Protecting the sea

Matt Ridley

Sustainable exploitation or no-take zones in marine protected areas? My Times column on the growing movement for marine protected areas in British overseas territories:   Britain may no longer have an empire, but it still rules a heck of a lot of waves. One of the manifesto commitments of the Conservative party in the last […]

The case against mercantilism

Matt Ridley

Trade treaties are not essential for trade; the EU distorts the UK’s trade My Times column on free trade the European Union:   The late Sir George Martin created substantial British exports. Had the import of his music to America been banned to save the jobs of US musicians, Britain would have missed out on […]

Time to cancel this nuclear white elephant

Matt Ridley

EDF cannot afford to build Hinkley Point and we cannot afford its electricity My Times column on Britain’s delayed and every more expensive EPR nuclear power station Last week the British and French governments announced that they remained confident that the Hinkley Point C nuclear power station in Somerset will be built. But EDF, the […]

For EU but not for US

Matt Ridley

Americans would never dream of joining a project like the EU is today My Spectator article on what it would be like for the United States to join the American Union: o the US Secretary of State, John Kerry, thinks his country has a ‘profound interest… in a very strong United Kingdom staying in a […]

Harm reduction

Matt Ridley

Giving people the lesser of two evils — for drugs, HIV and smoking My Times column on harm reduction The UN General Assembly is holding a special meeting on drug policy in April, its first since 1998. The mood of member states, as well as many international agencies, is now much less focused on law […]

Low oil prices are a good thing

Matt Ridley

The shale revolution has changed the world My Times column on the causes and consequences of low oil prices: The continuing plunge in the price of oil from $115 a barrel in mid-2014 to $30 today is really, really good news. I know just about every economic commentator says otherwise, predicting bankruptcies, stock market crashes, […]

Reflections on The Selfish Gene

Matt Ridley

40 years, on Richard Dawkins’s bold book has stood the test of time My Retrospective article on Richard Dawkins’s The Selfish Gene, published in Nature magazine:   Books about science tend to fall into two categories: those that explain it to lay people in the hope of cultivating a wide readership, and those that try […]

Staying in the European Union could be the riskier option for Britain

Matt Ridley

The renegotiation of Britain’s membership has achieved little My column in The Times on Britain’s EU membership referendum: Public opinion about the European Union is divided, like Gaul, into three parts: one third are already firmly in the “leave” camp, one third would remain in whatever happens, and the tussle is over who gets the […]

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