In a monumental feat of visual trickery, London-based Ordinary Architecture made the letters that make up the iconic “Hollywood” sign appear to have disappeared from their perch in the Santa Monica Mountains...
I fear that Chris Huhne's confidence in the "miracles" of technology and scale provides false reassurance that cheap batteries will revolutionise the renewable energy market (Comment, 10 March)...
Councils struggling, in the face of government cuts, to deal with floods made worse by climate change, will be delighted to hear of sweeteners for fracking, causing more, er, climate change (Cameron dangles cash incentive...
Simon Jenkins' article on wind turbines (We trash the landscape for the benefit of billionaires, 6 December) suggests a lack of knowledge on the subject...
GMB has been hugely critical of the way the Sellafield contract has been managed by Nuclear Management Partners (Report, 5 December). The people at the sharp end of this mismanagement are the 10,000 ordinary working men and...
Let me get this right. The consumer pays around £47 a year to the energy companies for the energy companies obligation (Green levies being watered down as ministers move to cut consumers' bills, 29 November). The energy...
Zoe Williams is on the right track when she finds the behaviour of the big six energy companies, and the government, hard to comprehend (Want an energy revolution? 13 November)...
Your article (Public sector paid big four outsourcing firms £4bn last year, NAO reveals, 12 November) highlights the need to renationalise public sector work and to take the politics out of their delivery...
David Cameron's proposals to roll back green taxes (Report, 28 October), which account for around 4% of an average energy bill, rather than tackling the underlying causes of rising prices and increasing fuel poverty, are...
Confirmation of Chinese involvement in UK nuclear power generation raises many vital questions (Report, 21 October).
You quote a leader from the GMB (Nuclear expert raises fears over Chinese role in atomic plants, 18 October) as suggesting it is almost Orwellian to allow Chinese investment into our highly sensitive energy infrastructure,...
So, we're to have Chinese companies providing our nuclear generated electricity (Editorial, 17 October). Can the chancellor explain why it is OK to have companies owned by foreign governments – including by communist ones...
Today UK and other European Union representatives will discuss whether to limit the amount of first-generation biofuels used in transport fuels. On a day that is also World Food Day, the importance of these negotiations,...
In regard to the uncomfortably large uncertainties with respect to global warming predictions, your editorial (27 September) states that "uncertainty is political anathema"...
Renewable energies can solve the problem of global warming, but the political will to employ them is missingIn the face of 95% of scientific evidence informing us that "human activities are driving climate change", a recent...
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