businessSee all
A picture

Farage steps up calls for Bank of England to halt bond sales

The Reform UK leader, Nigel Farage, has stepped up calls for the Bank of England to halt bond sales and cut the interest it pays to UK banks, after a meeting with its governor, Andrew Bailey.They met on Thursday morning at the Bank’s Threadneedle Street headquarters along with the Reform MP Richard Tice, after an exchange of letters in which the governor agreed to a meeting.Farage and Tice would like to see politicians take a firmer grip on the operation of the institution, made independent by Gordon Brown when he was chancellor, in 1997.In a statement released after the meeting, Tice said: “If parliament, via the chancellor of the exchequer, gave a different steer to the Bank of England this could significantly reduce the need for tax rises at the budget.“Subsequently I will be writing to the chancellor and the leader of the house requesting an urgent debate as soon as parliament returns

A picture

Co-op says ‘malicious’ cyber-attack has hit profits by £80m

The Co-op has fallen into the red after it suffered an £80m hit to profits as a result of a “malicious” cyber-attack this year.The group, which owns more than 2,000 grocery stores and more than 800 funeral parlours, was forced to shut down parts of its IT systems in April after it discovered an attempted hack.Shoppers faced gaps on shelves as a result of the attack, while its funeral parlours had to operate some services via paper-based systems without access to digital services.On Thursday, the retailer said it estimated the disruption lost it £206m in revenue, and hit its operating profit by £80m in the first half of its financial year. It now estimates a £120m hit to full-year profits as a result of the cyber-attack

A picture

First new Qantas Airbus jets come with one toilet for every 90 economy passengers – worse than Jetstar, Scoot and Ryanair

The first three aircraft in Qantas’s new fleet will arrive with a worse economy passenger-to-toilet ratio than on planes used by budget carriers Scoot, Ryanair and Jetstar.After ordering the Airbus 321XLR aircraft in 2022 to replace its ageing Boeing 737s, Qantas on Thursday used the new planes on commercial flights for the first time on the Sydney to Melbourne and Sydney to Perth routes.But the aircraft also come with a passenger-to-toilet ratio in economy of just one toilet for every 90 passengers.Qantas ordered the planes with three toilets and 200 seats, configured with two toilets for the 180 economy seats and one toilet for the 20 business class seats at the front of the aircraft.Sign up: AU Breaking News emailBy comparison, Ryanair’s Boeing 737 carries 197 economy passengers, with three toilets to share between them, a passenger-to-toilet ratio of 66, according to the airline seat data tracker seatmaps

A picture

Ed Miliband looking into more North Sea drilling despite Labour pledge

Ed Miliband is planning to encourage drilling in the North Sea despite a manifesto promise not to grant new licences on new parts of the British sea bed.The energy secretary is looking at ways in which the government can allow companies to look for and produce more oil and gas without breaking Labour’s pre-election pledge not to issue new licences on new fields.The plans, which will be announced in the coming months as part of a wider strategy for the North Sea, come amid pressure on one side from climate activists to stop all drilling, and on the other from Donald Trump to “drill, baby, drill”.A government spokesperson said: “The strategy will set out how the government intends to meet its manifesto commitments to ensure no new licenses to explore new fields and maintaining existing fields for their lifetime.” They said the government would meet its manifesto commitments “in full”

A picture

Australia, along with other OECD countries, is mired in mediocrity – and the RBA seems intent on keeping us there | Greg Jericho

As Rebecca Shaw so perfectly put it, the world is being burned down by losers, but when did we decide to be OK with mediocrity? When did we decide to aim no higher than the middle – whether in politics or economics?This week the OECD released its latest report on the global economy, where the pretence is that things are mostly normal and fine. The report’s title was Finding the Right Balance in Uncertain Times. And I had to think, “balance” between what?The clear issue is Donald Trump, whose policies often seem like thought bubbles based on whatever unscientific garbage he heard on TV in the 1980s and still thinks is true. But we can’t mention that and so instead we talk about “uncertain times” and needing to find a balance between that and, I guess, reality?Similarly, the IMF’s most recent report in April was A Critical Juncture Amid Policy Shifts.Ah yes, policy shifts where Trump put a tariff on every country including those uninhabited by humans, and is instigating an authoritarian regime in the world’s biggest economy

A picture

Bank of England urged to do more to tackle climate crisis

A coalition of 10 campaign groups is calling on the Bank of England to do more to tackle the climate crisis, a decade after the then governor Mark Carney warned of the “tragedy of the horizon”.Carney, now prime minister of Canada, argued in a speech at Lloyd’s of London in September 2015 that the short time-horizons of politicians and policymakers made it difficult to tackle the climate emergency, despite the threat it posed to the global financial system.Carney said: “The combination of the weight of scientific evidence and the dynamics of the financial system suggest that, in the fullness of time, climate change will threaten financial resilience and longer-term prosperity. While there is still time to act, the window of opportunity is finite and shrinking.”Ten years on, the environmental groups Greenpeace and WWF and the thinktanks the New Economics Foundation and Positive Money are among the signatories to a new briefing, calling on the Bank to take more decisive action

trendingSee all
A picture

BP predicts higher oil and gas demand, suggesting world will not hit 2050 net zero target

BP has raised its forecasts for oil and gas demand, suggesting the global net zero target for 2050 will not be met and highlighting a slowdown in the transition to clean energy.The energy company’s closely watched annual outlook report has estimated that oil use is on track to hit 83m barrels a day in 2050, a rise of 8% compared with its previous estimate of 77m barrels a day.The current trajectory of the energy transition means natural gas demand could hit 4,806 cubic metres a year in 2050, BP said, up 1.6% from its previous estimate of 4,729 cubic metres.To meet global net zero targets by 2050 the fall in oil demand would have to occur sooner, and with greater intensity, dropping to about 85m barrels a day by 2035 and about 35m barrels by 2050, BP said

A picture

United Utilities underspent £52m on vital work to reduce sewage pollution, FoI reveals

The water company United Utilities has underspent by more than £50m on vital work in Windermere and elsewhere in north-west England, to connect private septic tanks to the mains network and reduce sewage pollution, it can be revealed.The financial regulator, Ofwat, revealed in response to a freedom of information request that the privatised water company had been allocated £129m to connect non-mains systems – mostly septic tanks – to the mains sewer network since 2000.The company has spent £76.7m in almost 25 years, leaving £52m unspent.Save Windermere, the campaign group that submitted the request, has mapped areas where private sewerage systems are likely to be significantly affecting the water quality

A picture

Instagram still poses risk to children despite new safety tools, says Meta whistleblower

Children and teenagers are still at risk from online harm on Instagram despite the rollout of “woefully ineffective” safety tools, according to research led by a Meta whistleblower.Two-thirds (64%) of new safety tools on Instagram were found to be ineffective, according to a comprehensive review led by Arturo Béjar, a former senior engineer at Meta who testified against the company before US Congress, New York University and Northeastern University academics, the UK’s Molly Rose Foundation and other groups.Meta – which owns and operates several prominent social media platforms and communication services that also include Facebook, WhatsApp, Messenger and Threads – introduced mandatory teen accounts on Instagram in September 2024, amid growing regulatory and media pressure to tackle online harm in the US and the UK.However, Béjar said although Meta “consistently makes promises” about how its teen accounts protect children from “sensitive or harmful content, inappropriate contact, harmful interactions” and give control over use, these safety tools are mostly “ineffective, unmaintained, quietly changed, or removed”.He added: “Because of Meta’s lack of transparency, who knows how long this has been the case, and how many teens have experienced harm in the hands of Instagram as a result of Meta’s negligence and misleading promises of safety, which create a false and dangerous sense of security

A picture

Apple calls for changes to anti-monopoly laws and says it may stop shipping to the EU

Apple has called for the European Commission to repeal a swathe of technology legislation, warning that unless it is amended the company could stop shipping some products and services to the 27-country bloc.In the latest of a series of clashes with Brussels, the iPhone maker said the Digital Markets Act was leading to a worse experience for Apple users, exposing them to security risks, and disrupting the seamless way Apple products work together.The Silicon Valley company hit out in a submission to the commission’s review of the three-year-old anti-monopoly legislation, which is intended to regulate the gatekeeper power of the largest digital companies including search engines, app providers and messaging services.It said it had already delayed the launch of features such as live translation through AirPods and mirroring iPhone screens on to laptop because of the act’s demands for interoperability with non-Apple products and services.“The DMA means the list of delayed features in the EU will probably get longer, and our EU users’ experience on Apple products will fall further behind,” it said

A picture

Wallabies out to break Eden Park hoodoo despite dog’s breakfast build-up | Angus Fontaine

To beat New Zealand at home, all the stars must align. You’ve got to pick a smart side, play the right style, win over the referee and catch a little luck along the way. Silencing the crowd early, with fast points or fierce attack and defence, helps too. Even then, there are no guarantees against the All Blacks. And they are never more dangerous than when wounded, as Scott Robertson’s side certainly is after their worst ever Test defeat last week, a 43-10 spifflication by South Africa in Wellington

A picture

Newcastle’s Red Bull rebrand brings fresh energy to rugby’s troubled outpost

Don’t mention the F-word. Such has been the pace of the Red Bull rebrand that one Newcastle official joked there would be spot fines for anyone who forgets it is no longer the Falcons giving them flight.Energy drinks are in, feathered friends out, but the feelgood factor now coursing through the north-east promises more than just a dopamine hit. For both the club, who only a few months ago were exploring a loan from their league rivals to stay afloat, and the revamped Prem, there is a feeling that the Red Bull revolution can be seminal.Newcastle have finished bottom of the table for the past three seasons