister said it was clear both nations were highly aligned when it came to shared values and challenges. He pointed to cooperation on areas like research and development and offshore wind.

    The leaders discussed the invasion of Ukraine, and the Prime Minister updated on the UK’s plans to accelerate its support to help the country secure a lasting peace.

    They also discussed the Northern Ireland Protocol, and the need to find solutions to the problems being faced by communities in Northern Ireland.

    Both leaders reflected on the need for Northern Ireland to have a power-sharing government up and running as soon as possible.

    The leaders agreed to stay in close touch.

  • PRESS RELEASE : United Kingdom commences membership on the United Nation’s Committee on NGOs [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : United Kingdom commences membership on the United Nation’s Committee on NGOs [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 23 January 2023.

    Statement delivered by Richard Croker, UK Ambassador to the General Assembly.

    Thank you Mr Co-Chair,

    The United Kingdom is proud to commence our membership on the United Nation’s Committee on NGOs. The value of this Committee cannot be overstated. Its existence reflects that the UN recognises the essential contribution of civil society to our work. Civil society enriches the evidence base at our disposal, making our meetings more effective and more substantial. All this helps ensure that what we do here has impact on the ground. Therefore we begin our membership with the understanding of the responsibility that comes with it.

    As demonstrated through our actions here at the UN, the UK is committed to championing civil society engagement. Regrettably, we do this in the face of opposition. A small group of Member States oppose civil society engagement with the UN, and seek to stifle their voices, fearing the scrutiny that civil society provides. We intend to seek approval of all applications from all legitimate NGOs. Therefore our scrutiny of NGOs will be only on the following categories in line with 1996/31.

    The NGO must exist and be currently active.

    The NGO is independent of government, with a majority of positions filled by individuals without government connection.

    The NGO does not cause harm to people, property, or the environment.

    The NGO and its staff are in adherence to the UN Charter, in that it does not engage in politically motivated attacks against member states, nor verifiably benefit from proceeds of criminal activity.

    In recent years, this Committee has witnessed ever-increasing politicised deferrals – part of a wider trend of increasing reprisals against civil society actors who seek to engage with the UN. We encourage all Committee Members to use a fair and objective review process, and avoid blocking NGO applications for political reasons.

    Such a commitment will foster deeper civil society engagement at the UN, while helping to reduce the backlog in applications. As Members, we all have an interest in making this Committee as effective and efficient as possible. That is why the UK is supportive of any effort designed to improve the working methods of the Committee.

    In order to help deliver the Secretary-General’s Commitment to inclusive multilateralism, we urge all Committee Members to facilitate a safe and welcoming space for civil society participation at the UN.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : New fire safety regulations come into force in England [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : New fire safety regulations come into force in England [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Home Office on 23 January 2023.

    The Fire Safety (England) Regulations 2022, which implement the majority of the Grenfell Tower Inquiry recommendations, come into force today (23 January 2023).

    These are new requirements for ‘responsible persons’ of mid and high-rise blocks of flats to provide information to fire and rescue services to assist them with operational planning and provide additional safety measures. In all multi-occupied residential buildings, residents should now be provided with fire safety instructions and information on fire doors.

    The Fire Safety (England) Regulations 2022 are now law from today and form part of a package of sensible, risk mitigating fire safety measures that the government is delivering following the Grenfell Tower fire to keep the public safe.

    In high-rise residential buildings, responsible persons will be required to:

    • provide their local fire and rescue service with up-to-date electronic building plans and information on the design and materials of their external wall
    • undertake monthly checks of firefighting lifts, evacuation lifts and other key pieces of firefighting equipment
    • install a secure information box and wayfinding signage

    In mid-rise residential buildings (over 11 metres), responsible persons will be required to undertake annual checks of flat entrance doors and quarterly checks of all fire doors in the common part.

    Minister for Crime, Policing and Fire, Chris Philp, said:

    I am very pleased that measures to improve fire safety in blocks of flats are now law following recommendations made by the Grenfell Tower Inquiry.

    Keeping the public safe is our utmost priority and we are committed to ensuring that the Grenfell tragedy must never happen again.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Emergency pesticide authorisation approved to protect national sugar beet crop [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Emergency pesticide authorisation approved to protect national sugar beet crop [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs on 23 January 2023.

    National sugar beet crop could face serious losses due to risk from aphids – more than 50% of UK sugar comes from domestic production.

    Defra has approved an emergency temporary authorisation for the use of a neonicotinoid pesticide treatment on this year’s sugar beet crop due to the risk to the crop from yellows viruses.

    Emerging sugar beet seedlings are vulnerable to predation from aphids that have the potential to spread beet yellows virus, which can severely affect sugar beet yield and quality.  In 2020, 25% of the national sugar beet crop was lost, costing £67m of total economic loss across an industry that creates nearly 10,000 jobs.

    Defra has attached strict conditions to the emergency authorisation including only allowing for application if independent modelling predicts a virus incidence of 63% or above. If the virus threshold is not met, then the neonicotinoid treated seed will not be used.

    If the threshold is met and limited use is allowed, then further strict conditions will be applied to minimise risks to the environment. This includes a maximum number of seeds planted per hectare and restrictions on farmers planting flowering crops in subsequent years in any field where treated seed has been used.  This is to allow time for the chemical to break down.

    Emergency authorisations for pesticides are only granted for a short period of time,  in special circumstances where it is necessary because of a danger that cannot be contained by any other reasonable means, and the use is limited and controlled.  Other pesticide and organic treatments are not sufficiently effective in controlling  the virus

    The overall ban on the use of neonicotinoid pesticides remains in place.

    Farming Minister Mark Spencer said:

    We recognise the potential danger of an outbreak of the beet yellows virus on the nation’s sugar beet crop and the impact it could have on the production of UK sugar.  Therefore after careful consideration, we regard issuing an emergency authorisation as a necessary measure to protect the industry.

    The product can only be used if a strict threshold is met and on a single non-flowering crop. This decision has not been taken lightly and is based on extensive and rigorous scientific assessment.

    The Farming Minister considered advice on this application from the Health and Safety Executive, the independent UK Expert Committee on Pesticides and Defra’s Chief Scientific Adviser.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Immigration enforcement surge since pledge to tackle illegal working [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Immigration enforcement surge since pledge to tackle illegal working [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Home Office on 23 January 2023.

    The Home Office has ramped up immigration enforcement activity in the month since the Prime Minister’s pledge to boost raids on illegal working.

    A total of 1,152 immigration enforcement visits have taken place across the UK to identify illegal working since 11 December, marking an almost 10% rise on visits completed in the previous 5 weeks.

    The increase in enforcement comes as the Home Office establishes the UK’s first cross-government ministerial taskforce on immigration enforcement, which will ensure every available power across government is utilised to support law enforcement activity to identify and reduce illegal migrants in the UK, and ensure only those eligible can work, receive benefits or access public services.

    It will examine how to protect access to rented accommodation, bank accounts, healthcare, education, driving licences and public funds to only those eligible. The new enforcement taskforce, chaired by the Immigration Minister, will focus in its first meeting on illegal working and how enforcement activity can be maximised, including the rapidly growing gig economy.

    In December, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak announced plans to tackle illegal working and immigration, including by hiring 200 new Immigration Enforcement staff and restarting data sharing with banks to ensure those here illegally do not have access to bank accounts.

    Immigration Minister Robert Jenrick said:

    Illegal working causes untold harm to our communities, cheating honest workers of employment, putting vulnerable people at risk, and defrauding the public purse.

    Our Immigration Enforcement teams are working round the clock to bring those violating our laws to justice. It’s our priority to crack down on this crime and empower law enforcement to remove illegal migrants.

    With support from our new enforcement taskforce, we will go further and faster to prevent the abuse of our laws and borders and crack down on individuals exploiting the generosity of the UK taxpayer.

    Since mid-December, immigration enforcement action has included:

    • 362 arrests – in this timeframe, 92 illegal working civil penalties were also issued with a value of £1.5 million
    • 1,930 police enquiries referred to Immigration Enforcement teams of foreign nationals they arrest for further investigation
    • a further 58 arrests for immigration offences, with 28 convictions secured since 13 December
    • 151 foreign criminals and immigration offenders being removed on returns charter flights since the Prime Minister’s speech as part of the government’s commitment to remove those with no right to be in the UK
    • continued action to prevent illegal and dangerous small boats crossings, with 3 individuals arrested for piloting a small boat across the Channel under section 25 of the Nationality and Borders Act
    • 2 pilots of small boats being convicted under section 24 of the Act with aggravating factors
  • PRESS RELEASE : Joint Statement – The Tallinn Pledge (January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Joint Statement – The Tallinn Pledge (January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 23 January 2023.

    A joint statement by the defence ministers of Estonia, the United Kingdom, Poland, Latvia and Lithuania; and the representatives of Denmark, the Czech Republic, the Netherlands, and Slovakia.

    We the Defence Ministers of Estonia, the United Kingdom, Poland, Latvia and Lithuania; and the representatives of Denmark, the Czech Republic, the Netherlands, and Slovakia met today, 19 January, to reaffirm our continued determination and resolve to supporting Ukraine in their heroic resistance against the illegal and unprovoked Russian aggression. We condemn Russia’s attacks designed to terrorise Ukraine’s people, including intentional attacks against the civilian population and civilian infrastructure which may constitute war crimes. We reject Russia’s ongoing violation of Ukraine’s sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity, and its illegal claims to have annexed Ukrainian territory.

    We recognise that equipping Ukraine to push Russia out of its territory is as important as equipping them to defend what they already have. Together we will continue supporting Ukraine to move from resisting to expelling Russian forces from Ukrainian soil. By bringing together Allies and partners, we are ensuring the surge of global military support is as strategic and coordinated as possible. The new level of required combat power is only achieved by combinations of main battle tank squadrons, beneath air and missile defence, operating alongside divisional artillery groups, and further deep precision fires enabling targeting of Russian logistics and command nodes in occupied territory.

    Therefore, we commit to collectively pursuing delivery of an unprecedented set of donations including main battle tanks, heavy artillery, air defence, ammunition, and infantry fighting vehicles to Ukraine’s defence. This substantial assistance to Ukraine comes from our own national stocks, and resources illustrating the mutual understanding of the severity of the situation and our commitment to urgently increase and accelerate support for Ukraine. Having made this “Tallinn Pledge”, we shall head to the Ukraine Defence Group meeting in Ramstein tomorrow 20 January and urge other Allies and partners to follow suit and contribute their own planned packages of support as soon as possible to ensure a Ukrainian battlefield victory in 2023.

    Donations list per country
    Denmark: Denmark is continuing military and civil support to Ukraine. As part of the military support, recognising the decisive importance of modern artillery units on the battlefield, Denmark has decided to donate all its 19 CAESAR artillery systems to Ukraine. Denmark will also continue to provide training of Ukrainian forces, including but not limited to the UK-led programme of training for Ukrainian recruits. Denmark has donated or financed military aid for close to 600 million euros. Weapons donations and military support will continue in close cooperation with allies, and in accordance with Ukrainian needs.

    The Czech Republic: The Czech Republic will continue its support to Ukraine via delivery of military material, always in close cooperation with our partners and reflecting the Ukrainian needs. We are working with our defence industry to increase their production capacities in order to provide even more support, especially in terms of producing large calibre ammunition, howitzers and APCs. A key component of our contribution will be maintenance of the already delivered equipment and increased MRO capacity.

    Estonia: The Estonian package consists of tens of 155mm FH-70 and 122mm D-30 howitzers, thousands of rounds of 155mm artillery ammunition, support vehicles for artillery units, hundreds of Carl-Gustaf M2 anti-tank grenade launchers with ammunition with the total replacement values of approx. 113 million euros. In addition, Estonia will continue to provide both basic and specialist training to hundreds of Ukrainian Armed Forces members in 2023.

    Latvia: Latvia is preparing new donations with additional tens of man-portable air-defence systems (Stinger) and additional air-defence elements, two M-17 helicopters, tens of machine guns with ammunition, several tens of UAVs and spare parts for M109 howitzers. Latvia is also hugely investing in the training of Ukrainian soldiers. In 2023 Latvia is planning to train around 2000 Ukrainian soldiers in various programmes starting from basic infantry training to specialized courses.

    Lithuania: Lithuania’s new lethal support package consists of dozens of L-70 anti-aircraft guns with tens of thousands of ammunition, and two Mi-8 helicopters with the total replacement value of approx. of 85 million euros. Still this year, we will invest 40 million euros for procurements in support of Ukrainian military. This will include anti-drones, optics, thermo-visual devices and drones. Also, 2 million euros will be transferred to the UK International Fund for financing the heavy weaponry acquisitions projects such as artillery systems and ammunition, direct fire platforms or armoured fighting vehicles. The total value of Lithuanian upcoming lethal support package is 125 million euros. This year, Lithuania will continue training, and plans to train 1500 Ukrainians under bilateral and multilateral formats.

    Poland: Poland will continue to provide military and humanitarian assistance to Ukraine as long as necessary. The new Polish package consists of S-60 anti-aircraft guns with 70,000 pieces of ammunition. Poland already donated 42 Infantry Fighting Vehicles along with training packages for two mechanized battalions. In addition, Poland continues delivery of 155mm KRAB howitzers and supplying UKR with various types of ammunition. Medical and engineering training is also constantly provided. On top of that, Poland is ready to donate a company of Leopard 2 tanks with 1000 pieces of ammunition. Pending this, a wider coalition of Leopard 2 tanks donors will be established. On top of that, Poland is ready to donate a company of Leopard 2 tanks with 1000 pieces of ammunition. Pending this, a wider coalition of Leopard 2 tanks donors will be established.

    Slovakia: In addition to the heavy equipment already donated, Slovakia will continue intensive discussions with Allies on the possibilities of unlocking further equipment for donations to Ukraine. The effort currently focuses on possibilities related to main battle tanks, infantry fighting vehicles, air defence systems, but also increased production of howitzers, demining equipment and ammunition. Concrete details will be developed in due time based on continued exchanges with Allies and partners. Slovakia will continue to train Ukrainian soldiers and expand the training as required by Ukraine.

    United Kingdom: The United Kingdom’s accelerated package consists of a squadron of Challenger 2 tanks with armoured recovery and repair vehicles; AS90 self-propelled 155mm guns, while preserving their commitment in Estonia; hundreds more armoured and protected vehicles; a manoeuvre support package, including minefield breaching and bridging capabilities; dozens more un-crewed aerial systems to support Ukrainian artillery; another 100,000 artillery rounds; hundreds more sophisticated missiles including GMLRS rockets, Starstreak air defence missiles, and medium range air defence missiles; 600 Brimstone anti-tank munitions; an equipment support package of spares to refurbish up to a hundred Ukrainian tanks and infantry fighting vehicles. The package is further augmented by continuing basic training and junior leadership training for the AFU in the UK with 9 International partners. With the aim of training around a further 20 000 AFU personnel in 2023. The UK is also coordinating the International Fund for Ukraine which has raised almost £600M with partners. The first package of support from the fund will be announced shortly.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Change of His Majesty’s Ambassador to Israel – Simon Walters [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Change of His Majesty’s Ambassador to Israel – Simon Walters [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 23 January 2023.

    Mr Simon Walters has been appointed His Majesty’s Ambassador to the State of Israel in succession to Mr Neil Wigan OBE who will be transferring to another Diplomatic Service appointment.

    Mr Walters will take up his appointment during August 2023.

    Curriculum vitae

    Dates Role
    2022 to present Full Time Language Training, Hebrew
    2019 to 2022 FCDO, Director National Security for Middle East and Africa
    2017 to 2019 FCO, Director, Policy and Requirements
    2016 to 2017 FCO, Regional Lead for South-Eastern Europe, Istanbul
    2013 to 2016 FCO, Head, Global Prosperity Team
    2011 to 2013 FCO, Head, Arabian Peninsula Team
    2008 to 2011 Jerusalem, Her Majesty’s Consul
    2006 to 2008 FCO, Private Secretary to PUS
    1999 to 2006 Postings in Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Yemen
    1998 to 1999 Full Time Language Training (Arabic), Cairo
  • PRESS RELEASE : Ancient Egyptian limestone relief of female musicians at risk of leaving UK [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Ancient Egyptian limestone relief of female musicians at risk of leaving UK [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport on 23 January 2023.

    Export bar placed on the relief to allow time for a UK institution to acquire the work.

    • The relief depicts a group of female musicians asleep in the palace of the pharaoh Akhenaten

    A limestone relief that offers an insight into daily Egyptian life more than 3,300 years ago is at risk of leaving the UK unless a domestic buyer can be found.

    The artwork depicts a group of female musicians asleep in the palace of the ancient Egyptian pharaoh Akhenaten. It was created at some point during his 17-year reign from 1351 to 1334 BC.

    The relief could be very valuable to historians studying this period of history. It is highly unusual in depicting women as musicians and by making them the focus of attention, unlike other, more marginal, depictions. It also offers an insight into life in the palace at the time away from the king and queen.

    There are also very few reliefs from this period that have survived in such a large piece, with four figures depicted on the same fragment of stone.

    Arts and Heritage Minister Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay said:

    “This limestone relief offers a beguiling glimpse into daily life in the Amarna Period of Ancient Egypt and is hugely valuable to academics researching this fascinating period of history. I hope a UK buyer can come forward so this important artefact can be enjoyed and studied here by future generations, for the benefit of people all over the world”.

    The minister’s decision follows the advice of the Reviewing Committee on the Export of Works of Art and Objects of Cultural Interest.

    Committee Member Pippa Shirley said:

    “This ancient object speaks to us with extraordinary clarity across thousands of years. It shows an instantly recognizable subject – a group of women asleep. They are musicians, and we see them in wholly natural, individual poses, lying on mats with sheets drawn up around them, with their instruments (harps, lutes and box lyres) close at hand, and a brazier in each room to keep them warm. They are part of the entourage of the fabled pharaoh, Akhenaten and his equally famous queen, Nefertiti, and are depicted with great care by the sculptor in their palace quarters. Glimpses of the private lives of servants from this period are immensely rare, and this one, in the revolutionary style developed by Akhenaten for the palaces and temples at his new capital city, Amarna, is unparalleled. The King and Queen oversaw the design and execution of the decorative schemes, and encouraged not only greater artistic freedom and naturalistic composition, but a growing interest in reflecting the lives of ordinary people. Although only a fragment, the light the relief casts on aspects of art, culture and daily life during the reign of one of the most intriguing rulers of Ancient Egypt means that every effort should be made to keep it in this country”.

    The committee made its recommendation on the basis the relief meets the second and third Waverley criteria for its outstanding contribution to the study of Amarna period, Egyptology, art history and early human societies.

    The decision on the export licence application for the relief will be deferred for a period ending on 22 April 2023. At the end of the first deferral period owners will have a consideration period of 15 Business Days to consider any offer(s) to purchase the relief at the recommended price of £69,300 (plus VAT of £2,860 which can be reclaimed by an eligible institution). The second deferral period will commence following the signing of an Option Agreement and will last for three months.