Cholesterol is not bad for you

Matt Ridley

A sixty-year torrent of bad dietary advice is coming to an end My Times column on the U-turn over cholesterol and saturated fat:   If you are reading this before breakfast, please consider having an egg. Any day now, the US government will officially accept the advice to drop cholesterol from its list of “nutrients […]

Fossil-fuel divestment makes no sense

Matt Ridley

It’s ineffective, unethical, hypocritical, mistargeted and based on errors My Times column on the flawed fossil-fuel divestment campaign: Institutions and pension funds are under pressure to dump their investments in fossil-fuel companies. The divestment movement began in America, jumped the Atlantic and has become the cause célèbre of the retiring editor of The Guardian, Alan Rusbridger. […]

How to increase natural capital

Matt Ridley

Decoupling human activity from land and wildlife helps nature My review in The Times of Dieter Helm’s book Natural Capital: The easiest way to get a round of applause at a conference of ecologists is to make a rude joke about economists. Nature-studiers think money-studiers are heartless vandals who demand the rape of Mother Nature […]

There is no bee apocalypse

Matt Ridley

Honey bees are increasing, and there’s no evidence of a general decline in My Times column on bee declines and neonicotinoid pesticides: So those beastly farmers want the ban on neonicotinoid pesticides lifted to help them to poison more bees, eh? Britain’s honeybees are supposedly declining and so are our 25 species of bumblebee and […]

Reform is the theme of great governments

Matt Ridley

Challenging entrenched bureaucracies is what politicians should do My Times column on reform as a political theme: If there is political paralysis on Friday, as seems likely, and given how many of their powers national politicians have anyway passed to bodies like the Bank of England and the European Commission, perhaps we can look forward […]

Cameron faces guerrilla warfare in the House of Lords

Matt Ridley

Without coalition, the Conservatives will be greatly outnumbered in the Upper House   My Times column on a perverse outcome of the election: In one respect last week’s election result has made David Cameron’s life more difficult. While gaining seats in the Commons from the Liberal Democrats, he has effectively lost them in the Lords. […]

Ancient DNA makes pre-history an open book

Matt Ridley

Mass migrations, mixed matings and rapid evolution are common themes My Saturday essay in the Wall Street Journal: Imagine what it must have been like to look through the first telescopes or the first microscopes, or to see the bottom of the sea as clearly as if the water were gin. This is how students […]

Electricity for Africa

Matt Ridley

There really is a trade-off: denying aid for fossil fuels hurts the poor My column in The Times is on the undeniable truth that western countries are preventing Africans getting access to the cheapest power, which is fossil-fuelled. In what is probably the silliest comment on climate since a Ukip councillor blamed floods on gay […]

Only innovation can save us

Matt Ridley

Election campaigns ignore what matters most – technological change My Times column argues that only high-tech innovation will give us the cash to fund our future, so why won’t Cameron or Miliband talk about it?   Fifty years ago yesterday, a young computer expert called Gordon Moore pointed out that the number of transistors on […]

The Vital Question

Matt Ridley

Nick Lane’s new book understands how life started as an energy system My review of Nick Lane’s book The Vital Question in The Times: Nick Lane is not just a writer of words about science, he is also a doer of experiments and a thinker of thoughts. And these days he is hot on the […]

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