
Britain Is Waking Up from the Net Zero Fever Dream—Will Brussels?
Britain’s latest investment in nuclear has been described as “a tacit admission that wind and solar don’t work.”

Britain’s latest investment in nuclear has been described as “a tacit admission that wind and solar don’t work.”
Germany’s chancellor reignites debate over nuclear power, urging EU-level recognition for clean atomic energy as Social Democrats dig in against any policy reversal.

Italy is breaking from EU orthodoxy by pairing nuclear investment with cross-border grid expansion in the Mediterranean.
Hungarian PM’s political adviser berates Berlin for putting pressure on the EU, only to reverse course later on.

‘New wave’ environmental organizations, led by scientists and engineers, no longer view nuclear energy with suspicion.

Even the Commission knows the current energy model is failing, but while they stay silent, European families pay the price.

All three of Denmark’s governing parties have said they are open to relaxing atomic energy laws, in part to reduce dependence on Russia.

Nuclear is the ugly sister. It’s the Cinderella, I should say. It’s not cool to do research there, not regarded as a major source of energy, something to be celebrated.

A shadowy network of backroom green ideologues helped to kill Berlin’s nuclear grid; tactics included hiding documents from key ministers.

Oxfam complains about growing inequality. There is just one problem: the figures don’t add up.