Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson appears on stage in conversation with Bill Gates during the Global Investment Summit at the Science Museum, London. Reuters
Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson appears on stage in conversation with Bill Gates during the Global Investment Summit at the Science Museum, London. Reuters
Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson appears on stage in conversation with Bill Gates during the Global Investment Summit at the Science Museum, London. Reuters
Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson appears on stage in conversation with Bill Gates during the Global Investment Summit at the Science Museum, London. Reuters

Boris Johnson and Bill Gates team up to rally green innovation and investment


Thomas Harding
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Tech pioneer Bill Gates has spent the last decade spearheading the international fight against malaria.

As a newly-installed prime minister, Boris Johnson played a crucial role in enabling scientists to successfully create a vaccine against Covid-19.

Now, the two have joined forces to harness investment and innovation in the fight against global warming.

Mr Johnson on Tuesday called for global investment in the green technology required for carbon-cutting plans.

He was joined by the Microsoft founder to announce a £400 million ($552.6m) joint investment partnership, targeting technology such as green hydrogen, long-term energy storage and sustainable aviation fuels.

The UK Prime Minister courted the "trillions of the markets" in a speech to the world's top financiers and executives.

The UK government's Global Investment Summit in London marks post-Brexit Britain's biggest push to woo investors, even leveraging the soft power of drinks with Queen Elizabeth II at Windsor Castle as it seeks cash and partners to edge ahead in the international race for green technology.

Downing Street said plans being announced at the summit would involve £9.7 billion of new overseas investment in the UK, creating 30,000 additional jobs.

Mr Johnson said the major hurdles overcome in rapidly producing Covid-19 vaccines showed that humanity had the skills to find the solutions to avert climate catastrophe.

The pair announced a new global Breakthrough Energy Catalyst in which the Gates Foundation would team up with the British government, investing an initial total of £400m to assist green technology development across the UK.

The partnership is “a boost to the UK’s vision of a green industrial revolution”, Mr Johnson said. “We will only achieve our ambitious climate goals if we rapidly scale up new technologies in areas like green hydrogen and sustainable aviation fuels, technologies that seemed impossible just a few years ago.”

He said his government was making “big bets” on electric vehicles, giga factories for battery production, hydrogen and solar power.

He singled out hydrogen as a major “part of the solution” as well as a reliance on nuclear power.

Mr Johnson made a direct appeal to the business leaders assembled before him at the Science Museum, London, stating that while his government could “deploy billions”, those in the room represented a total value of $24 trillion.

“I want to say to each and every one of those dollars, you are very welcome to the UK and you have come to the right place at the right time.”

The lessons from the coronavirus pandemic were clear, “we have to listen to the scientists”, he said, using the rapid creation of vaccines as an example of what people could achieve.

“When humanity really wants something then our promethium powers of invention are quite amazing when we have to do it,” Mr Johnson said. “When necessity is the mother of invention, we crack it.”

On the day the government publishes its net zero strategy for cutting emissions, Mr Johnson said the UK had a responsibility to lead the world in decarbonising because as the birthplace of the industrial revolution, “we were the first to knit the deadly tea cosy of CO2 that is now driving climate change”.

It was also announced on Tuesday that homeowners in England and Wales will be offered subsidies of £5,000 from next year to help them replace old gas boilers with low-carbon heat pumps.

He channelled the spirit of Michael Douglas’s character from the 1987 film Wall Street as he told business chiefs: “To adapt Gordon Gekko – who may or may not be a hero of anybody in this room – green is good, green is right, green works.”

Mr Gates, 65, the billionaire Microsoft philanthropist, spoke of his passion for cutting-edge technology.

“The most exciting thing going on is innovation,” he said. “The way that you can get from the trillions that you'd have to subsidise down to something that really works is through innovation.”

He highlighted how initial significant government investment in solar energy, lithium ion batteries and wind power had diminished once the systems became widespread.

“That difference that the government has to fund comes down and, like it has with electric cars, eventually reaches zero.”

Mr Johnson issued a plea for industrialised countries to contribute to the £100 billion a year needed to help developing countries decarbonise, a major focus of the Cop26 climate summit in Glasgow, which beings on October 31.

“It’s crucial for the success of the summit that the G20 countries – rich countries – show that they understand that global solidarity is necessary, absolutely crucial.”

Green and clean technology was vital to keep to the target of a 1.5°C temperature rise by the end of the century under the 2015 Paris Agreement.

“That sounds like a pretty modest ambition but in reality that's a huge thing to achieve and it will be dramatic for our lives and the lives of our children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren,” Mr Johnson said. “It is crucial that we do it, as the evidence is overwhelming.”

Boris Johnson operates a robotic arm in the Innovation Zone, during the Global Investment Summit in London. AFP
Boris Johnson operates a robotic arm in the Innovation Zone, during the Global Investment Summit in London. AFP

Attendees at the event included JP Morgan Chase chief executive Jamie Dimon, Blackrock chief executive Larry Fink and bosses from GlaxoSmithKline and Darktrace.

Officials hope the summit will bring a new wave of investments over the next 12 months. More than 100 private meetings were set to take place in exhibition halls adorned with planes, spacecraft and other artefacts of Britain's engineering history.

After the conference, attendees will travel to Windsor Castle for a reception attended by the queen and senior royals.

"This summit is not just a showcase but an opportunity to come together and, in the generous spirit of collaboration, forge new partnerships," the queen said in a foreword for the investment programme.

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
Profile

Company: Justmop.com

Date started: December 2015

Founders: Kerem Kuyucu and Cagatay Ozcan

Sector: Technology and home services

Based: Jumeirah Lake Towers, Dubai

Size: 55 employees and 100,000 cleaning requests a month

Funding:  The company’s investors include Collective Spark, Faith Capital Holding, Oak Capital, VentureFriends, and 500 Startups. 

While you're here
Salah in numbers

€39 million: Liverpool agreed a fee, including add-ons, in the region of 39m (nearly Dh176m) to sign Salah from Roma last year. The exchange rate at the time meant that cost the Reds £34.3m - a bargain given his performances since.

13: The 25-year-old player was not a complete stranger to the Premier League when he arrived at Liverpool this summer. However, during his previous stint at Chelsea, he made just 13 Premier League appearances, seven of which were off the bench, and scored only twice.

57: It was in the 57th minute of his Liverpool bow when Salah opened his account for the Reds in the 3-3 draw with Watford back in August. The Egyptian prodded the ball over the line from close range after latching onto Roberto Firmino's attempted lob.

7: Salah's best scoring streak of the season occurred between an FA Cup tie against West Brom on January 27 and a Premier League win over Newcastle on March 3. He scored for seven games running in all competitions and struck twice against Tottenham.

3: This season Salah became the first player in Premier League history to win the player of the month award three times during a term. He was voted as the division's best player in November, February and March.

40: Salah joined Roger Hunt and Ian Rush as the only players in Liverpool's history to have scored 40 times in a single season when he headed home against Bournemouth at Anfield earlier this month.

30: The goal against Bournemouth ensured the Egyptian achieved another milestone in becoming the first African player to score 30 times across one Premier League campaign.

8: As well as his fine form in England, Salah has also scored eight times in the tournament phase of this season's Champions League. Only Real Madrid's Cristiano Ronaldo, with 15 to his credit, has found the net more often in the group stages and knockout rounds of Europe's premier club competition.

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ETFs explained

Exhchange traded funds are bought and sold like shares, but operate as index-tracking funds, passively following their chosen indices, such as the S&P 500, FTSE 100 and the FTSE All World, plus a vast range of smaller exchanges and commodities, such as gold, silver, copper sugar, coffee and oil.

ETFs have zero upfront fees and annual charges as low as 0.07 per cent a year, which means you get to keep more of your returns, as actively managed funds can charge as much as 1.5 per cent a year.

There are thousands to choose from, with the five biggest providers BlackRock’s iShares range, Vanguard, State Street Global Advisors SPDR ETFs, Deutsche Bank AWM X-trackers and Invesco PowerShares.

Key findings
  • Over a period of seven years, a team of scientists analysed dietary data from 50,000 North American adults.
  • Eating one or two meals a day was associated with a relative decrease in BMI, compared with three meals. Snacks count as a meal. Likewise, participants who ate more than three meals a day experienced an increase in BMI: the more meals a day, the greater the increase. 
  • People who ate breakfast experienced a relative decrease in their BMI compared with “breakfast-skippers”. 
  • Those who turned the eating day on its head to make breakfast the biggest meal of the day, did even better. 
  • But scrapping dinner altogether gave the best results. The study found that the BMI of subjects who had a long overnight fast (of 18 hours or more) decreased when compared even with those who had a medium overnight fast, of between 12 and 17 hours.
Red Joan

Director: Trevor Nunn

Starring: Judi Dench, Sophie Cookson, Tereza Srbova

Rating: 3/5 stars

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Tamkeen's offering
  • Option 1: 70% in year 1, 50% in year 2, 30% in year 3
  • Option 2: 50% across three years
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Updated: October 19, 2021, 1:38 PM