
British Gas owner strikes £20bn gas deal with Norway's state energy company
Under the agreement, Centrica will buy around 5bn cubic meters (bcm) of gas from Equinor – enough to supply 5m UK homes – every year from this winter until 2035 at the prevailing market rate.
It is the latest long-term deal between the UK and Norway, which has been one of Britain's largest sources of imported gas for the last 50 years. But in a nod to Britain's net zero agenda, the latest agreement will include a clause that allows the UK to swap gas imports for emissions-free hydrogen from Equinor's UK hydrogen plant.
Equinor is working with Centrica and the energy company SSE on multiple low carbon hydrogen projects on the north bank of the Humber. Equinor's plans to develop a 'pathfinder' hydrogen project at the existing Aldbrough gas storage facility in East Yorkshire alongside SSE could be operational by 2029.
Britain currently imports nearly two-thirds of its gas requirements from Norway, although the UK's demand for gas fell to record lows last year due to a steady rise in renewable energy output and increased power imports from Europe.
The UK's gas demand is expected to tumble in the decade ahead as the government's net zero policies further reduce the need for gas power plants and help homes and businesses choose electric alternatives to fossil fuels.
Chris O'Shea, the chief executive of Centrica, said the 'landmark agreement' underscored the 'vital role' for gas in securing the UK's energy supplies as it moves towards a low carbon future. He added it would also pave the way 'for a burgeoning hydrogen market'.
The deal is smaller than the last decade-long agreement struck between the pair in 2015, when the Centrica agreed to buy about 7.3bn cubic metres of gas each year from Equinor, which, at the time, was also about 10% of the UK's total gas demand.
Centrica agreed to a top-up deal after Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which wiped out Russia's pipeline gas exports to Europe, to more than 10bn cubic metres a year, or about 12% of Britain's total gas demand.
The government's official climate adviser, the Climate Change Committee (CCC), has forecast a steep fall in the UK's demand for gas in the years ahead as it moves towards a net zero economy by 2050.
Gas currently makes up 720TWh, or almost 40%, of the UK's primary energy demand according to the CCC's carbon budgets, but this will need to fall to 168TWh or less than 15% of primary energy demand by 2050 if the UK hopes to keep within its carbon budgets.
Currently about 70% of homes are heated using gas boilers, while gas-fired power plants account for around a quarter of the country's electricity supply. The government hopes ambitious targets to install up to 600,000 electric heat pumps in homes every year and keep gas plants for use only 5% of the time in the 2030s will help cut the country's reliance on gas.

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Reuters
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Lyft misses quarterly revenue estimates on competition, weak US travel demand
Aug 6 (Reuters) - Lyft (LYFT.O), opens new tab missed second-quarter revenue estimates on Wednesday, pressured by mounting competition from Uber and softening U.S. travel demand, sending its shares down 7% in after-hours trading. Larger rival Uber Technologies (UBER.N), opens new tab, which offers ride-hailing, food and grocery delivery business globally, beat revenue estimates and issued an upbeat forecast for the third-quarter earlier in the day. Demand for travel to the U.S. has fallen this year, and analysts expect the slump to continue through 2025 as economic uncertainty, trade tensions and visa backlogs make the country less appealing to international visitors. Lyft, which is expanding beyond its North America, posted revenue of $1.59 billion in the second quarter, missing estimates of $1.61 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG. Rides on its platform grew 14% to a record high of 234.8 million, slightly below estimates of 235.9 million, according to 27 analysts polled by Visible Alpha. Lyft recently completed its nearly $200 million acquisition of European mobility platform FreeNow and has signed a deal with China's Baidu ( opens new tab to introduce the search engine giant's robotaxis in the region. Meanwhile, Uber, which has 20 global partnerships for self-driving technology, said it was in talks with private equity firms and banks to finance the deployment of robotaxis. Lyft on Wednesday also announced a partnership, set to launch later this year, with United Airlines (UAL.O), opens new tab that will allow the carrier's customers to earn rewards on all Lyft rides. With partnerships including DoorDash (DASH.O), opens new tab and Chase already in place, Lyft's entry into Europe positions the company to extend such collaborations into international markets. Lyft said it expects gross bookings to be between $4.65 billion and $4.80 billion for the third quarter, well above estimates of $4.59 billion. The company also reported earnings of 10 cents per share for the June quarter, more than double analysts' expectations of 4 cents. With growth stagnating in major U.S. metros, ride-hailing companies are shifting their focus to medium and smaller car-dependent cities to tap into new markets and drive revenue. Lyft recorded an adjusted core earnings of $129.4 million in the second quarter, above the average estimate of $124.5 million. It forecast current-quarter core earnings of $125 million to $145 million, largely in line with Wall Street estimates.


BBC News
6 minutes ago
- BBC News
Gordon Brown calls for gambling tax to cut child poverty
Former Labour Prime Minister Gordon Brown has repeated his call for higher taxes on gambling to lift half a million children out of has backed a think tank report from the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR), saying the move could raise £3.2bn to fund scrapping the two-child limit and benefit who was also chancellor under Tony Blair, said taxing online casinos and slot machines would be "the first crucial step in the war we must wage against child poverty".A spokesperson for the Betting and Gaming Council rejected the proposals, describing them as "economically reckless" and claiming they could push gamblers onto the black market. The Department for Media, Culture and Sport has been contacted for comment. The two-child limit and benefit cap affects 1.6 million children and is blamed for rising rates of food insecurity by anti-poverty campaigners, who say getting rid of the cap is the "single most effective" step the chancellor could take to reduce child two-child limit restricts child tax credit and universal credit (UC) to the first two children in most households, while the benefit cap sees the amount of benefits a household receives reduced to ensure claimants do not get more than the government is expected to publish a child poverty strategy in autumn, and children's charities and campaign groups have been united in calling for the two-child limit to be in the Guardian, Brown states: "Britain is now enduring the worst levels of child poverty since modern records began, even worse than in the Thatcher-Major years, and far worse than in most European countries..."These are austerity's children, the victims of 14 years of Tory rule, an era whose most vindictive act was to treat newborn third and fourth children as second-class citizens, depriving them of all the income support available to their first and second siblings."Flagging that child poverty is set to rise to "a wholly unacceptable" 4.8 million, Brown urges Chancellor Rachel Reeves to make "a straightforward budget choice" to raise taxes on online gambling companies to fund tackling child proposals focus on online gambling firms - the fast-growing part of the industry - and avoid any changes to bingo or lotteries. The IPPR suggested increasing taxes on online casinos from 21% to 50% and raising those on slots and gaming machines from 20% to 50%.Many online gambling firms are based offshore and pay little or no UK corporation tax, the IPPR report flags, and already benefits from unique tax advantages, including a complete exemption from VAT. The IPPR said raising gambling taxes in the way they suggested would be unlikely to reduce overall government Parkes, principal economist and head of quantitative research at IPPR, said: "The gambling industry is highly profitable, yet is exempt from paying VAT and often pays no corporation tax, with many online firms based offshore. "It is also inescapable that gambling causes serious harm, especially in its most high-stakes forms."Set against a context of stark and rising levels of child poverty, it only feels fair to ask this industry to contribute a little more."But a spokesperson for the Betting and Gaming Council said they rejected the "economically reckless, factually misleading" proposals which they insisted "risk driving huge numbers to the growing, unsafe, unregulated gambling black market, which doesn't protect consumers and contributes zero tax".They added: "Further tax rises, fresh off the back of government reforms which cost the sector over a billion in lost revenue, would do more harm than good - for punters, jobs, growth and public finances." Sign up for our Politics Essential newsletter to keep up with the inner workings of Westminster and beyond.


The Guardian
19 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Scientists find link between genes and ME/chronic fatigue syndrome
Scientists have found the first robust evidence that people's genes affect their chances of developing myalgic encephalomyelitis or chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), a mysterious and debilitating illness that has been neglected and dismissed for decades by many in the medical community. Early findings from the world's largest study into the genetics of the condition pinpointed eight regions of the human genome that were substantially different in people with an ME/CFS diagnosis compared to those without the illness. The discovery suggests that several variants of genes commonly found in the population raise the risk of developing the illness, though many people will carry the variants and never acquire it. Prof Chris Ponting, an investigator on the DecodeME study at the University of Edinburgh, called the results 'a wake-up call' that showed a person's genetics could 'tip the balance' on whether they would develop ME/CFS. 'These provide the first robust evidence for genetic contributions to ME,' Ponting said. 'There are many genetic variants that apply across the genome that predispose people to be diagnosed with ME.' More research is needed to develop diagnostic tests or screenings to identify people at high risk of ME/CFS. But scientists called the work a milestone that put the illness on an equal footing with other debilitating diseases and opened potential avenues for treatments. 'This really adds validity and credibility for people with ME,' said Sonya Chowdhury, chief executive of Action for ME and a DecodeME co-investigator. 'We know that many people have experienced comments like 'ME is not real'. They've been to doctors and they've been disbelieved or told that it's not a real illness.' Despite its long history, scientists understand very little about the causes of ME/CFS, though most patients report an infection before symptoms first appear. Typical symptoms include extreme tiredness, sleep problems, brain fog and a worsening of symptoms after physical or mental activities, known as post-exertional malaise, which can take weeks to recover from. It is estimated that 67 million people are affected by ME/CFS at an annual cost to the global economy of tens of billions of pounds. In the UK, the annual economic toll is calculated at more than £3bn. There is no test or cure for the illness. The DecodeME study, a collaboration between Edinburgh University, ME charities and patients, was launched in 2022 to explore whether genes play a role in who develops ME/CFS. For the latest work, researchers analysed 15,579 DNA samples from 27,000 people with ME/CFS and more than 250,000 people without the illness. The eight genetic regions that stood out in people with ME/CFS contain genes involved in immune defences and the nervous system. It will take more work to unpick the biology, but some gene variants may make people more vulnerable to ME/CFS by compromising their ability to fight bacterial and viral infections. Another genetic difference seen in ME/CFS is known from people with chronic pain, a symptom that many with ME/CFS also experience. 'Overall, what is happening here is the genetics align with how people with ME have described their illness,' Ponting said. Andy Devereux-Cooke, a DecodeMe co-investigator, said the findings would be huge for patients. 'The vast majority of the patient population essentially has been abandoned in one way or another, by families, the government, the medical system,' he said. 'This will be huge for the patient population. Even though it does not provide all the answers [and] it does not provide practical assistance, it is a welcome drop in the ocean towards turning the tide.' Among the many questions that remain is why ME/CFS affects far more women than men. Diagnoses are four times more common in women, but the study found no genetic explanation. Another question is whether long Covid overlaps with ME/CFS. While many symptoms are similar, the researchers found no genetic link between the two. 'One of the key things we're doing is enabling others to use their different approaches to ask and answer the same question,' said Ponting. Prof Anne McArdle, who studies ME/CFS at the University of Liverpool, said the results, which have not yet been published in a peer-reviewed journal, provided 'a solid basis' for future work that would hopefully help accelerate the development of a treatment for the devastating illness. Dr Beata Godlewska, who studies ME/CFS at the University of Oxford, recently used magnetic resonance spectroscopy to scan the brains of people with ME/CFS and long Covid. Those with ME/CFS but not long Covid had high levels of lactate in the anterior cingulate cortex, a brain region that integrates information about effort and emotion. This points to disrupted energy metabolism in the brain, and impaired mitochondria, the battery-like structures that provide energy inside cells. Godlewska said 'It's a very sad fact that people with ME/CFS are still disbelieved and the disease has been so neglected, especially when it comes to research funding. Hopefully this study will come with a benefit of both fighting the stigma, and convincing research funders that this is a truly biological condition.'