Excess morality rates: What do they tell us about the state of public health in Europe?
As the world marks the third year since the start of the pandemic, excess deaths remain high. We asked the experts why that is.
As the world marks the third year since the start of the pandemic, excess deaths remain high. We asked the experts why that is.
Morten Brandtzæg, the CEO of Nammo, told the Financial Times that the demand for artillery rounds was 15 times higher than normal.
Chancellor Jeremy Hunt’s pension reforms will fail to get over-50s who have already retired back to work, experts have warned.
I’m worried about the rising cost of living and if I spent the money I may not have enough income
A former Fox News staffer says she was pressured into giving false answers in a deposition for Dominion's blockbuster lawsuit.
AN ILLEGAL scrap metal carrier has been handed a criminal behaviour order banning her from intimidating waste workers.
We asked them a simple question: How much do you pay into a private pension? The answers that came back were stark
Windfall taxes mean oil and gas producers in the British North Sea will likely leave 500 million barrels of oil equivalent in the ground over the next decade, the equivalent of one year's output in the ageing basin, industry group OEUK said on Tuesday. Over the past year, Britain has introduced windfall taxes on oil and gas as well as on renewables, which companies say stifles investment and in turn will likely increase Britain's dependence on imported fuels and derail its climate targets. In the oil and gas sector, the taxes are likely to result in reduced investment of between 3 billion to 5 billion pounds ($3.67 billion to $6.12 billion) over the next decade or so, Offshore Energies UK (OEUK) market intelligence manager Ross Dornan told reporters.
A new type of post office is being trialled at a south Essex corner shop from this week.
(Bloomberg) -- On the surface, Charles Schwab Corp. being swept up in the worst US banking crisis since 2008 makes little sense.Most Read from BloombergFBI Releases Files on Ivana TrumpSchwab’s $7 Trillion Empire Built on Low Rates Is Showing CracksBinance and Its CEO Sued by CFTC Over US Regulatory ViolationsSaudi National Bank Chair Resigns After Credit Suisse RemarkThe firm, a half-century mainstay in the brokerage industry, isn’t overexposed to crypto like Silvergate Capital and Signature Ba
An engineer was unfairly sacked after flouting lockdown rules to drive 220 miles in a company car and top up £50 in petrol on his work card, a tribunal has ruled.
A sex therapist embroiled in a £2m court clash over claims she stole clients from a rival's business by hijacking her online profile has blamed a "quirk of the Google algorithm" for the drama.
Sales at Waitrose have grown at the fastest rate in 18 months in a boost for owner John Lewis as it battles to raise money.
The Fox News producer who sued the network last week alleging she was "conditioned and coerced" to give false testimony in the billion-dollar defamation lawsuit brought by Dominion Voting Systems has now been fired, according to amended complaints filed on Monday morning. In amended complaints filed in Delaware and New York Monday morning, former Fox News producer Abby Grossberg expanded on her earlier complaints, alleging that Fox News attorneys directed her to testify during her deposition in a way that would "inculpate" her and host Maria Bartiromo while "exculpating ... certain blame worthy male colleagues." "Ms. Grossberg's deposition testimony, as manufactured by Fox News, put Ms. Grossberg and Ms. Bartiromo squarely on the frontline of the Dominion/Fox Lawsuit so they could be scapegoated as sacrificial female lambs," the complaint alleges.
New parking charges at Bucks Council car parks were revealed.
Leading B2B online marketplace Alibaba.com will highlight the digital export opportunity for Scottish businesses at Edinburgh's Food and Drink Conference today
A butchers firm in the Herefordshire borders plans to expand into new premises.
A trusted manager has admitted stealing tens of thousands of pounds from his employers.
Take advantage while you can.
The whisky industry will be served by a specialist new team at Wright, Johnston & Mackenzie LLP, writes Partner Angus MacLeod
The U.S. trade deficit in goods widened modestly in February as exports declined, potentially setting up trade to be a small drag on economic growth in the first quarter. The trade deficit increased 0.6% to $91.6 billion, the Commerce Department said on Tuesday. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the goods trade deficit would be little changed at $91.0 billion.