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Switzerland and Italy partly redraw border over melting glaciers

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Switzerland and Italy partly redraw border over melting glaciers
Getty Images The Matterhorn straddles the main boarder between Italy and Switzerland. It is a large, near symmetric Pyramid peak ,whose summit is 4,478m. this view is from ZermattGetty Images

The Matterhorn mountain sits on the border between Italy and Switzerland, near the area that will be changed

Switzerland and Italy have redrawn part of their border in the Alps due to melting glaciers, caused by climate change.

Part of the area affected will be beneath the Matterhorn, one of Europe’s tallest mountains, and close to a number of popular ski resorts.

Large sections of the Swiss-Italian border are determined by glacier ridgelines or areas of perpetual snow, but melting glaciers have caused these natural boundaries to shift, leading to both countries seeking to rectify the border.

Switzerland officially approved the agreement on the change on Friday, but Italy is yet to do the same. This follows a draft agreement by a joint Swiss-Italian commission back in May 2023.

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Statistics published last September showed that Switzerland’s glaciers lost 4% of their volume in 2023, the second biggest loss ever after 2022’s record melt of 6%.

An annual report is issued each year by the Swiss Glacier Monitoring Network (Glamos), which attributed the record losses to consecutive very warm summers, and 2022 winter’s very low snowfall. Researchers say that if these weather patterns continue, the thaw will only accelerate.

On Friday, Switzerland said that the redefined borders had been drawn up in accordance with the economic interests of both parties.

It is thought that clarifying the borders will help both countries determine which is responsible for the upkeep of specific natural areas.

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Swiss-Italian boundaries will be changed in the region of Plateau Rosa, the Carrel refuge and Gobba di Rollin – all are near the Matterhorn and popular ski resorts including Zermatt.

The exact border changes will be implemented and the agreement published once both countries have signed it.

Switzerland says that the approval process for signing the agreement is under way in Italy.

Getty Images A view of the the Matterhorn Glacier in summer located at the base of the north face of the Matterhorn from Pennine Alps on August 16, 2024Getty Images

Part of the glacier beneath the Matterhorn

Last year, Glamos warned that some Swiss glaciers are shrinking so fast that it is unlikely they can be saved, even if global temperatures are kept within the Paris climate agreement’s 1.5C target rise.

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Experts say that without a reduction in greenhouse gases linked to global warning, bigger glaciers like the Aletsch – which is not on the border – could disappear within a generation.

Swiss Police/Canton Valais A boot that belonged to a German climber who disappeared while hiking along Switzerland's Theodul Glacier in 1986Swiss Police/Canton Valais

A boot and climbing equipment belonging to a German climber were found alongside their remains on a glacier – the climber had been missing since 1986

A number of discoveries have been made on Swiss glaciers in recent years due to their melting and rapid shrinking.

Last July, human remains found close to Matterhorn were confirmed to be those of a German climber missing since 1986.

Climbers crossing the Theodul glacier above Zermatt noticed a hiking boot and crampons emerging from the ice.

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In 2022, the wreckage of a plane that crashed in 1968 emerged from the Aletsch glacier.

And the body of missing British climber Jonathan Conville was discovered in 2014 by a helicopter pilot who spotted something unusual while delivering supplies to a mountain refuge on the Matterhorn.

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Tackling climate change requires Conservative values

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Tackling climate change requires Conservative values

The Conservative Party has always understood the importance of leaving behind a world that is better than the one we inherited

September 30, 2024 12:21 pm

One hundred and forty-two years after the world’s first coal power plant opened on London’s Holborn Viaduct, the UK’s last operational coal-fired power station at Ratcliffe-on-Soar will begin the process of decommissioning.

Inevitably, this will be a difficult day for the people who work at Ratcliffe, and an emotional moment for many across our country’s industrial heartlands.

Coal powered the UK’s economic might. Mines helped to build and sustain communities and, for generations, miners were the backbone of the UK’s industrial strength.

But we have known for decades that, both economically and environmentally, the coal industry was not sustainable.

Despite the decline in coal mining in the 1970s and 1980s, and the increasingly damaging impacts of climate change at home and around the world, when I became Energy Secretary coal remained a stubbornly large part of our energy mix.

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However, because previous governments had rightly decided not to proceed with building new coal power stations, we had an ageing coal fleet with several plants approaching retirement. We had also put a price on carbon emissions from electricity, making coal increasingly uneconomic compared to gas, nuclear, and renewable energy.

Letting the lights go out is fatal for governments. So before making my decision, officials in the department worked intensively to show that the phase-out could be achieved without jeopardising security of supply.

The Ratcliffe closure is the final step for coal power in the UK, and another vital step forward in our transition to affordable, secure, home-grown clean energy.

And it marks the early delivery of a promise I made as Secretary of State: that the UK would phase out coal by 2025.

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That announcement was rooted in proper Conservative values: security; economic competence; environmental stewardship; and intergenerational responsibility.

It respected the important Conservative principle that the Government’s role in the energy system is to set the right framework, to ensure the market, rather than the state, provides secure, cost-efficient energy, in a system where competition keeps costs low for families and businesses.

That announcement – the first of its kind – not only enabled the UK to show genuine global leadership as the Paris Agreement was reached, but has enabled us to cut emissions faster than any advanced economy.

The policy achieved plaudits from across the political spectrum and from environmental groups, who are typically hard for Conservative ministers to please, showing there can be a political upside in ambitious climate policy.

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The share of coal in our power generation has reduced from 40 per cent to near zero. In the same period, wind energy generation has increased from eight per cent of national share to 30 per cent, and clean energy now generates almost half of all the power we need.

The Ratcliffe closure concludes coal power’s final chapter in our national story, but as a result of the decisions made and implemented by successive Conservative governments, the next chapter – which sets the UK as a world leader in clean power innovation, jobs and generation – is already being written.

As party members gather in Birmingham for the first party conference after a difficult election, they will have an important opportunity to remind the leadership candidates vying for their votes that they are proud of our environmental legacy.

The Conservative Party has always understood the importance of leaving behind a world that is better than the one we inherited. This includes passing on to our children and grandchildren a planet that is habitable and prosperous.

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Leading the world in clean energy and climate action is not just a matter of environmental stewardship, but of national security and economic opportunity. In short, it is about putting our Conservative values into action.

Amber Rudd is the former Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change

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How hot should your food be?

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Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

It started with soup. Two colleagues were eating carrot and coriander. One liked theirs scalding hot. The other lukewarm. Why the difference in preference? And is there an objective optimal temperature for eating soup? I decided to investigate.

Partly the temperature at which food is served and consumed is governed by health and safety. Guidelines stipulate that hot food should be cooked to a core temperature of 75ºC and kept at 63ºC or above to prevent bacteria. But putting that aside, how does temperature affect flavour?

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“Flavour is taste and smell,” says Dr Arielle Johnson, author of Flavorama: A Guide to Unlocking the Art and Science of Flavour (HarperCollins). “Regarding smell, heat makes flavour molecules more volatile. This increases the amount of molecules in the air and therefore aroma, which intensifies flavour. For maximum impact you want to release the aromas as close to eating as possible. That’s why you add lemon juice to a sauce at the end of cooking. Taste and smell reinforce each other, so the lemon in a dish tastes brighter when it also smells of lemon.”

“As for taste,” she continues, “at low and high temperatures, our taste perception is dampened. Warm foods around body temperature have the most taste. One important exception is spiciness: the higher the temperature, the spicier something tastes.”

Taste sensitivity is a factor too: where are you on the scale from super-tasters to hypo-tasters? “If you’re a super-taster, you might prefer very hot or cold food,” says Johnson, as tastes at extreme temperatures are muted. “The sweet spot for a hypo-taster might be warm.”

An illustration of Goldilocks and the Three Bears; mother bear pours porridge into baby bear’s bowl
Too hot, too cold, or just right? © Lebrecht Music

Pastry chefs, mindful of how cold temperatures dull flavour, amp up the sugar in ice cream. By the same principle, Johnson finds fermented fish overwhelming at room temperature but delicious cold: “If there’s a strong food you’d like to enjoy more, eat it cool,” she advises.

Part of the pleasure of piping-hot ramen is how flavour changes as it cools: rich in aroma when hot, burgeoning taste as it cools. Slurping helps cool the broth and push aroma molecules into your nose to bolster flavour.

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Nigella Lawson extols the virtue of tepid (carrying the “memory of heat” as she puts it) for dishes like her nutmeg-scented custard tart. Nik Sharma urges warm for his cherry black-pepper cake because the higher temperature intensifies its spiciness. For most Chinese cooks, piping-hot remains the standard for everything from hot and sour soup to dumplings.

Piping-hot is also a fixation among an older generation who grew up without central heating and get anxious about food poisoning. Meat is requested well done for that reason. Anything pink is practically a death wish. The obsession with eating off hot plates surely springs from the same place. It chimes with a slightly old-fashioned way of dining from a time when chafing dishes were routine. As Johnson explains, heated plates are only necessary for foods that cool off rapidly and turn lacklustre. “Don’t heat your plates for really hot stews because they’re better cooling down,” she says.

Texture also plays a role. “If ramen gets even a bit cold, the broth starts to congeal and become sticky in the mouth. You taste the fat too much,” says Tim Anderson, whose latest book Hokkaido (Quadrille) celebrates a region renowned for its ramen. With ice cream, the opposite happens. As the fat liquifies and becomes silky on your palate, you experience what food scientist Harold McGee calls “the birth of creaminess”. Special mention goes to hot and cold combinations like apple pie and ice cream, where each bite delivers a variety of temperature, aroma and taste.

One key learning from Tom Jackson’s book Cool Pasta: Reinventing the Pasta Salad (Hardie Grant) is how temperature affects the qualities of pasta. The higher the temperature, the more readily it absorbs liquid or oil. Depending on its size and shape, this determines whether you need to rinse the cooked pasta (to drop its temperature and remove excess starch) before dressing it.

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Often, though, personal taste trumps good sense. I like cold pasta despite Jackson’s warnings against it. Cold pizza and cold bolognese offer comparable pleasures, not least in the umami sweetness of chilled cooked tomatoes. There’s also shameless pleasure in eating at the fridge door, when it’s just you and the food and instant gratification.

Of course, the temperature at which we eat food can also be a matter of habit and convenience. Anderson may be a ramen aficionado, but when eating packet ramen at home he prefers his warm rather than scalding so he can hoover it up faster. “I’m hungry and in a hurry,” he says. There’s a lot to be said, too, for his ritual of pairing steaming-hot tomato soup with a grilled cheese sandwich: “I dip the sandwich in the soup and by the time I’ve eaten most of it, the soup is cool enough to slurp,” he says. The second law of thermodynamics put to excellent use. 

@ajesh34

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Thousands to get free cash or vouchers from £421m cost of living scheme to help with bills – how to apply

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Thousands to get free cash or vouchers from £421m cost of living scheme to help with bills - how to apply

THOUSANDS of households across the UK will be able to claim free cash or vouchers to help tackle the soaring cost of living this winter.

From October 1, households will be able to get fresh help from a new pot of government funding under the Household Support Scheme.

The government has released £421 million which will be distributed between councils and then dished out to vulnerable residents over the colder season.

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The pot of cash will be available from October this year until March next year.

This comes as the current scheme closes today, September 30, after the latest round of £421 million was used to help struggling households across the country.

The portion of funding each council gets is based on the size of the population, catchment area, and need.

This time Birmingham will receive the greatest share for instance, worth £12.8million.

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Receiving the second largest share will be Kent, with £11million, and Lancashire will get £9.7million.

Not every council will receive as much funding as this.

The Isle of Scilly will receive the least amount of cash, worth £11,130.

The City of London will also be allocated £63,080, and Rutland £157,371.

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Councils which have higher numbers of vulnerable households will get more cash based on demand.

‘How can you fix it?’ Keir branded DISHONEST and warned ‘the country is broke’ as top team grilled

Tower Hamlets, for example, is the most deprived area in London, and will get £3million.

How the cash gets distributed will be decided by each council, so what you can get will vary depending where you live.

Around £79million is estimated to be provided to the devolved governments in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland for them to decide how best to support their citizens.

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What is the Household Support Fund?

The Household Support Fund was introduced in October 2021 by The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) to support households most in need.

The funding is distributed between councils, and they are then responsible for dishing out the cash on an application basis.

For example, Birmingham City Council have announced they will hand out free £200 cost of living payments to help its residents cope this winter, as one of its approaches to the fresh fund.

How do I apply?

In order to be eligible for help, you usually have to be in receipt of a council tax reduction or show proof of being in financial difficulty.

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Each council has a different application process – so you’ll have to ask your local authority or find out via your council’s website.

Not all councils have decided how they will distribute the cash yet, so you may have to wait to get all the information.

To find out how to contact your local authority, use the gov.uk authority tool checker.

In the last round of funding, some residents received their share automatically, while others had to apply.

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For example, Haringey London Council is issuing automatic payments to eligible residents, as well as a support fund which can be applied to.

It is also issuing payments to schools, which means they can distribute free school vouchers.

In previous years, other authorities have offered cost of living vouchers – such as Coventry City Council.

This has included a Community Supermarket scheme, where all Coventry residents could pay £5 weekly and receive a basket of food worth up to £25.

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Residents of Effingham, near Guildford, have been able to claim up to £300 free cash to help with the cost of living crisis.

Surrey council previously poured £300,000 into food banks, where photo ID and proof of address is required, but no referral needed.

While some schemes, such as the Surrey Crisis Fund, which can offer up to £100 to those immediately in need, are reserved for those who also rely on other means-tested benefits.

What else can we expect from the new government?

The Household Support Fund was introduced by the Conservative government in 2021.

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This year, Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, Liz Kendall MP, said:

“We have invested an extra half a billion pounds in the Household Support Fund to give struggling families and the poorest pensioners the help they need this winter.

“As local authorities across England deliver this lifeline support to help households with the costs of feeding children and heating homes, we are continuing our work to fix the foundations of our country, grow the economy and deliver opportunities for people to get work and get on in work, so everyone feels better off.”

The Labour government is set to announce a new scheme which they have named The Child Poverty Taskforce.

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The information for this will not be published until Spring 2025, however the government have promised to regularly engage with people, communities, and organisations to help shape the strategy.

Household Support Fund explained

Sun Savers Editor Lana Clements explains what you need to know about the Household Support Fund.

If you’re battling to afford energy and water bills, food or other essential items and services, the Household Support Fund can act as a vital lifeline.

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The financial support is a little-known way for struggling families to get extra help with the cost of living.

Every council in England has been given a share of £421million cash by the government to distribute to local low income households.

Each local authority chooses how to pass on the support. Some offer vouchers whereas others give direct cash payments.

In many instances, the value of support is worth hundreds of pounds to individual families.

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Just as the support varies between councils, so does the criteria for qualifying.

Many councils offer the help to households on selected benefits or they may base help on the level of household income.

The key is to get in touch with your local authority to see exactly what support is on offer.

And don’t delay, the scheme has been extended until April 2025 but your council may dish out their share of the Household Support Fund before this date.

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Once the cash is gone, you may find they cannot provide any extra help so it’s crucial you apply as soon as possible.

What other help can I get?

Many energy companies are offering help to those struggling to pay their bills this winter – especially pensioners, as their Winter Fuel Payments are set to be slashed.

This comes as Rachel Reeves announced a £22bn black hole in public spending, making a controversial cut to winter allowances for pensioners not receiving universal credit or any other means-tested benefit.

Follwing the announcement, Octopus Energy has introduced a new scheme, offering pensioners discretionary credit of between £50 and £200.

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As well as this, Scottish Power’s Hardship Fund has handed out more than £60 million to all struggling customers.

Help is available if you receive from a long list of benefit schemes, including Income Related Employment and Support Allowance or Income Based Jobseeker’s allowance. 

You may also be eligible if you are facing circumstances impacting your earnings, such as illness. 

Another company offering help is Utilita – which offers grants to customers to help clear or minimise energy debt.

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The scheme operates through Utilita Giving, which is the company’s charity partner. 

Utilita Giving also partners with other charities such as IncomeMax, which helps customers make sure they are claiming what they are entitled to, and Let’s Talk, which provides replacement white goods.

Meanwhile, Utility warehouse offers payments of up to £140 to customers about to go in debt, or are currently indebted. 

The team has helped 6,000 customers increase their combined disposable income in the last year by £9 million. 

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To find out if you are eligible for any of these schemes, visit their websites and review the conditions of applying.

Via the website you will find information on how to apply – saving you huge amounts of cash this winter in just a few steps.

Do you have a money problem that needs sorting? Get in touch by emailing money-sm@news.co.uk.

Plus, you can join our Sun Money Chats and Tips Facebook group to share your tips and stories

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Tragedy as 'brilliant' dad, Quinn Barr, 26, dies after motorbike crash

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Tragedy as 'brilliant' dad, Quinn Barr, 26, dies after motorbike crash


Go Fund Me appeal set up to help family of dad of three who has died

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Samsung accused of obstructing Fortnite downloads

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Samsung accused of obstructing Fortnite downloads

Epic Games has accused Samsung of making it too difficult to download its massively popular video game Fortnite on certain mobile devices.

In a legal complaint it said it would file on Monday, it says people have to go through “21 steps” before they can play the game on a new Samsung product, including viewing security warning screens and changing settings.

Epic claims this means 50% of people who try to install the game on these devices give up before they complete the process.

It says this process takes 12 steps, rather than 21, for other Android phones and tablets.

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Epic has blamed a Samsung feature called Auto Blocker for the issue, which is turned on by default on Samsung’s latest products.

The tool is intended to block “malicious activity” and prevent app installations from unauthorised sources.

But Epic claims Auto Blocker is affecting Fortnite downloads, and says that goes against competition laws.

Apps on Samsung or Google’s stores can be downloaded in just a couple of clicks, as the firms have already approved them.

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But Fortnite must be downloaded from Epic’s own store – which triggers Samsung’s Auto Blocker feature to kick in with warnings about it.

Epic claims both Google and Samsung know Fortnite is a legitimate app, and so there should not be any warnings flagged.

That’s because it used to be available on Google Play – the official app store for Android-powered phones – and Samsung has even previously collaborated with it, running Fortnite competitions and creating digital skins for the game’s characters.

The BBC has approached Samsung and Google for comment.

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Fortnite’s developer has previously taken Google and Apple to court over disagreements about the way the tech firms operate their app stores.

The game returned to EU-registered iPhones in August after Apple was ordered to open up its app marketplace, but it still can’t be played on iOS in the UK.

Epic boss Tim Sweeney said he was “very sad” to be initiating more legal action.

“The fight against Samsung… is new, and it really sucks,” he said.

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“I did not think we would end up in this place.”

He claimed Epic would have “made a lot more money” had it chosen not to pursue its previous legal action, but said he wanted to create a “truly level playing field” for developers.

The game developer says it wants Samsung to introduce a process by which all legitimate third-party app developers can apply to be whitelisted from Auto Blocker but is has been unable to reach an agreement.

Fortnite was removed from Apple and Google’s app stores in 2020 after Epic introduced its own in-app payments system.

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And the developer won a lengthy court battle against Google over app store dominance in December 2023, with a jury deciding that Google had been operating a monopoly.

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Rightmove urges REA to submit ‘best and final’ offer as it rejects £6.2bn bid

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Rightmove urges REA to submit ‘best and final’ offer as it rejects £6.2bn bid

“The last few weeks have been very disruptive as well as unsettling for our colleagues,” said Rightmove chair Andrew Fisher.

The post Rightmove urges REA to submit ‘best and final’ offer as it rejects £6.2bn bid appeared first on Property Week.

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