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British Company - Dec 11

The following are the leading stories on the business pages of British newspapers. Reuters has not confirmed these stories and does not attest their precision.

The Times

- A 300,000 pound ($ 383,190.00) settlement has been agreed in between Shell and Greenpeace after the environmental charity inhabited among the multinational's vessels to protest versus its North Sea oil drilling plans.

- The industrial equipment hire business Ashtead Group has proposed moving its primary stock exchange listing to New york city, ending up being the most recent blue-chip company to leave London.

The Guardian

- Britain's Harrods workers from cleaners to go shopping flooring and restaurant personnel are set to strike in Christmas week, consisting of during the upmarket outlet store's essential Boxing Day sales, in a disagreement over pay and advantages.

- Britain's most significant water provider Thames Water stated that all of its funds might be exhausted if it failed to protect the emergency funding from its financial institutions, putting it at danger of short-lived nationalisation.

The Telegraph

- UK's Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner has been prompted to turn down Chinese premier Xi Jinping's plans for a London super-embassy over worries it would put the general public at danger.

- Britain is to develop its very first full scale carbon capture power station, with building and construction due to begin next year, following practically twenty years of hold-ups.

Sky News

- Sycamore Partners, the private equity firm, is anticipated to look for separate ownership for Boots if it is successful in taking Walgreens Boots Alliance, its present New York-listed moms and dad, private.

- Royal London, among Britain's leading financial mutuals is in talks to purchase Dalmore Capital, the facilities financier which owns a stake in the Thames 'very sewer'.

(source: Reuters)