9th Jul 2026 07:17
(Sharecast News) - UK vets may have to have a licence and cap prescriptions for pet medicine at £21 under plans being considered by the government. Ministers are also considering establishing a regulator for the veterinary sector, including inspections, a mandatory licensing system and published compliance reports to improve accountability and choice. Every vet practice could need an official operating licence - similar to GP surgeries and care homes - under proposals in a white paper. - Guardian
Britain's most recently completed nuclear power plant will continue generating electricity until 2055 after the government granted the power plant, which was first synchronised with the National Grid in 1995, a 20-year life extension. Sizewell B in Suffolk was due to shut down within the next decade, but under a deal with the government its lifetime will be extended to 60 years to help meet the UK's growing demand for low-carbon electricity. - Guardian
Russia has banned diesel exports after a series of Ukrainian strikes on oil refineries triggered widespread fuel shortages across the country. The Kremlin announced the emergency measure in a meeting on Wednesday, admitting that the situation regarding supplies remained fragile. Escalating attacks by Ukrainian drones on oil infrastructure has already drastically curbed diesel supplies in some regions, leading to long queues appearing at petrol stations on a daily basis. - Telegraph
The veteran stockpicker Terry Smith has accused Unilever of misleading him over its $66 billion food merger, in a fresh broadside just months after ditching his entire holding in the consumer goods group. In his latest investor update, Smith, who runs the Fundsmith Equity Fund and was a top-ten Unilever shareholder for more than a decade, claimed the company had assured him there would be no more disposals "for the foreseeable future" after the spin-off of its ice cream division late last year. - The Times
Dock workers in Australia are demanding a 28-hour week, with no reduction in pay, as one of the country's largest shipping terminal operators pushes to use artificial intelligence to automate processes at its facilities. The Maritime Union of Australia said DP World's use of AI had put jobs "in the crosshairs", and argued that the technology "should be used to improve workers' lives, not destroy them". - The Times