Is there life on Europa?

Matt Ridley

Who’s on the committee to deal with it if there is? My Times column on how earthlings communicate with life in space: The Hubble telescope has revealed that Europa, a moon of Jupiter, has fountains of water vapour near one of its poles, which means its ocean might not always be hermetically sealed by miles-thick […]

Heritable IQ is a sign of social mobility

Matt Ridley

Paradoxical features of the genetics of intelligence My fellow Times writer the cricketer Ed Smith posed me a very good question the other day. How many of the people born in the world in 1756 could have become Mozart? (My answer, by the way, was four.) So here’s a similar question: how many Britons born in […]

Gas and oil prices may soon fall

Matt Ridley

If they do, renewable energy will look even worse My Times column was on the likely effect of weaker oil and gas prices on competitiveness: The Chancellor is to knock £50 off the average energy bill by replacing some green levies with general taxation and extending the timescale for rolling out others. On the face […]

Immigration versus social cohesion?

Matt Ridley

The elite benefit, so it’s becoming a leftish issue My Times column is on immigration: It looks as if David Cameron is determined not to emulate Tony Blair over European immigration. Faced with opinion polls showing that tightening immigration is top of the list of concerns that voters want the Prime Minister to negotiate with […]

Spectator Australia diary

Matt Ridley

Home thoughts from abroad After my recent visit to Australia I wrote the diary column in the Australian edition of the Spectator: I flew from London into Sydney, then Melbourne, to make three dinner speeches in a row. Through nerves I never finished the main course of three dinners. Pity, because in my experience Australian […]

The Frackers

Matt Ridley

Review of a book on the people who made the shale gas revolution My review of Gregory Zuckerman’s book The Frackers appeared in The Times on 23 November. In the long tradition of serendipitous mistakes that led to great discoveries, we can now add a key moment in 1997. Nick Steinsberger, an engineer with Mitchell […]

Don’t shoot the messenger

Matt Ridley

Reply to a misleading article in the Guardian I have the following letter in the Guardian (online). While preaching to others to be accurate, John Abraham is himself inaccurate in his critique of me ( Global warming and business reporting – can business news organizations achieve less than zero?, 18 November, theguardian.com). In correcting one […]

When political tyranny allows economic freedom

Matt Ridley

China’s growth comes not from dirigisme, but from low-level freedoms I know very little about what is being discussed inside the Third Plenum of the 18th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist party, which started at the weekend. The meeting is being held in secret — although one of the subjects to be discussed is […]

Explaining the steep decline in the frequency of fires

Matt Ridley

In the UK, 40% fewer emergencies of all kinds for the fire service than ten years ago This morning’s brief strike by the Fire Brigades Union, like the one last Friday evening, will, I suspect, mostly serve to remind those who work in the private sector just how well remunerated many in the public sector […]

Storms are becoming ever more survivable

Matt Ridley

A big wind hitting Britain today does less harm than in past centuries My Times article on the storm that was to hit Britain on 28 October. In the event, four or five people died. Disruption to transport lasted only a few days.   If you are reading this with the hatches battened down, it […]

1 43 44 45 46 47 87