Tag: 2024

  • PRESS RELEASE : Getting active made easier with £93 million funding for over 1,100 grassroots sports projects [January 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Getting active made easier with £93 million funding for over 1,100 grassroots sports projects [January 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport on 27 January 2024.

    More than 1,100 grassroots sport projects will benefit from £93 million of funding as part of the continued drive to get more people active, the Government has announced today.

    • More than 1,100 multisport grassroots sport projects across the UK to benefit from £93 million towards new pitches, changing rooms, goalposts and floodlights
    • Funding part of £400 million government investment in grassroots facilities, including multisport pitches, tennis courts and swimming pools
    • Investment supports government ambition to get 3.5 million more adults and children active by 2030

    Research shows exercising more was the UK’s most common New Year’s resolution for 2024*, and the Government is helping hundreds of thousands more people across the UK keep their resolution and get active by delivering high-quality grassroots sport facilities.

    From Belfast to Bracknell, over 1,100 projects are receiving funding that will go towards facilities such as changing rooms, pavilions, state of the art 3G artificial grass pitches, goalposts and floodlights, improving access to sport and physical activity for local communities.

    Sports Minister Stuart Andrew announced the funding during a visit to Oaklands Park in Chichester, where over £700,000 from the Government, The Premier League and The FA’s Football Foundation will help Chichester City Youth FC (CCYFC) use the expanded capacity on their new pitch to support even more teams.

    With the new funding, Chichester City FC and CCYFC will also build on their strong women and girls offering by increasing the number of teams within five years of completion of the new pitch.

    Sports Minister Stuart Andrew said:

    Sport and physical activity are vital to our mental health and wellbeing, and each year thousands of people make a New Year’s resolution to exercise more.

    We know one of the major barriers to getting active is having access to high-quality sports facilities, which is why we are investing in 1,100 more projects, backed by £93 million.

    This government has delivered thousands of new projects across the UK with the aim of getting over 120,000 more people to get active, helping us to make big strides towards meeting our ambitious target of 3.5 million more people active by 2030.

    As part of an £81 million investment, 900 projects in England are already benefiting from funding from the Government and its Football Foundation partners the Premier League and The FA, with many more to follow.

    This will deliver over 60 artificial grass pitch projects, over 130 grass pitch projects and 35 changing facility projects, as well as floodlights and goalposts.

    Local communities across Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland will also benefit with an unprecedented £12 million being invested by the UK Government in 2023/24, delivered in partnership with the Scottish FA, the Irish FA, Cymru Football Foundation and Football Association of Wales. A further £9 million is also being committed across the home nations for projects to be delivered through 2024/25.

    In Scotland, the funding will deliver over 20 artificial grass pitch projects and four grass pitch projects. In Wales eight projects will get new changing rooms, while 12 projects in Northern Ireland are set to benefit from new floodlighting.

    Some of the beneficiaries from this year’s round of investment include:

    • Wirral Borough Council has received £1.1 million for a new 3G artificial grass pitch, changing rooms and grass pitch works at the Bidston Sports and Activity Centre in Birkenhead.
    • Norfolk County Football Association has received over £670,000 for a brand new 7-a-side floodlit 3G artificial grass pitch.
    • Poppleton United FC in York has received almost £20,000 for a new tractor and mower.
    • Portland United Youth FC in Dorset has received over £10,000 for new portable floodlights.
    • Dunfermline Athletic FC will receive £325,000 for a brand new artificial grass pitch.
    • Cyngor Gwynedd in Wales has received £300,000 for a new artificial grass pitch at Arfon Leisure Centre.
    • Fivemiletown United Football Club in Northern Ireland has received £400,000 for a new artificial grass pitch with floodlights.

    A full list of the facilities to benefit was published today.

    The Government’s Multi-Sport Grassroots Facilities Programme is investing in areas that are most in need of new or renovated facilities, with at least 50 per cent of the investment to be spent in the most deprived local authorities with high levels of inactivity. Through the programme more high quality facilities are being made available for people to play football, rugby and other grassroots sports.

    Since 2021, the Government, along with its partners, have helped deliver new facilities or improvements at almost 2,400 sites across the UK aiming to get at least 120,000 more people active, through the £325 million programme. This investment is supporting grassroots clubs up and down the country, including women’s and girls teams.

    It also follows the Government and The FA announcing an additional £30 million to build 30 new state of the art 3G pitches and facilities to prioritise women’s and girls’ teams across England, following the Lionesses success at UEFA EURO 2022, and the FIFA Women’s World Cup 2023.

    Robert Sullivan, CEO, Football Foundation said:

    This year, the Football Foundation will provide more great places to play than ever before.

    This 3G stadia pitch is just one of many sports facilities across the county that will have a transformative impact on physical and mental wellbeing, bringing people together and strengthening the local community here in Chichester from the roots up.

    Thanks to investment from the Premier League, The FA and Government we will deliver better pitches ensuring healthier lives and stronger communities.

    The Government recently published its new sport strategy to get 2.5 million more adults and one million more young people meeting the Chief Medical Officer’s guidance of 150 minutes of exercise per week for adults, and 60 minutes per day for young people by 2030.

    To help reach this target, the funding announced today is part of the Government’s unprecedented investment of over £400 million in grassroots facilities, including park tennis courts and swimming pools.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Statement on the interim ICJ ruling in South Africa vs Israel [January 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Statement on the interim ICJ ruling in South Africa vs Israel [January 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 27 January 2024.

    The FCDO has issued a statement on the ICJ’s interim ruling in the case of South Africa vs Israel.

    An FCDO spokesperson said:

    We respect the role and independence of the ICJ. However we have stated that we have considerable concerns about this case, which is not helpful in the goal of achieving a sustainable ceasefire.

    Israel has the right to defend itself against Hamas in line with IHL, as we have said from the outset. Our view is that Israel’s actions in Gaza cannot be described as a genocide, which is why we thought South Africa’s decision to bring the case was wrong and provocative.

    We welcome the Court’s call for the immediate release of hostages and the need to get more aid into Gaza. We are clear that an immediate pause is necessary to get aid in and hostages out, and then we want to build towards a sustainable, permanent ceasefire, without a return to the fighting.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Statement on allegations about UNRWA staff and 7 October attacks [January 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Statement on allegations about UNRWA staff and 7 October attacks [January 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 27 January 2024.

    The FCDO has issued a statement in response to allegations that UN Relief and Works Agency staff were involved in the 7 October attack against Israel.

    An FCDO spokesperson said:

    The UK is appalled by allegations that UNRWA staff were involved in the 7 October attack against Israel, a heinous act of terrorism that the UK Government has repeatedly condemned.

    The UK is temporarily pausing any future funding of UNRWA whilst we review these concerning allegations.

    We remain committed to getting humanitarian aid to the people in Gaza who desperately need it.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Defence Secretary awards medals to UK troops for Kosovo NATO peacekeeping mission [January 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Defence Secretary awards medals to UK troops for Kosovo NATO peacekeeping mission [January 2024]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 26 January 2024.

    The Defence Secretary, Grant Shapps presented hundreds of personnel from the 1st Battalion The Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment with a medal for their contributions to NATO peacekeeping operations in Kosovo.

    • British soldiers received their Operational Service Medals for supporting NATO in Kosovo.
    • The Defence Secretary deployed additional personnel in October 2023 following increasing tensions in the northern part of the country.
    • This year marks the 25th anniversary of NATO peacekeeping operations in Kosovo.

    Defence Secretary Grant Shapps praised hundreds of UK troops for their contribution to an important NATO peacekeeping effort in Kosovo at a medal parade today (26 Jan).

    Speaking to soldiers from 1st Battalion The Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment (1 PWRR) at the Royal Artillery Barracks in Woolwich, the Defence Secretary thanked personnel for their role in the NATO mission, and presented them with Operational Service Medals, watched by their families and friends.

    The parade and medals presentation marks the end of a demanding but successful deployment as part of the NATO task force to Kosovo (KFOR) for 1 PWRR, with this year marking the 25th anniversary of NATO peacekeeping operations in country.

    Defence Secretary, Grant Shapps said:

    Our brave men and women of the 1st Battalion Princess of Wales’ Royal Regiment have done us proud, and it was a great privilege for me to present them with a medal for their role in this crucial NATO peacekeeping mission.

    The UK continues to be a leading member of the Alliance, and 2024 is an important year. We mark 75 years of NATO, prepare for the largest exercise in decades – Steadfast Defender, and it is the 25th anniversary of NATO peacekeeping in Kosovo.

    And by deploying last year to boost the NATO Kosovo Force, our world class Armed Forces have shown once more their readiness to provide support wherever it is needed.

    Nearly 400 soldiers from 1 PWRR, nicknamed the ‘Tigers’ from the historic Bengal tiger insignia worn on their right arm, formed up for the parade to receive their medal for supporting Operation ELGIN – the UK operational name for the deployment.

    Following a request from Supreme Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR) to bolster the NATO peacekeeping efforts in Kosovo, and approval by the North Atlantic Council, in October last year the UK deployed around 200 soldiers from 1 PWRR to support the 400-strong British contingent that were already in Kosovo taking part in an annual exercise.

    The rapid deployment of the full battlegroup meant the transport of 200+ troops and the shipment of 117 vehicles to Kosovo in less than a fortnight.

    The bulk of the troops flew into Kosovo from RAF Brize Norton, while their equipment and vehicles were delivered by sea aboard the vessel MV Hurst Point, from Marchwood.

    The vessel unloaded its cargo at the Albanian port of Durres, the closest available seaport to their final destination of Camp Bondsteel, Kosovo. What followed was an eight-hour convoy drive in packets of 20 vehicles through the mountains and across the border.

    As part of NATO’s aims for sending the Strategic Reserve Force, personnel conducted patrols alongside the Administrative Boundary Lines of Kosovo and Serbia to deter illegal activity and reassure the local population. The group was also adequately equipped to help KFOR if there were more serious and dangerous incidents.

    Further to the strategic aims, personnel also helped clear out a snake infestation at a local school, making the local area safer for children to enjoy.

    The battalion returned from their deployment in mid-December, and were given post-deployment leave over Christmas.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Iran’s Soraya satellite launch – E3 joint statement [January 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Iran’s Soraya satellite launch – E3 joint statement [January 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 26 January 2024.

    The UK, France and Germany have issued a joint statement in response to Iran’s satellite launch using the Ghaem-100 space launch vehicle on 20 January 2024.

    E3 statement on Iranian Soraya satellite launch announcement:

    “On 20 January Iran announced the launch of the Soraya satellite using the Ghaem-100 Space Launch Vehicle (SLV). We condemn this launch, as this SLV uses technology essential for the development of a long-range ballistic missile system. Iran continues to develop its missile programme despite repeated international calls to halt it, and after years of disregarding UN restrictions.

    “Launches such as these allow Iran to test technology that could be used to further develop its ballistic missile programme, which poses a significant threat to regional and international security. We have longstanding concerns over Iran’s activity related to ballistic missile technologies that are capable of delivering nuclear weapons. These concerns are reinforced by Iran’s continued nuclear escalation beyond all credible civilian justification.

    “The governments of France, Germany and the United Kingdom remain committed to taking every diplomatic step to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons and to hold Iran to account for its destabilising activity in the region and internationally.”

  • PRESS RELEASE : Heat pump applications up by almost 50% as families make the most of government grant increase [January 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Heat pump applications up by almost 50% as families make the most of government grant increase [January 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero on 26 January 2024.

    New figures show applications to the government’s Boiler Upgrade Scheme in December jumped by 49% compared to the same month in 2022.

    • Figures for December show applications jumped by 49% year on year
    • increase to grants have made the Boiler Upgrade Scheme one of the most generous of its kind in Europe
    • families can now receive £7,500 grants towards the cost of a heat pump

    More people are taking advantage of increased heat pump grants with applications having risen by almost 50% compared to last year.

    New figures released show the number of people applying through the government’s Boiler Upgrade Scheme in December jumped by 49% compared to the same month in 2022.

    The scheme helps families make the switch from fossil fuel heating systems to a cleaner heat pump alternative, without a substantial upfront cost.

    The surge in applications follows a 50% increase in grants for air source heat pumps announced by the Prime Minister in October last year. Grants for heat pumps were boosted to £7,500 making the scheme one of the most generous of its kind in Europe.

    Energy Security Secretary, Claire Coutinho, said:

    We recently made our Boiler Upgrade Scheme one of the most generous schemes in Europe. Applications are now up by nearly 50% compared to last year.

    Helping people, rather than forcing them, to make the right choices for their homes will always be my priority.

    Lord Callanan, Minister for Energy Efficiency and Green Finance, said:

    These figures show more people want the cleaner heating and more stable bills you get with a heat pump.

    Our approach to reaching net zero works and because of increased heat pump grants, there’s never been a better time to make the switch.

    The figures released also show a regional breakdown of where heat pumps have been installed in England and Wales.

    The South West has seen the most with 3,655 installations, followed by the South East (excluding London) with 3,605 and then the East with 2,452.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Russia’s wanton destruction against Ukraine must be stopped: UK statement to the OSCE [January 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Russia’s wanton destruction against Ukraine must be stopped: UK statement to the OSCE [January 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 26 January 2024.

    Ambassador Neil Holland condemns Russia’s air attacks this week on Kyiv and Kharkiv, as well as the spate of attacks on Ukraine over the past month.

    Thank you, Madam Chair. It is regrettable – and sadly predictable – that we must gather today to condemn Russia’s latest wave of aerial attacks against the Ukrainian people.

    The UK condemns Russia’s attacks this week unequivocally. According to reports, Russian missiles on Kyiv and Kharkiv killed at least 18 people and injured over one hundred. The devastation was felt most acutely in Kharkiv, where an apartment block was hit, killing two people, and injuring 35 residents.

    Unfortunately, the attacks on Tuesday morning were just the latest of a series of acts of wanton destruction by Russia in Ukraine since we last gathered for a Permanent Council in December. Over the Christmas period, Russia launched hundreds of missile and drone strikes across cities in Ukraine including Kyiv, Odesa, Kharkiv, Dnipro and Lviv. This culminated on 29 December, when Russian unleashed its largest aerial assault against Ukraine since the war began. It killed at least 41 civilians, including a 15-year-old boy, wounded hundreds, and caused significant damage to civilian infrastructure, including a maternity hospital. This pattern continued into January.

    I offer my condolences and that of the UK to all Ukrainians for the lives lost due to these barbaric airstrikes. These took place far away from the front lines of Russia’s war, in civilian populated areas. The intensity, regularity and indiscriminate nature of Russia’s attacks may violate international humanitarian law, is extremely concerning and must stop.

    The level of destruction and suffering that Ukraine continues to face is hard to comprehend. According to the UN, there have been 29,000 civilian casualties: with over 10,000 of those having been killed. On average six civilians are estimated to have been killed each day since the start of the invasion and 86% have been in government-controlled territory. This includes a significant proportion killed in areas away from the frontline, due to use of long-range weapons.

    Russia chose to start this war, Russia can choose to end this war. Ukraine did not start it and has the right to defend itself. We will not let Russia win. We will continue to work with Ukraine and our international partners for a just and sustainable peace.

    Madame Chair, as we approach the third year since Russia’s full-scale invasion, the UK’s support will not falter. During his visit to Kyiv earlier this month, my Prime Minister announced a package of support and reaffirmed the close UK-Ukraine partnership. This included £2.5 billion in military support and a historic long-term security agreement. This brings the United Kingdom’s total package of support to Ukraine to approximately £12 billion. A clear signal of our unwavering support. We remain deeply humbled by the bravery and the resilience of the Ukrainian people and their determination to win.

    Madame Chair, last but not least I also wanted to highlight today the UK’s continued concern for our three OSCE colleagues of the Special Monitoring Mission detained by Russia. The UK again calls for their immediate release.

    The United Kingdom will stand with Ukraine today, tomorrow and for as long as it takes. Thank you, Madame Chair.

  • Oliver Dowden – 2024 Statement on Emirates Telecommunications Group Company PJSC

    Oliver Dowden – 2024 Statement on Emirates Telecommunications Group Company PJSC

    The statement made by Oliver Dowden, the Deputy Prime Minister, on 26 January 2024.

    The UK Government has approved the Strategic Relationship Agreement between Vodafone and e&. Using the National Security & Investment Act it has put in place proportionate measures to address any potential national security concerns.

    The UK is rightly a magnet for global investment and, in this spirit, the Act is entirely country-agnostic.

    Where investment might impact the UK’s national security – for example through the acquisition of certain technologies or infrastructure – we will work with investment partners to minimise any risk. As part of our Critical National Infrastructure, telecoms is one such sector. Vodafone is also a particularly important company for the UK Government given its critical functions, including as a key partner in HMG’s Cyber Security Strategy.

  • PRESS RELEASE : People smuggler jailed for fake passport scheme [January 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : People smuggler jailed for fake passport scheme [January 2024]

    The press release issued by the Home Office on 26 January 2024.

    A people smuggler has been jailed for conspiring to bring 16 Albanian migrants to the UK with fake EU passports and fraudulent airline bookings.

    A people smuggler has been jailed today after conspiring to bring 16 Albanian migrants to the UK by providing them with fake EU passports and making fraudulent airline bookings.

    Albanian national Sait Ruci used a fake Italian ID and stole the identify of an innocent man to open bank accounts used to buy airline tickets to the UK.

    The migrants, all from Albania, paid for a fake EU passport and an air ticket to the UK. Criminals can charge upwards of £10,000 per person for this type of facilitation.

    Ruci was sentenced to three years at Isleworth Crown Court today, for conspiracy to assist unlawful immigration.

    In many cases the fraudulent documents and bookings were identified by the airlines or European airport authorities before departure. Sixteen individuals travelled to the UK but their documents were detected as fakes by Border Force officers on arrival.

    With the cooperation of airports and airlines, Home Office investigators were able to link the bookings together and trace them back to Ruci.

    Analysis of Ruci’s mobile phone uncovered even more fake documents ready to be used for criminal purposes.

    Ruci will now be treated as a foreign national offender and could be removed from the UK after referral to the Home Office.

    Chris Foster, Deputy Director of Criminal and Financial Investigations at the Home Office, said:

    Today’s sentencing is the result of strong collaboration between agencies to bring this people smuggler to justice.

    Today we have removed another link in the chain of organised criminals who facilitate illegal entry to the UK.

    I am grateful for the tireless efforts of the officers who identified and investigated this complex case.

  • Bim Afolami – 2024 Speech at Bloomberg

    Bim Afolami – 2024 Speech at Bloomberg

    The speech made by Bim Afolami, the Economic Secretary to the Treasury, on 25 January 2024.

    This building and indeed this city, but this building in particular, reflects the UK’s commitment to openness, competitiveness and innovation in financial services and the significant role that financial services can play in growing our broader economy, and there’s been a great deal of talk in recent months about this.

    Since 2010, the British economy has seen the third fastest growth in the G7 faster than France, Germany, Italy, Japan. It is clear that our long-term underlying growth rate needs to rise in order for us to deliver prosperity, lower taxes and more effective public services.

    And it’s right then, that our long-term plan for this country’s growth is our commitment to openness, competitiveness and innovation writ large.

    That’s why we’re cutting taxes, to ensure hard work is rewarded, and to allow businesses to take long, firm decisions and investment in R&D.

    That’s why we’ll continue to reduce our national debt, to fight inflation and deliver affordable mortgages for working people.

    That’s why, through investment, we will ensure that our supply of homegrown, clean, affordable power is matched by home grown teachers, doctors and nurses.

    Because since the beginning of 2023, we’ve seen real progress. Inflation and borrowing costs have fallen with inflation more than halving, our economy has bounced back, outperforming the forecasters, outperforming many of our European neighbours, and our national debt continues to fall.

    I know that all of you, not just in Bloomberg, will continue to monitor our progress closely. But today I want to focus on the role that our capital markets can play in building our economy for the future. Rising to our economic challenges and achieving Britain’s economic potential.

    Well, the first thing we should say is, well, what are we talking about? What are capital markets? Why do they matter? They play a key role in our economy because by allocating capital, facilitating investment, growth and job creation, they create investor returns. And those investors are not just international conglomerates. They’re British businesses. They are British people. And all of this drive’s activity across the economy.

    London in particular, is an international powerhouse with a foreign exchange market three times the size of the American one. The derivatives market 50% bigger than the American one, all of which helps to make us a global hub for investment.

    Now, I have, this Chancellor, this government, we’re not the first to recognise the potential of capital markets to grow the British economy in the 1980s, Nigel Lawson’s reforms, the Big Bang suspect, so to speak, unlocked the UK’s capital markets.

    However, in recent years they have lost some of the dynamism for which they became well known in that generation. We in this country have not been immune to the global shift away from public equities to private equity.

    According to a recent paper by McKinsey, total private market assets under management have grown at an annual rate of nearly 20% since 2017, which was the first year I was elected to parliament.

    But between 2015 and 2020, London accounted for only 5% of global IPOs, and the number of listed companies in the UK has fallen by about 40% from as recently as 2008, the year of the financial crisis. Now those, I’m sure you agree, are sobering figures. And we take that on, and we know that we need to change them. But to change them, we must first understand what’s driving them.

    A large part of this story is the success of New York across the pond. Over the past five years, the FTSE 100 increased by 12%, while the S&P 500 increased by 81%. Nasdaq has been very successful in attracting new listings, especially big tech firms. There, American home grown American tech firms like Apple, Meta and Alphabet.

    And interestingly, if you remove the seven big tech companies from the S&P 500, the gap in performance is not anything like as wide as one thinks. Indeed, at one point in time, and this is quite an interesting fact, at one point in time, Apple alone out valued the entire FTSE 100. And we are also seeing greater competition from smaller EU exchanges such as Amsterdam.

    It’s true however, there has been a broader trend over the past decade or so of a change in British investor behaviour, with domestic British investors shifting away from investing in UK equities and moving beyond our shores. Why has that happened?

    My thinking after speaking with I don’t know how many people in the last few weeks a month since taking this job. Is that our approach to capital markets must carefully balance appropriate regulation with investors’ appetite for risk. And our post 2008 approach has focused too much on the former and not enough on the latter. In part that reflects the culture mindset of the government and our regulators.

    Now, as many of you may know, I’ve spent some time in this office and beforehand making the case for the importance, the importance of risk in our society. And I pushed against the modern trend across the whole Western world. It’s not just Britain. Pushed against the modern trend to seek to eliminate all risk, which has only accelerated after the Covid pandemic.

    Now, look, this is an understandable, but it’s a deeply damaging instinct. We have to move faster. Yes, with speed limits and controls. But accepting that innovation and growth cannot come and an entirely risk free environment.

    As I argued in my remarks to the FT banking summit, which was, I think, the first public statement I made in this post. There is no point us in the UK having the safest graveyard.

    Through a journey of root and branch reform. We need to move from a risk off to a risk on outlook, to move from a complacent incumbent mindset to an insurgent one, whilst recognising the challenges that we face because it’s only through measured and purposeful risk taking that we can deliver progress, economic growth and a capital markets renaissance.

    Here’s what we’ve already achieved. Here’s what we’ve already done. First step on our reform journey was to properly diagnose the problem that started in earnest in 2020, the end of 2020 with my very good friend Lord Hill. The UK Listings Review, which built consensus across government and the industry on how to boost IPOs and capital raising on UK markets.

    Then 2021 Mansion House, our then Chancellor, now Prime Minister mapped out our destination and he said he wanted a more open, competitive, technologically advanced financial services sector. And he launched the Wholesale Markets Review to consider how we could use our newfound regulatory freedoms to make UK markets more competitive. So having diagnosed the problem, next came our solutions.

    Reforms progressed across all areas in our legislation and regulatory regimes, but also in the culture and mindset of government and regulators. On the legal and regulatory front, we have passed a huge act, the new Financial Markets and Services Act 2023. This delivered the Wholesale Market Review’s most urgent changes, and as a result, firms can now trade in the most liquid market and get the best price for investors.

    We’ve also set statutory growth and competitiveness objectives for our regulators, established the new Regulatory Complaints Commissioner, Rachel Kent, who is here in the front row. So, she is, to ensure that regulators are fully accountable to market participants as well as accountable to consumers. And we’ve worked hand in hand with industry to carefully review every single aspect of our rulebook.

    Now, this issue is very close to my heart. As the former chair of the Regulatory Reform Group in Parliament, which I set up. I’ve long been a critic of the accountability gaps in our regulatory system and the disproportionately anti-growth mindset of many regulators.

    However. As my thinking has evolved over time, I’ve come to understand the responsibility that politicians have, not just regulators. Politicians from all parties. We as politicians must take a lot more responsibility for this. We created the system and incentives that the regulators operate in, whilst often blaming them for not acting fast enough on an issue of consumer harm, and then staying silent when industry complains about an ever more complex and costly rulebook.

    This culture of risk aversion has been very present in politics as much as it has been present in the regulatory state, and this must change. So be in no doubt. While I’m closely monitoring how the new system breaks down and closely monitoring how our regulators take on this growth and competitiveness objective that we have given them.

    I will act and we will act further if we don’t see a sensible shift in our regulators toward more pro-growth mindset. At the same time, I want to lead a cultural shift within our politics and within our politicians. More immediately, we are taking forward a host of new initiatives like the Digital Security Sandbox, which will test the use of distributed ledger technology in trading and settlement. That’s just one of the huge range of reforms coming up stream. The results of these reforms is that after three and a half years, we are now within sight of making the UK’s public markets match fit again.

    But you and I know we must go further to fully deliver on the promise of our capital markets. The regulatory and legal reforms are a necessary but not sufficient condition. So let me tell you about the steps that we are taking now to go further, because we’re supporting companies through every stage of their investment life cycle.

    First, we will ensure that companies can scale up effectively so that they are primed and ready for listing. To do this, we are establishing a world first, a new class of exchange, which will allow private companies to raise capital on an intermittent basis.

    Now, the private intermittent securities and capital exchange system. And this came across my desk and I said, guys, this isn’t going to work. I don’t even understand what that is. So, what I did was I played around with the acronyms with the words, and we’re going to call it Pisces. Pisces for short will be established before the end of this year.

    The Pisces platform will give private companies better access to UK capital markets, break down the artificial regulatory cliff edge that exists between the public and private markets. This development will allow us to take advantage of the structural shift that I was discussing earlier to private markets, rather than suffer from.

    Secondly, we want to ensure that when companies choose to list, when they do that, the process of doing so is as frictionless as possible. And as I’ve now taken the UK’s new prospectus legislation through Parliament in recent days, the FCA can now complete their entire rewrite of the prospectus regimes rulebook to deliver on the recommendations from the Lord Hill reforms and indeed the Mark Austin reviews. This will boost the operating environment for our capital markets in two principal ways.

    First, by increasing the pool of investors in participating capital raises and enabling firms to raise larger sums of capital more quickly and more easily.

    Finally, we want to ensure that once listed companies are matched with the best investors for their offering, we will achieve this by taking forward Rachel Kent’s Investment Research Review recommendations.

    We aim to revive the research market, which has been damaged in recent years, by delivering more efficient and accurate pricing, in particular for small and medium sized businesses, whilst attracting a more diverse range of investors, including retail investors.

    And I’m not going to have any more time to list some of our wider initiatives, like Charlie Gatlin’s Accelerator Settlement Taskforce, which will upgrade our back office operations for the 21st century by moving from a T2 to a T1 settlement, or our form of Solvency II which were released 100 billion pounds of investment into our economy.

    But given present company that, of course, seeking a balance of risk and reward, I’m prepared to make a bet with you about our future delivery of these reforms and then make a bet with you. This is dangerous. The Mansion House 2024 will mark substantial progress in all three of the investment lifecycle stages that I’ve set out today.

    First, the FCA’s new listing rules will consolidate our dual segment structure into a simpler single listing segment. And that would have narrowed the gap with our international competitors. I am confident that as part of this transition, the FCA will engage with firms who want their IP to benefit from our new regime, ensuring that the UK IPO pipeline is ready for action.

    Secondly, we will be well on our way by Mansion House midway through this year to delivering the regulatory framework for Pisces by the end of 2024.

    And finally by taking forward Rachel Kent’s IRR recommendations, the Investment Research Review recommendations, we will allow much more investment research to be produced in this country on smaller, mid-cap British businesses giving more information to investors, particularly retail investors.

    Now, why am I so confident in this agenda? Well, partly that’s just because that’s an occupational hazard of being politicians. But in all seriousness, I’m confident in this agenda. I’m saying it to all of you today because it’s underpinned by our commitment to where I started to openness, competitiveness, growth, dynamism, innovation in financial services. That is not for financial services. It is for the British economy as a whole.

    Now, I know, or at least I hope very strongly that the people in this room share those values. When they are properly applied, they will have an impact far beyond financial markets. After all, the Big Bang improved the lives of millions across this country. And I’m confident that when we have delivered our capital markets renaissance, those will too. Thank you.