Miscellaneous Wordsmith Miscellaneous Wordsmith

Scrap renewable targets

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New forms of energy are great. I would love to see the day when electric cars run as powerfully and cheaply as petrol-powered ones. But that is very different from jacking up prices to consumers by imposing ridiculous targets for renewables, especially given the growing uncertainty surrounding mainstream climate change predictions. The only answer is to scrap the renewable targets and to find other, more efficient ways of meeting Britain’s energy needs. That will probably mean better gas-powered plants; it might even mean more nuclear. It certainly shouldn’t mean building thousands of expensive wind farms regardless of cost at a time when firms and families across the country are facing years of austerity.

Allister Heath, 'Green rules pushing up energy prices' CityAM

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Miscellaneous admin Miscellaneous admin

Madsen & Eamonn win Enterprise Award

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Dr Madsen Pirie and Dr Eamonn Butler will be presented with the National Free Enterprise Award today. The Award will be made at the Institute of Economic Affairs annual conference on the state of the economy, held in the Institute of Directors near Westminster. It will be presented by Professor Stephen Littlechild.

The National Free Enterprise Award goes back three decades. Its lustrous past winners include the airline entrepreneurs Sir Freddie Laker and Sir Richard Branson, hotelier Lord Forte, Nobel economist Friedrich Hayek, politicians Sir Keith Joseph and Margaret Thatcher, Buckingham University head Dr Terence Kealey, and financial journalist Neil Collins.

The panel of judges includes prominent supporters of free enterprise from various walks of life, and most made Pirie and Butler their first choice for the award. The pair have been prominent for defending bankers during the recent crisis, and pinning the blame on inept central banks, spendthrift politicians, and incompetent regulators. As Eamonn Butler put it: "The cause of this crisis was the tsunami of paper money that the US and UK kept printing over fifteen years. At first, all of us who surfed on it enjoyed the ride. But inevitably, it crashed into reality and of course destroyed everything before it."

The pair are known for humour as dry as their politics. Butler described his 30-year professional partnership with Pirie as "one of the great double-acts, like Jekyll and Hyde", while Pirie assured journalists that "absolutely no bullying was used on the judges."

Click here to find out how you can attend a reception this evening to celebrate this achievement.

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Miscellaneous Charlotte Bowyer Miscellaneous Charlotte Bowyer

Eamonn Butler: Top Political Influencer

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totalpoliticsTotal Politics magazine has named the ASI's Dr Eamonn Butler as one of the UK's top 50 political influencers. In the latest issue the magazine publishes a list those with the most political sway. Excluding MPs and Lords from the equation (well, it's not like they achieve much anyway), they looked at 'who the key players in 2010 might be, and who will be shaping the political ideas that dominate the election.' Leapfrogging over the likes of the Jeremy Clarkson, Bob Crowe and the Archbishop of York, Eamonn and the work of the ASI are recognized at number 30.

As Total Politics comments, the sources of political influence are becoming increasingly diverse. Nowadays political pressure comes from a variety of sources: the church, the unions, the media, and even outspoken celebrities' opinions. With years of experience and achievement behind us, the ASI is fantastically placed to influence the debate on public policy in the coming months, and will continue to put forward the groundbreaking ideas and solutions needed for Britain's problems. We're pleased to see that Total Politics recognises that!

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Miscellaneous Wordsmith Miscellaneous Wordsmith

How big is a billion?

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A billion is a hard number so let's get some perspective. A billion seconds ago it was 1959. A billion minutes ago Jesus was alive. A billion hours ago was the Stone Age. A billion days ago no-one walked on the earth on two feet. A billion Pounds ago was only 13 hours and 12 minutes... - at the rate our government is spending it. Thanks Gordon!

H/T Stuart Barrow (ASI alumnus)

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