The UK economy may be struggling for momentum, but a quiet revolution is taking place within its industrial heartlands. As traditional markets face shifting headwinds, the transition to alternative energy has emerged as an aggressive driver of domestic employment.
Do most of us think about Potash unless you are a farmer but it is worrying Governments and the USA in particular and the affects are global including the UK affecting all of our food prices. The main reason behind the recent US request for EU countries especially Lithuania, Poland and Ukraine to allow Belarusian fertiliser exports is a mixture of food security concerns, geopolitical strategy and American economic interests.
The latest proposed and recently adopted European Union sanctions against Russia are part of what Brussels calls its 20th sanctions package, introduced in April–May 2026. The measures are aimed less at symbolic punishment and more at squeezing Russia’s long-term ability to finance the war in Ukraine while also closing loopholes that allowed Moscow to keep exporting energy through third countries.
The Richmond Project’s Spotlight on Financial Literacy 2026 is one of the most comprehensive examinations yet of how well the UK understands money. The answer is stark as almost 40% of British adults cannot correctly answer basic questions about interest, inflation, and risk.
According to data from the International Energy Agency (IEA) Global EV Outlook, global EV sales surpassed a record 20.7 million units, meaning one in four new cars sold worldwide was electric. However, a major divergence has emerged: while Europe and emerging global markets are experiencing massive growth, the United States is seeing a sharp decline.
Ofgem has announced a 13% increase in the energy price cap, taking effect from 1 July to 30 September 2026. This means energy unit rates are rising due to surging global wholesale gas prices linked to geopolitical tensions in the Middle East.
Claude Mythos is Anthropic’s highly advanced, next-generation AI frontier model. Originally revealed in April 2026 as "Mythos Preview,".
The Government has published a list of 125 everyday essentials - including fruit, oils and core pantry staples - targeted for tariff reductions, alongside uprating mileage rates to support working people with the cost of living. Government launches consultation on suspending tariffs on OVER 100 everyday essentials with the full list now available.
Projects agreed between the UK and Poland on the basis of the Treaty signed by the 2 countries on 27 May 2026. On 27 May 2026 the UK and Poland signed the Security and Defence Partnership Treaty.
The United Kingdom is currently navigating a fierce political and economic debate over the cost of living, with food prices sitting at the absolute centre of the storm. As households across the nation continue to feel the pinch at the supermarket checkout, Westminster and Holyrood have put forward two starkly contrasting visions on how to bring grocery bills down.
Crypto and illicit finance networks exploited by Russia to circumvent UK sanctions are being targeted as the government ramps up pressure on Putin’s war machine to support Ukraine. UK ramps up pressure on Putin’s war machine with tough new sanctions, targeting crypto networks used to bypass Britain’s sanctions.
The United Kingdom is currently experiencing a historic demographic shift. Fresh data reveals that the country’s birth rates have plummeted to unprecedented lows, while its overall population continues to expand to record heights.
A Policy Blueprint for Building a Northern Digital Workforce Before the Window Closes”. The global race for artificial intelligence investment is accelerating.
For months now, ministers have insisted that talk of “pension raids” is nothing more than online noise. They say the government is committed to protecting pensioners, that the triple lock is safe, that no one is coming for people’s retirement savings.
Otter Ferry Seafish Ltd is aiming to demonstrate that juvenile halibut can be grown successfully and commercially in sea cages in Scottish waters. A £97,400 aquaculture research and development project in Argyll, is aiming to demonstrate that juvenile halibut can be grown successfully and commercially in sea cages in Scottish waters.
The Chancellor’s already‑tight fiscal headroom has been “seriously eroded”, according to senior economic analysts, prompting renewed speculation that the Treasury may turn to pension‑related tax measures to plug the gap. Independent forecasts suggest that between £12 billion and £16 billion of the Chancellor’s fiscal buffer has disappeared due to weaker‑than‑expected growth, higher borrowing costs, and the ongoing freeze in tax thresholds.
Chris Rea, Prospects at Jisc, discusses their new report showing a disconnect between young people's perceptions and AI's real impact on work and jobs. AI is already having a significant impact on how young people approach their careers.
Retail sales weren't impacted by the conflict in Iran in March, but suffered a 1.3% fall in sales volumes in April. E-commerce was particularly badly hit by last month’s fall in consumer confidence.
The latest figures on immigration to the UK show a sharp decline in net migration, which is now at its lowest point since 2012, excluding the pandemic years. Data released by the Office for National Statistics and the Home Office covers the most recent changes in visas, small boat arrivals, asylum hotel use and overall migration levels.
The case involving Peter Murrell has become a wider warning about governance, oversight and concentration of power inside organisations. While the legal details are specific to that case, the broader lesson applies equally to businesses, charities, political parties, community trusts, sports clubs and voluntary organisations: no organisation should ever rely purely on trust, loyalty or personal reputation when handling money.