logo
Lampeter UWTSD campus plans progress with purchase of £1.8m farm

Lampeter UWTSD campus plans progress with purchase of £1.8m farm

BBC News18-07-2025
A council has bought a farm valued at more than £1.8m as part of plans to deliver vocational and post-16 courses including agriculture on a university campus.Ceredigion council leader Brian Davies said a loan was provided by the Welsh government to enable the authority to buy the farm, which adjoins the University of Wales Trinity St David (UWTSD) campus in Lampeter.At the start of the year UWTSD announced undergraduate teaching at the campus would end in September, with students able to continue their studies in Carmarthen.The authority said its aim was to "secure a sustainable future for the campus" by developing new courses there.
Following the announcement about the future of the campus there were concerns in Lampeter about the impact the course closures would have on the town.At the time, almost 6,000 people signed a petition calling on the university to provide a sustainable future for the historic campus.In recent months university chiefs have been in discussion with Ceredigion council about using part of the campus.The local authority has now said the campus plans to deliver post-16 vocational courses with an emphasis on agriculture, horticulture, gastronomy and construction.
Davies said buying the neighbouring 150-acre farm, including outbuildings and a farmhouse, was "crucial" for the delivery of a post-16 course in agriculture which was not currently available in the rural county.He said Welsh government ministers had been "kept in the loop" about the council's plans from the very outset, adding: "They can see the benefits of the vision here, and they were happy to give us the money to purchase the farm."An online advert for the farm - called Llettytwppa - listed an asking price of more than £1.8m. Davies would not specify how much the council had paid for it, but said it was "the market value".
The Lampeter campus is the oldest in Wales and has been described as the birthplace of higher education in the country. It was founded in 1822 as St David's College to provide education for members of the clergy.Over time a range of new courses were introduced, and it developed into a university, teaching both undergraduates and postgraduates.But in recent years the number of students in Lampeter declined and in January UWTSD confirmed 200 years of undergraduate teaching would come to an end, with humanities courses being transferred to its campus in Carmarthen in September.The university had said previously that, with just 92 undergraduate students, it was "not viable" to maintain the infrastructure of the campus, which cost £2.7m per year to run.In March UWTSD started to meet with stakeholders, including Ceredigion council, to discuss what were described as "viable proposals" for the future of the campus, and, in June, UWTSD and Ceredigion council said they were exploring plans to develop post-16 vocational training at the campus.Ceredigion council said other vocational and skills-based courses would be developed over the next three years and it aimed to provide additional community facilities on the site.A-level courses would not be provided on the campus, which could not compete with school sixth forms in terms of academic provision, the council added.
Davies said the campus had "significant potential" and the local authority wanted "to secure a sustainable future for the campus".He added the vocational courses would enable students to develop the skills required to meet employer needs around the region, with young people able to stay in their communities. Emlyn Dole, chair of the university's council, said the purchase was an "exciting opportunity" which would strengthen community links and support the rural economy.A series of public meetings are to be held over the coming months to discuss the plans.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bitcoin: James Howells gives up on retrieving hard drive from Newport landfill site
Bitcoin: James Howells gives up on retrieving hard drive from Newport landfill site

BBC News

time30 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Bitcoin: James Howells gives up on retrieving hard drive from Newport landfill site

It has lasted 12 years, involving a High Court and Court of Appeal hearing, and a very public row between a computer engineer and a council - but could the Newport tip Bitcoin saga finally be coming to an end? James Howells, from Newport, who claimed his ex-girlfriend mistakenly threw away a hard drive containing 8,000 bitcoins in 2013, has given up on retrieving the wallet, worth £620m, but has been hit with a £117,000 legal bill from his fight. Instead of buying the site to retrieve it, he has now launched his own cryptocurrency - Ceiniog Coin - to try and regain some of his this year, Newport council said it plans to close the site in the 2025-26 financial year, prompting Mr Howells to offer to buy it to retrieve the wallet. But the authority said he owes them just under £117,000 after his attempts to buy the landfill went to court. "We will not be spending any more of our officers' time on this issue until that payment is made," the council told BBC News. It was a move Mr Howells described as "financial coercion", to which the council refused to respond. Mr Howells has spent significant time and energy trying to access the site and recover the cryptocurrency, once describing it as his "9 to 5". But in January, Newport council asked a High Court judge to strike out Mr Howells' legal action to access the landfill or get £495m in Keyser KC said there were no "reasonable grounds" for bringing the claim and "no realistic prospect" of succeeding at a full led Mr Howells to represent himself at the Court of Appeal in London, using artificial intelligence to support his case, but this was rejected. Earlier this year, the council announced that the landfill site is set to close, after which Mr Howells said he intended to buy it."In July, I made a multi-million pound offer to Newport City Council. I followed up with the council's legal team and the leader of the council," Mr Howells said. He said he did not receive a reply or an acknowledgement from the council regarding his offer. A spokesperson for the council said that Mr Howells "currently owes the council just short of £117,000 in legal costs, costs which we occurred defending his claim for £500m submitted last year". It added that the council has a duty to the taxpayer to recover this money and to ensure that council resources are "used efficiently, and that officers time is not taken up unnecessarily"."As such, the council has responded to Mr Howells' correspondence, reiterating that he is required to pay us these costs, and that we will not be spending any more of our officers' time on this issue until that payment is made," it added. The council said it had not received any payment from Mr Howells and would not be commenting further. Responding to the council's comments, Mr Howells said it was "effectively holding the landfill sale process in an attempt to force a payment", something he described as "financial coercion"."If they don't wish to sell the site, they should say so clearly. But this tactic of using unrelated debts to shut down a lawful offer - one that's in the public interest - raises serious questions, not just legally but morally," he to BBC News on Thursday, he said he remained "open to a proper discussion" with council leaders until 17:00 BST on Friday, "after which I no longer care what they do, and will move forward with a tokenisation proposal regardless". The council said it would not be commenting further. What is Bitcoin? Bitcoin is a cryptocurrency, a virtual or digital currency that has no physical can be split into smaller units, with a satoshi being the smallest monetary are named after bitcoin's inventor Satoshi Nakamoto - believed to be a pseudonym – who wrote a key document about the currency in investing in the product around this time, like Mr Howells, were part of a "very small" crypto community known as Cypherpunks, said Billy Bambrough, author of the CryptoCodex was not the first cryptocurrency to be invented, but it did gain considerable attention with early adherents being "very quickly enamoured with it", Mr Bambrough began to rise in about 2016 and 2017, and again in 2020 during the Covid pandemic when "stock markets, cryptocurrencies and meme coins went up hugely". But Mr Howells is not giving up on utilising on his Bitcoin fortune. He now intends to "tokenise" the full value of the wallet assets into a new Bitcoin-based smart token called Ceiniog Coin (INI), which he intends to launch later this year. Mr Howells will use his Bitcoin wallet value as a "store-of-value or 'vault'" providing backing for the new token. Josh Riddict, a cryptocurrency expert, said there are many coins in crypto ecosystems that have "value derived from some kind of asset backing or vault". "Since James' wallet is publicly known and the blockchain is there for all to see, its easy evidence that these 8,000 coins do indeed exist. The need to readily access them to 'prove' their existence simply isn't required."Ultimately the market will decide how valuable they deem this new coin offering to be," he added.

Ofwat appoints interim chief executive after David Black departure
Ofwat appoints interim chief executive after David Black departure

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

Ofwat appoints interim chief executive after David Black departure

Ofwat has appointed an interim chief executive to take over from the outgoing boss as the embattled regulator prepares to be abolished. Chris Walters will take the helm from August 30, Ofwat announced on Thursday. It comes two days after the regulator announced that the incumbent chief executive, David Black, would be standing down after four years in the role. Mr Walters moves into the role from his current position as a senior director for the price review – the regulator's process for setting the price, service and incentive package for water companies for a five-year period. However, he will be overseeing Ofwat as ministers plan its dissolution in a major regulatory shake-up for the water industry. The government announced the move last month as part of its response to public fury over rising bills, sewage pollution and large bonuses for bosses. Ofwat may not be formally axed until at least 2027, with the process to overhaul the current system likely to be complex. The regulator said the board has made changes to the leadership structure to reflect the transitional nature of its work going forward. Currently, Ofwat oversees how much water companies in England and Wales can charge for services; the Drinking Water Inspectorate ensures that public water supplies are safe; while the Environment Agency and Natural England have regulatory functions to monitor firms' impact on nature. The regulators have faced intense criticism for overseeing companies during the years where they paid out to shareholders and accrued large debts while aging infrastructure crumbled and sewage spills skyrocketed. Under government plans, measures will be rolled out to merge their regulatory responsibilities into a 'single, powerful' regulator – one for England and another for Wales. It comes as one of 88 measures recommended by an independent review led by former Bank of England governor Sir Jon Cunliffe, which was commissioned by ministers to answer the widespread outrage over the ailing water sector. Ofwat said Mr Walters will be tasked with providing leadership for the organisation, but will also lead the engagement process with the government and industry as the recommendations are taken forward. As part of its own response to the crisis, Ofwat said it would allow firms to raise average bills from 2025 to 2030 to help finance a £104 billion upgrade for the sector as part of its 2024 price review. Elsewhere, Helen Campbell, Ofwat's senior director for sector performance, has been appointed as the executive director for delivery. Ms Campbell will also take up her new position from August 30, reporting directly to the board. In this role, she will take responsibility for ensuring the delivery of the £104 billion five-year expenditure programme. She will also oversee progress on the £50 billion pipeline of major infrastructure projects and the stabilisation of Thames Water, which is facing a severe financial crisis that has brought it to the brink of potential nationalisation.

Nutrien expects more fertilizer use by farmers despite low crop prices
Nutrien expects more fertilizer use by farmers despite low crop prices

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Nutrien expects more fertilizer use by farmers despite low crop prices

WINNIPEG, Manitoba, Aug 7 (Reuters) - Nutrien ( opens new tab, the world's top potash producer, expects increased fertilizer use by North American farmers this fall and a good global potash market in 2026 despite some crop prices at multi-year lows, company executives told analysts on Thursday. "We expect to be in a strong market next year," Nutrien CEO Ken Seitz said on a call with analysts. Nutrien topped Wall Street estimates for second-quarter profit on Wednesday, benefiting from improved demand in North America amid a robust corn planting season. The strong results were a rare bright spot for agriculture-focused companies after large agribusinesses including Archer-Daniels-Midland and Bunge Global reported their weakest quarterly earnings in years amid trade uncertainty from U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs, while farm equipment makers warned of sales headwinds due to slumping farm incomes. The company boosted its estimate of full-year potash sales following record sales in the first half of 2025, to a range of 13.9 million to 14.5 million metric tons, as farmers reacted to improving weather in parts of North America which had been grappling with drought conditions in previous years. "We see growers investing to protect their yields," said Jeff Tarsi, Nutrien's head of global retail. Crop prices for wheat, corn and soybeans are near multi-year lows in North America, a factor that can sometimes restrain farmers from buying fertilizer and other inputs, analysts say. But excellent crops in many parts of the continent are encouraging farmers to use higher rates of fertilizer as this year's expected high-yield crops remove more fertilizer from the soil. To produce maximum yields in 2026, U.S. farmers will need to replenish soil fertilizer levels more than in some recent dry years, Tarsi said. On Monday, the U.S. Department of Agriculture reported American corn and soybean crops were in the best condition for years at this point of the growing season. Crop prices have fallen as markets anticipate big supplies from North America, Brazil and other significant areas. Seitz said he sees the global potash market as "in balance" with "healthy" prices, citing strong demand and supplies unlikely to swell quickly due to challenges producers face in developing new projects.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store