Wednesday newspaper round-up: Anglesey power station, electric cars, Eurostar passengers

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Sharecast News | 22 May, 2024

Ministers have earmarked north Wales as the site of a large-scale nuclear power plant, which is part of plans to resuscitate Britain’s nuclear power ambitions. Wylfa on Anglesey (Ynys Môn) has been named as the preferred site for the UK’s third major nuclear power plant in a generation, coming after EDF’s Hinkley Point C nuclear plant, which is under construction in Somerset, and its Sizewell C nuclear project planned for Suffolk. – Guardian

Hybrid and electric cars are more likely to strike pedestrians than petrol or diesel vehicles, particularly in towns and cities, according to an analysis of British road traffic accidents. Data from 32bn miles of battery-powered car travel and 3tn miles of petrol and diesel car trips showed that mile-for-mile electric and hybrid cars were twice as likely to hit pedestrians than fossil fuel-powered cars, and three times more likely to do so in urban areas. – Guardian

A bank boss who earns £3.3m a year has admitted he only took the job on condition that he was allowed to work from home. Mike Regnier, the chief executive of Britain’s fifth-largest lender Santander UK, said he was convinced to accept the role after the bank allowed him to work out of the office most of the time. The 52-year-old spends up to two days a week working in the bank’s main offices in Milton Keynes and London, and the rest of the week from his home in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, or travelling the country. – Telegraph

Eurostar passengers at St Pancras station will be forced to negotiate a five-step check-in process under strict new EU rules, providing their fingerprints and a mugshot twice and answering a series of questions on the nature of their trip. People planning to travel through the Channel Tunnel will be sent a guide to the new system as soon as they book, including a flow chart and checklist detailing each stage of the process and explaining why it is being implemented. – Telegraph

The seaside resorts of Bournemouth, Sidmouth and Bexhill-on-Sea have been identified as among the fastest-growing engines of small-scale British enterprise. Traditionally better known for their holidays and beaches, the towns are attracting a new generation of entrepreneurs. Analysis of digital data by GoDaddy, the website hosting company, found that Suffolk Coastal, which includes Felixstowe, saw the density of microbusinesses increase by 54 per cent in the 12 months until April. That is more than ten times the average UK growth rate of 5 per cent. – The Times

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