One of the healthiest aspects of Lunch with the FT is the fact that several times a year it makes for very salutary reading. A case in point was David Pilling’s lunch with Danish political scientist ...
The United Nations is at a crossroads. US President Donald Trump pulled out of the World Health Organization (WHO), cut ...
But that’s just a flutter of the commentary swirling around the CERAWeek conference that describes the crumbling foundations ...
The EC released its Action Plan to drive innovation, sustainability, and competitiveness in the automotive sector on March 5. The plan reaffirmed the commission’s commitment to the EU-wide zero CO2 ...
Wildfire damage has gone up but that reflects population and property growth. The area burned annually has been falling ...
President Trump pulled out of the World Health Organization, cut funding for the UN’s Climate Convention, and more ...
Global warming does cause more heat waves, and these raise the risk that more people die because of heat. But it also brings ...
By contrast, the benefits of the climate war are virtually nonexistent: As economist Bjorn Lomborg points out, if the world does nothing more on emissions through the end of the century ...
Bjorn Lomborg explains the flaws of the treaty in USA Today: In truth, Trump’s action just exposes what we have known for a while: The Paris Agreement is not the way to solve global warming.
The ‘sceptical environmentalist’ used cost-benefit analysis to argue against emissions cuts. Now he has turned his attention to overseas aid ...
If you had the stamina or a prescription, over three days, you could hear Niall Ferguson, Douglas Murray, Bari Weiss, the environmental skeptic Bjorn Lomborg, a brace of ex-Australian prime ...