We’re glad Nick Stern has this all sorted then
For instance, my team at the Treasury and I did not foresee that the cost of generating electricity from solar panels would fall by 77% between 2014 and 2024, or that battery costs would plummet by 84% over the same period.
An exit tax is an abomination
Professor Andy Summers of the Centre for Analysis of Taxation, which first proposed the policy, said it had been largely made possible by Brexit.
Build on the Green Belt - that’s how we save nature
The discovery that affluent neighbourhoods have more diversity of nature has implications for human wellbeing – and sheds light on the structural injustices in cities
Removing the obstacles to growth
There is strong evidence that planning restrictions, high taxes, and complex regulation all act as drag factors on enterprise and productivity in the UK.
This is almost Murphyesque in its joy
This imposes real constraints on public spending. But the idea of a funding crisis is overblown.
Japan Keeps Thatcher’s Flame Alive While Britain Lets It Die Out
Thatcher's legacy appears to be overlooked in her home country, where it is needed the most during these challenging times while Japan’s first female PM has made her a role model.
Self-government within the union
The surprise and convincing win by Plaid Cymru in the Caerphilly Senedd by-election has set political analysts wondering if it forebodes the break-up of the United Kingdom.
But if it’s that expensive just stop doing it anyway
Offshore windfarm companies may be exempted from new UK nature rules in an attempt to keep down the cost of renewable energy, the Guardian has learned.
Snoopers in High Places
The UK government has a long history of keeping an eye on its citizens, once through opened letters, now through digital surveillance.
Claim about renewables we don’t believe
Jess Ralston, head of energy at the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit thinktank, said: “Every bit of free wind and sun power that we harness means we need to buy less foreign gas from abroad, boosting our energy security.”
Safer without human error
Ryan Bourne, writing for Cato, produces impressive statistics in favour of driverless cars.
Whaaat? Less supply pushes up prices?
Average private rents in Great Britain have climbed to record highs, with the amount tenants are being asked to pay in some hotspots rising more than 25% in a year, data shows.