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78 Search Results for: "nuclear"
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Search Results for: nuclear

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Is fracking a price worth paying?

Kevin Anderson By Paul Younger and Kevin Anderson Filed Under: Featured, Science and Technology Posted: October 22, 2015

Our dependence on a constant supply of energy presents seemingly intractable dilemmas. One of these is whether fracking should be permitted. Professor Paul Younger and Professor Kevin Anderson took opposing views in a recent online debate. In the US, the recovery of underground reserves of shale gas and its extraction from solid rock through the […]

Tagged With: carbon capture, climate change, coal, decarbonisation, fracking, fuel poverty, gas, oil, shale gas, Speakers' Corner Trust

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Zoning global? North Korea’s Special Economic Zones

By Jamie Doucette and Seung-Ook Lee Filed Under: All posts, Urban Posted: September 29, 2015

Jamie Doucette and Seung-Ook Lee ask if there are lessons for policymakers in the actions of North and South Korea in setting up zones where they can work together. When one hears the word globalisation, the image of North Korea rarely comes to mind. Long regarded as a hermit kingdom, a rogue state, and international […]

Tagged With: China, North Korea, South Korea

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Out of Time: Fracking in UK Energy Policy

John Broderick By John Broderick Filed Under: All posts, Featured, Science and Technology Posted: June 26, 2015

As the decision on fracking at Little Plumpton in Lancashire is delayed, Dr John Broderick of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, part of Manchester Energy, considers whether a UK shale gas industry may turn out to be an anachronism. Whether the go-ahead for fracking in Lancashire is given or not, there is little […]

Tagged With: carbon capture and storage, climate change, energy, energy demand, fracking, shale gas, The Pope, Tyndall Centre

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Could the SNP block a Labour Budget? No

Colin Talbot By Colin Talbot Filed Under: All posts, Featured, Westminster Watch Posted: April 22, 2015

Colin Talbot looks at the reality after Scottish National Party claims that they could block any budget if the Labour Party is leading a minority Government. The SNP are claiming they can ‘block Labour budgets’, ‘end austerity’ and ‘stop Trident’. Their problem however is simple – most of what they say is based on assuming […]

Tagged With: budget, Conservative Party, finance bill, fixed term parliament, general election, Labour, minority government, parliament, SNP, standing orders

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Why do politicians sometimes ignore scientific advice?

Martin Stanley By Martin Stanley Filed Under: All posts, Featured, Westminster Watch, Whitehall Watch Posted: March 9, 2015

Respected scientist Sir Paul Nurse recently expressed his distress that politicians sometimes “ignore” scientific evidence.  Here is a slightly different take on the issue from the perspective of a recent senior civil servant. At one level, of course, I agree with Sir Paul.  I can’t prove it but I suspect that many if not most […]

Tagged With: civil servants, drug policy, Ministers

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Evidence ignored amid Lords committee’s bullishness on fracking

John Broderick By John Broderick Filed Under: Featured, Science and Technology Posted: May 12, 2014

Last week a Lords Select Committee report backed “all out” development of a UK shale gas industry, pointing to compatibility with UK climate change commitments. But this conclusion flies in the face of a wealth of evidence to the contrary, writes Dr John Broderick. The message from last week’s House of Lords Economic Affairs Committee […]

Tagged With: 2°C, carbon, carbon budgets, climate change, fracking, IPCC, shale gas

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Does the UK have a future in manufacturing?

Kieron Flanagan By Kieron Flanagan Filed Under: Featured, Science and Technology Posted: April 9, 2014

Thanks to its world­-class science base the UK is very good at developing ideas. But we still don’t invest enough public money into developing early stage technologies, says Dr Kieron Flanagan. Does the UK have a future in manufacturing? Does the North West or the Greater Manchester city region have a future in manufacturing for that matter? These were the questions debated at a panel discussion I took part […]

Tagged With: manufacturing, Peter Marsh, technology

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Why the ‘radical’ post crash economics movement is missing a trick

Georgina Waylen By Georgina Waylen Filed Under: Featured Posted: December 2, 2013

The creation of a post crash economics society at the University of Manchester is being hailed as a radical new development. But is it really? Professor Georgina Waylen argues that feminist economics is currently being ignored – and yet it offers us new insights and innovative solutions. Despite its plea for a broader range of […]

Tagged With: austerity, crash, economics, feminism, feminist economics, Keynesian, Keynesianism, post crash economics, UK economy

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As BAE cuts jobs, is a strong defence sector really needed?

Andrew James By Andrew James Filed Under: Featured Posted: November 18, 2013

The announcement that defence company BAE Systems is to cut 1,775 jobs at its naval warship yards in Portsmouth and in Scotland will come as a huge blow to those workers, their families and their local communities. But, writes Andrew James, it also prompts questions about the nature of the defence industry in the United Kingdom, […]

Tagged With: BAE, budget, cuts, defence, military, MoD, redundancy

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Iran talks end in failure but France is not the only culprit

Siavush Randjbardaemi By Siavush Randjbardaemi Filed Under: Featured Posted: November 13, 2013

Frenzied negotiations in Geneva on the future of Iran’s nuclear programme have come to nothing despite early hopes for progress. Fingers are pointing at France for the failure of the talks but that may not be entirely fair, writes Dr Siavush Randjbar-Daemi. The Geneva meeting began as a preplanned, routine get together for senior diplomats […]

Tagged With: diplomacy, foreign policy, france, Geneva, iran, nuclear

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