
BP has put its onshore wind business in the US, estimated to be worth $2bn, up for sale as it trims its ‘renewables’ business and sells off underperforming assets
Written by The Financial Times

BP has put its onshore wind business in the US, estimated to be worth $2bn, up for sale as it trims its ‘renewables’ business and sells off underperforming assets
Written by Michael Nevradakis, Ph.D

A member of the New Zealand Parliament called on the country’s Covid commission to stop ignoring the voices of people injured by the vaccines, as other critics accused the commission of “not looking for the truth.”
Written by Michael Nevradakis, Ph.D

In interviews this month with CNBC and CNET, Bill Gates said we “should have free speech” but not “if you’re causing people not to take vaccines.”
Written by Caryn Lipson

During the eight years from 2016, when MAiD (medical assistance in dying) was legalized in Canada, through 2023, over sixty-thousand people were killed by doctors
Written by Bjorn Lomborg

The international body’s latest climate claims are more about inflammatory language than actual data
Written by Phillip Altman

In my opinion, the following updated US Florida State guidance should be provided as proper informed consent by every doctor to any patient seeking advice on COVID-19 boosters
Written by Niamh Uí Bhriain

Aontú has taken issue with draft provisions of a new Public Health Bill in Northern Ireland that they say would grant “powers to detain people in hospitals and require persons to take vaccinations against their will”
Written by Sascha Pare

Geologists have known for decades that gold forms in quartz with the help of earthquakes, but now they have worked out exactly how the setting and seismic waves combine to form large nuggets
Written by BBC

About 1,500 stretches of Welsh roads could be considered to have speed limits put back to 30mph a year after they were reduced to 20mph, BBC research shows
Written by Bret Swanson

Last week, Mario Draghi, the former president of the European Central Bank, sounded the economic alarm. In a 400-page white paper, Draghi warned an uncompetitive European economy faces “an existential challenge” of flagging dynamism and slow productivity growth
Written by Oscar L Martin

The Barakah nuclear power plant in the UAE has reached full capacity, which will now generate a staggering 40TWh of electricity annually
Written by Eduard Harinck

Scientists have discovered the cause of the massive tremors that left seismologists around the world in amazement last year
Written by Efrat Fenigson

In April 2024, the Knesset passed Israel’s climate bill through first reading. The bill, just like everywhere else in the western world, complies with UN’s agenda 2030 goals and 2050 targets.
Written by Donna Andersen

Over the last three years, we have been documenting the ecological catastrophe quietly unfolding on the East Coast. With the support of the US government, the wind industry is killing whales and other sea life
Written by Suzanne Burdick, Ph.D.

Dr. Marty Makary, a public researcher with Johns Hopkins University and author of “Blind Spots: When Medicine Gets it Wrong, and What It Means for Our Health,” said more doctors are “refusing to kiss the ring of the medical oligarchs, and instead are teaming up with creative people to redesign medical care.”
Written by The New Lede

U.S. regulators claim they aren’t legally required to regulate toxic PFAS chemicals in sewage sludge spread on U.S. farmland, according to a court filing the government made this week in response to a lawsuit from an environmental watchdog group