Investment is needed in ingenious solutions to the existing pollution problem, and preventative strategies to ensure we can keep necessary living standards affordable for consumers, while reducing the intrusion of crude by-products into landfills, lakes, and dinner-plates.
Author: Connor Tomlinson
Socialism Cannot Solve Climate Change
The ideological pitfalls and abhorrent track record of socialism prove that its ideas are anathema to human nature, and inadequate for solving any climate change challenges.
Will Britain’s Energy Security Strategy Deliver?
A combined strategy of repatriated gas production, and new nuclear power stations, can provide a consistent, dispatchable energy baseload for a diversified, decarbonising grid.
You Don’t Have to Become a Vegan to Beat Climate Change
Only the innovation and efficiency arising to facilitate free choice should govern what fills our farms and bellies.
Energy Consumption Controls Won’t Solve Scarcity
It’s time government stopped playing favourites with generation methods, and we abandon the notion that we can mandate and micromanage our way to a world worth living in.
The UK Forges a Global Path to Nuclear Fusion
The Joint European Torus (JET) laboratory in the UK’s Culham Centre for Fusion Energy have broken records on energy extraction from hydrogen fusion.
Britain Needs New Nuclear to End Reliance on China
Reforming nuclear regulations will help Britain reach net-zero goals, while lessening reliance on China.
A Fully Green Grid: At What Cost?
Wind, solar, fission, and fusion must all comprise contributions to a carbon-neutral energy sector. But the government must not be in the business of monopolistically picking which companies or technologies will come out on top. Come rain or shine, renewables must be left to succeed or fail on their own merits.
Eco-tunity Zones are the Clean, Green Key to Levelling Up Britain
By creating incentive structures for investment in Britain’s forgotten localities, a just green transition can sustain regional prosperity beyond the momentary extraction of finite resources.
Was COP26 a Cause for Climate Optimism?
COP’s fringe events were a success, and a cause for optimism on climate policy. All that’s required now is for those market voices on conservation issues to penetrate and percolate the UN’s main event, and have the self-evidentiary superiority of their solutions outshine inefficient socialist spending.