With Auchincloss in place, can BP go green and print green? February 5, 2024 The US giants Exxon and Chevron have reported their second-highest profits since David Cameron and Barack Obama were leading the free world. Across the pond, Shell also posted some rather handsome results last week.Next in line to report is BP, the little brother of the group in a market cap sense, which will update the [...]
Heating pools with cat videos? How data centres can carve a brave new world February 5, 2024 Companies are already using wasted heat from data centres in innovative ways, but we need government to get on board, writes Mark Bjornsgaard.
To lead the artificial intelligence revolution, London must first win over the sceptics February 5, 2024 AI could be London's next big industry, but only if it builds the needed trust to develop the technology, writes Michael Mainelli.
Starmer’s prawn cocktail offensive is just that: palatable but lacking substance February 5, 2024 Labour’s plan to boost business is hard to oppose, but only because it has nothing to say, writes Eliot Wilson.
Fighting cultural trends is no good – Manchester’s success shows hospitality must adapt to social changes February 3, 2024 It's no use burying our heads in the sand: a new generation and the scars of the pandemic have changed going-out habits forever. Greater Manchester is thriving because bars and clubs have responded to this, writes Sacha Lord
EU AI Act will set the global standard, so British businesses must keep up February 2, 2024 The EU's landmark AI act will likely set the tone for global standards, so British companies should not rest on their laurels, writes Nick White.
Worst corporate jargon of the week awards: Jumping on a call February 1, 2024 At City A.M., we’re taking a stand and calling out the worst jargon which travels around the City faster than you can drink an overpriced pint. This week: jumping on a call.
Belfast is beautiful but its peace walls convey the scars of brutal recent history February 1, 2024 The scars of the Troubles are visible in the physical barriers that divide Belfast's citizens in two, writes Lucy Kenningham
Sleeping with your boss? WWE scandal a reminder firms shouldn’t tolerate it February 1, 2024 The lesson for businesses from the WWE scandal is that the temptation to overlook the misbehaviour of powerful executives is not only immoral but unwise, writes Will Cooling
Off-peak Fridays sound fun, but Londoners will end up footing the bill February 1, 2024 The mayor's reckless promise of lower fare Fridays is a sign of more disingenuous election politicking to come, writes John Oxley