Tag: Press Release

  • PRESS RELEASE : Media freedom in Hong Kong – Media Freedom Coalition statement [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Media freedom in Hong Kong – Media Freedom Coalition statement [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 29 December 2023.

    The Media Freedom Coalition gave a statement on media freedom in Hong Kong on the second anniversary of the closure of Stand News and arrest of its staff.

    On the second anniversary of the closure of Stand News and arrest of its staff, whose prosecution remains ongoing, the members of the Media Freedom Coalition issued the following statement on media freedom in Hong Kong.

    The undersigned members of the Media Freedom Coalition (MFC) remain deeply concerned at the Hong Kong and mainland Chinese authorities’ continued attacks on freedom of the press and their suppression of independent local media in Hong Kong.

    Local media have intensified self-censorship since the imposition of the National Security Law in June 2020. Prosecutions of media workers in connection with sedition legislation have increased. Use of these laws to suppress journalism undermines Hong Kong’s autonomy and the rights and freedoms of the people in Hong Kong as promised in the Sino-British Joint Declaration and guaranteed in the Basic Law.

    The Hong Kong authorities’ prolonged prosecutions of journalists like the Stand News team and publishers such as Apple Daily founder Jimmy Lai creates a chilling effect on others in the press and media. They come against the backdrop of loss of editorial independence, the barring of journalists seeking to cover government press briefings and the removal of material from public broadcasting archives.

    Freedom of the press has been central to Hong Kong’s success for many years. Curtailing the space for free expression of alternative views weakens vital checks and balances on executive power. The free flow and exchange of opinions and information is vital to Hong Kong’s people, business and international reputation.

    We urge the Hong Kong and Chinese authorities to abide by their international human rights commitments and legal obligations and to preserve Hong Kong’s high degree of autonomy and respect for universal rights and freedoms.

    The member countries of the MFC will always defend media freedom and freedom of expression. The member countries of the MFC will continue to stand up for those who are targeted simply for exercising their human rights.

    Signed by:

    Australia, Austria, Canada, Czechia, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, New Zealand, Norway, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, the Netherlands, United Kingdom, United States.

  • PRESS RELEASE : New Year Honours 2024 for defence personnel [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : New Year Honours 2024 for defence personnel [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 29 December 2023.

    Armed Forces personnel and Defence civilians have been granted state honours by His Majesty The King in the annual New Year Honours list.

    Royal Navy Awards

    Promotions in and appointments to the military division of the most honourable order of the Bath

    As Knight Commander

    • Lieutenant General Robert Andrew MAGOWAN, CB, CBE

    As Companions

    • Rear Admiral Andrew BETTON, OBE
    • Rear Admiral James David MORLEY

    Promotions in and appointments to the military division of the most excellent order of the British Empire

    As Commander

    • Commodore Stephen David ROBERTS

    As Officers

    • Commander Trefor Morgan FOX
    • Commander Christopher Robert HOLLINGWORTH
    • Colonel Andrew Glenn David LOCK
    • Commander Lucy Jane OTTLEY
    • Commander Ian Hayden RICHARDSON
    • Commander Jamie Duncan WELLS
    • Captain Allan Thomas YOUP

    As Members

    • Commander Steven ANDREWS
    • Lieutenant Commander Ross Donald BALFOUR
    • Leading Seaman (Diver) Rory Edward CARTWRIGHT-TAYLOR
    • Warrant Officer 1 James Adrian CUTHBERT
    • Warrant Officer 1 Engineering Technician (Communication and Information Systems) Steven GILBERTSON
    • Commander Martin John HOWARD
    • Lieutenant Commander Alexander Rowan MARSH
    • Commander Paul O’DOOLEY, Royal Naval Reserve
    • Chief Petty Officer Engineering Technician (Marine Engineering) Michael John STEPHENS
    • Lieutenant Sam David THOMPSON
    • Commander Roger Simon WYNESS

    King’s Volunteer Reserves Medal

    • Warrant Officer 2 Michael RUDALL, Royal Marines Reserve

    Army Awards

    Promotions in and appointments to the military division of the most honourable order of the Bath

    As Dame Commander

    • Lieutenant General Sharon Patricia Moffat NESMITH

    As Companions

    • Major General Kevin Mark COPSEY
    • Major General John Robert MEAD

    Promotions in and appointments to the military division of the most excellent order of the British Empire

    As Commanders

    • Brigadier Vivienne Wendy BUCK
    • Major General Julian Nicholas Edward BUCZACKI
    • Brigadier Matthew Timothy CANSDALE, MBE
    • Major General Darren Howard CROOK
    • Colonel Lucy Margaret GILES
    • Colonel Michael Robert SMITH

    As Officers

    • Lieutenant Colonel Nicholas Paul ANDREW, Royal Regiment of Artillery
    • Lieutenant Colonel Tracy-Louise APPLEYARD, Royal Army Medical Corps
    • Colonel Edward Hugh James CARTER
    • Colonel Nigel Offley CREWE-READ, MBE
    • Lieutenant Colonel Ewan Christian Noble HARRIS, The Royal Welsh
    • Lieutenant Colonel Timothy Matthew HOLMES, Corps of Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers
    • Colonel Matthew Gordon Timothy LEWIS
    • Lieutenant Colonel (now Acting Colonel) John Andrew LYONS, Royal Corps of Signals
    • Lieutenant Colonel Craig David POPE, Royal Army Medical Corps
    • Colonel Thomas WOOLLEY
    • Colonel Nicholas George Charles YARDLEY

    As Members

    • Major John Edward BAILEFF, Royal Regiment of Artillery
    • Major Allan Paul BEARD, Intelligence Corps
    • Lieutenant Colonel John George BRADBURY, Corps of Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers, Army Reserve
    • Major (now Acting Lieutenant Colonel) Keith Michael Timothy BROOKS, VR, Royal Regiment of Artillery, Army Reserve
    • Captain Barry Lee BYRON, VR, General Service Corps, Army Reserve
    • Captain Giles Alexander Leighton CLARKE, The Royal Logistic Corps
    • Major Lisa Jane CLARKE, Adjutant General’s Corps (Staff and Personnel Support Branch)
    • Major James Philip DOTT, The Parachute Regiment
    • Major Brian James DUPREE, Royal Army Physical Training Corps, Army Reserve
    • Major Robert George FELLOWS, The Rifles
    • Major Toby Christian FOSTER, The Rifles
    • Lieutenant Colonel Christopher Simon GARRARD, Corps of Royal Engineers
    • Major Alex Jonathon GLYNN, Royal Regiment of Artillery
    • Major Jason Arthur Evan GROVES, The Royal Welsh
    • Major Kamal GURUNG, The Queen’s Gurkha Signals
    • Major Alexander Roy HAMILTON, VR, Corps of Royal Engineers, Army Reserve
    • Major Peter Anthony HARRISON, VR, The Royal Logistic Corps, Army Reserve
    • Major Steven Ross Duncan MAGUIRE, The Royal Irish Regiment
    • Bombardier (now Acting Sergeant) Alicia Rhiannon MARTIN, Royal Regiment of Artillery
    • Major Neil Alexander McCLELLAND, Scots Guards
    • Major Christopher James Patrick MURPHY, The Blues and Royals (Royal Horse Guards and 1st Dragoons
    • Corporal Tonderai NDLELA, Adjutant General’s Corps (Staff and Personnel Support Branch)
    • Lieutenant Colonel Christopher David NEWTON, Royal Regiment of Artillery
    • Private Ernest Chinazor OKENYI, The Royal Logistic Corps
    • Major Stacy Leanne OLIVER, Royal Army Medical Corps
    • Captain Pierre Andrew OZANNE, The Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment/The Ranger Regiment
    • Sergeant Daniel Adam POWDERHAM-BISSELL, Intelligence Corps
    • Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Sambrooke PROCTOR, Corps of Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers
    • Staff Sergeant Matthew Francis ROBINSON, Corps of Royal Engineers, Army Reserve
    • Major Charles Karu SINGLETON, The Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment
    • Staff Sergeant Charlotte Louise SPENCE, Royal Army Physical Training Corps
    • Major Jonathan Grant STUDWELL, Intelligence Corps
    • Major Thomas Daniel SWEENEY, Army Air Corps
    • Sergeant Edward William SWINDELL, VR, Corps of Royal Engineers, Army Reserve
    • Major Francesca Louise SYKES, Royal Regiment of Artillery
    • Lieutenant Colonel Andrew James TEETON, Corps of Royal Engineers
    • Major (now Acting Lieutenant Colonel) James VINEY, Corps of Royal Engineers
    • Captain (now Acting Major) David Edward WILLIAMS, Corps of Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers

    Royal Red Cross

    As an Ordinary Associate of the Royal Red Cross, Second Class

    • Staff Sergeant Natalie Dawn DAVIES, Queen Alexandra’s Royal Army Nursing Corps
    • Major Adam Gordon HUGHES, Queen Alexandra’s Royal Army Nursing Corps
    • Major Jennifer Elizabeth JACKSON, TD, VR, Queen Alexandra’s Royal Army Nursing Corps, Army Reserve

    King’s Volunteer Reserves Medal

    • Captain Carl GOYMER, VR, General List, Army Reserve
    • Major Adrian Thomas HUNT, DL, VR, Corps of Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers, Army Reserve
    • Warrant Officer Class 1 Shane Julian MARRIOTT, VR, Army Air Corps, Army Reserve
    • Warrant Officer Class 2 Denis McKEE, VR, The Royal Irish Regiment, Army Reserve
    • Major Dawn Marie SAUNDERS, VR, Royal Corps of Signals, Army Reserve

    Royal Air Force Awards

    Promotions in and appointments to the military division of the most honourable order of the Bath

    As Companions

    • Air Vice-Marshal Nigel James COLMAN, OBE
    • Air Marshal Ian David GALE, MBE

    Promotions in and appointments to the military division of the most excellent order of the British Empire

    As Commanders

    • Air Commodore Catherine Clare COTON
    • Air Commodore Jonathan MORETON
    • Air Commodore Gerard Alan OPIE

    As Officers

    • Wing Commander Erica Jane FERGUSON
    • Wing Commander Matthew Elfed LEWIS
    • Wing Commander Stephen MCCLEERY
    • Wing Commander Alison MORTON
    • Air Commodore Patrick James SHEA-SIMONDS
    • Group Captain Paul Andrew WEAVER SMITH
    • Wing Commander Christopher Andrew WRIGHT, MBE

    As Members

    • Master Aircrew Oliver Martin DEWEY
    • Sergeant (now Acting Flight Sergeant) George Joseph DOWNEY
    • Wing Commander Sam HALEY
    • Squadron Leader James Duncan HEMINGFIELD
    • Sergeant Martin John HENDERSON
    • Squadron Leader Sharon INGLE
    • Flight Sergeant (now Acting Warrant Officer) Stewart Marcus JACKSON
    • Flight Sergeant Philip KIPLING
    • Squadron Leader Kevin Charles William MARCH
    • Squadron Leader Christopher Scott MIDDLETON
    • Squadron Leader Mark SHIPLEY
    • Warrant Officer Garry John STANTON
    • Flying Officer (now Acting Wing Commander) Robert Charles TIMOTHY

    King’s Volunteer Reserves Medal

    • Warrant Officer Michael Antony KENNEDY
    • Squadron Leader Jill PRITCHARD
    • Sergeant Joyce Mitchell SOUTAR
    • Warrant Officer Stephen David THOMPSON

    Civilians in Defence

    Civilians in defence have also been granted state honours by His Majesty The King either for their work in the MOD or in other aspects of Defence. These are listed in the New Year Honours page by the Cabinet Office.

  • PRESS RELEASE : The UK bolsters Ukraine’s air defence after Putin’s latest air strikes [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : The UK bolsters Ukraine’s air defence after Putin’s latest air strikes [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 29 December 2023.

    Defence Secretary announces that hundreds of British-made air defence missiles are being shipped to Ukraine to protect civilians and infrastructure from drones and bombing.

    Delivery of a new package of sophisticated air defence missiles for Ukraine has commenced, rounding off a landmark year for the UK’s support for Ukraine – having been the first country to provide modern Western tanks, as well as long-range precision strike capability. The delivery comes as Russia continues its assault on Ukraine, with hundreds of drones and missiles believed to have been launched overnight on cities including Kyiv, Lviv and Odesa.

    The package of around 200 air defence missiles will re-supply UK-developed air defence systems provided to Ukraine in late 2022, topping up Ukraine’s crucial air defence capability to protect their citizens, front line, and critical national infrastructure from Russian bombing and one-way attack drones.

    The new package of support comes amid the most significant year for the UK’s military aid to Ukraine so far. Following announcements by the Prime Minister at the start of the year, the UK has now supplied a squadron of battle-ready Challenger 2 tanks, three batteries of self-propelled AS90 guns, hundreds of armoured and protected vehicles, as well as long-range precision strike capability in the form of Storm Shadow cruise missiles and long-range attack drones.

    Defence Secretary, Grant Shapps said:

    Putin’s latest wave of murderous airstrikes are a desperate and futile attempt to regain momentum after the catastrophic loss of hundreds of thousands of conscripts and ahead of the humiliation of his three-day war entering a third calendar year.

    We continue to stand by Ukraine’s defence, which is why today we are sending hundreds of air defence missiles to restock British gifted air defence systems capable of striking down Russian drones and missiles with incredible accuracy.

    Putin is testing Ukraine’s defences and the West’s resolve, hoping that he can clutch victory from the jaws of defeat. But he is wrong. Ukraine’s degradation of the Russian Black Sea fleet has proven it is still in this fight to win. And today’s air defence package sends an undeniable message, in the face of Russian barbarity that the UK remains absolutely committed to supporting Ukraine.

    Now is the time for the free world to come together and redouble our efforts to get Ukraine what they need to win.

    These air defence missiles (Advanced Short Range Air-to-Air Missiles – ASRAAM) are manufactured in the UK by defence contractor MBDA and are designed to be launched from aircraft including the UK’s Typhoon and F-35 fighter jets. In summer 2022, a joint MoD-MBDA team developed air defence systems to fire ASRAAM from the ground for the first time. Within four months of initiating the surface launched ASRAAM project, these air defence systems were developed, manufactured, trialled and Ukrainian crews trained on their usage, on UK soil, before being transferred into Ukrainian hands.

    The surface launched ASRAAM project has demonstrated the best of British engineering ingenuity and the agility of MOD and British industry to rapidly deliver very effective yet low-cost solutions to the frontline to meet urgent requirements. The systems have proven highly effective – with a successful hit rate reported as high as 90% against some Russian air targets. Ukrainian operators have become adapt at their usage and have asked for more missiles to protect their country.

    Further to the thousands of rounds of ammunition and anti-tank missiles provided to Ukraine by the UK, November marked 30,000 recruits having passed through Operation Interflex – the programme of training delivered to Ukrainian recruits on UK soil.

    Including specialised training delivered by the UK to the Armed Forces of Ukraine, such as training of Ukrainian marines, explosive ordnance disposal experts, and combat air pilots, the UK has now trained more than 53,000 Ukrainians since Putin first ordered the invasion of Crimea in 2014. The Defence Secretary previously announced an ambition to train an additional 10,000 recruits in the first half of 2024.

    UK military support to Ukraine has seen a total commitment of £4.6bn, with the £2.3bn set aside for FY23/24 covering up until the end of the financial year. The Prime Minister has expressed his intent to continue support for Ukraine in 2024.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Statement on Iranian nuclear steps reported by the IAEA [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Statement on Iranian nuclear steps reported by the IAEA [December 2023]

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

    Statement by the spokespersons of France, Germany, the United Kingdom and the United States on the latest Iranian nuclear steps reported by the IAEA.

    The 26 December 2023 report by the IAEA highlights that Iran has increased its rate of production of uranium enriched up to 60% at Natanz and Fordow to levels observed between January and June 2023. These findings represent a backwards step by Iran and will result in Iran tripling its monthly production rate of uranium enriched up to 60%.

    We condemn this action, which adds to the unabated escalation of Iran’s nuclear programme. The production of high-enriched uranium by Iran has no credible civilian justification and the reported production at the Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant and the Pilot Fuel Enrichment Plant further carries significant proliferation-related risks. We also take note of Iran’s decision to revert to the same cascade configuration as the one discovered by the IAEA in Fordow earlier this year. Iran’s delay in declaring this change in January 2023 cast serious doubts on Iran’s willingness to cooperate with the IAEA in full transparency.

    These decisions demonstrate Iran’s lack of good will towards de-escalation and represent reckless behaviour in a tense regional context.

    We urge Iran to immediately reverse these steps and de-escalate its nuclear programme. Iran must fully cooperate with the IAEA to enable it to provide assurances that its nuclear programme is exclusively peaceful, and to re-designate the inspectors suspended in September 2023.

    We remain committed to a diplomatic solution and reaffirm our determination that Iran must never develop a nuclear weapon.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK takes lead of NATO Rapid Response Force [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK takes lead of NATO Rapid Response Force [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 28 December 2023.

    UK forces are taking lead of NATO’s rapid response force on 1 January 2024, placing thousands of soldiers on standby and ready to deploy within days.

    NATO’s Very High Readiness Joint Task Force (VJTF) was created after Russia’s illegal annexation of Crimea in 2014 and deployed for the first time for the collective defence of the Alliance after Russia’s full-fledged invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

    Taking leadership of the VJTF will see the UK provide the majority of forces in the task force. The United Kingdom’s Allied Rapid Reaction Corps will serve as the land component command.

    The leadership position is rotated annually among NATO members, and the UK now takes over from Germany, which led the force in 2023. The UK previously led the task force in 2017.

    Defence Secretary Grant Shapps said:

    The UK is at the heart of NATO. By heading up NATO’s Very High Readiness Joint Task Force in 2024, we are taking another leading position in the Alliance, sending a clear message that Britain is stepping up to our global defence commitments as NATO enters its 75th year.

    The UK’s Armed Forces stand ready, at a moment’s notice, to defend our Allies and protect the British national interest.

    The world is a more dangerous and contested place than it has been for decades and we need NATO more than ever. The UK and its allies are committed to supporting NATO and what it stands for.

    The VJTF is the highest-readiness element of NATO’s larger Response Force (NRF), which also includes air, maritime and special operations forces. In 2024, VJTF land forces will comprise some 6,000 troops, with the UK’s 7th Light Mechanised Brigade Combat Team – the ‘Desert Rats’ – at its core.

    This is the same force that led the response during the activation of NATO’s Strategic Reserve Force in Kosovo last year. The brigade consists of a light cavalry regiment, and four light-mechanised infantry battalions with enabling artillery, engineering, logistics, and medical regiments. Major units include the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards, the 4th battalion The Royal Regiment of Scotland, and the 2nd battalion the Royal Anglian Regiment.

    The MOD’s 2023 Integrated Review Refresh was clear that NATO will remain the cornerstone of UK defence and security. The UK remains committed to offering the full spectrum of defence capabilities to the Alliance, and the past year has underlined the continued importance of the Alliance’s role in deterrence and defence.

    Our existing commitments to NATO include UK leadership of the enhanced Forward Presence (eFP) mission in Estonia, with a brigade of troops held at high readiness in the UK to reinforce Estonia and the wider Baltic at a time of crisis.

    Around 1,000 UK troops are persistently deployed to Estonia as part of the eFP mission – known as Operation Cabrit. This year, over 1,500 UK troops participated in Exercise Spring Storm in Estonia, the first time the UK conducted a brigade-sized deployment as part of Op Cabrit.

    The UK also provides a Reconnaissance Squadron to a US-led NATO battlegroup in Poland, as well as a Ground-Based Air Defence system (Sky Sabre) to help protect Polish airspace.

    In 2024, nine NATO Allies – UK, Spain, Poland, Hungary, Turkey, Latvia, North Macedonia, Romania and Albania – will contribute to the NATO Response Force. The Alliance will transition the NATO Response Force into the new Allied Reaction Force in mid-2024.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Government reforms set to spark greater reuse and recycling of electrical goods [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Government reforms set to spark greater reuse and recycling of electrical goods [December 2023]

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

    Government will make it easier for people and businesses to reuse and recycle their old electrical goods.

    The Government is set to make it easier for households to recycle electrical cords, devices and white goods under new UK-wide plans announced today (28 December).

    Shocking statistics show an estimated 155,000 tonnes of smaller household electricals such as cables, toasters, kettles and power tools are wrongly thrown in the bin each year. UK homes are thought to hoard a further 527 million unwanted electrical items containing valuable materials such as gold, silver and platinum.

    The waste generated during the festive period demonstrates the scale of the problem: 500 tonnes of Christmas lights are discarded every year in the UK.

    To power the transition to a circular economy, government proposals unveiled today will change how we all dispose of electrical equipment, both large and small, ensuring retailers can turn old goods into new wares.

    The move builds on the major steps already taken by the Government this year to clamp down on plastic pollution and clean up our streets.

    A range of measures are proposed within the joint UK Government, Scottish Government, Welsh Government and Northern Ireland Executive consultation for introduction from 2026, including:

    • UK-wide collections of waste electricals directly from households – saving the public from having to trek to distant electrical disposal points. The collections would be financed by producers of electrical items, not the taxpayer, and not necessarily require any further bins.
    • Large retailers rolling out collection drop points for electrical items in-store, free of charge, without the need to buy a replacement product.
    • Retailers and online sellers taking on responsibility for collecting unwanted or broken large electrical items such as fridges or cookers when delivering a replacement.

    The proposals will mean consumers will be able to recycle their goods during their weekly shop or without even leaving the house.

    The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs is set to work closely with manufacturers, major retailers and small and medium enterprises throughout the consultation period to ensure the most efficient and accessible options become a reality.

    Recycling Minister Robbie Moore said:

    Every year millions of household electricals across the UK end up in the bin rather than being correctly recycled or reused. This is a sheer waste of our natural resources and has to stop.

    We all have a drawer of old tech somewhere that we don’t know what to do with and our proposals will ensure these gadgets are easy to dispose of without the need for a trip to your local tip. Our plans will also drive the move to a more circular economy and create new jobs by making all recycling simpler.

    The changes proposed also ensure suppliers of vapes properly finance the cost of their separate collection and treatment when the items become waste.

    Nearly 5 million vapes are now thrown away every week, the equivalent to eight per second and almost four times higher even than last year. Industry estimates the potential yearly cost of collecting and recycling vapes, which have been incorrectly disposed of, at £200 million.

    These measures build on the Prime Minister’s proposals to restrict the sale of disposable vapes, which is part of a separate consultation to create the first smokefree generation and crack down on youth vaping. These products are not only attractive to children but also incredibly harmful to the environment.

    Elsewhere, the consultation proposes extending obligations to contribute to the collection of waste electricals and the financing of their recycling and preparation for reuse to online marketplaces such as Amazon. This would ensure that major international suppliers have to comply with the regulations as well – not just British businesses.

    A recent study on public attitudes and behaviours found that around 86% of people in the UK think it is worth recycling and taking the time to do it properly. It also showed many are unaware of or have difficulty accessing recycling points for waste electricals.

    Around three-quarters of UK adults say they would recycle their electricals at their local supermarket, electrical retailer or charity retailer if it was available to them. More than 77% of householders would view a retailer as more environmentally responsible if they knew they offered an electrical recycling service.

    As such, the Government has today launched a 10-week consultation on the proposed improvements to the industry-funded scheme for waste electricals, as committed to in the Government’s Environmental Improvement Plan earlier this year.

    Increasing the collection and recycling of waste electricals has the potential to drive greater investment in the UK’s treatment and re-use sector, helping to create British jobs and deliver on the Prime Minister’s priority of growing the economy.

    Rob Sant, Managing Director of AO.com’s electrical recycling operations, said:

    We’re the only UK electricals retailer with its own fridge recycling plant, having invested over £20m in our mission to make new appliances out of old ones through our facilities. We recycle a fifth of all the fridges that are thrown away each year and, since we opened it in 2017, we’ve recycled or reused over seven million large appliances.

    Being both a retailer and a recycler gives us a unique perspective to input to this consultation on the practicalities for our industry, driving higher standards and making it easier for customers to recycle more electrical waste.

    Jacob Hayler, Executive Director of the Environmental Services Association, said:

    Far too many electronic devices currently end up in the bin, so making it simpler and more convenient for householders to recycle waste electricals at home will undoubtedly play a key role in helping our sector return the valuable and rare materials in these devices back to the circular economy.

    On behalf of those operating recycling centres and kerbside collection services, we welcome the opportunity to contribute through consultation and help create an effective system that delivers on its intended outcomes and works, not just for householders, but for obligated producers and retailers too.

    Waste electricals and particularly vapes increasingly contain powerful batteries and are now responsible for hundreds of serious fires every year when not recycled responsibly, so we hope that offering convenient and widespread household collection services for these devices will also help reverse the growing trend of battery fires blighting the sector.

    The proposed reforms for waste electricals build on the Government’s wider efforts to increase recycling and reduce waste. New restrictions on single-use plastic plates, trays, bowls, cutlery, balloon sticks, expanded and extruded polystyrene food and drinks containers came into force on 1 October to help reduce plastic pollution and keep streets clean.

    The Government is also moving forward with the implementation of our deposit return scheme for drinks containers and its extended producer responsibility scheme for packaging to boost recycling and clamp down on plastic pollution and litter.

    A ban on microbeads in rinse-off personal care products has already been introduced alongside restrictions on the supply of single-use plastic items like straws, drink stirrers and cotton buds and last year’s world-leading Plastic Packaging Tax. Meanwhile, the single-use plastic carrier bag charge has successfully cut sales by more than 97% in the main supermarkets.

    We are taking action to conserve our finite resources, establish a more circular economy and protect the environment and human health from the negative impacts of waste.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Smokers encouraged to quit this new year for their health [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Smokers encouraged to quit this new year for their health [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department of Health and Social Care on 28 December 2023.

    The NHS is launching a brand new smokefree campaign to encourage all 5.3 million smokers in England to make a quit attempt this January.

    • Former England goalkeeper and ex-smoker David James urges parents to quit for their kids’ sake in poignant video campaign discussing own struggles to kick the habit
    • Research shows teens more than 3 times as likely to smoke if their parents, caregivers or friends do
    • Comes as NHS Smokefree campaign encourages 5.3 million smokers in England to make a quit attempt this January to improve health and reduce likelihood of young people starting
    • Major new survey shows three-quarters of people in England back government’s historic plans to create the first smokefree generation – regardless of age or region
    • First 259,000 vapes to be provided to local authorities nationwide to support smokers to quit under world-first Swap to Stop scheme

    In a hard-hitting campaign film released today, former England goalkeeper and ex-smoker David James joins a number of other ex-smokers to discuss the influence their parents’ smoking had on them taking up the habit themselves and how being around children was their motivation to quit.

    It comes as the NHS launches a brand new smokefree campaign to encourage all 5.3 million smokers in England to make a quit attempt this January – not only for their health, but also to help ensure young people are not being influenced to start smoking.

    Research lays bare the stark reality – teens are more than 3 times as likely to smoke if their parents, caregivers or friends do. In a new, poignant film released today, the former England goalkeeper discusses how his family members and friends smoked around him when he was a youngster, which led to him taking up the habit. In the film, he describes how smoking impacted his performance on the football world stage.

    The UK is now in the lead to be the first country in the world to create a smokefree generation by phasing out the sale of tobacco, and is set to introduce a new law to stop children who turned 14 in 2023 – or are younger – from ever legally being sold tobacco in England.

    Three-quarters (76%) of people in England support the principle of creating a smokefree generation a YouGov survey – commissioned by campaign group Action on Smoking and Health (ASH) – has found, with only 9% opposing. Support for creating a smokefree generation is similar regardless of age or region.

    Former England goalkeeper, David James, said:

    I smoked for about 15 years and at the time, it was normal. My mum smoked, my friends smoked, it was around me. It didn’t take long for me to be hooked.

    Looking back, it had a huge impact on my health and performance at the time, I wish I never started.

    My health, my children and my fans were huge motivators for me to quit – I didn’t want younger people to see me smoking and think it was okay.

    David James is joined by a number of other ex-smokers in the film to discuss the influence their parents’ smoking had on them taking up the habit themselves.

    They are accompanied by Nick Hopkinson, Professor of Respiratory Medicine at Imperial College London, who was involved with the UK Millennium Cohort Study research, and TV doctor, Dr Sarah Jarvis, who talks through the wider impact of generational smoking.

    Chief Medical Officer for England, Professor Sir Chris Whitty, said:

    Smoking causes a range of diseases that affect people throughout their lives.

    Stopping people becoming addicted to smoking and helping those who have been addicted to quit are 2 of the most important measures we can take to improve health.

    Quitting will improve your health whatever your age and no matter how long you have smoked, it’s never too late to stop.

    The government continues to go further and faster to support people to quit smoking. Under the world-first Swap to Stop scheme, the government has so far received requests from local authorities nationwide for an unprecedented 259,000 vapes.

    Vaping is rightly used by adults as a tool to quit smoking, but the health advice is clear: if you don’t smoke, don’t vape – and children should never vape.

    As part of the scheme, almost 1 in 5 of all smokers in England will be provided with a vape starter kit alongside behavioural support to help them quit the habit. This is part of a series of new measures to help the government meet its ambition of making England smokefree.

    Public Health Minister, Andrea Leadsom, said:

    Smoking is the biggest preventable killer in the UK and places a huge burden on our NHS.

    Cigarettes are responsible for 64,000 deaths a year in England alone – no other consumer product kills up to two-thirds of its users.

    That’s why we need to act now to prevent our children from ever lighting one. Our historic Tobacco and Vapes Bill will protect the next generation from the harms of smoking and risk of addiction.

    Smoking is still the single largest preventable cause of death in England. Almost every minute of every day someone is admitted to hospital with a smoking-related disease.

    Smoking costs the economy and wider society £17 billion a year. This includes an annual £14 billion loss to productivity, through smoking-related lost earnings, unemployment and early death, as well as costs to the NHS and social care of £3 billion. This is equivalent to the annual salaries of over half a million nurses, 390,000 GPs, 400,000 police officers, or 400 million GP appointments.

    Reducing the prevalence of smoking will reduce those costs, lower pressure on the NHS and help the economy become more productive.

    Professor of Respiratory Medicine at Imperial College London, Nick Hopkinson, said:

    We know that most people who smoke start as teenagers, and taking up smoking at a young age is linked to a greater risk of health problems later in life.

    Our research shows that the influence of family and friends is a significant driving force in young people taking up cigarettes in the first place, making them more than 3 times as likely to start smoking if their parents, caregivers or friends do.

    We must do what we can now to ensure our children are the first smokefree generation.

    Research suggests that people who start smoking under the age of 18 have higher levels of nicotine dependency and are less likely to quit smoking later in life. Imperial College London’s analysis of UK Millennium Cohort Study data also found that 1 in 10 (10.6%) teenagers were regular smokers at the age of 17 – this equates to approximately 160,000 young people in the UK being regular smokers by the age of 17.

    Currently, 4 in 5 smokers start before the age of 20 and smoking from a younger age is linked to being more likely to smoke in later years. This has a significant lasting impact, as someone who quits before turning 30 could add 10 years to their life.

    Deborah Arnott, chief executive of ASH, said:

    Over three-quarters of the public support the Prime Minister’s ambition to create a smokefree generation.

    Legislation to end cigarette sales to anyone born on or after the 1 January 2009 will be crucial to delivering that ambition. But as role models for their children, parents who smoke can play their part too.

    Stopping smoking will not only improve their health and put money in their pocket, but also significantly increase the chances their children will grow up to be part of the smokefree generation.

    TV doctor, Dr Sarah Jarvis, said:

    Smoking is highly addictive, particularly for our children. We know that most smokers start in their youth and many want to quit – but the addictive nature of cigarettes means they cannot.

    But there’s help available for those looking to stop smoking. The NHS has a range of free support, including local stop smoking services.

    Better Health offers a range of free quitting support, including a local stop smoking services look-up tool, as well as advice on stop smoking aids including information on how vaping can help you quit smoking.

    For free support to quit this January, search ‘Smokefree’.

    YouGov survey information

    The total sample size of the YouGov survey was 3,533 adults. Fieldwork was undertaken between 15 and 17 November 2023. The survey was carried out online by YouGov. The figures have been weighted and are representative of all adults in England (aged 18 and over).

  • PRESS RELEASE : British alcohol and chocolate companies in high spirits after CPTPP sales soar [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : British alcohol and chocolate companies in high spirits after CPTPP sales soar [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Business and Trade on 28 December 2023.

    Exports of British festive treats to CPTPP countries have increased significantly.

    • Sales of British festive treats including chocolate, gin, whisky and sparkling wine to CPTPP countries are up significantly this year
    • Under CPTPP and existing trade deals tariffs on these festive products will be 0%
    • Scotch Whisky to Singapore has increased by 31% and by 43% to Malaysia, while UK sparkling wine exports to Japan have increased by 140%

    UK food and drink exporters are toasting success this Christmas as demand from consumers in CPTPP, the massive trade bloc in the Indo-Pacific the UK signed up to in July, has boomed ahead of the festive season.

    Latest figures show luxury British staples such as Scotch Whisky, chocolate and sparkling wine are being ordered en masse by CPTPP countries including Singapore, Japan, Mexico and Malaysia. Over the past year, UK chocolate exports to Singapore have increased by 220% in current prices to over £26 million while UK sparkling wine exports to Japan have increased by 140% to over £26 million.

    The Indo-Pacific region is set to account for the majority of global growth and around half of the world’s middle-class consumers in the decades to come, presenting huge opportunities for UK businesses. Under CPTPP, which the UK is set to formally join next year, tariffs on 99% of UK goods exports such as chocolate to Mexico and Malaysia will be 0%, helping drive even more export success.

    Scotch Whisky continues to dominate the Singapore market, with over £380 million worth of Scotch Whisky exported from the UK to Singapore over the last year, an increase of 31% (£90 million) in current prices on the previous year. Its huge popularity extends to other markets in CPTPP, with a 43% (£11 million) increase of Scotch Whisky exports to Malaysia over the past year.

    Business and Trade Secretary Kemi Badenoch said:

    This Christmas our fantastic British food and drink producers are already reaping the rewards of the UK’s tilt towards the Indo-Pacific, with high demand in fast-growing economies such as Singapore and Malaysia for our world-renowned festive staples.

    Once we become a fully-fledged CPTPP member, tariffs on more than 99% of UK goods will be set at 0%, ensuring even more people across the globe will be able to celebrate next Christmas with a glass of English sparkling wine or dram of Scotch whisky.”

    Scotch Whisky Association Chief Executive, Mark Kent said:

    Exports of Scotch Whisky to the CPTPP countries have grown significantly in the past decade, collectively reaching more than £1.1bn in 2022.

    The UK’s accession to CPTPP will open up new opportunities for Scotch Whisky and other UK products in key markets in the region, including the phased elimination of Malaysia’s import tariff.

    With the potential for more countries to join CPTPP in the coming years, Scotch Whisky will benefit from further liberalisation in the region.”

    Jonathan Brenton Director of Public Affairs for Pernod Ricard UK, Pernod Ricard Global Travel Retail and Chivas Brothers said:

    We are excited by UK’s entry into the CPTPP. The Pacific rim is already the world’s most economically dynamic region and five CPTPP members are in the top 20 markets for our Scotch whiskies.

    CPTPP will reduce whisky tariffs in Malaysia to zero and will help us leverage the growing middle class and a trend towards premium products and cocktail culture in other Southeast Asian countries like Vietnam.”

    Isle of Harris distillers are one such business who have been leading the charge in not just CPTPP markets but across the world too, so that now even more people can sample their award-winning gin and whisky. Singapore is also a big market for the UK gin industry, with enthusiasm for gin and tonic and the Singapore Sling driving a 56% (£3 million) increase in current prices in UK gin exports to the country over the past year.

    Peter Kwasniewski, International Business Development Manager at Isle of Harris Distillers Ltd. said:

    Exporting is a great way for a business to grow sustainably and at faster rate than just domestically and exporting to CPTPP is becoming an increasingly important part of our business, and we’ve seen an encouraging boost to our sales to member countries over the past year.

    Consumers worldwide are looking at drinking less but higher quality products. There is a clear demand for super premium quality products such as the Harris Gin and The Hearach – Single Malt Whisky we distil, and once Britain becomes a full-member of the trading bloc this should only improve things further with making the products more easily accessible to international consumers .”

    Singapore is not the only country with an increasing taste for British alcohol. For Kent-based Balfour Wines, Japan – which buys more sparkling wine from the UK than any other CPTPP country – is by far their biggest market, totalling 35% of sales. Japanese customers have uncorked more than £26 million worth of sparkling wine from the UK over the past year, up 140% (£15 million) in current prices on the previous year, and this could grow further when we join CPTPP and word of this first-class product spreads.

    Adam Williams, COO and Sales Director of Balfour Wines said:

    As a category, we are at the early stages in our export journey, but it’s clear that Japan is a hugely exciting market for English Wine.

    It is a mature market for premium wine, especially for high-quality sparkling wine, something that English wineries rightly have a worldwide reputation for.

    We’re looking forward to working closely in the market to build awareness of our wine.”

    Hampshire-based chocolate manufacturer Summerdown is another business enjoying new success after taking advantage of the UK’s recent trade deals. Their award-winning peppermint chocolates have hit shelves in Singapore, where the UK exported over £26 million of chocolate over the past year. With its large expat community, Singapore’s demand for British chocolate has reached new heights, sparking a 220% (£18 million) increase in current prices in exports to the country over the past year.

    Chief Mint Officer for Summerdown Jo Colman said:

    At Summerdown, knowing our products are being enjoyed around the world brings us enormous pride. Seeing what we are creating from my family’s farm in Hampshire sold on the shelves of the world’s best food halls from Singapore to Sydney will never not be exciting.

    The support we have received from DBT over the years in these key markets has always been invaluable in enabling us to focus on promoting and extolling the virtues of what makes everything we sell so special – our Black Mitcham peppermint.”

    Analysis reveals estimated £745 million surge for food and drink sector as the UK dismantles trade barriers, propelling British goods to global markets. This includes around £440 million in fresh opportunities for UK alcohol exporters.

    Background

    • All figures in this release are in current prices, and any increases compare the 12 months to October 2023 to the previous 12 months.
    • Data for UK chocolate and sparkling wine exports was sourced from HMRC’s UK Overseas Trade in Goods Statistics, October 2023: https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/uk-overseas-trade-in-goods-statistics-october-2023.
    • Chocolate has been defined in the data as HS6 180620, HS6 180631, HS6 180632, and HS6 180690, sparkling wine has been defined as HS6 220410, Scotch Whisky has been defined as CN8 22083030, 22083041, 22083049, 22083061, 22083069, 22083071, 22083079, and gin has been defined as HS6 220850.
    • All exports figures compare the 12 months to October 2023 to the previous 12 months in current prices.
    • Not all UK exports of food and drink products are produced in the UK. Figures include products that have been re-exported by the UK.
    • The Digital Market Access Service (DMAS) is the internal government database of trade barriers facing UK businesses that enables closer collaboration across government in Whitehall and at overseas Posts to analyse and progress action to try and resolve them where feasible.
    • DMAS is not a comprehensive repository of all market access issues facing UK exporters, and reporting rates vary widely across countries and regions. As such, aggregate figures should be interpreted as an indicative estimate based on a selective sample.
    • Aggregate figures on the total value of barriers resolved are based on DBT analysis of specific market access, using the methodologies set out in the DBT analytical working paper. To calculate the aggregate figures, the mid-point for each valuation range is added to provide a central estimate. Further details on the methodology for the aggregate valuation figures are published in the DBT analytical working paper.
    • All individual barrier valuation figures presented are midpoints of a valuation range, and not an exact point estimate.
  • PRESS RELEASE : UK takes lead of NATO Rapid Response Force [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK takes lead of NATO Rapid Response Force [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 28 December 2023.

    UK forces are taking lead of NATO’s rapid response force on 1 January 2024, placing thousands of soldiers on standby and ready to deploy within days.

    NATO’s Very High Readiness Joint Task Force (VJTF) was created after Russia’s illegal annexation of Crimea in 2014 and deployed for the first time for the collective defence of the Alliance after Russia’s full-fledged invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

    Taking leadership of the VJTF will see the UK provide the majority of forces in the task force. The United Kingdom’s Allied Rapid Reaction Corps will serve as the land component command.

    The leadership position is rotated annually among NATO members, and the UK now takes over from Germany, which led the force in 2023. The UK previously led the task force in 2017.

    Defence Secretary Grant Shapps said:

    The UK is at the heart of NATO. By heading up NATO’s Very High Readiness Joint Task Force in 2024, we are taking another leading position in the Alliance, sending a clear message that Britain is stepping up to our global defence commitments as NATO enters its 75th year.

    The UK’s Armed Forces stand ready, at a moment’s notice, to defend our Allies and protect the British national interest.

    The world is a more dangerous and contested place than it has been for decades and we need NATO more than ever. The UK and its allies are committed to supporting NATO and what it stands for.

    The VJTF is the highest-readiness element of NATO’s larger Response Force (NRF), which also includes air, maritime and special operations forces. In 2024, VJTF land forces will comprise some 6,000 troops, with the UK’s 7th Light Mechanised Brigade Combat Team – the ‘Desert Rats’ – at its core.

    This is the same force that led the response during the activation of NATO’s Strategic Reserve Force in Kosovo last year. The brigade consists of a light cavalry regiment, and four light-mechanised infantry battalions with enabling artillery, engineering, logistics, and medical regiments. Major units include the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards, the 4th battalion The Royal Regiment of Scotland, and the 2nd battalion the Royal Anglian Regiment.

    The MOD’s 2023 Integrated Review Refresh was clear that NATO will remain the cornerstone of UK defence and security. The UK remains committed to offering the full spectrum of defence capabilities to the Alliance, and the past year has underlined the continued importance of the Alliance’s role in deterrence and defence.

    Our existing commitments to NATO include UK leadership of the enhanced Forward Presence (eFP) mission in Estonia, with a brigade of troops held at high readiness in the UK to reinforce Estonia and the wider Baltic at a time of crisis.

    Around 1,000 UK troops are persistently deployed to Estonia as part of the eFP mission – known as Operation Cabrit. This year, over 1,500 UK troops participated in Exercise Spring Storm in Estonia, the first time the UK conducted a brigade-sized deployment as part of Op Cabrit.

    The UK also provides a Reconnaissance Squadron to a US-led NATO battlegroup in Poland, as well as a Ground-Based Air Defence system (Sky Sabre) to help protect Polish airspace.

    In 2024, nine NATO Allies – UK, Spain, Poland, Hungary, Turkey, Latvia, North Macedonia, Romania and Albania – will contribute to the NATO Response Force. The Alliance will transition the NATO Response Force into the new Allied Reaction Force in mid-2024.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Smokers encouraged to quit this new year for their health [December 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Smokers encouraged to quit this new year for their health [December 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department of Health and Social Care on 28 December 2023.

    The NHS is launching a brand new smokefree campaign to encourage all 5.3 million smokers in England to make a quit attempt this January.

    • Former England goalkeeper and ex-smoker David James urges parents to quit for their kids’ sake in poignant video campaign discussing own struggles to kick the habit
    • Research shows teens more than three times as likely to smoke if their parents, caregivers or friends do
    • Comes as NHS Smokefree campaign encourages 5.3 million smokers in England to make a quit attempt this January to improve health and reduce likelihood of young people starting
    • Major new survey shows three quarters of people in England back government’s historic plans to create the first smokefree generation – regardless of age or region
    • First 259,000 vapes to be provided to authorities nationwide to support smokers to quit under world-first Swap to Stop scheme

    In a hard-hitting campaign film released today, former England goalkeeper and ex-smoker David James joins a number of other ex-smokers to discuss the influence their parents’ smoking had on them taking up the habit themselves, and how being around children was their motivation to quit.

    It comes as the NHS launches a brand new smokefree campaign to encourage all 5.3 million smokers in England to make a quit attempt this January – not only for their health, but also to help ensure young people are not being influenced to start smoking.

    Research lays bare the stark reality – teens are more than three times as likely to smoke if their parents, caregivers, or friends do. In a new, poignant film released today, the former England goalkeeper discusses how his family members and friends smoked around him when he was a youngster, which led to him taking up the habit. In the film, he describes how smoking impacted his performance on the football world stage.

    The UK is now in the lead to be the first country in the world to create a smokefree generation by phasing out the sale of tobacco, and is set to introduce a new law to stop children who turned 14 in 2023 – or are younger – from ever legally being sold tobacco in England.

    Three quarters (76%) of people in England support the principle of creating a smokefree generation a YouGov survey – commissioned by campaign group Action on Smoking and Health –has found with only 9% opposing. Support for creating a smokefree generation is similar regardless of age or region.

    Former England goalkeeper, David James, said:

    I smoked for about 15 years and at the time, it was normal. My mum smoked, my friends smoked, it was around me. It didn’t take long for me to be hooked.

    Looking back, it had a huge impact on my health and performance at the time, I wish I never started.

    My health, my children and my fans were huge motivators for me to quit – I didn’t want younger people to see me smoking and think it was okay.

    David James is joined by a number of other ex-smokers in the film to discuss the influence their parents’ smoking had on them taking up the habit themselves.

    They are accompanied by Nick Hopkinson, Professor of Respiratory Medicine at Imperial College London, who was involved with the UK Millennium Cohort Study research, and TV doctor, Dr Sarah Jarvis, who talks through the wider impact of generational smoking.

    Chief Medical Officer for England, Professor Sir Chris Whitty, said:

    Smoking causes a range of diseases that affect people throughout their lives.

    Stopping people becoming addicted to smoking, and helping those who have been addicted to quit are two of the most important measures we can take to improve health.

    Quitting will improve your health whatever your age and no matter how long you have smoked, it’s never too late to stop.

    The government continues to go further and faster to support people to quit smoking. Under the world-first Swap to Stop scheme, the government has so far received requests from local authorities nationwide for an unprecedented 259,000 vapes.

    Vaping is rightly used by adults as a tool to quit smoking, but the health advice is clear: if you don’t smoke, don’t vape – and children should never vape.

    As part of the scheme, almost 1 in 5 of all smokers in England will be provided with a vape starter kit alongside behavioural support to help them quit the habit. This is part of a series of new measures to help the government meet its ambition of making England smokefree.

    Public Health Minister, Andrea Leadsom, said:

    Smoking is the biggest preventable killer in the UK and places a huge burden on our NHS.

    Cigarettes are responsible for 64,000 deaths a year in England alone – no other consumer product kills up to two-thirds of its users.

    That’s why we need to act now to prevent our children from ever lighting one. Our historic Tobacco and Vapes Bill will protect the next generation from the harms of smoking and risk of addiction.

    Smoking is still the single largest preventable cause of death in England. Almost every minute of every day someone is admitted to hospital with a smoking related disease.

    Smoking costs the economy and wider society £17 billion a year. This includes an annual £14 billion loss to productivity, through smoking related lost earnings, unemployment, and early death, as well as costs to the NHS and social care of £3 billion. This is equivalent to the annual salaries of over half a million nurses, 390,000 GPs, 400,000 police officers, or 400 million GP appointments.

    Reducing the prevalence of smoking will reduce those costs, lower pressure on the NHS, and help the economy become more productive.

    Professor of Respiratory Medicine at Imperial College London, Nick Hopkinson, said:

    We know that most people who smoke start as teenagers, and taking up smoking at a young age is linked to a greater risk of health problems later in life.

    Our research shows that the influence of family and friends is a significant driving force in young people taking up cigarettes in the first place, making them more than three times as likely to start smoking if their parents, caregivers or friends do.

    We must do what we can now to ensure our children are the first smokefree generation.

    Research suggests that people who start smoking under the age of 18 have higher levels of nicotine dependency and are less likely to quit smoking later in life. Imperial College London’s analysis of UK Millennium Cohort Study data also found that 1 in 10 (10.6%) teenagers were regular smokers at the age of 17 – this equates to approximately 160,000 young people in the UK being regular smokers by the age of 17.

    Currently, 4 in 5 smokers start before the age of 20 and smoking from a younger age is linked to being more likely to smoke in later years. This has a significant lasting impact, as someone who quits before turning 30 could add 10 years to their life.

    Deborah Arnott, chief executive of Action on Smoking and Health (ASH) said:

    Over three quarters of the public support the Prime Minister’s ambition to create a smokefree generation.

    Legislation to end cigarette sales to anyone born on or after the 1 January 2009 will be crucial to delivering that ambition. But as role models for their children, parents who smoke can play their part too.

    Stopping smoking will not only improve their health and put money in their pocket, but also significantly increase the chances their children will grow up to be part of the smokefree generation.

    TV doctor, Dr Sarah Jarvis, said:

    Smoking is highly addictive, particularly for our children. We know that most smokers start in their youth and many want to quit – but the addictive nature of cigarettes means they cannot.

    But there’s help available for those looking to stop smoking. The NHS has a range of free support, including local stop smoking services.

    Better Health offers a range of free quitting support, including a local stop smoking services look-up tool, as well as advice on stop smoking aids including information on how vaping can help you quit smoking.

    For free support to quit this January, search ‘Smokefree’.