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Monthly Archives: January 2016
On the empty platitudes of the anti-pipeline advocates
This week was a busy one in the Energy East pipeline debate with Denis Coderre and his merry band of municipal politicians stepping out of their jurisdictional depth to come out against the pipeline and our Prime Minister saying he … Continue reading
Posted in Canadian Politics, Energy East, Oil Sands, Pipelines, Trans Mountain, Uncategorized
10 Comments
Debunking more Myths and Fables about the Energy East Pipeline
Well my last post summarizing why I support the Energy East pipeline has been out for only a couple days and the response has been quite positive. I can usually tell when a post is doing well: when my social … Continue reading
Posted in Canadian Politics, Energy East, Oil Sands, Pipelines, Uncategorized
14 Comments
A Chemist in Langley’s take on Energy East
I have written a lot about pipelines at this blog and last night while watching Denis Coderre attempt to hijack the Energy East pipeline discussion I said to myself: enough is enough I want to write a blog post to … Continue reading
Posted in Canadian Politics, Energy East, Oil Sands, Pipelines, Uncategorized
15 Comments
On poor science communication in the media: a case study on the flu vaccine
This morning I was directed to a blog post by Bill Tieleman in The Tyee. The post dealt with the flu vaccine and was titled Time to End Expensive, Ineffective Forced Flu Shots. This is the latest of his, now … Continue reading
Posted in Canadian Politics, Chemistry and Toxicology, Risk, Uncategorized
5 Comments
On the glaring intellectual inconsistencies in 100% Wind Water and Sunlight
Ralph Waldo Emerson is his famous essay Self-Reliance coined the phrase “A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds”. As readers of my blog know I have spent a lot of time researching and commenting on the 100% Wind, … Continue reading
On the curious anachronism that is the academic journal business model
While discussing my post on the benefits and limitations of peer review in the reporting of interdisciplinary and multi-disciplinary science I came to recognize that I was taking a lot of things for granted. The biggest is that a lot … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
2 Comments
On blogging and the irrelevance of academic peer review in multi-disciplinary fields
In my short blogging career I have been challenged, on more than one occasion, to submit my writing to peer-reviewed academic journals. My response has been to point out that my work undergoes peer review the second I post it … Continue reading
More on 100% Wind, Water and Sunlight and the Council of Canadians “100% Clean economy” by 2050 goal
This week the Globe and Mail featured an interview with engineer Dr. Mark Z Jacobson on his plan for the world to get all its energy – including transport and heating fuel and electricity – from wind, water and solar … Continue reading
A look at British Columbia’s energy picture in light of the Paris Agreement
In the last month or so, I have seen an upsurge of comments on my Twitter feed, and at the #bcpoli hashtag, from individuals who I can best describe as “politically active” and “partisans”. These tweets have centered on the … Continue reading