Monday newspaper round-up: Four-day week, UK energy, Apple
Fraudsters may have stolen £500,000 from a taxpayer-funded scheme aimed at accelerating the removal of dangerous cladding from buildings, the public spending watchdog has revealed. The National Audit Office said the government decision to prioritise speed in handing out money to building owners had increased its risk of losses from fraud. The warning came in an NAO report into the government’s progress in remediating dangerous cladding from blocks after the Grenfell Tower fire in 2017. – Guardian
One thousand workers in the UK will get extra time off with no loss of pay in the first official pilot by the four-day week campaign under the Labour government. The British Society for Immunology and Crate Brewery in Hackney, east London, are among the businesses to have joined the latest trial, which is being led by the 4 Day Week Campaign, as it launches on Monday. – Guardian
Cornwall is home to more solar panels than anywhere else in the country, new figures show, fuelling a growing backlash from local farmers and small businesses. The south-west county now boasts more than 27,000 sites generating solar energy, with even more planned under Ed Miliband’s green energy rollout. The spread of solar energy across the Cornish countryside has been welcomed by climate campaigners. However, it has also sparked anger among residents and councillors who claim the local landscape has been ruined by an influx of large glass solar panels. – Telegraph
Shares in Apple will be in focus on Monday after Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway continued to slash its stake in the tech company as part of a selling spree that has lifted his cash pile to record levels. The billionaire’s industrials-to-insurance conglomerate disclosed on Saturday that it had reduced its position in Apple to $69.9 billion in the third quarter, indicating it had shed a further 100 million shares in the period, or a quarter of its holding. – The Times
The head of the International Energy Agency has backed the government’s ambitious plan to clean up Britain’s power supply by 2030 so the UK can keep its lead in cutting-edge energy industries. Labour has faced criticism for its ambition to supply almost all the country’s electricity with wind, solar and nuclear energy in only six years’ time. – The Times