The plot against fracking

Matt Ridley

How cheap energy was killed by Green lies and Russian propaganda My article from The Critic The first coffee house in Marseilles opened in 1671, prompting the city’s vintners to recruit a couple of professors at the University of Aix to blacken their new competitor’s reputation. They duly got one of their students to write […]

Why vaping causes harm in the US but not in the UK

Matt Ridley

It pays to legalise but regulate, rather than prohibit My recent article in the Wall Street Journal about the very different experiences of two countries with respect to electronic cigarettes.   Why the U.K. Isn’t Having Problems With Vaping The lessons of Prohibition’s failure in the U.S. haven’t been lost on the British. A woman […]

A pledge to abolish sin

Matt Ridley

Renewables and austerity can’t decarbonise My Sunday Telegraph article on the need for realism about carbon dioxide targets: If the British government declared the abolition of sin by 2050, commentators would be rightly cynical. The announcement last week that Britain will enact a net-zero carbon target for 2050 was instead welcomed, especially by “faith leaders”. […]

The freedom to save your life

Matt Ridley

Why do people oppose harm reduction technologies? My essay for Freer: Suppose that millions of Britons were driving a dangerous type of car that was killing 80,000 people a year. Suppose somebody invented a new car that was much, much safer, significantly cheaper, and emitted far fewer fumes, while performing just as well. Would you […]

A counsel of despair about the loss of biodiversity is the wrong approach

Matt Ridley

Why are lions decreasing, wolves increasing and tigers holding steady? My article for Reaction on biodiversity:   Driven perhaps by envy at the attention that climate change is getting, and ambition to set up a great new intergovernmental body that can fly scientists to mega-conferences, biologists have gone into overdrive on the subject of biodiversity […]

The near misses of scientific history

Matt Ridley

A new book uncovers those who almost found the secret of life My Times review of Gareth Williams’s new book Unravelling The Double Helix.   Who discovered DNA? James Watson and Francis Crick, right? Wrong. Eighty years before they even approached the topic, in 1868, a young Swiss researcher, Friedrich Miescher, working at the University […]

Surface mining in Northumberland

Matt Ridley

Economic and environmental benefits of mining go together Blagdon estate has hosted parts of two surface coal mines, at Brenkley and Shotton, for several years. We are proud to have done so mainly because of the jobs provided and the income to the local economy. But environmentally, too, these projects have been very positive. Managed […]

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Laundered lies

Matt Ridley

How bad science gets used for power and profit by some activists My Spectator article on a surge in medical and environmental pseudoscience:   ‘The whole aim of practical politics,’ wrote H.L. Mencken, ‘is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by menacing it with an endless series of […]

The pros and cons of no deal

Matt Ridley

Scare stories about Brexit without a withdrawal agreement are exaggerated An expanded version of the my recent Times article:   Suppose Britain leaves the EU on March 29 with no deal, just a series of last-minute fixes on things such as aviation and data. And suppose it proves to be a fairly damp squib, with […]

Why people prefer bad news

Matt Ridley

The psychology behind global pessimism My article in the Wall Street Journal  on the persistent appeal of pessimism: Has the percentage of the world population that lives in extreme poverty almost doubled, almost halved or stayed the same over the past 20 years? When the Swedish statistician and public health expert Hans Rosling began asking […]

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