Елена Самтынова

depositedhar / Depositphotos.com
Правительство РФ решило продлить указанную меру поддержки бизнеса, которая действовала в прошлом году (постановление Правительства РФ от 23 января 2021 года № 391). Согласно постановлению распорядители бюджетных средств федерального бюджета вправе предусматривать в заключаемых ими в 2021 году госконтрактах о поставке товаров (выполнении работ, оказании услуг) авансовые платежи в размере, не превышающем 50% суммы такого контракта, но не более лимитов бюджетных обязательств. Данное правило распространяется на госконтракты, финансируемые как из федерального, так и из региональных бюджетов.
Отмечается, что до начала пандемии коронавируса аванс ограничивался размером в 30% от цены, зафиксированной в договоре. Помимо этого, уточняются правила применения казначейского сопровождения при уплате авансовых платежей по госконтрактам. Такая процедура применима в случае необходимости особого контроля за бюджетными расходами.
Все важные документы и новости о коронавирусе COVID-19 – в ежедневной рассылке Подписаться
Изменения внесены в постановление Правительства РФ от 9 декабря 2017 г. № 1496 и вступят в силу с момента официального опубликования постановления Правительства РФ от 23 января 2021 года № 39.
_____________________________
1 С постановлением Правительства РФ от 23 января 2021 г. № 39 «О внесении изменений в пункты 18, 264 и 268 Положения о мерах по обеспечению исполнения федерального бюджета и приостановлении действия отдельных положений некоторых актов Правительства Российской Федерации» можно ознакомиться на официальном сайте кабинета министров (http://government.ru/news/41397/).
id=»firstHeading» class=»firstHeading mw-first-heading»>Search results
Help
English
Tools
Tools
move to sidebar hide
Actions
General
Bright and early, my old friend, the beauty and wellness entrepreneur
Liz Earle, is standing at my door clutching a Kilner jar with what looks like a
small sponge floating in murky water.
‘I made kombucha for you,’ she says with an enthusiasm I don’t entirely
share.
(The sponge, it turns out, is the Scoby, or
‘symbiotic culture of bacteria and yeast’,
which is what’s used to ferment sweetened tea to make kombucha.
I don’t realise at the time, but this hideous thing takes
weeks to develop and is in fact a very generous gift.)
The truth is, I’d drink (almost) anything if it gave me
Liz’s zip. At 61, a mother of five and a new grandmother,
she honestly looks 20 years younger. Fans of her
YouTube channel and her 170,000 Instagram followers will know how bright and smooth
her skin is, but in person she is fizzing with energy, too.
Liz and I have been friends for 25 years — over which time she has somehow seemed to
gain in vitality as I, nine years her junior, have… well, deflated.
Beauty and wellness entrepreneur Liz Earle, right, and
Beatrice Aidin met back in the 1990s when they were both
beauty journalists
So here’s my plan. I am going to Live Like Liz for a full eight weeks, morning to night,
to see just how much I, too, can turn back
the clock.
I am going to eat, drink and exercise like Liz, ‘ground myself’ in a flower bed
in my pyjamas like her, and even tape up my mouth
à la Liz. From my gut to my hormones, my brain to the very cells of my skin, I will follow the ‘bio-hacks’ set out
in her new book A Better Second Half: Dial Back Your Age To Live A Longer, Healthier, Happier Life,
which swiftly became a bestseller on its release this year.
Liz says it can’t fail, so long as I commit to it.
‘Who’s to say we can’t or shouldn’t change the way we age?’
she asks.
‘I was stronger, fitter and more capable in my 50s than I was in my 40s, so why can’t I be even more
so in my 60s, 70s and beyond?’
Perhaps more significantly, after the ‘car crash of emotional wreckage’ caused by the breakdown of her second marriage, and the divorce she
went through in 2020, she now says: ‘I’m happier at 61 than I was at 40.’
Career-wise, it shows. When we met back in the 1990s we were both beauty journalists.
At launches for new products, I’d merrily down the free
Krug while Liz sipped sparkling water. ‘Ah Bea, you were the yin to my
yang,’ she says.
Now, her wellness empire has mushroomed… and I’m suffering major work anxiety,
a not-unrelated financial crisis and severe sciatica.
Frankly, I look and feel knackered. My skin is dull and
I have dark circles under my eyes. Physical pain interferes with my sleep, and I’ve been turning rather too readily to
the sauvignon blanc to help me nod off.
Food is not a priority: I’m either not interested or craving sugar,
which means I’m a good 10lb heavier than I should be.
So, can living like my rather fabulous friend make me feel as young
as she looks? More to the point — can I really stick to it, kombucha and all?
‘Come on Bea, get off your backside!’ Liz demands…
Liz (left) puts Beatrice through her paces in the gym. Beatrice
needs extra help with exercise because of her sciatica
Week one: I face up to my middle-age spread
Liz’s top-line diet philosophy is high-protein, low carb, meaning she’s a fan of lots of foods I love but
didn’t think I should eat: butter, unprocessed meat, avocados,
good quality cheese, taramasalata and thick Greek yoghurt.
High protein helps us ‘shift to a leaner, more toned shape, and lose that middle-aged spread,
‘ she says.
Timing matters. Liz eats two meals a day —
brunch around 11am and dinner at 7pm. The order matters too:
clear your plate of chicken before rice, because eating protein before
carbs keeps blood sugar levels stable.
In recent years she has increased her coffee intake (before 2pm) because studies show four to five
cups is ‘strongly associated with living longer’ thanks to the bioactives in coffee beans such as chlorogenic acid.
She eats wheatgerm, soya beans and nuts to up her intake of spermidine — a dietary molecule that
interacts with our DNA and mimics an anti-ageing process called autophagy, which de-ages us at a cellular level.
Alcohol is basically a no-no. Liz has the ‘occasional glass’ of wine or tequila, but never more than two
and never alone.
I chuck out the ready meals and plonk, roll up my sleeves and
start cooking from scratch. I grill venison, roast a chicken and make soups with
the leftovers.
Eating at specific times works for me — I’m never very hungry
first thing — and enjoying the protein part of each meal first means I’m fuller and find it
easy to cut back on my carb portions.
Gut health is a big focus, which means more fermented foods.
Much to my surprise, I love the kombucha and soon start to
brew my own using Liz’s Scoby. But homemade kimchi — fermented veg — is a harder
sell. When a lunch guest asks me why I’m forcing myself to
eat something I dislike so much, I reply solemnly: ‘Liz told me
to.’
Week two: I discover I can do only 3 press-ups
I really need help with exercise because sciatica
means my normal routine has gone to pot.
Thankfully, Liz reckons just ten minutes a day of
exercises such as squats, lunges and press-ups is more valuable in the long term than a
high-intensity gym session once a week or a long park run.
She introduces me to her personal trainer, Michael Garry, who delivers the (bombshell,
but welcome) news that running any distance over 5k can ‘start to have
negative effects’ on our immune system and bone strength.
If you’re a runner, make it harder by speeding up your time, not
increasing your distance.
At Michael’s insistence, I consult a physio about my
sciatica, and then he devises a daily regime for
me. I try press-ups and make it to three.
Mortifying. Perseverance is clearly key. As are weights, especially in your 50s.
‘The more muscle you have, the more your bones are protected from osteoporosis, especially during midlife,’ says Michael.
For cardio, says Beatrice, I keep swimming twice a
week. But instead of plodding up and down the pool, I
start to compete with myself, speeding up the laps
For my slack and flabby upper arms, he advises shoulder presses and hammer curls, with 3kg weights in both hands.
I try tricep dips off a chair, and quickly find I can increase my reps — until by
week four I’m doing two sets of 15.
I work out three times a week at home. At first the
routine takes 40 minutes but the more I do, the faster I do it, until the whole thing — stretching, press-ups, weights — takes just
20 minutes.
For cardio, I keep swimming twice a week. But instead of plodding up and down the pool,
I start to compete with myself, speeding up the laps.
Week three: I slow the hormonal roller coaster
I’m menopausal and already on HRT, but I know I could improve how
I feel, which is sluggish and foggy.
Liz introduces me to something called the ‘estrobolome’ — the specific collection of bacteria in the gut that influences
how our body uses oestrogen. Put simply, some microbes improve the
efficiency with which oestrogen reaches tissues around the
body, meaning we use our dwindling supplies more effectively.
The best way to support your estrobolome is by eating fibre from
veg, seeds and nuts, plus some of the low-sugar fruits such
as apples, berries and plums. Back to the supermarket I go.
To boost the happy hormone serotonin, my saintly mentor insists I finish
my morning shower with a minimum 60-second blast of icy cold water, resulting — she claims
— in a ‘post-shock high’ and ‘genuine glow’.
Hmmm. I find it hard to relinquish the comfort of a
hot shower and feel not happy but mutinous as I step
out of the bathroom shivering.
Week four: I stand in the flower bed
Living Like Liz means getting outside first thing
in the morning and standing barefoot on the grass.
‘Grounding’ apparently enables electrons from the surface of the Earth to transmit deep
into the body, ‘where they have an anti-inflammatory effect’.
Liz tells me she does this in the tranquil grounds of her glorious pile
in the West Country. I do it in a flower bed in my shared patio, still in my pyjamas, and
feel, well, very self-conscious. Later I graduate to the park,
and — look away now — tread in dog mess, which does not
improve my emotional wellbeing.
She also encourages us to keep a Five Minute Gratitude Journal twice a
day. ‘Gratitude is… a superpower that improves longevity and supports the immune system,’
she says.
I can’t help but think my better-off mate has rather a lot more
to smile about than me but, following instructions, I write down three things I
am grateful for every morning, and every night a short list of ‘good things’ that happened that day, plus another (longer) list of ‘things that are concerning me’.
My scepticism around gratitude slowly lifts as I
find it does make me realise what’s important and what’s not.
It helps me see that things are a lot brighter than I thought.
Packing in a rush for a weekend away, I can’t find my journal and am surprised by how bereft I feel without it.
Week five: I start to sleep well
I’m a night owl — I stay up too late watching TV and end up hitting my snooze button past 8.30am…
and occasionally edging towards 10am.
Liz reckons anyone can improve their sleep if they follow her routine, which means setting an evening alarm for 9pm — to remind yourself to start ‘winding down for bed’.
Emails, social media and TV are switched off, replaced by a printed book or a podcast.
She takes 120g of magnesium glycinate in a milky drink half an hour before bed (and stops
eating two hours before).
Living Like Liz means getting outside first thing in the morning
Liz wears a bamboo fibre nightie or pyjamas to keep warm because she sleeps with
an open window, which she covers with blackout blinds
and curtains, and sprinkles her pillow with a few drops of neat lavender essential
oil.
I’m an e-book reader, so already failing at this routine.
Still, I leave my phone charging in the kitchen and buy a regular alarm clock.
The lavender oil makes me sneeze, so I spray my pillows with C.
Atherley Geranium Spray instead.
Oh, and I tape my lips up — Liz shows me how when she delivers the
kombucha. Forcing yourself to breathe through your nose is said to promote more restful sleep.
All of this is time-consuming and takes practise, but I find the ritual soothing.
Five weeks in, I’m getting to sleep earlier than I have for years — at 10.30pm
after 20 minutes drop-off time -and waking at 7.30am.
How virtuous!
Week six: I crash off the wagon
I’m doing my best, but then I go for lunch with a friend who
chirpily suggests a glass of wine, which turns into a bottle.
And then a second. Later, with a daytime hangover, I head to M&S and find reduced dauphinoise potatoes, which
become dinner.
Liz has got me on a blood sugar tracker called Lingo (£289 for two months — you jab a biosensor
the size and shape of a plastic bottle top into your upper arm, and then link
it to an app on your phone), which shows a massive post-potato spike and then a huge slump, which makes me tired and irritable.
Who knew that such deliciousness had such a high glycaemic load?
I call Liz to ‘fess up. ‘I have the odd day when I lie in, eat too much cake
and drink too much tequila,’ she says. ‘But that’s fine because you then know what to do to put it right.
It’s not about being perfect.’ Phew!
Week seven: I tackle my financial mess
Re-reading my journal really helps here. By documenting what I was so worried about day by day, my
perspective on it changes.
Here, in black and white, is a record of how I
felt at the start of this project and how I’ve evolved.
I’ve come unstuck — in a good way. I’m not going to pretend it’s been easy because change
is uncomfortable, but I realise there’s simply nothing to be
gained from the worry spiral.
If freelance life is tough, and my income erratic, I’m going to do something about it.
Buoyed with the confidence that comes with action, I
apply for part-time admin jobs. As personal trainer Michael observes as we
work out on Zoom, I wouldn’t have done this before.
He’s right. Finally I’ve started to take control.
Week eight: And the winner is…
So how have eight weeks of Living Like Liz changed me?
Physically, I’m in much better shape. I’ve lost 7 lb and taken an extraordinary 5 in off my waist and 11 in off my body as a whole.
Those three pathetic press-ups have become a whopping 40 per workout,
and the measly 3kg weights are now 6kg, meaning I have
proper bicep definition. The sleeveless tops will be coming out again this party season.
Read More
Our essential guide to beating back pain: What’s causing your aches
My skin is clearer, eyes brighter and face more defined because I’ve
reduced the carb-inducing bloat. I’m sleeping better and feeling infinitely less
anxious.
Most remarkably — and this is really life-changing — my sciatica
is almost gone and I can come off strong painkillers. I know sciatica can disappear of its own accord, but the timing is surely no coincidence.
All those exercises have strengthened the muscles around my spine and buttocks and I’m convinced it’s
done the trick.
I meet Liz for lunch, nervous about whether she’ll see a difference.
‘Oh wow,’ she says, taking a good look at her pupil.
‘Those arms! You definitely look younger.’
We chat for a while and she adds: ‘You also seem more content and optimistic.
You have an inner glow and a halo of positivity.’
Well, yes, she would say that, wouldn’t she?
(Probably. Though Liz is known for her candour, so it’s not a given.) ‘I wasn’t sure you
were going to prioritise yourself enough and commit,’ she admits ‘You weren’t
an easy nut to crack so I’m thrilled.’
I’m delighted with my gold star. And I’m grateful
to her, which is one of the key lessons I’ve learned.
Gratitude makes everything feel better.
That — along with the kombucha, ice-cold showers (which
I have learned to love) and the odd tequila — are the habits I’ll hold on to.
But not (shudder!) the kimchi or flower beds.
As Liz says, everyone deserves to have a better second half — and
if I can do it, anyone can.
A Better Second Half: Dial Back Your Age To Live A Longer, Healthier, Happier Life, by Liz Earle
(Hodder & Stoughton, £22).
Instagram
Electric vehicles accounted for more than a quarter of all new cars
bought in the UK last month but demand is being propped up by ‘unsustainable’ manufacturer discounts,
the trade body has warned.
New car sales in the UK declined by 1.9 per cent in November, with 153,610 motors joining the road, latest figures from the
Society of Manufacturers and Motor Traders reveal.
EV sales rose for an eleventh consecutive month — up 58.4 per cent — to represent
25.1 per cent of all new registrations — the highest share of sales battery cars have secured in a single month in almost two years.
In contrast, petrol and diesel car registrations
fell by 17.7 and 10.1 per cent respectively in November.
However, industry bosses said the figures masked the sector’s
‘continued struggles’ to meet the Government’s aggressive Zero Emission Vehicle (ZEV) mandate
targets introduced this year, with fines looming for manufacturers who fail to meet the designated quota.
The ZEV mandate, launched in January, is designed to force makers
to increase their share of electric vehicle sales in each of the
next six years as part of the phase-out of new petrol
and diesel models from 2030.
For this year, the mandate requires that 22 per cent of every brand’s sales are
fully electric, rising to 28 per cent next year and 33 per cent in 2026.
For 2024 so far, manufacturers as a whole are well short at just
18.7 per cent, the official figures show, despite offering discounts totalling £4billion as
part of efforts to make EVs more appealing to drivers.
EV sales rose for the eleventh consecutive month in November,
up 58 .4 per cent to 25.1 per cent overall, in contrast petrol and diesel car registrations fell by 17.7
and 10.1 per cent respectively, SMMT data shows
Read More
Car makers slash new EV prices by up to a THIRD in desperate bid
to meet binding end-of-year sales targets
The ever-growing pressure of the ZEV mandate is dominating the
new car market.
EV sales might have reached their highest market share since
December 2022, but November is only the second month this year
in which BEV uptake has exceeded the mandated levels.
And sales of battery powered cars are being driven by manufacturers slashing the price
of new EVs in a bid to stimulate demand, experts suggest.
The SMMT says car makers have provided discounts amassing to £4billion in 2024 in a bid to kickstart demand.
Heavy discounting is just one of a number of industry tactics — from putting on dealer demonstrators to
aggressively positioning the motability market and restricting sales of petrol cars — being used
by beleaguered manufacturers who are committed to hitting 22
per cent sales of EVs this year in a vain effort to stimulate private demand.
But demand from private buyers is still falling below the expected level needed to hit the regulation targets.
The Zero Emission Vehicle (ZEV) mandate requires 22% of all car sales
by major manufacturers to be EVs this year to escape punishing
fines of £15,000 per model
New car sales declined by 1.9 per cent in November, with 153,610 motors joining the road
Uptake has been waning among EV private buyers for two years now,
and demand fell by 3.3 per cent in November, meaning that fewer than four in 10 (38.1 per cent) of new registrations were electric
RELATED ARTICLES
Previous
1
Next
EV sales targets will cost jobs, warn Nissan and Vauxhall,…
Car makers plea to Chancellor for incentives to help slash…
Share this article
Share
HOW THIS IS MONEY CAN HELP
How to save money on car insurance: Ten top tips to cut the cost in just a few minutes
Uptake has been waning among EV private buyers for two years and demand fell by 3.3 per
cent in November.
It means fewer than two in five (38.1 per cent) of new
registrations among the general car-buying public were electric last month.
Even fleet sales, which represent the bulk (59.9 per cent) of the market, fell by 1.1 per cent to just
91,933 units.
In light of this, the industry now expects the UK’s EV market share to be 18.7 per cent in 2024, although a strong December performance could see it hit 19 per
cent — still, however, a distance short of the 22 per cent requirement.
And according to the latest industry outlook, EV registrations will need
to grow by an additional 53 per cent in 2025 if next year’s 28 per cent mandated target is to be met — equivalent to
90,000 more businesses and consumers making the switch.
New Automotive’s ZEV tracker shows that JLR’s parent
company Tata and Toyota are the two manufacturers set to
miss targets by the most
Read More
EXCLUSIVE
How government EV sales targets are forcing car makers to use drastic tactics to inflate numbers
In order for electric car sales to be met, industry voices are
calling on the government to ‘urgently reviews the market regulation and the support necessary to drive it,’ the SMMT said.
Mike Hawes, its chief executive, added: ‘Manufacturers are investing at unprecedented levels to bring new zero emission models to market and spending billions on compelling offers.
Such incentives are unsustainable — industry cannot deliver the UK’s world-leading ambitions alone.’
Ford’s UK boss this week demanded a return of subsidies for EVs that were scrapped
over two years ago in June 2022.
Lisa Brankin, UK chair of the car maker, said flagging demand needed to be boosted by a ‘substantial’ grant, or by another financial incentive like a cut to VAT on new EV prices.
The government recently met with industry leaders to discuss the ZEV mandate and ways
to help beleaguered firms meet the strict thresholds introduced this
year.
However, many parties aren’t with the government’s direction.
Fleet sales, that represent the bulk (59.9 per cent
of the market), fell by 1.1 per cent to just 91,
933 units last month
id=»firstHeading» class=»firstHeading mw-first-heading»>Search results
Help
English
Tools
Tools
move to sidebar hide
Actions
General
id=»firstHeading» class=»firstHeading mw-first-heading»>Search results
Help
English
Tools
Tools
move to sidebar hide
Actions
General