Tag: 2024

  • 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.

  • PRESS RELEASE : 60 per cent of England now covered by historic devolution deals [January 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : 60 per cent of England now covered by historic devolution deals [January 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities on 26 January 2024.

    The percentage of the English population now living in a place covered by a devolution deal has risen to 60 per cent.

    • Devolution deals now cover 60 per cent of the English population – up from 41 percent since major levelling up plan two years ago
    • Deals providing powers to local leaders now cover nearly 34 million people in England – including nine of England’s 10 largest cities and 90 per cent of the North
    • Devolution milestone comes as Levelling Up Minister Jacob Young signs another deal with Devon County Council and Torbay Council – the 10th new deal since government’s levelling up plan was published

    Sixty per cent of the English population will now live in a place covered by a devolution deal, thanks to another historic deal signed with Devon County Council and Torbay Council.

    This is up from 41 per cent when the government published its major levelling up plan almost two years ago, meeting a key commitment to devolve powers to more areas across England.

    This means an extra 10 million people will now benefit from new powers handed from Westminster to their local leaders – covering a total of almost 34 million people across England.

    In another boost for levelling up, devolution deals now cover 90 per cent of the North – up from 62 per cent two years ago and benefitting over 14 million people.

    And in the Midlands, the percentage of people covered by a devolution deal has more than doubled in two years – up from 26 per cent to 55 per cent, covering almost 6 million people.

    The government has also secured devolution deals for nine of England’s 10 largest cities, including Manchester, Birmingham, Leeds, Liverpool, Newcastle upon Tyne, Nottingham and Sheffield.

    These deals are giving local leaders strengthened powers to make local decisions on important matters like transport, adult education and business support.

    They are also providing areas with over £5 billion of new, long-term funding from the government – the total amount committed to 10 devolution deals so far.

    Levelling Up Secretary Michael Gove said:

    This historic devolution milestone shows our commitment to spreading opportunity more equally across the country – empowering local leaders to take control on matters that mean most to their communities and improving local people’s lives.

    And to support their plans we’re providing billions of pounds in new funding for the long term, helping people to feel the benefits of these changes for years to come.

    The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities aims to secure devolution deals by 2030 for every part of England that wants one. This is one of 12 levelling up goals set by the department in its flagship Levelling Up White Paper in February 2022.

    These goals, called Levelling Up Missions, set out clearly what the government aims to do to reduce geographical disparity across all parts of the UK.

    To mark progress on devolution in England, the government measures the proportion of the English population living in an area with a devolution deal.

    The signing between Devon County Council and Torbay Council yesterday (25 January) will see the creation of a new Combined County Authority and £16 million awarded from central government to invest in local priorities as part of the deal. This follows devolution deals already secured with the East Midlands, North East, York and North Yorkshire, Norfolk, Suffolk, Cornwall, Lancashire, Greater Lincolnshire and Hull and East Yorkshire.

    Seven of these devolution deals will see the election of new mayors in county areas in 2024 and 2025.

    ENDS

    Notes to editors:

    • As with other Combined Authority and Combined County Authority deals, the Devon County Council and Torbay Council devolution deal is subject to local consultation, ratification by the constituent councils and parliamentary approval of the secondary legislation implementing the provisions of the deal. The deal encapsulates the majority of the ceremonial county of Devon.
  • PRESS RELEASE : 45th Universal Periodic Review of human rights – UK statement on Senegal [January 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : 45th Universal Periodic Review of human rights – UK statement on Senegal [January 2024]

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

    The UK’s statement during Senegal’s Universal Periodic Review (UPR) at the Human Rights Council in Geneva. Delivered on 22 January 2024.

    Thank you, Madam Vice-President, and we warmly welcome Her Excellency the Minister of Justice of Senegal to today’s Review.

    The UK welcomes the progress made by Senegal on human rights issues, including on the rights of women and children. However, we remain concerned about continued high levels of child, early and forced marriage, as well as discrimination and violence based on gender or sexual orientation, and we call on the government to take further steps to tackle these.

    We recommend Senegal:

    1. Improve protections for the rights of women and children, including by adopting the draft ‘Children’s Code’.
    2. Protect media freedom and the rights to freedom of opinion and expression, and of peaceful assembly and association, including during the 2024 presidential elections.
    3. Ensure full compliance with Senegalese and international law on police custody and pre-trial detention time limits.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Children’s wellbeing at the heart of family court reforms [January 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Children’s wellbeing at the heart of family court reforms [January 2024]

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

    Children will be better protected from the impact of lengthy courtroom battles thanks to pioneering measures to help families resolve disputes as swiftly as easily possible.

    • parents offered early legal advice to settle disputes amicably away from the courts
    • more courts to pilot process which better protects domestic abuse victims
    • almost 25,000 separating families have benefited from mediation voucher scheme

    Families who are separating will benefit from early legal advice, greater use of mediation, and the continued rollout of an innovative pilot which better supports domestic abuse victims and children, following the government’s response to the Private Family Law Early Resolution Consultation published today (26 January 2024).

    A legal advice pilot will be launched to help families agree child arrangements quickly, addressing barriers to early resolution including a lack of understanding of the options available such as mediation.

    The role mediators can play will be bolstered through improved domestic abuse screening and advanced DBS checks, meaning they have the right vetting and can support children earlier in the process. This, alongside the mediation voucher scheme which has already helped nearly 25,000 families, will mean more couples can resolve their issues without ever reaching court.

    For those who do end up going through the courts, a successful pilot in North Wales and Dorset, aimed at reducing conflict, will be expanded to the family courts in Birmingham and south east Wales, ahead of a national roll out. The model improves information sharing between agencies like the police and local authorities so victims avoid retelling traumatic experiences.

    It also allows judges to review more documents before a case gets to court, to prevent further conflict in the courtroom, and gives children extra opportunities to explain how they feel about decisions which affect their future.

    Lord Chancellor and Justice Secretary, Alex Chalk KC, said:

    There is no one-size-fits-all approach for separating families, which is why we’re ensuring people have access to early legal advice and mediation to resolve disputes as early as possible.

    These reforms will help spare thousands of children the long-term harm of lengthy, combative courtroom conflict.

    More than 60,000 private law children and contested finance cases went through the family courts in 2022.

    Long-term conflict between separating parents can have a devastating impact on a children’s wellbeing. The trauma has been linked to increased rates of anxiety, aggression, and depression, and can lead to anti-social behaviour, academic struggles, and substance misuse.

    Mediators can help avoid these issues by working with both parties together or separately to find a solution that works for them, rather than have a solution imposed on them by a judge. As of December 2023, the government-funded mediation voucher scheme, backed by £23.6 million, has helped over 24,600 families to resolve their issues without resorting to court.

    Greater use of mediation also allows family courts to better prioritise and provide protection for the most serious cases with safeguarding concerns where it is not an option, such as domestic abuse and child safety.

    Following consultation on mandatory mediation concerns were raised that the proposed safeguards to protect domestic abuse victims may not go far enough. To avoid forcing a continued relationships between a victim and their abuser the government will not change the law to mandate mediation for separating couples.

    We are working with the Family Mediation Council to improve training for mediators on domestic abuse and help them develop a screening tool – such as a questionnaire – to better identify victims at the earliest opportunity.

    Justice Minister Lord Bellamy said:

    These reforms are about helping those who need it the most. By elevating the voice of the child and reducing strife in a court room, we will give our children the best chance of growing up to becoming well-adjusted adults.

    The response also commits to increase inclusive mediation by ensuring mediators can apply for advanced Disclosure and Barring Service checks, create a new online portal for parents sign-posting to relevant support services and improve the offline information available at Family Hubs.

    The government has also pledged to work alongside Cafcass – an independent body which advises family courts on what is safe for children and in their best interests – to help more families undertake parenting programmes early in the process, rather than by court order.

    Chief Executive of the Children and Family Court Advisory Support Service (Cafcass), Jacky Tiotto, said:

    One of Cafcass’ main strategic priorities is to improve the experiences of children in private law proceedings. There is so much more to be done to turn up the volume of their voices and to make them central to the business of the proceedings. We therefore welcome the heightened focus on children within the government’s proposals announced today. We are already working alongside our partners in the family justice system to create a Pathfinder in Birmingham and we support the government’s intention to encourage more families to find alternative resolutions and to prioritise what is in their children’s best interests without the need for lengthy family court proceedings.

    Domestic Abuse Commissioner Nicole Jacobs said:

    The Family Court is critical in keeping child and adult victims safe from abuse. I am delighted that the Pathfinder Court pilots will be extended to two further sites, with a view to national roll-out. These courts take a child-centred approach, supporting victims and embedding an understanding of domestic abuse throughout the proceedings, which were key recommendations I made in my 2023 Family Court report.

    I welcome the opportunity to continue working with the Ministry of Justice to ensure that early resolution measures – such as provision of early legal advice, and reforming the family justice system to be less adversarial and more child-centric – will further improve the Family Court response to domestic abuse and protect child and adult victims from further harm.

  • PRESS RELEASE : £33 million boost to turn green ports and ships into a reality [January 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : £33 million boost to turn green ports and ships into a reality [January 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Transport on 26 January 2024.

    Funding awarded to 33 projects across the UK to develop clean maritime technologies.

    • £33 million for new technologies to cut shipping emissions, support jobs in coastal areas and boost local economies
    • total funding awarded through the Clean Maritime Demonstration Competition (CMDC) now £128 million, helping support the maritime industry to deliver net zero emissions
    • among the winners are initiatives dedicated to constructing electric vessels and charging ports, propelling a new era of sustainable maritime innovation

    Maritime Minister, Lord Davies, has today (26 January 2024) announced the winners of £33 million of government funding to develop green technologies for ports and ships – accelerating the UK’s race to decarbonise the sector while supporting jobs in coastal communities across the country, helping grow the economy in the long term.

    The £33 million has been awarded to 33 projects across all 12 regions of the UK to deliver demonstrations, factory trials and feasibility studies. These initiatives position the UK as a leader in emerging clean maritime technologies, fostering sustainable high-skilled jobs across the country and boosting coastal economies.

    The funding comes from the fourth round of the government’s Clean Maritime Demonstration Competition (CMDC4), which focuses on developing a range of clean maritime technologies including electric, hydrogen, ammonia, methanol, wind power and more.

    Lord Davies visited 2 of the winning organisations, Aqua SuperPower and RS Marine Group, in Southampton, to see their pioneering network of electric chargepoints and electric vessels in action. Thanks to CMDC4, these 2 winners will work together to build on their existing electric infrastructure to provide electricity back to ports, harbours and the grid when the vessels are not in use.

    Maritime Minister, Lord Davies, said:

    Unlocking a sustainable maritime sector and the economic growth it provides relies on cutting-edge technology to propel it to the next level. The voyage to sustainability demands bold investments to not just deliver greener shipping but highly skilled jobs across the UK.

    Today, we witnessed a firsthand glimpse into the transformative solutions that can help shape the future landscape of the maritime industry and support jobs in coastal communities.

    Government funding is a crucial driving force for cutting-edge technology, inspiring investors to engage in pilot incentives. CMDC4 builds on 3 successful previous rounds, which allocated over £95 million to 105 projects and leveraged over £45 million in private investment.

    The continued demand for funding underscores the industry’s strong interest in clean maritime investment. This support has also fostered partnership between the government and the private sector – paving the way for exciting innovations that will decarbonise the maritime industry.

    Lesley Robinson, CEO of British Marine, said:

    British Marine is proud to celebrate the achievements of our members, who are leading the way in sustainable maritime innovation and are among the beneficiaries of the government’s £33 million investment in green maritime technology.

    This significant funding is just one way in which the government can help accelerate our industry’s journey to net zero emissions and mark a new era in maritime history. Many of our members are pioneering electric vessels and charging ports, in turn, contributing to environmental sustainability, job creation and the UK’s levelling-up agenda. We’re excited to witness this pivotal shift towards a cleaner, more prosperous maritime future.

    Mike Biddle, Innovate UK Executive Director for Net Zero, said:

    The maritime sector continues to demonstrate a keen appetite for decarbonisation, which is highlighted by the 33 winning projects of the Clean Maritime Demonstration Competition Round 4.

    Today’s announcement shows UK industry is embracing research and development as a solution to a global industry-wide problem and I’m inspired by the ambition of our maritime innovators.

    The CMDC4 projects will build upon the proven success of previous rounds where the Department for Transport and Innovate UK have worked in partnership to show the UK is a leading voice in maritime’s green transition.

    Today’s funding comes from the wider £206 million UK Shipping Office for Reducing Emissions (UK SHORE) programme, announced in March 2022.

    The CMDC is one of the many initiatives from UK SHORE to fund green technology. Last year, the government launched the Zero Emission Vessels and Infrastructure (ZEVI) competition to support projects in the latter stages of development and the Clean Maritime Research Hub – aimed at the early science and research behind green technology.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Vulnerable people encouraged to seek help with energy bills [January 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Vulnerable people encouraged to seek help with energy bills [January 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Work and Pensions on 26 January 2024.

    Families struggling with energy bills are being urged to speak to their council for Household Support Fund help.

    • Over £360m has already been spent on helping people with energy and water bills.
    • Councils have provided boilers, loft insulation and can help with the cost of essentials such as food and bills.

    People struggling with the cost of energy bills this winter are being encouraged to speak to their council about the financial help available from the Department for Work and Pensions’ Household Support Fund.

    The Government has invested over £2 billion into the Fund since it launched, with new statistics now showing more than £360 million has been paid to households for support with energy and water costs between October 2021 and March 2023.

    With colder temperatures in recent weeks, the Fund can be used to make homes more energy efficient, as well as help households with bills.

    Kingston upon Hull Council have used the Fund to pay for hundreds of boilers and radiators for residents, while others have benefitted from loft insulation, new thermostats, and radiator valves.

    Pensioners in Swindon Borough Council have been allocated tens of thousands of pounds ahead of winter for tailored heating support, including fuel and energy grants as well as repairs and maintenance to heating systems.

    The Fund is part of the government’s work to deliver a brighter future for Britain, building long-term economic security and stability, as well as a Britain where hard work is rewarded, and families are supported. That is why the government has worked to bring inflation down by more than half while cutting taxes which will help make the income of hardworking people go further.

    Minister for Employment, Jo Churchill MP, said:

    The Household Support Fund is there for anyone who needs a helping hand. This Fund allows councils to help in all kinds of ways – from providing heating support, like boilers and insulation, to other needs, such as kitchen essentials, free school meals and warm clothing.

    Now inflation has more than halved, and the economy has turned a corner, anyone who feels they need help this winter should get in touch with their local council to find out how this Fund can help them.

    As well as heating support, the Fund can help with other needs, such as kitchen essentials, free school meals and clothing to help people during the colder months.

    The Fund sits alongside wider government support worth an average £3,700 per household – including up to £900 in direct Cost of Living payments for those on means-tested benefits. As well as this, three million households are expected to benefit from the £150 Warm Home Discount and over 11 million pensioner households received up to £600 in Winter Fuel Payments in December last year.

    Working age and disability benefits are also set to rise by 6.7% from April, following last year’s inflation-matching 10.1% rise, and millions of private renters will benefit from boosts to the Local Housing Allowance for 2024-25.

    As well as the Household Support Fund, there’s a range of support available to struggling households. Through the Help for Households campaign, people have access to information and support on a range of issues – from Cost of Living Payments to help with childcare costs, mental health advice and more.

    To find out what support you may be eligible for go to Help for Households – Get government cost of living support.

  • PRESS RELEASE : The UK supports Ukraine’s response to the Ilyushin II-76 aircraft incident – UK statement at the UN Security Council [January 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : The UK supports Ukraine’s response to the Ilyushin II-76 aircraft incident – UK statement at the UN Security Council [January 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 25 January 2024.

    Statement by Ambassador James Kariuki at the UN Security Council meeting on International Peace and Security.

    Thank you President, and I think USG DiCarlo for her briefing.

    At the outset, President, let me express our full support for your handling of the Presidency. I do find it ironic that while the Russian representative chooses to lecture France on UN rules, as he has frequently lectured the UK on our organisation of meetings, his country continues to commit arguably the most egregious and flagrant violation of the UN Charter in this institution’s history.

    President, the UK regrets all loss of human life, wherever it occurs.

    We fully support Ukraine’s calm and measured response to this aircraft incident and agree that there is an urgent need to establish the facts, as President Zelenskyy has said.

    Whilst it is too early to draw conclusions, one thing is clear: when President Putin made the decision to illegally invade Ukraine, he demonstrated his total disregard for the value of human life, including his own citizens. We would not be in this position, and incidents like this would not happen, if it were not for Russia’s full-scale illegal invasion in February 2022.

    A sovereign, independent Ukraine did not and does not pose a threat to Russia. Ukrainians want and deserve to live in peace and security, and without interference from their largest neighbour.

    Hundreds of thousands of lives have been lost in this war, including over 300,000 Russian soldiers dead and injured, and tens of thousands of Ukrainian civilians killed.

    Soon this pointless conflict will have lasted for two years. Russia can choose to end the bloodshed. It can withdraw all its military personnel from the internationally recognised borders of Ukraine. And, as a permanent member of this Council, it can uphold purposes and principles of the UN Charter.

    Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Rishi Sunak appoints Towns Tsar [January 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Rishi Sunak appoints Towns Tsar [January 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities on 25 January 2024.

    The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has appointed Adam Hawksbee as interim Chair for the new high-powered Towns Unit to ensure the voices of UK towns are heard loud and clear across government and that vital regeneration comes to life.

    Adam, Deputy Director of the think tank Onward, will help deliver the government’s Long-Term Plan for Towns, backed by £1.1 billion overall, to regenerate 55 towns around the country so people can feel proud of the place they call home.

    Each town will receive a 10-year endowment-style fund with £20 million of funding and support to deliver long-term projects focused on the issues that matter most to local people, including regenerating high streets, protecting local heritage and cracking down on anti-social behaviour.

    The Unit will ensure the Long-Term Plan for Towns delivers its promise by supporting local leaders to develop proposals, encouraging further investment from businesses and making sure that Towns Boards become long-term institutions that serve their communities.

    Adam will be visiting towns up and down the country and reporting directly back to the Prime Minister and the Secretary of State for Levelling Up Michael Gove on how these places can better level up.

    This work as part of the Long-Term Plan for Towns will help local people continue to feel the benefits of a bettering economy – ensuring a brighter future for Britain and more opportunity for generations to come.

    Towns Unit Chairman Adam Hawksbee said:

    It’s an honour to be heading up this vital work, which will empower communities to transform their towns. The Long-Term Plan for Towns puts local people at the heart of change, letting them choose their own priorities. Whether that’s making high streets safer and cleaner, improving transport links or celebrating local heritage, we will help towns to rebuild a sense of pride.

    Levelling Up Minister Jacob Young said:

    Towns have been taken for granted for too long and local leaders need long-term funding that goes directly to community priorities, instead of being caught up in public sector red tape. I am excited to be working with Adam to deliver our Long Term Plan for Towns to put power in the hands of communities so that they can decide on local priorities and what’s best their future.

    Adam’s work to date has focused on increasing economic growth and strengthening communities across the UK.

    He has published research on a range of topics including empowering regional mayors, tackling antisocial behaviour and reforming technical education. He was also previously Head of Policy to Andy Street, Mayor of the West Midlands.

    Adam will be undertaking the role on a part-time basis, alongside his position as Deputy Director of Onward.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK confirms full support to 2024 OSCE Chair Malta – UK statement to the OSCE [January 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK confirms full support to 2024 OSCE Chair Malta – UK statement to the OSCE [January 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 25 January 2024.

    Ambassador Neil Holland thanks Malta for stepping into this critical role and reaffirms the UK’s commitment to the OSCE which must continue to hold Russia to account in its war of aggression against Ukraine.

    Minister Borg, on behalf of the UK, I warmly welcome you to the Permanent Council and express our sincere gratitude for the herculean efforts from you and your team, to step in as Chair in Office 2024.  Thank you for outlining your priorities for this year.

    The UK remains a strong and committed participating State of the OSCE.  My Foreign Secretary, Lord Cameron, made this clear at the Ministerial Council in Skopje in December, and has since repeated our commitment.  You can count on the UK as you lead the organisation through what will doubtless be another challenging year.

    We wholeheartedly welcome your continued focus on Ukraine, which must remain at the top of the OSCE agenda until Russia changes its actions, completely withdraws from Ukraine and faithfully complies with the OSCE’s founding principles and instruments. We find ourselves at 700 days since Russia’s unprovoked, illegal, full-scale invasion of Ukraine, which is causing immense devastation to the people of Ukraine. Our response needs to be one of strength, resilience and unity. Now is the time to double down on our support so Ukraine not only wins the war, but emerges from it as a strong, sovereign, and free country. Russia’s efforts to undermine global stability must and will be stopped in its tracks. If we allow Russia to lay waste to this stability, the risks to the OSCE region, and the world, are grave.  We will continue to support the OSCE structures which contribute towards a peaceful resolution and to bringing accountability for the abuses – across the OSCE’s three dimensions – which the people of Ukraine have endured.

    The UK was mentioned by my esteemed Russian colleague as waging hybrid war against Russia.  This is nonsense. The only war being waged in Ukraine is by Russia against Ukraine. And to categorise UK support for Ukraine to defend itself against a brutal onslaught in this way is another example of the sort of disinformation that we see so often in this forum. The UK is committed to supporting Ukraine to protect itself and will continue to offer unwavering support to Ukraine until it prevails – as it inevitably will.

    The UK also supports efforts to ensure peaceful resolutions to the protracted conflicts in Georgia and Moldova, including through the valuable work of the Mission to Moldova. Field missions strengthen stability and governance in the OSCE region, including the Western Balkans and Central Asia – they are a direct, on the ground demonstration of OSCE principles and commitments.

    The UK strongly welcomes the 7 December Joint Statement from Armenia and Azerbaijan. The intention to normalise relations, and to reach a peace treaty on the basis of respect for the principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity, was a truly historic moment.  We now encourage both parties to seize the opportunity to reach a lasting peace agreement to finally end the decades-long conflict and bring regional stability to the South Caucasus.

    We welcome your desire to ensure a resilient organisation.  You demonstrated this clearly by stepping into the role of CiO.  We know that you are already working on agreement of a unified budget for 2024 and considering how to reach agreement on the leadership of the OSCE. We stand ready to play our part in reaching consensus on these decisions.

    We also welcome your support for the autonomous institutions. UK support for the Third Dimension will remain steadfast.  In this year of elections and against the growth of authoritarianism globally, it is more important than ever to uphold the OSCE’s founding commitments on democracy and human rights. Media freedom underpins our shared, regional security; we look forward to working closely with you on this agenda too.

    We welcome your cross-dimensional approach on other thematic issues – digital security and artificial intelligence, gender and youth, and the security implications of climate change matter to our populations and are closely linked to our OSCE commitments.

    Minister Borg, thank you once again for taking on this responsibility at such short notice. Malta can count on the UK’s strong support.  We wish you and your very capable teams here in Vienna and in Valletta all the best for your time as Chair-in-Office.

    Thank you.