
RT Gale
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WATCH LIVE: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's statements to the media (in both English and Hebrew) twitter.com/i/broadcasts/1…

In a more dangerous world, weakening our energy security is a risk Britain cannot afford. The transition to net zero must be managed with realism, stability and security in mind. The UK faces a clear choice: strengthen domestic energy supply or increase our dependence on imports.


Stonehenge tunnel officially scrapped - after more than £179,000,000 spent on plan lbc.co.uk/article/stoneh…




SPA 2012: flat out through Eau Rouge with a real engine screaming between 12,000 - 18,000 RPM. Sound on 🔊 and wait for the music 🎶

On today's Coffee House Shots podcast Tim Shipman is joined by policy adviser to four prime ministers, John Bew. In an essay for the New Statesman he set out the historical context which has contributed to the malaise and decline of the British state – and hypothesises that we are living in the ‘fourth great disruption’ to the political and economic order. @ShippersUnbound spectator.com/podcast/britai…



Stonehenge tunnel officially scrapped - after more than £179,000,000 spent on plan lbc.co.uk/article/stoneh…




Labour moves to crack down on 500-year-old rural practice in latest attack on British countryside gbnews.com/politics/labou…

Last year, the future of British Steel was on the line. Scunthorpe’s steel furnaces were hours away from shutting down. I couldn’t let thousands of people lose their jobs. So we saved British Steel. Time and again, people want to write off Britain’s workers. The Tories did it again and again. My Labour government will never leave workers behind. We’re investing in British steelmaking across our country – so we can make more of our own steel here at home.





Extracting from a mature basin requires investment and the technical expertise of the producers that have been painted as 'evil' in the UK. Norway knows this. Despite the basin’s maturity, Norway never stopped drilling, averaging forty-five exploration wells annually. In 2025, Norwegian production surged to its highest level since 2009 — the lucrative result of a record $24.68 billion investment that returned roughly $90 billion in exports. Today, the sector serves as the bedrock for 20% of Norway’s GDP and sustains 200,000 people. Britain still has its own reserves. The collapse of British exploration is a policy-driven crisis, not a geological one. By suffocating North Sea producers with a 78% effective tax rate via the Energy Profits Levy, Britain rendered long-term capital investment impossible. The result is a historic standstill. In 2025, for the first time in sixty years, not a single new exploration well was drilled in British waters.














