The
sustained weakness of Sterling against the Euro has forced Ford to announce and
average 4pc price increases across its range from the start of July 2009 on all
orders received after 30 June.
It is the third time this year that Ford has
raised prices. They rose by 4.7pc in February and by 3.75pc in April. The list
price of Ka, Fiesta, Focus and Mondeo models will rise by between £600
and £650
while an S-Max will cost £700 more and a Galaxy will go up by £800.
Pupils from Fitzalan High School, Cardiff went to the British
Grand Prix last weekend as part of their prize for being finalists in
the F1 Schools Technology Challenge last year. They were given VIP treatment at the event, met teams and walked around the paddock.
Motorists are being
urged to become familiar with foreign driving rules before they set off on
annual holiday. Insurer Sheilas' wheels found 15pc of motorists sustain
damage abroad, 2.8 million don't know speed limts and a third break the law by
not carrying a warning triangle and adjusting their headlights not to dazzle.
More worryingly, nine in ten assume they are automatically covered on insurance
when driving abroad.
Many motorists are unaware
of the dangers they face on different types of roads, according to the AA in
response to the Eurorap survey which is released today.
AA
/ Populus research* shows that drivers are most confident when driving on
the very roads that the EuroRAP study and national statistics show to be the
least safe - single carriageway A roads. In the AA / Populus survey 65pc
said they felt confident driving on A roads whereas fewer (60pc) said they felt
confident driving on motorways yet they are in fact the safest roads.
For the thirteenth
consecutive month, new registrations of commercial vehicles have declined in
Europe.
They totaled 138,830 units in May, decreasing by
39.0pc compared to May last year. Five months into 2009, the downturn was -37.6pc
and affected all countries across all vehicle categories.
The case for building more roads
has been knocked by new research showing that the proposed roads are running
over budget and that even if they go ahead, they are unlikely to solve traffic
problems.
Government
figures unearthed by Campaign for Better Transport reveal that the Highways
Agency's road building programme is significantly over budget. These cost
increases, combined with expected cutbacks in public spending, mean that it is
highly likely that many of these schemes will not be built.
Transport Secretary Andrew Adonis announced
four companies will begin supplying low carbon and all-electric vans to
selected public sector organisations later this year.
This is
part of a £20 million Department for Transport scheme to use public sector
procurement to help demonstrate the potential of new technologies for
decarbonising road transport.