
Long delays on A12 after gas works close lane at Marks Tey
There are heavy delays on the southbound A12 in Essex due to gas works. National Highways said there had been one emergency lane closure at junction 25 for Marks Tey "for gas utility works". It reported about 50 minutes of hold-ups between junction 28, for Colchester, and junction 25. Drivers are being warned to allow extra time for their journey.
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Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Government backs £1bn Nissan lifeline loan amid raised hopes for future of its Sunderland plant
The Government will back a £1billion loan to Japanese carmaker Nissan as it undergoes a major restructuring. The struggling auto giant, which operates the UK's biggest car plant in Sunderland, is planning to close seven factories and cut 20,000 jobs and is looking to raise £5.2billion to keep afloat. The £1billion is guaranteed by UK Export Finance, an arm of the Treasury, and will be seen as safeguarding workers in Sunderland as Nissan cuts its number of plants from 17 to 10 globally. Nissan has not said the factory is safe but boss Ivan Espinosa has insisted it will make more electric cars there, amid reported fears that Nissan could be close to running out of cash by the end of March. The Government will underwrite a £1billion loan from Nissan's lenders. Nissan will also sell part of its stakes in French carmaker Renault and battery firm Aesc Group, and plants in South Africa and Mexico at a crunch time for manufacturers who are reeling from Donald Trump's trade wars. Britain's recent trade deal with the US to reduce tariffs from 25 per cent to 10 per cent for up to 100,000 cars made in the UK has contributed to the UK's attractiveness as an investment destination. This week, Toyota, the world's biggest car manufacturer, said it would expand production in the UK. Earlier this month, it emerged that Nissan was plotting 11,000 job cuts on top of the 9,000 roles put at risk in November. It has lost £3.4billion in the last year. A 73-year low for production UK vehicle production fell 16 per cent to 59,000 last month, the lowest April level since 1952 – excluding the pandemic in 2020. Car manufacturing was down 9 per cent partly due to the timing of Easter, and the changeover to new models. Exports to the EU were down by 19 per cent and to the US by 3 per cent. Output of commercial vehicles slumped more than two-thirds after a post-pandemic boom in HGV demand faded, according to Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders' figures. Total production for 2025 is down 8 per cent to 298,000, the worst start for a year since 2009.


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
JOHN MACLEOD: The Clyde no longer clangs with the sound of hammers, but still the silver ferry glides across its waves
It's a muggy day in August 1979 and, atop a bicycle slightly too big for him, a mop-haired 13 year-old heads determinedly through western Glasgow by Anniesland Road, Kingsway and the main drag to Dumbarton. He's a bit lonely, very bookish and, worst of all, thirteen. But he likes ferries. They suggest change, transition, deliverance. And so he pulls up his Raleigh Wayfarer at the top of the great cobbled slip and, for long soothing minutes, watches the stately craft chug back and fore, along heavy guiding chains, between Renfrew and Yoker – and life feels that wee bit better. Negotiating the thunderous local traffic nearly half a century later, I wonder what possessed me. Yoker Ferry Road seems longer than I remember. Much around the slipway has been demolished. But the Clyde is a great deal cleaner. And, shortly, the wee silver landing-craft purrs across the wavelets. Danny, the perky young skipper, relieves me of £3 and, shortly, I am on my way to the other shore and, indeed, another local authority. A similar craft is perched high and dry on the Renfrew slip. 'Been there two year,' says Danny. 'They were supposed to change the ramp, and guys duly came and cut the old one off. We never saw them again.' 'Really?' 'They stopped returning our calls,' says Danny darkly. 'Good you're still going. I thought the new bridge...' 'It's hit us, aye – numbers are down half, about half – but there's still many that like the ferry.' The swingbridge in question, which finally opened earlier this month, is about ten minutes' walk downstream and, already, evidently popular. I amble across it, add West Dunbartonshire to my footfall, and note not just the steady purr of cars and vans – the new connection is especially useful for Braehead shopping – but a surprising number of pedestrians: young mums and dads with pushchairs. I glance upriver, and Danny is traversing the straits again, the sunlight glinting on his little 12-passenger vessel. The Clydelink landing-craft is not, of course, the ship I remember. She – imaginatively named the Renfrew – was a great square double-ended chain-ferry, diesel-electric, built in 1952, able to bear two dozen cars and for an era when thousands crossed the Clyde daily for work. And when she had occasionally to be drydocked and overhauled, a similar if smaller vessel – steam-powered, repurposed from Erskine upon 1971 redundancy – could relieve her. It might have seemed prosaic, but in its own wee way the Renfrew ferry is part of Greater Glasgow's rich tapestry. When the King and Queen in 1934 descended on Clydebank to launch the Queen Mary, it is said the Renfrew ferry that day conveyed some 22,000 excited sightseers. On two dreadful nights in March 1941, the ship toiled from dusk to dawn, flashes and explosions all around her, conveying ambulances and fire-engines to stricken Clydebank. And one of the Renfrew ferry crew was even a key witness in the 1958 trial of the murderous Peter Manuel. Even then, this was still one of many craft – some vehicular; other little launches for passengers only – that criss-crossed the river under the auspices of the Clyde Port Authority and when Glasgow was not just still the Second City of the Empire but the workshop of the world. All the ferries, in fact, were free, except for those at Renfrew and Erskine which were partly and wholly outwith Glasgow Corporation bounds. But life then began to grow lonely. Opened in 1963, the Clyde Tunnel was the finish of the ferries at Govan and Whiteinch. Other services – Stobcross, Meadowside, Finnieston – soon disappeared too and, with the demise of the little Kelvinhaugh ferry in 1980, the Renfrew was on her lonesome. And losing money in epic quantities, jangling back and fore with just two or three cars at a time. It was bonkers and, on a wistful day in May 1984, she voyaged for the last time, children and locals turning out in great number to make rather a gala of the occasion. It was not the end of the service. Two small bow-loading ferries – for passengers only, though capable of taking an ambulance over in emergency – assumed the crossing, and till 2010 the Renfrew Rose and the Yoker Swan served loyally and well. But the operational losses were increasingly crazy and they were finally withdrawn for new careers, respectively, on the Cromarty Firth and in the south of Ireland. Indeed, last year and in her new Hibernian briny the Yoker Swan, laden with finalists, had a chug-on part in Masterchef: The Professionals. Clydelink now took on the Renfrew to Yoker passage, with their glorified lawnmowers. 1984 was not quite doom for the broad-beamed chain ferries. The Renfrew floats to this day as an static, popular quayside venue upriver and, during the Glasgow Garden Festival, her older sister briefly served in a similar capacity. But by November 2000 Scotland's last steam-powered ferry, last of the long line of Erskine vessels, had foundered in Renfrew's little harbour, and was shortly demolished. The Clyde's latest bridges – a passenger swing-bridge opened between Govan and Partick last September – have proved rather a hit. It's good that the Clyde has now been so cleaned up that salmon have been running it happily, anew, since the late Seventies. Indeed, they were historically so plentiful that, according to tradition, Govan tradesmen could not feed it to their apprentices more than twice a week. But, steaming downriver on the Waverley or even just going for a long determined walk by its shores, by derelict this and gap-site that, one feels sad to see one of the greatest rivers in the world reduced to little more than a bit of pretty. Great tides of working men no longer flood Dumbarton Road as the end-of-shift siren wails, Glasgow is no longer reduced to a ghost-town in Fair Fortnight, and the merry chink and clang of hammers no longer reverberates in Scotstoun and Whiteinch. Danny is having a joyously busy day and, as I retrace my steps down the Renfrew cobbles, he is just sweeping in with his latest complement of passengers – Maw, Paw and three happy weans. The children turn and wave exuberant goodbye as I again cross Danny's palm with silver and his little craft backs out with a growl of outboard. Danny was in Lewis once. Lewis is nice, aye. 'Aye, I get lots of children. Kids just love the ferry…' And, of course – it was shut for some hours yesterday – the competing new bridge is not always available, adding further joyous footfall. Danny and colleagues are determined to maintain a service now at least in its fifth century – and I, for one, hope there is always a Renfrew ferry.


BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
Harrison tops IOM TT Superbike qualifying speeds
Dean Harrison set the fastest lap speed in the first timed Superbike qualifying session for the Isle of Man TT on Honda Racing rider circulated at 133.069mph on his second lap of the evening, 15.5 seconds faster than Peter Hickman, who recorded 131.076 on his 8Ten Racing 36, is in his second season with the Japanese manufacturer and will be looking to add to his three TT wins to date, the most recent of those coming in team-mate Davey Todd was third on the Superbike leaderboard at 130.402, followed by record 29-time winner Michael Dunlop on 129.975 on his Rokit Todd was quickest in the Superstock category with a speed of 131.231, with Harrison one second slower in second with at 131.098 and Michael Dunlop next fastest on earned the first TT win of his career by taking victory in the Superstock race in 2024 so will be aiming for a repeat of that was best of the Supersports on his Ducati V2 at 127.181, with Harrison close behind at 126.436 and then James Hillier on 124.576 on his Rob Hodson topped the Supertwins with 119.521 but Michael Dunlop was hot on his heels at and Callum Crowe led the sidecars, registering 118.797 before the session was brought to a premature halt because low cloud had descended on parts of the course after the crews had completed just one is scheduled to continue on Thursday evening, with a further session on Friday afternoon and racing starting with the first Supersport event on session had been designated as untimed free practice because of difficult conditions caused by damp patches around the 37.73-mile Mountain Course. Wednesday TT qualifying leaderboard Superbikes - 1 Dean Harrison (Honda) 133.069mph; 2 Peter Hickman (BMW) 131.076; 3 Davey Todd (BMW) 130.402; 4 Michael Dunlop (BMW) 129.975; 5 Nathan Harrison (Honda) 128.825; 6 Shaun Anderson (Suzuki) 128.14Superstocks - 1 Davey Todd (BMW) 131.231; 2 Dean Harrison (Honda) 131.098; 3 Michael Dunlop (BMW) 130.387; 4 Dom Herbertson (Honda) 129.257; 5 Paul Jordan (Honda) 128.055; 6 Conor Cummins (BMW) 128.041Supersports - 1 Michael Dunlop (Ducati) 127.181mph; 2 Dean Harrison (Honda) 126.436; 3 James Hillier (Kawasaki) 124.596; 4 Davey Todd (Honda) 124.238; 5 Peter Hickman (Triumph) 124.085; 6 Mike Browne (Yamaha) 123.998Supertwins - 1 Rob Hodson (Paton) 119.521; 2 Michael Dunlop (Paton) 119.068; 3 Michael Evans (Kawasaki) 118.646; 4 Mike Browne (Kawasaki) 118.579; 5 Davey Todd (Paton) 117.634; 6 Peter Hickman (Yamaha) 116.718Sidecars - 1 Ryan Crowe/Callum Crowe (Honda) 118.797; 2 Peter Founds/Jevan Walmsley (Honda) 115.37; 3 Lee Crawford/Scott Hardie (Kawasaki) 113.742