Thursday newspaper round-up: Moderna boss, North Sea drilling, Ryanair.


The UK boss of the US drugmaker Moderna, which shot to prominence with its Covid vaccine during the pandemic, has defended the country after it was labelled the “worst in Europe” for drug pricing. Darius Hughes spoke as he opened a £150m vaccine site in Oxfordshire, just days after MSD, AstraZeneca and Eli Lilly announced that they would ditch or pause planned UK investments amid a row over pricing between the pharmaceutical industry and the government. – Guardian

Source: Sharecast

Ed Miliband is planning to encourage drilling in the North Sea despite a manifesto promise not to grant new licences on new parts of the British sea bed. The energy secretary is looking at ways in which the government can allow companies to look for and produce more oil and gas without breaking Labour’s pre-election pledge not to issue new licences on new fields. - Guardian

Ryanair has been accused of ignoring elderly passengers after confirming plans to scrap paper boarding passes. A Ryanair shake-up, due to take effect in November, will result in 40 million Ryanair customers who use paper tickets being forced to carry passes on a smartphone, which campaigners said will make travelling harder for older passengers. – Telegraph

Animal rights activists have been accused of driving up chicken prices by attempting to block new poultry farms across Britain. Plans to build a chicken factory in Lincolnshire have been targeted by a barrage of complaints, in the latest example of a coordinated campaign to halt new poultry projects. – Telegraph

The boss of BT and other big business leaders have warned the government that high taxes and excessive red tape risk deterring investment in Britain. Allison Kirkby, chief executive of BT, claimed that the FTSE 100 telecommunications group paid “ten times” more than peers in other major European economies in “government-inflicted costs”, before what she said would be a “very difficult” budget in November. – The Times

Britain’s biggest carmaker is said to have been uninsured for the disastrous cyberattack that has shut down its production and is raising fears of insolvency in the supply chain as hundreds of companies begin laying off workers. Jaguar Land Rover had not finalised a cyber-insurance deal that was being brokered before the incident, leaving it “uninsured directly” for the attack, an insurance journal reported. – The Times

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