Business
Renewables generate record share of electricity generation, figures show

Renewable sources generated a record share of the UK’s electricity for April, May and June, according to Government figures.
Energy trends data, released by the Energy Department (DENSZ) on Tuesday, show that wind, solar, hydro, and bioenergy together accounted for 54.5% of all the UK’s generation for these three months this year.
This marks an increase of 2.8 percentage points from the same quarter of the year in 2024.
The new record was partly driven by a 10% increase in offshore wind generation and a 27% increase in solar output, compared to April, May and June last year.
Solar generation was at a record high share of 11% of all generation, the data shows, after the UK saw its sunniest spring on record.
But the jump in renewables generation was also attributed to an increase in capacity, as wind turbines and panels continue to be rolled out across the country.
The share of “low carbon” generation, which includes renewables as well as nuclear power, also reached a record high of 69.8% but this was due to the rise in renewables, with nuclear falling 13%.
Fossil fuels generated just a quarter of the UK’s electricity for April, May and June, equalling the previous record low share of 26.7%.
It comes as the Government pushes ahead with its target to decarbonise the grid by 2030 so that 95% of the UK’s electricity is generated by “clean sources”.
For the first time, the data included the share of clean electricity generation for the year, pinpointing how the UK is progressing towards the target.
Renewables and nuclear generated a 73.8% share of Great Britain’s electricity generation in 2024, up 5.5 percentage points from 2023, it said.
Energy Secretary Ed Miliband said: “Over the past year, we’ve taken decisive actions to start delivering a clean energy system that works for the British people.
“In just 12 months, we’ve approved projects that can power more than two million homes, seen over £50 billion in private investment announced for clean, homegrown energy, launched the publicly owned Great British Energy, and ushered in a new golden age of nuclear power, the largest clean energy investment in our nation’s history.
“Today’s figures show our plan is working, with Britain delivering a record amount of clean power in 2024.
“This milestone puts us on track to become a clean energy superpower by 2030, cutting energy bills for good, protecting families from fossil fuel markets controlled by dictators like (Vladimir) Putin, and creating thousands of good clean energy jobs across the country.”
Elsewhere, the figures show that energy production remains low by historic standards, down 25% on the second quarter of 2019 as oil and gas output from the UK’s mature continental shelf continues to decline.
Total final energy consumption was 3.2% lower than in the second quarter of 2024, according to the data.
There was a 15% fall in domestic consumption, with record high temperatures during April, May and June considered a factor in the significant decrease as households turned off gas boilers.
On the other hand, transport demand increased by nearly 4% with rises in petrol and jet fuel offsetting falls in diesel demand.
Business
India-EFTA Trade Pact Aims $100 Billion Investment, 1 Million Direct Jobs From Oct 1

New Delhi: As the India-European Free Trade Association (EEFTA) Trade and Economic Partnership Agreement (TEPA) comes into effect from October 1, the India-EFTA Desk has been inaugurated as a single-window platform to facilitate EFTA investments in renewable energy, life sciences, engineering, and digital transformation, while fostering joint ventures, SME collaborations, and technology partnerships, the government said on Tuesday.
The TEPA establishes India’s first FTA with four developed European nations and commits USD 100 billion in investments and 1 million direct jobs over 15 years.
India’s exports to EFTA stood at USD 72.37 million in 2024, contributing 0.41 per cent of EFTA’s total imports. This agreement is expected to reduce tariff barriers and expand India’s share in key commodities.
The TEPA enhances market access for goods and services, strengthens intellectual property rights, and fosters sustainable, inclusive development, while supporting Make in India and Atmanirbhar Bharat initiatives.
According to the Ministry of Commerce and Industry, the agreement comprises 14 chapters with the main focus on market access related to goods, rules of origin, trade facilitation, trade remedies, sanitary and phytosanitary measures, technical barriers to trade, investment promotion, market access on services, intellectual property rights, trade and sustainable development and other legal and horizontal provisions.
The EFTA’s market access offer under TEPA covers 100 per cent of non-agri products and a tariff concession on Processed Agricultural Products (PAP).
Sensitivity related to PLI in sectors such as pharma, medical devices and processed food, etc., has been taken while extending offers.
Under the TEPA, the EFTA has offered 92.2 per cent of tariff lines encompassing 99.6 per cent of India’s exports. It includes 100 per cent non-agricultural products and tariff concessions on PAP.
India’s offer to the EFTA covers 82.7 per cent of tariff lines, accounting for 95.3 per cent of the EFTA exports.
Over 80 per cent of these imports are gold, with no change in effective duty on gold. Sensitive sectors protected, including pharma, medical devices, processed food, dairy, soya, coal, and sensitive agricultural products.
“The TEPA presents stronger opportunities in IT, business services, cultural and recreational services, education, and audio-visual services. The TEPA ensures IPR commitments at the TRIPS level. The IPR chapter with Switzerland has a high standard for IPR, showing a robust IPR regime. India’s interests in generic medicines and concerns related to evergreening of patents have been fully addressed,” according to the ministry.
Business
Here’s JPMorgan Chase’s blueprint to become the world’s first fully AI-powered megabank

Deep within the bowels of JPMorgan Chase’s data centers and cloud providers, an artificial intelligence program crucial to the bank’s aspirations grows more powerful by the week.
The program, called LLM Suite, is a portal created by the bank to harness large language models from the world’s leading AI startups. It currently uses models from OpenAI and Anthropic.
Every eight weeks, LLM Suite is updated as the bank feeds it more from the vast databases and software applications of its major businesses, giving the platform more abilities, Derek Waldron, JPMorgan chief data analytics officer, told CNBC in an exclusive interview.
“The broad vision that we’re working towards is one where the JPMorgan Chase of the future is going to be a fully AI-connected enterprise,” Waldron said.
JPMorgan, the world’s largest bank by market capitalization, is being “fundamentally rewired” for the coming AI era, according to Waldron. The bank, a heavyweight across Main Street and Wall Street finance, wants to provide every employee with AI agents, automate every behind-the-scenes process and have every client experience curated with AI concierges.
If the effort succeeds, the project could have profound implications for the bank’s employees, customers and shareholders — even the nature of corporate labor itself.
Waldron, who gave CNBC the first demonstration of its AI platform seen by any outsider, showed the program creating an investment banking deck in about 30 seconds, work that would’ve previously taken a team of junior bankers hours to complete.
Out of the box
Since the arrival of OpenAI’s ChatGPT in late 2022, optimism over generative AI has driven markets higher on gains from the tech giants and chip makers closest to the trade. Underpinning their growth is the expectation that corporate clients deploying AI will either boost worker productivity or lower expenses through layoffs — or both.
But similar to how the internet story played out in the 1990s, near-term expectations for AI may have outstripped reality. Most corporations had no tangible returns yet on their AI projects despite more than $30 billion in collective investments, according to an MIT report from July.
Jamie Dimon, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of JPMorgan Chase & Co. speaks during an event honoring local construction workers who helped build the firm’s new headquarters at 270 Park Avenue, in the Midtown area of New York City, U.S., Sept. 9, 2025.
Shannon Stapleton | Reuters
In the case of JPMorgan, even with it $18 billion annual tech budget, it will take years for the company to realize AI’s potential by stitching the cognitive power of AI models together with the bank’s proprietary data and software programs, said Waldron.
“There is a value gap between what the technology is capable of and the ability to fully capture that within an enterprise,” Waldron said.
Companies “do work in thousands of different applications, there’s a lot of work to connect those applications into an AI ecosystem and make them consumable,” he said.
If JPMorgan can beat other banks to the punch on incorporating AI, it will enjoy a period of higher margins before the rest of the industry catches up. That first-mover advantage will allow it to grow revenues faster by going after a larger slice of the addressable market in global finance — enabling the bank to pitch more middle-market companies in investment banking, for instance.
Change on the horizon
AI was a major topic at a four-day executive retreat held in July by JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon, according to a person who attended but declined to be identified speaking about the private event.
Among concerns discussed at the off-site meeting, held at a resort outside Nashville, was how AI-driven changes will be adopted by the bank’s 317,000-person workforce and its possible impacts to the apprenticeship model on areas including investment banking.
If JPMorgan succeeds with its AI goals, it will mean that a bank that is already the largest and most profitable in American history is set for new heights. Dimon has led the bank since 2005, guiding it through periods of upheaval to notch record profits in 7 of the last 10 years.
The end state for JPMorgan, as envisioned by Waldron, is a future in which AI is woven into the fabric of the company:
“Every employee will have their own personalized AI assistant; every process is powered by AI agents, and every client experience has an AI concierge,” he said.
JPMorgan laid the groundwork for this starting in 2023, when it gave employees access to OpenAI’s models through LLM Suite; it was essentially a corporate ChatGPT tool used to draft emails and summarize documents.
About 250,000 JPMorgan employees have access to the platform today, which is the entire workforce except for branch and call center staff, said Waldron. Half of them use it roughly every day, he said.
JPMorgan is now early in the next phase of its AI blueprint: It has begun deploying agentic AI to handle complex multistep tasks for employees, according to an internal roadmap provided by the bank.
“As those agents become increasingly powerful in terms of their AI capabilities and increasingly connected into JPMorgan,” Waldron said, “they can take on more and more responsibilities.”
Nvidia deck
Waldron, a former McKinsey partner with a Ph.D. in computational physics, recently demonstrated LLM Suite’s capabilities to CNBC.
He gave the program a prompt: “You are a technology banker at JPMorgan Chase preparing for a meeting with the CEO and CFO of Nvidia. Prepare a five-page presentation that includes the latest news, earnings and a peer comparison.”
LLM Suite created a credible-looking PowerPoint deck in about 30 seconds.
“You can imagine in the past how that would have been done; we would’ve had teams of investment banking analysts working long hours at night to do this,” said Waldron.
The bank is also training AI to draft other key investment banking documents including the “inch thick” confidential memos that JPMorgan produces for prospective M&A clients, said the person who attended the July executive meeting.
Derek Waldron, JPMorgan’s chief analytics officer.
Courtesy: JP Morgan
The prospect of collapsing work loads means that fewer junior bankers may be needed even while AI-enabled teams handle more work and pitch more companies, according to senior Wall Street executives at several firms who spoke on the condition of anonymity to provide their candid thoughts.
But to extract the full value from this new, almost magical technology, it’s not just about the tools: Changes to how employees and departments are organized may be needed.
One proposal being discussed at a major investment bank is reducing the ratio of junior bankers to senior managers from the current 6-1 to 4-1. In the new regime, half of those junior bankers would be working from cities with cheaper labor, say Bengaluru, India, and Buenos Aires, Argentina, instead of being clustered in expensive New York.
The AI-powered junior bankers could then work on deals in shifts around-the-clock, passing the baton from one time zone to the next.
With fewer bankers on the payroll, the cost structure of investment banking would fall, boosting the bottom line, said the executives.
Structural shifts
Unlike previous generations of technology, where bespoke automation tools had to be made for every distinct job, LLM Suite can service them all, from traders to wealth managers and risk officers, according to Waldron.
The implications for workers are profound. AI will empower some workers and give them more time, positioning them at the center of a team of AI agents. Others will be displaced by AI that takes over processes which no longer require human intervention.
That shift favors those who work directly with clients — a private banker with a roster of rich investors, traders who cater to hedge fund and pension managers, or investment bankers with relationships with Fortune 500 CEOs, for instance.
Those at risk of having to find new roles include operations and support staff who mainly deal in rote processes like setting up accounts, fraud detection or settling trades.
In May, JPMorgan’s consumer banking chief told investors that operations staff would fall by at least 10% in the next five years thanks to AI deployment.
“In an AI world, you’ll still have people at the top who are managing and have relationships with clients, but many, many of the processes underneath are now being done by AI systems,” Waldron said.
AI FOMO
But it’s still unwritten as to how that future will unfold; will corporations retain workers impacted by AI, retraining them for the new roles it creates? Or will they simply opt to cut their payroll?
“Without a doubt, AI technology will have changes on the construction of the workforce,” Waldron said. “That is certain, but I think it’s unclear as to exactly what those changes will look like.”
More broadly, Waldron said that workers would shift from being creators of reports or software updates, or “makers” in his terminology, to “checkers” or managers of AI agents doing that work.
The bank is closing in on another frontier: It will soon allow generative AI to interact directly with customers, Waldron said. JPMorgan will start with limited cases, like allowing it to extract information for a user, before rolling out more advanced versions, he said.
Despite market concerns that the AI trade is a brewing bubble, corporate clients are actually more worried now that if they don’t start adopting it soon, they’ll fall behind and lose share, said Avi Gesser, a Debevoise & Plimpton partner who advises corporations on issues around AI.
“People are starting to see what these tools can do,” Gesser said. “They’re sort of like, ‘Wow, if you get the workflow right, implement it properly and have the right guardrails, I could see how that would save you a lot of time and a lot of money and deliver a better product.”

Business
Man Industries Shares Tank 16% After Sebi Uncovers Fraud, Bans Executives

Last Updated:
Man Industries shares fell 16 percent after Sebi banned the firm and three executives, including Ramesh Mansukhani, for two years.

Man Industries shares tank 16% on Tuesday.
Man Industries Share Price: Pipe manufacturing company Man Industries shares tanked 16 per cent on Tuesday following Sebi’s action to ban the firm and three of its senior executives from the securities market for two years, along with a Rs 25 lakh fine on each for alleged financial fraud.
Shares of Man Industries (India) were trading 11.73 per cent lower around 11:19 am at Rs 359 apiece, against the previous day close at Rs 406 apiece. The day’s low stood at Rs 340 apiece.
The order named Ramesh Mansukhani, Chairman of Man Industries; Nikhil Mansukhani, Executive Director; and Ashok Gupta, former Executive Director and current CFO, as the individuals penalised.
Sebi found that the company’s financial statements for FY 2015-16 to FY 2020-21 were “deliberately misstated.” The regulator said these misrepresentations, omissions, and concealments were part of a scheme that deprived investors of a true view of the company’s financial position.
The order noted that MIIL’s wholly-owned subsidiary, MSPL, was excluded from consolidation after FY 2014-15 without explanation. This, Sebi said, hid group-level losses and liabilities while artificially boosting MIIL’s reported profits.
“I conclude that the financial statements of MIIL for FY 2015-16 to FY 2020-21 were misrepresented, creating a false picture of profitability, liquidity, and group-level risks for investors. This constitutes a fraudulent and unfair practice by the noticees,” said Sebi Chief General Manager N Murugan.
By doing so, the company and its executives violated PFUTP (Prohibition of Fraudulent and Unfair Trade Practices) regulations. In response, Sebi barred them from market participation for two years and levied fines.
The action follows a complaint alleging diversion of funds to subsidiaries and non-consolidation of results to conceal losses. Sebi subsequently conducted a forensic audit, appointing an auditor on November 22, 2021, to investigate MIIL’s accounts from FY 2014-15 to FY 2020-21.
In response, the company said, “the SEBI order pertains to legacy matters and carries no material impact on the company’s current or future operations. With a strong order book, improving margins, disciplined governance, and a robust capex pipeline, the company is well positioned to deliver sustainable growth and value for shareholders. We reaffirm our solid fundamentals, commitment to corporate governance, and focus on long-term value creation for all stakeholders.”
(With PTI Inputs)

Varun Yadav is a Sub Editor at News18 Business Digital. He writes articles on markets, personal finance, technology, and more. He completed his post-graduation diploma in English Journalism from the Indian Inst…Read More
Varun Yadav is a Sub Editor at News18 Business Digital. He writes articles on markets, personal finance, technology, and more. He completed his post-graduation diploma in English Journalism from the Indian Inst… Read More
September 30, 2025, 11:28 IST
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