logo
Britain pledges to deliver 100,000 drones to Ukraine by April 2026

Britain pledges to deliver 100,000 drones to Ukraine by April 2026

Yahoo2 days ago

LONDON (Reuters) -Britain pledged on Wednesday to supply 100,000 drones to Ukraine by the end of the current financial year in April 2026, marking a tenfold increase, after saying the unmanned aerial vehicles had transformed the way wars are fought.
The government on Monday endorsed an independently-produced Strategic Defence Review, which calls for a more lethal, tech-driven army to counter emerging threats, including possible Russian aggression.
Britain, one of Ukraine's staunchest Western supporters, plans to learn from Kyiv's more than three-year fight against Russian invasion, during which drones have transformed the battlefield.
The 350-million-pound ($473 million) drone package is part of a broader 4.5-billion-pound military support initiative for Ukraine, the government said.
Defence Secretary John Healey will make the announcement at a 50-nation Ukraine Defence Contact Group meeting in Brussels, co-hosted with Germany.
"The UK is stepping up its support for Ukraine by delivering hundreds of thousands more drones this year and completing a major milestone in the delivery of critical artillery ammunition," Healey said in a statement ahead of the meeting.
In addition to the drone deliveries, Britain said it has completed the shipment of 140,000 artillery shells to Ukraine since January and will spend a further 247 million pounds this year training Ukrainian troops.
($1 = 0.7402 pounds)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Massport pushing to make the state a hub for sustainable aviation fuels
Massport pushing to make the state a hub for sustainable aviation fuels

Boston Globe

time23 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

Massport pushing to make the state a hub for sustainable aviation fuels

Among the suggestions: Pass legislation to create tax credits that would encourage sustainable aviation fuel blends, storage, and production infrastructure, and new kinds of fuel technologies. While Massport has already asked the US Department of Energy to study the region's current sustainable aviation fuel assets, the task force also wants to identify existing state programs that could be used to support and grow the industry. Davey said he hopes Massachusetts can become a big player in this emerging industry, by fostering startups that can engineer more environmentally friendly alternatives to traditional petroleum-based jet fuel, and by prompting the airlines that use Massport-run Logan Airport to increasingly blend sustainable aviation fuels, primarily biofuels, with their conventional fuel. Advertisement Current technology and regulations allow for up to 50 percent biofuel in jet engine tanks. While its use is rapidly rising, biofuels still represent less than 2 percent of all jet fuel in the US market. Advertisement 'We're not going to stop flying,' Davey said. 'On the flip side, we have a [climate] crisis we need to address.' Davey pitched the idea of creating a sustainable aviation fuel hub to Healey soon after he started as Massport chief executive last year. 'What we found in this journey is that this is not only about improving or reducing gas emissions in Massachusetts,' Davey said. 'It's also an economic development play.' Toward that end, the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center has access to newly created tax credits and capital grants tailored specifically for climate-tech businesses, funded by a $4 billion economic development bond bill that the Legislature passed last year. The working group would like to augment those subsidies with tax credits that could be applied against the state's jet fuel tax to encourage the big airlines to add more biofuels to their tanks. (Airlines paid around $50 million in jet fuel taxes in Massachusetts last year.) Davey said the legislation could include a cap on how much is spent each year, like what has been done in several other states that already offer these incentives. 'I'm cognizant that while we want to solve this problem, the state budget right now is a bit murky,' Davey said. 'We need to balance that uncertainty and all the services we provide [from state government] with this potential incentive.' Some research and development in sustainable aviation fuels is already happening here. Chief growth officer Ben Downing pointed to two startups affiliated with the nonprofit incubator and accelerator where he works, The Engine in Cambridge: Lydian Labs, which is creating carbon-neutral aviation fuels, and Sora Fuel, which aims to make fuel out of carbon removed from the air. Advertisement Downing said Massport's leadership should help spur similar startups, in part because of the opportunities that the port authority could provide to commercialize sustainable fuel technologies by working with suppliers and airlines. 'We've seen Rich and his team lead [on this issue],' Downing said. 'There's a proactive nature to their approach that puts Massachusetts in a really interesting position to be not just a place where these things get invented but potentially where these companies grow. ... That's a model for other key anchor institutions and it's really hopeful and promising for this sector.' Jon Chesto can be reached at

'Sometimes you have to let them fight': Trump compares Russia, Ukraine to brawling children
'Sometimes you have to let them fight': Trump compares Russia, Ukraine to brawling children

USA Today

time24 minutes ago

  • USA Today

'Sometimes you have to let them fight': Trump compares Russia, Ukraine to brawling children

'Sometimes you have to let them fight': Trump compares Russia, Ukraine to brawling children Trump anticipates Russia will retaliate against Ukraine for drone strikes. Show Caption Hide Caption Trump says Putin will respond to Ukraine attack after phone call President Donald Trump spoke with Russian President Vladimir Putin in an hour-long phone call, which he described as a "good conversation." Trump said he told Russia's President Vladimir Putin that sometimes when two children are fighting, they don't want to be pulled part. Trump told Germany's Chancellor Friedrich Merz that Putin 'got hit hard' and so he will strike back at Ukraine. WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump compared the war between Russia and Ukraine to two kids fighting in a park, where he might have to let them brawl for a while rather than break them up immediately because of their intense hatred. Trump told Germany's Chancellor Friedrich Merz on June 5 that he made that analogy in a lengthy call with Russia's President Vladimir Putin a day earlier, after Putin said he needed to retaliate for drone strikes against his air force. 'Sometimes you see young children fighting like crazy. They hate each other and they're fighting in a park,' Trump said. 'You try to pull them apart and they don't want to be pulled apart.' 'Sometimes you have to let them fight for a while,' Trump added. Trump and Merz were meeting to discuss trade and how to end the three-and-a-half-year war. Merz said a day before the anniversary of D-day in World War II that Germany owes a tremendous debt to America for liberating his country and Europe from the Nazis, and needs to again help end a war. 'We all are looking for measures and instruments to bring this terrible war to an end,' Merz said. 'I told the president before we came in that he is the key person in the world who can really do that now by putting pressure on Russia.' Trump said he would be very tough and could impose sanctions on both countries if the fighting continues unabated. He didn't disclose a deadline but said he had it in his head. Ukraine is the apple of Putin's eye, Trump said, and the Russian would like to control the entire country. After a Ukrainian drone strike against Russian aircraft, Trump said Putin intends to hit back. 'He got hit. He's been doing hitting, so I understand it. But he got hit hard,' Trump said. 'I don't think he's playing games. I've always said he wanted the whole thing. I thought he wanted everything having to do with Ukraine.' Trump said he sensed great hatred between Putin and Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, making peace talks more complicated. 'There's a lot of bad blood,' Trump said. 'There is a great hatred between those two men but between the warring parties.' Besides children fighting in a park, Trump compared it to hockey players. 'The referees let them go for a couple of seconds,' Trump said. 'Let them go for a little while before you pull them apart.'

Trump budget bill would kill subsidies that made home solar mainstream
Trump budget bill would kill subsidies that made home solar mainstream

Yahoo

time27 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump budget bill would kill subsidies that made home solar mainstream

By Nichola Groom (Reuters) -A last-minute tweak to the Republican budget bill passed by Congress last month would immediately end subsidies for solar leasing companies that help make rooftop systems affordable to homeowners, likely leading to a massive drop in the pace of installations, according to industry representatives. President Donald Trump's "big, beautiful bill," now being taken up by the Republican-controlled Senate, would eliminate a 30% tax credit for solar leasing companies that charge homeowners a monthly fee for panels - one of numerous cuts directed at clean energy subsidies passed by former President Joe Biden. That provision, inserted shortly before the bill passed the House of Representatives on May 22, risks stifling a sector that buys American-made equipment, employs thousands of people and relieves strain on the grid, according to industry backers. "That's one of the harsher components of the one big, beautiful bill currently," said Gabe Rubio, a principal in the business incentives and tax credits practice at professional services firm BDO. Tax credits for homeowners who own their own rooftop systems would also be eliminated. The changes could result in as much as 40% less residential solar capacity being installed over the next five years, according to energy research firm Wood Mackenzie. Solar companies are lobbying the Senate to make changes to the bill before it becomes law. "America's home solar and storage industry is a powerful economic growth engine," Sunrun CEO Mary Powell said in a statement. "Senate Republicans now have an opportunity to advance the administration's energy independence agenda by amending this bill to keep American energy prices low and create well-paying U.S. manufacturing jobs." Trump campaigned on a promise to repeal the clean energy tax credits in Biden's 2022 Inflation Reduction Act, arguing they are expensive, unnecessary and harmful to business. Republican backers of the bill say the subsidy cuts would free up billions of dollars for other priorities. More than 5 million U.S. homes have solar panels, according to the Solar Energy Industries Association. LAST MINUTE CHANGE An earlier version of the bill had protected the credit for leased solar systems, but fiscal hawks including Representative Chip Roy of Texas have said publicly that they pressed for deeper cuts to clean energy credits at the eleventh hour. Roy's office did not respond to a request for comment. Solar leasing was pioneered two decades ago by companies including Sunrun and SolarCity, which is now owned by Elon Musk's company Tesla, and quickly became the primary way home solar panels were financed. Under the model, solar installers partner with financiers that own the rooftop panels and offset their federal tax bills by claiming the credit. Homeowners either pay a monthly fixed fee to lease the equipment or pay for the electricity the system generates under a power purchase agreement (PPA). In what some analysts have said could be a loophole, the House bill directly references leased systems but does not mention PPAs. About 44% of residential systems sold today are under such arrangements, according to EnergySage, an online solar marketplace. Solar installers say undermining the subsidies could have a ripple effect on U.S. manufacturers that supply them. Freedom Forever, a top privately-held installer based in Temecula, California, said in two years it has gone from using no U.S.-made equipment to now sourcing 85% of it from American facilities. That is thanks to another IRA subsidy that provides bonus 10% tax credits for using American-made equipment. "The administration wants to bring manufacturing back to the United States, and that's what our industry has been doing for the last two to three years," Freedom Forever CEO Brett Bouchy said. Sign in to access your portfolio

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store