Tag: Press Release

  • PRESS RELEASE : Chief of the Defence Staff speech to CSIS [August 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : Chief of the Defence Staff speech to CSIS [August 2025]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence on 14 August 2025.

    The Chief of Defence Staff Admiral Sir Tony Radakin gave a speech to the Centre for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

    It’s a pleasure to be back in Washington.  Thank you to Lord Mandelson and the British Defence Staff, and to the Centre for Strategic and International Studies for hosting what is probably my last public speech as Chief of the Defence Staff.

    There normally comes a point when a Chief steps down that they let forth on all the frustrations and opinions they have bottled up during their time in post.

    Those of you hoping for me to let rip, or to spill the beans on the inner workings of the four different administrations I’ve served, will be disappointed.

    I’m afraid I’m going to be irritatingly consistent.  My narrative today is pretty much the same as it was at the outset of my tenure four years ago.

    For those of you who haven’t made it through one of my speeches before, the gist is as follows: we are in a new more dangerous era, but Britain remains safe; NATO is stronger, Russia is weak; and the West has the military, economic and intellectual heft needed to buttress the global system.

    Sometimes I’ve been accused of being an optimist – or worse complacent.

    But this is less about optimism or pessimism and more about confidence and judgement.

    A case in point is Ukraine.

    When Russia invaded Crimea, the world looked the other way.  And it could have easily done so again in February 2022.

    I remember the meetings of the National Security Council as Russian forces mounted on the border.

    I’m sure you recall the images at the time: convoys of armoured vehicles tens of miles long…the chilling sight of mobile crematoria…residents in Kyiv making Molotov cocktails

    At the time we thought the Russian military was much more capable than it has proven to be.  We had limited confidence in Ukraine’s defensive strategy.  The prevailing view was that Russia would take Kyiv within weeks, if not days.

    The choice was whether to back Ukraine or not.  Some around the table remained quiet.  Others looked awkwardly at their shoes.

    But thankfully, this time around, it was the bolder voices that prevailed.

    The lion’s share of credit must go to Boris Johnson, Ben Wallace and Liz Truss for their leadership, particularly in pushing through those first supplies of lethal aid.

    It was a significant moment when both the gut instincts and principles of politicians triumphed over the potential inertia and innate caution of the Whitehall machine.

    That decision was magnified internationally and pursued similarly by Rishi Sunak and Liz Truss as Prime Ministers.  And in the same vein credit must also go to Keir Starmer and John Healey, who backed the Government to the hilt in Opposition, and for the consistency of their approach in office over the past year.

    This is an example of Britain at its best.  True to our values and interests. Consistent in our strategy.  United across both sides of the aisle on defence and security.  Ready to act quickly and boldly, and lead others to do the same.

    So that’s my theme today – how confidence must shape our approach to a more contested world.

    And I offer the following points in support:

    • First, that Britain has good reason to be confident.  In the quality of our Armed Forces and Intelligence Services.  In the strength of our defence construct.  And that the path before us now is the right one.
    • Second, NATO too should be confident.  In the enormous overmatch we enjoy.  In Russia’s weakness and Putin’s dilemma.  And how that should embolden our strategy of deterrence.
    • Third, the return of statecraft: how are leaders are prepared to use the military instrument alongside the other levers of national power to advance our collective interests.
    • Finally, a point on technology and the need to retain our advantage – especially with respect to Artificial Intelligence.

    I hope a US audience will indulge me if I start with a tribute to the British Armed Forces.

    As I reflect on the past four years, the level of operational activity has been remarkable.

    In Europe.  Training 60,000 Ukrainians.  Being right at the forefront of NATO’s denial and deterrence: whether the British Army in Estonia, the Royal Navy in the North Atlantic or the Royal Air Force over Baltic skies.

    In the Eastern Med and Middle East.  Delivering aid to Gaza.  Being ready for an evacuation from Lebanon.  Striking Houthi targets.  Protecting international trade in the Red Sea – including downing a ballistic missile.  A first for the UK.

    In the wider world.  Safely recovering 2,500 people from Sudan – the largest and longest evacuation of any Western nation.  Reassuring our Commonwealth partners in Guyana.  Two carrier deployments to the Indo-Pacific.

    And at home.  At the forefront of national life.  Through a Jubilee, a State Funeral and a Coronation.  Assisting with Small Boats.  Stepping in for the Border Force at airports.  Being ready to pick up Armed Policing duties in the capital.

    Of course, I don’t want to pretend that we do not have significant challenges. For the past thirty years, we have been asking the Armed Forces to make do with less, even while the operational demands increase.  There have been too many deferrals and delays, too greater mismatch between resource and ambition.  We are continuing to feel the pinch as a consequence of decisions taken ten or twenty years ago and I do not underestimate the demands this places on our people.

    That is now changing and we are on a path of greater investment – but it will take time for the effects to be felt in terms of new capabilities, improved readiness and better support to achieve the ambition of the Government’s Strategic Defence Review to return our Armed Forces to a much more substantial level of warfighting readiness.

    But nothing should take away from what the Armed Forces achieve on behalf of the nation every day.  And throughout my time as CDS, they have never failed to step up to deliver all that has been asked of them. They are simply magnificent. Thank you to them and their families.

    Ladies and Gentlemen, the world is more dangerous, but Britain, the US and Allies are safe.

    It is safe because of the quality of the men and women in the UK’s Armed Forces, Civil Service and Defence Industry, as well as our Intelligence Agencies.

    And it is safe because we are the beneficiaries of a remarkable defence construct which ought to be the envy of most nations on the planet. It’s based on:

    • our status as a nuclear power;
    • our membership of the world’s strongest and largest defensive alliance, NATO;
    • and that our closest ally is a super-power called America.

    This is the kind of security construct that keeps a nation safe for the last 80 years AND the next 80 years.

    The Deterrent is being renewed – at a time of heightened nuclear rhetoric and proliferating nuclear risk.

    NATO has rarely been more relevant, more unified or more focused – and enjoys an insurmountable overmatch against Russia.

    And the bridge between Europe and America remains.

    The United States may be re-focussing on the Homeland and Indo-Pacific, but it is not stepping away.  President Trump’s Administration has been clear that the vital nuclear guarantee remains, as well as its conventional power in the Euro-Atlantic theatre – which was underlined by the recent appointment of a hugely respected American as SACEUR.

    And America has been consistent in expecting its European allies to step up to shoulder their fair share of the burden, and that is now happening.

    Pax Americana can give rise to a new age of Pax Europa.

    For my country, and for European allies throughout NATO, the decision to spend 5% of GDP on National Security – with 3.5% allocated to core military spending – is simply profound.

    I do not doubt how difficult this decision is for a government that is contending with economic headwinds and competing demands on the public purse.  But Defence remains the first duty of government, and this is the responsible thing to do in a more dangerous world.

    I’ve been fortunate to work for four Prime Ministers, each of whom took their defence responsibilities with the utmost seriousness.

    That included Boris Johnson and his team devoting a day to meet with nuclear experts and historians to really understand the nature of Britain’s nuclear enterprise.

    It included Rishi Sunak and Jeremy Hunt being generous with their time in their first days in office, to listen to Ben Wallace and I as we talked them through the defence spending pressures, and to agree the further investment required.

    And I really welcome when Prime Minister Keir Starmer speaks of the end of the peace dividend and a new era of “defence dividend” and a Chancellor whose stated ambition is to make the UK a “defence industrial superpower”.

    And then the defence budget itself, which successive Prime Ministers have been prepared to revisit in response to the deterioration of global security.

    Our trajectory to spending 5% of GDP by 2035 is now set.

    It means we have the certainty needed to deliver the vision set out by the government in their Strategic Defence Review:

    • Recapitalising the Army to lead a NATO Strategic Reserve Corps.
    • Restoring a tactical nuclear role to the Royal Air Force.
    • Doubling the size of the Royal Navy’s attack submarine force.
    • Developing a sixth-generation fighter.
    • Adding thousands more long-range missiles to our inventory.
    • And embracing technology much more strongly: through directed energy weapons, through hybrid carrier air wings, through investment in cyber, space and AI.
    • All underpinned by a new relationship with industry and a better deal with our people particularly on pay and accommodation.

    Taken together this is a response that matches the challenges we see in the world and will keep Britain safe and prosperous.

    This leads me to my second point – NATO and the enormous overmatch we enjoy over Russia.

    Early in my tenure as CDS I travelled to Moscow with Ben Wallace and met my counterpart General Gerasimov, where I warned him that invading Ukraine would be a catastrophic mistake.

    I am even more convinced of that four years later.

    Last year Russia gained half of one percent of Ukraine’s territory, in return for over 400,000 killed and wounded.

    This year it has taken a similar amount of territory for a further 200,000 killed and wounded.

    More than a million lives sacrificed in total for Putin’s Special Military Operation.

    And what about the wider cost?

    The Black Sea Fleet has been sent scuttling by a country with barely a Navy.

    Russia’s strategic bomber force has been decimated by a country with barely an Air Force.

    And Russia has had to shift its economy to a war effort, which it will be incredibly hard to row back from.

    Putin is left with a dilemma: agree a ceasefire with his stated aims incomplete and little to show his people in return for the lost blood and treasure; or continue the war indefinitely, and watch his country become even weaker and poorer chasing the false dream of subjugating Ukraine.

    In the meantime, we should not be cowed by Putin’s rhetoric or his campaign of state-sponsored sabotage.

    Disgraceful as they are, they do not change the calculus.

    Indeed, the very reason Russia is pursuing sub-threshold attacks against us is because Russia is unwilling and unable to do so through more overt means.

    Putin doesn’t want a war with NATO. He can’t even win a war against Ukraine.

    To be sure, Russia is more dangerous:  because she is weaker, and because Putin has no compunction about using violence to achieve his aims.

    And we need to be clear-eyed about the threat – which is felt most keenly by those Baltic and Nordic nations that border Russia.

    But personally, I am wary of too great an emphasis on homeland defence, or a fortress Europe.  We need to defend forward.  Russia has more cause to be fearful of an Alliance of 32 than the other way around.

    The policy of NATO is to deter.   And we deter by demonstrating to Russia that we are stronger, that we are ready to fight, and that we will beat them.

    That means contesting Russia in every domain – nuclear, land, sea, air, cyber and space – as well as in the diplomatic and economic arenas.  It also underlines the imperative to double down on our efforts to support Ukraine’s ability to defend its courageous people against Russian aggression to preserve their hard-won freedom and independence through a just and lasting peace.

    These last two – diplomacy and economics – matter most and bring me to my third point.  The immense latent strength of Europe, America and our partners.

    Sometimes we forget how strong the West remains.

    Europe and North America account for half the world’s wealth.

    NATO spends more on defence than Russia and China combined.

    The tech hubs of America’s west coast, and the universities of Europe, remain as vibrant and innovative as they have always been.

    And we are able to draw upon the most extraordinary breadth of partnerships.

    From the British point of view these include: Five Eyes. NATO. The Lancaster House agreements with France. The Trinity House agreement with Germany.  The Joint Expeditionary Force of ten Northern European nations. The Five Power Defence Arrangements with South-East Asia. Our deep and historic ties to the Gulf monarchies and the island nations of the Caribbean.  AUKUS, GCAP, and our burgeoning relationships with Italy, Norway, Japan and South Korea and many others.

    For America your network is even greater.  We talk about the UK/US Special Relationship, but the truth is you have special relationships all around the world.

    In April 2024, the US, France, Britain and other regional partners joined together to prevent hundreds of Iranian missiles and drones reaching Israel.  Only America could have coordinated such a complex operation.  Only America could draw together partners from Europe and the Middle East in this way.

    Compare and contrast the strength and utility of our partnerships with those of Russia.

    In 2022 Russia and Iran signed a strategic partnership clause – but Russia has done nothing to support Iran in its recent predicament.  Nor has China.  When the Axis of Four comes under pressure it dissipates.

    As for Beijing, China’s interests require stability in the world above all else, as is the case for any truly global economic power.

    And Russia’s experience in Ukraine provides a sobering analogy with respect to Taiwan.

    War is an unpredictable force. There is no guarantee that it will be short, sharp or decisive.  The likelihood is the opposite.  And the consequences and reverberations are immense.  A point I made to my counterpart, General Liu, when we met in April.

    America, Europe and our partners don’t have to watch helplessly from the sidelines as the post-1945 settlement deteriorates.  We have the financial, military and intellectual might to buttress and defend the world order and confront those who undermine it.

    But we do need the confidence and willingness to wield the military instrument.

    We have seen this in the way Israel has neutered Hezbollah in Lebanon.  Through the willingness of the US to strike at Iran’s nuclear facilities.  And through the extraordinary outcome of the Hague Summit.

    Soft power, by itself, is rarely enough.   As the great US President Theodore Roosevelt declared, “speak softly and carry a big stick.”

    And that leads me to a broader point.

    Too many of the contemporary discussions over the future of defence are reduced to simplistic “either / or” debates. The world is seldom that neat and tidy.  In most cases, the answer needs to be “and”.  Hard and soft power. Regional and global.  Atlantic and Pacific.

    And in the same way for technology, it’s a false choice to think we can simply dispose with the old altogether in order to make way for the new, or that there is an easy trade-off to be had between capability and mass.

    I remember 15 years ago, when we were fixated on counter insurgency operations and Afghanistan was the UK’s ‘Main Effort’, there was a tendency for anything not deemed relevant to that task to be regarded as needlessly exquisite.

    Why was the Navy building anti-air destroyers when all it really needed was cheap and cheerful corvettes to go after Somali pirates? And couldn’t the RAF make do with Tucanos rather than Typhoons?

    Thankfully we worked hard to protect enough of these kinds of platforms – and preserve the warfighting instincts required for peer competition.  And it’s a good job we did, because these are precisely the ‘big sticks’ and capabilities that are in demand now to counter a resurgent Russia and to defend against the kind of long-range missiles that the Houthis are using in the Red Sea.

    My point is two-fold:

    We do get many of the big decisions right.  More than we give ourselves credit for.  And we are better at strategy than we think.

    But at the same time, we need to be wary of simplistic choices.  The strategic context has – and will continue – to shift at pace.  Resilience and redundancy, and the ability to flex and adapt, and an understanding of the value of all the levers of power and the quality of a nation’s underlying security construct are the attributes for long term security.

    We are still going to need submarines and jets and armoured vehicles alongside our mass ranks of drones and uncrewed systems.

    How we shape the future is never one or the other. It is the application of all the levers of power.  That is both classical and orthodox teaching.  It’s just that we sometimes need reminding.

    And then my final point on AI.

    My worry with this debate is that we embrace our inner geek by focusing on the technology and its applications, and we miss the broader point about the strategy that needs to accompany it.

    What we have seen from the AI revolution to date is nothing compared to what is just around the corner. Whoever reaches Artificial General Intelligence – and then Artificial Super Intelligence – first, will have an enormous military advantage.

    I may currently have a 10-minute advantage in targeting my opponent to take out a data centre.  But that margin is getting smaller exponentially.  And if ASI means I fall one second behind my opponent, I may never catch up.

    It’s a race we must win.

    But that’s very difficult for most countries to do – it is the preserve of only a few.

    So we need to think of it in the same way as we did with nuclear. People like Gundbert Scherf of Helsing are right to challenge us as to whether we need to be pooling our efforts through a Manhattan Project type endeavour, and through the architecture of international security that followed.  ASI will become a very significant advantage that can be shared and enhanced by alliances of like-minded nations.  And it may become a fundamental element of a nation’s security construct in the way I described earlier: Nuclear, Collective Security, America as a principal ally, and – in the future – ASI.

    And turning to my earlier themes, that requires Europe AND America working together, utilising ALL our advantages across the instruments of power, and ensuring we continue to maintain the relative peace we enjoy today.

    The good news is that that is within our gift.  Perhaps the even better news as I depart the stage is that this will be for others to decide and do.  And I leave delighted with having had the opportunity to serve and the privilege to both lead and stand on the shoulders of giants – the dedicated and extraordinarily able men and women who serve in uniform and keep us all safe.  Thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Baroness Amos to spearhead maternity and neonatal Investigation [August 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : Baroness Amos to spearhead maternity and neonatal Investigation [August 2025]

    The press release issued by the Department of Health and Social Care on 14 August 2025.

    Baroness Amos has been selected to lead the independent investigation into NHS maternity and neonatal care to drive urgent improvements to care and safety.

    • Baroness Valerie Amos has been appointed by the Health and Social Care Secretary to lead the national maternity and neonatal investigation
    • The review will identify ways to urgently improve care and safety
    • Bereaved and harmed families will be central to the investigation, including working with the Chair to shape her team of expert advisers and the terms of reference

    Baroness Amos was selected by Health and Social Care Secretary Wes Streeting by direct ministerial appointment after feedback from bereaved families who expressed a preference for someone with distance from the NHS who is able to bring a fresh pair of eyes to the role.

    The Secretary of State has been meeting regularly with bereaved and harmed families, let down by maternity and neonatal services across the country, including in some of the worst affected trusts. From hearing their stories, he ordered a rapid national investigation, to drive urgent improvements which will address systemic problems dating back over 15 years.

    Baroness Amos is currently Master of University College Oxford, and brings a wealth of experience as a previous UK government minister and senior official at the United Nations.

    She will be supported by a team of esteemed expert advisers, who will be selected following further engagement with families.

    Health and Social Care Secretary Wes Streeting said:

    I have been appalled by the many harrowing stories I’ve heard from mothers and fathers let down by the NHS.

    Families asked for fresh eyes, independence and compassion – and that’s why I’ve appointed Baroness Amos. Valerie has an outstanding record of leadership and driving change – nationally and internationally. She will work closely with families to uncover the truth, confront problems and drive the improvements needed so every woman and baby receives safe, high-quality care.

    Through our Plan for Change, we will rebuild the NHS to ensure no family suffers like this again.

    Baroness Valerie Amos said:

    I will carry the weight of the loss suffered by families with me throughout this investigation. I hope that we will be able to provide the answers that families are seeking and support the NHS in identifying areas of care requiring urgent reform.

    The investigation was announced by the Secretary of State in June 2025 and will look at up to 10 services in the country. It will also review the maternity and neonatal system, bringing together the findings of past reviews into one clear national set of actions to ensure every woman and baby receives safe, high-quality and compassionate care.

    It will begin its work this summer and produce an initial set of national recommendations by December 2025.

    The 10 maternity and neonatal units will be decided by Baroness Amos and her team, alongside the terms of reference of the investigation, which are being developed with the families who have experiences of maternity and neonatal care, including those in Leeds, Sussex, Nottingham and more.

    The investigation is separate from the National Maternity and Neonatal Taskforce, which will be made up of a panel of esteemed experts and families, and chaired by the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, to keep up momentum and deliver change.

    While the majority of mothers and families do have positive experiences of maternity and neonatal care, tragically there have been profound cases of failure, avoidable harm and loss that should never have happened. This investigation will explore why – and help drive lasting change to ensure every family receives the safe, compassionate care they deserve.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Keir Starmer meeting with President Zelenskyy of Ukraine [August 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : Keir Starmer meeting with President Zelenskyy of Ukraine [August 2025]

    The press release issued by 10 Downing Street on 14 August 2025.

    The Prime Minister hosted President Zelenskyy in Downing Street this morning.

    They had a private breakfast, where they discussed yesterday’s meetings. They agreed there had been a powerful sense of unity and a strong resolve to achieve a just and lasting peace in Ukraine.

    They then looked ahead to tomorrow’s talks between President Trump and President Putin in Alaska, which present a viable chance to make progress as long as Putin takes action to prove he is serious about peace.

    They agreed to stay in close touch in the coming days.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Keir Starmer call with Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia, His Royal Highness Mohammed bin Salman [August 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : Keir Starmer call with Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia, His Royal Highness Mohammed bin Salman [August 2025]

    The press release issued by 10 Downing Street on 14 August 2025.

    The Prime Minister spoke to His Royal Highness Mohammed bin Salman, Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia this afternoon.

    Discussing the appalling humanitarian crisis in Gaza, the Prime Minister set out the work the UK is doing to improve the situation on the ground while continuing to press for a ceasefire. He said that Israel must urgently lift its restrictions on aid and Hamas must immediately and unconditionally release all hostages.

    The Prime Minister shared progress on his work with allies on a long-term plan for peace to pave the way for lasting security in the region, including plans to ensure there is no role for Hamas in the future governance of Gaza.

    The leaders resolved to continue to work closely together to preserve the prospect of a two-state solution, which they reaffirmed was the only way to guarantee peace and security for Palestinians and Israelis.

    They agreed to stay in touch.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Young people across England celebrate exam results [August 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : Young people across England celebrate exam results [August 2025]

    The press release issued by the Department for Education on 14 August 2025.

    Record number of 18-year-olds in England get first choice university, as T Levels continue to grow and government tackles inequalities through Plan for Change.

    Hundreds of thousands of young people across England are celebrating receiving their A levelT Level and Vocational Technical Qualification (VTQ) results today (14 August 2025), as the Education Secretary thanked teachers and congratulated students.

    University continues to be a popular choice for young people with record numbers (193,510, up from 184,400 in 2024) of English 18-year-olds receiving their first choice of university.  20.4% of disadvantaged 18-year-olds being accepted to higher education, up from 19.8% in 2024 and 17.4% in 2019.

    But like in previous years, results today have exposed inequalities which continue to exist in the education system, with big gaps between regions and with poor outcomes year on year for pupils from white working-class backgrounds. This follows the government setting out a clear focus on tackling these issues head on and ensuring white working-class pupils – especially boys – are supported to thrive in school and go on to get well-paid jobs.

    T Levels also continue to deliver strong results for students.  The overall pass rate for T Levels is 91.4%, with almost two thirds of students (65.3%) achieving a merit or above, as this innovative new qualification offering hands-on experience of work in an in-demand sector continues to grow. Last year, 97% of T Level students who applied to university received at least one offer, with others progressing onto an apprenticeship or a job. T Level industry placements offer strong work experience, insights into competitive sectors which students might not otherwise get, and lead to good jobs – with around a third of students that get jobs after their course doing so with their chosen T Level industry placement employer.

    The figures build on the government’s drive to deliver the skilled workforce the country needs and follows the announcement of a new £100 million investment just this week in ten specialist Construction Technical Excellence Collegesto offer even more opportunities to build successful careers in trades.

    Over the past 12 months, the government has already made progress in fixing the foundations of education through its Plan for Change and turning the tide on stubborn challenges. Attendance is up, with over 5 million fewer days of absence this year compared to last. And teacher recruitment and retention is up, with 2,300 more teachers in our schools.

    Education Secretary, Bridget Phillipson, said:

    Students should be incredibly proud of their hard work and their achievements today, and I am immensely grateful to teachers and school staff for everything they have done to support students up to this point.

    Every single young person collecting their results today should have the opportunity to pursue their dreams – whether that starts with further study, university, an apprenticeship or the world of work – but too often, opportunities depend on background rather than talent. The entrenched divide in outcomes seen over the last few years and the lack of progress for children from white working-class backgrounds is particularly concerning.

    Through our Plan for Change we are breaking the link between background and success, starting with reformed early years and revitalised family services, through to ambitious reforms to our school and post-16 system to make sure every young person, wherever they grow up, is truly ready for life and work.

    Progress sits alongside vital, wider work to tackle disadvantage such as expanding free school meals, providing free breakfast clubs across the country and revitalising family services in every local authority.

    Results today show that:

    • at grade C and above at A level, the North East is now the only region where attainment remains below pre-pandemic levels
    • more pupils are taking maths, physics and chemistry A levels than at any other time since modern records began – and more of these pupils taking these subjects are achieving a grade C – preparing them to work in the STEM sectors in the future
    • almost 12,000 students received T Level results this year, up from just over 7,000 last year and around 3,500 in 2023
    • almost 240,000 certificates were awarded for those completing their Level 3 vocational and technical qualifications

    24.9% of 18-year-olds from the North East have secured a university place on results day compared to 43.4% of 18-year-olds from London. This gap is now 18.5 percentage points, which is the highest on record, up from 17.3 percentage points in 2024 and 11.9 in 2019.

    For A level results the gap between this year’s lowest performing region (East Midlands) and highest performing (London) is 6.0 percentage points at C and above. While the gap has decreased from 6.3 percentage points in 2024 it is still greater than in 2019 (when the equivalent gap was 5.2 percentage points).

    Later this year government will publish Schools and Post-16 Skills white papers, setting out further reforms to build an education system where every child and young person can achieve and thrive, regardless of their background or circumstances.

    To further break down barriers to opportunity for young people, the government has also launched the Youth Guarantee, which will ensure that every 18 to 21-year-old in England will have support to access an apprenticeship, quality training and education opportunities or help to find a job, backed by £45 million investment.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK Ambassador Visits San Miguel Community in Poptún [August 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK Ambassador Visits San Miguel Community in Poptún [August 2025]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 13 August 2025.

    The visit highlighted progress made through a UK project which supports sustainable development and environmental conservation in southern Petén.

    UK Ambassador to Guatemala, Juliana Correa, visited the community of San Miguel in Poptún on 13 August, where the Biodiverse Landscapes Fund (BLF) is investing approximately £16,000 to support local initiatives.

    The project has provided piped water access to 38 families (benefiting around 210 people), supported environmental protection systems for 21 families, and helped 14 families revive traditional bean cultivation practices that reduce greenhouse gas emissions and wildfire risks.

    During the visit, the ambassador learned about community conservation efforts, including more than 50 environmental monitoring tours, maintaining firebreaks across an area of 551 hectares, and strengthening local governance in collaboration with Guatemala’s National Council of Protected Areas (CONAP).

    San Miguel has been a benchmark in the region, promoting cooperation agreements that have inspired other communities to follow similar processes. The United Kingdom reaffirms its commitment to working alongside Guatemala to address the effects of climate change, protect biodiversity, and combat poverty.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Prime Minister’s call with European leaders and the President of the United States [August 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : Prime Minister’s call with European leaders and the President of the United States [August 2025]

    The press release issued by 10 Downing Street on 13 August 2025.

    The Prime Minister joined a call with the leaders of the United States, Ukraine, France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Finland, NATO and the European Union this afternoon.

    All leaders agreed this week marks an important moment for the future of Ukraine. They thanked President Trump for his efforts in bringing Putin to the table in pursuit of a ceasefire to end to the ongoing bloodshed.

    The Prime Minister was clear that our support for Ukraine is unwavering – international borders must not be changed by force and Ukraine must have robust and credible security guarantees to defend its territorial integrity as part of any deal.

    Europe stands ready to support this and will continue to work alongside President Trump and President Zelenskyy for a just and lasting peace in Ukraine, they added.

    They looked forward to speaking again following the meeting in Alaska on Friday.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Sheffield firm pays £167,587.13 for dumping waste in Lincolnshire [August 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : Sheffield firm pays £167,587.13 for dumping waste in Lincolnshire [August 2025]

    The press release issued by the Environment Agency on 13 August 2025.

    A transport company will pay a total of £167,587.13 for delivering controlled waste to an illegal site at Fen Lane, Long Bennington, Lincolnshire.

    • Latest hearing following major investigation by Environment Agency into site at Fen Lane, Long Bennington
    • Court told company was responsible for delivering over 1400 tonnes of controlled waste
    • Sentencing hearing at Nottingham Crown Court on Friday 8 August 2025

    The sentence imposed on Fletcher Plant Limited of Clement Street, Sheffield, is the latest result from a major investigation by the Environment Agency.

    At Nottingham Crown Court on Friday 8 August 2025, the company was fined £80,000, ordered to pay costs of £50,000 and a confiscation order of £37,587.13.

    The company had previously been found guilty in June 2024 after a trial of failing to comply with duty of care regulations for controlled waste between 1 October 2019 and 1 May 2020.

    Named Operation Lord, the investigation saw Environment Agency officers spend months building evidence of the illegal waste site.

    The findings led to 12 people and 1 company, Fletcher Plant, being charged, of which 10 pleaded guilty.

    Following an 8 week trial which concluded on 28 June 2024, the remaining 3 defendants were found guilty.

    So far, 11 people have been sentenced to a total of 14 years’ imprisonment for their involvement in this illegal operation.

    The court was told that intelligence gathered, revealed lorry-loads of shredded waste were regularly being accepted onto the site the size of a football pitch.

    It was calculated that Fletcher Plant, over a period of 6 months, organised the transport of over 1400 tonnes of controlled waste.

    The judge accepted that the company did not know the site was operating illegally, but its officers had a legal requirement to carry out a duty of care.

    The company said it had built a good reputation and it was the first time it had been prosecuted in over 40 years. A new management team had also been put in place.

    Peter Stark, Enforcement Team Leader for the Environment Agency in Lincolnshire and Northamptonshire, said:

    This sentence shows that all businesses involved in the removal of controlled waste must make all reasonable checks to ensure that waste is being dealt with appropriately and not illegally.

    If simple and continued due diligence checks had been made by Fletcher Plant they would have flagged up that the site operators did not have the appropriate authorisations.

    Due diligence checks are not something that should only occur prior to starting a contract, they should occur regularly during a contract.

    The duty of care in relation to waste is a legal requirement under Environmental Protection Act 1990.

    Anyone who suspects illegal waste activity should report it to our 24-hour hotline on 0800 80 70 60, or anonymously to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.

    Particulars of Offence

    FLETCHER PLANT LIMITED, a body corporate, between 1 October 2019 and 1 May 2020, acting as a waste broker, had control of controlled waste and failed to take all such measures applicable to it as are reasonable in the circumstances to prevent a contravention by any other person of Regulation 12 of the Environmental Permitting Regulations 2016, contrary to section 34 (1) (a) (a) and 34 (6) of the Environmental Protection Act 1990.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Keir Starmer call with Prime Minister Schoof of the Netherlands [August 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : Keir Starmer call with Prime Minister Schoof of the Netherlands [August 2025]

    The press release issued by 10 Downing Street on 13 August 2025.

    The Prime Minister spoke to the Prime Minister of the Netherlands Dick Schoof earlier today.

    They discussed their sustained support for Ukraine and the ongoing work to end Russia’s barbaric war. They agreed that there should be no decisions about the future of Ukraine without Ukraine.

    They looked forward to discussing further in this afternoon’s meetings alongside President Trump and President Zelenskyy.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Permanent Secretary Appointed at Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs [August 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : Permanent Secretary Appointed at Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs [August 2025]

    The press release issued by the Cabinet Office on 13 August 2025.

    Paul Kissack is appointed as the new Permanent Secretary of the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA).

    The Cabinet Secretary, with the approval of the Prime Minister, has appointed Paul Kissack as the new Permanent Secretary of the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA).

    Paul, who is currently the Group Chief Executive of the Joseph Rowntree Foundation and Joseph Rowntree Housing Trust,  will start the role in October.

    Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, Rt. Hon Steve Reed MP said:

    I’m delighted to welcome Paul to the department. His experience and expertise will ensure we achieve our objectives as a government. I look forward to working with him to make our country a better place.

    Cabinet Secretary, Sir Chris Wormald said:

    I would like to congratulate Paul Kissack on his appointment as Permanent Secretary at the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs. Paul’s experience of public service delivery in the UK (and New Zealand), and his most recent role leading the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, makes him excellently suited to lead Defra at this time and drive delivery of the Department’s missions.

    I’d also like to take this opportunity to thank Tamara Finkelstein for her excellent leadership of the Department over the last six years and David Hill for his role as interim Permanent Secretary.

    Incoming Permanent Secretary, Paul Kissack said:

    I am delighted to be rejoining the Civil Service and honoured to be returning to Defra. Restoring the natural environment and enhancing the sustainable use of natural resources – through cleaner water, greener land, purer air and reduced waste – is fundamental to a strong economy and delivering the Plan for Change.

    And the work of the Defra Group – from food security to bio-security to flood defences – is critical to ensuring our national resilience and protecting the public. I am hugely looking forward to working with colleagues across the Defra Group, across Government and the many stakeholders who share these ambitions for our country in the years ahead.

    The appointment follows an external recruitment exercise chaired by the independent First Civil Service Commissioner.