Staying in the European Union could be the riskier option for Britain

Matt Ridley

The renegotiation of Britain’s membership has achieved little My column in The Times on Britain’s EU membership referendum: Public opinion about the European Union is divided, like Gaul, into three parts: one third are already firmly in the “leave” camp, one third would remain in whatever happens, and the tussle is over who gets the […]

The ecological restoration of South Georgia

Matt Ridley

The success of a bold bid to rid a subantarctic island of rats and deer My column in The Times on how South Georgia’s environment has been repaired: In claiming the Falklands, the Argentinian government also claims South Georgia, even though it is 700 miles further away from its coast, was unambiguously claimed by Captain Cook when […]

Britain’s flooding is a land management issue

Matt Ridley

It’s about slowing water in the uplands and speeding it in the lowlands My Times column on the winter floods in Britain:   My invitation to serve on the government’s flood defence review seems to have got stuck in the Christmas post. So here’s a memo, based on Northumberland gossip as well as published papers, for how […]

How Capability Brown recreated the African savanna

Matt Ridley

Our favourite landscapes echo our past habitat My Times column on the Capability Brown tercentenary: Next year marks the 300th birthday of Lancelot Brown at Kirkharle, in Northumberland, the man who saw “capability” in every landscape and indefatigably transformed England. In his 280 commissions, Capability Brown stamped his mark on some 120,000 acres, tearing out […]

Badgers are driving hedgehogs extinct

Matt Ridley

A classic case of meso-predator release hurting another species My Times column on the hedgehog decline, and the effect of badgers: Hedgehogs, subjects of the Times Christmas Appeal, are to get their own summit, the Environment Secretary Liz Truss said last week. Hedgehogs really are in trouble. Their numbers have plunged, their range has shrunk […]

The long shadow of Malthus

Matt Ridley

Treating evolution as a prescription not a description has been cruel My article on the misuse of Malthus appeared in Standpoint magazine. It is an edited extract from my book, The Evolution of Everything. It is worth asking how John Gray could have reviewed that book and accused me of social Darwinism after reading this! […]

Where shall we eat dinner?

Matt Ridley

Why multilateral negotiation is so difficult My Times column on the underwhelming results of the climate conference and Britain’s renegotiation with the European Union:   There’s an uncanny similarity between the climate negotiations that climaxed in Paris at the weekend and David Cameron’s European Union reform negotiations, which continue in Brussels this week. The original […]

Doing good by doing well

Matt Ridley

Mark Zuckerberg’s generosity is welcome My Times column on the Chan-Zuckerberg Initiative: Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan marked the birth of their daughter Max by promising to donate 99 per cent of their Facebook shares during their lifetimes to support good causes. For this they were pilloried by some. The economist Thomas Piketty […]

The Paris Climate Summit

Matt Ridley

Why climate policies are doing more harm than climate change I have written five articles on climate change science and policy in the past week, for Scientific American, The Times (twice), the Wall Street Journal and the Spectator. They follow here in the form of a lengthy essay. Sentences in square brackets have been added […]

The rise of humanism

Matt Ridley

Non-belief is the fastest growing category of belief; Islamists are worried My Times column on the rise of non-belief:   Fifty years ago, after the cracking of the genetic code, Francis Crick was so confident religion would fade that he offered a prize for the best future use for Cambridge’s college chapels. Swimming pools, said […]

1 31 32 33 34 35 89