Business
First new Amazon electric heavy goods vehicles hit UK roads
The first of the biggest order of electric heavy goods vehicles for online giant Amazon were being launched into service on Tuesday.
Amazon said it would eventually have 160 eHGVs, the largest number of electric trucks in its global transportation network.
The vehicles will transport products between Amazon logistics hubs across the UK.
The company is also adding 800 new electric vans across the UK and extending pedestrian deliveries to London’s Borough of Camden.
Nicola Fyfe, of Amazon Logistics, said: “The first vehicles from our record-breaking eHGV order are now on Britain’s roads, transporting products between our hubs.
“This marks a major milestone in our journey to decarbonise our UK transportation network.
“These trucks, alongside more electric vans and on-foot deliveries, are a win for our customers, the environment, and our business.
“The challenge to scaling this approach across the logistics industry, however, is charging infrastructure. We’ve invested in our own facilities but need continued industry and government collaboration to develop the national network required for widespread electric vehicle adoption.”
Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander said: “This is exactly the kind of investment we want to see – putting more electric trucks on UK roads to cut emissions and power Britain’s economy.
“It speaks volumes that Amazon has chosen to make the UK the home of their biggest EV truck fleet globally and demonstrates how our £200 million investment to get more zero-emission lorries on our roads, alongside the infrastructure to keep them moving, is helping businesses to grow and delivering cleaner roads.”
Business
Union hits out as Mossmorran plant ends production
The Unite trade union has criticised oil giant ExxonMobil as it shuttered its Mossmorran plant.
The Fife Ethylene Plant was due to close this month, but the union claimed it was shut down early, with production ending on Monday.
Exxon announced the impending closure last year, with around 400 jobs at risk as a result, claiming it was no longer financially viable.
No immediate job losses are expected as a result of the end of production on Monday, but it is understood 69 staff will leave at the end of April, with 90 remaining to complete the decommissioning of the site, who will then leave in three waves up until the expected completion in early 2028.
According to the firm, 20 staff have chosen to relocate to other parts of ExxonMobil’s UK operation.
Along with the firm’s own staff, around 250 contractors worked on the site.
In a statement, a spokesman for the company said: “After more than 40 years of operations, Fife Ethylene Plant permanently shut down production on February 2.
“In the months ahead the plant will be fully decommissioned and made safe for dismantling. We anticipate this process to be completed by early 2028.”
But the trade union hit out at the firm, claiming it had ended production early.
ExxonMobil had previously planned to close the plant on February 16, but it is understood an operational issue with a unit on the site, which would have required multiple days for repair and to restart, was the reason for the early closure.
Unite’s general secretary Sharon Graham said: “This is another nail in the coffin of the oil and gas industry, with jobs haemorrhaging on this government’s watch.
“Unite has said repeatedly that the government should not be letting go of one rope before it has hold of another.
“Importing oil and gas while we offshore our carbon responsibilities is quite frankly an abdication of responsibility which makes us more vulnerable and betrays workers.
“ExxonMobil’s decision to close Mossmorran ahead of schedule is a disgrace and a betrayal of its workers.
“This is an enormously profitable multi-billion pound company and this unnecessary decision will have a devastating impact on the local community in Fife.”
Deputy First Minister Kate Forbes said the news would be “difficult” for workers, but the Scottish Government was “doing all it can to support them”.
“I have written to worker representatives to assure them of our support and to ExxonMobil to ask that the workforce is prioritised,” she said.
“We have committed £9 million over three years to mitigate the impacts of the plant’s closure, with our Partnership Action for Continuing Employment providing skills and employability support to workers.
“This funding will also support the site’s long-term future, with Scottish Enterprise identifying new investment opportunities.”
Scottish Tory business spokesman Murdo Fraser said the closure was a “terrible blow” for the area and the workers.
“As with Grangemouth, the SNP government promised swift action to protect workers and the local community, but their task force didn’t even meet until last week,” he said.
“These closures are the inevitable result of Labour and the SNP having created a hostile environment for businesses, especially those connected with the oil and gas sector, by piling on punitive taxes and regulations.
“Ministers must now ensure that there is decisive action to support those affected, and not merely empty promises.”
Business
DGCA says no fault found in Boeing fuel control switch after Air India grounds plane
The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) said on Tuesday that when the switches were operated according to Boeing’s recommended procedure, they were found to be “satisfactory”, staying at run instead of moving to cut-off (which can stop fuel supply to the engines).
Business
Musk’s X office in France raided by Paris prosecutor
The raid, involving cyber-crime officers, represents a dramatic escalation of an investigation that began in January 2025.
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