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Two hurt in Derby car incident released from hospital
“There will be real upset and trauma for many people who witnessed what happened on the night as well, of course, as those victims who were directly impacted, but we understand that there were no fatalities and that two people have already been discharged from hospital and more we hope, soon.”
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Stuart Penkett obituary | Environment
Stuart Penkett’s discovery of the chemical processes that cause acid rain transformed our understanding of atmospheric pollution and what was required to deal with it.
Penkett, who has died aged 87, and his colleagues at the Atomic Energy Research Establishment (AERE) in Harwell, Berkshire, published a landmark paper in 1979 in the journal Atmospheric Environment, identifying how sulphur dioxide, primarily emitted from industrial sources, is converted into sulphuric acid in clouds that subsequently falls as rain.
Acid rain had been causing significant environmental harm throughout the 20th century, devastating aquatic ecosystems and forests, as well as damaging infrastructure throughout Europe and North America, where chemicals concentrated in the atmosphere above industrialised areas.
Later, while based at the University of East Anglia (UEA) in Norwich in the 1980s, Penkett worked on understanding the processes that produce and destroy ozone in the Earth’s atmosphere. His measurements helped identify the role being played by chlorofluorocarbons and other ozone-depleting substances (ODSs) and would contribute significantly to the successful implementation of the 1987 Montreal Protocol, the international treaty designed to protect the Earth’s ozone layer by phasing out the production and emission of ODSs.
The protocol was signed by all United Nations member states, the first treaty in UN history to achieve universal ratification. For many years afterwards, Penkett would contribute to the UN’s Scientific Assessments of Ozone Depletion reports, which underpinned the protocol. The former UN secretary general Kofi Annan described Montreal as “perhaps the single most successful international agreement to date”. What Penkett described in New Scientist magazine as the “creeping horror of ozone hole-induced damage” has since been reversed.
Born in Eccles, Lancashire, Stuart was the only child of Arthur, a fitter at Gardner and Sons, an engine building company in Eccles, and Ilene (nee Henshaw), who had been a secretary before marriage. Penkett passed the 11-plus exam and attended Eccles grammar school before, in 1960, graduating with a degree in chemistry at Leeds University.
He stayed at Leeds to gain his PhD, specialising in chemical kinetics – the branch of physical chemistry focused on understanding the rate of chemical reactions and the factors that influence them. He then spent two years carrying out postdoctoral research in the US at the University of Southern California before returning to the UK to work in the labs at the multinational consumer-goods company Unilever.
In 1968 Penkett was appointed senior (later principal) scientific officer at the AERE, initially focusing on how atmospheric pollutants oxidise and damage materials with which they come into contact. In addition to his discovery of the processes causing acid rain, his other work at the AERE and subsequently at UEA showed how our atmosphere breaks down pollutants, effectively cleaning the air we breathe, and how badly adjusted domestic gas stoves can cause serious health risks to those using them.
He left the AERE in 1985 to join UEA, initially as a Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) reader, before becoming professor of environmental sciences in 1990. He would remain at UEA until retirement in 2004, following which he became emeritus professor.
Penkett established the Weybourne Atmospheric Observatory (WAO) on the Norfolk coast to the north of Norwich, to monitor pollutants and record other atmospheric phenomena. It is now one of the stations in the World Meteorological Organisation’s Global Atmosphere Watch network.
He also led the development of the UK Met Office’s C-130 aircraft, which became the Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements, an airborne laboratory capable of measuring the chemistry of the atmosphere. In addition, by bringing together scientists from different universities and NERC research centres, he created the first co-ordinated national programme for atmospheric chemistry, offering a blueprint for future global research projects.
Among numerous appointments, Penkett was a member of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, an affiliate scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado, and a member of the Max Planck Society, a non-governmental, non-profit association of German research institutes. He also worked for the World Meteorological Organization and the European Research Council, advised the British and US governments on climate and atmospheric science, and was awarded the Gaskell Memorial Medal by the Royal Meteorological Society in 1987.
In 2003 he received the Haagen-Smit award, considered the “Nobel prize” in air quality research, from the academic publisher Elsevier, for his original, seminal paper on acid rain formation.
Penkett’s made the UEA’s school of environmental sciences the UK’s leading research group looking into atmospheric chemistry measurements. He trained a large cohort of young scientists now working in important research positions, and was generous with his time, notably with visitors from abroad, who would always be treated to a fish-and-chip supper after visiting the WAO.
In 1962 Penkett married Marigold Gibbens, whom he had met during his PhD course while seconded to the Akers research laboratory in Welwyn, Hertfordshire. For many years she worked as his personal assistant.
She survives him, along with three of their four children, Fiona, Clive and Rebecca, and five grandchildren. Another son, Christopher, died in 2021.
UK News
Scott Mills sacked from BBC Radio 2 over 'personal conduct'
On 24 March he ended his programme saying “back tomorrow” and the following morning Gary Davies was standing in for him.
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Starmer says UK won’t get ‘dragged into Iran war’ as Labour launches its local elections campaign – UK politics live | Politics
Starmer insists UK won’t get ‘dragged into’ Iran war, highlighting his willingness to resist Trump’s calls for more help
Keir Starmer is speaking now.
He thanks Sarah, and say he has the cabinet with him in the room. There is a lot of energy there, he claims.
Moving into the substance of his speech, he starts by referring to the Ukraine war, praising the courage of the Ukrainians, before move on to the Iran war.
He goes on:
People look at their screens and they’re worried when they see explosions, infrastructure blown up, the rhetoric that goes with it, worried about whether this is going to escalate even further.
And therefore it’s really important that I reiterate where I stand and where this government stands, because this is not our war and we are not going to be dragged into it.
He says this applies “whatever the pressure [to join in] and whoever it’s coming from”.
(Starmer is referring to Donald Trump at this point, highlighting is refusal to comply with Trump’s requests for more military support.)
Starmer says Nigel Farage and Kemi Badenoch both “wanted to go straight in, with both feet, into the war without thinking through the consequences”.
And he criticises Zack Polanski for wanting to leave Nato.

Key events
Starmer ended his speech talking about the NHS, where he named Wes Streeting, the health secretary, as the person leading efforts to improve it.
He said:
This is the thing, I think, that broke all of our hearts is that confidence in the NHS was a record high in 2010 and then it plummeted under the last government because of what they did to the NHS.
Gradually, through the hard work that we’ve put in, the investment we’ve put in, Wes’s leadership, that confidence is going back up because people can see that it matters to us.
We don’t see public services just as a chart of how much money you can save here or there. We see it as something you invest in because they’re vital for people.
This did not sound like the sort of thing that Streeting would say if, as some reports have claimed, he were thinking of sacking Streeting.
If this had been a major launch, with a lot of national media journalists present and Starmer taking questions, someone might have asked about today’s Guardian report saying the NHS is set to miss key targets to shorten waiting times for help at A&E, cancer care and planned hospital treatment.
But it was not that sort of event, and after Starmer’s speech the formal part of the event wrapped up.
Starmer complained about other parties whipping up division, and he specifically criticised Nick Timothy, the shadow justice secretary, for “complaining about Muslims praying in public”.
Labour, by contrast, values bringing people together, he said.
And he highlighted Labour’s Pride in Place programme as an example of that.
He claimed this was an example of Labour trusting people, because under the scheme “you decide what the money is spent on, because you’re going to have a better idea than someone in Westminster or Whitehall, and that’s why it’s Pride in Wolverhampton. Let Wolverhampton decide.”
Starmer refers to Labour’s cost of living measures (see 9.42am), saying that energy bills will start going down this month because of a decision by the government.
Starmer insists UK won’t get ‘dragged into’ Iran war, highlighting his willingness to resist Trump’s calls for more help
Keir Starmer is speaking now.
He thanks Sarah, and say he has the cabinet with him in the room. There is a lot of energy there, he claims.
Moving into the substance of his speech, he starts by referring to the Ukraine war, praising the courage of the Ukrainians, before move on to the Iran war.
He goes on:
People look at their screens and they’re worried when they see explosions, infrastructure blown up, the rhetoric that goes with it, worried about whether this is going to escalate even further.
And therefore it’s really important that I reiterate where I stand and where this government stands, because this is not our war and we are not going to be dragged into it.
He says this applies “whatever the pressure [to join in] and whoever it’s coming from”.
(Starmer is referring to Donald Trump at this point, highlighting is refusal to comply with Trump’s requests for more military support.)
Starmer says Nigel Farage and Kemi Badenoch both “wanted to go straight in, with both feet, into the war without thinking through the consequences”.
And he criticises Zack Polanski for wanting to leave Nato.
Powell introduces “Sarah from Dudley”, who is talking about having two “amazing” adopted twins.
Sarah is talking about the impact of the 30-hour free childcare allowance introduced by Labour. It has saved the family £400 a week, she says. It meant she could return to work full-time, she says.
Powell goes on to make jokes (not particularly good ones) about Nigel Farage and Zack Polanki.
Farage has got a new job as Donald Trump’s intern, she says.
And she says Polanski is making “hypnotic promises” that are “just an illusion”.
Labour launches its English local elections campaign
The Labour local elections launch is starting.
Lucy Powell, the deputy leader, is opening the proceedings.
She starts by saying the party is “immensely proud” of the way Keir Starmer has dealt with the Iran war, and his decision “in the face of a lot of pressure and criticism not to follow blindly into an offensive war”.
In Australia the Labor government has announced that it is halving excise duty on fuel for three months. Only last week Reform UK called for VAT on road fuel to halved for three months. Explaining the policy, Reform UK said:
The tax cut would reduce pump prices by around 12p per litre for petrol and 14p per litre for diesel at current prices, at a static exchequer cost of about £1.5bn. The measure could be funded within current spending envelopes using the estimated £2.7bn windfall from higher oil prices that the chancellor has received.
Tories call for VAT on household energy bills to be removed for three years
At the Conservative party conference last year, the Tories announced plans to cut £165 a year from the average household energy bill by getting rid of the renewables obligation subsidy and the carbon tax.
Today Kemi Badenoch is visiting an oil rig in the North Sea to publicise what the Conservatives are calling their cheap energy plan. In addition to the measures announced last year, they are now proposing removing VAT from household energy bills for three years. They say this would save the average household £94 per year, at a cost of £2.2bn. They say they would fund this by cutting subsisides for renewables.
In a statement issued overnight, Badenoch said:
Labour promised to cut energy bills by £300 but they are still higher than when they took office. Instead, Ed Miliband is blocking drilling in the North Sea during an energy crisis and Rachel Reeves is hiking taxes on working families to pay the energy bills of those on benefits.
The Conservatives would use extra tax revenue from our plan to Get Britain Drilling in the North Sea to cut taxes and ease the cost of living. Our Cheap Power Plan would scrap VAT on energy bills and cut bills by £200 for every family.
Badenoch also says the Tories would “back the North Sea” by allowing new oil and gas drilling licences to be issued, and repealing the windfall tax on energy firms. They claim this would boost tax revenues, which could be used to cut costs for households.
Labour highlights 13 ‘key cost of living measures’ coming into force within next week as it launches local elections campaign
As Jessica Elgot reports in her overnight story on the Labour local elections launch this morning, Keir Starmer will also highlight what Labour is doing to help people with the cost of living.
In his news release issued ahead of the launch, Labour has highlighted more than a dozen measures coming into force within the next week that it says will help people with the cost of living. Here is the list.
Key cost of living measures coming into force on 1 April:
-Prescription charge freeze, keeping prescriptions under £10
-National Living Wage (age 21+) rises to £12.71 an hour – 4.1% increase
-National Minimum Wage (age 18-20) rises to £10.85, under 18 £8, apprentice £8
-Energy bill support – average £117 reduction on household energy bills, applied to all households on top of £150 Warm Homes Discount for millions of low income households.
-Benefits uprating – most inflation-linked benefits to rise by 3.8% (CPI Sept 2025)
-Child benefit increases
-Crisis & Resilience Fund launches (replacing Household Support Fund). New £1 billion per year fund begins April 2026.Offers: Cash‑first crisis payments; Housing payments (replacing Discretionary Housing Payments)
-Healthy Start vouchers increase by 50p a week
Key cost of living measures coming into force on 6 April:
-State pension uplift – increasing by 4.8% rising to £241.30 per week
-Two child limit removed – expected to lift 450,000 children out of poverty
-Statutory Sick Pay rights from day 1
-Day one entitlement to paternity leave and unpaid parental leave
-Universal credit standard allowances receive an additional 2.3% uplift
Starmer to say Iran war means Labour’s values needed more than ever at local elections campaign launch
Good morning. Keir Starmer will today chair a meeting in Downing Street on how the government responds to the economic consequences of the Iran war, which has the potential to upend much of what the government is trying to do to improve living standards. And so he is probably not too happy about the fact that this morning he has to attend an event in the West Midlands launching Labour’s English local elections campaign.
It is a relatively low-key launch. “The Westminster press pack wasn’t invited for a full Q&A,” Politico reports. Starmer will be back in London later for his Iran war meeting.
No one expects Labour to do well in the local elections and last week Stephen Fisher, an Oxford politics professor and an elections expert who works with John Curtice on the widely admired general election exit polls, published his projections for how many seats he expects parties to win and lose in the English local elections, based on current polling and other factors. It is terrible reading for Labour.
As Fisher points out in his blog on this, his equivalent forecast for Labour losses in 2025 turned out to be reasonably accurate.
According to the extracts from his speech briefed in advance, Starmer will not be forecasting success for Labour at the local elections, but he will argue that the war in Iran means that Labour is needed more than ever. He will say:
We’re going to fight to earn every vote. Fight for our values. And fight for the country we are building together, a Britain built for all.
Because, in the context of everything that is happening in the world. Those values – that fairness we stand for – it’s never been more important.
That is the thing about the volatile world we live in now. It tests, not just our security, our strength on the world stage. It is also tests our fairness at home. Our unity.
He will also attack Reform UK and the Conservatives in particular for their initial unqualified support for President Trump’s decision to go to war.
We will protect our forces, our people, our allies in the region. But I made the decision that it is not in our national interest to commit British forces to a war, without a clear legal basis and a clear plan – and I stand by that.
It’s a question of judgement. Do not forget that the Tories and Reform would have rushed us into this. With no thought of the consequences, including for the cost of living. Utterly reckless.
Here is the agenda for the day.
9.15am: Eluned Morgan, the Welsh first minister, launches Labour’s campaign for the Senedd elections.
Morning: Keir Starmer launches Labour’s campaign for the English local elections in the West Midlands.
10.30am: Rhun ap Iorwerth, the Plaid Cymru leader, launches Plaid’s campaign for the Senedd elections.
11.30am: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.
Afternoon: Starmer hosts a roundtable with business leaders to discuss the impact of the Iran war.
2.40pm: Zack Polanski, the Green party leader, addresses the National Education Union’s conference.
Afternoon: Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, and Ed Miliband, the energy secretary, take part in a virtual meeting with G7 counterparts to discuss the economic impact of the Iran war.
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