Toyota plans to build battery vehicles in UK and keep European plants
‘Patchy and behind deadline’: MPs attack UK rollout of EV charging points
The rollout of electric vehicle chargers across Britain is “patchy”, behind deadline and ignores the needs of disabled drivers, the parliamentary spending watchdog has found.A report published by the public accounts committee (PAC) warned that the charging points needed to give drivers confidence for the switch to EVs were still lacking, particularly on Britain’s biggest roads.MPs on the committee warned that the rollout risked “baking serious injustice” into the nation’s infrastructure, with drivers with disabilities “left behind” and those reliant on public chargers left paying much more than those able to charge at home.While the PAC report said the government was on track to reach a promised target of 300,000 charging points by 2030, there were stark regional divides, with too few installed outside south-east England and London, where approaching half (43%) of public chargers are located.Drivers reliant on public charge points also pay significantly more, partly due to higher rates of VAT, levied at 20% compared with 5% for domestic bills – exacerbating inequalities for those who live in flats or houses without off-street parking
Toyota plans to build battery vehicles in UK and keep European plants
Toyota has said it plans to build battery vehicles in the UK in the future as it seeks to keep all of its European plants open, although it will be cautious before switching away from fossil fuels.The Japanese company, the world’s largest carmaker by sales, said it wanted to retain all eight of its European factories through the transition to electric cars, as it announced two new electric models and promised another three by 2026 under its main brand. It also showed a new electric model under its premium Lexus brand, with two more to come this year.The manufacturer was one of the leaders in making hybrid cars that combine a petrol or diesel engine with a small battery, but it has been much slower to switch production over to pure battery electric vehicles than rivals.That cautious approach has paid off financially in recent months as the pace of growth in battery car sales has slowed in some markets, including Europe
iPhone 16e review: Apple’s cheapest new phone
Apple’s cheapest new smartphone is the iPhone 16e, which offers the basic modern iPhone experience including the latest chips and AI features but for a little less than its other models.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.The iPhone 16e costs £599 (€699/$599/A$999) and is the spiritual successor to the iPhone SE line
Elon Musk claims ‘massive cyber-attack’ caused X outages
Elon Musk claimed on Monday afternoon that X was targeted in a “massive cyber-attack” that resulted in the intermittent service outages that had brought down his social network throughout the day. The platform, formerly known as Twitter, had been unresponsive for many users as posts failed to load.“We get attacked every day, but this was done with a lot of resources,” the platform’s CEO posted. “Either a large, coordinated group and/or a country is involved.”Downdetector, a website that monitors outages on various sites and platforms, showed thousands of reports of outages that initially spiked at about 5
Young Tigers are full of hope – but for every success story, there’s a cautionary tale
Sam Lalor made the obligatory phone call to his dad this week; his selection wasn’t exactly a surprise. It wasn’t exactly Marlion Pickett in grand final week. And it wasn’t exactly Richard Nixon phoning Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin. It was as monosyllabic as most teenagers phoning their parents.Many good judges consider Lalor’s dad, Steve, to be one of the best country footballers they’ve seen
Tim Cahill calls for ‘broader understanding’ amid influx of sovereign wealth into sport
Socceroos great Tim Cahill has said people who criticise the influx of sovereign wealth into sport neglect the fact trade deals exist between Australia and countries like Saudi Arabia and Qatar.The 45-year-old all-time leading Socceroos goalscorer has worked for six years in Qatar, and has the title of international sports advisor at the country’s government-backed Aspire Academy.Cahill was asked for his views on sovereign wealth investment in sport at the SportNXT conference in Melbourne on Wednesday.Governments and government-linked entities from countries including Saudi Arabia, UAE and Qatar have invested billions of dollars into sport but some have drawn criticism for their human rights and development records amid accusations of sportswashing.“We talk about business, we talk about governments, let’s talk about maybe government trade deals before we start talking about sponsorship,” Cahill said
Who bought this smoked salmon? How ‘AI agents’ will change the internet (and shopping lists)
Internet shutdowns at record high in Africa as access ‘weaponised’
Skype got shouted down by Teams and Zoom. But it revolutionised human connection | John Naughton
‘An ideal tool’: prisons are using virtual reality to help people in solitary confinement
‘Major brand worries’: Just how toxic is Elon Musk for Tesla?
Crypto giant Tether CEO on cooperating with Trump administration: ‘We’ve never been shady’