Sunday 2 July 2017

Blaze rips through new multi-million pound development in trendy east London



Staff reporter(wp):
A huge fire has ripped through a new multi-million pound development in a trendy part of east London.

Dramatic images posted on social media showed thick smoke billowing over Victoria Park, in Bow.
Eighty fire fighters rushed to Bow Wharf – a new development where apartments cost as much as £1 million – just after 11am on Sunday.
At least 75 per cent of the roof of one of the developments blocks of luxury flats has been destroyed by flames along with parts of the third floor, London Fire Brigade said.
Fire crews evacuated a nearby play area while Grove Road was sealed off, witnesses said.
Jack Hawke wrote on Twitter: “#MileEnd park has been evacuated as firefighters put out the flames in the roof of a building at Bow Wharf.”
Rachel Carmac added: “Terrible fire at new Bow Wharf development in E3. Fire crews attending. Good job no-one is living there yet.” 
The cause of the fire is being investigated.

Saturday 1 July 2017

One dead and three seriously injured after mass brawl in Essex

Staff reporter(wp):
A man in his 20s has died and three others are suffering from "life-threatening injuries" following reports of mass brawl in Essex.
Police have launched a murder investigation after officers found the man had been stabbed in the chest and died at the scene in Blackshots Lane, Grays.
Three men are being treated at Basildon Hospital for injuries believed to be life-threatening, police added.
Officers said the incident, at around 12.35am on Saturday, was believed to be linked with another in nearby Fleming Road, Chafford Hundred, where a 17-year-old was knocked unconscious at around 1.55am.

Conservatives must 'change hard' to win over young voters, Damian Green to say

Political reporter(wp):
 The Conservatives must "change hard" to win over young voters who backed Labour in June's general election, Theresa May's most senior minister is to warn.
Damian Green will tell Tories they must modernise after losing their majority in an election where they trailed Labour by 30% among voters aged 18-35.
The First Secretary of State will tell Conservatives to create a "distinctive" message for "excluded voters".
It comes amid signals the government could ease off on austerity.
Thousands of people are expected to gather a mile away from where Mr Green is due to speak later for an anti-austerity demonstration Mr Corbyn will address.
Speaking at the Bright Blue liberal conservative think-tank's conference, Mr Green will discuss a new "city Conservativism" to woo young, metropolitan voters.

Devolution of power

This will involve highlighting existing Tory policies to build 1.5 million homes by 2022 and the devolution of power to British cities.
"I am not standing here and saying all we need to do is keep calm and carry on," he will say.
"We need to think hard, work hard and change hard.
"We need to show how Conservative values and policies can work for those parts of the country, and parts of the population, who have turned away from us."
Mr Green, effectively Mrs May's deputy prime minister, will say that the "root" of the Conservatives' failure to win a majority last month lies in those aged 18 to 35.
He will say: "If we are to bring young, educated, working Britain back to the Conservative Party, we need to make a reality of the promise to build a country that works for everyone."
On housing, Mr Green will promise that the Conservatives will build "high-quality" homes, including social housing that creates "sustainable and integrated communities".

Grenfell Tower fire: Sadiq Khan calls on PM to appoint commissioners

Political reporter(wp):
London's mayor has urged Theresa May to appoint commissioners to run Kensington and Chelsea council after its leader resigned over the Grenfell Tower fire.
Sadiq Khan welcomed Nicholas Paget-Brown's decision to stand down, but said public trust could not be restored by other members of the council.
He said residents "quite rightly feel desperately neglected".
Mr Paget-Brown resigned on Friday, saying he had to accept his "share of responsibility for perceived failings".
At least 80 people are believed to have died as fire engulfed the Grenfell Tower block, in west London, on 14 June.
Mr Paget-Brown resigned following sustained criticism of the council and an aborted meeting of its cabinet on Thursday, from which leaders had tried to ban members of the public and press.
The decision led to a rebuke from Downing Street, which said it would have expected the council to respect a High Court ruling that the meeting be open to the public.

    Reacting to Mr Paget-Brown's resignation, Mr Khan said it had been "clear that the local community in and around North Kensington has lost trust in the council and that the administration is not fit for purpose".
    He called on the prime minister to appoint "untainted" commissioners with "a genuine empathy for local people and the situation they face" to take over the running of the council until the next local council elections.
    Mr Khan added: "The council now needs to find a way to move forward and find a way to restore the confidence in that community.
    "That can only be done with new leadership and a new approach that reaches out to residents who quite rightly feel desperately neglected."
    Yvette Williams, co-ordinator of the Justice4Grenfell campaign, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that the community was "very, very angry" and would not accept commissioners without consultation.
    "They need to speak to us, we are not going to consistently have people imposed on us," she said.
    "I do support the mayor in terms of a commissioner-led borough, but how are those people going to be selected?"
    She added that one former Grenfell Tower resident had had rent deducted from their bank account since the tragedy.
    In response, Catherine Faulks, Conservative councillor for Kensington and Chelsea council, said "I'm very sorry to hear that happened, but that person, if it's happened, will have a one-person connection to go to, to explain that's happened, who will help them sort it out."
    • Residents condemned the response to the tragedy, calling it "absolute chaos" as relief efforts on the ground were limited.
    • They said there was little or no co-ordination in the immediate days after the disaster, with claims council officials were nowhere to be seen.
    • The council was accused of failing to provide enough support or information to those who had been made homeless.
    • It tried to hold the first cabinet meeting since the disaster behind closed doors.
    • After a High Court order ruled it should be open to the public, the council adjourned the meeting after 20 minutes, claiming an open meeting would "prejudice" the inquiry.
    • Ms Faulks said Mr Paget-Brown had done the "honourable thing" in resigning.
      "I completely understand the anger, the frustration of the local community," she said.
      "Of course we weren't immediately quick off the ground, it was an enormous tragedy, I don't know if everyone realised how complex and how vast this fire was.
      "I challenge any borough in the whole country to immediately have had an action plan that they could put into place."
      But shadow housing secretary John Healey told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that he backed Mr Khan's call because the council had "demonstrated they are not up to the job".
      "The public and residents' trust can't be restored by simply replacing the leader and deputy leader by other politicians from the same political group and this is where ministers need to step in," he said.
    • The former head of the civil service, Lord Kerslake, a cross-bench peer, told Today commissioners were "not brought in lightly" and it had "only happened on very few occasions".
      "The test for me about whether commissioners come in - I wouldn't like to make that judgement not being close to the detail - is really, essentially, can the council do the job that is necessary to make the building safe and in particular to support those who have been affected?" he said.
      "The pace of response has been the issue and also I have to say the communication. The public have a right to know what's going on."
      Council leaders claimed on Thursday that an open meeting would "prejudice" the forthcoming public inquiry into the disaster.
      But angry protests followed and Labour councillor Robert Atkinson, whose ward includes Grenfell Tower, branded the abandoned meeting a "fiasco".
      In his resignation statement, Mr Paget-Brown said he had received legal advice not to "compromise" the public inquiry into the fire by having the meeting open to the public and press.
      But he added this decision "has itself become a political story".
      "It cannot be right that this should have become the focus of attention when so many are dead or still unaccounted for," he said.Communities Secretary Sajid Javid said the resignation was a "personal matter" for Mr Paget-Brown, but added that it was "right that he has stepped aside".
      Deputy council leader and cabinet member for housing, property and regeneration, Rock Feilding-Mellen, also stood down.
      The fire at the 24-storey block in North Kensington destroyed 151 homes, both in the tower and surrounding areas.
      Documents obtained by the BBC suggest cladding fitted to Grenfell Tower during its refurbishment was changed to a cheaper version, which was less fire resistant.
      The tower's cladding has been the focus of attention, amid suggestions it was why the flames spread so quickly.
      Meanwhile, the head of Kensington and Chelsea Tenant Management Organisation has stepped aside so he can focus on "assisting with the investigation and inquiry"


    Friday 30 June 2017

    Mile End father and baby killed in French holiday crash

    Staff reporter(wp):
    A father and his nine-month-old son from east London died in a road crash during a family holiday in Brittany, France, an inquest has heard.
    Baby Max Naman died at the scene of the crash in Finistere on 7 June. His father, Lawrence Naman, 37, of Mile End, died the next day in hospital.
    Opening inquests into the deaths coroner Caroline Beasley-Murray said Mr Naman's wife remained in hospital.
    The hearing, in Chelmsford, was adjourned to a date to be confirmed.
    The court heard how Mr Naman had been driving the car with his wife - who was not named in the hearing - by his side and baby Max was in the back when their vehicle collided with a lorry.
    Mr Naman was taken to Brest Hospital where he later died. A post mortem examination found he died of skull trauma.
    Mrs Beasley-Murray said the deaths were a "tragic loss" and were currently subject to a criminal investigation in France.
    It is understood the inquest will resume once the police investigation has been completed.

    Man faces murder charge

    Molly McLaren
    Pic:Molly McLaren died at the scene/Kent Police
    Crime reporter(wp);
    A man has been charged with murder after a woman was stabbed to death in a car park.
    Joshua Stimpson, 25, of Wouldham High Street, Rochester, appeared before magistrates in Medway.
    Molly McLaren died in the dockside area of Maritime Way, Chatham, from injuries "consistent with a stabbing" on Thursday, Kent Police said.
    Ms McLaren, who was in her 20s, and Mr Stimpson were known to each other.
    The force said the case had been referred to the Independent Police Complaints Commission.
    At Medway Magistrates' Court, Mr Stimpson was remanded to appear before Maidstone Crown Court on Monday.

    Downing Street criticises council over aborted meeting

    Staff reporter(wp):
    Downing Street has rebuk and Chelsea Council over its decision to adjourn its first cabinet meeting since the Grened Kensingtonfell Tower fire.
    The cabinet had tried to hold Thursday's meeting behind closed doors but was forced by a court order to hold it in public.
    A spokesman said Number 10 expected the council to "respect" the court ruling.
    Separately, the chief executive of the organisation which manages Grenfell Tower has agreed to "step aside".
    Kensington and Chelsea Council leaders abruptly ended their meeting after 20 minutes, claiming an open meeting would "prejudice" the forthcoming public inquiry.
    On Thursday appeal judge Sir Martin Moore-Bick was appointed to lead the public inquiry into the deaths of at least 80 people.

    'Hiding from residents'

    Angry protests followed after the abandoned meeting, which Labour councillor Robert Atkinson, whose ward includes Grenfell Tower, branded a "fiasco".
    He shouted: "An absolute fiasco, this is why I am calling for your resignation."
    Mr Atkinson, the Labour group leader on Kensington and Chelsea Council, told the BBC he was "ashamed" of the authority.
    He accused the leaders of "hiding from residents, they have been hiding from backbench councillors for over a week".
    Mayor of London Sadiq Khan has demanded the resignation of the entire council leadership.
    The Labour mayor said the council's decision to scrap the meeting "beggars belief".
    And Andrew Gwynne MP, Labour's shadow communities and local government secretary, called for "commissioners to take control" of Kensington and Chelsea "if necessary".
    While he welcomed the Communities Secretary Sajid Javid's call for the democratic process to be open and transparent in the wake of Thursday night's abandoned meeting, he also called on him to "immediately ensure that all residents who are now homeless or in temporary accommodation are getting the support they need".
    Before the meeting, Mr Paget-Brown apologised for the authority's response to the Grenfell Tower tragedy, in which at least 80 people died..
    The Conservative councillor told BBC London he would not resign in the foreseeable future.
    On 22 June, the chief executive of Kensington and Chelsea Council Nicholas Holgate announced he was resigning following pressure from Mr Javid.
    A statement from Kensington and Chelsea Tenant Management Organisation (KCTMO) confirmed its chief executive Robert Black had also resigned so he can "concentrate on assisting with the investigation and inquiry".
    In a statement released after the cabinet meeting was adjourned, Mr Paget-Brown said: "We are under sustained media criticism for a slow reaction to the fire, non-visibility and for failing to invest in north Kensington.
    "I believe that many of these criticisms need to be challenged and over time they will be, but I can think of nothing more demeaning to the memory of those lost and missing in the fire than seeking the resolution of political scores."

    Thursday 29 June 2017

    Woman dies after being hit by Northern line Tube Train

    Staff reporter(wp/es):
    A woman has died after she was hit by a Tube train at a south London station.
    Police and paramedics arrived at Clapham South station just after 12.30pm on Thursday after reports of the incident.
    London’s Air Ambulance also landed on nearby Clapham Common.
    Northern line services between Morden and Stockwell were suspended as the incident was dealt with.
    A spokesman for British Transport Police said: "Paramedics, including the Air Ambulance, are on scene and treated a woman for serious injuries.
    "However despite their best effort she has sadly died. 
    "This incident is not currently being treated as suspicious and a file will be prepared for the coroner."

    Northern Ireland women to get abortions free on NHS

    Sarah Ewart and Grainne Teggart of Amnesty International,
    Pic:Campaigner Sarah Ewart (left) travelled to England for an abortion after learning that her baby would die soon after birth
    Health reporter(wp):
    Women from Northern Ireland will be able to get abortions in England, the government has said.
    More than 50 MPs from the major parties had backed a Labour-led call for the women to have abortions for free in England - they currently have to pay.
    The BBC's political editor said ministers made the concession because it appeared some Tory MPs might back the call, risking a possible defeat.
    Northern Ireland's abortion laws are much stricter than the rest of the UK.
    Abortions are only allowed in Northern Ireland if a woman's life is at risk or there is a permanent or serious risk to her physical or mental health. Rape, incest and fatal foetal abnormalities are not circumstances in which they can be performed legally.
    Women seeking an abortion can travel to England to have one privately, but had not been allowed to have them free on the NHS - a position that was backed by the UK Supreme Court earlier this month.
    An amendment on the issue, co-ordinated by Labour's Stella Creasy, which had cross-party backing, had been selected for inclusion in the Queen's Speech debate - which meant Theresa May's government ran the risk of possible defeat.
    Since the election Mrs May no longer has a majority of MPs so has to rely on backing from the 10 DUP MPs - but even then she remains vulnerable to a rebellion from her own Conservative MPs.
    The news of the change of policy was welcomed by the British Pregnancy Advisory Service which described it as a "landmark moment: for years the women of Northern Ireland, despite being UK citizens and taxpayers, have not been entitled to NHS-funded treatment".

    Wednesday 28 June 2017

    Man jailed for threatening to kill Labour MP Karin Smyth

    Crime reporter(wp):
    A man has been jailed after threatening to kill a Labour candidate during the general election campaign. Matthew Niblett phoned Karin Smyth’s office in Bristol seven times in one hour because he had taken exception to her campaign leaflets.
    He left messages in the early hours of 3 June claiming he would kill Smyth, who was re-elected on 8 June, and saying that he hoped that she would get stabbed in the street or caught in a bomb blast. Niblett was jailed for 14 weeks after pleading guilty to one count of harassment without violence.
    Judge Lynne Matthews said: “As a nation, we enjoy informed debate. We can protest, we can march in the street. But what we’re not free to do is the harassment of our politicians. That’s where we draw the line.”
    The judge also made reference to the murder of the Labour MP Jo Cox in June last year. “We only have to consider what happened to Jo Cox to understand how your actions would have caused distress to Ms Smyth and those who work in her office,” Matthews said. “You have shown no regard for the anxiety you cause to others.”
    The judge was told that Niblett, from Hartcliffe, south Bristol, had a longstanding issue with Smyth because he felt she had not properly investigated a case involving him. His lawyer, Jane Taylor, dismissed his calls to Smyth’s office as the “drunk ramblings” of a man with mental health and anger management issues.
    Taylor said it was clear her client had absolutely no intention of harming any member of the Labour party. Niblett interjected: “I’ve been doing this for years and years and nobody’s died, have they?”
    In a victim statement, Smyth, who doubled her Bristol South majority at the election, said she felt sad for Niblett and had been worried for the safety of her staff.
    Niblett was also given a seven-year restraining order preventing him from going near or contacting Smyth or the offices of the Bristol South Labour party in Bedminster.

    Tesco to axe 1,200 head office jobs

    Tesco store
    Pic: Tesco Store
    Business reporter(wp):
    Tesco plans to cut 1,200 jobs at its head office as part of a major cost-cutting drive.
    The UK's biggest supermarket told staff on Wednesday morning about the cull, which amounts to a quarter of its workforce in Welwyn Garden City and Hatfield.
    Tesco is implementing a turnaround plan that aims to reduce costs by £1.5bn.
    The cuts come after the retailer said last week it would close a call centre in Cardiff at the cost of 1,200 roles.
    Tesco said it was a "significant next step" in the reorganisation of the company.
    "This new service model will simplify the way we organise ourselves, reduce duplication and cost but also, very importantly, allow us to invest in serving shoppers better," a spokesperson said.
    Pauline Foulkes, national officer at shop workers' union Usdaw, said: "Tesco's head office staff are understandably very concerned that the company is proposing further large-scale job losses.
    "Our priorities are to keep as many staff as possible in employment and to get the best possible deal for our members."
    Shares in Tesco rose 1.6% to close at 171.7p, but have fallen almost 17% since the start of the year.
    Tesco said earlier this year that 1,000 roles would go as it reduced the number of distribution centres.
    It also announced a plan to replace 1,700 deputy managers at its Express convenience stores with 3,000 lower-paid "shift leaders".
    Trading at Tesco has been improving under chief executive Dave Lewis and earlier this month it reported a 2.3% rise in UK like-for-like sales for the three months to 27 May.
    The supermarket is undertaking a £3.7bn takeover of wholesaler and convenience store group Booker, which has drawn opposition from some shareholders.
    Schroders and Artisan Partners have said that Tesco is paying too much for Booker, which owns the Premier, Budgens and Londis store brands. and has written to chairman John Allan about their concerns.
    The Competition and Markets Authority has opened the first phase of its investigation into the deal, which will end in late July.

    No final Grenfell Tower death toll 'this year'

    Grenfell Tower
    Pic:Grenfell Tower/getty images
    Staff reporter(wp):
    The final Grenfell Tower fire toll will not be known until at least the end of the year, with 80 people currently presumed dead, police say.
    The vast majority of those who died were said to be in 23 of the North Kensington building's 129 flats.
    The 14 June fire destroyed 151 homes, most in the tower block, but also a number of surrounding properties.
    The opening of inquests into seven of the victims heard a six-month-old baby was found dead in her mother's arms.
    Survivors and relatives of those who died have expressed frustration at the progress of the investigation.
    But Det Supt Fiona McCormack said the full death toll will only be known when the search and recovery operation is over.
    What I can say is that we believe that around 80 people are either dead or sadly missing and I must presume that they are dead," the officer said.
    She added: "I don't want there to be any hidden victims. We want to understand the true human cost of this tragedy."
    Police said some residents had tried to move up the building to escape the flames and it is thought a number of people may have ended up in one flat.
    Det Supt McCormack said officers were having to prepare some families for the reality that their relatives' remains may never be recovered.
    There was "utter devastation inside the flats," she said.
    The update on the police investigation came as Prime Minister Theresa May told MPs that cladding from 120 high-rise buildings in 37 local authority areas in England has now failed fire safety tests.
    Westminster coroner Dr Fiona Wilcox has opened and adjourned more inquests into the deaths of the Grenfell Tower victims.

    Unsafe flats

    At least one person from 106 of the 129 flats at Grenfell Tower has been contacted in an attempt to identify those who might have died, police said.
    Some of the victims have been identified from a variety of sources including 999 calls - 26 calls received came from inside the 23 flats where the majority of people are thought to have died.
    The 23 flats concerned were located between the 11th and 23rd floors of Grenfell Tower.
    Det Supt McCormack said: "At this stage, we must presume, that no-one in those flats survived, that includes anyone who lived there or was visiting them."
    She said a few flats were still too unsafe for police to carry out further investigation "due to the devastation caused by the fire".
    The previously given death toll was 79.
    Local people have created their own databases on missing people with figures which differ from those officially released.
    Police said they hoped information would be sent to its investigation if it might identify the missing.
    They said "every imaginable source" of information "from government agencies to fast food companies" had been used by officers as part of their inquiries to identify the victims.

    Tuesday 27 June 2017

    Incredible moment man is flattened by out-of-control bus

    readingbuscrash2706a.jpg
    Pic:The moment the man is hit from behind by the double-decker bus
    Staff reporter(wp):
    A man was smashed from behind and sent flying through the air by an out-of-control bus in a dramatic crash in central Reading.
    Shocking CCTV footage shows the victim walking across the road when a double-decker bus suddenly comes hurtling around the corner of a busy town centre street.
    He is immediately struck down and thrown forward as the vehicle then crashes into a bus stop, sending glass and debris flying in all directions.
    Incredibly, the victim is then seen picking himself up and walking through the scene of carnage towards the Purple Turtle pub.
    The pub’s CCTV footage shows the victim being tended to by about a dozen concerned passers-by, including a man wearing a Reading Buses top.
    The bus itself appears to sustain a shattered windscreen following the impact, before coming to a halt a short distance away following the incident on Gun Street at 9am on Saturday.
    The victim is believed to be Simon Smith, who told BBC South Today he felt “lucky to be alive” following the crash.
    A Reading Buses spokesman confirmed the pedestrian was injured, but said he was not seriously hurt.
    He said the driver had been "taken off the road" while an investigation into the incident was carried out.
    It is not yet known what caused the bus to crash and there have been no arrests.
    The Reading Buses spokesman said: "We are obviously shocked by the incident as well as the very graphic footage that has been shared a number of times.
    "Thankfully, the pedestrian does not have any major injuries and there were no major injuries to passengers on the bus.
    "The incident is the subject of an ongoing internal investigation as well as an investigation by the police with whom we are working and sharing footage from our on-board CCTV, so it would be inappropriate for us to comment or speculate on this until it has run its course.
    "We can assure the public that all our drivers are incredibly professional and trained to the highest standard. Our buses receive regular checks by our award-winning engineering department.
    "We send our regrets to those affected, especially the pedestrian injured in the street and hope that he is recovering from his injuries."
    A spokesperson for Thames Valley Police said: “We were called to a road traffic collision involving a bus and a pedestrian in Gun Street at 9.13am on Saturday.
    “The ambulance was called to the scene. The road was closed for about two hours.
    “No arrests have been made.”

    Mega-satellite production begins

    Artwork satellite
    Pic:Each satellite is about a metre cubed and weighs less than 150kg
    Tech reporter(wp):
    European aerospace giant Airbus and its partner, OneWeb, have begun the production of a mega-satellite constellation.
    The network will comprise at least 600 spacecraft in the first instance, but could eventually encompass more than 2,000.
    The aim is to deliver broadband links from orbit to every corner of the globe.
    In particular, the project wants every school to have a connection.
    Building so large a constellation requires a step-change in the manufacture of satellites - especially for Airbus.
    It can take Europe’s biggest space company many months and hundreds of millions of dollars to build some of today’s specialist platforms. But for the OneWeb venture, it is all about high volume and low cost.
    That means new assembly line methods akin to those in factories producing cars and planes.
    The idea is to turn out three units per shift at well less than a million dollars a piece.
    The boss of Airbus, Tom Enders, concedes he initially thought the OneWeb concept to be fantasy.
    "Everything in space as you know traditionally has been gold-plated; it had to work perfectly, [and have] the most expensive materials, etc.
    "Here, we’ve had to go other ways, to be really commercial and calculating according to the target cost because that is very decisive in the whole business case for OneWeb," he told BBC News.
    Airbus and OneWeb have inaugurated the first assembly line in Toulouse, France. Two further lines will be set up in a soon-to-open factory complex in Florida.
    The most obvious difference you notice between these new lines and the conventional satellite cleanroom is the trolley robot, which moves the developing satellites between the various work stations. But the "revolution" here goes far beyond automation; it requires a whole chain of suppliers and their components to scale their work to a different game plan.
    The first 10 satellites to come off the Toulouse assembly line have a deadline to launch in April next year.
    Another batch will follow into orbit around November. And then the launch cadence will kick on apace.
    The establishment of the OneWeb constellation requires the greatest rocket campaign in the history of spaceflight.
    More than 20 Soyuz vehicles have been booked to throw clusters of 32-36 satellites into a web some 1,200km above the Earth.
    There should be just under 300 on station by 2020/21; more than 600 by the end of 2021; and then over 800 by the middle of the decade.
    OneWeb and Airbus are not the only companies planning a mega-constellation in the sky. SpaceX, Boeing, ViaSat and others have all sought regulatory approval. But not everyone will succeed in getting the necessary multi-billion-dollar financing, and Airbus believes the OneWeb concept has first-mover advantage.
    Equity of $1.7bn has already been raised, and talks are ongoing to secure the loans needed to complete the roll-out. OneWeb describes itself as a "truly global company" but it has company registration in the UK's Channel Islands. And, as such it must deal with the UK Space Agency as the licensing authority.
    "A lot of our revenues are going to flow through the UK. So, from an economic perspective, it is going to be very important for the UK," said OneWeb CEO Eric Béranger.
    "And when you have people locally, you are also fostering an ecosystem. And I think the UK being at the forefront of regulatory thinking on constellations will foster an environment that puts the UK ahead of many countries."
    One aspect that the UKSA is sure to take a keen interest in is debris mitigation. There is considerable concern that a proliferation of multi-satellite networks could lead to large volumes of junk and a cascade of collisions.
    The fear is that space could eventually become unusable.
    A recent study - sponsored by the European Space Agency and supported by Airbus itself - found that the new constellations would need to de-orbit their old, redundant spacecraft within five years or run the risk of seriously escalating the probability of collisions. Brian Holz, who is CEO of OneWeb/Airbus manufacturing joint venture, said the ambition of his constellation was to set new standards in debris mitigation.
    "We can bring down the satellites and re-enter within two years; we've made that commitment," he told BBC News.
    "We've put extra hardware into the system to improve the reliability of that de-orbit process. We're also committing to put a small adapter device on to each spacecraft that will allow those spacecraft, in the small probability that one of them dies on the way down, to be grabbed by a small chase vehicle and pulled out of orbit."
    Time will tell how disruptive the new manufacturing approaches adopted in Toulouse will be to the satellite industry as a whole.
    Airbus and OneWeb hope also to be making satellites for other companies on their assembly lines. But not every platform in the sky will require such volumes and a good number of spacecraft will still need the bespoke treatment.
    "Not everything here is application to the whole space industry. When we launch to Jupiter, there are things that will remain gold-plated whether we like it or not; unless of course we start to manufacture 900 satellites to go to Jupiter but this is not the case today,” said Nicolas Chamussy, who runs the satellite division of Airbus.