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Water company sewage pollution to halve by 2030, minister pledges

BBC News

The government is preparing a “water revolution” that will halve the number of times sewage is discharged into waterways in England and Wales by 2030, the environment secretary has said.
Steve Reed told the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg that the water sector was “broken” and the regulator, Ofwat, was “clearly failing”.
The “reset” would include tougher treatment of water company bosses if their companies were not meeting the required standards, including possible prison sentences.
However, he did not confirm if Ofwat would be scrapped, a policy recommendation that could be included in a landmark review of the industry, due to be published on Monday.
Reed said he had been given the review’s report but had not yet had time to read it thoroughly.
He ruled out taking water back into public ownership, which would “take years” and be too expensive, he added.
“Nationalisation would cost upwards of £100bn that we’d have to take away from the National Health Service and schools to give to the owners of the companies that are polluting,” said Reed.
His vow on sewage discharge marks the first time ministers have set a clear target on the number of pollution spills, following public outcry over the state of the UK’s waterways.
Reed said families had “watched their local rivers, coastlines and lakes suffer from record levels of pollution” – but the Conservatives claimed Labour had “done nothing to stop water bill rises” despite “big promises” to reform the system.
“I’ve been up and down this country and spoken to wild swimmers, parents, everybody furious about the state of our water,” Reed said.
“So clearly, regulation must change.”
He told the programme he would be held accountable if there had not been improvements in water quality by the next election.
“Politicians come and say we’re going to do things. Of course our job should be on the line if we don’t,” he said.
The pledge forms part of wider government plans to improve the water sector, ahead of the Water Commission review of the industry being published on Monday.
James Wallace, chief executive of charity River Action UK, said the target seemed “admirable” but that ultimately it was a “political pledge” and not legally binding.
The plans announced on Sunday will also include a commitment to work with devolved governments across the UK to ban wet wipes containing plastic, among other measures.
Nigel Farage, leader of Reform UK, told Laura Kuenssberg that the water industry was a “hell of a mess”, in part due to growth in the UK’s population. It should be put into joint public-private ownership, he argued.
The state needed to get “some degree of control over vital national assets”, he said, but did not put a figure on its cost.
Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey told the programme the regulator should be replaced, with public benefit corporations taking the place of private companies.
“A tough regulator by itself isn’t sufficient,” he said. A completely new structure would allow the country to “start afresh with the investment we need without costing bill and taxpayers”, he added.
There has been widespread scrutiny of water companies over the increasing number of sewage discharges into UK waterways amid rising bills – all while the firms have paid out millions to executives and shareholders.
The Environment Agency said water companies recorded 2,801 pollution incidents in 2024, up from 2,174 in 2023.
Of those, 75 were considered to pose “serious or persistent” harm to fisheries, drinking water and human health – up from 47 last year.
At the same time, water bosses in England were paid £7.6m in bonuses, according to the government. In June, it barred them from being paid out at six firms that had fallen foul of environmental and consumer standards.
Reed told Laura Kuenssberg extra pay awarded to the boss of Southern Water, which would almost double his income, was “outrageous”.
He urged Southern’s boss to “think how this looks to their customers” and turn down the pay rise.
On Monday the chair of the Water Commission, Sir Jon Cunliffe, will lay out his recommendations on how to improve the environmental and financial performance of the sector. The government will respond in Parliament.
England has a combined sewage system, which means both rainfall and sewage are processed through the same system. Last year, rainfall levels were up, which could have overwhelmed some water company infrastructure.
However, despite variations in rainfall, discharges that result in serious pollution are a breach of companies’ permits and legal obligations.
Many incidents are reported to the Environment Agency by the companies themselves, but of 4,000 inspections carried out last year by the regulator, nearly a quarter of sites were in breach of their permits.
A record £104bn is due to be invested into the water sector over the next five years to improve its infrastructure.
As a result, consumer bills are expected to rise on average by £123 annually – though for Southern Water customers this could be as much as £224.
The Environment Agency has also received £189m to support hundreds of enforcement offices to inspect and prosecute water companies, with the fines retroactively paying for this.
Conservative shadow environment secretary Victoria Atkins said the government “must be transparent about where the £104bn investment is coming from as some will come through customer bill rises”.
She said plans “must also include credible proposals to improve the water system’s resilience to droughts, without placing an additional burden on bill payers and taxpayers”.
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Albania’s leader says his new Cabinet includes an AI ‘minister’ to fight corruption

TIRANA, Albania — Albania’s leader said Friday his new cabinet will include an artificial intelligence “minister” that will be in charge of running public funding projects and fighting corruption in public tenders.
Prime Minister Edi Rama said Diella, whose name means “Sun” in Albanian, is a “member of the Cabinet who is not present physically but has been created virtually from artificial intelligence.”
Rama said Diella would help ensure that “public tenders will be 100% free of corruption.”
Diella was launched earlier this year as a virtual assistant on the e-Albania public service platform, where she helps users navigate the site while wearing traditional Albanian folk costume.
Rama’s Socialist Party secured a fourth consecutive term after winning 83 of the 140 Assembly seats in the May 11 parliamentary elections. The party can govern alone and pass most legislation, but it needs a two-thirds majority, or 93 seats, to change the Constitution.
The Socialists have said it can deliver EU membership for Albania in five years, with negotiations concluding by 2027. The pledge has been met with skepticism by the Democrats, who contend Albania is far from prepared.
The conservative Democratic Party-led coalition, headed by former prime minister and President Sali Berisha, won 50 seats. The party has not accepted the official election results, claiming irregularities, but its members participated in the new parliament’s inaugural session. The remaining seats went to four smaller parties.
Legal experts say more work may be needed to establish Diella’s official status.
Corruption has remained a top issue in the Western Balkan country since the fall of the communist regime in 1990.
Parliament began the process to swear in new lawmakers Friday. Later in the day, lawmakers are expected to elect a new speaker and deputies and formally present Rama’s new cabinet.
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Is AI changing our language? – Computerworld

Is AI changing our language? Computerworld
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Prediction: This Unstoppable Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock Will Be the World’s First $10 Trillion Company by 2030

Nvidia’s projected growth allows it to easily become a $10 trillion business by 2030.
Currently, Nvidia (NVDA) is the world’s largest company, with a market cap of $4.2 trillion. So, predicting that a stock will reach a $10 trillion market cap by 2030 is daunting. However, I think that Nvidia is up to the task, as it’s slated to capitalize on massive and growing AI computing capacity.
As AI spending rises, so will Nvidia’s stock. Companies are a long way from completing the buildout of necessary AI computing power, and this demand is what will drive Nvidia to become a $10 trillion company by 2030.
Image source: Getty Images.
The AI hyperscalers are still ramping up their data center spending
Nvidia makes graphics processing units (GPUs), which are the computing muscle behind nearly every AI model you can use today. They possess a unique attribute that enables them to process multiple calculations in parallel, providing superior computing power compared to traditional computing devices. They can also be connected in clusters to amplify this effect, which is why you hear about data centers with hundreds of thousands of GPUs.
2025 was a record-setting year for data center capital expenditures, and that trend appears to be continuing. Many AI hyperscalers have already warned investors that spending in 2026 will be even greater than in 2025, which also indicates further growth beyond 2026.
Most data centers take several years to complete construction, so the money spent in 2025 to purchase land, design the facility, and initiate construction will translate into these clients purchasing Nvidia GPUs in 2026 or 2027. So, whenever you hear an AI hyperscaler announce that they’re building a facility in a location, it’s safe to assume that Nvidia’s growth horizon was extended at least another two or three years.
This jives with what Nvidia’s management has told investors during various conference calls. In the second quarter, they estimated that the big four AI hyperscalers will spend around $600 billion on data center capital expenditures. However, they expect that figure to rise to $3 trillion to $4 trillion when all customers worldwide are included. With Nvidia retaining an estimated 35% of this data center spend, it’s slated to capitalize on massive growth during the next few years.
This is the fuel that Nvidia needs to reach a $10 trillion market cap, and I won’t be surprised if Nvidia eclipses this monumental threshold by 2030.
Nvidia could be a much larger company than just $10 trillion
Using the bottom end of the estimated range, $3 trillion, and dropping Nvidia’s take to 30% to bake in a bit of conservatism, indicates Nvidia would generate $900 billion in revenue by 2030. If Nvidia maintains its 50% profit margin, that would translate into net income of $450 billion by 2030. Over the past 12 months, Nvidia has generated $165 billion in revenue and $87 billion in profits, indicating a substantial increase.
NVDA Revenue (TTM) data by YCharts
But are those figures enough to make Nvidia a $10 trillion company? Remember, this is only data center revenue, not any revenue the company generates from other business pursuits. Therefore, the actual revenue and profit totals are likely to be significantly higher.
Even only considering projected data center growth, it’s still sufficient to reach $10 trillion for Nvidia.
If we assign Nvidia a price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 30 times earnings, a reasonable price tag considering Nvidia’s growth and importance, that would indicate that Nvidia’s stock could be worth $13.5 trillion by 2030. That’s far above the $10 trillion threshold, and that only includes the data center business. Additionally, this was due to Nvidia losing some of its share in the spending pie and the lower end of Nvidia’s projection.
As a result, I’m confident that Nvidia can easily pass the $10 trillion threshold by 2030, making it a no-brainer buy today.
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