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Rishi Sunak and Grant Shapps will lead an intensive series of engagements this week in a determined effort to strengthen the UK’s energy independence.

The prime minister and energy security secretary are meeting with industry leaders from oil, gas and renewable sectors aimed at driving forward measures to safeguard national energy security and diminish reliance on potentially hostile states.

Drawing upon the UK’s expertise in the energy industry, Mr Sunak will outline plans that emphasise job creation and economic expansion while ensuring leaders such as Vladimir Putin can never again exploit energy as a weapon to blackmail other nations.

Central to the government’s energy security strategy is a significant emphasis on empowering Britain through domestic resources.

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PM: ‘We’re making it easier for people’

Mr Sunak is expected to unveil investment plans that prioritise powering up the UK from within. This approach seeks to reduce dependency on imported fossil fuels by bolstering the domestic oil and gas industry, investing in cutting-edge clean technologies, and isolating Russia’s regime from global energy markets.

The government’s goal is to ensure the UK seizes opportunities to fortify its energy infrastructure in the present, and to secure long-term energy independence, resilience, and prosperity for the future.

Analysis: Green policies seen as election battleground

Another week, another policy push. On Monday the government revealed a new housing strategy, next week the focus will be on energy security.

The details however are still light: Rishi Sunak will meet energy bosses, support is expected new renewables but there remains a commitment to oil and gas in the North Sea. The Sunday Times reports the prime minister will announce multimillion-pound funding for a carbon capture project in Scotland.

It comes as Rishi Sunak’s green credentials come under fire: the government is accused of watering down and weaponising environmental policies like ULEZ in Uxbridge, west London.

There is certainly evidence in the Sunday newspapers they see green policies as an election battleground. Writing in the Sun on Sunday Grant Shapps says Keir Starmer’s stance on new oil and gas licences “threatens the lights going out”, and the Telegraph reports that Rishi Sunak is “on motorists’ side” over anti-car schemes.

What’s clear is the PM wants to set the agenda in recess, with long-term strategies on energy and housing. The trouble is the Conservatives may not be in power long enough to see any of this through.

Mr Shapps said: “Energy security is national security. Since Putin’s illegal invasion of Ukraine, the government has driven Putin from our energy market, paid around half of a typical family’s energy bill and grown our economy by driving forward major energy projects.

“This week we will go even further. Forging ahead with critical measures to power up Britain from Britain – including supporting our invaluable oil and gas industry, making the most of our home-grown energy sources and backing British innovation in renewables.”

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How Russia affects our energy bills

He added: “And across government, we will champion Britain’s businesses to deliver on the prime minister’s priority of growing the economy – helping them to create new jobs and even whole new industries across the UK.”

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In line with these efforts, the week’s agenda will also highlight support for British innovation in emerging industries, particularly in areas such as carbon capture and storage. It will also showcase initiatives aimed at accelerating the adoption of cutting-edge renewable technologies across the country.

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The government’s strategic push for energy security builds upon the UK’s years of critical support for the North Sea oil and gas sector and its world-leading achievements in renewable energy.

The UK has so far cut emissions by 48% between 1990 and 2021, while growing the economy by 65% over the same period.

Some 41.5% of the nation’s electricity comes from renewable sources in 2022 – up from 6.7% in 2010 – as the UK leads the world in the response to Mr Putin’s invasion of Ukraine and driving Russia out of its energy market for good.

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CFTC chair’s final message includes a call for crypto guardrails

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CFTC chair’s final message includes a call for crypto guardrails

In what he said would be his last remarks as CFTC chair, Rostin Behnam said he intended to advocate for the commission to address regulatory challenges over digital assets.

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MPs vote against new national inquiry into grooming gangs

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MPs vote against new national inquiry into grooming gangs

A Tory bid to launch a new national inquiry into the grooming gangs scandal has been voted down by MPs amid criticism of “political game playing”.

MPs rejected the amendment to the Children’s Wellbeing Bill by 364 to 111, a majority of 253.

However, even if the Commons had supported the measure, it wouldn’t have actually forced the government to open the desired inquiry, due to parliamentary procedure.

Instead, it would have killed the government’s legislation, the aim of which is to reform things like the children’s care system and raise educational standards in schools.

Follow politics latest: Reaction to vote

Tonight’s vote was largely symbolic – aimed at putting pressure on Labour following days of headlines after comments by Elon Musk brought grooming gangs back into the spotlight.

The world’s richest man has hit out at Sir Keir Starmer and safeguarding minister Jess Phillips, after she rejected a new national inquiry into child sexual exploitation in Oldham, saying this should be done at a local level instead.

The Tories also previously said an Oldham inquiry should be done locally and in 2015 commissioned a seven-year national inquiry into child sex abuse, led by Professor Alexis Jay, which looked at grooming gangs.

However, they didn’t implement any of its recommendations while in office – and Sir Keir has vowed to do so instead of launching a fresh investigation into the subject.

Jess Phillips exclusive:
Victims can have inquiry if they want one

The division list showed no Labour MPs voted in favour of the Conservative amendment.

Those who backed the proposal include all of Reform’s five MPs and 101 Tory MPs – though some senior figures, including former prime minister Rishi Sunak and former home secretaries James Cleverly and Suella Braverman, were recorded as not voting.

The Liberal Democrats abstained.

Speaking to Sophy Ridge on the Politics Hub before the vote, education minister Stephen Morgan condemned “political game playing”.

“What we’re seeing from the Conservatives is a wrecking amendment which would basically allow this bill not to go any further,” he said.

“That’s political game playing and not what I think victims want. Victims want to see meaningful change.”

As well as the Jay review, a number of local inquiries were also carried out, including in Telford and Rotherham.

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Grooming gangs: What happened?

Speaking earlier in the day at PMQs, Sir Keir Starmer accused Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch of “jumping on the bandwagon” after Mr Musk’s intervention and spreading “lies and misinformation”.

Referring to her time in government as children’s and equalities minister, the prime minister said: “I can’t recall her once raising this issue in the House, once calling for a national inquiry.”

He also said having spoken to victims of grooming gangs this morning, “they were clear they want action now, not the delay of a further inquiry”.

Ms Badenoch has argued that the public will start to “worry about a cover-up” if the prime minister resists calls for a national inquiry, and said no one has yet “joined up the dots” on grooming.

Girls as young as 11 were groomed and raped across a number of towns in England – including Oldham, Rochdale, Rotherham and Telford – over a decade ago in a national scandal that was exposed in 2013.

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We should hone ‘responsible AI’ before Copilot goes autopilot

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We should hone ‘responsible AI’ before Copilot goes autopilot

There is a critical need for a comprehensive, responsible AI approach to address privacy, security, bias and accountability challenges in the emerging agentic economy.

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