Category: United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Do one thing – get on the HMRC app

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    HMRC is reminding people to download the HMRC app to access HMRC services such as Child Benefit and their National Insurance number.

    Apple and the Apple Logo are trademarks of Apple Inc. App Store is a service mark of Apple Inc. Google Play is a trademark of Google LLC.

    • Talk Money Week is an annual awareness initiative – the theme this year is “Do One Thing”
    • 1.7 million customers use the HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) app every month, with 29 million sessions launched between July and September 2024 and 711,000 new users in the same period
    • HMRC has today launched a new advertising campaign promoting the app, aimed at 18-34-year-olds

    This Talk Money Week (4 – 8 November), taxpayers are being urged to “Do One Thing” and get on the HMRC app to save time and simplify managing their money and tax.

    More than 1.7 million people are already using the HMRC app every month, which enables users to access services such as making a Child Benefit claim, finding their National Insurance number and a tax calculator to estimate their take-home pay.

    Between July and September 2024, 711,382 new users downloaded the app, and there was a 39% increase in app activity compared to the same period last year – up from 20.93 million sessions to 29.22 million. And nearly £300 million has been paid to HMRC via the app so far this financial year.

    HMRC is encouraging anyone who hasn’t yet downloaded the free and secure HMRC app, one of the UK’s top-rated finance apps, to do one thing and get on it today.

    The most popular features used on the app between July and September this year were:

    • check State Pension contributions– 1.9 million sessions
    • manage Child Benefit – 1.6 million sessions
    • view annual tax summaries – 1.4 million sessions

    Myrtle Lloyd, HMRC’s Director General for Customer Services, said:

    One of the main priorities for HMRC is improving its customer services and this incredibly useful and user-friendly app is a great example of how tax can be made much easier for people.

    Whether you’re a student looking for your National Insurance number or a new parent wanting to claim Child Benefit, the HMRC app has a range of tools for you, at your fingertips. I urge everyone to download it today.

    The HMRC app is rated 4.7/5 and 4.8/5 respectively on the Google Play and Apple Store and ranks among both of their top 10 finance apps.

    HMRC has launched a new advertising campaign today aimed at 18-34-year-olds to “get on it” with the app, showcasing how it can help them remain in control of their tax affairs and finances amidst their busy daily lives. This includes an attention-grabbing new advert streaming on multiple video on demand channels that can also be viewed on the HMRC YouTube channel.

    You’re on it – Download the HMRC app

    Further information

    Download the app from Google Play or Apple Store

    The HMRC app is bilingual and available in Welsh.

    You can use the HMRC app to:

    • check your tax code, National Insurance number, and income and employment history from the past five years
    • view and manage Child Benefit, Tax Credits, and your State Pension forecast
    • access tax details, including your Unique Taxpayer Reference and income information
    • use tools like the tax calculator to estimate take-home pay, and check for National Insurance contribution gaps
    • make payments for Self Assessment, Simple Assessment, and even set payment reminders
    • access your Help to Save account and claim refunds if you’ve overpaid tax
    • track forms and correspondence with HMRC
    • update personal information like your name and address
    • save your National Insurance number to a digital wallet and opt for electronic communications from HMRC
    • use HMRC’s digital assistant for guidance and support

    Updates to this page

    Published 4 November 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: UKHSA issues health advice following the half-term break

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) is reminding parents of the simple steps they can take to reduce the spread of stomach bugs and winter illnesses.

    As children across the country return to their classrooms after the half term break, the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) is reminding parents of the simple steps they can take to reduce the spread of stomach bugs and winter illnesses to ensure they stay healthy this term and keep strong this winter.   

    We are now beginning to see cases of flu and norovirus increasing as we head into the winter months, with norovirus activity in the past two weeks more than double the 5-season average for the same 2-week period and flu steadily increasing over the past few weeks.

    Teaching good hygiene habits

    Parents are urged to encourage good hygiene habits in their families, such as handwashing and using a tissue to catch coughs and sneezes. Regularly washing your hands with soap and warm water for 20 seconds or using hand sanitiser when convenient, is one of the most effective ways to stop the spread of germs.

    Knowing when to keep your child at home and when to send them to school

    Children are encouraged to stay in school or nursery with symptoms such as a runny nose, sore throat or slight cough (if otherwise well and do not have a high temperature), but should stay home if they’re displaying symptoms such as having a fever (they should stay home until the fever has passed and they are well enough to attend) or diarrhoea and vomiting (children should stay home for at least 48 hours after these symptoms clear up).

    Stopping the spread of stomach bugs

    Stomach bugs spread easily in schools and nurseries. If you or your child have diarrhoea and vomiting, washing your hands with soap and warm water and using bleach-based products to clean surfaces will help stop infections from spreading. Don’t prepare food for others if you have such symptoms or for 48 hours after symptoms stop. If you are unwell, you should also avoid visiting people in hospitals and care homes to avoid passing on the infection to those more vulnerable. It’s important that all children are given the opportunity to start the year in good health, which is why it’s important not to return to school, nursery or work until 48 hours after symptoms have stopped.

    Getting vaccinated

    Infections such as flu, which see a seasonal increase in winter, are easily protected against with vaccination. All primary school age children, those aged 2 years (who have turned 2 years old before the  1 September 2024) and all 3 year olds (and secondary school children from Year 7 to Year 11) are eligible for the flu vaccine, which beyond protecting the children themselves and the school community, will also protect elderly relatives.

    It’s also important to ensure your children are up-to-date with their routine vaccinations, which protect against diseases such as measles, mumps, rubella, diphtheria and polio. UKHSA is continuing to see cases of measles, which is easily prevented with vaccination. If parents are unsure of their child’s vaccination status, they can check their child’s red book or contact their local GP.  

    Dr Richard Pebody, Director, Clinical & Emerging Infections at UKHSA, said:

    As children return to school after the half term holidays, it’s important that they get off to the best start possible ahead of winter. Staying healthy and taking simple steps to reduce the spread of illness will ensure children and their families experience less disruption at this important time of year.

    Each winter, we see an increase in acute respiratory and gastro-intestinal illnesses, however it only takes simple steps to reduce the spread of most of these infections. By following advice on good hygiene habits, knowing when to keep your child off school and taking up the opportunity to get vaccinated, parents are protecting their children and the wider school community.

    UKHSA’s e-bug resources for all ages can help you to explain and discuss hygiene habits and their importance, to your child or teenager.

    NHS UK also provides easily accessible guidance for parents to help manage winter illness at home.

    Updates to this page

    Published 4 November 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: expert reaction to study suggesting association between many pesticides and prostate cancer

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    A study published in Wiley Cancer looks at an association between pesticides and prostate cancer incidence. 

    Prof Paul Pharoah, Professor of Cancer Epidemiology, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, said:

    “The epidemiological design used to evaluate the association between pesticides and prostate cancer incidence and mortality in this study is called an ecological study.  In an ecological study the unit of analysis is the population in a given area, and so the correlation studied is that between pesticide levels in a given area and prostate cancer rates in the same area.  It is important to note that pesticide exposures and prostate cancer occurrence in individuals was not studied.

    “Ecological studies are very prone to bias and can give rise to the ecological fallacy – the assumption that group level correlation also applies to individuals.  Ecological studies are generally regarded as hypothesis generating rather than hypothesis testing.  The well-known mantra that correlation does not mean causation is particularly applicable to ecological studies.

    “While several associations were identified, no data to suggest that these associations are causal is presented.  It is notable that of the four pesticides associated with both incidence rates and mortality rates of prostate cancer three are considered by the Environmental Protection Agency of the USA as not likely to be carcinogenic or have evidence of non-carcinogenicity.”

    ‘Pesticides and prostate cancer incidence and mortality: An environmentwide association study’ by Simon John Christoph Soerensen et al. was published in Wiley Cancer at 08:01 UK Time Monday 4 November 2024. 

    DOI: 10.1002/cncr.35572

    Declared interests

    Prof Paul Pharoah: I have previously provided expert testimony in for the defence in glyphosate and lymphoma litigation

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Council’s autumn leaves sweep up will generate enough electricity to boil more than 5 million kettles | Westminster City Council

    Source: City of Westminster

    This autumn, Westminster Council, in partnership with Veolia, has extended its street cleaning service once again to accommodate the substantial leaf fall from the city’s 19,000 trees.   

    The peak period of leaf fall typically spans from October 1 to November 30, influenced by strong winds, rainfall, and cooler temperatures.  

    The council anticipates gathering approximately 1,000 tonnes of leaves, equivalent to around 200,000 bags, this autumn. This quantity is comparable to the weight of six London underground trains, or 80 double decker buses.

    Due to the presence of heavy metals resulting from traffic pollution, leaves collected in the city cannot be used for composting. But, to optimise the leaves as a resource, they are used to contribute to generating energy for heating homes.

    Approximately 1,000 tonnes of leaves can generate 530,000 kilowatt-hours of electricity, enough to power an estimated five million hours of television or boil 5.3 million kettles.

    During this period, the local authority and Veolia are employing 11 additional agency staff and utilizing two extra collection vehicles to bolster the street cleansing endeavour.  

    Manual street cleansing teams are work closely with the council’s new electric gully trucks to prevent leaves from obstructing drains and potentially causing floods.  

    Cllr Paul Dimoldenberg, Westminster City Council Cabinet Member for City Management and Air Quality said:

    Falling autumn leaves make for a great Instagram picture and look spectacular in our parks, but they can make pavements slippery and pose a flood risk by blocking drains. Our street cleansing teams are working hard to prioritise leaf sweeping to keep our streets free from hazards for residents and visitors.” 

    Lee Mewett, Senior Contract Manager for Veolia Westminster, added:

    As Westminster City Council’s environmental services partner, we’re proud to play a crucial role in this autumn’s leaf clean-up initiative.

    Our commitment to ecological transformation drives us to find innovative solutions and I look forward to the deployment of new electric gully trucks this year as part of our ambition to transition all Westminster depots to be fully electric. This sustainable energy solution will reduce noise and increase the efficiency with which we address the challenges posed by the annual leaf fall.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Pensioner Advice Events bring comfort and financial relief to Derby residents

    Source: City of Derby

    In a heartening series of community events throughout October, we have been able to deliver life-changing support to residents facing financial hardship, bringing peace of mind and practical assistance to individuals who need it most.

    At our Pensioner Advice Event on October 4 at The Council House, a local woman left with a brighter financial outlook, gaining £73 extra each week thanks to council-led advice on available benefits. Several other attendees also found they were eligible for Pension Credit. Although some who attended the event could not apply immediately due to a lack of required documents, home visits have been scheduled with the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) to help them complete their applications.

    The events not only put more money in people’s pockets but also brought warmth and safety into their homes. An 84-year-old gentleman, who attended an event in New Zealand on October 25, learned for the first time that he qualified for Pension Credit. This discovery was a tremendous relief for him and his wife, who had been cutting back on heating and cooking hot meals to save on costs. The couple was also gifted a heated blanket and an air fryer, ensuring they can now stay warm and enjoy warm meals without worry.

    A woman from Mackworth walked away £36 per week better off after council advisors helped her identify unclaimed entitlements. Another attendee at a local event was also delighted to receive a heated blanket and air fryer, just as winter temperatures begin to set in. Another participant reported savings of £75 per week after connecting with council representatives.

    Councillor Sarah Chambers said:

    These events are here to make a real difference for Derby residents who may be struggling or unsure of the support available to them. I strongly encourage anyone who could benefit from extra help to attend. Our team is dedicated to connecting residents with resources to improve their quality of life, especially as costs rise and winter draws in. We’re here to help every step of the way.”

    There are upcoming events happening around Derby in the coming weeks. These include:

    • Mackworth – Thursday 24 October, 10am-12 noon, St Francis Church, Prince Charles Avenue, Mackworth, DE22 4FN
    • New Zealand – Friday 25 October, 10am-12 noon, Lonny Wilsoncroft Community Centre, Stepping Lane, Derby DE1 1GL
    • Chaddesden – Friday 1st November, 10am-12 noon, Age UK Building, Chaddesden Park, Chaddesden, DE21 6LN (There is free parking in the main car park off Maine Drive, Chaddesden)
    • Sinfin – Monday 4 November, 10am-12 noon, Sinfin Moor Church, Arleston Lane, Sinfin, Derby, DE24 3DH
    • Allenton – Wednesday 4 December, 2pm-4pm, Derby South Salvation Army, 24 Chellaston Road, Derby, DE24 9AE
    • Osmaston – Monday 10 December, 10am-12 noon, Moorways Sports Village, Moor Lane, Derby, DE24 9HY

    If you want to learn more about cost of living support, visit our cost of living webpage or visit Community Action Derby’s cost of living online hub.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Scottish Secretary champions energy sector on visit to Norway

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Ian Murray will make his first official overseas visit to Norway this week, as the UK strengthens its relationship with key international partner.

    On this trip Mr Murray will met energy investors to highlight Scotland’s world-leading energy sector and UK Government’s clean energy mission. This follows £125 million allocated in the Budget towards establishing Great British Energy in Aberdeen,

    Norway is a key partner for Scotland and the UK, in trade, defence, and energy. The Scottish Secretary’s visit will deepen these ties, to bring benefits to people and businesses in both Scotland and Norway.

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer met the Prime Minister of Norway in July, where they discussed the importance of energy security and working together on green energy and renewables.

    Following on from this, the Secretary of State will meet a number of Norwegian companies who are investors in wind and low carbon projects. That includes Equinor who are a major supplier of energy to UK households and Operate the Hywind Scotland windfarm off the North East coast of Scotland.

    Speaking ahead of his visit, Mr Murray said:

    We are committed to maximising Scotland’s influence abroad, and selling ‘Brand Scotland’ across the world. Norway and the UK are key partners in energy, trade and defence, and my visit will help strengthen those ties. Norway is an important provider of clean energy, and of course Scotland’s energy sector is world-leading.

    I look forward to meeting a number of energy companies to discuss our journey to clean energy by 2030, the role of GB Energy, and encourage their further investment in Scotland’s green clean future.

    Last week the Chancellor’s Budget demonstrated how the UK Government is investing in Scotland’s future and laying the foundations for economic growth across the UK – including through funding for Green Freeports, City and Growth Deals, GB Energy and hydrogen projects.

    The visit to Norway will also help cement relations with one of the UK’s most important strategic trade and defence allies. Mr Murray will meet Norwegian ministers, and visit Kongsberg, a world leading defence contractor part owned by the Norwegian Government. Kongsberg supports 3500 jobs in the UK, including in Aberdeen and Dunfermline.

    The Secretary of State for Scotland and the Norwegian Ambassador to the UK, Tore Hattrem, recently visited the Royal Navy’s HMS Prince of Wales aircraft carrier. The carrier has recently taken part in Operation Strike Warrior – the biggest maritime training exercise in Europe, involving Norway and other NATO allies, operating under challenging conditions off the west coast of Scotland.

    Mr Murray will also meet the Norwegian government to discuss local economic growth, and support to remote communities.

    Updates to this page

    Published 4 November 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Housing handover in Dingwall

    Source: Scotland – Highland Council

    Twenty new homes are ready to welcome tenants in a beautiful edge of town location at Tulloch Square/Castle – Green Lady Court, Dingwall.

    The Highland Council has taken ownership from contractor Capstone for twenty housing units that include a mix of housing tenancy opportunities including:

    • four, 3-bedroomed semi-detached villas,
    • four, 2 bedroomed cottage flats; and
    • twelve, 2 bedroomed communal flats.

    All twenty properties will be available for social rent.

    Cllr Graham MacKenzie, Dingwall and Seaforth Area Chair and Local Ward Member, said: “This is a stunning location for the twenty new homes now available in Dingwall. They are situated in a fantastic location, just minutes walking from both Dingwall Primary and Dingwall Academy.”

    Chair of the Council Housing and Property Committee, Cllr Glynis Campbell Sinclair added: “The demand for affordable housing is felt throughout the Highlands, and across Scotland as a whole. We are committed to meeting the Highland housing challenge by building more homes and exploring solutions with our partners.

    “The new properties in Dingwall provide a welcome addition to the Council’s commitments to provide sustainable and energy efficient affordable social rental homes for both families and individuals.”

    Rhona Donnelly, Managing Director of Capstone Construction said: “We are delighted to hand over 20 new homes in Dingwall providing much needed accommodation to the town. This is our first project as a developer to The Highland Council and look forward to delivering more affordable housing under this model in the future.”

    This housing development was supported through funding from the Scottish Government of £2,418,801.

    Photo courtesy of Capstone

    4 Nov 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: New team of wardens to enhance environmental protection

    Source: Northern Ireland City of Armagh

    From Monday 11 November, a new team of litter wardens will be on patrol across the Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon (ABC) Borough.

    ABC Council has partnered with District Enforcement Limited, to enhance and enforce its zero tolerance approach to littering, fly-tipping and dog fouling.

    The four new District Enforcement Officers will supplement the work of Council’s four Environmental Wardens in carrying out patrols across the Borough, giving advice and issuing Fixed Penalty Notices to offenders.

    Already this year, the council has been involved in around a dozen Fixed Penalty Notices handed to those responsible for fly-tipping.

    People who are found responsible for fly-tipping will face a Fixed Penalty Notice of £400, while those who fail to pick up after their dog face a fixed penalty fine of £120 and similarly those who drop litter will be fined £120.

    Those who do not pay the Fixed Penalty Notice will be subject to court action and there are no early payment reductions.

    The new District Enforcement Officers will proactively patrol all areas of the borough, including city/town centres, villages, parks and open spaces. They will also respond to concerns over areas which are particularly adversely affected by dumping, litter or dog fouling.

    While the Council recognises that the vast majority of residents respect and look after their areas, they remain committed to pursuing those who continue to cause harm to the environment, local wildlife and the climate through littering offences.

    Members of the public can also help in the fight against litter, fly-tipping and dog fouling, by reporting incidents via the ABC Council App which is available to download on the App store and Google Play store, or by calling the Council’s Environmental Health team directly on 0300 0300 900.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: City to fall silent for Remembrance Sunday commemorations

    Source: City of Leicester

    PEOPLE from across Leicester will remember the city’s fallen service men and women at the annual Remembrance Sunday service this weekend.

    The city’s service of remembrance will take place at the war memorial in Victoria Park on Sunday (10 November).

    A parade, led by the Seaforth Highlanders Pipes and Drums and comprising members of the Armed Forces, reservists, veterans and cadets, will step off from De Montfort Hall at around 10.40am and make its way to the Arch of Remembrance, ready for the service at 10.55am.

    The Lord Bishop of Leicester, the Right Reverend Martyn Snow, will conduct the service with support from former BBC Radio Leicester presenter, Dave Andrews.  A bugler will sound the Last Post before the firing of salutes marks the beginning and the end of the two-minute silence. A piper from the Seaforth Highlanders will play a lament before the service continues.

    People in the area are advised that the salutes will create a loud bang, which may cause alarm or distress, particularly to young children or pets.

    Official wreaths will be laid by the Vice Lord-Lieutenant of Leicestershire, Colonel Murray Colville, and The Lord Mayor of Leicester, Councillor Bhupen Dave, together with representatives of local emergency services, military units and faith communities.  Other organisations and veterans’ associations will lay wreaths immediately after the official wreath laying, while members of the public will have an opportunity to lay their wreaths at the end of the service.

    The Salvation Army band will accompany hymns, supported by the City of Leicester Singers and the Leicester Cathedral Choir.

    Limited public seating will be available on a first come, first served basis and there will be a designated seating area for those with a disability or who are unable to stand for long periods.

    A returning parade will step off through the War Memorial and back onto Centenary Walk at the end of the service, returning to the front of De Montfort Hall at around 11.45am.

    Granville Road car park will be closed from midnight on Saturday, 9 November until around 1pm on Sunday, November 10, and vehicles should not be left overnight in the car park.

    A limited number of spaces for disabled guests and blue badge holders will be available in the car park, which will be accessible from London Road only. These must be requested in advance by emailing lord.mayor@leicester.gov.uk or by calling 0116 454 0020.

    Road closures will be in operation on both Granville Road and Regent Road from 9.30am until 12.30pm on Sunday.  Access will be maintained for residents of Salisbury Road.

    The Lord Mayor of Leicester, Councillor Bhupen Dave, said: “Remembrance Day is a time for reflection and contemplation on the sacrifice made by the men and women of our armed forces in defence of their country and allows us to come together to remember all those whose lives have been lost in armed conflict.

    “I am humbled to be able to lay a wreath commemorating them on behalf of the people of Leicester.”

    The following day, Monday 11 November, is Remembrance Day, when the nation pauses at 11am to reflect on the sacrifices made by the country’s service men and women.

    Held each year on 11 November, the silence coincides with the time in 1918 when the First World War came to an end.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Mayor’s pioneering policies set to halve emissions from new buildings as London leads the way in cutting energy use

    Source: Mayor of London

    • Sadiq’s ambitious planning policies ensure the capital is outperforming national requirements for cutting energy use in new buildings, driving down carbon emissions and supporting investment in green technologies – including solar panels and heat pumps
    • London achieved 57 per cent higher carbon savings in proposed new buildings than required by national building regulations in 2023 – a seven per cent increase compared to the previous year.
    • New data also reveals that London’s overall emissions have fallen 21 per cent since start of the Mayor’s tenure in 2016, significantly faster than the national average 

    London is leading the country in driving down energy use and reducing emissions, new City Hall data published today has revealed.

    The Mayor’s London Plan – which sets out policies that address the global climate emergency and the housing crisis whilst providing a blueprint to make London a greener and healthier city – is helping to drive these achievements.

    The Plan’s net zero carbon target, which applies to all major planning applications, is delivering 57 per cent higher carbon reductions in proposed new developments than required by national building regulations. Where developers cannot achieve net zero on site, the Plan ensures that they contribute funds to support other decarbonisation projects in London boroughs.   

    City Hall’s 2023 Energy Monitoring Report, published today, showcases the significant impact of the Mayor’s policies and highlights the vital role cities play when they are given power to drive down carbon emissions, reduce energy costs, support supply chains and drive investment in clean technology. The report highlights: 

    • Emissions from proposed new developments were less than half of the CO2 levels required to meet national Building Regulations, with a saving of over 32,000 tonnes. This is equivalent to 27,000 return flights from London to New York.  
    • More than a quarter of this saving came from energy efficiency measures – saving 8,552 tonnes of CO2 emissions. This is the equivalent to adding loft insulation to over 13,000 homes. 
    • 84 per cent of proposed developments in the capital, featuring over 20,000 homes and more than 1,000,000m2 of non-residential floor space, plan to use heat pumps for their heating system – the majority being large, centralised heat pumps supplying communal and site-wide heat networks. These heating systems service a number of buildings on a site.  
    • 92 per cent of proposed developments will include solar panels. Combined, these panels will be the size of approximately 14 football pitches (having a cumulative area of 70,000 m²), totalling £21 million in new solar investment. 
    • More than 28,000 homes (91 per cent of all new homes) are set to connect to either communal heat networks or area-wide district heat networks.   

    City Hall has also today published the London Energy and Greenhouse Gas Inventory, which looks at emissions in London between 1 January 2022 and 31 January 2022 and shows significant reductions in emissions in the capital in recent years:

    • Since Sadiq took office in 2016, total emissions in the capital have fallen 21 per cent, significantly faster than the national average (16 per cent). 
    • London’s emissions have dropped 43 per cent since their peak in 2000, despite a 23 per cent increase in population.
    • Emissions from transport are dropping faster in London than across the UK. Since 2016, London has had an 18 per cent drop in transport emissions compared with a 13 per cent drop nationwide.

    Since 2016, the Mayor’s carbon offsetting policy has enabled £333 million to be secured for net zero projects across London. This fund will be redirected by local authorities to projects in their neighbourhoods that will reduce London’s emissions. Projects include energy efficiency improvements and renewable energy installations on council-owned buildings such as schools and community centres.

    Deputy Mayor for Environment and Energy Mete Coban said: “It’s fantastic to see London leading the country in reducing emissions and that the Mayor’s ambitious planning policies are bringing down energy bills and helping Londoners become more energy efficient. 

    “The Mayor has committed to making London a net zero-carbon city by 2030 and this new data shows we are progressing in the right direction. 

    “Sadiq and I continue will continue to work tirelessly to help boost London’s green economy to build a better, greener city for everyone.”  

    Helena Rivers, Net Zero Lead, Building and Places, Europe and India, AECOM said: “The GLA’s energy monitoring report for 2023 highlights a significant milestone, with on-site CO2 emission reductions from new development averaging 57.4% beyond national building regulation standards.  

    “This progress underscores the effectiveness of the GLA’s leading London Plan policies aimed at achieving net zero by 2030, which AECOM is proud to support in their implementation.  

    “The evolving policy landscape, including the Future Homes Standard and the Future Building Standard, will play a crucial role in this success.  

    “As we adapt to these new policies, it is essential to maintain our momentum in meeting the GLA targets, whilst striving to ensure a sustainable future for London.” 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: NDA supply chain award winners 2024 revealed

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    The Nuclear Decommissioning Authority group have announced five organisations as winners of this year’s supply chain awards.

    NDA supply chain award winners revealed

    Morgan Sindall Infrastructure, The Decommissioning Delivery Partnership, PA Consulting, Antech and The Higher Activity Waste Thermal Treatment Tranche 1 Team are the big winners in this year’s supply chain awards.

    The awards recognise the vital role that supply chain companies play in helping the NDA group deliver its nationally important mission and clean-up its 17 nuclear sites across the UK.

    NDA Group Chief Commercial and Business Development Officer, Emma Ferguson-Gould, said:

    These awards not only recognise how important the supply chain is to our mission, but they also showcase the variety of innovative work being delivered by businesses throughout the UK and beyond on our behalf.

    We’re looking forward to presenting the winners with their awards at the event in January.

    The event is a fantastic opportunity to see pioneering work from our mission critical supply chain, who the NDA group are committed to encouraging, supporting, and developing, not just for today, but for the future.

    NDA’s supply chain conference, which usually attracts around 1,700 delegates and 300 exhibitors, will take place on 16 January 2025 at The International Centre in Telford. Registration is open now with full details available on the supply chain event website.

    The full list of winners is below. Visit our LinkedIn page to view the films explaining more about each category and those shortlisted:

    Best approach to achieving social value
    Winner: The Decommissioning Delivery Partnership

    Best approach to environmental sustainability
    Winner: Morgan Sindall Infrastructure

    Best example of applying creative and innovative solutions
    Winner: PA Consulting for harnessing AI at Sellafield Ltd

    Best example of delivering excellence through collaboration
    Winner: The Higher Activity Waste Thermal Treatment Tranche 1 Team

    Best small and medium enterprise
    Winner: Antech

    Updates to this page

    Published 4 November 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Council pledge to improve public transport means more buses on the road

    Source: City of Stoke-on-Trent

    Published: Monday, 4th November 2024

    Seven new bus routes have been introduced in Stoke-on-Trent to make it easier for residents to get around the city.

    Some of the additional services are completely new and some are existing routes which will now run into the evenings and at weekends. They are in addition to the service improvements which were introduced by the city council in May.

    The new routes are:

    • Service 6A (Blythe Bridge – Meir Park – Meir – Longton – City Centre) – additional early morning buses on weekdays, operated by First Potteries.
    • Service 9A (Tunstall – Mill Hill – Bradeley – City Centre) – a new service operating every 30 minutes during the daytime Monday to Saturday, operated by D&G Bus, starting on 11 November. 
    • Service 11 (Longton – Stoke – Newcastle) – later evening buses on the Longton to Newcastle section of route on Mondays to Saturdays, operated by D&G Bus.
    • Service 19/19A (City Centre – Sneyd Green) – new routes serving Cobridge Health Centre, providing a direct link along Leek New Road to and from the Sneyd Green area, operated by Stanton’s of Stoke.
    • Service 21 (City Centre – Stoke – Trentham) – new hourly Sunday service operated by First Potteries.
    • Service 22 (Longton – Blurton – Trentham – Royal Stoke University Hospital – Newcastle) – a new hourly Sunday service, operated by First Potteries, and further buses operating later into the evenings on Mondays to Saturdays, operated by D&G Bus.
    • Service 43 (City Centre – Milton – Baddeley Green) – new hourly Sunday service operated by First Potteries.

    Councillor Finlay Gordon-McCusker, cabinet member for transport, infrastructure and regeneration, said: “Improving the city’s transport links is a key priority for Stoke-on-Trent City Council and is part of our wider vision of creating a healthier, wealthier and greener city for all.

    “Now we want to build on our commitment to improving public transport in the city by putting on even more new services which will make it easier for residents to get to work, college, their jobs and our city centre.”

    Cllr Gordon-McCusker added: “Earlier this year, we announced new routes which run more frequently and operate at the weekends. We also recently helped to introduce routes like the number 42 bus in Norton after listening to residents who say they have been cut off for many years.

    “We want to see these services continue for as long as possible, so I encourage all residents across the city to make use of our buses and ensure that these routes are sustainable for the long term.”

    David Brookes, managing director of D&G Bus, said: “The bus operators of Stoke-on-Trent, in collaboration with the city council, have worked together as part of the Enhanced Partnership to introduce these new routes, funded through the Bus Service Improvement Plan.

    “The partnership has been a tremendous success, and we are proud to have been part of it. The introduction of these routes, alongside the Affordable Fares scheme and other improvements, such as enhanced bus stop infrastructure, are all positive outcomes from the partnership that will further elevate and improve public transport in Stoke-on-Trent.”

    The new bus routes are part of the city council’s Bus Service Enhancement Scheme, part of the wider Bus Service Improvement Plan (BSIP) which is being funded by £31.6 million from the Department for Transport (DfT).

    Already, BSIP has seen the launch of the incredibly successful Affordable Fares scheme, which offers discounted bus tickets to adults and young people, and improvements to more than 180 bus stops around the city.

    The next phase of the Bus Service Enhancement Scheme will see a tender produced for more new bus routes in the city, including proposals for daytime buses to the Middleport area and later, evening buses for Abbey Hulton, Blurton, Chell and Norton.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Satellite deal signed for advanced military tech

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments 3

    New Juno satellite to support military operations will be designed and built in the UK.

    Artist impression of Juno

    Armed forces personnel are to have access to the latest space technology for military operations, following a deal signed for a new satellite.

    The £40 million project with Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd will support around 200 skilled jobs, boosting the UK’s space sector and helping to grow the economy.

    Named Juno, the satellite will be able to capture daytime images of the Earth’s surface, strengthening the UK’s Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (ISR) capabilities. Expected to launch in 2027, Juno will have advanced imagery sensors, building on the capabilities of Tyche, UK Space Command’s first satellite which successfully launched in August this year.

    Both satellites form part of the Ministry of Defence’s space-based Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance programme, which will deliver a constellation of satellites and supporting ground systems by 2031.

    These satellites will support military operations, for instance by monitoring adversary activities, and also contribute to other government tasks, including natural disaster monitoring, the development of mapping information, environmental monitoring and tracking the impact of climate change around the world.   

    Minister for Defence Procurement and Industry Maria Eagle said: 

    “The contract for Juno shows the UK’s commitment to grow one of the most innovative and attractive space economies in the world and keep our competitive edge in space science and technology. 

    “Juno will not only support Armed Forces personnel deployed globally, but also support highly skilled jobs, delivering on the government’s growth mission.” 

    Air Chief Marshal Sir Rich Knighton said:

    “With Tyche in space, and Juno now on contract, UK Space Command’s ISTARI programme is making great strides, showcasing innovation and collaboration across government and industry.

    “With these Earth Observation satellites on orbit, UK Space Command and defence will be better equipped to conduct all-domain military operations and deliver assured space-based intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance to the joint force and our allies.”

    The contract for Juno was awarded via competitive procurement to Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd (SSTL), the same company that manufactured Tyche. 

    SSTL employs around 400 engineers, technicians and support staff across its two sites in Guildford, Surrey, and Bordon, Hampshire. With around half of these employees expected to work on the project, Juno will play a key part in securing critical UK skills in the growing global space sector. The project will also help inform the procurement strategy for future space capability requirements.

    Andrew Cawthorne, Managing Director, SSTL, said:

    “We’re incredibly proud that the Ministry of Defence has again placed its trust in SSTL to deliver the UK’s next sovereign intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance spacecraft.

    “Juno will offer a step change in imaging capability over Tyche, SSTL’s demonstrator spacecraft which launched in August and is now being operated for UK Space Command. We look forward to continuing our successful relationship with UK Space Command, DE&S, and Dstl, and playing a leading role in delivering the UK Defence Space Strategy.”

    Paul Russell, Space team leader at DE&S said:

    “Placing contracts and managing delivery of a new generation of UK military capabilities for use in a complex and critical environment takes incredible focus and collaborative working with our defence and industry partners. These efforts are key in ensuring the UK Armed Forces have access to the surveillance and intelligence information they need to maintain a competitive edge.”

    Updates to this page

    Published 4 November 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Planning approval paves way for new Wolverhampton city centre leisure hub anchored by Superbowl UK

    Source: City of Wolverhampton

    It will enable an estimated £500,000 of landlord works to be completed by Catella APAM’s sustainable retrofit and principal contracting business, Vantage, on the 17,000 sq. ft. space across multiple units.

    Superbowl UK, renowned for its premier entertainment and leisure experiences, will establish a new mixed use concept venue, featuring 12 bowling lanes, Crazy Club Soft Play area, interactive darts, a bar and diner, and SEGA Prize Zone Arcade, which will open in early 2025.

    Superbowl UK’s new mixed use concept creates a vibrant leisure hub on Victoria Arcade and Victoria Street, building on the council’s recent transformation works to pedestrianise Victoria Street.

    Superbowl UK’s exciting plans to bring this empty retail space back to life align to the council’s vision for the city centre – based on better connectivity, more homes, jobs, skills and learning opportunities and investment in the visitor economy – and demonstrates how town and city centre retail can be adapted to create a more vibrant city centre.

    The benefits of this approach are already showing with independent tourism STEAM data highlighting an increase of visitors to the city from 9.8 million to over 10 million last year.

    Councillor Chris Burden, City of Wolverhampton Council Cabinet Member for City Development, Jobs and Skills, said: “This is exactly the type of new development our extensive works on Victoria Street were designed to attract and it will be great to see works starting on site soon now that planning approval has been granted.

    “The scheme provides a major boost to the city centre’s leisure offer for residents and visitors, creates jobs for local people, increases footfall and dwell time to support current and emerging businesses, and complements plans coming forward for major regeneration around the Market Square area in partnership with the ECF.

    “The Superbowl UK investment, will ensure the currently vacant retail space will be occupied, boosting the local economy, and creating 30 new job opportunities for residents, including management positions and guest experience hosts.

    “The development will also serve as a catalyst for further investment, and the council continues to work with Catella APAM on attracting other new leisure and food and beverage occupiers, to capitalise on their confidence in the city.”

    Harry Wilce, Asset Manager at Catella APAM, said: “We are delighted to welcome Superbowl UK to the Mander Centre as the main anchor for our leisure offer to improve the customer offer at the centre and extend the operating hours, generating significant increase in footfall for the city centre.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Government incentive for second-hand electric business vans closed04 November 2024 An incentive to encourage local businesses to switch to second-hand electric vans has seen all 25 available incentives successfully applied for in just six weeks. When the scheme launched on 16 September,… Read more

    Source: Channel Islands – Jersey

    04 November 2024

    An incentive to encourage local businesses to switch to second-hand electric vans has seen all 25 available incentives successfully applied for in just six weeks. 

    When the scheme launched on 16 September, local businesses had an opportunity to apply for funding towards the purchase of a second-hand electric van on a first-come, first served basis, as part of the Government of Jersey’s incentive to reduce the Island’s transport emissions. 

    The Minister for the Environment, Deputy Steve Luce, said: “I’m pleased to see such an immediate and positive response from local businesses to the second-hand electric van incentive. This shows a real desire from businesses to switch to electric and support Jersey’s decarbonisation efforts. 

    “Business transport vehicles are responsible for a significant proportion of our transport emissions, so by making the switch to electric, businesses are supporting with the Island’s transition towards a more sustainable transport future.” 

    A separate Electric Vehicle Purchase Incentive (EVPI) continues to be available to both individuals and businesses; at a value of up to £3,500 towards the cost of an electric car or van, or up to £300 towards the cost of an electric moped or motorcycle. 

    Due to the successful uptake of this to date, it is likely to close by the end of 2024. For more information about the Electric Vehicle Purchase Incentive, visit: gov.je/GoElectric​.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Derry community organisations honoured at 2024 Pride of Place Awards

    Source: Northern Ireland – City of Derry

    Derry community organisations honoured at 2024 Pride of Place Awards

    4 November 2024

    Eglinton’s Aspace2 and DEEDS (Dementia Engaged and Empowered Derry and Strabane) in Creggan were celebrating at the weekend as they received national recognition for their key role in the community.
    Both organisations received runners up awards at the prestigious IPB Pride of Placer Awards which were announced in the Hillgrove Hotel in County Monaghan on Saturday night.  

    Aspace2, who support adults with additional needs in learning additional skills to allow them to fulfil their potential, received the runners up award in the Community Wellbeing Initiative category of the Main Competition.
    DEEDS, a community based model of support for people living with dementia, their carers and families, finished runners up in the Community Wellbeing Initiative city category.
    Mayor of Derry City and Strabane District Council, Councillor Lilian Seenoi-Barr, represented the Council area at the awards where she was joined by representatives of both organisations.
    “I am so proud to see these two brilliant local initiatives recognised on the national stage,” she said.
    “These awards rightly celebrate and recognise the selfless efforts of people to make their local neighbourhoods better places to live, work and socialise and these two projects embody that spirit.

    “I appreciated the opportunity to spend the evening with their teams and acknowledge the key work they do to give people with additional needs the support and guidance they need to get the most out of life.”
    The DEEDS Project has grown immensely over the last ten years thanks to the support from the National Lottery Community Fund.
    From one single memory group based in Creggan it has expanded into an organisation that boasts six social groups, two activity groups, a choir, carers education, carers drop in, intergenerational work, connection to the community, large scale Dementia friendly events and trips, and a suite of training and education courses.
    More recently it launched a pre-diagnosis programme in partnership with the Western Health and Social Care Trust, the first of its kind in Northern Ireland.
    DEEDS offer members a chance to meet other people in a friendly and relaxed environment and in a weekly social group in their own community or join an activity group where they can take part in different activities, learn new skills or practice old ones.
    Aspace2 is a Community Interest Company (CIC) and Aspace2 Multisensory Centre is a registered charity located in the rural community of Campsie.
    The building at Aspace2 has been customised to an extremely high standard to meet the accessibility needs of all attending the centre.
    The vision of Aspace2 is to provide a service that supports adults with additional needs to learn the skills necessary to live an independent, purposeful lifestyle and grow to make informed, fulfilling life choices in an age appropriate, respectful, and inclusive manner. 
    Training is user-led, trainees’ individual pathways are chosen to reflect their future learning and or employability choices.
    Employability Training is offered in the catering school and factory floor coffee shop, retail training is offered in the Artspace shop and creative opportunities are provided in the art rooms and upcycling studio.
    Aspace2 strives to nurture the potential of people with a disability to thrive in a socially inclusive society.
    For further details of all the nominees for the Pride of Place Awards and to watch the awards back visit the Pride of Place Awards at prideofplace.ie

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Frank Elderson: The first decade of European supervision: taking stock and looking ahead

    Source: European Central Bank

    Keynote speech by Frank Elderson, Member of the Executive Board of the ECB and Vice-Chair of the Supervisory Board of the ECB at the “10 Years of SSM – Looking back and looking forward” conference organised by the European Banking Institute and the Hessisches Ministerium für Wissenschaft und Kunst

    Frankfurt am Main, 4 November 2024

    Introduction

    Thank you for your kind invitation. It’s a pleasure to be with you this afternoon to reflect on the first decade of European banking supervision and, most importantly, to take a look at the path ahead of us.

    On this day ten years ago, the morning might have seemed just like a typical November morning in Frankfurt’s Bankenviertel: a rainy autumn day, with people heading to their offices armed with umbrellas, wearing heavy coats.

    But that day ten years ago was anything but typical.

    Because it was the first time European supervisory teams got together and started work on an important task: making sure the banking system is safe and sound on behalf of European citizens.

    At the time, some argued that integrating a fragmented system of supervision was either impossible or would take forever. Well, those pioneer European supervisors who came together on 4 November 2014 have certainly proven the sceptics wrong.

    We have come a long way since that day. The last ten years have been transformative both for the Single Supervisory Mechanism (SSM) and the banks we supervise. We have evolved from a start-up to a mature, risk-based and effective supervisor. Banks under our supervision have also evolved significantly, building up remarkable resilience. Unlike in the crises that predated the banking union, banks have now become part of the solution to economic shocks rather than the source. That’s good news.

    There is, however, no room for complacency.

    While past achievements provide a solid foundation, they are by no means a guarantee of future success. The macro-financial environment is changing profoundly. Unlike ten years ago, when the main risks emanated from banks themselves, today prudential risks are largely driven by an increasingly volatile and uncertain external environment.

    In my remarks, I will therefore focus on how supervisors and banks must adapt to this challenging environment. I will also address suggestions being put forward by some to relax banking regulation and supervision – suggestions which in my view are misguided. Compromising the resilience that has been carefully built up over the past ten years would undermine the objective of having a financial system that can support a competitive and sustainable economy.

    The first decade of European supervision: from start-up to maturity

    But before focusing on current challenges, I hope you’ll allow me to take a brief walk down memory lane. Where did we start from? What were the expectations a decade ago? And how did we go about meeting them?

    As Europe was looking into the abyss of the euro area sovereign debt crisis in 2012, legislators agreed on nothing less than a paradigm shift – the banking union, which represented the most significant leap forward in European integration since the introduction of the euro.

    The banking union encompasses three pillars, each with a straightforward task: first, European banking supervision to ensure that banks across Europe are subject to the same rules and high-quality supervisory standards. Second, European resolution to make sure that if banks fail, they can get resolved in an orderly manner instead of relying on the public purse. And third, European deposit insurance, to make sure that when push comes to shove, all depositors enjoy the same protection, no matter where in the euro area they are based.

    As far as the supervisory pillar is concerned, the ECB and the national competent authorities that make up the SSM were given a clear mission: ensuring the safety and soundness of banks. This is not just an end in itself – it is necessary so that banks remain at the service of people and businesses by funding innovation, productivity and sustainable growth.

    The destination was clear. But we had no roadmap to show us how to get there. There was no blueprint on how to transform a fragmented system of supervision into an integrated one. So it was by no means a given that the SSM would be a success.

    In the start-up phase of the SSM we were essentially crossing the bridge we were still building: we spent the mornings recruiting the best risk experts from across Europe, the afternoons supervising significant banks, and the evenings setting up our processes.

    When we started, there were plenty of ways in which supervisors across Europe looked at risks and how best to mitigate them. They all focused on different things: while some put the emphasis on credit file reviews, others focused on scrutinising banks’ internal risk management through the lens of the internal capital adequacy assessment process. Some supervisors chose to shine the spotlight more closely on governance or on-site culture.

    Thanks to the unwavering commitment and tireless energy of supervisors from the national competent authorities and the ECB, we consolidated the best practices from this wealth of supervisory experience into a common supervisory approach. What followed was a race to the top rather than to the bottom, resulting in high-quality supervision and a level playing field.

    On our path to becoming a mature organisation, we have adapted our processes along the way. Our supervision has evolved from being predominantly rule-based and heavily codified, to having a more flexible, agile and risk-focused approach.

    And banks under our supervision have also evolved significantly over the past ten years. Today, European banks are in much better shape than a decade ago.

    For instance, the financial resilience of SSM banks has notably improved. The aggregate Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio has increased from 12.7% in 2015 to 15.8% today, the liquidity coverage ratio has increased from 138% in 2016 to 159% today and the non-performing loan ratio of significant banks has declined from 7.5% in 2015 to 1.9% today.[1]

    Moreover, risk management, the effectiveness of internal control functions and governance arrangements in SSM banks have all improved.

    Over the past ten years, banks under European supervision have shown remarkable resilience even under the most challenging circumstances. They have evolved from shock propagators to shock absorbers, stabilising rather than de-stabilising the economy as it experienced significant shocks such as the pandemic, Russia’s unjustified war against Ukraine and the rapid changes to the interest rate environment. This resilience is also a testament to the crucial role played by European supervision, confirming that the SSM has lived up to the expectations that were placed on it a decade ago.[2]

    Highly complex, volatile and challenging risk landscape

    But there is no room for complacency. We can’t assume that the achievements of the past ten years will automatically pave the way for another successful decade of resilient banks under European supervision.

    We can’t ignore the fact that the world around us is changing. The macro-financial environment is characterised by unprecedented shocks, giving rise to new risk drivers. In the words of President Lagarde, in the last three years alone we have “faced the worst pandemic since the 1920s, the worst conflict in Europe since the 1940s and the worst energy shock since the 1970s”.[3]

    And as former US Treasury secretary Larry Summers put it, “this is the most complex, disparate and cross-cutting set of challenges that I can remember in the 40 years that I have been paying attention to such things’’.[4]

    In fact, the current combination of risks, challenges and uncertainties is staggering.

    A widening geopolitical divide and a global economy that is fragmenting into competing, increasingly protectionist blocs, give rise to new geopolitical risks.

    Heightened operational headwinds such as ever-more sophisticated cyberattacks and technology disruptions are challenging banks’ operational resilience.

    And last, but, alas, not least, we see the climate and nature crises unfolding, as evidenced by the horrific events last week in Paiporta and other villages and towns in the Spanish region of Valencia. On top of the human tragedy and physical destruction, the climate and nature crises are increasingly leading to material risks for banks.

    What makes this period so unprecedented is that these challenges are not happening one after the other – they are all happening at the same time. And there is no clear sign of them going away any time soon, rather the contrary.

    So how can supervisors and banks adjust to this era of polycrises?

    Ensuring bank resilience in the era of polycrises

    First and foremost, banks’ management bodies are the ones holding the steering wheel and must ensure that banks remain resilient and prepared for this new risk landscape. This involves making sure that banks have sound risk management that is commensurate to new risk drivers, that they maintain sufficient capital headroom to cushion against credible adverse scenarios, and that banks’ management bodies are effective in their steering and oversight function.

    While acknowledging that banks’ management bodies are in the driving seat, as supervisors we keep a close eye to ensure that no material risks are left unaddressed.[5] This means that we must be able to identify the risks and then ensure that banks are resilient to these risks.

    To ensure that our risk identification can keep up with the changing risk landscape, we have made our supervisory processes more agile. We simply cannot look at every risk with the same intensity, every year, in every bank we supervise. We have therefore started to implement a supervisory risk tolerance framework aiming at freeing up the desks and minds of supervisors. This allows our supervisors to focus on those risks that are most pertinent and the supervisory actions that are most impactful. In the same vein, we have also reformed our Supervisory Review and Evaluation Process (SREP) to make it more targeted and risk-based. Moreover, we are increasingly using supervisory technology tools – also known as suptech – to detect risks early on and move closer to real-time supervision.[6]

    These improvements to our processes give our supervisory teams more time to focus on the most relevant risks. By detecting vulnerabilities that would otherwise only surface later, we help banks to be better prepared and build up resilience proactively.

    Let me illustrate this with an example. Threats from cyberattacks are on the increase and are challenging banks’ operational resilience. In 2022, 50% of our supervised entities were subject to at least one successful attack – that number rose to 68% in just one year.[7] In order to help banks better identify their vulnerabilities to cyber risks and bolster their operational resilience, earlier this year we conducted a cyber resilience stress test[8] to gauge how well banks would be able to respond to and recover from a successful cyberattack while maintaining their critical functions and services. The cyber resilience stress test was an important learning exercise for banks; it helped them pinpoint areas where they need to build greater operational resilience to cyberattacks, which are unlikely to fade away in the current geopolitical risk environment.

    Let’s shift our focus from risk identification to remediation. As supervisors we must ensure that the risks we identify in our risk assessments are adequately managed. This also means that if we find deficiencies in the way banks are managing their risks, they must be remediated fully and in a timely manner, not at some unspecified point in the distant future. This is why we are putting more emphasis on impact and effectiveness.[9]

    To ensure full and timely remediation of our supervisory findings, we set out a time-bound remediation path. If a bank is not remedying the deficiency at a speed that will ensure full and timely remediation by the pre-established timeline, we will step up our supervisory action by deploying more intrusive measures from our ample supervisory toolkit. This is what we call the “escalation ladder”.

    The use of supervisory powers to compel banks to make concrete improvements is not just something we do within the SSM; it is international best practice.[10] The disorderly events of the March 2023 banking turmoil were a clear reminder of what can happen when banks leave material shortcomings unaddressed for too long.

    Banks and supervisors need to have the capacity to focus on emerging challenges. That’s why it is important to declutter our desks by tackling supervisory findings that have been with us for too long. While this is always an imperative, it is especially pertinent in the current challenging risk landscape.

    Let me illustrate this with the example of risk data aggregation and reporting. It is very hard to imagine any bank being able to appropriately manage its risks without strong risk data reporting. A bank’s ability to manage and aggregate risk-related data effectively is a pre-requisite for sound decision-making and robust risk governance. In fact, the Capital Requirements Directive, as transposed into national law, requires banks to put processes in place to identify all material risks. Worryingly, risk data aggregation and reporting was the lowest-scoring sub-category of internal governance in the 2023 SREP. In other words, despite the work done by supervisors over the years, too many banks still don’t have adequate risk data aggregation and reporting capabilities.

    It should not be a surprise that ECB Banking Supervision is stepping up the escalation ladder, using more intrusive supervisory tools to ensure that banks have adequate risk data aggregation capabilities. It’s not about forcing banks to do something that is merely an added perk; it’s about making sure they are able to manage material risks adequately and in good time. In a rapidly changing risk environment where prompt availability of reliable data has become essential, timely remediation of our supervisory findings on risk data aggregation is more important than ever.

    Deregulation and lenient supervision would compromise resilience

    After a decade of European supervision, it is not only the external risk environment that has changed. The current debate suggests that the perception by some of the role of financial regulation and supervision is also changing.

    Ten years ago, with the gloomy memories of the global financial crisis lingering in people’s minds, there was a strong consensus across society on the need for strong financial regulation and supervision in order to safeguard the public good of financial stability.

    Today, it appears that the pendulum is slowly swinging in the opposite direction. Some have raised the question as to whether regulation and supervision have become too conservative, to the point that they may constrain growth.

    Let me be clear: the argument being put forward in favour of relaxing banking regulation and supervision in order to promote growth is misguided.[11]

    We can’t allow the memory of the global financial crisis to fade. Its lessons are as relevant today as they were back in 2012, when the banking union was created. As deputy governor of the Bank of England, Sam Woods, correctly said, the great financial crisis was “the biggest growth-destroying event in recent economic history”.[12] The crisis was a stark reminder of the economic, social and fiscal hardship that weakly regulated and supervised banks can cause for people. The last thing we should do is ignore the lessons of the financial crisis and allow a regulatory race to the bottom, which would compromise the resilience that has been carefully built up over the last decade.

    It is a fundamental misconception to frame safety and competitiveness as opposing forces.

    It is essential to remember that resilient and well-capitalised banks are a pre-condition for competitiveness and sustainable growth.

    Strong and resilient banks are best equipped to lend to the real economy, funding innovation, investment and growth, even during economic downturns.[13] Banking deregulation or more lenient supervision would weaken the foundations of growth.

    It is true that European growth has been sluggish when compared with other regions, and addressing it is rightly a top priority. That is why we need policies to tackle the root causes of low productivity, promote innovation and bolster the single European market.

    For instance, the EU will need an additional €5.4 trillion between 2025 and 2031 to advance our green transformation, accelerate the digitalisation of our economy and bolster our defence capabilities.[14] Faced with this mammoth task, deepening the capital markets union to help guide the required financing flows should be our highest priority. This will help channel private investments towards supporting innovation and the twin green and digital transition – ultimately fostering EU competitiveness.

    To speed up the integration of a single banking market in Europe, we should now move forward and complete the banking union.

    As a first step, we must enhance the crisis management and deposit insurance framework so that the failures of small and medium-sized banks can be dealt with more effectively.

    Second, we would welcome if Member States were to resume discussions on setting-up a European-level public backstop to provide temporary liquidity funding to banks following resolution. The credibility of the resolution framework in Europe would be significantly enhanced by setting up a framework for liquidity in resolution.

    Moreover, building on the strong foundations of the SSM and the Single Resolution Mechanism, we must pave the way for a common European deposit insurance scheme (EDIS). In the first decade of the SSM, risks have been significantly reduced and common supervisory standards have been established. These preconditions for EDIS have now been met, and moving it forward will be important for severing any remaining feedback loops between banks and sovereigns, given that these proved so harmful during the sovereign debt crisis.

    Conclusion

    Let me conclude.

    Ten years ago today, when European supervisory teams started to come together for the first time, it was not at all certain that the SSM would be a success.

    We have since built a strong and effective supervisory framework in Europe, perceptive to evolving risks and – whenever necessary and appropriate – insistent in making sure that material risks are addressed. European banks have notably improved, proving resilient to shocks that we couldn’t have imagined a decade ago. This resilience is also a result of the strengthened supervisory and regulatory framework put in place after the global financial crisis, including the creation of the banking union.

    Ten years ago, the first Vice-Chair of the SSM, Sabine Lautenschläger, invoked the parallel of an athlete at the beginning of a career, who trained extremely hard and achieved an excellent result in a first major tournament.[15] To turn this promising start into a track record of sustained high performance, the athlete clearly cannot afford to rest on her laurels. Instead, she needs to go right back to the routine of constant training, to keep developing her skills and thus continue to build the foundation for future success on a day-to-day basis.

    This conclusion is as relevant today as it was ten year ago, especially considering the challenges along the path ahead.

    Considering the macro-financial environment and volatile risk landscape, it is safe to say that there is a high likelihood of unprecedented shocks continuing to emerge over the next decade. To make sure banks continue to serve European households and businesses under these challenging circumstances, we must ensure they remain resilient. Because a stable banking system forms the bedrock of long-term competitiveness and sustainable growth.

    European supervisors will continue to work tirelessly to make sure banks are well capitalised and adequately manage their risks. In this way, in ten years’ time we can celebrate another successful decade of resilient banks under European supervision.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: PM announces further funding for the National Crime Agency (NCA) and new migration returns figures

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    The PM has announced two new elements of this government’s approach to boost border security and restore order to the asylum system.

    The Prime Minister has announced two new elements of this government’s approach to boost border security and restore order to the asylum system – a £58 million boost for the National Crime Agency (NCA) and new figures showing 9,400 people with no right to be here have been returned since the government took power.

    The NCA will receive a £58 million increase in its core budget for the 2025/26 financial year, representing a 9% rise compared to 2024/25. 

     This uplift in funding will:  

    • Deliver specialist operational equipment such as covert audio/video tools and covert tracking capabilities (including in the maritime domain).

    • Increase the amount of leads we generate through analysis of data to stop criminals in their tracks.  

    • Allow us to keep pace with the ever more sophisticated ways online criminals hide their tracks by bringing in threat specific data from international partners, industry and covert sources. 

    • Expand access to datasets and systems to NCA intelligence and investigative teams, borders staff and policing partners to give them direct access to the single intelligence picture. 

    • Increase the skills and tools available to forensic officers.  

    • Increase the technology available to officers to allow them to collaborate and work more productively. 

    The PM has also announced new returns figures following an ad-hoc statistical release from the Home Office today. 

    • Since this government took power (up to 28 October), a total of 9,400 returns were recorded (including both enforced and voluntary returns).  

    • There were 2,590 enforced returns of people with no legal right to remain in the UK. This compares with 2,170 enforced returns over the same period in 2023, an increase of 19%.   

    • Of the total returns, 1,520 enforced and voluntary returns were of foreign national offenders (FNOs), this is an increase of 14% compared to 1,330 FNO returns in the same period of 2023.

    Updates to this page

    Published 4 November 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Press release: PM announces further funding for the National Crime Agency (NCA) and new migration returns figures

    Source: United Kingdom – Prime Minister’s Office 10 Downing Street

    The PM has announced two new elements of this government’s approach to boost border security and restore order to the asylum system.

    The Prime Minister has announced two new elements of this government’s approach to boost border security and restore order to the asylum system – a £58 million boost for the National Crime Agency (NCA) and new figures showing 9,400 people with no right to be here have been returned since the government took power.

    The NCA will receive a £58 million increase in its core budget for the 2025/26 financial year, representing a 9% rise compared to 2024/25. 

     This uplift in funding will:  

    • Deliver specialist operational equipment such as covert audio/video tools and covert tracking capabilities (including in the maritime domain).

    • Increase the amount of leads we generate through analysis of data to stop criminals in their tracks.  

    • Allow us to keep pace with the ever more sophisticated ways online criminals hide their tracks by bringing in threat specific data from international partners, industry and covert sources. 

    • Expand access to datasets and systems to NCA intelligence and investigative teams, borders staff and policing partners to give them direct access to the single intelligence picture. 

    • Increase the skills and tools available to forensic officers.  

    • Increase the technology available to officers to allow them to collaborate and work more productively. 

    The PM has also announced new returns figures following an ad-hoc statistical release from the Home Office today. 

    • Since this government took power (up to 28 October), a total of 9,400 returns were recorded (including both enforced and voluntary returns).  

    • There were 2,590 enforced returns of people with no legal right to remain in the UK. This compares with 2,170 enforced returns over the same period in 2023, an increase of 19%.   

    • Of the total returns, 1,520 enforced and voluntary returns were of foreign national offenders (FNOs), this is an increase of 14% compared to 1,330 FNO returns in the same period of 2023.

    Updates to this page

    Published 4 November 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: PM speech to the INTERPOL General Assembly: 4 November 2024

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer makes a speech to the INTERPOL General Assembly in Glasgow.

    It’s great to welcome you all to Glasgow.

    It was right here, in this conference centre, exactly three years ago that over 190 countries came together at COP26 to agree the Glasgow Climate Pact. 

    That was the first global commitment to phase down the use of coal. And a vital step in the fight against climate change – a challenge that no country can meet on its own.

    So it’s fantastic that once again today, we have over 190 countries here working together to meet another global challenge: the threat of serious organised crime. 

    And it’s particularly fitting to be here in Glasgow: a place that was once home to what many consider to be the first professional City Police Force.

    And a place that is today home to our state-of-the-art Scottish Crime Campus, just down the road in Gartcosh.

    18 different organisations working together, under one roof, co-operating for a common cause. Precisely the kind of co-operation that is so essential to the missions of my government, and the foundation we rest everything upon.

    Greater security for our people. Security rooted in our values, in respect for human rights and upholding the rule of law. 

    Now, I was a prosecutor myself. I served as the Director of Public Prosecutions in England and Wales. Not here in Scotland – we have a complicated set of arrangements across these countries. 

    But what we know from being a country of four nations – what I know having served in that role – having seen the complexity of operations that fight organised crime, first-hand, is that crime is global. 

    Criminals do not respect borders. And so I want to start today by thanking you – all of you here in this conference centre. And the thousands that you represent. Those who serve in police, in intelligence, and security services right across the world. Because too often – what you do goes unrecognised. 

    Some of it necessarily unknown. But just look at some of the operations we can talk about – they tell the story. 

    The UK working with the US and Ecuador to seize 19 tonnes of cocaine. The global identification of over 40,000 victims of child sexual abuse online, and more than 70 countries working together to save them. 

    60 countries working together to tackle online scams, resulting in almost 4,000 arrests, and more than $250 million of assets seized. 

    And of course, the operation which infiltrated and seized the online platform used by LockBit, the world’s most harmful cyber-crime group.

    I know the hard work that goes into this. I know how many things have to come together, almost instantly. And most importantly – I know what would happen without you.

    The extra lives destroyed by drugs and violence. The unspeakable horrors of child sexual abuse. Gangs forcing the vulnerable into modern slavery or prostitution. People having their life savings stolen through online fraud.

    It’s your work, your service, that protects people from these threats. And because so much of your work is done in private, I’m grateful for this opportunity in public to say a huge and heartfelt thank you. 

    Now, of course INTERPOL is absolutely central to these efforts. As I say – I have seen the importance of global co-operation first-hand. I sent British prosecutors in Pakistan so we could work together on counter-terrorism. In West Africa – to disrupt the flow of drugs from South America to Europe, and ultimately to the UK. 

    So I understand the power of what INTERPOL does, and why the UK makes great use of those resources… 

    Handling thousands of enquiries every week from around the world, from intelligence sharing to managing direct threats to life. 

    So I am pleased to say today that the UK is increasing its funding for INTERPOL projects, investing £6 million this financial year.

    This will include support for improved data-sharing, and faster communications capabilities. The first ever Global Fraud Threat Assessment, and new regional networks. From strengthening co-operation across the Pacific to tackling drug and gun smuggling networks in the Caribbean.

    Because together, we want to send a clear message to the world’s most hardened criminals: there is no safe haven. There is no place that you can hide from justice.  Together – we’ve got the whole world covered. And together – we will defeat you.  

    And look – there is a particular group of organised criminals that urgently need to hear this message: the vile people smugglers, who think that human life can be trafficked, that borders can be ignored.

    And that desperation, misery and hope – they prey on that too – are all emotions that are ripe for exploitation. 

    Make no mistake – people smuggling needs a global response. And on a scale – way beyond where we are now. We need to unlock the power of that co-operation – across borders, agencies, continents – even. 

    And look – I know many people in this room are already working hard on this. So I accept that my argument here is a political one, first and foremost. 

    But I’m afraid we’re still at the stage where the world needs to wake up to the severity of this challenge. It goes back to security. 

    I was elected to deliver security for the British people. And strong borders are a part of that – of course they are. But I say it again – security doesn’t stop at our borders.  

    And illegal migration is, without question, a massive driver of global insecurity. There is nothing progressive about turning a blind eye as men, women and children die in the Channel. 

    And you don’t advance the cause of global justice – or compassion for those individuals – to pretend that there is. 

    This is a vile trade that must be stamped out – wherever it thrives. And it exploits the cracks between our institutions, pits nations against one another, profits from our inability – at the political level – to come together. 

    That’s part of the business model. And so I will work with anyone serious who can offer solutions on this – anyone.

    Because without co-ordinated, global action, it will not go away. 

    And unless we bring all the powers we have to bear on this, in much the same way as we do for terrorism, then we will struggle to bring these criminals to justice.  

    And that in a sense is my message here today. People-smuggling should be viewed as a global security threat similar to terrorism.

    We’ve got to combine resources, share intelligence and tactics, and tackle the problem upstream, working together to shut down the smuggling routes.

    We do that with terrorism. When I was the Director of Public Prosecutions, it was my personal mission to smash the terrorist gangs. And we worked across borders to ensure the safety of citizens, across Europe and across the world.  

    Now, as the UK’s Prime Minister, it is my personal mission to smash the people smuggling gangs. And look, that starts here in the UK. 

    This Labour government is resetting the UK’s whole approach to this challenge. No more gimmicks. No more gesture politics. No more irresponsible, undeliverable promises that almost by design – seek conflict with other countries.  

    We have turned the page on all of that. Because such promises are not worth the paper they are written on. All they do is waste taxpayer money, destroy people’s trust in politics as a force for good.

    Instead, we are approaching this issue with humanity, and with profound respect for international law.

    We will never withdraw from the European Convention on Human Rights. Indeed, we’re proud of the role the UK played in creating that Convention. Respecting international treaties also makes international co-operation easier, because it shows that the UK is a reliable partner.

    So our approach is different. As I say – we’re going to treat people smugglers like terrorists. So we’re taking our approach to counter-terrorism – which we know works – and applying it to the gangs, with our new Border Security Command.

    We’re ending the fragmentation between policing, Border Force and our intelligence agencies. Recruiting hundreds of specialist investigators. They are best of the best – from our National Crime Agency, Border Force, Immigration Enforcement, the CPS and our intelligence agencies – all working together. 

    We’re making border protection an elite border force. And not just within our country. We’re also working together with international partners, sharing intelligence and tactics.

    Earlier this year I visited the Headquarters of our National Crime Agency. I saw first-hand the ways we are already collaborating, and what it takes to intercept, to disrupt, and destroy these networks. There are so many tools at our disposal.

    We can seize their phones at the border, identifying and tracing smugglers wiring payments. We’ve already trained sniffer dogs to detect the smell of dinghy rubber and working with Bulgaria stopped more than 100 small boats upstream, long before they made it to the Channel. 

    And as we understand how these gangs work, we can invest in new capabilities and enhanced powers to smash them.

    So we’re giving our new Border Security Command an additional £75 million of new funding on top of the of £75 million we’ve already committed.

    This will support a new Organised Immigration Crime Intelligence Unit, hundreds of new investigators and intelligence officers, backed by state-of-the-art technology.

    We’re also investing a further £58 million in our National Crime Agency, including strengthening its data analysis and intelligence capabilities.

    And we’ll also legislate to give those fighting these gangs enhanced powers too. Again, look what we’ve done with counter-terrorism. We have the powers to trace suspects’ movements using information from the intelligence services.

    We can shut down their bank accounts, cut off their internet access, and arrest them for making preparations to act, before an attack has taken place.

    We don’t wait for them to act – we stop them before they act. And we need to stop people smuggling gangs before they act too.

    Now, as with any crime – smuggling does not operate in an institutional vacuum, so we also need to rebuild our broken asylum system, process claims swiftly and humanely.

    That will make law enforcement’s job much easier.  So we’re recruiting hundreds of additional people into asylum case working.

    Overall returns since this government came to office are now 9,400 – up almost 6,000 since the end of August. 

    Enforced returns are up almost a fifth on the same period last year. And returns of Foreign National Offenders are up 14 per cent.

    But look, the only way to defeat this vile trade and save lives is to stop people being smuggled here in the first place.

    And that means doing everything possible to deepen our cross-border co-operation. So international agreements matter.

    We have to use every tool we have – operational, diplomatic, political – to join up our response.

    President Macron and I have already agreed to increase intelligence sharing and do more to dismantle smuggling routes further upstream. This is also a priority for the bi-lateral co-operation treaty we are working on with Germany. 

    We’re also working with Italy to dismantle the supply chains of maritime equipment, combat illicit financial flows, and strengthen our investigative capacities and our data sharing. And as part of the UK’s wider reset with the European Union, we are seeking a new security pact, including restoring access to real-time intelligence sharing networks. And at the European Political Community this Thursday in Hungary, I’ll be putting this issue at the top of the international agenda once again. 

    But we need your help also.  This is the General Assembly of the world’s security experts. It’s your co-operation across borders that saves lives, time and again. It’s your collective efforts that bring organised criminals to justice, wherever they seek to hide.

    And it’s your leadership today that can help make a decisive breakthrough against this vile trade in human life. 

    Because if together we can win this war against the people smugglers, then this gathering will have achieved a victory for humanity – every bit as significant as the Glasgow Climate Pact.

    Because you will have helped to smash the gangs, secure our borders, and save countless lives.  And it is with that hope, and in that spirit, that I declare the 92nd General Assembly open. 

    Thank you so much.

    Updates to this page

    Published 4 November 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Speech: PM speech to the INTERPOL General Assembly: 4 November 2024

    Source: United Kingdom – Prime Minister’s Office 10 Downing Street

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer makes a speech to the INTERPOL General Assembly in Glasgow.

    It’s great to welcome you all to Glasgow.

    It was right here, in this conference centre, exactly three years ago that over 190 countries came together at COP26 to agree the Glasgow Climate Pact. 

    That was the first global commitment to phase down the use of coal. And a vital step in the fight against climate change – a challenge that no country can meet on its own.

    So it’s fantastic that once again today, we have over 190 countries here working together to meet another global challenge: the threat of serious organised crime. 

    And it’s particularly fitting to be here in Glasgow: a place that was once home to what many consider to be the first professional City Police Force.

    And a place that is today home to our state-of-the-art Scottish Crime Campus, just down the road in Gartcosh.

    18 different organisations working together, under one roof, co-operating for a common cause. Precisely the kind of co-operation that is so essential to the missions of my government, and the foundation we rest everything upon.

    Greater security for our people. Security rooted in our values, in respect for human rights and upholding the rule of law. 

    Now, I was a prosecutor myself. I served as the Director of Public Prosecutions in England and Wales. Not here in Scotland – we have a complicated set of arrangements across these countries. 

    But what we know from being a country of four nations – what I know having served in that role – having seen the complexity of operations that fight organised crime, first-hand, is that crime is global. 

    Criminals do not respect borders. And so I want to start today by thanking you – all of you here in this conference centre. And the thousands that you represent. Those who serve in police, in intelligence, and security services right across the world. Because too often – what you do goes unrecognised. 

    Some of it necessarily unknown. But just look at some of the operations we can talk about – they tell the story. 

    The UK working with the US and Ecuador to seize 19 tonnes of cocaine. The global identification of over 40,000 victims of child sexual abuse online, and more than 70 countries working together to save them. 

    60 countries working together to tackle online scams, resulting in almost 4,000 arrests, and more than $250 million of assets seized. 

    And of course, the operation which infiltrated and seized the online platform used by LockBit, the world’s most harmful cyber-crime group.

    I know the hard work that goes into this. I know how many things have to come together, almost instantly. And most importantly – I know what would happen without you.

    The extra lives destroyed by drugs and violence. The unspeakable horrors of child sexual abuse. Gangs forcing the vulnerable into modern slavery or prostitution. People having their life savings stolen through online fraud.

    It’s your work, your service, that protects people from these threats. And because so much of your work is done in private, I’m grateful for this opportunity in public to say a huge and heartfelt thank you. 

    Now, of course INTERPOL is absolutely central to these efforts. As I say – I have seen the importance of global co-operation first-hand. I sent British prosecutors in Pakistan so we could work together on counter-terrorism. In West Africa – to disrupt the flow of drugs from South America to Europe, and ultimately to the UK. 

    So I understand the power of what INTERPOL does, and why the UK makes great use of those resources… 

    Handling thousands of enquiries every week from around the world, from intelligence sharing to managing direct threats to life. 

    So I am pleased to say today that the UK is increasing its funding for INTERPOL projects, investing £6 million this financial year.

    This will include support for improved data-sharing, and faster communications capabilities. The first ever Global Fraud Threat Assessment, and new regional networks. From strengthening co-operation across the Pacific to tackling drug and gun smuggling networks in the Caribbean.

    Because together, we want to send a clear message to the world’s most hardened criminals: there is no safe haven. There is no place that you can hide from justice.  Together – we’ve got the whole world covered. And together – we will defeat you.  

    And look – there is a particular group of organised criminals that urgently need to hear this message: the vile people smugglers, who think that human life can be trafficked, that borders can be ignored.

    And that desperation, misery and hope – they prey on that too – are all emotions that are ripe for exploitation. 

    Make no mistake – people smuggling needs a global response. And on a scale – way beyond where we are now. We need to unlock the power of that co-operation – across borders, agencies, continents – even. 

    And look – I know many people in this room are already working hard on this. So I accept that my argument here is a political one, first and foremost. 

    But I’m afraid we’re still at the stage where the world needs to wake up to the severity of this challenge. It goes back to security. 

    I was elected to deliver security for the British people. And strong borders are a part of that – of course they are. But I say it again – security doesn’t stop at our borders.  

    And illegal migration is, without question, a massive driver of global insecurity. There is nothing progressive about turning a blind eye as men, women and children die in the Channel. 

    And you don’t advance the cause of global justice – or compassion for those individuals – to pretend that there is. 

    This is a vile trade that must be stamped out – wherever it thrives. And it exploits the cracks between our institutions, pits nations against one another, profits from our inability – at the political level – to come together. 

    That’s part of the business model. And so I will work with anyone serious who can offer solutions on this – anyone.

    Because without co-ordinated, global action, it will not go away. 

    And unless we bring all the powers we have to bear on this, in much the same way as we do for terrorism, then we will struggle to bring these criminals to justice.  

    And that in a sense is my message here today. People-smuggling should be viewed as a global security threat similar to terrorism.

    We’ve got to combine resources, share intelligence and tactics, and tackle the problem upstream, working together to shut down the smuggling routes.

    We do that with terrorism. When I was the Director of Public Prosecutions, it was my personal mission to smash the terrorist gangs. And we worked across borders to ensure the safety of citizens, across Europe and across the world.  

    Now, as the UK’s Prime Minister, it is my personal mission to smash the people smuggling gangs. And look, that starts here in the UK. 

    This Labour government is resetting the UK’s whole approach to this challenge. No more gimmicks. No more gesture politics. No more irresponsible, undeliverable promises that almost by design – seek conflict with other countries.  

    We have turned the page on all of that. Because such promises are not worth the paper they are written on. All they do is waste taxpayer money, destroy people’s trust in politics as a force for good.

    Instead, we are approaching this issue with humanity, and with profound respect for international law.

    We will never withdraw from the European Convention on Human Rights. Indeed, we’re proud of the role the UK played in creating that Convention. Respecting international treaties also makes international co-operation easier, because it shows that the UK is a reliable partner.

    So our approach is different. As I say – we’re going to treat people smugglers like terrorists. So we’re taking our approach to counter-terrorism – which we know works – and applying it to the gangs, with our new Border Security Command.

    We’re ending the fragmentation between policing, Border Force and our intelligence agencies. Recruiting hundreds of specialist investigators. They are best of the best – from our National Crime Agency, Border Force, Immigration Enforcement, the CPS and our intelligence agencies – all working together. 

    We’re making border protection an elite border force. And not just within our country. We’re also working together with international partners, sharing intelligence and tactics.

    Earlier this year I visited the Headquarters of our National Crime Agency. I saw first-hand the ways we are already collaborating, and what it takes to intercept, to disrupt, and destroy these networks. There are so many tools at our disposal.

    We can seize their phones at the border, identifying and tracing smugglers wiring payments. We’ve already trained sniffer dogs to detect the smell of dinghy rubber and working with Bulgaria stopped more than 100 small boats upstream, long before they made it to the Channel. 

    And as we understand how these gangs work, we can invest in new capabilities and enhanced powers to smash them.

    So we’re giving our new Border Security Command an additional £75 million of new funding on top of the of £75 million we’ve already committed.

    This will support a new Organised Immigration Crime Intelligence Unit, hundreds of new investigators and intelligence officers, backed by state-of-the-art technology.

    We’re also investing a further £58 million in our National Crime Agency, including strengthening its data analysis and intelligence capabilities.

    And we’ll also legislate to give those fighting these gangs enhanced powers too. Again, look what we’ve done with counter-terrorism. We have the powers to trace suspects’ movements using information from the intelligence services.

    We can shut down their bank accounts, cut off their internet access, and arrest them for making preparations to act, before an attack has taken place.

    We don’t wait for them to act – we stop them before they act. And we need to stop people smuggling gangs before they act too.

    Now, as with any crime – smuggling does not operate in an institutional vacuum, so we also need to rebuild our broken asylum system, process claims swiftly and humanely.

    That will make law enforcement’s job much easier.  So we’re recruiting hundreds of additional people into asylum case working.

    Overall returns since this government came to office are now 9,400 – up almost 6,000 since the end of August. 

    Enforced returns are up almost a fifth on the same period last year. And returns of Foreign National Offenders are up 14 per cent.

    But look, the only way to defeat this vile trade and save lives is to stop people being smuggled here in the first place.

    And that means doing everything possible to deepen our cross-border co-operation. So international agreements matter.

    We have to use every tool we have – operational, diplomatic, political – to join up our response.

    President Macron and I have already agreed to increase intelligence sharing and do more to dismantle smuggling routes further upstream. This is also a priority for the bi-lateral co-operation treaty we are working on with Germany. 

    We’re also working with Italy to dismantle the supply chains of maritime equipment, combat illicit financial flows, and strengthen our investigative capacities and our data sharing. And as part of the UK’s wider reset with the European Union, we are seeking a new security pact, including restoring access to real-time intelligence sharing networks. And at the European Political Community this Thursday in Hungary, I’ll be putting this issue at the top of the international agenda once again. 

    But we need your help also.  This is the General Assembly of the world’s security experts. It’s your co-operation across borders that saves lives, time and again. It’s your collective efforts that bring organised criminals to justice, wherever they seek to hide.

    And it’s your leadership today that can help make a decisive breakthrough against this vile trade in human life. 

    Because if together we can win this war against the people smugglers, then this gathering will have achieved a victory for humanity – every bit as significant as the Glasgow Climate Pact.

    Because you will have helped to smash the gangs, secure our borders, and save countless lives.  And it is with that hope, and in that spirit, that I declare the 92nd General Assembly open. 

    Thank you so much.

    Updates to this page

    Published 4 November 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Talk Money fortnight is here to help you get more and spend less

    Source: City of York

    Published Monday, 4 November 2024

    The week after the Budget is announced, City of York Council and partners are holding a fortnight of events and activities to help residents with their own finances.

    Talk Money Fortnight starts today and runs from 4-15 November. Drop-in events and advice sessions will be held for any residents facing financial struggles. All are welcome to get impartial, free and discreet information and support to maximise their household income, spend less and get good advice.

    Residents are urged to use an online, confidential and impartial benefits calculator so they can claim what they’re eligible for and don’t miss out on the millions of pounds in unclaimed benefits nationally.

    Those of State Pension age can check if they’re eligible for and claim Pension Credit which unlocks other benefits – even if they own their home and have savings, and any residents struggling to pay Council Tax can get advice on claiming Council Tax Support. For those worried about rising fuel bills, there’s information on grants for energy saving measures, and how to stay online by accessing lower broadband and phone tariffs.

    Eligible families can get help with childcare and claim free school meals which bring further help with uniforms and extra money to support the child’s schooling.

    Pauline Stuchfield, Director of Housing and Communities at City of York Council, said:

    It’s never too late to see if there are ways to boost your income and claim all you’re entitled to: we’re here to help you do that during Talk Money fortnight and year-round.”

    Talk Money Week is a national initiative that promotes discussions about money matters, such as budgeting, saving, debt management, and financial planning.

    Check out and visit the drop-in events listed here and a wealth of year-round advice, ideas and information from partners at www.livewellyork.co.uk/talkmoney

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: New skills programme seeks to link employers and students

    Source: City of Manchester

    Talented students at schools and colleges in Manchester are being connected to future employers helping to cultivate new opportunities as they look to enter the workforce.

    The BREE (Building Relationships with Employers and Educators) project has been launched by Manchester City Council to bring together employers, educators and students to help them succeed in their future career path. 

    The first opening event was held in the city on Wednesday, 30 October, where representatives from businesses, schools and colleges were present to celebrate the initiative alongside the Council Leader Cllr Bev Craig, as well as partner organisations and stakeholders. 

    As the Council works towards Manchester becoming accredited as a Child Friendly City, it is important the city develops these relationships to give young people the best possible start in life, helping to develop skills and talent that will help them succeed in the years to come. 

    Businesses across Manchester are being called to join the project and lend their expertise and voice to growing this community, and establish strong bonds between the education sector and further work and training. It is a simple process, completed via a form on the Council’s website. 

    Councillor John Hacking, Executive Member for Skills, Employment and Leisure said: “We know how important it is to provide young people the options and pathways to a future career. Whether it is sparking interest in a trade or sector, to showing what extra training is on offer for them we want to ensure there are no doors left unopened for school and university leavers. 

    “Work and Skills is a hugely important part of the work the Council does, working in tandem with our wider economic strategy, we want to see more people getting into well-paying jobs, helping to grow our city and economy in an inclusive and progressive way.” 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Security: British Prime Minister opens global police assembly in Glasgow

    Source: Interpol (news and events)

    The 92nd INTERPOL General Assembly takes place from 4-7 November in Glasgow, Scotland

    GLASGOW, Scotland: Keir Starmer, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, opened the INTERPOL General Assembly, stressing the need for international police cooperation to combat pervasive organized crime.
    The General Assembly is INTERPOL’s supreme governing body, made up of representatives from its 196 member countries.
    With around 1,000 attendees, it is the largest global gathering of senior law enforcement officials, who collectively decide how INTERPOL operates.
    This year, the General Assembly will elect the new Secretary General, after Valdecy Urquiza of Brazil was put forward as the chosen candidate of INTERPOL’s Executive Committee.

    The Secretary General is INTERPOL’s chief full-time official and directs the 1,200 staff who work in the organization’s 15 duty stations around the world.
    The General Assembly will also elect nine new members to INTERPOL’s 13-member Executive Committee, which oversees the implementation of General Assembly decisions.

    UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer said:
    “This is the General Assembly of the world’s security experts. It’s your cooperation across borders that saves lives, time and again. It’s your collective efforts that bring organized criminals to justice, wherever they try to hide.”
    In his opening remarks, INTERPOL President Ahmed Naser Al-Raisi said:
    “From the rise of organized crime, drug trafficking and terrorism to climate change and migration challenges, our ability to adapt and innovate is crucial. This year’s General Assembly presents an opportunity for member countries to engage in fruitful conversations, share intelligence, and enhance collaborative strategies.”
    The Assembly will also consider a number of motions guiding the organization’s activities on terrorism, lawful access to digital evidence and child abuse, among other subjects.

    In his statement to delegates, INTERPOL Secretary General Jürgen Stock said:
    “INTERPOL was created to serve police by allowing the exchange of information across borders. This mission still drives our work today. We have made INTERPOL’s systems more connected, our products better and our response more coordinated than ever before.”
    UK Home Secretary Yvette Cooper also addressed delegates, saying:
    “International security and domestic security are two sides of the same coin. That is why INTERPOL remains integral to public safety.”
    The first day of the General Assembly saw the announcement of the INTERPOL Law Enforcement Academy, an educational centre hosting a range of professional development programmes and events.

    Housed within INTERPOL’s Global Complex for Innovation in Singapore, the Academy will notably offer an Executive Leadership Programme for senior police leaders from around the world. INTERPOL member countries will be invited to nominate candidates for the programme’s first cohort.
    “Some lessons can only be learned when fellow officers come together face to face. We must equip the next generation of police leaders with the right skills as they face a world that continues to evolve,” Secretary General Stock said.

    For news and developments from INTERPOL’s 92nd General Assembly, visit INTERPOL’s website or follow us on social media.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Consultation on East End community services

    Source: Scotland – City of Dundee

    Members of the public are being encouraged to have their say on plans to relocate community services in the East End of Dundee to a flagship Community Campus.

    Construction of the East End Community Campus is well under way, bringing local school and community facilities together in a single state-of-the-art complex.

    The plans include a proposal to relocate all services from four facilities: The Hub Library & Community Facilities; Whitfield Community Library; Douglas Community Centre & Library; and Douglas Sports Centre.

    A public consultation on that proposal is now being run by the Council, in partnership with Leisure & Culture Dundee, over the next six weeks.

    Full details of what’s planned, why the proposals are being put forward and how to take part can be found on the Council’s Consultation Hub, along with Frequently Asked Questions.

    People can share their views either by filling out an online survey, completing a paper copy or taking part in face-to-face sessions.

    The aims of the consultation include understanding the impacts that implementing the proposals would have on communities, and particularly any related to people with protected characteristics.

    Feedback will help identify any additional steps that can be taken to mitigate these. This will inform any Integrated Impact Assessments which would be presented to elected members on Dundee City Council when they are asked to take any final decisions.

    The consultation will also explore options for the future of the properties.

    These could include:

    • Using the buildings for other purposes;
    • Transferring the buildings to community organisations;
    • Selling the buildings;
    • Closing the buildings.

    A spokesperson for the Council said: “Before any final decisions are taken, it is essential that we understand what these plans would mean for users and the wider community.

    “This is particularly the case for those who have characteristics protected by law.

    “This is a legal requirement, so the survey asks specific questions to identify if people have protected characteristics. However, each of the questions is entirely optional.

    “It is also important to stress that everyone is invited to have their say on the proposal, regardless of whether or not they consider themselves to have protected characteristics.

    “We are committed to working with communities, understanding that the plans will have different implications depending on individuals’ circumstances.

    “Whether you are a current user of the facilities, a member of the wider community, someone with an idea about the future of a building or anyone else with feedback, we want to hear from you.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: ILO Governing Body 352: UK Statement on development cooperation in Palestine

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments 3

    POL/3 – Enhanced programme of development cooperation for the occupied Arab territories. Delivered at 352nd International Labour Organization Governing Body.

    Chair,

    1. At this meeting last year I spoke of the suffering experienced by Palestinians and Israelis since the horrific events of 7 October. One year on, the situation in Gaza is intolerable. As we all know, over 40,000 people have now been killed and at least 100,000 injured. More than 100 people are still held. Over 85% of Gaza is subject to evacuation notices. More than 90% of the population has been displaced. The onset of winter will exacerbate already dire needs amongst the population. The fighting must end, the hostages must be freed, and the aid must flow safely and freely. And we must work with fresh vigour towards a two-state solution in which both Palestinians and Israelis can live in safety and security.

    2. The ongoing conflict has had a profound impact on the Palestinian economy, not only in Gaza, but also in the West Bank. The private sector is key to economic growth and stability in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. So, we are concerned that ILO surveys report that private sector workers are bearing the brunt of the crisis with substantial job losses and reductions in full-time employment and wages. The report also details that almost 99 per cent of West Bank enterprises experience challenges that have impacted their operations, production capacity and sales and profits.

    3. The UK has strengthened our support to the private sector in light of these challenges, including providing assistance to identify new markets for their goods and services, and supporting measures to reduce operating costs for Palestinian businesses. We urge Israel to remove restrictions on trade to sustain Palestinian jobs and support the recovery of the Palestinian private sector.

    4. Israel’s revocation of 200,000 permits for Palestinian workers in Israel is seriously impacting the Palestinian economy, removing a key income source.  While we recognise legitimate Israeli security concerns, we nonetheless urge the Israeli government to reinstate work permits at scale, as well as reducing barriers to Palestinian trade and supporting private sector recovery. This is in the interest of both parties.

    5. The agricultural sector is of vital importance to the Palestinian labour market, particularly the olive harvest which provides an income for around 90,000 families. Israeli restrictions, in addition to record levels of settlement expansion and settler violence, are significantly undermining this sector. We call on Israel to ensure that all Palestinians in the West Bank can participate in the olive harvest and benefit from their olive trees. International law obliges Israel to protect Palestinians and not to obstruct their economic development.

    6. Chair, we commend the actions of ILO staff in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, the continued roll out and expansion of the emergency response programme, and the ILO’s close collaboration with other UN partners.

    In conclusion, we can support the decision point with the amendments tabled by the Arab Group.

    Thank you, Chair.

    Updates to this page

    Published 4 November 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Wolverhampton Literature Festival poetry competition launched

    Source: City of Wolverhampton

    As always, the competition has a 1st place prize of £400, a 2nd place prize of £150, and three 3rd place prizes of £25, and there is an additional prize of £50 for the best poem by someone living in a WV postcode.

    Applicants can send poems, on any subject, up until midnight on 31 December, 2024. Poet Holly Magill will judge the main competition, while the WV postcode prize will be chosen by Dave Pitt, Associate Artist at Wolverhampton’s Arena Theatre.

    City of Wolverhampton Council Cabinet Member for City Development, Jobs and Skills, Councillor Chris Burden, said: “The festival has been a huge success over the years, and it is growing more and more.

    “Poetry speaks volumes, and we look forward to welcoming all entries into the competition – I wish everyone the best of luck.”

    The fee for entering a poem to the competition is just £4, or you can send in 3 poems for £10. For more information, visit Wolverhampton Literature Festival.

    The 2025 Literature Festival will take place over the weekend of 31 January to 2 February. Full details of the events will soon be available on the festival website. If you would like to subscribe to the festival newsletter and stay updated on all events, please register here.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: UConn Forum Draws Top Minds to Brainstorm Ways to Grow Connecticut’s Economy

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    Scores of esteemed industry leaders, researchers, entrepreneurs, and public officials came together at UConn Storrs recently to share ideas on combining their organizations’ energy and expertise to grow a robust, sustainable Connecticut economy.

    “UConn Forum: Economic Engine of a Thriving Connecticut” featured discussions on driving the state’s economy through several key growth areas including advanced manufacturing, sustainable energy, fintech, biotech, quantum computing, artificial intelligence, and other realms.

    Panelists and participants praised the Oct. 31 event as a unique opportunity to learn about innovations in various industry sectors and inspire ideas for collaboration, including by drawing on UConn expertise.

    With an annual impact of $8.5 billion on the state’s economy, UConn takes its responsibilities seriously to help drive Connecticut forward, President Radenka Maric told the crowd in welcoming remarks.

    That includes sharing its research expertise, helping foster startup businesses and technologies, ensuring its graduates are entrepreneurial and workforce ready, and doing all within its power to keep them in Connecticut to build their careers and lives.

    A common theme throughout the day’s discussions was Connecticut’s innovative spirit and enviable strengths, including a well-educated workforce, diverse population, strong schools, family-friendly quality of life, and innovation-oriented business ecosystem.

    Forum participants also agreed it’s a perfect time to accelerate the collaborations between industry and higher education – particularly as Connecticut is regaining population lost during the recession; has seen a noteworthy jump in business startups; and is developing new technologies in several fields.

    “What we’re seeing is that the trends have reversed in a pretty meaningful way. People are betting on Connecticut with both their wallets and their feet,” said keynote speaker Daniel O’Keefe, commissioner of the Connecticut Department of Economic and Community Development (DECD).

    He said the state had the 19th best-performing economy nationwide in the last two years. That’s a major turnaround from the 2000s-era recession in which Connecticut became one of only three states – including Wyoming and Mississippi – whose economies contracted and became smaller on an inflation-adjusted basis.

    As Connecticut’s manufacturing and national defense-related industries bounced back, so did the state – supplemented by growth in areas such as technology and software information, and other emerging industries such as those discussed at the UConn forum.

    “This is a state where innovation happens literally every day. You don’t hear about it as much as you do in places like Silicon Valley because the innovation is taking place not only in our startups, but also in our incredibly large companies,” O’Keefe said.

    Several new collaborations also have immense promise, such as the QuantumCT public-private partnership led by UConn and Yale.

    UConn President Radenka Maric hands a proclamation from Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont to Lee Langston, professor emeritus of mechanical engineering at UConn, during the “UConn Forum: Economic Engine of a Thriving Connecticut” event in the Rowe Commons ballroom on Thursday, Oct. 31, 2024. (Sydney Herdle/UConn Photo)

    That initiative aims to win federal funding to transform Connecticut into the nation’s leading accelerator of quantum technologies. The proposal recently advanced to the competition’s next stage, and marks the first time that UConn and Yale have partnered on an initiative of this scope.

    That kind of collaborative thinking underscored most of the forum’s panels, in which the speakers discussed the importance of addressing society’s emerging needs for sustainable clean energy, effective and affordable pharma products, innovative use of AI, or other topics.

    The forum’s guests also gained inspiration from the entrepreneurial history of the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation as shared by its chairman, Rodney Butler ’99 (BUS).

    Having endured generations of forced assimilation and poverty, its members survived economically by selling timber, maple syrup, and other goods until the tribe gained federal recognition in 1983, he said.

    With the ability to diversify into more lucrative areas, the tribe opened a high-stakes bingo hall in 1986 and, in 1992, it opened Foxwoods Resort Casino – now the world’s largest such gaming and entertainment venue.

    Today, the tribe’s annual economic impact in the state is about $1 billion, and it has expanded into the hospitality business, golf courses, real estate holdings, hotel and golf course development, a pharmaceutical network, sports betting, internet gaming, and other ventures.

    It’s a far cry from the early days of selling handmade baskets, picking berries, and hunting snakes to survive economically. The Pequot tribe and UConn have also partnered on several projects, including the development of its hydroponic Meechooôk Farm; research into responsible gaming; and various academic and cultural endeavors.

    “The reason we do all of it, and the reason we’re in this room, is to create a thriving and sustainable community,” Butler told the forum’s attendees. “Ours is at Mashantucket. In this room, it’s about Connecticut and dare I say, all of southern New England.”

    Also as part of the forum, Maric presented a proclamation from Gov. Ned Lamont to UConn Professor Emeritus Lee Langston ’60 (ENG), one of UConn’s most accomplished engineering innovators.

    His career included helping to develop the fuel cells that powered Apollo 11 to the moon. He also was part of a team that helped install the first solar panels at the White House during the Carter Administration, and pioneered gas turbine technologies now used worldwide, including at UConn’s Cogeneration (CoGen) Central Utility Plant.

    Langston joined UConn in 1977 as a mechanical engineering professor after more than a decade at Pratt & Whitney. He also served a year as the interim dean of the School of Engineering (now a college), later retiring from UConn in 2003 but remaining active as a professor emeritus.

    “His contributions to science and society are immeasurable,” Maric said in presenting the proclamation, adding that she first learned of his expertise in sustainable energy when she was studying for her Ph.D. in Japan.

    Maric said the legacy of innovators such as Langston, along with the vision of people at the economic development forum and throughout the state, will be key to its future.

    “We make the impossible possible in Connecticut. We are leaders and will continue to lead, and anyone who says we can’t do it in Connecticut will be proven wrong,” she said.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Friends of Spencer Park to take over sports pavilion lease

    Source: City of Coventry

    Community group and charity, Friends of Spencer Park, is set to take over the lease for the sports pavilion in Spencer Park at the end of October.

    This transition marks a significant milestone for the group, as they will now be responsible for the condition and future of this beloved community facility.

    Owned by Coventry City Council, the agreement for lease and approvals started in the summer of 2022 for the Edwardian pavilion. Friends of Spencer Park has since fundraised and secured planning permission for renovations.

    Renovations include addressing critical issues such as the removal of asbestos and implementing a range of structural improvements.

    The bigger goal is to revitalise the pavilion and transform it into a vibrant café and community activity hub. Friends of Spencer Park will also work to enhance the overall environment and leisure facilities in Spencer Park, promoting their use while preserving the natural beauty of the area.

    Coventry City Council will continue to manage the remainder of Spencer Park, ensuring that both the pavilion and the park flourish as vital community spaces. This includes the replanting of a Verdun Oak tree that was lost many years ago. The memorial stone for David Spencer has been relocated to a more central spot so the tree will not be overshadowed. The Oak has been grown from seed gathered from a Verdun Oak tree that stands in Lichfield.

    Cllr Abdul Salam Khan, Deputy Leader and Cabinet Member for Events, Coventry City Council, stated: “This is a fantastic development for Spencer Park. The pavilion is set to receive a new lease of life, adding even more value to our already wonderful list of parks in Coventry.

    “This has been a long time coming and the planned changes for the pavilion look fantastic. I hope to keep residents updated on the progress of the project.”

    Cllr Jim O’Boyle, Cabinet Member for Jobs, Regeneration and Climate Change, Coventry City Council, added: “It’s great that the park pavilion will now be taken over by the Friends of Spencer Park. They are able to access a number of grants and this will help to secure the future of this listed structure.

    “This isn’t the first time we are secured the future of a listed building by working in partnership and I’m pleased that the community is so organised and motivated. I look forward to seeing how they enhance this historical building.”

    Ken Taylor, Chairman Of Trustees for the Friends of Spencer Park, said: “It’s an exciting time for the Friends of Spencer Park volunteer team and supporters. So much time has been put in by so many people helping to  raise the money to refurbish our wonderful pavilion.

    “The signing of the lease is a massive step forward which we have been working towards for the last few years. We thank the council for their support during this period and we look forward to being able to provide a new community space and cafe for all the residents of Earlsdon and the greater Coventry area.”

    For more information about Friends of Spencer Park and their plans for the pavilion, head to their website or check out the planned works on the Coventry City Council planning portal.

    Photo left to right:

    Cllr Antony Tucker, Tim Brooke, Peter Elias, Helen Spence, Ken Taylor, Cllr Jim O’Boyle, Cllr Kindy Sandhu

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: EA re-opens initial consultation for Swadlincote incinerator

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    On 1 November 2024 the Environment Agency re-opened the initial consultation into an environmental permit application for an incinerator near Swadlincote.

    • Environment Agency re-opens initial consultation on plans for proposed site in Keith Willshee Way
    • Consultation to run from 1 November to 13 December 2024
    • Environment Agency will consider issues around any likely impact on human health and environment

    Due to the high level of public interest associated with the site, the Environment Agency is re-opening the initial public consultation. The initial public consultation, ran between 28 June 2024 and 2 September 2024.

    R&P Clean Power Limited has applied for the permit to operate an incinerator on Keith Willshee Way, Swadlincote DE11 9EN. The company has also separately applied to Derbyshire County Council for planning.

    The company wants to incinerate up to 230,000 tonnes of non-hazardous waste each year in an incinerator known as an Energy from Waste Facility.

    The proposed facility will incinerate waste to produce energy in the form of electricity. Electricity from this process will be exported to the National Grid.

    An environmental permit sets the conditions which R&P Clean Power Limited must meet when operating the proposed incinerator.  It covers the management and operation of the site and the control and monitoring of emissions.

    Issues that we consider in deciding on the permit are: 

    • Relevant environmental regulatory requirements and technical standards.
    • Information on local population and sensitive sites.
    • Protection of human and environmental health.
    • Comments on whether the right process is being used for the activity, for example, whether the technology is appropriate.
    • Pollution control and any emissions to air, land and water.
    • Whether energy generated by waste incineration is recovered as much as possible.
    • Handling and storage of waste.
    • The impact of noise and odour from vehicle movements on site.
    • Plans to deal with litter and vermin on site.
    • Any permit conditions that may be needed.

    The Environment Agency will consult with partner organisations, including the UK Health Security Agency, as part of the process.  

    Issues such as suitability of the site, operating hours and traffic management to and from it, are matters for the planning authority, not the Environment Agency.

    The Environment Agency can only consider issues covered by the environmental permit and can only refuse a permit application based on technical information.  

    However, in order to build and operate the proposed incinerator, the company will need to be granted both planning permission and an environmental permit.

    To obtain an environmental permit, the company will need to show they are putting in place the necessary measures to meet current standards to protect human health and the environment. In addition, they must explain how any risks that are identified, such as odour and emissions, are prevented or minimised, alongside producing a Fire Prevention Plan.

    Once the consultation closes, the Environment Agency will review all the comments received before reaching a draft decision. R&P Clean Power Limited has the right to appeal if the permit is refused.

    If the Environment Agency thinks it is likely to issue the permit, it will consult again on the draft permit and draft decision document. This means the public will be able comment again if they feel that there is additional information that we have not considered in our decision.  

    If you wish to make comments about the application, please do so by 13 December 2024.

    You can comment by:

    • Visiting our online Citizen Space web page:

     DE11 9EN, R&P CLEAN POWER LIMITED, EPR/LP3327SK/A001: environmental permit consultation – Environment Agency – Citizen Space

    If you need help accessing this consultation in another format please contact us by emailing: PSCpublicresponse@environment-agency.gov.uk or calling 03708 506 506.

    Please use the application number LP3327SK/A001

    Updates to this page

    Published 4 November 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom