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Eni CEO Claudio Descalzi: ‘I hate to be politically correct’

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Science   来源:Innovation  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:In the Hamilton area, candidates and boundaries change over time but this corner of Scotland's post-industrial centre is a consistent source of political intrigue.

In the Hamilton area, candidates and boundaries change over time but this corner of Scotland's post-industrial centre is a consistent source of political intrigue.

The £15bn investment into the warhead programme will back the government's commitments to maintain the continuous-at-sea nuclear deterrent.In his announcement on Monday, Sir Keir is to repeat a Labour manifesto commitment to deliver the Dreadnought class of nuclear-armed submarines, which are due to replace the ageing Vanguard fleet from the early 2030s onwards.

Eni CEO Claudio Descalzi: ‘I hate to be politically correct’

The MoD's Defence Nuclear Enterprise accounts for 20% of its budget and includes the cost of building four Dreadnought class submarines.Commitments on military spending come against the background of the government's wider review of departmental spending due later this month and have also taken on renewed importance given the Ukraine war, and pressure from Nato and US President Donald Trump for European countries to step up defence spending.Sir Keir has committed the government to spending 2.5% of the UK's national income on defence by 2027, up from 2.3%, but has faced pressure to commit to 3%.

Eni CEO Claudio Descalzi: ‘I hate to be politically correct’

Healey said the target will be hit by 2034 but the Conservatives say the threshold should be hit earlier. The Liberal Democrats have also argued for a 3% spending target.Shadow defence secretary James Cartlidge said Labour's review should be "taken with a pinch of salt" unless the government showed there would be enough money to pay for it.

Eni CEO Claudio Descalzi: ‘I hate to be politically correct’

Head of NATO, Mark Rutte has called on allies to spend 3.5% of its GDP on defence, with a further 1.5% on defence related expenditure.

The government has said it wants Britain to be the leading European nation within the NATO alliance but that might prove difficult when a significant number of allies exceed the UK's military spending.Certain expenses like infrastructure, academy, community and the cost of having a women's team are excluded from calculations.

BBC Sport crunches the numbers with football finance expert Kieran Maguire to look at how much each Premier League club will be able to spend in the transfer market, and whether there are any PSR limitations.While Arsenal have not lifted a major trophy since winning the FA Cup in 2020, last term marked the third consecutive season in which they have finished runners-up.

The Gunners also reached the semi-finals of both the Champions League and Carabao Cup, and pressure is building to shake off the tag of nearly men.With a £51m move for Real Sociedad and Spain midfielder

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