Media

IPN Opinion article

February 12, 2008
EU environment ministers will decide this week whether Europe should have GMO-free zones - although genetically-modified crops have been in commercial production in the USA for a dozen years now, and, so far, there are no signs of killer tomatoes rampaging through California. Yet some environmentalists still so oppose modern agricultural biotechnology that the fear is still widespread.

IPN Opinion article

February 4, 2008

IPN Opinion article

January 9, 2008
Despite the breakdown of UN climate-change talks in Bali last December, the same themes were still being pushed at the late August week's meeting in Ghana--but now developing countries have begun to question the effects on the world's poorest. They must fight for greater realism in the climate debate: their livings and even their lives depend on it.

IPN Opinion article

December 16, 2007
The WHO has overstated the health implications of climate change in order to call for strict caps on carbon emissions. By undermining economic growth, this would have very serious consequences for health in developing countries.

IPN Opinion article

October 29, 2007

IPN Opinion article

October 14, 2007
A scare story about pesticides and prostate cancer in the Caribbean made big headlines with little or no proof: in fact, Nature offers more fatal threats than pesticides do. This sort of alarmism undermines trust in science and in chemicals and it causes real damage to health and the environment.

IPN Opinion article

October 2, 2007

IPN Opinion article

September 13, 2007
Governments and activists are celebrating from 12-21 September the 20th anniversary of the Montreal Protocol that saved the ozone layer - or did it? This analyst shows how other factors in real life up in the stratosphere had more effect than the CFC ban. He fears similar hype will lead to radical and expensive policies in the attempts to alter climate change - and the cost will hit the poorest hardest.

IPN Opinion article

August 13, 2007
A seventh EU member state has decided to take legal action against the Commission, highlighting the absurdity of the growth-retarding Kyoto Protocol and similar "cap and trade" schemes, which would be enormously expensive and relatively ineffective at addressing climate change.