A recent article on OilPrice.com caught our attention. The piece, titled “Power Prices Triple on PJM as Heat Wave and Data Centers Collide”, describes a moment that may be remembered as one of the first clear warnings that the world’s digital infrastructure is beginning to outgrow the electrical grids that power it.
Britain is at a pivotal moment. After decades of leaning heavily on financial services, the UK is now facing a convergence of pressures such as geopolitical shocks, energy transitions, supply‑chain fragility, and a renewed focus on national resilience.
Scotland is at a crossroads in how it recognises and promotes apprenticeships. England’s annual Top Apprenticeship Employers rankings—recently updated for 2026 have become a high‑profile benchmark for celebrating companies that invest heavily in skills, training, and workforce development.
When politicians talk about "welfare spending", they are often referring to a very broad budget that includes: Working-age benefits (Universal Credit, disability benefits, housing benefit, etc.) State pensions Pension Credit and other pensioner benefits. The important point is that the State Pension is by far the largest single component of welfare spending.
After decades of central control, could the balance of power finally shift away from Whitehall? Every government promises to "empower local communities." Almost every government then proceeds to do the opposite. Councils are told what they must spend money on, what targets they must meet, what taxes they can raise and, increasingly, what they cannot do without first seeking permission from central government.
The £4.6 billion contract awarded to industry joint venture Edgewing, funded jointly by the three partner nations, will advance the next stage of the aircraft's design. £4.6 billion contract secured with Italy and Japan to deliver a next-generation combat aircraft.
Andy Burnham needs to remember - “If rebalancing doesn’t reach Caithness, it isn’t rebalancing — it’s just regional branding.” Where the UK’s Economic Debate Feels Most Real In Caithness, the idea of “economic rebalancing” isn’t an abstract policy discussion — it’s a lived reality. Here, at the northern edge of mainland Britain, the distance from London isn’t just geographical.
Every year, millions of people dream of visiting the Scottish Highlands. They picture empty roads winding through spectacular mountains, pristine beaches, dramatic castles and unforgettable sunsets.
Every summer, thousands of visitors arrive in Caithness to explore dramatic coastlines, ancient castles, beautiful harbours and some of Scotland's most spectacular scenery. For most, Google Maps is an invaluable travelling companion.
Imagine you've booked a café for lunch in Wick. Google says it's "in Wick", so you allow half an hour before your next destination.
n additional £2.5 million is being invested to expand free after school activity clubs for primary school children from low-income families, starting this August. The investment builds on the success of the Extra Time programme – delivered in partnership with the Scottish Football Association (SFA) – which currently supports around 5,000 children every week across 50 clubs in 27 local authority areas.
Apparently None — But We’re All Experts Now. Before the Strait of Hormuz started making headlines, most of us thought potash was something you sprinkled on the garden once a year, and phosphates were either in dishwasher tablets or something your chemistry teacher mentioned right before you fell asleep.
Britain is constantly told there isn’t enough money. We’re told there isn’t enough to build council housing.
New funding has been made available to support people impacted by gambling-related mental health problems in Scotland. From today, organisations will be able to bid for a share of £375,000 to support projects and research linked to gambling harms and mental health, including suicide prevention.
Scotland enters any conversation about economic rebalancing Burnham push or otherwise from a different starting point than England. It already has a devolved parliament, its own economic development agencies, and a long tradition of regional identity.
From Caithness to Nottingham, the Same Warning Signs Keep Appearing. Across Britain, maternity stories keep surfacing — and they share a troubling pattern.
Donald Trump has declared a national emergency over fertilizer supplies in the United States and temporarily suspended import duties on phosphate fertilizer from Morocco to prevent a domestic food‑production crisis. This move is meant to stabilise U.S.
For half a century, Britain’s economy has revolved around a single axis of London and the South East. From finance to media, from tech startups to infrastructure investment, the gravitational pull of the capital has shaped everything from wages to housing costs.
A major new report from the international delivery expert Parcelhero finds AI has moved from boardroom experiment to operational backbone across global supply chains – and the transformation is accelerating faster than anyone predicted. A new industry report, Putting the AI into Supply ChAIns, reveals there is a seismic shift under way in UK logistics.
Technical study on suitable areas in Scotland for new nuclear published. Scotland has areas with “high potential” for new nuclear development from a technical perspective, according to a new siting study by the government’s nuclear delivery body.