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UK’s flagship investment summit suffers bumpy build-up

News Desk
Sunday, Oct 13, 2024

LONDON: The UK government hosts international business leaders on Monday to try and secure much-needed investment for Britain but the build-up has been chaotic with a major firm reportedly threatening to shelve a project.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer, the leader of the new Labour government, hopes the International Investment Summit in London will show the UK is “the best place in the world to do business”.

Starmer has been in power for just three months after securing a thumping majority in the general election.

But he is already on the back foot, with a YouGov poll showing only 18 per cent of Britons approve of his government’s record to date.

Labour sees Monday’s event as an opportunity to demonstrate its pro-business agenda and to stabilise the economy after 14 years of chaotic Conservative rule and Britain’s departure from the European Union.

Starmer is expected to announce billions of pounds in investments.

He has already unveiled GBP24 billion ($31.4 billion) in green energy projects, including GBP12 billion by Spanish giant Iberdrola and GBP8 billion by Danish firm Orsted.

But his attempts to woo investors suffered a blow when an expected announcement by P&O Ferries of a GBP1-billion port expansion was reported by UK media to be under threat.

This came after transport minister Louise Haigh and Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner issued a joint press release calling P&O’s employment practices “unscrupulous” and “exploitative”.

Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem, the chairman of P&O owner DP World, then threatened not to attend the investment summit.

Last-ditch talks with the UK government ensued and the Times reported on Saturday that bin Sulayem would take part after all and an announcement about the P&O investment was still expected.