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Monday newspaper round-up: Coal power plant, Deloitte, RBS scandal

(Sharecast News) - Britain's only remaining coal power plant at Ratcliffe-on-Soar in Nottinghamshire will generate electricity for the last time on Monday after powering the UK for 57 years. The power plant will come to the end of its life in line with the government's world-leading policy to phase out coal power which was first signalled almost a decade ago. - Guardian Almost half of British adults will ration their energy use this winter, a survey has found, as energy bills will rise again by 10% this week. Charities have called on the government to do more to help vulnerable people to heat their homes, with the average household bill scheduled to rise by £149 after the energy price cap increases on Tuesday. - Guardian

Deloitte cut its UK partners' pay packets by £48,000 in the last financial year as it sought to promote more people to its senior ranks. The "big four" firm said average partner pay was down to £1.012m for the year to the end of May, compared with £1.060m in 2023. It said this reflected the fact it had been increasing its number of people in senior posts, with 80 of its employees promoted to partner over the past 12 months. - Telegraph

The Government is poised to approve the extension of HS2 into Euston station, despite concerns it could saddle the taxpayer with billions of pounds in extra costs. The move will ensure that the high-speed rail route runs into the centre of London rather than ending at Old Oak Common in the west of the capital. Chancellor Rachel Reeves will reportedly use her first Budget next month to approve funding for the project, which will also include a multi-billion-pound transformation of Euston. - Telegraph

Instead of the London Stock Exchange's junior market looking forward to celebrating its 30th birthday next year, the City is braced for the threat of a Halloween "Nightmare on Aim Street" at next month's budget. In the run-up to Labour's first budget in almost 15 years - to be delivered the day before Halloween - investors have been spooked by concerns that the Treasury is considering cutting a "vital" tax relief that has underpinned the Alternative Investment Market (Aim) since shortly after it was launched in 1995. - The Times

The Financial Conduct Authority permitted the destruction after only 12 months of more than one million documents collated during a banking scandal investigation - despite the fact that the regulator has a policy of retaining documents for 25 years. The regulator told Promontory, a private sector firm it commissioned to look into the mistreatment of thousands of small businesses by Royal Bank of Scotland, that it needed to keep the documents it had compiled for one year after it had completed its work. - The Times

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Friday newspaper round-up: UK manufacturing, passport fees, Thames Water
(Sharecast News) - Thousands of European airline staff are being trained to stop people boarding flights to Britain without valid visas, in a move billed by the foreign secretary as a digital upgrade to border controls. David Lammy said the measures marked a step towards "more secure, more digital and more effective" borders, but the move could raise questions about human rights safeguards. - Guardian
Wednesday newspaper round-up: Tariffs, UK gas plants, xAI
(Sharecast News) - Donald Trump is threatening to keep 25% tariffs on some or all of its steel imports from the UK unless it gives specific guarantees over the Indian-owned steelmaking plant at Port Talbot in south Wales, sources have told the Guardian. An agreement to reduce tariffs on UK car exports to the US and scrap them for the aerospace sector was signed off by the US president and Keir Starmer on Monday, on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Canada. - Guardian
Tuesday newspaper round-up: UK-US trade deal, Oxford Street, TSB
(Sharecast News) - Keir Starmer and Donald Trump have signed off a UK-US trade deal at the G7 summit in Canada, with the US president saying Britain would have protection against future tariffs "because I like them". The two leaders presented the deal, which covers aerospace and the auto sector, at the G7 venue in Kananaskis, Alberta. - Guardian
Tuesday newspaper round-up: UK-US trade deal, Oxford Street, TSB
(Sharecast News) - Keir Starmer and Donald Trump have signed off a UK-US trade deal at the G7 summit in Canada, with the US president saying Britain would have protection against future tariffs "because I like them". The two leaders presented the deal, which covers aerospace and the auto sector, at the G7 venue in Kananaskis, Alberta. - Guardian

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