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The Grid Question (With Practical Solutions)

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  The Grid Question (With Practical Solutions) Why Are We Still Linking Electricity Prices to Gas in 2026? (And What You Can Actually Do About It) It’s one of those questions that sounds too obvious… until you stop and think about it. Why, in a country rapidly expanding renewables, are our electricity prices still tied to gas? Even if only a small percentage of our electricity is generated using gas, the price of electricity is often set by the most expensive source —which is usually gas. So when gas prices spike, everything goes up. Solar? Wind? Nuclear? All dragged along for the ride. It’s a bit like pricing all cars based on the cost of a Ferrari. At home, we’ve invested heavily in solar panels and battery storage. On a sunny day, we’re producing our own electricity—quietly, cleanly, and (once installed) cheaply. Yet the wider system still behaves as if we’re entirely dependent on fossil fuels. There are good reasons for how the market evolved—balancing supply, ensuring r...

What’s Really Happening in Your Garden (When You Look Closely)

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  What’s Really Happening in Your Garden (When You Look Closely) At first glance, it looked like something had gone wrong. A brand new pear tree. Fresh leaves. And then… bumps. Blisters. Strange little growths that didn’t look like they belonged. The instinct is immediate: “Something’s wrong. I need to fix it.” But here’s the thing. When you slow down and take a closer look, you realise something quite different: Nothing is “wrong” at all. Your garden is simply alive . A Hidden World on a Single Leaf Those small raised blisters are caused by the Pear leaf blister mite . You won’t see them easily — they’re microscopic — but their presence transforms the leaf, creating tiny homes where they feed and reproduce. It’s easy to label them as a “problem”. But step back for a moment… This is: An insect (well, a mite) Feeding naturally On a host it evolved alongside In a system that has existed for millions of years That’s not a failure of your gardening. That’s ecology working exactly as in...
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  Holding Companies to Account: When Shareholders Say “Enough” 🌍 There’s a quiet revolution happening in boardrooms—and it’s not being led by governments, but by shareholders. This week, oil giant BP found itself at the centre of a significant climate backlash. At its first Annual General Meeting (AGM) under new leadership, more than 50% of voting shareholders opposed plans to weaken climate reporting commitments . Not only that, but the board faced what’s being described as a “triple climate rebellion” —a rare and very public show of investor dissatisfaction. Let’s unpack why this matters—and why it could signal a turning point in corporate climate accountability. What Happened at BP? At the AGM, shareholders were asked to support changes that would effectively scale back transparency around BP’s climate targets and reporting . The response? A resounding no . Investors—including major pension funds and institutional stakeholders—pushed back hard. Their message was clear: 👉 If y...

Rainforests: Nature’s Comeback Story (Faster Than We Thought!)

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  Rainforests: Nature’s Comeback Story (Faster Than We Thought!) There’s a surprising bit of good news from the environmental world (yes, it does happen occasionally): recent studies suggest that rainforests can recover from deforestation far more quickly than we once believed — sometimes in just a few decades. Now, before we all rush off and start chopping trees down thinking “they’ll grow back anyway,” let’s be clear: this is not a licence to destroy. But it is a powerful reminder of just how resilient nature can be — if we give it half a chance. 🌱 What Does “Recovery” Actually Mean? When scientists talk about rainforest recovery, they’re referring to secondary forests — areas where trees regrow after being cleared. In many tropical regions: Tree cover can return within 20–30 years Biodiversity (plants, insects, birds) begins to bounce back surprisingly quickly Carbon absorption ramps up again, helping tackle climate change Some studies even show that young regrowing forest...

From 40 Years to 6: The Wind Power Acceleration We Didn’t See Coming

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  From 40 Years to 6: The Wind Power Acceleration We Didn’t See Coming It took the world 40 years to install the first terawatt (TW) of wind power. The next one? Just 6 years. Let that sink in. According to the Global Wind Energy Council (GWEC), wind energy is no longer the slow, experimental technology it once was. It’s now accelerating at a pace that should make even the most hardened fossil fuel executive spill their morning coffee. 🚀 What Does a Terawatt Actually Mean? A terawatt is a trillion watts of power. In real-world terms, that’s enough electricity to power hundreds of millions of homes . So going from: 0 → 1 TW in 40 years to 1 → 2 TW in just 6 years is not just progress… …it’s a full-blown energy revolution . ⚙️ Why the Sudden Speed-Up? Several things have quietly (and not so quietly) fallen into place: 1. Technology has matured Modern turbines are giants compared to their predecessors—taller, more efficient, and capable of generating far mor...

Turning Seawater into Sustainability

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  Turning Seawater into Sustainability The Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Solar Park Meets the Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Desalination Complex If you’d told me a few years ago that one of the most water-stressed regions on Earth would start producing fresh drinking water using sunshine, I might have raised an eyebrow (and probably reached for a cup of tea). Yet here we are. Dubai’s Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Desalination Complex is quietly rewriting the rules of how we think about water, energy, and sustainability. ☀️ From Oil to Sunlight Traditionally, desalination has had a bit of a reputation problem. It’s energy-hungry, often powered by fossil fuels, and not exactly what you’d call “green”. But Dubai is flipping that narrative. By linking desalination to the vast Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Solar Park , the city is producing fresh water using renewable solar energy . Instead of burning gas to boil seawater, modern systems use reverse osmosis , pushing water through...

Burning Wood for Power – Green Solution or Smoky Illusion?

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  Burning Wood for Power – Green Solution or Smoky Illusion? There was a time when burning wood for energy sounded reassuringly natural . After all, trees grow back… don’t they? Well, new research published in Nature Sustainability suggests the reality is far less comforting — and frankly, a bit inconvenient for current energy policy. The Big Claim (And Why It Matters) Governments, including the UK, have been backing bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS) as a way to produce electricity while removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. The idea goes like this: Grow trees 🌱 Burn them for energy 🔥 Capture the CO₂ 🏭 Store it underground 🪨 Grow more trees to absorb CO₂ again 🌳 On paper, it sounds like a carbon-neutral (even carbon-negative) loop. But the new findings suggest something rather awkward… 👉 Burning wood for power can be worse for the climate than burning gas. The 150-Year Problem Here’s the catch: time . Forests take decades — sometimes over a century —...