
There is this mantra, this insisting from some that there is no impact from agriculture – while there is this mantra, this insisting from others that agriculture is killing the same Great Barrier Reef
Written by Dr Jennifer Marohasy

There is this mantra, this insisting from some that there is no impact from agriculture – while there is this mantra, this insisting from others that agriculture is killing the same Great Barrier Reef
Written by Charles Q. Choi

Neanderthal genes seen in modern humans may have entered our DNA through an interval of interbreeding aroud 47,000 years ago
Written by William D. Balgord

In case you’ve lost sleep worrying about the latest reports of melting ice in Antarctica, go back to bed and enjoy a good snooze. There’s nothing to the story
Written by Thomas Catenacci

Biden’s aggressive climate regulations targeting ‘fossil-fuel’-fired power plants will create widespread electric grid instability and lead to mass blackouts impacting millions of Americans, according to a recent study commissioned by North Dakota’s state government
Written by Climate Discussion Nexus

This week we launch a new series exploring a rival theory of global warming proposed by Professor Qing-Bin Lu of the University of Waterloo Department of Physics here in Canada
Written by Dr Wilson Sy

Written by Climate Discussion Nexus

In a number of areas climate activists are trying to get from the courts things they cannot get from voters
Written by Athena Stavrou

Climate protesters doused Stonehenge in orange paint on the eve of the summer solstice celebration
Written by Brian Sussman

My publisher contacted me this week, drawing attention to a Wall Street Journal article claiming ‘climate change’ is producing shortages of “the finer things in life”, like wine, coffee, cocoa, and olive oil
Written by Michael Nevradakis, Ph.D

Many VAERS reports list “age unknown” for people who were injured or died following a COVID-19 vaccine
Written by John Leake

In an 1817 collection of essays titled Characters of Shakespeare’s Plays, the English literary critic, William Hazlitt, argued that what made Shakespeare such a great writer was that his characters are perfectly natural—that is, motivated by complex and often conflicting emotions that they often struggle to resolve
Written by Oliver McPherson-Smith

The Inflation Reduction Act’s consumer tax credit for electric vehicles is a fiscal blowout and a gift to Chinese mineral companies
Written by Stepheny Price

Several arrests were made at the Congressional Baseball Game for Charity Wednesday night after people wearing ‘END FOSSIL FUELS’ teeshirts stormed the field at Nationals Park in Washington, D.C.
Written by Simon Kent

New Zealand is scrapping a scheme to price gas emissions from livestock — squelching a so-called burp-and-fart tax initiated under the previous left-wing government led by now departed authoritarian Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern
Written by BBC

Wreck hunters have found the ship on which the famous polar explorer Ernest Shackleton made his final voyage
Written by MARYAM HENEIN

About a week ago, I learned via John Cullen that the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) just ordered 4.8 million doses of the Avian Flu vaccine