The shale industry (and the Conservative Party) must do more to make the case
Britain and America stand together as countries that have managed to combine austerity with economic growth.
Over the past four decades or so, Labour has suffered a remarkable decline in its political biodiversity
Even the UN’s IPCC now agrees shale gas is a way to cut pollution. Honest climate change activists should back fracking.
And there are already a number of initiatives in place that can help achieve that goal.
Britain could provide a template for the environmentally and socially responsible development of shale gas elsewhere in Europe
There are plenty of ways of taking the initiative away from Moscow.
Fracking makes it easier for countries to assert their national independence, without being bullied by dictatorial neighbours
In North Dakota, this new energy source has driven vast growth across the economy. We should want the same for Britain.
The choice between reducing our greenhouse gas emissions and adapting to climate change is a false one
Also in the Chairman of the ECR Group’s monthly report: banking union, red cards, shale…and helping the honey-makers.
The new energy source is an environmental and economic opportunity, he tells the World Economic Forum at Davos.
The price freeze grabbed headlines, but our new series shows Labour’s policies are in chaos.
Labour politicians still hark back to the fate of British industry in the 1980s, but they conveniently forget about the damage done by Gordon Brown’s boom-and-bust
As the Coalition’s fourth birthday approaches, we begin a series examining its record to date.