Tag: Press Release

  • PRESS RELEASE : Joint outcome statement – UK-India round eleven FTA negotiations [July 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Joint outcome statement – UK-India round eleven FTA negotiations [July 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Business and Trade on 24 July 2023.

    Round eleven of negotiations for a free trade agreement between the United Kingdom and the Republic of India.

    On 18 July 2023, the United Kingdom and the Republic of India concluded the eleventh round of talks for a UK-India Free Trade Agreement (FTA).

    As with previous rounds, this was conducted in a hybrid fashion – a number of Indian officials travelled to London for negotiations and others attended virtually.

    On 10-11 July, the Honourable Minister for Commerce and Industry, Government of India, Piyush Goyal, visited the UK as part of the eleventh round of the UK-India FTA negotiations. He met with Rt Hon Kemi Badenoch MP, the Secretary of State for Business and Trade, and Nigel Huddleston MP, the Minister of State for International Trade, where they discussed ways to make progress on the FTA negotiations and wider trade and investment opportunities for the UK and India.

    Shri Sunil Barthwal, Commerce Secretary, Government of India also visited the UK during the round. He met with senior UK trade officials and took stock of the progress made in the eleventh round of negotiations.

    Technical discussions were held across 9 policy areas over 42 separate sessions. They included detailed draft treaty text discussions in these policy areas.

    The twelfth round of negotiations is due to take place in the coming months.

  • PRESS RELEASE : FCDO statement on Cambodian elections [July 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : FCDO statement on Cambodian elections [July 2023]

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

    The FCDO has issued a statement following elections in Cambodia.

    An FCDO spokesperson said:

    The UK is a long-term partner in Cambodia’s prosperity and stability, and believes progress in these areas is best sustained through a democratic political culture that supports open discussion of diverse perspectives.

    Democratic elections depend on credible, open, and fair competition. We regret that these elections were preceded by a narrowing of the political space, including the disqualification of the main opposition Candlelight Party earlier this year, resulting in an election that was neither free nor fair. The UK views this as a missed opportunity to strengthen Cambodia’s democracy.

    The UK remains committed to supporting efforts to enhance democratic processes and civic space in Cambodia, and to supporting the people of Cambodia.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK announces historic boost to seafarers’ rights and welfare [July 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK announces historic boost to seafarers’ rights and welfare [July 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Transport on 24 July 2023.

    UK and French governments agree to join forces to improve conditions for seafarers with the new Seafarers’ Charter.

    • wages and working conditions for thousands of seafarers will be bolstered by launch of historic Charter
    • UK and French governments agree to join forces to improve conditions for seafarers and help grow the economy
    • part of UK’s nine-point plan to support seafarers following P&O Ferries’ disgraceful sackings of nearly 800 staff

    Thousands of seafarers will be guaranteed fair wages, proper rest periods and suitable training thanks to a new Seafarers’ Charter launched by the UK government today (24 July 2023).

    Building on government action already taken, the charter – backed by DFDS Ferries, Condor Ferries, Brittany Ferries and Stena – is part of the government’s wider Nine-point plan to protect seafarers and boost employment protections, ensuring they’re paid and treated fairly – irrespective of flag or nationality.

    This is at the heart of the UK’s response to P&O Ferries’ appalling decision to fire nearly 800 of its staff without consultation or notice last year.

    The UK government’s charter will be launched alongside a similar initiative by the French government during a visit by Maritime Minister Baroness Vere to Paris today to meet her counterpart Minister Berville.

    Maritime Minister Baroness Vere said:

    Fair pay and protection against unlawful discrimination are the basic rights of any employee. Our seafarers deserve nothing less.

    I therefore expect companies across the maritime sector to sign up to this Charter, letting their staff know they’re serious about protecting their rights and welfare.

    Today, in Paris, alongside Minister Berville, we strengthen our commitment to protect those working in the Channel and we’ll continue collaborating with our international partners on this vital issue.

    During the UK-France summit in Paris earlier this year, Transport Secretary Mark Harper met his French counterpart Clément Beaune, with both nations agreeing to continue working together to improve conditions for those working in the Channel.

    The government has already delivered the Seafarers’ Wages Act, a key safeguard to protecting domestic seafarers in the UK. The law will make it illegal to not pay the thousands of seafarers regularly entering the UK at least the equivalent of the UK National Minimum Wage.

    The Seafarers’ Charter requires employers to:

    • pay seafarers for overtime at a rate of a least 1.25 times the basic hourly rate
    • ensure adequate training and development is provided
    • provide employees with a full, indefinite contract
    • allow seafarers to receive social security benefits, including sickness benefits, family benefits, and medical care
    • adopt roster patterns considering fatigue, mental health and safety
    • provide adequate rest periods between shifts and rosters
    • carry out regular drug and alcohol testing

    As well as the Seafarers’ Wages Act and the Charter, strong action has been taken against rogue employers using controversial practices which was revealed in the plans to create a statutory code of practice​.

    The code will make it explicitly clear to employers that they must not use threats of dismissal to pressurise employees into accepting new terms, and they should have honest and open discussions with their employees and representatives.

    John Napton, CEO, Condor Ferries, said:

    Condor Ferries is a proud and responsible employer, dedicated to building a diverse, inclusive and authentic workplace for all staff and crew across our network. We therefore fully support the Seafarers’ Charter being launched by the UK government today.

    Christophe Mathieu, Brittany Ferries CEO, said:

    When it comes to seafarers’ wages and working conditions, we believe that all ferry companies should aim for the highest bar and not participate in a race to the bottom.

    That’s why this charter is such an important step forward for us. We never forget the importance of seafarers and are proud to be part of the fight to protect their rights, on both sides of the Channel. We also intend to shout about this from the rooftops, urging freight and passenger customers to make the right decision when choosing a carrier.

    Gemma Griffin MBE, Vice President and Head of Global Crewing, DFDS, said:

    DFDS welcomes the Seafarers’ Charter and any related legislation that protects the employment rights of seafarers and ensures that there is a level playing field for all operators.  We have been cooperating with the French and UK authorities on the practical application of the charter and the new laws, and are very pleased to see the actions taken by both authorities, so far.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Long-term plan for housing [July 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Long-term plan for housing [July 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities on 24 July 2023.

    The Prime Minister and Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities have set out further plans for regeneration, inner-city densification and housing delivery across England, with transformational plans to supply beautiful, safe, decent homes in places with high-growth potential in partnership with local communities.

    • Today (24 July 2023), as part of a long-term plan for housing, the Prime Minister and Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities have committed to a new era of regeneration, inner-city densification and housing delivery across England, with transformational plans to supply beautiful, safe, decent homes in places with high-growth potential in partnership with local communities.
    • Building on work already underway to meet our commitment in the Levelling Up White Paper to regenerate 20 of our towns and cities, the Levelling Up Secretary has announced the regeneration and renaissance of a further 3 English cities, committing to transformational change in Cambridge, central London and central Leeds.
    • This follows work to level up towns and cities across the country – including in Sheffield and Wolverhampton. The Levelling Up Secretary also outlined plans to continue working closely with local partners in Barrow, to help make Barrow a new powerhouse of the North.
    • £800 million will also be allocated today from the £1.5 billion Brownfield, Infrastructure and Land fund to unlock up to 56,000 new homes on brownfield sites, taking an infrastructure first approach to build up our cities. We are funding Homes England with £550 million, which with income generated will mean a total investment of £1 billion. We are also providing landmark investments of £150 million to Greater Manchester and £100 million to the West Midlands.
    • Additional reforms to the planning system will speed up new developments, put power in the hands of local communities to build their own homes, and unlock planning decisions – with a new fund of £24 million to scale up local planning capacity, and an additional £13.5 million to stand up a new “super-squad” of experts to support large scale development projects.

    Regeneration of 20 places

    Following the commitment in the Levelling Up White Paper to regenerate 20 places, the Levelling Up Secretary and Prime Minister set out further plans today on Cambridge, and inner-city London and central Leeds.

    Proposals will see Cambridge supercharged as Europe’s science capital, addressing constraints that have left the city with some of the most expensive property markets outside London, and companies fighting over extremely limited lab space and commercial property with prices that rival London, Paris and Amsterdam.

    These ambitious plans to support Cambridge include a vision for a new quarter of well-designed, sustainable and beautiful neighbourhoods for people to live in, work and study. A quarter with space for cutting-edge laboratories, commercial developments fully adapted to climate change and that is green, with life science facilities encircled by country parkland and woodland accessible to all who live in Cambridge.

    Any development of this scale will have substantial infrastructure requirements. The government will deliver as much of the infrastructure and affordable housing as possible using land value capture – with the local area benefiting from the significant increase in land values that can occur when agricultural land is permitted for residential and commercial development. Land values will reflect the substantial contributions required to unlock the development (see annex).

    A Cambridge Delivery Group, chaired by Peter Freeman and backed by £5 million, will be established to begin driving forward this project. The Group will work to turn this vision into a reality, taking a lead on identifying the housing, infrastructure, services and green space required. It will also consider options for an appropriate delivery mechanism that will be needed to lead the long-term work on planning, land acquisition and engagement with developers, starting in this Parliament but running through the next few years as development takes shape.

    In the meantime, the Delivery Group will take forward immediate action to address barriers such as water scarcity across the city, including:

    • Convening a Water Scarcity Working Group with the Environment Agency, Ofwat, central and local government and innovators across industries to identify and accelerate plans to address water constraints. The Group will include all relevant partners to understand what it would take to accelerate building the proposed new Fens Reservoir and enabling Cambridge to reach its economic potential.
    • Supporting the council in efforts to make sure new developments proposed as part of the local plan can be as sustainable as possible, including whether new houses in planned developments such as Waterbeach and Hartree can be made more water efficient. To support this, the government is announcing today a £3 million funding pot to help support measures to improve the water efficiency of existing homes and commercial property across Cambridge, to help offset demands created by new developments in the local plan.
    • The government will also take definitive action to unblock development where it has stalled, providing £500,000 of funding to assist with planning capacity. Cambridge City Council, Anglian Water, Land Securities PLC and Homes England will work together to accelerate the relocation of water treatment works in Northeast Cambridge (subject to planning permission), unlocking an entire new City quarter – delivering approaching 6,000 sustainable well-designed homes in thriving neighbourhoods – as well as schools, parks and over 1 million square feet of much needed commercial life science research space.

    In addition to Cambridge, today the government has also announced:

    • A ‘Docklands 2.0’ vision in East London for up to 65,000 homes across multiple sites of significant scale including at Thamesmead, Beckton and Silvertown. Beautiful, well-connected homes and new landscaped parkland will be integral to the vision. We will look at how we can ensure better transport connections from east to west, to ‘crowd in’ local and private investment, and to build the best evidence on how and whether HMG will invest in the future.
    • London will also see the benefits of this government’s decision to allow the Affordable Homes Programme to be directed towards regeneration for the first time – with up to £1 billion available in London alone – as part of a transformative reform that will change how we level up communities across the country. We have also made £1 million available to push forward work with the Mayor to consider how we drive housing delivery in London, including looking at innovative new ways that industrial land can be released for housing.
    • A commitment to work with local partners in central Leeds, to regenerate the city centre and explore how a West Yorkshire mass transit system could open up the city to many more workers across the city’s burgeoning financial, digital and legal sectors. This builds on the £40 million that is already being provided by the government to West Yorkshire Combined Authority to support development of the mass transit system and offer a greener, quicker and more reliable option of travel. The government will accelerate work in the centre of Leeds by identifying the remaining barriers to delivery for key housing growth sites within the city rim, including the South Bank, Innovation Arc, and local and neighbourhood plans, potentially delivering up to 20,000 new homes on these sites over the next decade. The government will also work with local authorities to adapt existing HS2 land safeguarded in Leeds City Centre where appropriate, supporting economic growth and housing delivery. Additional revenue funding will be provided to support capacity and development to deliver these ambitions.
    • Plans to continue working closely with local partners in Barrow-in-Furness, to help make it a new powerhouse of the North – extending beyond its current boundaries with thousands of new homes and space for new businesses to benefit from the scientific and technical expertise already clustered there.
    • We are also investing £800 million from the £1.5 billion Brownfield, Infrastructure and Land fund to unlock up to 56,000 new homes across England, to transform disused site and create vibrant communities for people to live and work, while also protecting our cherished green spaces, including further accelerating activity in areas such as Sheffield. We are funding Homes England with £550 million which, in real terms, will be an investment of up to £1 billion through the reinvestment of receipts back into the fund. As set out previously, we are also providing £250 million to Greater Manchester and West Midlands Combined Authorities.

    Building up and building out across the country

    In addition to targeted action in a few high-potential areas, the government’s plan delivers a package of reforms to unleash building on underused sites in high-demand regions. Densification, done the right way, will transform the opportunities available to people across the country – our inner cities have much lower population densities than comparable Western countries, impacting our productivity. The plan therefore includes:

    • Launching a consultation on new Permitted Development Rights, to provide more certainty over some types of development, and how design codes might apply to certain rights to protect local character and give developers greater confidence. New and amended permitted development rights would make it easier to convert larger department stores, space above shops and office space. The plan also backs rural communities, with changes to support farm diversification and development, to allow businesses to extend and more outdoor markets to be held. The government will consult on further measures in the Autumn on how to better support existing homeowners to extend their homes. The government will continue to ensure that local removal of permitted development rights through Article 4 Directions will only be agreed where there is evidence of wholly unacceptable impacts.
    • Taking steps to unblock the bottlenecks in the planning system that are choking and slowing down development, and stopping growth and investment by:
      • Launching a new £24 million Planning Skills Delivery Fund to clear planning backlogs and get the right skills in place.
      • Establishing a new “super-squad” team of leading planners and other experts charged with working across the planning system to unblock major housing developments, underpinned by £13.5 million in funding. The team will first be deployed in Cambridge to boost our plans in the city, before also looking at sites across our eight Investment Zones in England, to provide high-quality homes to go alongside the high-quality jobs being created there.
      • Increasing the amount developers pay in planning fees, following our recent consultation, to ensure all planning departments are better resourced.

    The government’s commitment to development and regeneration in and around existing town and city centres is also guiding its consideration of responses to the consultation on updating the National Planning Policy Framework. The government wants to make it easier to progress such developments, and to that end is clear that:

    • Development should proceed on sites that are adopted in a local plan with full input from the local community, unless there are strong reasons why it cannot.
    • Local councils should be open and pragmatic in agreeing changes to developments where conditions mean that the original plan may no longer be viable, rather than losing the development wholesale or seeing development mothballed.
    • Better use should be made of small pockets of brownfield land by being more permissive, so more homes can be built more quickly, where and how it makes sense, giving more confidence and certainty to SME builders.

    Later in the year, the government will pass the Levelling Up and Regeneration Bill to put in place our reforms to the planning system that will create more beautiful and sustainable homes in the right places, and publish updates to the National Planning Policy Framework.

    Communities taking back control / building beautiful everywhere

    To deliver housing anywhere, all new homes built will need to be accepted by the community – they will need to be beautiful, well-connected, designed with local people in mind and be accompanied by the right community infrastructure and green space. Communities must have a say in how and where homes are built.

    In this plan, communities will be supported to be at the heart of new development in their areas. This will be achieved by:

    • Establishing the Office for Place in Stoke-on-Trent, a new body to lead a design revolution, ensuring beautiful new homes are built according to a simple design code supported by local people. The Office for Place will support residents to demand what they find beautiful from developers – ensuring every local place is built to reflect the individual local character and beauty of every community across the country. Nicholas Boys Smith has been appointed as the interim chair.
    • Supporting councils to deliver high quality up to date local plans, launching a consultation to seek views on our proposals to simplify the system of developing a new plan. Local plans are the best way to ensure the right homes are built in the right places, so the government will work with councils to reduce the cost and bureaucracy associated with getting an updated plan in place. The government is also clear that local authorities should continue to develop their local plans, ensuring local people get their say.

    Building safely

    In all buildings, the first priority must be keeping people safe. Through the landmark Building Safety Act 2022, the government has overhauled the way we do so with a “golden thread” of accountability and protections for leaseholders from the ruinous costs of fixing the mistakes of others.

    The government will not be complacent in its approach to safety – recognising that, as work progresses to densify our towns and cities, people must be given unimpeachable confidence that new homes are safe and decent to live in. This long-term plan for housing therefore builds on our existing progress by:

    • Confirming the intention to mandate second staircases in new residential buildings above 18m, following confirmation from expert bodies that they support this threshold. This responds to the call from the sector for coherence and certainty. This is a considered and gradual evolution of safety standards, which, when taken with our other fire safety measures and reforms ensures the safety of people in all tall buildings – both new and existing. The government is clear that this new regulation cannot jeopardise the supply of homes by disrupting schemes that have been planned for years. DLUHC will work rapidly with industry and regulators over the summer to design transitional arrangements with the aim of securing the viability of projects which are already underway, avoiding delays where there are other more appropriate mitigations.
    • Opening the Cladding Safety Scheme to all eligible buildings, ensuring that no leaseholder will be out of pocket to fix dangerous cladding in medium or high-rise buildings.

    Annex

    The development of a new quarter in Cambridge will have substantial infrastructure requirements, including water, power, transport, affordable housing, environmental and social infrastructure. Permitting such a development will also result in substantial increases in land values above the existing use value of the land.

    Government viability guidance sets out that when undertaking a viability appraisal, the value allowed for the purchase of land should in general be based on the value of the land in its existing use, plus an appropriate premium for the landowner. The government intends to explore recommendations about what a reasonable premium to agricultural landowners should be.

    Building on this approach, the government intends that a consultation will be undertaken to inform the policy on a reasonable premium for landowners above existing use value, to support the development of plans for the new quarter. To the extent that infrastructure and affordable housing need justifies this position, the government anticipates that policy will be set to capture land value uplift above the premium. This will enable landowners to receive fair compensation for their land while minimising the public sector investment required to bring the development forward.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Reappointments to the Boundary Commission of England and the Boundary Commission of Wales [July 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Reappointments to the Boundary Commission of England and the Boundary Commission of Wales [July 2023]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Justice on 24 July 2023.

    The Lord Chancellor has announced the reappointments of Mrs Justice Jefford to the role of Deputy Chair for the Boundary Commission for Wales and Mr Justice Lane to the role of Deputy Chair for the Boundary Commission for England.

    The Lord Chancellor has announced the reappointments of Mrs Justice Jefford to the role of Deputy Chair for the Boundary Commission for Wales (BCW), and Mr Justice Lane to the role of Deputy Chair for the Boundary Commission for England (BCE).

    Mrs Justice Jefford is reappointed from 23 June 2023 to 4 October 2025. Mr Justice Lane is reappointed from 23 June 2023 to 22 December 2023.

    Appointments and re-appointments are regulated by the Commissioner for Public Appointments, and have been made under Section 3(a) and (c) of Schedule 1 of the Parliamentary Constituencies Act 1986, and are in line with the Governance Code on Public Appointments.

    The Boundary Commission for Wales carries out boundary reviews of parliamentary constituencies in Wales, and submits its recommendations to the government.

    The Boundary Commission for England is required by the Parliamentary Constituencies Act 1986 to review the parliamentary constituencies in England every 5 years.

    Both the BCW and BCE are advisory non-departmental public bodies, sponsored by the Cabinet Office.

    Biographies

    Mrs Justice Jefford

    Mrs Justice Jefford was appointed; a Recorder in 2007; as Queen’s Counsel (now King’s Counsel) in 2008 and; as a Deputy High Court Judge in 2016. She was appointed as a High Court Judge of the Queen’s Bench Division (now the King’s Bench Division), in 2016, and sits in the Technology and Construction Court and the Administrative Court.

    In 2019, she was appointed as the Administrative Court Liaison Judge for the North Eastern Circuit and – in 2020 – as a Presiding Judge of the Wales Circuit. In 2020, she was appointed as the Deputy Chair of the Boundary Commission for Wales.

    Mr Justice Lane

    Mr Justice Lane was appointed: as a fee-paid immigration adjudicator in 1996; a salaried immigration adjudicator, in 2001, and a Vice President of the Immigration Appeal Tribunal in 2003.

    In 2005, he became a senior immigration judge in the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal. In 2010, he became an Upper Tribunal judge. In 2014, he was appointed as President of the General Regulatory Chamber of the First-tier Tribunal.

    In 2016, he was appointed a deputy High Court judge and, in 2017, a High Court judge in the Queen’s Bench Division (now the King’s Bench Division). He was President of the Upper Tribunal Immigration and Asylum Chamber, from 2017- 2022. Mr Justice Lane was appointed, as Deputy Chair of the Boundary Commission for England, in 2020.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Thousands of parents to benefit from more work coach support [July 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Thousands of parents to benefit from more work coach support [July 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Work and Pensions on 24 July 2023.

    From today (24 July 2023), parents of children aged 1 and 2 on Universal Credit will start to benefit from meeting more frequently with work coaches to help them prepare for work.

    • From today, parents of children aged one and two will start to have more face-to-face employment support
    • Extra support builds on efforts to reduce inactivity with a more generous childcare offer through Universal Credit
    • Statistics show that full-time work substantially reduces the chances of poverty and since 2010, the Government has helped 400,000 children out of absolute poverty

    The appointments include exploring steps to improve their skills, identifying support needs, learning about childcare provision, and boosting their confidence.

    The meetings increase the opportunity to engage and encourage claimants to think about a job in the future, consider the steps they can take and secure jobs when their child is older.

    Parents with a one-year-old will start to have a work-focused meeting with their work coach every three months instead of the current every six months. Parents with a two-year-old meanwhile will start meeting with their work coach every month instead of the current every three months.

    Claimants will be told of the change at their next scheduled appointment with their work coach.

    Minister for Employment, Guy Opperman MP, said:

    From today, thousands of parents of young children will start to meet their dedicated work coaches on a more regular basis.

    This extra support will help those on low incomes to think about and prepare for work while their child is young.

    We’ve already taken steps to support families by increasing the amount of help through Universal Credit and providing upfront childcare costs.

    Today’s change is the latest example of how this Government is putting families first.

    Helping parents return to work is part of the Government’s continued efforts to drive down economic inactivity and get Britain working as we grow our economy.

    Today’s announcement builds on support announced in June to boost childcare payments through Universal Credit by 47% and ensures working parents can get upfront childcare costs paid for.

    Parents can now receive up to 85% of childcare costs back before their next month’s bills are due – meaning they should have money to pay one month in advance going forward.

    This is part of the largest expansion in free childcare in history by the Government, worth £6,500 a year for an average working family using 30 hours a week.

    One person to already benefit from the boosted childcare offer is mum of three, Victoria from the South West. Thanks to the increased childcare support via Universal Credit, she was recently able to accept her dream job as a teaching assistant in a special needs school.

    Victoria – who previously worked part-time – was worried that she wouldn’t be able to claim more hours of free childcare, but after contacting her local Jobcentre, she learnt of Universal Credit’s updated assistance.

    She said: “I love my new job and being able to claim 85 per cent of the childcare costs back will make such a difference to my family.”

    In the Autumn, the Department for Work and Pensions will also increase the maximum work-related activity and work availability expected of parents of children aged three to twelve to up to 30 hours. This will be tailored to a parent’s individual circumstances, including the availability of local childcare.

    Today’s change and the change planned for the Autumn are expected to support over 700,000 parents who have the main responsibility of looking after their children.

    Further information

    • In March the Chancellor announced that we are expanding work search requirements for parents of young children and the changes are expected to encourage over 700,000 lead carers of children on Universal Credit to look for work or increase their hours and will receive additional work coach support to do so. The first of the two measures will come into force from today.
    • The change in frequency of appointments for those who look after children aged one and two impacts Universal Credit claimants who have the main caring responsibilities for these children. This could be a parent, grandparent, kinship carer, adoptive parent, or other guardian dependent on their individual family circumstances. As such, DWP refers to them as lead carers to reflect the full range of childcare arrangements. Where there is a lone parent, they will always be listed as the lead carer. For couples on Universal Credit, individuals can identify who is the lead carer.
    • The second measure which comes into force in later in the year will see an increase in the work-related activity hours expected of parents of children aged three to twelve. This means any lead carer who is suitable for having their work-related activity hours increased can be expected to increase their work search and preparation activity and be required to be available for work up to 30 hours. The requirements will be tailored to claimants’ circumstances.
    • Helping parents return to work is part of the Government’s continued efforts to drive down economic inactivity and get Britain working with £3.5 billion already invested to-date.
    • In addition to the DWP’s childcare support via Universal Credit, the hourly rates paid to providers to deliver the Government’s free childcare offer for two-year olds will increase by 30% in September, up to an average rate of £8.
    • And from April 2024, there will be 15 free hours childcare available for working main carers of two-year-olds, followed by 15 free hours from nine months in September 2024, and finally 30 free hours from nine months to the start of school from September 2025.
  • PRESS RELEASE : Prime Minister to build 1 million new homes over this Parliament [July 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Prime Minister to build 1 million new homes over this Parliament [July 2023]

    The press release issued by 10 Downing Street on 24 July 2023.

    The government will meet its manifesto commitment to build 1 million homes over this Parliament, the Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak, has announced.

    Reaching this target would represent another important milestone in the government’s already successful housebuilding strategy. Since 2010, over 2.2 million new homes have been delivered and millions of people have moved into home ownership.

    The pledge comes ahead of a major speech by the Housing and Levelling Up Secretary, Michael Gove, today in which he will set out new measures to unblock the planning system and build more homes in the right places where there is local consent.

    Rather than concreting over the countryside, the government will focus on prioritising building in inner-city areas where demand is highest and growth is being constrained. This includes a new urban quarter in Cambridge which will unlock the city’s full potential as a source of innovation and talent. Working with local leaders and communities in Cambridge, a new quarter will create new beautiful homes, supported by state of the art facilities with cutting-edge laboratories and green spaces.

    Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said:

    Today I can confirm that we will meet our manifesto commitment to build 1 million homes over this Parliament. That’s a beautiful new home for a million individual families in every corner of our country.

    We need to keep going because we want more people to realise the dream of owning their own home.

    We won’t do that by concreting over the countryside – our plan is to build the right homes where there is the most need and where there is local support, in the heart of Britain’s great cities.

    Our reforms today will help make that a reality, by regenerating disused brownfield land, streamlining planning process and helping homeowners to renovate and extend their houses outwards and upwards.

    Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities Michael Gove said:

    Most people agree that we need to build more homes – the question is how we go about it.

    Rather than concreting over the countryside, we have set out a plan today to build the right homes in the right places where there is community support – and we’re putting the resources behind it to help make this vision a reality.

    At the heart of this is making sure that we build beautiful and empower communities to have a say in the development in their area.

    The government will also take steps to unblock the bottlenecks in the planning system that are choking and slowing down development, and stopping growth and investment by:

    • Immediately launching a £24 million Planning Skills Delivery Fund to clear backlogs and get the right skills in place.
    • Setting up a new “super-squad” team of leading planners and other experts charged with working across the planning system to unblock major housing developments. The team will first be deployed in Cambridge to turbocharge our plans in the city.

    Developers will also be asked to contribute more through fees, to help support a higher quality more efficient planning service.

    New flexibilities to convert shops, takeaways and betting shops into homes will help to rejuvenate the high street. Meanwhile, red tape will be cut to enable barn conversions and the repurposing agricultural buildings and disused warehouses.

    New freedoms to extend homes, convert lofts and renovate new buildings will help to convert existing properties into new accommodation. A review into the extension of permitted development rights will make it easier for homeowners to build upwards and outwards – with new extensions and loft conversions – whilst ensuring neighbours’ interests are protected.

    Community support is vital in making these plans a success and the Housing Secretary has been clear any developments must be beautiful, come with the right infrastructure and designed with locals in mind. That is why the Housing Secretary is also today announcing:

    • Office for Place – a new body will be launched today to lead a design revolution and ensure local people have a say in how housing is designed.
    • consultation on reforming local plans, to make them simpler, shorter and more visual, showing clearly what is planned in local areas so communities can engage.

    Stakeholder comments:

    Sir Mene Pangalos, AstraZeneca:

    This announcement offers the potential to help Cambridge continue to develop as a leading global centre for life sciences and healthcare, enhance its infrastructure, and deliver further growth locally and nationally.

    Caspar Herzberg CEO, AVEVA:

    We welcome this investment in Cambridge’s future as a global science and technology hub. From AVEVA’s origins as a research joint-venture between the government and University of Cambridge, the city remains a major R&D centre for our global software business.  We’re committed to continuing to invest in Cambridge as an innovation centre for the development of the next generation of industrial software, using AI to drive productivity and decarbonisation for our customers around the world.

    Steve Bates CEO, UK BioIndustry Association:

    The UK life science sector needs speedy decisions on new labs and homes to grow. Today’s announcement about Cambridge  is a welcome boost to scaling companies like Alcamab and Bicycle, competing for global investment.

    Mark Reynolds, Chief Executive, Mace:

    One of our biggest challenge as an industry is a lack of clarity over the future pipeline of construction work across the UK. This welcome funding for more planning experts will help to decrease waiting times for planning decisions – a major cause of uncertainty and delay in delivery across the construction sector – and a review of permitted development rights could help to unlock UK-wide growth through the opportunity for more work across the country for the repair, maintenance and improvement sector.

    Ryan Shorthouse CEO, Bright Blue:

    To give younger people from modest backgrounds a better chance of home ownership, we urgently need to build more homes in desirable parts of the country.  The welcome measures announced today will help quicken and simplify the planning process, and are thus strong steps towards achieving greater and greener homes. But these policies are only the start of the major demand-side and supply-side reforms that are needed to the housing market to ensure more young people can enjoy the benefits of property ownership.

    Dean Finch CEO, Persimmon:

    Persimmon welcomes the proposals announced today to deliver much needed reform of the planning system with the aim of accelerating the development of new homes that will help hard-pressed people achieve their dream of affordable home ownership.

    Jack Pringle, Chair of the RIBA Board:

    We pleased to see today’s announcements which will enable the vital action needed to tackle the housing crisis. Measures to increase planning resource are welcome and critical to build the homes that we need. New homes do need to be delivered at pace, and we should aim to deliver quality as well as quantity. We remain committed to working with our partners in government to deliver well-designed, accessible and sustainable homes in the places that need them most.

    Ike Ijeh Head of Housing, Architecture and Urban Space, Policy Exchange:

    Policy Exchange is delighted to see key recommendations of its recently published Placemaking Matrix incorporated into the government’s new plans. Both the report and our groundbreaking ‘Building More, Building Beautiful’ paper co-authored by the late Sir Roger Scruton were invested in the founding principle that improving the quality and quantity of UK housing is simply not possible without an aggressive focus on urban quality and democratic consent. It is therefore encouraging to see these ideas take centre stage in the government’s new proposals.

    Victoria Hills, Chief Executive, Royal Town Planning Institute:

    I believe this investment into the planning system will make a significant contribution to alleviating the pressure placed on England’s planning services. Well-resourced local planning authorities have the power to make a unique contribution to their areas, helping to deliver the affordable homes, public services, and critical infrastructure individuals, families and communities need.

    Andrew Davies, CEO, Kier Group:

    Construction and Infrastructure have a key role to play in supporting economic growth. As such, any steps taken to speed up planning consents and invest in the improvement and regeneration of communities are welcome.

    Richard Harpin, founder and Chairman, Homeserve:

    I welcome this investment from the government to build more homes in a sensible way to help grow the economy. It is good to see government listening to business and backing areas such as Cambridge.

    Poppy Gustafsson, CEO, Darktrace:

    Cambridge is a fantastic place not just to start, but also to scale a technology business. We have benefitted greatly from being so close to the talented technology innovators of the future, bringing them into our rapidly growing business where they’re developing extraordinary AI solutions that are keeping organisations around the world safe from cyber disruption. We welcome any steps taken to strengthen the Cambridge innovation ecosystem as we’d love to see a thriving UK technology sector and the next wave of Darktraces on these shores.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK backs £680m loan guarantee for new high-speed electric railway in Turkey [July 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK backs £680m loan guarantee for new high-speed electric railway in Turkey [July 2023]

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

    UK government backing enables completion of a 286km electric railway in southern Turkey, connecting major cities with a high-speed, lower-carbon route.

    • €781m support unlocked by UK Export Finance – equivalent to £680m – will enable Rönesans Holding to finish construction of a high-speed electrified railway connecting Mersin with the cities of Adana, Osmaniye and Gaziantep
    • Offering a lower-emission transport link between Turkey’s second-largest container port and inland cities over 150 miles away, the railway is expected to reduce CO2e emissions by over 150,000 tonnes a year
    • UKEF’s backing creates multimillion-pound export contract opportunities for UK suppliers to the rail sector

    UK Export Finance (UKEF), the UK government’s export credit agency, has underwritten €781m of financing – equivalent to £680m – to support construction of a 286km high-speed electric railway in southern Turkey.

    With financing provided through UKEF’s Buyer Credit Facility, Rönesans Holding will finish construction of the Mersin-Adana-Gaziantep High Speed Railway on behalf of the Turkish Ministry of Transport.

    The deal is expected to create new, multimillion-pound export contract opportunities for the UK’s infrastructure, engineering and project management sectors, supporting the Prime Minister’s priority of growing the UK economy.

    This signals key future opportunities for UK exporters, with Rönesans Holding – one of Europe’s ten largest construction companies – intending to use the high-speed rail project to build its wider relationships with the UK supply chain.

    Lord Offord, Minister for Exports, said:

    The UK-Turkey trading relationship is going from strength to strength. Last year, UK exports to Turkey reached £8.5 billion, and this week we announced plans for an updated trade deal that will further boost exports and imports between our countries.

    UK Export Finance’s backing for this transformative high-speed railway adds to this success story. This deal shows that the UK, home to the world’s first railway system, still moves full steam ahead with its export of railroad innovation and expertise.

    UKEF’s backing – which has been given on the condition that UK exporters supply to the project – will support continued economic growth in the UK, in line with the government’s priorities; Rönesans Holding has already engaged with UK suppliers to negotiate contracts for electronic infrastructure, ESG consultancy services, catenary and mechanical components.

    UKEF worked in partnership with J.P. Morgan, ING Bank and BNP Paribas, who provided the loan, as well as SACE and OeKB – the Italian and Austrian export credit agencies providing reinsurance – to secure this landmark deal for Turkish rail infrastructure.

    Dr. Erman Ilıcak, President of Rönesans Holding, said:

    We’re thrilled to be working with UKEF, JP Morgan, ING and BNP to secure a deal that will enable a landmark shift in the Turkish construction of rail links and the high-speed railway project.

    By upgrading the existing railway line to a high standard railway line, we will be actively reducing negative environmental impact while offering a lower-carbon travel alternative and significantly enhancing the region’s industrial connectivity and trade. Rönesans Holding takes immense pride in contributing to Turkey’s national environmental goals and infrastructure advancement.

    Our fruitful collaboration with British Exporters has secured €781m in financing for the transformative high-speed electrified railway in southern Turkey, adding tremendous value to the cooperation between Türkiye and UK exports and services while paving the way for exciting global partnerships.

    John Meakin, Global Head of Export and Agency Finance at J.P. Morgan, said:

    This project is expected to reduce traffic congestion on the motorways and promote more sustainable transportation in the region. We are honoured to have the responsibility to deliver the financing for this impactful project while supporting UK exporters providing goods, services and notable technical expertise.

    In replacing the current railway, which relies on diesel locomotives, the electrified line will provide a lower-carbon alternative to existing routes between Mersin and Gaziantep. Project forecasts suggest that the completed route will save 157,000 tonnes in CO2e emissions in its first year alone.

    The UKEF-backed project will also contribute directly to Turkey’s objective of increasing high-speed railway coverage to 10,000km, by creating a rail link greater than the distance between Cardiff and London.

    Able to carry trains travelling up to 200 km/h, this transport link is a major step forwards for regional infrastructure and growth. The high-speed railway will reduce the travel time from Gaziantep – via regional cities Adana and Osmaniye – to Mersin by four hours; Mersin is the second largest container port in the country and a thriving city of over one million people.

    Treasury and Finance Minister for Türkiye, Mehmet Şimşek, said:

    Mersin, Adana and Gaziantep are among the highly industrialised and important cities of the region with their deep-rooted cultural heritage. This project will ensure a reduction of transportation costs, decrease travel time between Mersin and Gaziantep and strengthen our railway connectivity.

    In this regard, this project is crucial for economic, social and environmental integration. We are very grateful to our trading partner UKEF for their contribution to this important project, which will expand the national railway network.

    The most important aim of the project is to improve the rail connectivity and create a sustainable alternative transportation scheme in Türkiye. We look forward to continuing our fruitful collaboration with new projects on the way of development of Türkiye.

    Gaziantep, the railway’s eastern terminus, was near the epicentre of the 7.8 magnitude earthquake which struck Turkey in February 2023. The UKEF-backed project for completing this railway will also contribute to reconstruction in Gaziantep, Osmaniye and other areas of southern Turkey severely damaged in this disaster.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Innovation at heart of plans to strengthen retail energy market [July 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Innovation at heart of plans to strengthen retail energy market [July 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero on 24 July 2023.

    Government sets out plans to boost competition and innovation in the energy market

    • Government sets out vision for a future energy market, with better consumer choice and protections at its core
    • industry invited to shape future of the market, focussing on innovation to unlock competition and usher in new low carbon technologies
    • collaboration with energy suppliers marks positive step forward in building a more resilient and investable market

    Households across Great Britain will have better access to energy deals and more control over their energy use as part of government plans to boost competition and innovation in the energy market.

    Energy Consumers and Affordability Minister Amanda Solloway today outlined plans to ensure consumers have a much wider range of using energy – whether that’s tariffs offering lower prices at certain times of the day, smart chargers that automatically put users on the lowest rate to charge electric vehicles or opportunities to buy shares in renewable energy in return for electricity bill discounts.

    Already some retailers are offering these more flexible and tailored ways of using energy, but today’s plans would ensure even more households benefit from these opportunities.

    Putin’s barbaric attack on Ukraine sent energy prices soaring, with the government stepping in to cover half a typical household’s energy bills this winter. However, despite prices falling by two thirds since their peak, the majority of suppliers are continuing to charge consumers the maximum amount allowed under the default tariff price cap instead of offering more innovative and flexible products.

    As the government continues to work with stakeholders and consumer groups on energy bill support for vulnerable households, it wants to make sure the market is resilient, competitive, fit for the future and delivers for consumers.

    That is why energy suppliers are today being asked to put forward ideas that will ensure consumers benefit from the cheaper cost of powering their homes as more of their electricity comes from renewables, and from using their energy when demand is lower.

    Amanda Solloway, Minister for Energy Consumers and Affordability said:

    The global rises in energy prices caused by Putin’s barbaric invasion of Ukraine shows why we need to bolster our energy security and strengthen our energy market, so families and businesses are protected, while getting a fair deal.

    Over the winter, we provided unprecedented levels of support – including paying nearly half a typical household’s energy bill – and took decisive steps to stabilise the retail market.

    We now want to put power back in the hands of consumers, giving them greater options to cut their energy bills in a market fit for the future. Today, I’m calling on industry to work with us, and take up the opportunities of investing in low-carbon technologies and providing a first-class customer service.

    With energy from renewables now accounting for 40% of electricity supply, today’s announcement signals a positive step forward in future-proofing the market, as the UK transitions to a greener, more secure energy system.

    The government wants energy retailers to play a driving role in unlocking barriers to innovation that will bring real benefits to both consumers and suppliers alike.

    To that end, government will now work with industry to gather their views and evidence on ways to make low carbon technologies more commonplace, bringing out this monumental sea-change in our energy retail market.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Pacific delegation to visit Lionesses at the FIFA Women’s World Cup 2023 [July 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Pacific delegation to visit Lionesses at the FIFA Women’s World Cup 2023 [July 2023]

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

    A group of leading Pacific female football players and officials arrive in Sydney this week for a special sports diplomacy programme linked to the FIFA Women’s World Cup 2023™.

    Lead officials in women’s sport from Tonga, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Fiji, Vanuatu and Samoa, will have access to a training session with the England Women’s Football team at the home of the Central Coast Mariners in Gosford.

    The delegation will receive briefings on coaching, nutrition and women’s sport development, and host a session at Central Coast Sports College. The UK government is sponsoring the visit as part of our partnership with the Pacific.

    British High Commissioner Vicki Treadell will meet with the delegation, who will be hosted in Australia by Nicola Noble, UK Deputy High Commissioner to Fiji. The delegation will also meet with UK Sports Minister Stuart Andrew.

    Vicki Treadell, UK High Commissioner to Australia said:

    I am delighted to have this amazing Pacific group with us. The UK continue to champion all aspects of women’s sport around the world.

    We are committed to removing barriers to participation amongst women and girls, raising the profile of women’s sport, and ensuring women are fairly represented at all levels across the sector.

    Nicola Noble, UK Deputy High Commissioner to Fiji said:

    I’m delighted to host our Pacific delegation in Australia for the FIFA Women’s World Cup.

    Sport is a unifying force across the Pacific and we have a fantastic programme of activity for our visitors this week.

    Ileen Pegi Moffat, Captain of the Solomon Islands National Women’s Football Team said:

    This is an opportunity worth sharing with the Solomon Islands National Women’s Football team after our visit.

    But also, it is a once in a lifetime opportunity for us on a personal level, having to train alongside the Lionesses.

    British High Commissioner to Solomon Islands and Nauru, Thomas Coward met the two delegates from Solomon Islands at their training in Honiara over the weekend, congratulating them for the opportunity.

    Among other leading Pacific football players and officials, both the Solomon Islands delegates will spend one week in Australia to join the Lionesses training camp and have the opportunity to witness them take on Denmark in their Group D Match on Friday 28 July.

    The senior team captain and vice-captain of the Solomon Islands Women’s National Football team, Ms Pegi and Solo will then return to Honiara on Saturday 29 July 2023.