What’s the Point of the Latest Ukraine Escalation?
23 November 2024
by Eugyppius
The Emperor’s New Ad
22 November 2024
It's too late to save Britain from global heating, says the head of the UN's IPCC, with the country set to resemble the French Riviera by 2070. Just one wrinkle, says Paul Homewood: the data show nothing of the sort.
Green civil war has broken out over carbon capture and hydrogen, with Net Zero zealots increasingly disputing the key technology. But the public is being kept in the dark by the mainstream media, says Chris Morrison.
The Government has pledged nearly £22bn for carbon capture and storage projects in a move that has united sceptics and alarmists in condemnation of the expensive and unproven technology.
As Labour prepares to deliver a Net Zero coup de grâce to the industries that made Britain, there are signs of workers beginning to organise their own defence. But alas, it's doomed to fail, says Ben Pile.
Two Just Stop Oil activists have been jailed for throwing soup over Vincent van Gogh's Sunflowers painting after they came close to "destroying" the masterpiece.
British companies are paying the highest electricity prices in the developed world, official data have shown, after costs more than doubled in the past five years. The U.K. is now four times as expensive as the USA.
Exploding with the force of a bomb blasting 2,000°C super-heated jets of flame into surrounding areas, EV fires have risen 46% in just a year. No wonder the public are turning against them, says Chris Morrison.
As if Hull didn't have enough problems, eco-obsessed Cold Play have announced their only U.K. tour dates outside London will take place there. Observers are baffled, but Roger Watson thinks he knows why: wind turbines.
Shoppers are in revolt after supermarkets removed lids on hummus to cut down on single-use plastics, a move criticised as counterproductive as it shortens the fridge-life and creates the need to use cling film.
Net Zero Secretary Ed Miliband has doubled down on his commitment to expensive, intermittent forms of power. It's a strategy leading straight to deindustrialisation and impoverishment, says David Turver.
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