According to Ambrose Evans-Pritchard in the Telegraph, Spain’s catastrophic blackout (apagón) which stopped most of the country in its tracks may have been the result of a disastrous experiment to test how far the nation’s renewable energy sources can be pushed.
Drs. Ben and Shawn Javid aren’t your typical dentists. As founders of SmileBody, they’ve spent decades breaking from conventional dental practices to focus on biological dentistry—an approach that views the mouth as a central driver of systemic health.
The might of the Mississippi River has tested engineers for centuries. Few have approached its challenges more fearlessly than the self-taught James Buchanan Eads, who risked his career and even his life to exploit its potential
Science is the systematic study of the natural world. As outlined in Chapter 2 of Environmental Science, its fundamental goal is “to understand natural phenomena and to explain how they may be changing over time.”
In 1985, Denmark, the poster child for the elimination of “fossil fuels” in favour of solar and wind energy, mandated the phase out of nuclear power, which took effect in 2003
I did a quick read of the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) Report, officially titled “Making Our Children Healthy Again (Assessment”, which was released by the President’s Make America Healthy Again Commission on May 22, 2025.
A gleeful, self-satisfied Mr Punch was often heard to remark: “That’s the way to do it.” Today we examine how Mark Poynting, one of the BBC’s top doom-mongering Net Zero activists, uses the trusted ‘scientists say’ message to turn a centennial sea level rise of around 30 cm into prose
U.S. President Donald Trump offers friendly advice to Britain, suggesting the country’s astronomical energy bills might come tumbling down if the government increases the supply of cost-effective oil rather than trying to block new extraction. [emphasis, links added]
In the New York Times “Climate Forward” David Wallace-Wells asks “Can we really fight climate change when we’re not scared of it?” To which one might well retort “Probably not, but why would you want to?”
Pressured by legal action from seventeen states that would have been impacted, California has agreed to not just drop enforcement of its electric truck mandate, but to repeal it entirely. [emphasis, links added]
In the New York Times “Climate Forward” David Wallace-Wells asks “Can we really fight climate change when we’re not scared of it?” To which one might well retort “Probably not, but why would you want to?”