Solar in Algeria

A recent blog on this site hailed the development of clean energy in countries traditionally seen as petro-states.

Policy under scrutiny

With the future of the UK’s energy policy currently up in the air, it seems investors need a crystal ball to predict how energy markets may look in 20 or even 10 years’ time.

The fragile Arctic

Climate change is melting the Arctic sea ice, not just displacing cute polar bears but posing a grave risk to the habitat for all species. Climate change impacts could very well be our cemetery moment, just as the asteroid impact was for the dinosaurs 120 million years ago.

Getting tough on obesity

I don't like seeing a small child drinking a huge soda. It´s like a monkey smoking a cigarette: unsettling, unnatural and unlikely to end well.

Clean up with solar

It is easy to be distracted by negative news headlines about solar energy these days: solar companies going bankrupt, photovoltaic (PV) supply much higher than demand and solar panels causing a new trade war.

A nutritious argument

Last month, global thought leaders gathered in South Africa to discuss the challenge of boosting crop yields and nutrition at the “Feeding the World: Africa’s Role in Solving the Global Food Crisis” Economist Conference.

Nobody can do this alone

In an earlier posting on this page, Dougal Thomson wrote: “the only way the world can feed seven billion…is by forming cross-stakeholder alliances”. I agree.

Food vs fuel is corny

You may know that the US is suffering its worst drought since 1956. The US Department of Agriculture's Drought Map, updated regularly, looks painfully red right now.

Microinsurance in Africa

I wrote previously that to get to grips with food security we need better cross-stakeholder partnerships.

Let markets play their part in feeding the world

Barack Obama's announcement of a 'New Alliance for Food Security and Nutrition', a partnership between G8 nations, African countries, and businesses to boost African agriculture, promises to raise 50 million people out of poverty in 10 years. Oxfam have criticised it for focusing too heavily on the private sector, but they're missing the point.

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