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A property firm has been fined £80,000 after an asbestos surveyor died following an electrical explosion.

Inverness-based Global Energy Nigg Limited pleaded guilty to a health and safety breach before Tain Sheriff Court on Wednesday.

The Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service (COPFS) said Christopher Wayne Earley’s death was “entirely avoidable”.

Mr Earley, the director of CWE Asbestos Consultants Ltd, was injured on 10 December 2020 while carrying out a survey of a large disused fabrication workshop on behalf of Global Energy Nigg Limited at Nigg Energy Park, also known as The Port of Nigg, in the Cromarty Firth.

The 64-year-old entered an electrical switch room which appeared to be out of operation as part of his inspection, the COPFS said.

He opened an electrical cabinet, which set off a flash caused by an electrical flashover – a high-current electrical discharge through an air gap between conductors.

As a result, Mr Earley suffered significant burns and later died in hospital on 10 March 2021.

An investigation by the Health and Safety Executive found Global Energy Nigg Limited had failed to maintain the switch room in an appropriate condition.

Investigators found there was no internal door and no visual warning of electrical danger at the doorway.

Live switch panels did not carry any suitable warning signs or labelling, and redundant panels were also not marked.

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Safety failings ‘foreseeable and entirely avoidable’

Debbie Carroll, who leads on health and safety investigations for COPFS, said: “Christopher Wayne Earley lost his life in circumstances which were foreseeable and entirely avoidable.

“By failing to maintain the switch room in an appropriate condition Global Energy Nigg Limited put someone not employed by them at unacceptable risk.

“This prosecution should remind duty holders that failing to take reasonable health and safety measures can have fatal consequences and they will be held accountable for this failure.”

In a statement, Global Energy Nigg Limited said: “Global Energy Group express its sincere condolences to the individual’s family and friends following this tragic accident.

“The health and safety of everyone that works in and around the facility continues to be our top priority.”

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Whitakers’ real-life Willy Wonka on shrinkflation and the rise of chocolate-flavour bars

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Whitakers' real-life Willy Wonka on shrinkflation and the rise of chocolate-flavour bars

Britain loves chocolate.

We’re estimated to consume 8.2kg each every year, a good chunk of it at Christmas, but the cost of that everyday luxury habit has been rising fast.

Whitakers have been making chocolate in Skipton in North Yorkshire for 135 years, but they have never experienced price pressures as extreme as those in the last five.

“We buy liquid chocolate and since 2023, the price of our chocolate has doubled,” explains William Whitaker, the real-life Willy Wonka and the fourth generation of the family to run the business.

William Whitaker, managing director of the company
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William Whitaker, managing director of the company

“It could have been worse. If we hadn’t been contracted [with a supplier], it would have trebled.

“That represents a £5,000 per-tonne increase, and we use a thousand tonnes a year. And we only sell £12-£13m of product, so it’s a massive effect.”

Whitakers makes 10 million pieces of chocolate a week in a factory on the much-expanded site of the original bakery where the business began.

Automated production lines snake through the site moulding, cutting, cooling, coating and wrapping a relentless procession of fondants, cremes, crisps and pure chocolate products for customers, including own-brand retail, supermarkets, and the catering trade.

Steepest inflation in the business

All of them have faced price increases as Whitakers has grappled with some of the steepest inflation in the food business.

Cocoa prices have soared in the last two years, largely because of a succession of poor cocoa harvests in West Africa, where Ghana and the Ivory Coast produce around two-thirds of global supply.

A combination of drought and crop disease cut global output by around 14% last year, pushing consumer prices in the other direction, with chocolate inflation passing 17% in the UK in October.

Skimpflation and shrinkflation

Some major brands have responded by cutting the chocolate content of products – “skimpflation” – or charging more for less – “shrinkflation”.

Household-name brands including Penguin and Club have cut the cocoa and milk solid content so far they can no longer be classified as chocolate, and are marketed instead as “chocolate-flavour”.

Whitakers have stuck to their recipes and product sizes, choosing to pass price increases on to customers while adapting products to the new market conditions.

“Not only are major brands putting up prices over 20%, sometimes 40%, they’ve also reduced the size of their pieces and sometimes the ingredients,” says William Whitaker.

“We haven’t done any of that. We knew that long-term, the market will fall again, and that happier days will return.

“We’ve introduced new products where we’ve used chocolate as a coating rather than a solid chocolate because the centre, which is sugar-based, is cheaper than the chocolate.

“We’ve got a big product range of fondant creams, and others like gingers and Brazil nuts, where we’re using that chocolate as a coating.”

The costs are adding up
Image:
The costs are adding up

A deluge of price rises

Brazil nuts have enjoyed their own spike in price, more than doubling to £15,000 a tonne at one stage.

On top of commodity prices determined by markets beyond their control, Whitakers face the same inflationary pressures as other UK businesses.

“We’ve had the minimum wage increasing every year, we had the national insurance rise last year, and sort of hidden a little bit in this budget is a business rate increase.

“This is a small business, we turn over £12m, but our rates will go up nearly £100,000 next year before any other costs.

“If you add up all the cocoa and all the other cost increases in 2024 and 2025, it’s nearly £3m of cost increases we’ve had to bear. Some of that is returning to a little normality. It does test the relevance of what you do.”

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UK to rejoin EU’s Erasmus student exchange scheme – reports

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UK to rejoin EU's Erasmus student exchange scheme - reports

The UK is to rejoin the European Union’s Erasmus student exchange scheme, according to reports.

The popular programme allowed Britons to spend a year studying at European universities as part of their degree, without paying extra fees, and vice versa for their European counterparts.

It ended for British students after Brexit on 1 January 2021 and was replaced by the Turing scheme.

But ministers could announce the UK will rejoin Erasmus from January 2027 as soon today, The Times and The Guardian have reported.

What is the Erasmus programme?

The Erasmus programme is a popular European Union student exchange scheme.

It allows university students to study or undertake internships abroad in other European countries for between two and 12 months.

Students receive grants for travel and living costs and receive university credit for the courses they take abroad.

The programme came to an end for British students after Brexit on 1 January 2021.

The scheme began in 1987 as a university student exchange programme and has grown to include volunteering and vocational training.

How did we get here?

Sir Keir Starmer promised a post-Brexit reset deal with Brussels and announced the government was working on rejoining the programme in May.

Negotiations have included work on “mutually agreed financial terms” for the UK and the EU.

The UK had pushed for a discount on membership fees, which are calculated on the basis of a country’s gross domestic product (GDP), The Times reported.

It said the EU is understood to have offered the government a 30% reduction of fees in the first year of membership.

Labour MP Darren Frith told Sky News’ Politics Hub he would “welcome” such a move.

The Guardian reported that, as well as university-based study exchanges, British students will be able to participate in vocational training placements under the scheme.


Minister on Brexit ‘self-harm’

Cabinet Office minister Nick Thomas-Symonds held talks with Maros Sefcovic, the European Commission’s trade lead, in Brussels last week.

A Cabinet Office spokesman said: “We are not commenting on ongoing talks.”

‘Fantastic opportunities for students’

But the UK’s universities welcomed the apparent breakthrough.

Tim Bradshaw, chief executive of the Russell Group of leading universities, said: “We’re delighted at the UK’s association to Erasmus+.

“With an even greater scope than previous programmes, Erasmus+ opens up fantastic opportunities for students, adult learners and young people to all benefit from new experiences and learning.

“It will also renew the huge contributions that EU students and staff make to life on our university campuses.”

The Lib Dems, who have been campaigning to rejoin Erasmus, welcomed the news.

Leader Sir Ed Davey said: “This is a moment of real opportunity and a clear step towards repairing the disastrous Conservative Brexit deal.”

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Warnings of NHS ‘disruption and delays’ as resident doctors in England begin strike

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Warnings of NHS 'disruption and delays' as resident doctors in England begin strike

Resident doctors across England begin a five-day strike this morning over pay and jobs, marking the 14th walkout by them since March 2023.

It coincides with the record number of flu cases in England and NHS leaders warning of a “huge strain on hospitals” and strikes causing “further disruption and delays”.

Resident doctors are striking in England from 7am today until 7am on Monday 22 December.

Sir Keir Starmer called the action “irresponsible” while Health Secretary Wes Streeting has rejected the British Medical Association’s (BMA) pay demands, accusing the union of a “shocking disregard for patient safety”.

But the BMA insists its strike is “entirely avoidable” and has demanded a “credible offer” to avert “real-terms pay cuts”.


Streeting: Government has gone ‘as far as we can’ with BMA negotiations

Why are resident doctors on strike?

The government says resident doctors have already received an average pay rise of 28.9% over the past three years (2023-24 to 2025-6).

But the BMA has been demanding an additional 26% pay uplift to restore what they say amounts to erosion in their earnings, once inflation is taken into account. Although there is some dispute about the extent of the real terms fall, because of the BMA’s use of the Retail Price Index (RPI) in its calculation.

Hopes that the strike could be averted were dashed on Monday when the BMA said 83% of resident doctors rejected a fresh proposal from the government.

While it did not include any extra pay, the offer included the fast expansion of specialist training posts; covering out-of-pocket expenses such as exam fees; and offering to extend the union’s strike mandate to enable any walkout to be rescheduled to January.


BMA boss on decision to go ahead with doctors’ strike

What if I need urgent medical care?

The Department of Health and Social Care says it is important people do not avoid seeking urgent care, and should use 999 if it is a serious or life-threatening emergency. For everything else, there is NHS 111 or the NHS App.

It adds that patients should turn up for planned appointments unless they have been told otherwise. Any appointments that need to be rescheduled will be given priority.

During strikes, there are exemptions or special arrangements, called derogations, which allow certain essential services to continue operating. It means critical services will be maintained to ensure patient safety and prevent serious harm.

How much do resident doctors earn?

There are many different types of resident doctor in England with different levels of pay. Full Fact, which has crunched the numbers, said they currently earn between £38,831 and £73,992 a year, but that does not take into account extra pay for unsociable hours.

Full Fact states that resident doctors typically get between a quarter and a third more than their basic salary from other sources.

This takes estimated average earnings (in the year ending August 2025) to between £45,846 and £81,061 (although the government claims the figures are more like £49,000 to £97,000).

Comparisons with other countries are difficult because of how doctors are categorised. Broadly, resident doctors in England earn about the same as those in Ireland and anything between 1% less and 26% more than in New Zealand.

But doctors in Australia earn somewhere between 23% and 48% more than their counterparts in England.

BMA rejects offer despite Streeting’s attack

Wes Streeting took a risky line of attack. He put an offer of more jobs to the BMA.

And while that offer was being considered he went on the offensive.

He warned the NHS would collapse if the resident doctors carried on with their strikes during a record flu season.

He repeated that line throughout last weekend when doctors were voting on whether to call off the strikes.

The BMA responded by accusing Streeting of “scaremongering”. In the end, 83.2% of those who took part in the poll rejected the government’s offer.

Senior NHS consultants gave interviews saying flu season was bad, but to be expected, and with the same contingency planning that happens every summer (off flu season) the NHS would cope.

The BMA will argue that Streeting can make the resident doctors his scapegoat for an NHS that will struggle again this winter.

They rejected that idea completely. And now they have rejected his offer.

What has the reaction been?

The prime minister has said the strike comes “on the back of a very substantial pay increase in the last year or so”.

“I think it’s irresponsible action by the BMA,” he told MPs.


BMA actions ‘irresponsible’, says Starmer

The health secretary called for doctors to ignore the strike and criticised what he called the “fantasy demand for another 26% pay rise,” adding that “it reveals the BMA’s shocking disregard for patient safety”.

Dr Jack Fletcher, chairman of the BMA’s resident doctors’ committee, said the strikes were “entirely avoidable”. He added that “we should start negotiating, and the government should stop game-playing”.

But organisations representing NHS trusts have been scathing about the walkouts. Daniel Elkeles, chief executive of NHS Providers, said: “Trust leaders and staff will be working now to minimise the impact of the strike, but sadly it will mean further disruption and delays.”

Meanwhile, Rory Deighton, acute and community care director at the NHS Confederation, said: “These strikes come at the worst possible time, with rapidly rising flu levels putting huge strain on hospitals.”

What about public support for strikes?

Public support for the strikes is low, according to a YouGov poll released last week.

The results showed 58% of those asked either somewhat or strongly opposed the industrial action, while 33% somewhat or strongly supported it.

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