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Matt Ridley is the author of provocative books on evolution, genetics and society. His books have sold over a million copies, been translated into thirty languages, and have won several awards.

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    Archive for date: June, 2013

  • Curing cancer is harder than preventing it

    Published on: Sunday, 30 June, 2013

    Genomics helps head off cancer, but cures remain elusive

    My column in The Times:

    Preventing cancer is proving a lot easier than curing it. The announcement that the NHS will fund five-year courses of the drugs tamoxifen or raloxifene for healthy women who are genetically predisposed to get breast and ovarian cancer is overdue. The US has been doing “chemo-prevention” for some time and clinical trials have confirmed that the benefits comfortably outweigh the side-effects. Tens of thousands of deaths a year could be averted.

    This is another incremental advance in the prevention of cancer that began with the gradual recognition (resisted, ironically, by some of those fighting pesticides in the late 1950s) that tobacco smoke was a chief cause of lung cancer. Mainly thanks to such prevention, along with early diagnosis, surgery and some treatments, deaths from cancer, adjusted for age, are falling.

    Read Full Post
    By: Matt Ridley | Tagged: rational-optimist, the-times
  • The Tabarrok curve

    Published on: Sunday, 23 June, 2013

    Striking a balance between intellectual property and freedom to innovate

    The economist Arthur Laffer is reputed to have drawn his famous curve—showing that beyond a certain point higher taxes generate lower revenue—on a paper napkin at a dinner with Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld in the Washington Hotel in 1974.

    Another economist, Alex Tabarrok of George Mason University, last year drew a similar curve on a virtual napkin to argue that, beyond a certain point, greater protection for intellectual property causes less innovation. He thinks that U.S. patent law is well beyond that optimal point.

    Last week the Supreme Court came out against the patenting of genes, on the grounds that they are discoveries, not inventions, though it did allow that edited copies of the DNA of a breast cancer gene should be seen as invented diagnostic tools. Dr. Tabarrok thinks that decision and other recent rulings are nudging patent law back in the right direction after a protectionist drift in the 1980s and '90s.

    Read Full Post
    By: Matt Ridley | Tagged: rational-optimist, wall-street-journal
  • The biomess

    Published on: Saturday, 22 June, 2013

    Making electricity from burning wood is bad for the economy and the environment

    My column in the Times on 20 June 2013:

    In the Energy Bill going through Parliament there is allowance for generous subsidy for a huge push towards burning wood to produce electricity. It’s already happening. Drax power station in Yorkshire has converted one of its boilers to burn wood pellets instead of coal; soon three of its six boilers will be doing this and the power station will then be receiving north of half a billion pounds a year in subsidy. By 2020, the Government estimates, up to 11 per cent of our generating capacity will be from burning wood.

    Read Full Post
    By: Matt Ridley | Tagged: rational-optimist, the-times
  • Badgers versus hedgehogs

    Published on: Monday, 17 June, 2013

    In the absence of predators to control lesser predators, people have a role

    My article in the Times on 13 June 2013

    ‘We are as gods and have to get good at it,” the Californian ecologist and writer Stewart Brand said recently. Worldwide there has been a sea change in the ecological profession. These days most ecologists recognise that there is no such thing as a pristine wilderness and that the best biodiversity is produced by active management to control some species and encourage others.

    Read Full Post
    By: Matt Ridley | Tagged: rational-optimist, the-times
  • Non-fossil fuels

    Published on: Saturday, 08 June, 2013

    Abiogenic methane made in the mantle from carbonate?

    My Mind and Matter column in the Wall Street Journal is on abiogenic methane

    Coal, oil and gas are "fossil" fuels, right? They are derived from ancient life-forms and are nonrenewable, stored energy, extracted from prehistoric sunlight. In the case of coal and most oil, this is obviously true: You can find fossil tree trunks and leaves in coal seams and chemicals in oil that come from plankton.

    But there's increasing doubt about whether all natural gas (which is 90% methane) comes from fermented fossil microbes. Some of it may be made by chemical processes deep within the earth. If so, the implications could be profound for the climate and energy debates.

    Read Full Post
    By: Matt Ridley | Tagged: rational-optimist, wall-street-journal
  • Who will lobby for the poor old taxpayer?

    Published on: Saturday, 08 June, 2013

    It's what politicians will do unbribed that's the bigger scandal

    My Times column here.

    I have a confession to make. Last week I held a meeting with representatives of three organisations and offered to raise an issue for them in the House of Lords. They claimed they were charities seeking a smidgin of funding to push forward promising research on a squirrel-pox vaccine, which might help to save the red squirrel from extinction in this country.

    Now I begin to wonder if these three charming people were actually disguised investigative reporters who were trying to add my name to that of my three fellow peers who were splashed over the front page of The Sunday Times. Or perhaps they were from a front for the Chinese People’s Liberation Army. (Tony Blair apparently spoke at an event hosted by a front for the latter.) I never checked their credentials or frisked them for hidden cameras.

    Read Full Post
    By: Matt Ridley | Tagged: rational-optimist, the-times
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