Department for Infrastructure
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[Written Question] Water Supply: Infrastructure
Question by: Bob Blackman Answering Body: Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Question: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, whether she has made an assessment of the potential merits of placing the Regulators’ Alliance for Progressing Infrastructure Development on a statutory footing with powers to coordina
[Written Question] Transport: Infrastructure
Question by: Alex Mayer Answering Body: Department for Transport Question: To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what assessment her Department has made of the potential role of Digital Twin technology in supporting the delivery of an integrated transport system in the UK.
Cash or app - how do you prefer to pay for your parking?
Stormont's Department for Infrastructure is to remove almost half the pay and display machines it owns in Belfast, Newry and Lisburn.
Number of parking machines cut to make way for ticketless system
Stormont's Department for Infrastructure is to remove almost half the pay and display machines it owns in Belfast, Newry and Lisburn.
Cash or app - how do you prefer to pay for your parking?
Stormont's Department for Infrastructure is to remove almost half the pay and display machines it owns in Belfast, Newry and Lisburn.
Buoys track ocean waves across 14,000 km, from storms in Antarctica to ripples in Alaska
Buoys track ocean waves across 14,000 km, from storms in Antarctica to ripples in Alaska Lisa Lock Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor For the first time, mighty ocean waves generated in the Southern Ocean have been accurately measured all the way to the tiny ripples they form on the shores of Alaska. Professor Ian Young, from the University of Melbourne's Department of Infrastructure Engineering, is lead author on a landmark study that analyzed data from 300 drifting ocean buoys...
Even kids want gambling ads banned, so why won't the government do it?
analysis Government's proposed crackdown on gambling advertising doesn't go far enough for most Australians Sat 6 Jun 2026 at 8:10am Last week, on a brisk Canberra afternoon, ACT Brumbies fans gathered to watch the Super Rugby match against Moana Pasifika. On their way into the stadium, one fan summed up his views on the gambling industry. "The house always wins,"he said.
Damning report questions what counts as a home in Tasmania's 10,000-home target
New report into failed Homes Tasmania finds 'significant financial vulnerabilities', reliance on spreadsheets Wed 3 Jun 2026 at 9:34am In short: A review has found Homes Tasmania relies too heavily on spreadsheets and faces significant financial risks due to rising debt. The report also criticised how the government defines and counts a home as part of its 10,000-homes target. Homes Tasmania will be wound up, with housing policy and delivery shifting to a new Building Tasmania department,...
A walking tour of surveillance infrastructure in Seattle
Note: this guide is a work in progress and may change at any time! We’ve done our best to cite our sources, but this page has not been professionally fact-checked. This workshop was first run as part of two pilot workshops with the Tech Equity Coalition, in partnership with the ACLU of Washington, in October 2019.
Uncle Sam considers buying a seat on the Titanic
The US government is reportedly weighing whether to take a financial stake in AI companies, which looks a bit like negotiating for a seat on the Titanic. Neither OpenAI nor Anthropic, the marquee brands in US AI, are profitable yet. While Anthropic may be nearer to that point if its accounting survives scrutiny, OpenAI's $1.4 trillion in financial commitments over the next eight years have been interpreted as a red flag for investors.