Wednesday 18 March 2009

Unemployment passes two million

Unemployment passes two million

UK unemployment

UK unemployment has risen above two million for the first time since 1997, official figures have shown.

During the three months to January, the number of people unemployed totalled 2.03 million, up by 165,000, said the Office for National Statistics (ONS).

For February, the number of people getting jobseeker's allowance added a record 138,400 to reach 1.39 million.

There are now 10 jobseekers for every vacancy advertised in UK jobcentres, the TUC claimed earlier this week.

'Unemployment milestone'




The ONS added that the unemployment rate jumped to 6.5% between November and January.

Unemployment is rising as the first recession in the UK since 1991 continues to bite. Many economists now predict it will go above three million next year.

"This is another milestone in the return of mass unemployment to the UK, and it will get worse before it gets better as unemployment always persists even after a recovery starts," said TUC general secretary Brendan Barber.

Turning his attention to next month's G20 meeting in London, Mr Barber added that it was now imperative that world leaders work together to help stimulate the global economy.

David Kern, chief economist at the British Chambers of Commerce, said the government should now "seriously consider" temporary wage subsidies.

Owen Bednall lost his job at the BMW plant in Cowley in mid-February

The ONS figures showed that it is the private sector that is seeing the rise in unemployment.

They showed that in December 2008, the number of people in private sector employment was 23.6 million, down 13,000 from September 2008.

Over the same period, the number of people with public sector jobs rose 15,000 to

5.78 million.

The ONS added that average earnings, including bonuses, rose only 1.8% in the year to January, the lowest annual rise since records began in 1991.

Political wrangle

Prime Minister Gordon Brown told the Commons that the government was continuing to do all it could to help the unemployed.

"The action we are taking now is designed to get us through this as quickly as possible," he said.

Mr Brown added that despite the rise in UK unemployment, it remained higher in other countries.

Conservative leader David Cameron countered that Mr Brown had led the UK to the current level of unemployment "without a hint of an apology, and the British people will never forgive him".

"Doesn't this reveal that the claims repeatedly made by you that Britain was one of the best countries in the world to withstand recession was simply nonsense?" added Mr Cameron.

Business warnings

Separate reports by the British Chambers of Commerce (BCC) and CBI have both predicted that UK unemployment will rise above three million in 2010.

Tony McNulty: 'These are very bad figures'

The BCC said the UK economy had worsened "significantly" so far in 2009, and said unemployment will hit 3.2 million next year, slightly more than 10% of the workforce.

Alan Tomlinson, an accountant who guides firms through insolvency, said he had "never been so busy".

"Companies of all sizes and in all sectors are folding by the day, putting more and more people out of a job," he said.

"The CBI's prediction, last month, that unemployment will peak at just over three million in the second quarter of 2010 could prove to be wildly optimistic."


Tuesday 17 March 2009

UK To Cut Number Of Nuclear Warheads?

The prime minister has warned Iran it faces a "clear choice" over its nuclear programme, with tougher sanctions for defying the international community.

But Gordon Brown said an expansion of civil nuclear power was needed globally to meet carbon reduction targets.

Iran says it is developing civil nuclear power, rather than weapons, and refuses to stop its work.

Mr Brown added that the UK would "be ready" reduce its number of nuclear warheads "if it is possible".

The prime minister argued that Iran would be a test of how nuclear nations can work together with non-nuclear states to equip them with new sources of energy.

He urged it to pursue a purely civil nuclear path with the promise of international support and engagement.

'Work with us'

Enriched uranium can be used in power plants, but can also be used to make atomic weapons.

The Iranian government continues to defy the international community, enriching enough uranium - according to a recent report by the International Atomic Energy Authority - to fill a warhead.

"Iran therefore faces a clear choice," Mr Brown told an audience of diplomats and scientists.

FROM THE TODAY PROGRAMME

"Continue in this way and face further and tougher sanctions - or change to a UN-overseen civil nuclear energy programme that will bring the greatest benefits to its citizens."

Mr Brown said: "However we look at it, we will not secure the supply of sustainable energy on which the planet depends, without a role for nuclear power."

The world needed "moral leadership", he said, urging "collaboration, not isolation".

Britain would be "at the forefront" of efforts towards general nuclear disarmament when international talks are held next year, he added.

Mr Brown said, that "if it is possible to reduce the number we have of our own warheads... Britain will be ready to do so".

Consequences

Mr Brown encouraged Iran to accept US President Barack Obama's offer of negotiation and to heed calls from China, Russia and leading European powers to comply with UN nuclear resolutions.

"I urge Iran, once again, to work with us rather than against us upon this," he said.

"The opportunity to do so remains on the table and the choice is theirs to make."

Defence Secretary John Hutton told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that, if Iran continued with its nuclear weapons programme, it "would be very destabilising for the region and the world. The consequences of that are too frightening to think about".

Mr Brown's speech would be a "restatement of what our policy is" and was "absolutely the kind of speech Barack Obama could make".

Mr Hutton said: "They haven't actually got a civil nuclear power reactor. So people are right to raise eyebrows about their programme."

'Generous'

He added: "We have got to be clear with Iran about the consequences of them not complying. The clock is ticking on all of this...

"The offer is still on the table for the Iranians to take up this extraordinarily generous and, I think, unprecedented offer to help them with their [civil] programme."

The new US administration has offered to engage with Iran to reduce tension over the issue while insisting it will not tolerate it having a nuclear bomb and extending sanctions against Tehran.

Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who is facing elections this year, has shown little sign of wanting a "deal" to put the country's nuclear programme under international supervision in return for the lifting of sanctions and financial assistance.

The international community will face a significant challenge in ensuring the necessary expansion of civil nuclear power does not lead to weapons proliferation, Mr Brown will add.

According to International Atomic Energy Agency forecasts, more than 30 nuclear reactors will have to built every year if the world is to meet its target of halving carbon emissions by 2050.

"We have to create a new international system to help non-nuclear states acquire the new sources of energy they need," the prime minister will say.







Wednesday 11 March 2009

Climate Predictions Could Be Understated

Sea level could rise more than a meter by 2100, say experts

• Increase much higher than previously forecast
• Change could displace 10% of world's population

Melting iceberg, Ililussat, Greenland

Melting water streams from an iceberg in Ililussat, Greenland. Photograph: Paul Souders/Corbis

Global sea levels could rise much higher this century than previously projected, raising the threat level for millions of people who live in low-lying areas, new research suggests.

Scientists at a climate change summit in Copenhagen say changes in the polar ice sheets could raise sea levels by a metre or more by 2100. The implications could be severe, they warn. Ten per cent of the world's population - about 600 million people - live in vulnerable areas.

The new estimate appears to significantly worsen the predictions of a report in 2007 by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which said sea level could rise by up to 59cm this century. The IPCC report also said higher increases could not be ruled out, but that not enough was known about ice sheets to predict how quickly they could break up as temperatures increased.

Prof Konrad Steffen, of the University of Colorado, said new studies of ice loss in Greenland showed it had accelerated over the last decade.

"I would predict sea level rise by 2100 in the order of 1m," he said. "It could be 1.2m or 0.9m, but it is 1m or more seeing the current change, which is up to three times more than the average predicted by the IPCC. It is a major change and it actually calls for action."

Dr John Church, of the Centre for Australian Weather and Climate Research in Tasmania, said: "The most recent satellite and ground based observations show that sea-level rise is continuing to rise at 3mm per year or more since 1993, a rate well above the 20th-century average. The oceans are continuing to warm and expand, the melting of mountain glaciers has increased and the ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica are also contributing to sea level rise."

Prof Eric Rignot, a senior research scientist at Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said new studies since the IPCC report showed that melting and ice loss could not be overlooked. "As a result of the acceleration of outlet glaciers over large regions, the ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica are already contributing more and faster to sea level rise than anticipated."

Prof Stefan Ramstorf, of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany said: "Based on past experience, I expect that sea level rise will accelerate as the planet gets hotter."

The IPCC estimate had been based largely on the expansion of oceans from higher temperatures, rather than meltwater and the impact of glaciers breaking into the sea.

Ramstorf said research indicated sea levels rising between 75cm and 190cm by 2100. Even if the world manages to cut the emission of greenhouse gases driving global warming, the "best estimate" was about 1m, he added.

Steffen said: "Different groups may come to slightly different projections, but differences in the details of the projections should not cloud the overall picture where even the lower end of the projections look to have very serious effects."

John Ashton, the special representative for climate change at the Foreign Office, said: "We need to look at what is a reasonable worst case in the lifetime of people alive today."

More than 2,000 researchers from 80 countries are attending the conference, which is intended to spur politicians into taking action on global warming.

"The huge response from scientists comes from a sense of urgency, but also a sense of frustration," said Katherine Richardson, head of the Danish government's commission on climate change colicy, which organised the conference. "Most of us have been trained as scientists to not get our hands dirty by talking to politicians."

She said the IPCC report from 2007 was an "invaluable document", but it would be years out of date when negotiators convene in Copenhagen in December to try to agree a new global deal to regulate carbon emissions.

Tuesday 10 March 2009

Real IRA training