Sabtu, 27 Agustus 2022

Energy bills: Middle-earners will need help with rising prices too, says chancellor - BBC

Woman checking bills at homeGetty Images

Middle-earners, as well as low earners, are likely to need government help to pay their energy bills this winter, Chancellor Nadhim Zahawi has warned.

The energy regulator hiked the price cap on household bills by 80% on Friday, meaning the average bill will rise to £3,549 a year from October.

Speaking to the Daily Telegraph, Mr Zahawi said even those earning £45,000 a year may need support.

He said the Treasury was exploring "all the options" to help households.

He added that the country was in a "national economic emergency [that] could go on for 18 months, two years".

Both Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak, one of whom will be announced as the next prime minister on 5 September, have pledged further support, though neither has given details.

Environment Secretary George Eustice defended the wait for policy announcements from either candidate, saying it was right that whoever got the top job would "want to look at all of the options, properly costed" when they take office.

"Both candidates have said they will do more - you don't have long to wait," Mr Eustice told BBC Radio Four's Today programme.

"They've both made clear that this will be absolutely at the top of their in tray," he added.

The government has already said that all households will get a £400 rebate on energy bills, with low income and vulnerable households receiving an additional £650.

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Francisco's story: Money worries with baby on the way

Photo of Francisco Salvatierra
Francisco Salvatierra

Francisco Salvatierra, 37, in Cardiff has been a teacher for the last seven years and earns £38,000 teaching Spanish in Caerphilly. He and his wife's joint household income is about £56,000.

Even with two incomes, we're facing financial difficulties. Our rent has increased by £200 in a month's notice, and our energy bills are likely to hit £350 a month. What does it say in a country where people are working but they can't afford to pay for their energy?

Forty years ago, the difference between poverty and financial struggle was a job. Now, it's not the case anymore. I have a decent job, but it doesn't stop me from experiencing financial struggles.

Getting a mortgage is science fiction for me. It's almost £1000 in rent for our flat alone, so how are we going to save for a 10% deposit for houses that are already so expensive? I have had to accept that I'll never be able to get onto the housing ladder.

I'd love to have a second baby, but it was hard enough to have a first one [which is due on Boxing Day]. We kept postponing the decision because of financial worries, but having a second one - I now don't think that's going to happen. We don't know if we're going to be able to afford childcare for our first child because it's outrageously expensive.

The idea of getting a £400 payment doesn't solve anything. We need more than charity, we need social and financial justice, like taxing energy companies who have billions in profits.

It feels like I haven't been given the chance that my preceding generations had. When is it our time for my generation to have a chance? It feels like Groundhog Day.

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The rise in the energy price cap - which is the maximum amount that suppliers can charge households per unit of energy - means millions of households will see their annual bills rise from about £1,971 currently.

Typical prepayment meter customers will also see their bills rise to £3,608.

Charities and experts have warned that the rise will have a devastating impact on households and that lives will be at risk without government intervention.

In his interview with the Telegraph, Mr Zahawi said he was also concerned about those who were not on benefits.

"If you are a senior nurse or a senior teacher on £45,000 a year, you're having your energy bills go up by 80% and will probably rise even higher in the new year - it's really hard.

"If you're a pensioner, it's really hard. So Universal Credit is a really effective way of targeting, but I'm looking at what else we can do to make sure we help those who really need the help."

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How much are energy prices rising by?

  • The price cap, set by the regulator, Ofgem, is rising by 80% in October
  • The price of electricity will rise on average from 28p per kilowatt hour (kWh) to 52p and gas will go up from 7p to 15p per kWh
  • A typical annual energy bill paid by direct debit is currently £1,971. In October, that will rise to £3,549
  • Prepayment meter customers will pay an extra £59 a year from October, taking the new typical bill on a prepayment meter to £3,608
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Mr Zahawi said the options being drawn up for the next prime minister to consider included an increase in benefits and a loan scheme for energy suppliers to stop them having to pass costs on to consumers.

He said a price cap freeze had not been ruled out, though he expressed concern that the measure would also benefit households that could afford to pay higher energy costs.

Mr Zahawi added that a number of measures to help small businesses, including temporary reductions to VAT, business rates, or green levies, were being considered, saying a failure to help business would leave a "longer-term scarring effect on the economy".

Labour and the Liberal Democrats have criticised the government for failing to respond to the growing crisis.

Labour says its own plan to freeze energy prices this winter - paid for in part by a windfall tax on energy companies - would save someone on the minimum wage more than £40 a week.

Asked whether it was right that even the richest would benefit, Labour's Darren Jones - chair of the department for business, energy and industrial strategy committee of MPs - said "the vast majority of people" would be affected by the rises.

He added that the government was not set up well enough to get money to people in a targeted way.

Lib Dem leader Ed Davey said the energy price cap rise was "nothing short of a catastrophe for millions of families and pensioners".

Ian Blackford, the SNP's Westminster leader, said people were already saying they would be unable to heat their homes or put food on their tables.

"These are costs people simply can't afford," he told BBC Breakfast. "The government has a responsibility to step in."

Mr Blackford warned businesses could "go to the wall" over winter, and added: "This is an emergency as big as the Covid crisis. In such a scenario, the government has a responsibility to act."

Bar chart showing how the price cap has risen, with the price cap forecast for January standing at £4,600
AFP

Speaking to broadcasters on Friday, Mr Zahawi also split with cabinet colleagues who have so far resisted suggestions that households should be encouraged to reduce their energy usage.

A spokesperson for Prime Minister Boris Johnson said this week that choices about energy consumption remained "decisions for individuals".

Asked about the issue, Mr Zahawi said: "The reality is that we should all look at our energy consumption."

He told the Telegraph the country would have to be resilient as it continued to help Ukraine resist the Russian invasion.

"Putin has worked out that he can use energy as a tool to hit back at us," he said.

"And we're going to need to send a message back to Putin that this is not going to soften our resolve."

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Are you a senior nurse or a teacher? How are you being affected by the rising cost of living? Share your experiences by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.

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2022-08-27 13:49:41Z
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'Silence is not an option': Police make another appeal over Liverpool shooting - after two men arrested over Olivia Pratt-Korbel death - Sky News

Police say they 'need names' in their investigation into the fatal shooting of nine-year-old Olivia Pratt-Korbel in Liverpool, and are urging people to share their appeal.

Merseyside Police says it wants to ensure "there's no hiding place for anyone involved".

Two men have been arrested in connection with Olivia's death.

A 33-year-old from the Dovecot area of the city was arrested on suspicion of murder and two counts of attempted murder on Friday afternoon.

On Thursday, a 36-year-old was arrested on the same charges.

Detectives have released CCTV footage of that arrest, as well as an image of an Audi Q3 that was believed to have been used to take Joseph Nee, a 35-year-old man who was injured in the shooting and is believed to be the intended target, to hospital.

The Audi Q3 which has been seized by police. Pic: Merseyside Police
Image: An Audi Q3 has been seized by police. Pic: Merseyside Police

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CCTV captures gunshots in Liverpool

That vehicle has been seized and is being examined by forensic experts.

On Saturday morning, Merseyside Police tweeted: "A simple request - share this far and wide, to everyone you know, and ask them to share if further still, so that there's no hiding place for anyone involved in the murder of little Olivia. We need names. Silence is not an option."

Olivia's family has paid tribute to her, describing her as a "unique, chatty, nosey little girl who broke the mould when she was born".

Ambassador of Liverpool FC, Ian Rush (right), and Ambassador of Everton FC, Ian Snodin, visits the scene in Kingsheath Avenue, Knotty Ash, Liverpool, where nine-year-old Olivia Pratt-Korbel was fatally shot on Monday night. Picture date: Friday August 26, 2022.
Image: Ian Snodin, ambassador of Everton FC, and Ian Rush, ambassador of Liverpool FC, visit the scene
Floral tributes are left near to the scene of an incident in Kingsheath Avenue, Knotty Ash, Liverpool, where nine-year-old Olivia Pratt-Korbel was fatally shot on Monday night. Picture date: Friday August 26, 2022.
Image: Flowers left near the Olivia's home

They added: "Although her life was short, her personality certainly wasn't and she lived it to the most she could, and would blow people away with her wit and kindness."

The family has urged people to "do the right thing", and said: "If anyone knows anything, now is the time to speak up. It is not about being a 'snitch' or a 'grass', it is about finding out who took our baby away from us."

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2022-08-27 10:56:11Z
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Man dies after entering River Thames during arrest - BBC

Kingston BridgeSean Davis/Geograph

A man has died after entering the River Thames while being arrested by police.

Officers were flagged down on Kingston Bridge at about 22:30 BST on Friday, the Metropolitan Police said.

A "verbal altercation" involving a man and a woman known to each other was taking place and an allegation of theft was made, the force added.

Officers were in the process of arresting the man, but he had not been placed in handcuffs, when he entered the water, the Met said.

The force's Marine Policing Unit, the National Police Air Service, London Fire Brigade and the RNLI were all involved in the search for the man, who was believed to be in his 20s.

He was recovered from the water at about 00:30 BST and was treated by paramedics, but was pronounced dead at the scene, police said.

The man's family had been informed and the force had referred itself to the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC), according to the Met.

'Public very concerned'

Deputy Assistant Commissioner Laurence Taylor said: "My thoughts, and those of the Metropolitan Police Service, are with the friends and family of the man who has sadly lost his life following this incident.

"I fully appreciate the public will be very concerned. We of course share that concern.

"The Met's Directorate of Professional Standards made an immediate referral to the Independent Office for Police Conduct as is protocol in any incident in which a person comes to harm following police contact."

The IOPC said its investigators had taken initial accounts from the officers involved.

In a statement, an IOPC spokesperson said: "We have now begun the process of gathering and reviewing evidence, including footage of the interaction between officers and the man.

"Our thoughts are with the man's loved ones and all those affected by his death."

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2022-08-27 11:33:50Z
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Jumat, 26 Agustus 2022

Liverpool shooting: Murder arrest over Olivia Pratt-Korbel's death - BBC

Olivia Pratt-KorbelFamily handout

A man has been arrested on suspicion of murder after a nine-year-old girl was fatally shot in her own home.

Olivia Pratt-Korbel was hit in the chest as her mother struggled with a gunman at the door of their house in Dovecot, Liverpool, on Monday.

Police said a 36-year-old man from Huyton had been detained after an operation involving armed officers in Merseyside on Thursday night.

He was also arrested on suspicion of two counts of attempted murder.

Olivia was killed after Cheryl Korbel, 46, opened her front door on Kingsheath Avenue at 22:00 BST in response to a commotion outside.

The intended target of the attack, 35-year-old Joseph Nee, was being chased by a gunman.

Joseph Nee
Cheshire Police

The men - complete strangers to the family - burst in and Olivia was fatally shot.

Ms Korbel was shot in the wrist as she tried to shut the door.

She has now been released from hospital.

Nee, from Dovecot, was shot in the upper body and taken to hospital in a black Audi by a third man.

Once his treatment is completed, Nee will be recalled to prison for allegedly breaching the terms of his licence conditions.

The convicted drug dealer was jailed for three years and nine months in 2018 for burglary.

He was also previously convicted of two counts of theft of a motor vehicle, dangerous driving, driving without insurance and driving while disqualified.

Olivia was described by her family as a "unique, chatty, nosey little girl who broke the mould when she was born".

In a statement, they said Olivia "lived [life] to the most she could, and would blow people away with her wit and kindness.

"We as a family are heartbroken and have lost a huge part of our life."

Floral tributes to Olivia Pratt-Korbel
PA Media

Det Ch Supt Mark Kameen, of Merseyside Police, previously said there was a sense of "disgust" in the city about recent shootings including 28-year-old Ashley Dale was killed in the Old Swan area and 22-year-old Sam Rimmer died in Dingle.

Karen Dempsey, 55, was also found stabbed in a pub car park near Kirkby on Monday. Her son has been charged with her murder.

The government has announced it will allocate £500,000 for Merseyside to counter crime and provide mental health support following the killings.

During a visit to Liverpool, Home Secretary Priti Patel said the whole country had been "appalled at the spate of violence".

Earlier, former Liverpool striker Ian Rush and ex-Everton player Ian Snodin left flowers in Kingsheath Avenue on behalf of both football clubs.

Ambassador of Liverpool FC, Ian Rush (right), and the Ambassador of Everton FC, Ian Snodin, visits the scene in Kingsheath Avenue
PA Media

On the flowers from Everton FC, a message read: "RIP Olivia. No words will lessen the pain or explain such a tragedy.

"Our city stands united. Forever in our thoughts."

While a card on the floral tribute from Liverpool FC read: "Rest in peace, Olivia, with deepest sympathy from all of us at Liverpool Football Club.

"You'll Never Walk Alone."

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2022-08-26 12:23:51Z
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Emmanuel Macron responds after Liz Truss says 'jury is out' on whether he is 'friend or foe' - as PM calls French president a 'tres bon buddy' - Sky News

Emmanuel Macron has responded after Liz Truss refused to say if he was a "friend or foe" during the penultimate Conservative leadership hustings on Thursday.

Asked if Mr Macron, the French president and leader of the UK's closest neighbour, was a "friend or foe", the Conservative leadership race frontrunner replied: "The jury is out."

She added: "If I become prime minister, I will judge him on deeds, not words."

Responding to the foreign secretary's comment on Friday morning, the French president quipped that "the United Kingdom is a friendly nation, regardless of its leaders, sometimes in spite of its leaders".

Bills set to soar after price cap announcement - live updates

French President Emmanuel Macron

He told broadcasters: "If I were asked the question, this is roughly how I'm going to answer you - whichever person is being considered and whatever the future leadership in Britain, I don't hesitate one second. The United Kingdom is France's friend."

President Macron continued: "If, between us as French and British people, we aren't able to say if we're friends or foes - the term isn't neutral - we're heading towards serious problems.

More on Emmanuel Macron

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'UK is a friend in spite of its leaders'

"So yes, certainly, let me say that the British people, the United Kingdom is a friendly, strong, ally nation, regardless of its leaders, and sometimes in spite of and beyond its leaders, or any potential slip-ups they make when playing to the gallery."

The relationship between the UK and France has suffered since Brexit, with the two sides rowing on issues such as fishing and migration.

Labour warned that Ms Truss's comment, which could be seen to risk straining tensions with France, showed a "terrible and worrying lack of judgment".

But on Friday morning, Chancellor Nadhim Zahawi defended Ms Truss's remarks.

"It was clearly said as a light-hearted comment with a touch of humour," he said.

"We like people to judge us on our actions, on our deeds, not words. And I think it is right that we also hold our allies to that very high standard."

When asked the same question, leadership rival Rishi Sunak replied instantly that President Macron was a "friend".

He has previously said he wants to reset the UK's relationship with Europe if he wins the race to succeed Boris Johnson.

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Macron a 'très bon buddy' says PM

Meanwhile, the PM described President Macron as a "tres bon buddy" of the UK when asked about Ms Truss's comments.

"I think I've always had very good relations with Emmanuel Macron. Emmanuel Macron est un tres bon buddy de notre pays," Mr Johnson told reporters.

He added: "I think the relations between the UK and France are of huge importance. They have been very good for a long time, ever since the Napoleonic era basically, and I think we should celebrate that.

"As for Emmanuel, I've had very good relations with him and I can tell you something: he's a great, great fan of our country."

He continued: "And there were lots of chuckles around it. Liz and I both know that France is a strategic ally in defence, cyber, in our war effort in helping Ukraine, all these things we work very closely together.

"We like to be held by our allies on our actions and our deeds, not words, as we have done in Ukraine. Liz has led that effort in facing down Putin and his cronies and sanctioning them and of course, she will continue to do that as prime minister."

Read More:
Sunak claims he was gagged over negative effects of COVID lockdowns
Woman confronts health secretary over 'people dying' due to ambulance waits

During the quick-fire questions round at Thursday's hustings, both Tory leadership candidates were asked if they would rather be stuck in a lift with Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon or Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer.

Mr Sunak quipped that he would "rather take the stairs", leading to a large round of laughter from the audience.

Ms Truss said she would pick Ms Sturgeon so she can "persuade her to stop being a separatist by the time we got to the ground floor".

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'Rather take stairs' than be stuck in lift with Starmer

The foreign secretary previously suggested she will "ignore" the Scottish leader over her wish for another independence referendum and called her an "attention seeker".

It led to a war of words, with Ms Sturgeon hitting back that Ms Truss asked her how she could get into Vogue when they met briefly last year.

After giving her answer, Ms Truss could not resist making a dig at the Labour leader, saying: "Frankly, being stuck in a lift with Keir Starmer would be extremely boring."

The opposition leader has previously been forced to defend himself against accusations he is too boring to be prime minister, saying "the only thing that is boring is being in opposition".

Read more:
What have the Tory leadership candidates pledged for the country?

Ms Truss also said Mr Johnson would be a better prime minister than Mr Sunak after her leadership rival said he would prefer to see her in Number 10 than the outgoing leader.

Ms Truss is widely expected to win the leadership contest when the result is announced on 5 September.

Mr Sunak said on Thursday that he will not leave politics if he is defeated but insisted there was still "everything left to play for".

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2022-08-26 11:59:22Z
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Tory leadership: Truss criticised for Macron 'jury is out' remark - BBC

Liz TrussReuters

Foreign Secretary Liz Truss has been criticised after she said the "jury was still out" on French President Emmanuel Macron.

Her remark came as she was asked if Mr Macron was a "friend or foe" of the UK at a Tory leadership hustings.

She added that if elected PM she would judge him on "deeds not words".

But Labour's David Lammy accused Ms Truss of "a woeful lack of judgement", saying she had insulted one of "Britain's closest allies".

Ms Truss, widely seen as the clear front-runner to be the next Conservative leader and prime minister, made the remark at the penultimate leadership hustings in Norwich, to loud applause.

Her comment came at the end of the hustings during a series of "quickfire questions" posed by the host, TalkTV's Julia Hartley-Brewer.

When asked the same question Mr Sunak said Mr Macron was a "friend".

One Conservative minister said Ms Truss's comments had "completely undermined our relationship with France", calling her a "faux Thatcher", a reference to the infamously Eurosceptic former Tory prime minister.

In a tweet, former foreign minister Alistair Burt said Ms Truss has made a "serious error" and should have struck a more diplomatic tone.

Former Conservative minister Gavin Barwell also questioned Ms Truss's comment saying: "You would have thought the foreign secretary was aware we are in a military alliance with France."

Another ex-Tory minister, David Gauke, said: "There's playing to the gallery and then there's letting the prejudices of the gallery go to your head, especially when now is one of the worst times to try to fragment the West."

Ms Truss's comments have been picked up by French media, who have highlighted recent tensions between Paris and London.

The UK and France have clashed over several issues in recent years, including migrant boat crossings in the Channel, a military pact between Britain, the US and Australia, and Brexit measures involving Northern Ireland.

Mr Macron has sometimes publicly criticised the Conservative government's approach.

Last year Mr Macron reacted angrily to British Prime Minister Johnson's public call for France to take back migrants who reach the UK.

The French president accused the UK prime minister of not being "serious" by making the call on Twitter, though they had since been pictured arm-in-arm at a G7 summit in Germany this year.

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Emmanuel Macron - friend or foe?

Emmanuel Macron
Reuters

Analysis by BBC political correspondent David Wallace Lockhart

There's no denying the UK can have a complex relationship with France. From boat crossings in the Channel to ferry passport checks, there's been tension recently.

But as a close neighbour and a fellow NATO member, there are few in mainstream politics who would consider France anything but a strong ally. Especially at a time when western unity over the war in Ukraine is so important, and any division could be exploited by the likes of Vladimir Putin.

While Ms Truss's comments did appear to go down well with the audience of Conservative members, she's still the foreign secretary - the UK's chief diplomat. And therefore what she says on international affairs really matters.

This won't be the end of the matter. Ms Truss will be asked about these comments again over the coming days.

What happens next will be watched carefully, on both sides of the Channel.

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At the Tory leadership event in Norwich, Ms Truss and her rival Rishi Sunak were also asked who would make a better prime minister - Boris Johnson or their leadership rival.

Mr Sunak chose Ms Truss, arguing it was important for the country to move forward. But Ms Truss picked Mr Johnson - a decision that earned her applause from the crowd of Conservative Party members.

The pair were also asked about the recent shooting of nine year old Olivia Pratt-Korbel in Liverpool and how they would tackle crime.

Mr Sunak said the shooting was appalling and pledged to make sure there were more police officers on the street and that they "have tools they need to keep us safe".

He expressed concern that "wokeish ideology" was holding back police from using stop-and-search powers.

Ms Truss agreed on the need for more police and said at the moment forces were spending too much time "policing Twitter" instead of "crimes that people care about".

Both reiterated their previously-stated concerns about the level of restrictions during the Covid pandemic, with Ms Truss arguing it had been wrong to close schools.

"We were too draconian," she added.

Rishi Sunak
EPA

More light-heartedly, the pair were also asked who they would rather be stuck in a lift with - Labour leader Keir Starmer or Nicola Sturgeon.

Ms Truss opted for Scotland's first minister with the hope she could persuade Ms Sturgeon "to stop being a separatist by the time we got to the ground floor".

She added that the idea of being stuck in a lift with Labour leader Sir Keir was "extremely boring".

Mr Sunak said he would take the stairs.

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2022-08-26 09:36:54Z
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Protesters smash petrol pumps and block service stations across London - Metro.co.uk

Just Stop Oil protesters have blocked service stations and smashed petrol pumps across London this morning.

Action began at 6am today in the west and south of the city.

Some protesters have been pictured sitting in the road with banners while others block entrances.

Groups have broken display glass and covered pumps with spray paint before sitting down ‘to await arrest’.

Pumps have been decommissioned after Just Stop Oil say 51 campaigners flocked to service stations.

A Metropolitan Police spokesperson told Metro.co.uk: ‘Police were called at 06:29am on Friday, 29 August to reports of protestors damaging pumps at a petrol station in Talgarth Road, Hammersmith. 

‘Officered attended and within approximately 10 minutes had arrested four men and one woman on suspicion of criminal damage. They remain in custody at a west London police station.

‘Enquiries are ongoing.’

LONDON, ENGLAND - AUGUST 26: Police officers arrest a woman during an action at a BP petrol station by the Just Stop Oil environmental protest group on August 26, 2022 in London, England. Just Stop Oil is a coalition of groups working together to ensure the UK Government commits to halting new fossil fuel licensing and production. (Photo by Leon Neal/Getty Images)
Protesters have demanded government action against oil and gas projects (Picture: Leon Neal/Getty Images)
?? Licensed to London News Pictures. 26/08/2022. London, UK. Acton by Members of the climate activist group Just Stop Oil at a BP filing stain on the A40 in Perivale, west London. Just Stop Oil, a branch if Extinction Rebellion, have targeted petrol stations and oil refineries across the UK, calling for an end to the use of fossil fuels. Photo credit: Ben Cawthra/LNP
Just Stop Oil at a BP filling stain on the A40 in Perivale, west London (Picture: Ben Cawthra/LNP)

Today’s action was timed to coincide with the announcement by Ofgem of an increase in electricity bills for October.

The energy price cap will rocket to £3,549 on October 1, a move which will pile cost of living pressure on families. 

Tez Burns, 34, a bicycle mechanic and physics graduate from Swansea taking action today said: ‘We are suffering the worst cost of living crisis in 40 years and facing climate breakdown because of our dependence on oil.

‘Yet the government is allowing energy companies to drive us into poverty with skyrocketing energy bills, and is failing to protect us from the consequences of climate collapse.

LONDON, ENGLAND - AUGUST 26: Police officers move in to remove people during an action by the Just Stop Oil environmental protest group on August 26, 2022 in London, England. Just Stop Oil is a coalition of groups working together to ensure the UK Government commits to halting new fossil fuel licensing and production. (Photo by Leon Neal/Getty Images)
Police officers speak with protesters this morning (Picture: Leon Neal/Getty Images)
?? Licensed to London News Pictures. 26/08/2022. London, UK. Acton by Members of the climate activist group Just Stop Oil at a BP filing stain on the A40 in Perivale, west London. Just Stop Oil, a branch if Extinction Rebellion, have targeted petrol stations and oil refineries across the UK, calling for an end to the use of fossil fuels. Photo credit: Ben Cawthra/LNP
Just Stop Oil, a branch of Extinction Rebellion, are targeting petrol stations (Picture: Ben Cawthra/LNP)
51 supporters of Just Stop Oil claim to have blocked service stations and decommissioned pumps across central London this morning in support of their demand that the UK government end new oil and gas projects in the UK, August 26 2022. The group announced that starting from 6am today, actions took place across West and South London affecting 7 service stations. In some locations, Just Stop Oil supporters blocked access to the petrol pumps by sitting in the road with banners. Elsewhere, groups moved from one station to the next decommissioning petrol pumps by breaking the display glass or covering them with spray paint before sitting down to await arrest.
Protesters clashed with police early this morning (Picture: Just Stop Oil / SWNS)

‘Enough is enough.’

Just Stop Oil launched the action in support of their demand that the UK government end new oil and gas projects in the UK.

Jade Calland, 29, from Lancashire, is also taking action today.

He said: ‘Today we are resisting the government’s plans to allow more oil and gas.

‘We want to stop the misery forced on millions by rising energy bills, food poverty, poorly insulated housing and a society run for the benefit of the fossil fuel companies and the rich.’

Today’s actions will put further pressure on petrol and diesel supplies for the south-east ahead of the August Bank Holiday weekend.

LONDON, ENGLAND - AUGUST 26: Members of the Just Stop Oil environmental protest group hold onto petrol pump lines during an action at a BP petrol station on August 26, 2022 in London, England. Just Stop Oil is a coalition of groups working together to ensure the UK Government commits to halting new fossil fuel licensing and production. (Photo by Leon Neal/Getty Images)
Today’s action was timed to coincide with the announcement by Ofgem of an increase in electricity bills for October (Picture: Leon Neal/Getty Images)
?? Licensed to London News Pictures. 26/08/2022. London, UK. Acton by Members of the climate activist group Just Stop Oil at a BP filing stain on the A40 in Perivale, west London. Just Stop Oil, a branch if Extinction Rebellion, have targeted petrol stations and oil refineries across the UK, calling for an end to the use of fossil fuels. Photo credit: Ben Cawthra/LNP
Police say enquiries are ongoing into arrests made this morning (Picture: Ben Cawthra/LNP)
51 supporters of Just Stop Oil claim to have blocked service stations and decommissioned pumps across central London this morning in support of their demand that the UK government end new oil and gas projects in the UK, August 26 2022. The group announced that starting from 6am today, actions took place across West and South London affecting 7 service stations. In some locations, Just Stop Oil supporters blocked access to the petrol pumps by sitting in the road with banners. Elsewhere, groups moved from one station to the next decommissioning petrol pumps by breaking the display glass or covering them with spray paint before sitting down to await arrest.
This morning’s protest is the latest in Just Stop Oil’s campaign (Picture: Just Stop Oil / SWNS)

Earlier this week, protesters formed a human chain along the main route used by tankers driving between the ring road and the Navigator oil terminal in Grays, Essex.

Footage showed protesters climbing over a tall iron fence along the nearby InterTerminals facility while security staff with a guard dog tried to intercept them

Activists had to be forcibly removed and at least 18 were arrested following the action.

The group has also claimed to have dug tunnels underneath roads outside each facility.

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2022-08-26 06:53:00Z
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