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A ban on single-use plastic plates and cutlery and certain types of polystyrene cups and containers comes into force in England on Sunday.

It follows a similar move by Scotland last year, while a ban in Wales comes in later this month.

The ban also includes single-use plastic trays, bowls and balloon sticks, with the Westminster government saying the aim was to reduce plastic pollution.

Bally Singh, who runs Hooked Fish and Chips in west London, is having to swap from polystyrene to cardboard containers and cups at a cost of nearly £1,000 a year.

He said: “I agree with the change, we need to be more sustainable in regard to our planet but it is a lot for us, a small business.

“We’ve got to make a change so quick, it’s all of a sudden. I don’t feel there’s a lot of variety out there that we can choose from.

“We’ve had to absorb the cost – I can’t pass it onto customers. We’ve increased our prices already because fish has gone up, the price of oil, electricity, gas has gone up – how much can we pass on to our consumers?”

An unrecognisable person enjoying some fish and chips.
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Small businesses are worried about absorbing the cost of switching packaging

According to estimates, England uses 2.7 billion items of single-use cutlery, most of which are plastic, and 721m single-use plates per year, but only 10% are recycled.

The average person uses 37 single-use pieces of cutlery and 18 single-use plastic plates every year.

Environment Secretary Thérèse Coffey, who announced the ban in January, said then: “We all know the absolutely devastating impacts that plastic can have on our environment and wildlife.

“We have listened to the public and these new single-use plastic bans will continue our vital work to protect the environment for future generations.

“I am proud of our efforts in this area, we have banned microbeads, restricted the use of straws, stirrers and cotton buds and our carrier bag charge has successfully cut sales by over 97% in the main supermarkets.”

Read more:
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Microplastics in clouds may be contributing to climate change

Takeaways, food vans, vendors, stalls and hospitality businesses are all affected by the new ruling.

Anyone who breaches the law could face a fine and potentially the cost of an investigation.

Pre-packed food is exempt from the ban, but there will be incentives for producers to use packaging that can be recycled.

The government is also looking at measures to reduce the littering of other plastics, such as wet wipes, tobacco filters and sachets.

But recent announcements delaying key climate targets have infuriated environmentalists.

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Steve Hynd from City to Sea, an organisation that campaigns to stop plastic pollution, said although the plastics ban was a “huge step forward” the group was “disappointed to hear more delays around recycling reforms”.

Earlier this year, the government announced it was delaying packaging recycling reforms for a year, from October 2024 to October 2025.

When Rishi Sunak last week announced a raft of climate policy U-turns, he said he would rule out policy ideas requiring people have seven bins to hit recycling targets.

Mr Hynd said recycling reforms were “a really crucial part of tackling the climate crisis and addressing addiction to single use plastics”.

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Ex-BT chief Patterson sounded out about £300m Waves Audio float

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Ex-BT chief Patterson sounded out about £300m Waves Audio float

A former BT Group chief is being lined up to steer an audio technology business used by many of the world’s leading musicians through a £300m London flotation.

Sky News has learnt that Gavin Patterson, who now sits on various boards including Ocado Group, is in talks to chair Waves Audio ahead of a listing which could come as soon as next month.

City sources said an agreement between the company and Mr Patterson had yet to be finalised.

Sky News revealed several weeks ago that Waves Audio, which is headquartered in Israel, had hired bankers from Panmure Liberum to oversee an initial public offering (IPO).

The company, which is majority-owned by founders Meir Sha’ashua and Gilad Keren, is expected to raise millions of pounds from the sale of new shares, although the details have yet to be finalised.

Waves Audio makes professional digital audio signal processing technology and audio effects used in recordings, mixing, mastering, post-production, broadcasting and live sound.

It employs more than 200 people, and has a major international presence, including in Europe and the US.

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A successful float on London’s main market would be a relative rarity given the depressed level of IPO activity in the last couple of years.

Data compiled by EY, the professional services firm, showed that there were just five new listings on the London market in the first quarter of the year.

Pessimism about the outlook for flotations has been compounded by a steady trickle of companies cancelling their London listings or shifting them overseas – with drugmaker Indivior the latest to abandon the City on Monday.

The UK market’s biggest hope – that Shein, the Chinese-founded online fashion retailer, would defy the impact of US President Donald Trump’s tariffs and list in London – appears to have been dashed, with reports last week suggesting that it would float in Hong Kong instead.

A spokesman for Waves Audio declined to comment.

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Newly re-privatised NatWest names Chamberlain as retail bank chief

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Newly re-privatised NatWest names Chamberlain as retail bank chief

NatWest Group has picked a new head of its high street branch network in the lender’s first significant appointment since ending its 17-year tenure in partial taxpayer ownership.

Sky News has learnt that Solange Chamberlain has been chosen as NatWest’s new retail bank chief executive, nearly six months after predecessor David Lindberg’s departure was announced.

Ms Chamberlain, who has worked for NatWest since 2019, will take up her new role on 1 July, subject to regulatory approval.

A former investment banker, she will report to Paul Thwaite, the bank’s group chief executive.

Her previous roles at NatWest include chief operating officer of its commercial bank and more recently as group director of strategic development.

NatWest’s retail bank has more than 18 million customers across Britain, making it one of the industry’s four biggest retail banks alongside Barclays, HSBC and Lloyds Banking Group.

The recent acquisition of Sainsbury’s Bank added 1 million accounts to NatWest’s retail customer base.

Responding to an enquiry from Sky News, NatWest confirmed the appointment on Monday afternoon.

Mr Thwaite said in a statement that Ms Chamberlain’s “knowledge of our customers, sharp strategic thinking, and track record of transformation delivery will help us to grow our retail business and succeed with customers”.

On Friday, the Treasury sold the last of its shareholding in NatWest, having bailed out the then Royal Bank of Scotland with £45.5bn of taxpayers’ money during the 2008 financial crisis.

On Monday, shares in the bank were trading at around 524.6p, giving it a market value of more than £42bn.

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SME lender Tide eyes $1bn valuation in Apis funding talks

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SME lender Tide eyes bn valuation in Apis funding talks

Tide, the business banking services platform, is in advanced talks to raise new funding in a deal expected to make it Britain’s latest technology unicorn.

Sky News has learnt that Tide has been negotiating the terms of an investment from Apis Partners, a prolific investor in the fintech sector, for some time.

City sources cautioned that a deal between the two was not yet certain to take place, and that other investors were also in discussions.

Apis Partners has backed early-stage companies such as Moneybox, the UK-based digital wealth manager, and Thunes, a digital payments infrastructure provider.

Significantly, the firm has made a string of investments in India, which is overtaking the UK as Tide’s single-biggest geography.

Tide now has roughly 650,000 SME customers in both Britain and India, with the latter market expanding at a faster rate.

The precise terms of a deal between Apis and Tide were unclear on Monday.

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Morgan Stanley, the Wall Street bank, has been advising Tide on the fundraising, which is expected to comprise a combination of primary and secondary shares.

Tide was founded in 2015 by George Bevis and Errol Damelin, before launching two years later.

It describes itself as the leading business financial platform in the UK, offering business accounts and related banking services.

The company also provides its SME ‘members’ in the UK a set of connected administrative solutions from invoicing to accounting.

It now boasts a roughly 11% SME banking market share in Britain.

Tide, which employs about 2,000 people, also launched in Germany last May.

The company’s investors include Apax Partners, Augmentum Fintech and LocalGlobe.

Chaired by the City grandee Sir Donald Brydon, Tide declined to comment on Monday.

Apis Partners also declined to comment.

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