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Navigating the News Void: Opportunities for Revitalization

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Navigating the News Void: Opportunities for Revitalization

By Andy Lee Roth and Mickey Huff

In 1995, early in the development of the global internet, sociologist Michael Schudson imagined how people might process information if journalism were to suddenly disappear. An expert on  the history of US news media, Schudson speculated in his book, The Power of News, that peoples’ need to identify the day’s most important and relevant news from the continuous torrent of available information would eventually lead to the reinvention of journalism

Beyond daily gossip, practical advice, or mere information, Schudson contended, people desire what he called “public knowledge,” or news, the demand for which made it difficult to imagine a world without journalism.

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Nearly thirty years later, many Americans live in a version of the world remarkably close to the one Schudson pondered in 1995—because either they lack access to news or they choose to ignore journalism in favor of other, more sensational content.

By exploring how journalism is increasingly absent from many Americans’ lives, we can identify false paths and promising routes to its reinvention.

The Rise of News Deserts

Many communities across the United States now suffer from limited access to credible, comprehensive local news. Northwestern University’s 2022 “State of Local News” report determined that more than half of the counties in the United States—some 1,630—are served by only one newspaper each, while another two hundred or more counties, the homes of some four million people, have no newspaper at all. Put another way, seventy million Americans—a fifth of the country’s population—live in “news deserts,” communities with very limited access to local news, or in counties just one newspaper closure away from becoming so.

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Not surprisingly, the study found that news deserts are most common in economically struggling communities, which also frequently lack affordable and reliable high-speed digital service—a form of inequality known as digital redlining. Members of such communities are doubly impacted: lacking local news sources, they are also cut off from online access to the country’s surviving regional and national newspapers.

Noting that credible news “feeds grassroots democracy and builds a sense of belonging to a community,” Penny Abernathy, the report’s author, wrote that news deserts contribute to “the malignant spread of misinformation and disinformation, political polarization, eroding trust in media, and a yawning digital and economic divide among citizens.”

Divided Attention and “News Snacking”

While the rise of news deserts makes credible news a scarce resource for many Americans, others show no more than passing interest in news. A February 2022 Gallup/Knight Foundation poll found that only 33 percent of Americans reported paying “a great deal” of attention to national news, with even lower figures for local news (21 percent) and international news (12 percent).

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With the increasing prevalence of smartphone ownership and reliance on social media, news outlets now face ferocious competition for people’s attention. Following news is an incidental activity in the lives of many who engage in “news snacking.” As communications scholar Hektor Haarkötter described in a 2022 article, “Discarded News,” mobile internet use has altered patterns of news consumption: “News is no longer received consciously, but rather consumed incidentally like potato chips.”

Instead of intentionally seeking news from sources dedicated to journalism, many people now assume the viral nature of social media will automatically alert them to any truly important events or issues, a belief that is especially prominent among younger media users, Haarkötter noted. A 2017 study determined that the prevalence of this “news-finds-me” perception is likely “to widen gaps in political knowledge” while promoting “a false sense of being informed.”

Signs of Reinvention?

With journalism inaccessible to the growing number of people who live in “news deserts,” or only a matter of passing interest to online “news snackers,” the disappearance of journalism that Schudson pondered hypothetically in 1995 is a reality for many people today. If journalism as we have known it is on the verge of disappearing, are there also—as Schudson predicted—signs of its reinvention? Examining the profession itself, the signs are not all that encouraging.

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Consider, for example, the pivot by many independent journalists to Substack, Patreon, and other digital platforms in order to reach their audiences directly. Reader-supported journalism may be a necessary survival reflex, but we are wary of pinning the future of journalism on tech platforms controlled by third parties not necessarily committed to principles of ethical journalism, as advocated by the Society of Professional Journalists.

Media companies—including the tech websites CNET and BuzzFeed—have experimented with using artificial intelligence programs, including the infamous ChatGPT bot, to produce content. Noting that there would be “nothing surprising” about AI technology eventually threatening jobs in journalism, Hamilton Nolan of In These Times suggested that journalists have two key resources in the “looming fight” with AI, unions and “a widely accepted code of ethics that dictates how far standards can be pushed before something no longer counts as journalism.”

News outlets, Nolan argued, do not simply publish stories, they can also explain, when necessary, how a story was produced. The credibility of journalists and news outlets hinges on that accountability. Artificial intelligence may be able to produce media “content”—it may even be of use to journalists in news gathering—but it cannot produce journalism.

We also don’t anticipate a revival of journalism on the basis of the June 2022 memo from CNN’s Chris Licht, shortly after he became the network’s CEO, which directed staff to avoid overuse of its “breaking news” banner. “We are truth-tellers, focused on informing, not alarming our viewers,” Licht wrote in his memo. (In June 2023, CNN reported that the network’s chairman and CEO was “out after a brief and tumultuous tenure.”) But competitive pressures will continue to drive commercial news outlets to lure their audiences’ inconstant attention with sensational reporting and clickbait headlines.

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Toward a Public Option

More promising bases for the reinvention of journalism will depend not on technological fixes or more profitable business models but on reinvesting in journalism as a public good.

In a 2020 article for Jacobin, media scholar Victor Pickard argued that commercial media “can’t support the bare minimum levels of news media . . . that democracy requires.”13 Drawing on the late sociologist Erik Olin Wright’s model for constructing alternatives to capitalism, Pickard argued that the creation of a publicly-owned media system is the most direct way “to tame and erode commercial media.” 

The “public options” championed by Pickard and others—which include significant budgets to support nonprofit media institutions and municipal broadband networks—would do much to address the conditions that have exiled far too many Americans to news deserts.

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If the public option advocated by Pickard focuses on the production of better quality news, the reinvention of journalism will also depend on cultivating broader public interest in and support for top-notch journalism. Here, perhaps ironically, some of the human desires that social media have so effectively harnessed might be redirected in support of investigative journalism that exposes abuses of power and addresses social inequalities.

Remembering a Golden Era of Muckraking

Few living Americans recall Ida Mae Tarbell, Lincoln Steffens, Upton Sinclair, and other pioneering investigative journalists who worked in the aftermath of the Gilded Age—an era, comparable to ours, when a thin veneer of extravagant economic prosperity for a narrow elite helped camouflage underlying social disintegration. “Muckraker” journalists exposed political and economic corruption in ways that captivated the public’s attention and spurred societal reform.

For instance, in a series of investigative reports published by McClure’s Magazine between October 1902 and November 1903, Steffens exposed local stories of collusion between corrupt politicians and businessmen in St. Louis, Minneapolis, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, and New York. Most significantly, though, Steffens’s “Shame of the Cities” series, published as a book in 1904, drew significant public attention to a national pattern of civic decay.

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Steffens’s reporting not only made him a household name, it also spurred rival publications to pursue their own muckraking investigations. As his biographer, Peter Hartshorn, wrote in I Have Seen the Future: A Life of Lincoln Steffens (2012), other publishers “quickly grasped what the public was demanding: articles that not only entertained and informed but also exposed. Americans were captivated by the muckrakers and their ability to provide names, dollar amounts, and other titillating specifics.”

By alerting the public to systemic abuses of power, investigative journalism galvanized popular support for political reform and indirectly helped propel a wave of progressive legislation. As Carl Jensen related in Stories That Changed America, the muckrakers’ investigative reporting led to “a nation-wide public revolt against social evils” and “a decade of reforms in antitrust legislation, the electoral process, banking regulations, and a host of other social programs.” The golden age of muckraking came to an end when the United States entered World War I, diverting national attention from domestic issues to conflict overseas.

Though largely forgotten, the muckraking journalists from the last century provide another model of how journalism might be renewed, if not reinvented. The muckrakers’ reporting was successful in part because it harnessed a public appetite for shame and scandal to the cause of political engagement. To paraphrase one of Schudson’s points about news as public knowledge, the muckrakers’ reporting served as a crucial resource for “people ready to take political action.”

Reviving Public Hunger for News About “What’s Really Going On”

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Despite its imperiled status, journalism that serves the public good has not yet disappeared. There is no shortage of exemplary independent reporting on the injustices and inequalities that threaten to disintegrate today’s United States. 

That said, it is not simple to recognize such reporting or to find sources of it, amidst the clattering voices that compete for the public’s attention. Finding authentic news requires not only countering the spread of news deserts, but also cultivating the public’s taste for news that goes deeper than the latest TikTok trend, celebrity gossip, or talking head “hot takes.”

A public option for journalism could help assure more widespread access to vital news and diverse perspectives; and a revival of the muckraking tradition, premised on journalism that informs the public by exposing abuses of authority, could reconnect people who have otherwise lost interest in news that distracts, sensationalizes, or—perhaps worse—polarizes us.

Both the twentieth-century muckrakers and today’s advocates of journalism in the public interest provide lessons about how journalism can help recreate a shared sense of community—a value touted in Northwestern’s 2022 “State of Local News” report. The muckrakers appealed to a collective sense of outrage that wealthy tycoons and crooked politicians might deceive and fleece the public. That outrage brought people together to respond in common cause.

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As George Seldes—a torchbearer of the muckraking tradition, who founded In Fact, the nation’s first successful periodical of press criticism, in 1940—often noted, journalism is about telling people “what’s really going on” in society. At its most influential, journalism promotes public awareness that spurs civic engagement, real reform, and even radical change.

Perhaps that is why it is so difficult, especially in these troubled times, to imagine a world without journalism. Our best hopes for the future, including the renewal of community and grassroots democracy, all hinge at least partly on what Schudson called “public knowledge,” which a robust free press protects and promotes.

Note: The above material was excerpted from Project Censored’s State of the Free Press 2024, edited by Andy Lee Roth and Mickey Huff (Fair Oaks, CA and New York: The Censored Press and Seven Stories Press, 2024).

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Officer who killed Daunte Wright is taking her story on the road with help from a former prosecutor

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Officer who killed Daunte Wright is taking her story on the road with help from a former prosecutor

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A former Minnesota police officer who was convicted of killing a Black motorist when she used her handgun instead of her taser during a traffic stop is out of prison and delivering presentations at law enforcement conferences, stirring up a heated debate over how officers punished for misconduct should atone for their misdeeds.

After Kim Potter served her sentence for killing Daunte Wright, she met with the prosecutor who charged her case. That former prosecutor, Imran Ali, said Potter wanted to do something to help other officers avoid taking a life. Ali saw the presentation as a path toward redemption for police officers who have erred and an opportunity to promote healing in communities already shaken by police misconduct.

But Katie Wright, Daunte’s mother, said the plan amounts to an enraging scheme where her son’s killer would turn a profit from his death and dredge up painful memories in the process.

“I think that Kim Potter had her second chance. She got to go home with her children. That was her second chance,” Wright said. “I think that when we’re looking at police officers, when they’re making quote-unquote mistakes, they still get to live in our community. They still get to continue their lives. That’s their second chance. We don’t have a second chance to be able to bring our loved ones back.”

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Potter, who did not respond to phone and email messages, had been set to deliver her presentation to a law enforcement agency in Washington state when it was abruptly canceled in September after news reports generated criticism. But other law enforcement groups, including one of the largest in Minnesota, have hosted the presentation and are continuing to invite Potter to speak.

Some see canceling her presentation as short-sighted, saying she could share a cautionary tale with others who have to make life-or-death decisions in the field.

“This is the definition of why I decided to walk away. You have somebody that recognizes the need for reform, recognizes the need for redemption, recognizes the need to engage. And still,” Ali said. “If you’re in law enforcement in this country, there is no redemption.”

Ali initially was co-counsel in the case against Potter. But he resigned, saying “vitriol” and “partisan politics” made it hard to pursue justice. Ali is now a law enforcement consultant and said he is working to help departments implement changes that could prevent more officers from making Potter’s mistake.

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Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, whose office took over the prosecution of Potter after Ali resigned, has said the former officer’s public expression of remorse could help the community heal.

Wright was killed on April 11, 2021, in Brooklyn Center, about 10 miles (16 kilometers) from where the officer who killed George Floyd was on trial. Wright’s killing ignited protests as communities in Minneapolis and beyond were still reeling from Floyd’s murder. A jury later found Potter guilty of manslaughter. A judge said Potter never intended to hurt Wright and sentenced her to two years in prison. She was released after 16 months and later connected with Ali.

“I was like, wow. Even after being convicted, even after being driven out of your home, even after having so many death threats against you and having been incarcerated, you just don’t want to go away,” Ali said.

The pair have become a fixture at Minnesota Sheriff’s Association events. They delivered training sessions at conferences in June and September, with a future training scheduled in October. They also took their presentation out of state in May when Potter presented at a law enforcement conference in Indiana, event agendas show.

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Jeff Storms, Wright’s attorney, said the description of the Washington training session in the contract prepared by Ali’s law firm reads more like an advertisement tailored for police officers who feel embattled, rather than a heartfelt story of Potter’s regrets.

“The officer, and the prosecutor who quit in protest, will deliver a dynamic presentation on the truth of what occurred, the increased violence and non-compliance directed towards law enforcement, the importance of training, and steps we can take in the future,” says the contract for the training session, which was obtained by The Associated Press.

That passage suggests Ali is engineering support for Potter and his law firm, Storms said.

“They profit from law enforcement training. And so to say this is simply about sort of a redemption arc for Ms. Potter in doing this training, it sounds really hard to believe that that’s the case,” Storms said.

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Ali’s firm proposed a $8,000 charge for the training session, which includes speaking fees and travel costs, the contract says.

“To say my firm is trying to benefit off an $8,000 contract is ridiculous,” Ali said.

He did not say how much money Potter would earn, but said the amount was far less than what she might earn telling her story through a book deal or another project. Ali declined to show the AP the full presentation he and Potter had been set to deliver in Washington. But he described Potter’s opening line, which would read: “I killed Daunte Wright. I’m not proud of it. And neither should you be.”

Ali said he is committed to helping law enforcement agencies implement changes that would prevent more officers from making Potter’s mistake. The backlash to Potter telling her story at the training session speaks to a view among some that redemption for those convicted of crimes does not extend to police officers, Ali said.

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“We can give the benefit of the doubt to people that are former Ku Klux Klan members or former skinheads that come in and educate, sometimes even our youth,” Ali said. “But we cannot give law enforcement that chance.”

Rachel Moran, a professor specializing in police accountability at the University of St. Thomas School of Law, said the perspectives of victims and their families should be considered by law enforcement agencies when they decide who to include at training sessions. But Potter’s voice might be able to penetrate a law enforcement culture that is skeptical of outside criticism, she said

“Police officers culturally do have a pattern of not wanting to hear outside perspectives and not believing other people can understand the situation,” she added. “So to hear from someone who is very much in their shoes, who’s actually willing to admit an error, I think that has potential to be heard more by officers than an outsider.”

In an interview, James Stuart, executive director of the Minnesota Sheriff’s Association, said Potter’s upcoming presentation would go on, despite the blowback. His organization has a responsibility to learn from the “national moment of upheaval” sparked by Potter’s killing of Wright.

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“She’ll be the first to say she’s not a hero and it was a horrific tragic accident,” Stuart said. “I understand the concerns and the criticisms, but I would also hope they could understand the value of learning from mistakes and making sure that no other families find themselves in that same situation.”

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Lobbyists access parliamentary emails using IT loophole

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Lobbyists who previously worked as aides in the House of Commons have accessed confidential information from parliamentary email systems because Westminster authorities failed to close their accounts after they left.

Two ex-aides to MPs told the Financial Times they logged in to access the private contact details of MPs and their staff after they had taken up jobs at lobbying firms.

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One said they had been asked by their new boss at a lobbying firm to use their continued access to Commons IT systems to get private email addresses that are not available to the public.

“They would ask me to go in and get email addresses from the internal systems for the six weeks I still had access after leaving,” the ex-aide said.

Others said they were able to see emails sent to their former MP’s inbox, which would have enabled them to see confidential constituent information as well as the parliamentarian’s private messages.

The ex-aides also said the access would have enabled them to see security information circulated to MPs and staff in parliament.

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The revelations suggest the parliamentary authorities are failing to properly secure private or confidential information, even after a high-profile China spying scandal.

In April, a UK parliamentary researcher and another man were charged with spying for China after allegedly providing information that could be “useful to an enemy”.

The two were accused of giving “articles, notes, documents or information” to a foreign state, according to the Metropolitan Police. Both pleaded not guilty on Friday.

Parliament has different bodies responsible for various parts of its operations. The Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority (IPSA) handles payroll for MPs staff, but the aides are legally directly employed by their MPs. IPSA is separate from Parliamentary Digital Services, which handles email systems.

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Two ex-aides said parliamentary authorities did not automatically close email accounts when a staffer’s employment ended.

“To close an account, the MP or office manager has to inform Parliamentary Digital Services directly the person has left,” one of the aides said. 

“If the MP is disorganised, or just a new MP with limited training on running their office, then it’s very possible that an account may remain for months until security clearance expires,” they added.

A third former staffer added: “You go through such a rigorous security process to get your pass, it’s mad they don’t restrict access to parliamentary accounts as soon as you leave.

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The Labour party, which swept to power at the July UK general election after 14 years in opposition, last month privately warned its parliamentary staff about the risk of access by ex-employees.

It said in an email to all Labour parliamentary staff that it was “vital” that staffing records were kept updated so that anyone who had left Westminster was immediately prevented from receiving information.

The party added that only one member of each MPs office should be on internal mailing lists at any given time to prevent confidential information being leaked.

Many former MPs’ staff move into lobbying roles upon exiting parliament. These jobs frequently involve contacting parliamentarians — often the ones who formerly employed them — on behalf of commercial clients.

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This year hundreds of aides left parliament largely because of the July general election, when 175 Conservative MPs lost their seats.

A House of Commons spokesperson said: “Network accounts sponsored by MPs are audited throughout the course of every Parliament, with accounts closed and access to the parliamentary estate removed, as soon as we are told to by either the sponsoring MP or by IPSA.”

They added: “Individual MPs, as the sponsors of their staff and owners of the data, are required to inform us of any changes or closures.

An IPSA spokesperson said: “Parliamentary accounts are administered by Parliamentary Digital Service, and IPSA sends data on a weekly basis confirming any members of staff whose leaving date has passed.”

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P. Diddy Faces Abuse Allegations from 120 Plaintiffs as Scandal Grows

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P. Diddy Faces Abuse Allegations from 120 Plaintiffs as Scandal Grows

Ex-Girlfriend Among Accusers

As the accusations mount, Diddy is currently in custody. His legal team is working diligently to secure his release, appealing a judge’s decision to keep him detained until the trial.

Combs has vehemently denied all allegations, calling them “disgusting claims” from individuals seeking “quick money.”

Among the accusers is Combs’ ex-girlfriend, Cassandra “Cassie” Ventura, who filed a civil lawsuit last year alleging physical abuse and human trafficking.

As the legal proceedings unfold, the implications for Diddy’s career and personal life remain significant, raising questions about accountability in the entertainment industry.

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The situation continues to develop, and with the increasing number of allegations, it is unclear how this will affect Combs’ future and reputation in the music industry. As investigations proceed, the outcomes of these serious allegations will undoubtedly resonate beyond the courtroom.

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The small Scottish loch holding an answer to how the UK could reach net zero

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Loch nam Breac Dearga, is a hidden lochan perched 475 metres above the UK’s most voluminous lake, Loch Ness, on the Great Glen in Inverness-shire.

It holds an answer to how Britain reaches net zero.

The Great Glen’s topography of deep water surrounded by vertiginous hills provides ideal conditions for pumped storage hydropower, a system that uses large bodies of water to store power, facilitating the UK’s energy transition by tackling the problem of renewables’ intermittency.

As the UK increasingly turns to wind power to decarbonise the electricity grid, long-term energy storage is vital for dependable renewable power when the wind does not blow — a gap currently bridged by fossil fuels.

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Pumped hydro schemes elevate water from a lower to a higher reservoir when electricity is abundant and cheap, releasing it back through a turbine to meet surges in demand.

Hydro power schemes on Loch Ness

Glen Earrach Energy, formed by the owners of the Balmacaan Estate where Loch nam Breac Dearga is situated, is planning the largest such scheme on Loch Ness, with a capacity of 2 gigawatts, seeking to tap into the home of the mythical monster for a vast so-called water battery.

The firm estimates that the scheme will reduce the national grid’s post-2030 carbon footprint by 10 per cent and save £2bn in grid operating costs in the first 20 years of operation. Its size and height differential will make it the most efficient in the UK, maximising power output while minimising the impact on Loch Ness water levels, it said.

“This is how the UK becomes a green energy superpower,” said Roderick MacLeod, director of family-owned Glen Earrach. “The UK has a massive offshore wind resource, so the question is how to smooth it out so it can be usable in the UK and also countries abroad,” he said.

Roderick MacLoed stands outdoors near Loch Ness, Scotland.
Roderick MacLeod says high-head projects will minimise water-level changes © Paul Heartfield/FT

The UK is playing catch-up with other parts of the world, such as China, Japan, the US and Europe, where the technology is growing rapidly as a means of stabilising renewables generation.

The world’s 179GW of pumped storage hydro capacity, which forms 90 per cent of overall installed global energy storage, is expected to increase by almost 50 per cent to about 240GW by the end of the decade, according to the International Hydropower Association.

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The operator of the UK grid has projected that 7GW to 15GW of long-duration electricity storage would be required by 2050 as the government targets net zero emissions.

The UK’s four existing 2.8GW pumped storage hydro facilities in Wales and Scotland were built more than four decades ago, when energy was state owned.

But opposition is forming to a hydro “gold rush” around Scotland’s most famous loch.

The 300-megawatt Foyers Power Station, operated by energy group SSE, was commissioned half a century ago via a link to the 19th-century Loch Mhor Dam, which used to power aluminium production in the Highlands. Other prospects on Loch Ness include Statera’s 600MW at Loch Kemp and Statkraft’s 450MW at Loch na Cathrach.

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The slew of projects around the tourist hotspot threatens the loch’s fragile ecosystem, including juvenile salmon and shoreline invertebrates, because of rapid, frequent water drawdowns, said Brian Shaw of the Ness District Salmon Fishery Board.

“There are huge risks involved — it’s hard to see how they [developers] can demonstrate they can leave biodiversity in a better condition, it’s simply not possible,” he said. “There is a gold rush of companies trying to get access to these waters.”

A panoramic view of Loch nam Breac Dearga under a cloudy sky. The landscape features rolling hills covered with brown and green vegetation, surrounding the expansive, calm waters of the loch
Loch nam Breac Dearga © Paul Heartfield/FT

MacLeod, who aims to start construction in early 2026, said high-head projects such as Glen Earrach’s — with larger vertical distance between the lower and upper reservoirs — would benefit the local economy while also minimising water-level changes. The flow of water through Loch Ness would also help mitigate fluctuations, he added.

A Scottish government spokesperson said impacts on communities and nature were “important considerations” and all applications were subject to “site-specific assessments”.

As well as bringing local communities on side, other challenges to such grandiose engineering feats include expensive upfront costs, lengthy construction and uncertainty around operational revenues.

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Glen Earrach said it had made significant progress in developing the £2bn project and was now seeking to raise equity funding.

The government, industry executives said, was set to unveil a “cap and floor” price stabilisation mechanism that would guarantee minimum revenue for operators while capping excessive returns.

Developers say such a mechanism — similar to the one used for electricity interconnectors that share power between neighbouring countries — could unlock billions of private sector investment into UK hydro projects, primarily in Scotland and Wales, where the most favourable geographical conditions are found.

“We are embracing the future of energy production and storage and will lay out further plans on this in due course,” said a UK government spokesperson.

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Further south at Loch Lochy, energy group SSE is funding ground condition surveys at its 1.5GW Coire Glas project, drilling and blasting 1.2km tunnels into subterranean caverns near where an underground powerhouse complex could be located for the generators.

SSE has ploughed in £100mn so far ahead of an implementation of a cap and floor policy that Mike Seaton, project director for Coire Glas, hopes can be in place for developers by the first or second quarter of next year.

Seaton said SSE had garnered interest from other utilities and institutional funds for co-investment. “There are lots of interest, but they will need this cap and floor — without this there will be no projects,” he said.

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The seven best seaside hotels in Hastings, with rooms from £74

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Seaside resort town of Hastings in East Sussex.

Hastings in East Sussex was once much maligned, often a punchline to jokes about the “roughest” seaside towns in the country. Those in the know, though, know differently. This coastal community has a long-held artistic tradition and more recent implants – known to locals as “Down from Londons” (DFLs) – have added to this reputation.

While the town, made up of the Old Town, new town and edgy St Leonards-on-Sea, may still be a little rough around the edges, it’s full to the brim with eccentric art galleries, cosy pubs, Michelin-recommended places to eat – and some of the most quirky shops and museums you’ve ever seen (try the Fishermen’s Museum and True Crime Museum).

After you’ve got your 1066 history fix, antiqued up and down the streets of St Leonards, danced to live Irish music in The Albion, eaten from the imaginative menu at The Crown on All Saints St and washed it all down with a pint or two at the First In Last Out on the High Street, head to one of Hastings’ best stays – rounded up here…

Vive, Havelock Road

Hastings and Ibiza are rarely referred to in the same sentence, but Vive Hotel is where the two meet.

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Open for just a year, this hotel in the up-and-coming new town was a collaboration between Jason Bull – who previously owned the snazzy Es Vive in Ibiza before he sold it to footballer Lionel Messi – and designer Sean Cochrane, who designed the Balearic escape.

Set in a former university building, rooms are modern and functional, with each acting as a studio, ideal for long or short stays.

Each space features white walls and clean lines and comes fully equipped with a luxury en-suite shower room, modern kitchenette, and desk area.

There are plans for a modern European restaurant, as well as a spa, creche and a playroom, slated to open in the near future.

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Rooms from £74, vivehotel.co.uk

Hastings House, St Leonards-on-Sea

Although technically a separate town, St Leonards-on-Sea is frequently lumped in with Hastings. It offers a very different vibe, though, with artists in residence and achingly hip eateries everywhere you turn.

Hop off the train from London or Brighton one station before Hastings at St Leonards Warrior Square and take a short walk to Hastings House, set in a Regency townhouse, which is one of just a few five star residences in the area. Step inside this upscale B&B and you’ll be greeted with contemporary soft greys and exposed wood.

Most rooms have a sea view and are bright, clean and comfortable. Each comes with an en-suite bathroom, featuring wet room-style rainfall showers as well as robes and slippers – and some have luxurious freestanding bathtubs.

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Breakfast is included as standard, and guests can choose from a traditional Full English, French toast or a perfectly seaside-y smoked salmon and scrambled eggs.

Rooms from £115, hastingshouse.co.uk

St Benedict Victorian B&B, Pevensey Road

Hastings and St Leonards are well known for their quirkiness – and St Benedict Victorian B&B encapsulates that reputation perfectly.

Walk inside and you’ll feel as if you’ve stepped into a time machine. Located, aptly, in a late Victorian family house, this spectacular B&B has taken great care to recreate the 1800s with accurate interiors, many sourced from the town’s wealth of antiques shops.

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Each of the five rooms is named whimsically – The Old Nursery and The Colonel’s Room – and several feature William Morris wallpaper.

Owner Paul Oxborrow, who started the B&B in 2008, is clearly committed to presenting an accurate picture of the Victorian era but, luckily, there are baths, showers and plumbed-in loos as opposed to the more rudimentary methods of our forefathers.

In the colder months, the dark yet sumptuous interiors come into their own. Guests can warm up in front of a cosy open fire in the lounge and the Victorian lighting gleams off ornate gold picture frames and chandeliers, while heavily patterned rugs add extra snugness.

All stays include a full English cooked breakfast, served “country house style” in the dining room along with home made marmalade. Visitors can also take a stroll in the faithfully restored walled kitchen garden, flanked by authentic greenhouses.

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If you’re feeling inspired by the remarkable decor, take a brisk walk to nearby Norman Road, which has a seemingly endless array of antiques shops, perfect for picking up a Victorian era trinket as a souvenir of your trip to the ‘past’.

Rooms from £118, victorianbedandbreakfast.co.uk

The Laindons, Hastings Old Town

Locals know the Old Town as the “real” Hastings. With buildings dating back the 1400s, it’s a world away from the new town with its chain shops and utilitarian architecture.

The Laindons, a small but perfectly formed guest house in the middle of Old Hastings, is the perfect base to explore the narrow streets, packed with quirky gift shops and cute coffee spots.

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Each of its five rooms are named after colours and offer unique designs and vibes – think tiled fireplaces and nods to the sea beyond, like shell-shaped lamps and cushions adorned with crabs.

The Blue Room takes the nautical theme a step further, with a roll top bath in the room itself. The Yellow Room has perhaps the best view of all, thanks to its bay window which reveals a panorama over the delightfully quirky Old Town buildings.

Breakfast, included in the price, is served until 10 in the conservatory which overlooks the pretty East Hill nature park.

Free-range eggs and sausages and bacon come from local farms and jams and marmalades are hand-produced in nearby Battle.

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Rooms from £165, laindons.com

The Laindons offers comfort, views – and a little light nautical theming

The Cloudesley, Cloudesley Road

If you’re a conscious traveller, The Cloudesley could be your best bet for a visit to Hastings.

A little inland, this environmentally-conscious B&B has previously been named one of the best in the country and it’s easy to see why.

Designed by Chelsea Flower Show award winner Shahriar Mazandi, relaxation and calm is the vibe here.

Rooms have no televisions and are painted in limewash from Francesca’s Paints and the showers are heated by solar panels.

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Carrying on this philosophy, there are no microwaves in the kitchen, Himalayan crystal salt is used in food preparation on-site, while fruit from the garden is served at breakfast when in season.

For a full-on escape, spa treatments and holistic therapies are on offer, from traditional massage to reflexology, and reiki in peaceful treatment rooms.

Rooms from £111, thecloudesley.co.uk

The Old Rectory, Harold Road

If you’re looking for a sign that Hastings truly is on the up and up, The Old Rectory is it. It has been recognised by the Michelin Guide’s new Michelin Keys, created to highlight outstanding hotels.

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Just inland from Hastings’ iconic fishermans’ huts, this stylish haunt is owned by Lionel Copley, a designer who previously worked with Katherine Hamnett.

His fashionable nous is evident in The Old Rectory, which dates back to mediaeval times and has had Victoian and Georgian wings added on over the intervening years.

The nine rooms, elegantly decked out, are all named after streets in Hastings Old Town. Some of them feature wallpaper designed by local artist Deborah Bowness and others feature shabby-chic chandeliers and gilded mirrors, adding a rustic-meets-glamorous touch to your environment.

The walled garden is a must-see and breakfast is a gem. The Old Rectory makes their own meat and veggie sausages and smoke their own kippers and salmon at an in-house smokery.

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Hastings is not known for its spas, but the venue here is hailed as one of the best for miles around.

On offer are a wide variety of treatments, including a Sculpted Facial, Oriental massage and reflexology and postural realignment body work. Bookings are open to non-residents, so make sure to book ahead.

Rooms from £135, theoldrectoryhastings.co.uk

Hastings - city in East Sussex, UK.
Hastings is still home to countless fishermen who catch the freshest fish to be served in local eateries (Photo Hija/Getty Images)

The Jenny Lind Inn, High Street

If you like to be in the thick of it and experience life like a local, you could do a lot worse than a stay at The Jenny Lind Inn.

Downstairs is a cosy pub with a wide selection of real ales on tap and live music – think sea shanties, folk and blues – on several days a week.

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Upstairs, in the inn’s rooms, it’s a world away from the noisy fun in the bars below. The five bedrooms, which offer flexible accommodation for family groups and single occupancy rates, are cosy and comfortable. All have seagull’s eye views of the higgledy piggledy Old Town below, and are just two minutes walk from the beach.

The Jenny – as locals call it – also makes the perfect base to visit two of Hastings’ most interesting museums – the Flower Makers’ Museum and the Fishermen’s Museum, both offering unique insights into parts of the town’s rich history.

Rooms from £74, jennylindhastings.co.uk/stay

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Low Rider — War’s 1975 track celebrated a thriving subculture

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