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  • Carbon and water cycle: The small Scottish loch holding an answer to how the UK could reach net zero

  • Disease dilemmas: Keir Starmer to ban TV junk food ads before 9pm in UK public health drive

  • Disease dilemmas: Bird flu and mpox show little learnt from Covid about future pandemics

  • Power and borders: Ukraine’s Kursk offensive has triggered doubts among Russian elite, spy chiefs say

  • Population geography: Global population to shrink this century as birth rates fall

  • Changing spaces: Inside the mind of a Nimby

  • Changing spaces: A pre-election journey across Britain’s neglected north

  • Hazardous earth: The next critical mineral source could be volcanic soup

  • IB Power places and networks: Christmas shipments rush risks deepening supply chain crisis, warns Maersk boss

  • Disease dilemmas: Big rise in diseases linked to ageing and lifestyle increases healthcare burden

  • IB Global interactions: Joe Biden to raise solar import tariffs in bid to protect US industry

  • Carbon and water cycle: Panama Canal traffic recovers from drought caused by El Niño, study finds

  • Carbon and water cycle: Dutch kick-start European attempts at carbon capture

  • Global Migration: The ‘brain waste’ of skilled migrants in Europe

  • IB Freshwater: Dubai battles flood waters as historic storm causes chaos

  • IB Freshwater: ‘New climate reality’ stretches global freshwater supply

  • IB Changing population: Marriage holds key to Japan’s falling births

  • IB Global climate: Warmer, wetter, hotter, drier — February caps unending stretch of record temperatures

  • Power and borders: Sweden joins ‘Nato lake’ on Moscow’s doorstep

  • IB Fresh water: AI boom sparks concern over Big Tech’s water consumption

  • IB Global risks and resilience: North Korean hackers use AI for more sophisticated scams

  • Carbon and water cycle: Huge ice loss risks Antarctica’s ‘destabilisation’

  • IB Global climate: Ski industry navigates new terrain to fend off threat of climate change

  • Carbon and water cycle: Atmospheric rivers set to hit US west coast

  • Disease dilemmas: China hopes for ‘dragon babies’ as population decline gathers pace

  • Changing places: China hopes for ‘dragon babies’ as population decline gathers pace

  • Power and Borders: US vetoes UN resolution calling for immediate ceasefire in Gaza

  • Climate change: How each country’s emissions and climate pledges compare

  • Global Migration: Sunak under pressure as net migration to UK hits record 745,000

  • Global migration: Britain’s migrant policy is in disarray

  • Changing Spaces: To fix towns, politicians must not forget about cities

  • Power and borders: Gaza — the history of an embattled territory

  • Climate graphic – Rivers: Amazon river at lowest in 121 years

  • Climate change: UK regulators approve plans for new Rosebank North Sea oilfield

  • Climate change: Earth outside ‘safe operating zone’ for humans in crucial areas, scientists find

  • Natural disasters: Morocco vows to rebuild as hopes fade for more earthquake survivors

  • Changing spaces: A northern English town looks to BAE Systems to help it ‘level up’

  • Changing spaces: The Nimby tax on Britain and America

  • Supply chains: Severe drought in Panama hits global shipping industry

  • Climate change: The sudden warming of the oceans

  • Climate change: First days of June bring record heat

  • Changing spaces: ‘New town’ offers vision of how to breathe life back into ailing UK high streets

  • Climate change: Will El Niño return for a heated-up 2023?

  • Health and Changing Spaces: ‘Population anxiety’ fuelling harmful fertility policies, says UN

  • Power and borders: Xi Jinping to test limits of friendship with Putin

  • Changing spaces: HS2 rail project delayed by 2 years to save costs

  • Glaciation – Climate graphic of the week: Glacial lakes flood risks rise

  • Power and borders: How to contain a recalcitrant Russia

  • Hazardous Earth: Turkey and Syria’s devastating earthquakes in graphics

  • Power and borders: Geography is (almost) everything

  • Changing spaces: China’s population falls in historic shift

  • Earth Life Support Systems – Climate graphic of the week: ‘alarming’ trends revealed in weather reports

  • Climate change: Scientists study how wavy jet stream plus ‘extra warmth’ fuels extreme weather

  • Changing spaces: Big cities drive half of global economic growth

  • Hazardous earth: Mauna Loa eruption provides unique research opportunity for volcanologists

  • Disease dilemmas: Global floods and droughts will intensify sooner than expected, studies show

  • Changing spaces: World population reaches 8bn as it grows older

  • Disease dilemmas: UK lags behind comparable countries in cancer survival rates, study finds

  • Disease dilemmas: Britons now have the worst access to healthcare in Europe, and it shows

  • Climate change: World on track for up to 2.6C temperature rise by 2100, reports UN

  • Power and borders: Crimean bridge explosion leaves Russian supply lines exposed

  • Climate change: The new era of stronger hurricanes

  • Changing spaces: Britain and the US are poor societies with some very rich people

  • Changing places: Why are UK home energy bills going through the roof?

  • Disease dilemmas: Overweight England struggles to break the ‘junk food cycle’

  • Power and borders: UN envoy ‘unable to assess’ scale of Xinjiang repression

  • Climate change: ‘Megadrought’ threatens water and power supplies to millions in US

  • Climate change: Record carbon dioxide levels alarm scientists

  • Ecosystems under stress: Trouble in Costa Rica’s eco-paradise as homebuyers heat up market

  • Global change: War in Ukraine makes farming innovation imperative

  • Climate change: Polar regions experience extremes as world warms

  • Changing spaces: How did a vast Amazon warehouse change life in a former mining town?

  • Carbon and water cycle: The rise of ‘extreme weather attribution’

  • Power and borders: Russia’s invasion to have ‘enormous impact’ on world food supplies

  • Geographical skills: War in Ukraine reminds us that maps can be weapons

  • Changing Spaces: Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in maps — latest updates

  • Changing Spaces: What teenagers can teach us about creating better places to live

  • Global resource consumption: Macron restarts France’s ‘nuclear adventure’ with plans for 6 reactors

  • Changing Spaces: Five takeaways from the UK’s levelling-up plan

  • Changing Spaces: How the UK high street was hit by the pandemic: look up your area

  • Food and health: The US’s hidden minority hit hard by Covid

  • Disease dilemmas: Antibiotic resistance kills over 1m people a year, says study

  • Global change: Hydrogen power forecast to bring new dimension to energy geopolitics

  • Climate change: Weather events cost the US $145bn in 2021 as climate change took hold

  • Global change: Britain needs immigrants if it is to survive the climate storm

  • Changing spaces: Wealth inequality rises in Britain after decade of stability

  • Climate change: Deaths mount after ‘unprecedented’ tornadoes devastate parts of US

  • Earth Life Support Systems: La Niña expected to intensify global rain and drought after second consecutive year

  • Global migration: Belarus moves migrants away from Polish border camp

  • Power and borders: Belarus seeks Russian missiles as border tensions rise

  • Earth Life Support Systems: Policing the Amazon: on the front lines of deforestation

  • Climate change: COP26: How every country’s emissions and climate pledges compare

  • Power and borders: China tests new space capability with hypersonic missile

  • Global climate: How green is your electric vehicle?

  • Disease dilemmas: WHO backs deployment of first malaria vaccine for children

  • Changing Spaces/Hazardous Earth: La Palma’s volcano thrills onlookers — but should the ‘lava chasers’ be stopped?

  • Disease dilemmas: World’s biggest cities fail on tougher WHO air pollution standards

  • Global migration: The Turkish wall built to keep out refugees from Afghanistan

  • Climate change risks triggering catastrophic tsunamis, scientist warns

  • Power and Borders: Africa has quietly become the epicentre of the Islamist threat

  • Global Change: Pandemic and higher food prices fuel sharp rise in global hunger

  • Changing spaces: Half of all bikes sold in Europe will be electric by 2025, predicts manufacturer

  • Global Interactions: What’s fuelling China’s new online nationalists

  • Global Change: How heatwaves became climate change’s silent killer

  • Changing spaces: Instability in the Sahel: how a jihadi gold rush is fuelling violence in Africa

  • Changing spaces: How acute inequality scars Cornish idyll hosting G7 summit

  • Global climate: How can the world get to net zero emissions by 2050?

  • Global climate: Europe’s Climate Leaders 2021

  • Disease dilemmas: Covid threat and drought combine to put India’s tea harvest at risk

  • Changing spaces: Building blocks: how Birmingham is emerging from London’s shadow

  • IB Global Trends in Consumption: UAE’s Taqa seeks to shine with solar energy push

  • Climate Change: Forest fires spread across Indian Himalayan state

  • Power and borders: US offers to help Egypt unblock Suez Canal

  • Global Interactions: How the KitKat went global

  • Global migration: Biden scrambles to cope with rising number of migrant children

  • Climate change: Polar vortex sends Texas into deep freeze

  • IB DP Global change: Pandemic blamed for falling birth rates across much of Europe

  • IB DP Urban environments: Saudi Arabia’s mega-project: a 170km line city through the desert

  • Changing spaces: Inside the ‘Covid Triangle’: a catastrophe years in the making

  • Power and borders: US launches air strikes against Iran-linked militias in Syria

  • IB DP Global interactions: Denmark raises investment in Arctic surveillance to counter Russian build-up

  • Climate change: Go-ahead for Cumbrian coal mine put on hold

  • IB DP Global resource consumption: India’s energy demands to grow more than those of other countries, says IEA chief

  • IB DP Urban environments: How cities around the world are tackling climate change

  • Earth’s life support systems: Egypt’s farmers on front line in battle against water scarcity

  • Power as borders: US warns Beijing over incursion into Taiwanese air defence zone

  • Global migration: Coronavirus sparks exodus of foreign-born people from UK

  • Climate change: Brazil denudes rainforest further in 2020

  • Changing spaces: Destitution levels soared in the UK, even before the pandemic

  • Power and borders: UK to send troops to Mali peacekeeping operation

  • Power and borders: Constitutional question at the heart of Ethiopia’s fight in Tigray

  • Earth life support systems: Pollution results less impressive during second European lockdown

  • Climate change/data skills: Siberia experiences record temperatures

  • Power and borders: What’s at stake as conflict flares in Ethiopia?

  • Hazardous Earth: Earthquake kills 17 people in Turkey and Greece

  • Disease dilemmas: Covid-19: The global crisis — in data

  • Disease dilemmas: Covid-19 will push millions in middle-income nations into poverty, warns World Bank

  • Earth life support systems: China pledges to be ‘carbon-neutral’ by 2060

  • Climate change: Wildfires, hurricanes and vanishing sea ice: the climate crisis is here

  • Changing spaces: Britain’s housing ‘boom’ obscures a divided market

  • Changing places: High streets face a ‘new normal’ with old problems

  • Climate change: Arctic Circle’s record temperatures heighten global warming concerns

  • Changing spaces: Twenty Indian soldiers killed in clash with Chinese troops in Himalayas

  • Changing spaces/human rights: Coronavirus fuels black America’s sense of injustice

  • Power and borders: A divided America cannot compete in a superpower duel with China

  • Power and borders: Donald Trump offers to mediate in India-China border dispute

  • Human rights: Half a billion children miss out on education due to lockdowns, says UN

  • Hazard: Why we fail to prepare for disasters

  • Future of food: Global nutrition crisis puts millions more at risk from coronavirus

  • Power and borders: US looks to exploit anger over Beijing’s South China Sea ambitions

  • Climate change: Glasgow climate talks on hold over coronavirus

  • Disease dilemmas: Deprived areas hit hardest in UK by pandemic

  • Future of food: Warnings of unrest mount as coronavirus hits food availability

  • Migration: Remittance flows expected to plunge more than $100bn

  • Future of Food: Coronavirus and a bitter harvest for UK farmers

  • Changing spaces: Effects of pandemic will widen inequality, report finds

  • Disease dilemmas: Coronavirus tracked

  • Globalisation: Businesses call for stability after tax overhaul

  • Disease: Middle East’s refugees are vulnerable to an explosion of coronavirus cases

  • Data/migration: The riddle of Europe’s shadow population

  • Geopolitics: Lentils and war games: Nordics prepare for virus lockdown

  • Changing spaces: Levelling up: how wide are the UK’s regional inequalities?

  • Globalisation: Lofty environmental goals present clear test for Modi

  • Globalisation: Has the ‘Make in India’ campaign run out of steam?

  • Carbon and water cycle: Atmospheric rivers’ over Atlantic blamed for extreme UK flooding

  • Data/Population and the environment: What’s killing us now?

  • Climate change: Record Antarctic temperature met with the sound of cracking ice

  • Resource security: How Greek energy sources have untapped potential

  • Disease: The new coronavirus: is China moving quickly enough?

  • Glaciated landscapes: Himalayas glacier melt accelerates as temperatures rise

  • Global challenges; Population/environment: How safe is the air we breathe?

  • Hazardous Earth: Shift in Earth’s magnetic north throws navigators off course

  • Carbon and water cycle: Amazon’s spectre of devastation

  • Geopolitics, power and borders: Thirteen  French troops killed in Sahel

  • UK halts all fracking

  • Disease dilemmas: What’s killing us now?

  • Earth Life Support Systems: Brazil needs compensation to protect the Amazon

  • Energy, geopolitics: Russia to launch floating nuclear reactor

  • Power and Borders. Niger: war at the heart of west Africa

  • Carbon and water cycle: Great Barrier Reef at risk

  • Health: Finland’s demographic time-bomb

  • Global development: Mali’s community health programme

  • Trade, globalisation and place: Nissan reverses Sunderland decision

  • Global development, globalisation: Commodities exploitation

  • Regional inequality: North and South gap widens

  • Disease and  health: Bill Gates invests in toilets

  • Energy security/carbon cycle: fracking

  • Global migration: EU migration in Britain

  • Geopolitics/power relations: the fracturing of the west

  • Disease dilemmas: urban air pollution

  • Mattis attacks Beijing for ‘coercion’ in South China Sea

  • Mid-sized powers must unite to preserve the world order

  • Coal’s rapid decline drives carbon emissions down to 1890 levels

  • Donald Trump agrees to meet Kim Jong Un

  • Arctic enveloped in warmth as Europe shivers

  • Aung San Suu Kyi rebuked by US adviser over Rohingya crisis

  • Declining fertility rates dent Macron’s ‘France is back’ mantra

  • Britain’s voice in global affairs under threat, warn experts

  • Diesel buyers face raid as Budget pushes motorists to go electric

  • Left behind: can anyone save the towns the economy forgot?

  • The migrant’s journey, in photographs: ‘We had to escape’

  • Migrant labour shortage leaves fruit rotting on UK farms

  • Can Leo Houlding rewrite the rules of Antarctic exploration

  • Spain’s crisis is the next challenge for the EU

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    Why Israel’s goal of a new regional order has big risks

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    Banker all-nighters create productivity paradox

    Gideon Rachman provides a clear picture of Israel’s goal of a new order in the Middle East (Opinion, September 30). He has also entered the contest for understatement of the year when he says Israel “is losing the battle for international public opinion”.

    Across the globe younger generations in particular are appalled at the seeming indifference towards innocent Arab lives lost and systematic degradation of Palestinians’ ability to live their lives. Israel may succeed in creating a new order, but it seems Israel’s methods will end its historic moral authority.

    Bob Walsh
    Millbrook, ON, Canada

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    UniCredit-Commerzbank deal is test case for ECB

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    Banker all-nighters create productivity paradox

    What seemed unthinkable days ago is happening: a major Eurozone bank plans to acquire another in a different member state. UniCredit, Italy’s second lender, says it holds contingent derivative instruments which would give it effective control of Commerzbank, the second-biggest bank in Germany by market capitalisation (“The trouble with UniCredit’s interest in Commerzbank”, Opinion, September 30).

    The two banks are a good match. After years of draconian clean-up and restructuring, UniCredit recently outperformed most European peers by net returns and market valuation. Now worth twice what Commerzbank is worth, it is an internationally diversified group, experienced in restructuring itself and other banks. It already owns an important mortgage unit in Germany, which would generate synergies. Commerzbank, by contrast, with a cost ratio well above UniCredit’s and profits about a tenth of the size, may benefit from some internal cure. Both banks have sound capital and liquidity positions.

    In its recent report on European competitiveness, Mario Draghi called for banking integration in the Eurozone, even suggesting special legislation is needed to bring it about. This deal would mark a remarkable step in the right direction.

    But within Germany, it is fiercely opposed by the political establishment and trade unions, fearing loss of control and job cuts.

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    At the time of writing, the only obstacle seems to be authorisation by the European Central Bank, on prudential grounds. Its supervisory board, chaired by former Bundesbank vice-president Claudia Buch, includes top officials from the Bundesbank and BaFin, Germany’s financial watchdog. All of them are bound by statute to act independently in the sole interest of the EU bloc and not take instructions from governments or any other bodies.

    The UniCredit-Commerzbank deal is a test case for the ECB, which will reverberate into the future, and be a golden opportunity for its supervisory board to uphold its independence.

    Ignazio Angeloni
    Senior Policy Fellow, SAFE, Goethe University Frankfurt; Non-resident Fellow, Institute for European Policymaking, Bocconi University, Milan, Italy

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    Drink and petrol levies haven’t changed behaviour

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    Banker all-nighters create productivity paradox

    Milo Brett’s letter suggesting that the NHS budget could be enhanced by subsidising no-alcohol drinks (Letters, September 25) and thus reduce alcohol -related treatments in the NHS is wishful thinking.

    Roughly 35 per cent of the cost of a litre of petrol and 50 per cent of a litre of Gordons gin goes to tax yet that levy does not seem to deter the James Bond wannabes from driving fast cars and drinking martinis. Subsidising mocktails and electric cars seems unlikely to fuel mass take-up.

    Peter Breese
    Lauzerte, France

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    Stranded property assets require decisive action now

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    Banker all-nighters create productivity paradox

    Mark Carney’s warning about stranded assets in commercial real estate is timely (Report, October 3), but his considerations should not be limited to offices, as many residential property portfolios face similar challenges.

    The stop-start nature of policymaking has severely damaged investor confidence and limited investment in the sector. Our own research shows that 45 per cent of large real estate companies in the UK lack access to sufficient private capital for net zero measures. This shortfall extends beyond commercial properties to residential buildings, hampering progress overall.

    Carney’s assertion that he’s “sanguine about commercial real estate risks in the financial sector” overlooks a more significant concern: the impact of stranded assets on savers. As pension funds and individual investors face potential losses from devalued properties, the financial stability of millions could be at risk.

    To address these challenges comprehensively, the UK should relaunch a green jobs task force to co-ordinate efforts across the built environment sector to retrofit and install heat pumps at pace. The consumer price inflation CPI plus 1 per cent rent cap agreement has gone some way to ensuring housing associations have certainty of income, but more must be done to ensure the works get under way and properties do not devalue. A social housing retrofit scheme such as that introduced in the Netherlands (known as Energiesprong) could allow landlords to borrow for retrofits based on forecasted future energy bill savings.

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    The transition to net zero presents both risks and opportunities. By taking decisive action now, we can mitigate the risks of stranded assets while creating a more resilient and sustainable property sector that benefits both the economy and individual savers.

    James Alexander
    Chief Executive Officer, UK Sustainable Investment and Finance Association, London EC2, UK

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    Make financial education compulsory in English schools, business urges

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    A cross-industry coalition of businesses has urged the UK prime minister to make financial education compulsory in all English schools, adding pressure on the government to ensure children are taught how money works from an early age.

    Financial education was added to the curriculum for local authority-run secondary schools in 2014, but it is largely incorporated in non-core subjects, such as citizenship. The subject is optional for academies and free schools.

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    In an open letter, the Financial Education Council (FEC), a subcommittee of The Investing and Saving Alliance (TISA), said implementation of the subject “remains inconsistent and its impact limited.”

    The call to boost personal financial education comes as the Labour government consults on a proposed overhaul of the school curriculum. A review is being led by Becky Francis, chief executive of the Education Endowment Foundation charity.

    The letter has been signed by groups including L&G, Schroders, GoHenry, NatWest Cushon, Rathbones, Foresters and Bank of Ireland.

    The businesses said they backed recommendations made earlier this year by the House of Commons education select committee, who asked ministers to review the contents of the current maths curriculum to expand “the provision and relevance” of financial education. 

    The crossparty group of MPs called on the government to make the “personal and societal elements” of financial education compulsory at both primary and secondary school level.

    Campaigners have warned that confidence in basic numeracy is at a low level among young people, which only compounds pressure on them during a cost of living crisis.

    Several charities, including the Financial Times’ Financial Literacy and Inclusion Campaign, have pressed the government for better financial education.

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    Carol Knight, TISA CEO said: “There is clear evidence that the delivery of effective financial education during childhood is of great benefit both from an individual and a societal perspective: helping to increase financial inclusion, financial confidence and, ultimately, increase economic growth.

    “For these reasons, TISA is calling on the prime minister to add financial education to the curriculum so that all children can benefit from a high-quality and effective financial education.” 

    A Department for Education spokesperson said financial education already forms a compulsory part of the national curriculum covering personal budgeting, calculating interest, financial products and services, and how public money is raised and spent.

    “The Curriculum and Assessment Review led by Becky Francis recently launched a call for evidence and we encourage experts, teachers, parents and key organisations like the Financial Education Council to respond to help shape their recommendations to government,” the spokesperson added.

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    UK power market reforms pose danger to industry and investment, ministers told

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    Proposals to split Britain’s electricity market so that prices differ by region risk pushing up manufacturers’ costs and deterring investment, some of the UK’s largest trade groups have warned the government. 

    UK Steel, Make UK, RenewableUK and the Global Infrastructure Investor Association have written to ministers saying they are worried that the proposals, developed by the Conservative government, could “increase the risks of de-industrialisation”.

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    “We are clear that splitting Great Britain into several regional price zones would undermine investment in low-carbon energy and risks penalising the UK’s energy-intensive industries with higher electricity costs,” they said in the letter sent on Friday and seen by the Financial Times.

    The message comes at a sensitive time for the new Labour government, which is trying to demonstrate the UK’s attractiveness to investors ahead of its global investment summit on October 14. The recipients included energy secretary Ed Miliband and Jonathan Reynolds, business secretary.

    The proposed reforms are part of sweeping potential changes to the electricity market first advanced in 2022, to adapt to the shift to renewable sources of generation such as intermittent wind and solar power. Labour, which is making a big push on renewable energy, has yet to outline its position on them.

    Currently Britain has a single national wholesale electricity price. The proposals include an option to split the market so that wholesale prices differ by region, depending on supply and demand.

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    Proponents argue this could make the market more efficient and keep system costs down by encouraging consumers to use electricity when it is abundant nearby, rather than letting it go to waste, as frequently happens.

    Guy Newey, chief executive of Energy Systems Catapult, the innovation centre, said the market needed “urgent reform”, adding: “Zonal pricing is already common in a huge number of international markets and has driven down costs for consumers.”

    Ultimately, supporters argue the move could encourage industry to shift to areas with abundant renewable supply, such as parts of Scotland, while developers could expand in areas less well supplied with renewable electricity, as they could get higher prices.

    However the trade groups are concerned that the proposals would risk higher prices for industries that consume large quantities of electricity, such as steel, glass and ceramics. They would also add to the risks faced by renewable developers, they said.

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    “A miles-wide steel plant simply cannot up and leave to get access to lower power prices elsewhere,” added Frank Aaskov, director of energy and climate change policy at UK Steel, in comments separate to the letter. 

    “This is before we consider the billions invested in operations, let alone the workers who could get left behind.”

    Relatively high electricity costs have long been a source of complaint for industry, which is moving away from fossil fuels. Both Tata Steel and British Steel are closing coal-fired blast furnaces in the UK and moving to electric arc furnaces.

    Jon Phillips, chief executive of the Global Infrastructure Investor Association, noted that global investors “seek long-term, low-risk investments that generate steady returns”.

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    He added: “The introduction of zonal pricing . . . risks undermining the government’s ambitions to attract more international investment into the UK. It’s important that energy policy provides the long-term stability that investors seek.”

    A UK government spokesperson said it was reviewing responses to the consultation on the issue and would “ensure that any reform options taken forward focus on protecting bill payers and encouraging investment”.

    “Our new industrial strategy will deliver long-term, sustainable growth right across the UK by supporting our industries and driving private investment into our economy,” they added.

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