London says goodbye to the queen, scenarios to counter the energy crisis and OM lose again in C1

Did you miss the news this early morning? We’ve put together a recap to help you see things more clearly.

For her final journey, the queen is back in her capital. Hundreds of thousands of people are expected from this Wednesday in London, to greet Elizabeth II one last time, their monarch back in the city, almost a week after her death in Scotland. For nearly five days, from Wednesday 5 p.m. (6 p.m. in Paris) until Monday 6:30 a.m., the day of the national funeral, the British will be able to come and pay their last respects. The public is massively expected at Westminster Hall, open for the occasion 24 hours a day. But it will take patience, with long queues that could stretch for miles.

Will it be easy to keep warm this winter? An outline of the response will be given this Wednesday by the Prime Minister. Elisabeth Borne will indeed reveal the possible scenarios to face the peaks of energy consumption in the months to come, but also the bills which are soaring, at a time when France is facing its worst energy crisis since the 1970s. of the forecasts presented the same day by the operators of the electricity and gas transmission networks (RTE and GRTgaz), the tenant of Matignon will hold a press conference at 3.30 p.m., surrounded by the Ministers of the Economy Bruno Le Maire and of the Energy transition Agnès Pannier-Runacher.

This group phase is very complicated for Olympique de Marseille. Already beaten by Tottenham at the start of the Champions League, OM fell again on Tuesday against Frankfurt (1-0), at home this time. Above all, his chances of qualifying are already compromised after this setback which confirms his difficulties at a very high level. And as the defeat (2-0) last week gave rise to some hope, as much as last night’s shed a cruel light on the club’s shortcomings, against a Frankfurt team yet without genius. However, it is still mathematically possible to believe it. Marseille will now face Sporting Lisbon, and this is probably their last chance to turn things around.

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