UK government makes major driveway law change set to affect millions of homes
Labour has just rolled out a major driveway law change which is set to benefit thousands of UK homes.
No more planning applications are needed for EV charging point installations as the government cuts red tape.
Future of Roads Minister, Lilian Greenwood, announced drivers and businesses will no longer need to submit a planning application to install public or private EV sockets.
EV owners will be able to unlock savings of up to £1,100 a year compared to running a petrol or diesel car.
🇬🇧 Great to visit @astonmartin yesterday — where British engineering meets world-class innovation. 🚗 Took the DBX707 for a spin 🌍 UK trade deals with 🇺🇸 🇪🇺 🇮🇳 to safeguard 150,000 jobs in auto & steel 🔋 £2.3bn Govt boost to power the switch to EVs pic.twitter.com/yIPDOcDeOx
— Lilian Greenwood (@LilianGreenwood) June 6, 2025
The planning changes also apply to workplace and public chargepoints, meaning businesses will be able to install new sockets faster and for less money, increasing the number of public chargepoints.
Ms Greenwood said: "We're cutting down on paperwork to power up the EV revolution, so that drivers, businesses and those looking to make the switch will have more chargepoints to power from, and less red tape to deal with."
Vicky Edmonds, chief executive of EVA England, said: "Making it easier to install both public and private charging infrastructure is essential to helping more drivers switch to electric."
She warned "further action is needed" as "drivers without driveways still face barriers to affordable, convenient charging".
Recommended reading:
Millions of drivers warned they might have illegal number plates amid crackdown
Pest control expert issues 'incredibly sneaky' bed bug warning to all UK homes
Lloyds, Halifax, Bank of Scotland make huge service change for all customers
She added: "We urge the Government to increase its support of the rollout of cross-pavement charging and extend legal rights to tenants and leaseholders, so all drivers can access and benefit from cheaper and more convenient charging."
Jack Cousens, head of roads policy for The AA, believes "removing the planning rules" will help "accelerate installations".
He further added: "The crucial element is ensuring grid connection in a timely manner. This is especially important in rural locations and areas where there is no dedicated off-street parking."
Rocio Concha, director of policy and advocacy at consumer group Which? said it is "an important step in the right direction".

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Miliband's latest misstep will pile unnecessary costs upon developers
Ed Miliband's attempt to lead this country was resoundingly rejected at the ballot box in 2015. Given his influence within the present Government, he may have had the last laugh. The Energy Secretary appears to have emerged triumphant in a clash with embattled Chancellor Rachel Reeves, securing the future of a £13 billion funding allocation for insulating properties across Britain, and very possibly triggering further tax rises this autumn. Having secured access to the fruits of your wallet, Mr Miliband has now turned his sights to redefining British architecture. Under plans revealed today, developers will be forced to install solar panels in the 'vast majority' of new houses, and gas boilers will effectively be banned in newbuilds in favour of heat pumps. The Energy Secretary claims that the moves could save households £500 a year on their energy bills, but appears to have neglected to consider the likely effect on development costs. There are few objections to people choosing to install solar panels, or choosing to buy a house with a heat pump. That builders confronted with market demand are not already supplying them suggests, however, that any premium people are willing to pay for these features will not cover the costs of installing them. The last thing Britain's capacity constrained housing market needs is another effort to pile unnecessary costs upon developers. Measures to ease building are drastically needed. Regrettably, Mr Miliband seems to think otherwise. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Tesla's largest EV plant in the world suffers eighth straight month of declining demand as May sales sink 15%
Outbound volumes from Tesla's GigaShangai factory, which includes exports, sank 15% in May. The drop follows similarly bleak figures out of most of Europe. Although Tesla is increasingly viewed as an AI company, roughly three-fourths of its revenue and gross profit come from selling cars. With two-thirds of the second quarter now in the books, the chance Tesla's EV sales could rebound from its terrible start to the year is swiftly waning. On Thursday data continued to pour in from across the world showing demand for Elon Musk's cars is shrinking in most major markets. One sign of that emerged out of China, where aggregate sales of EVs made in Tesla's largest manufacturing plant worldwide suffered an eighth straight month of declines. According to China's CPCA industry association, outbound volumes from its GigaShangai factory, including exports, sank 15% in May to 61,662 vehicles. It follows similarly bleak figures out of most of Europe. Tesla may have successfully rebranded itself as an AI and robotics company in the eyes of investors, but EV sales still matter because they pay the bills. Its core business accounted for 72% of both revenue and gross profit in the first three months of this year, when volumes dropped to their lowest level in three years. Yet just as sales are crashing, the stock is paradoxically ballooning, with the price rallying by a third since April's terrible Q1 earnings. At $1 trillion, Musk's company is now the ninth most valuable company in the world, worth more than the next 15 largest global carmakers combined. Multiples well above 100 times next year's consensus earnings estimates, like Tesla's, are typically reserved for companies about to see stratospheric earnings growth. In this case, it reflects optimism that Musk is poised to capture Uber and Lyft's ride-hailing market with its robotaxi service scheduled to roll out in the second half across much of the United States. Yet there is no evidence its driverless technology already matches, let alone outperforms, autonomous vehicle leader Waymo, and one well-known Tesla bull sold the remainder of his stockholdings as a result. Citing valuation 'disconnected from underlying fundamentals', Future Fund money manager Gary Black said late last month he exited his position for the first time since 2021 given the risks are firmly to the downside. There are a few bright spots for Tesla car sales, like Norway, the world's most EV-friendly country, that remains loyal to the brand. Australia, a key market where Tesla must compete directly with Chinese brands for western consumers without the help of steep tariffs, likewise saw a 9% gain in May amid soaring demand for the refreshed Model Y. But these individual data points are not reflective of the broader Tesla trend. In most other parts of the world, the picture looks radically different. On Thursday, the United Kingdom followed Germany with an identical 36% decline in Tesla registrations for last month. That leaves Tesla EV sales trackers such as TroyTeslike, one of the most reliable, warning Q2 will likely see a drop of 11% to 395,000 cars in a best-case scenario for Tesla. This story was originally featured on Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Docusign, Manchester United, Petco: Trending Tickers
Docusign (DOCU) shares drop lower in Friday's trading session after reporting that first quarter billings fell short of expectations while topping revenue estimates. British soccer club Manchester United (MANU) is seeing its stock soar after lifting its adjusted EBITDA full-year forecast. Pet retailer Petco (WOOF) sank by over 20% after missing its quarterly sales forecasts as its comparable sales saw wider-than-expected declines tied to tariffs. To watch more expert insights and analysis on the latest market action, check out more Market Domination here. It's time for our trending tickers. We're watching DocuSign on the decline, Manchester United kicking higher, and Petco is sinking. Let's start with DocuSign. It's seeing some of the lowest share prices in over a month. The company's first quarter beating estimates on revenue but missing billings expectations. And the company also adjusting its full year billings outlook, signaling potential stalling for its growth. So the shares as you can see are tumbling there. Um and you know, really it was that billing's forecast that accounts for the declines here. I I you know, DocuSign has been such an interesting story because obviously this was a pandemic sort of really sea change in the way that we signed documents. But since then the normalization happened and then it just hasn't seen that recovery. I mean I was looking back to 2021, the high in the stock 31005 was the high and it's trading what around 75, 76 now. So it's and it's just been bumping along at this level for a very long time. Yeah. So what do Bulls say on a day like this when the stock is just getting wrecked here? Uh team at Jeffries led by Brent Till, uh friend of the show. Uh Brent is sticking with this one. Uh told his clients he would consider that reaction overdone. He still sees this one in his words as a top mid-cap value play. He says he argues the Q1 jitters will pass, product stories broadening out, no change, he says, to leading core signature business. Maintains the buy. He is in the minority though, right? Because there are five buys on this one, 15 holds, and one sell. Target 105. All right, Manchester United shares are up after reporting third quarter earnings despite missing revenue estimates. The football club sharing some rallying news and adjusting their forecast for remainder of the year. Uh this one stock jumping, football club boosts its adjusted guidance for the year. Uh I do see some analysts out there saying, and this is the team also, Jeffries, uh saying the company raised the sales outlook, increased the adjusted guidance, reflects the impact of ongoing cost-cutting efforts. They have a buy. Target is 26. Man United has had a rough year. And so this coming it's down hard because they haven't been playing well. Um and so, you know, it's funny because obviously we don't have really a lot of publicly traded access to sporting teams here in the US, but in Europe, the fate of the stocks is frequently tied to whether they're winning or losing because the thinking I guess if they're losing not as many people are going to be spending money on the club. Um and Man United had a bad season. It lost the Europa League final against Tottenham. Um and that that was back in late May and we saw the stock really drop on that. So this a relief for investors. It looks like that they're cutting cutting costs and trying to to mitigate some of the losses. And it's three. I mean, there's not a ton of coverage and they're split anyway. Two buys, two holds. Yeah. All right, let's talk about Petco. Health seeing losses today following the announcement of its first quarter earnings. Sales for the company down 2.3% this quarter. Comparable sales fell 1.3%. The pet supply retailer says that tariff uncertainties are a primary cause. In addition to growth initiatives which aren't expecting results until late 2025 here. So, um I feel like, you know, Wolf is the ticker on this. And I feel like we always make sort of the Wolf joke because they've had some disappointing quarters as of late. This is not the first that we have seen here um for Petco, unfortunately for them. City uh neutral on this one. I see them cited as saying they see the results is actually encouraging. Uh they argue the weakness was overblown. Changes, they told their clients, are happening in stores which could potentially drive a return to sales growth in the second half. Tariffs, they they emphasize, are being mitigated. Uh stock is down pretty hard this year about 25%. Most analysts like City are are on the sidelines. I mean, you're a pet owner. I know we've talked about this before. Are you a Petco customer? I am not. I'm not a Petco guy. We go in there occasionally. But usually I mean, I think a lot of pet owners you know, order their stuff online now. And City says, uh to your point, the cat category we set in May and the dog category we set last week in case you're wondering. For those of us with dogs and cats. Big news there. I've just a dog household in my case. Nothing wrong with that.