A new railway bridge will be installed at Cathays railway station starting on 13 June.
The ‘Access for All’ footbridge will provide better accessibility and help modernise the station to a safer transport hub while additional features of the infrastructure upgrade include step-free lift access for wheelchair users, improved walkways, and direct access to the Cardiff University’s Centre for Student Life.
Honda has introduced a new service-activated warranty programme replacing the five-year powertrain cover and three-years general warranth.
Effective for vehicles registered from 1 June, the new scheme reinforces Honda’s reputation for reliability and will cover all Honda automobiles for a maximum period of eight years or 100,000 miles from the date of initial registration and it’s transferable to subsequent owners of a qualifying vehicle.
As Child Safety Week shines a spotlight on protecting children from preventable harm, TyreSafe is urging families to think beyond the child car seat and ensure the whole vehicle is safe before every journey.
The road safety charity is highlighting the important connection between correctly fitted child restraints and properly maintained tyres, warning that both play a vital role in keeping children safe on the roads.
In response to the Competition and Markets latest road fuel monitoring report, RAC head of policy Simon Williams said, “It’s positive to have confirmation retailers haven’t altered their pricing strategies as a result of the Iran war, but it’s worrying the watchdog has concluded competition is still lacking in the road fuel market and that margins are still at historically high levels.”
The Government’s new Fuel Finder, introduced at the start of February, is supposed to help with that but it’s still early days, he added.
Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) and Hydrogen technology will be vital to cutting emissions and strengthening energy resilience, but progress will stall without co-ordination of infrastructure, clearer cross-border rules and stronger investor confidence, according to a new report OEUK commissioned from DNV.
In the first of two studies launched at OEUK’s first CCS & Hydrogen Summit in Edinburgh this week, DNV’s ‘An Integrated and Resilient North Sea’ report examines CO2 transport and storage and hydrogen transport across the UK, Norway, the Netherlands, Germany, Belgium and France, and argues that planning infrastructure as one integrated North Sea system, rather than as isolated national or project-level developments, is essential to deliver affordability, resilience, interoperability and long-term value.
