Round Up: Progress on renewables, Progress on Cancer, plus warnings from History and Xunzi

Nations gather to end fossil fuels Reports Nature Briefing.  Jolly well about time time too, we say, when the petty, spiteful quarrels of Iran, Israel and the United States have the rest of us over a barrel.

At the annual United Nations climate conference (COP30) last year, Colombia stepped up to host a new conference, alongside the Netherlands, to create a roadmap for countries to transition away from fossil fuels that doesn’t require consensus between all of the world’s countries, as the COP process does. At the conference, which just finished in Santa Marta, one of the first orders of business was to launch a panel of scientists that will advise willing countries to shift to clean energy. A separate group of researchers released a report listing 12 high-level actions that nations can take to support a fossil-fuel phaseout. “We’re not trying to replicate the [UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change] here. We’re trying to give some practical policy insights” based on science, says climate-change economist Frank Jotzo, who was part of the editorial team. Nature | 7 min read
Reference: Santa Marta Action Repertoire (SMART) Summary

Cancer progress(1)  Our first today is from the indefatigable Nature Briefing

The benefits of vaccinating young women against human papillomavirus (HPV), which can cause cancers of the genitals, head and neck, have been known for at least a decade. Data from the United States published last month now reveal the positive impact of vaccinating men against the virus4.

Researchers compared the rates of cancer among 510,000 boys and men aged between 9 and 26 years old who were vaccinated against HPV, and another 510,000 who were unvaccinated. They found that vaccination was linked to a 46% reduction in the risk of developing cancers of the oesophagus, head, neck, penis and anal tissue. The HPV vaccine is “an absolute winner” for cancer prevention, says Jarad Martin, a radiation oncologist at private health-care provider GenesisCare in Newcastle, Australia.

Cancer Progress (2) From the Mail, which is surprisingly good on things like science and medicine, so we’ll quote them verbatim:

“Tens of thousands of patients could benefit from a new jab on the NHS which ‘rapidly’ treats more than a dozen cancers in just 60 seconds……” an injectable form of immunotherapy called pembrolizumab….effective for 14 different types of cancer

‘One-minute’ jab that cuts cancer treatment time from two hours to 60 seconds for 14 types of the disease is rolled out by the NHS | Daily Mail Online

Big Oil back in the dock?

A few months ago,(LSS 13 1 26) we published a rather plaintive blog in which we wondered if it were possible for some people to get recompense from Oil companies for damage that may have been caused by global warming. Now Alexander Hurst of the Guardian goes much, much further, as you will see if you read this article

Trump and his oil-and-coal oligarchy should face sanctions for their war on the environment | Alexander Hurst | The Guardian

Spanish warning from 1976 Only a few months after its birth, prestigious Spanish Newspaper  EL PAÍS was already warning of impending climate disaster, in the shape of an article by Alfonso García Pérez.

Cambio climático: crónica de un desastre anunciado | 50 Aniversario | EL PAÍS

Quote of the week:

“Pride deafens; warnings go unheard; and disaster, long signalled, arrives on schedule.”

Xunzi, Self‑Cultivation, in Xunzi: The Complete Text, trans. Eric Hutton (Princeton UP, 2014).

#cancer #epidemiology #health #medicine #climate change #global warming

Progress on Multiple Sclerosis: When Big Data meets Molecular Genetics

Few of us have not met someone who is suffering from Multiple Sclerosis, that terrible wasting disease wherein the immune system seems to turn on its own body, especially in the fatty sheaths around the neurons. Leading to a progressive deterioration in mobility before confining victims finally to a wheelchair-or even worse. The experience for families and victims was extra-bad because for many years the cause seemed unknown, making hope of any cure quite unlikely. Michael Marshall of the New Scientist has been covering this story most assiduously. And so we are pleased to showcase it, because it celebrates achievements in two our our favourite fields-big data and molecular biology-and the benefits which accrue when scientists from both work together.

We urge you to read Michael’s article either by buying the hard copy mag (there’s tons else to read inside it) or paywalling past the link below [1] Suffice it to say: #1 The molecular evidence that the Epstein Barr virus (which can cause glandular fever) is involved. #2 That this has a strong effect on both B cells and T cells in the immune system, which ,when they go rogue, are essentially responsible for the terrible lesions of MS #3 That not all hosts of Epstein Barr virus go on to develop MS, because the chances of that depends on certain genetic propensities and variants and, best of all #4 the above and more, which we report so glibly, has been elucidated by the use of huge data studies : 10 million people in one, 617, 186 in another, even 471 000 B cells in another-how’s that for numbers, folks?-which were only possible because: #5 places like the UK and USA have worked to build big collaborative things the the UK Biobank and All of us. Well some of the people in those countries have anyway.

All of which leads us to few reflections, some of which will not be uncongenial to regular readers. Firstly, it seems a pretty good idea to spend money on science, especially basic research, instead of cutting it. Secondly scientists these days work best in large teams whose members come from all sorts of backgrounds and this is especially true when you throw multidisciplinarygroups of them together. And that this also seems to be true of football teams: how far would Arsenal FC. for example, have enjoyed their current success if they had insisted on retaining a staff entirely composed of plucky British lads? [2] The implications in turn for visa systems, cultural openness and plain common sense are clear in turn.

[1]Huge study reveals how Epstein-Barr virus may cause multiple sclerosis | New Scientist

[2]‘Everything can happen’: Trossard confident of Arsenal’s chances in final | Arsenal | The Guardian

#multiple sclerosis #Ebpstein-Barr virus #T cells #B cells #autoimmune disease #medicine #health

Heroes of Learning:The Formidable Shirley-Ann Jackson

Today, gentle readers, we are showcasing the life and times of remarkable American Physicist Shirley-Ann Jackson (b1946), who this year will celebrate her eightieth birthday after a lifetime of intellectual accomplishment. But we’ve picked her out because there is a deeper message for ourselves as members of the Evidence Based, Reason Modulated (EBRM) community, a lesson we could all learn, even some of the members of our exalted Editorial Board.

Shirley’s life and work are admirably described in these two links we have so thoughtfully provided; one from Wikipedia[1] and the other from Shirley’s own alma mater, MIT.[2] Suffice it to say, her career glittered.-Doctorate at MIT, on to years of cutting-edge research at the prestigious Bell Labs, then service as a fully-paid-up member of the Great and the Good at places like Rutgers, the US NRC and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute[3] among others. So far, so good. But now comes the lesson-and it’s humbling for those with eyes to see. Read this, which we have unashamedly pinched from the MIT section of her biography: it dates from the Autumn of 1964:

In the midst of working on her first physics problem set, she emerged from her room and noticed all the other first-year women on her floor out in a common area, doing theirs together. “If you know anything about MIT, you know that working the problem sets is a big deal,” she says. “So I gathered up my paperwork and said, ‘May I join you?’ One of them looked up and said, ‘Go away.’“I said, ‘I’ve done half the problems already and I know how to do the other ones.’“And another girl said, ‘Didn’t you hear her? She saidgo away.”

For Shirley Ann Jackson was Black, Ladies and Gentlemen. And the other people around her were, wait for it, white. Now we at LSS are nothing if not Men of the World, knowing humanity for what it is, its little ways so to speak. And we might expect such attitudes from certain persons who-erm, how to put this gently?- are perhaps less educated, and perform more physically based labour. The sort of bore with the beer belly and the big opinions you find in many a pub, in fact.. But we do not expect it from our own, either, at this time, nor at any other. You go to MIT to learn physics, not to rehearse the petty cruelties of exclusion. Just because we have a degree or two does not mean we are free of the blind spots, intellectual weaknesses and mental laziness. Not necessarily anyway. “Physician heal thyself” comes from Luke, though the saying is much older. It’s a truism for the holder of any Doctorate or other advanced qualification. And that means us.

[1]Shirley Ann Jackson – Wikipedia

[2]The Remarkable Career of Shirley Ann Jackson | MIT Technology Review

[3]Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) :: Architecture, Business, Engineering, Humanities, IT & Web Science, Science

#science #physics #MIT #race prejudice #learning

Hydrogen from Microbiology-another hopeful story from Nature Briefing

You might be forgiven for thinking we’re against bacteria at this blog. Got a beef with them, want more antibiotics to kill them, especially that pesky little Escherichia coli that is always clogging up the pristine pages of our little website. Nothing could be further from the truth: we are simply against bacteria that kill people, that’s all, and we admire the little creatures for all the useful things they do

Nothing more useful it seems than generating hydrogen in clean green ways that massively reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Of course we need hydrogen for all sorts of things-food, drugs, plastics-but the way it is currently made is depressingly energy intensive  Which is what this remarkable team of researchers at Edinburgh University have done, re purposing E coli to make hydrogen in amazingly clean ways Get this extract from the admirable Nature Briefing:

. The new process involves growing a strain of Escherichia coli that naturally produces hydrogen when deprived of oxygen. The researchers added a palladium catalyst and substrate for the hydrogen to bind to, and when they removed oxygen, hydrogen was bound to 94% of the substrate.

And they didn’t stop there:

The team then turned waste bread into a food source that could be given to the bacteria instead of glucose, to show that this type of food waste can be repurposed. The system resulted in a three-fold decrease in greenhouse-gas equivalent emissions compared with using fossil fuels, according to the team’s modelling.

There’s a lot to be said here. First our admiration for the amazing work and intelligence of the scientists[2] whose original paper we seem for once to be able to reproduce in full. The marvellous ways old things like bread and E coli are recycled to useful purposes. And a further point which the team at the admirable Nature Briefing know well. Progress, hope even, comes from the application of the scientific method. The use of evidence and reason to judge it in that order. Nothing else, however much you might want it to be so.

[2] Native H2 pathways enable biocompatible hydrogenation of metabolic alkenes in bacteria | Nature Chemistry

#microbiology #palladium #greenhoiuse gas# hydrogen# E coli #sustainabilityn #drugs #plastics

Round up: Declining lives, Giant Octopuses, Memory modules and more problems for the Nation State

Sick Man of Europe? We’ve said it here before (LSS 10 2 25, 21 12 21):declining health statistics are one of the surest indicators of a society in long term decay. Now this study reported by the Guardian gives further cause to our suspicion that poor old Britain may be heading the way of the poor old USSR.

People in UK spend fewer years in good health than a decade ago, study finds | Health | The Guardian      1

Can your brain get full? It’s a question that has vexed many of us who cannot find their car keys or remember the birthdays of friends and families but seem to recall the lyrics of Living thing by ELO with ease. This article from The Conversation explains how this embarrassing state of affairs may come about:

Squids in  Riffing on the above, prepare your brain for a totally new piece of information: apparently the Cretaceous seas were home to a population of hitherto unknown octopuses of terrifying size, easily able to wolf down one of the whale like mosasaurs which had been labelled apex predator of these long-ago seas.

‘Kraken-like’ giant octopuses 100m years ago crunched bones of prey | Palaeontology | The Guardian    absence of evidence is not evidence of absence

Sovereignty v Sovereign Wealth Funds The title which Larry Elliott gives his article: Why is Britain’s economy so stuck? It’s the tension between what voters want and what the bond markets allow is an almost perfect summary of our theme that as a going concern, the Nation State now seems to be in deep trouble. For those who say we are being hopelessly Anglocentric, we think the UK  makes a pretty good model for about 50 other small to medium-sized nations, so everyone can learn from it.

Why is Britain’s economy so stuck? It’s the tension between what voters want and what the bond markets allow | Larry Elliott | The Guardian

Quote of the week: Neither a borrower nor a lender be; For loan oft loses both itself and friend, And borrowing dulls the edge of husbandry.” Hamlet Act 1 Scene 3

#paleontology #economics #britain #neurology #health #epidemiology

WHO has a Cunning Plan to speed antibiotic development

The scientific community has developed and approved new antibiotics in recent years. This is good, but unfortunately not sufficient to catch up with evolving drug-resistance bacteria, especially against those of greatest concern. We need a reliable pipeline with new antibacterial agents that are innovative, affordable, accessible to all those who need them.”

Dr Yvan Hutin, Director of Antimicrobial Resistance at WHO

Says it all really, everything that we’ve been banging on about here for the last six years and more. The problem is simple, but deadly.  Although more than 90 new antibiotics are now in development, very of few of them target the really high-priority organisms that worry health care professionals: and even fewer of these are really innovative (in the way that penicillin was in its day for example) And so the World Health Organization, that most noble of entities has come up with a Cunning Plan to really get things moving. They gave divided it into three Target Product Profiles:

-our old friends the multidrug resistant gram negative bacteria such as enterobacteriales, Acinobacter baumanii and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, who’ve shown up in so many old LSS blogs we won’t bother to list them.

Gram positives like Enterococcus faecium.  We have wondered why the gram negatives have been getting all the attention, and seeing no Darwinian reason why the gram positives should not evolve resistance too, are extremely glad someone is at last paying attention to them.

-their third trope for action is bacterial meningitis, caused by organisms such as Neisseria meningitidis and  Streptococcus pneumoniae among others. Particularly welcome, for of those who incur such dreadful infections, one out of six will die and of the survivors, about one in five will be left with some long term disimpairment.

Hats off to Dr Hutin in particular and the World Health Organization in general. The World Health Organization is often treated as a mere federation of its member states, but in practice it is something larger and more coherent than the sum of its parts. Individual nations see only their own budgets, their own pathogens, their own political cycles; the WHO sees the whole epidemiological chessboard. Its strength lies in that cooperative vantage point — the ability to gather data from Lagos and Lima, to convene experts from Seoul and Stockholm, and to turn a hundred local anxieties into a single, rational blueprint for global action. In a field as fragmented and under‑powered as antibiotic development, that kind of coordination isn’t bureaucracy; it’s civilisation defending itself. There’s your glass-raiser for Friday Night Cocktails, gentle readers.

WHO releases new target product profiles for urgently needed antibiotics

#antibiotics #penicillin #world health organisation #epidemiology  #microbiology #health #medicine

Friday Night Feast of Fun: What to Wear for Cocktails

A few years ago (LSS 15 5 20) we received a plaintive call for help from a reader in Bridport in Dorset. He posed an age old and much-debated question: how should the Gentleman of Fashion dress for Friday Night Cocktail?. And this is the answer we gave

“Dear Mr AF: the rules on this have always been very prescriptive, but fair. In winter, a dark blue or black jacket, striped shirt, creased chinos and smart black shoes. Tie; anything regimental. old school, or your golf club. The building, not the thing you hit the ball with! In summer you may sport a light jacket, summer being defined as any date from Easter Sunday until the final Bank Holiday in August. You may of course wear a Panama. But don’t wear it indoors, or you will look like a numpty.”

Well, we will not change a dot or comma of that answer. Rules of dress are timeless, like rules of Golf or Morality. What you see above is how it is ladies and gentleman and we can no mor exchange that than we can ask for a rewrite on one of the Ten Commandments. (not even the one about Adultery) But we will add an appendix. A coda if you like, to recognise the times we live in.

Because since that blog was published quite a lot has changed. global temperatures have climbed by roughly 0.3 °C, 2024 became the hottest year ever recorded at about 1.55 °C above pre‑industrial levels , mountain glaciers have kept shrinking with more than 27 m water‑equivalent lost since 1970 and record mass losses in five of the past six years , and extreme events—heatwaves, storms, floods, droughts, and fires—have intensified across almost every corner of the biosphere. Yes, it’s got hotter, quite a lot hotter and it’s not just because you are standing too near the barbecue fire, ladies and gentlemen. So, just as St Benedict wisely relaxed monastic rules to make them more bearable , we are going to relax the Cocktail Code. A bit. In the warmest weather only. Gentleman may, with discretion, wear a polo shirt if working at the barbecue or serving the drinks, provided that you clear it first with the Guests.

Well there’s our advice . It’s nearly Six British Summer Time as we pen these lines, so we, like many of you are already thinking of slipping in to the time-honoured garb and wolfing down that first Pimms. We hope you enjoy your evening too, wherever you are.

#cocktails #clothes #global warming #st benedict #climate change #pimms #gin

Round-up: More Amoc Havoc, IQ Blues, immunity-and is the prequel to Terminator?

George Monbiot shares fears of Amoc Havoc

Last week we showcased a piece by Damien Carrington about the rising dangers of a collapse in the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation(LSS 16 4 26)  Several outlets took up the theme, But it took a writer as prescient as George Monbiot to put it into wider context:

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2026/apr/23/catastrophic-climate-event-scientists-atlantic-system-collapse-billionaire-existential-crisis.

A critical eye for IQ

We’ve always had our doubts about IQ tests, and not just because we’re rubbish at them. Now an eminent researcher in psychology shares our concerns that such tests on their own are sufficient to guess at a child’s future development.

https://theconversation.com/the-truth-about-child-iq-research-shows-it-fluctuates-and-may-be-an-unreliable-predictor-of-future-success-27156    nMargherita Malanchini

Running up that hill-it doesn’t hurt ……

Immune cells linked to endurance in mice reports Nature Briefing. Is this what’s going on inside the cells of top athletes?

B cells — the ‘security guards’ of the immune system — also provide crucial support for muscles during exercise. B-cell-deficient mice performed worse on strength and endurance tests than did mice with healthy B-cell counts. Researchers found that the absence of B cells lowers the amount of the amino acid glutamate, which is associated with improved mitochondrial and skeletal muscle function, released by the liver. A lack of glutamate in muscle tissue and the bloodstream could explain the decrease in exercise performance, they suggest.

Nature | 4 min read
Reference: Cell paper

Human machine barrier gets ever more blurred

News that Barcelona surgeon Dr Juan Aibar has successfully implanted electrodes into the brain of an unfortunate sufferer from Tourettes syndrome reinforces another old trope of this blog. That our ability to create functioning interfaces between nervous tissue and artificial technology is advancing ever further. Perhaps you could ask Arnold Schwarzenegger where it might end, or rather Terminate (this El País article by  Jessica Mouzo is in Spanish)

https://elpais.com/salud-y-bienestar/2026-04-22/electrodos-en-el-cerebro-para-mitigar-el-sindrome-de-tourette-grave-los-tics-mas-fuertes-junto-con-gritos-y-

Quote of the week “But the prophet, which shall presume to speak a word in my name, which I have not commanded him to speak… even that prophet shall die.” — Deuteronomy 18:20,

Harsh words for someone!

#climate change #global warming #amoc #neurology #medicine  #immunology  #intelligence testing

When Bacteria Explode: a new clue in the old antibiotic arms race

Bacteria are relentlessly evolving resistance to our attacks with antibiotics and phages — but how? If we understood their tricks a little better, we might still have a chance of avoiding the lethal pandemics of antibiotic‑resistant organisms otherwise waiting in the wings. A new paper from researchers at the John Innes Centre[1] has now shed light on at least one way that  whole populations of bacteria may be secretly defending themselves from our ministrations.

The team found that the bacterium Caulobacter crescentus has an extraordinary switch mechanism that can cause it to “explode” under certain conditions. When it does, it releases tiny virus‑like particles containing fragments of its own DNA. Pertinent to our quest, gentle reader, is that some of this DNA may include instructions on how to resist antibiotics — or perhaps even the bacteriophages we deploy against them. The researchers also identified the components of this switch, which go by the snappy names LypABC and CdxB. They don’t yet know exactly what flips the switch, but they have their suspicions.

All of this is good news for those of us following the antibiotic‑resistance story. We now have a clearer picture of how at least one type of bacterium spreads resistance among its own members. And if we know what these switches are, we have a fighting chance of intervening to turn them off. If, as the researchers suspect, the presence of a hostile phage is indeed one of the triggers, then this is a very great step forward indeed

[1]A bacterial CARD–NLR-like immune system controls the release of gene transfer agents

Emma J. BanksPavol BárdyNgat T. TranPhuong M. NguyenBoris StojilkovićKevin GozziAbbas Maqbool & Tung B. K. Le Nature Microbiology (2026)C

[2]John Innes Centre | Excellence in plant science, genetics and microbiology

#antibiotic resistance #bacteria #dna #genes #virus #bacteriophage #health #medicine

Farewell Robert Skidelsky. If you want to know more about the current mess, read this

No one over thirty will forget the terrifying autumn of 2008. For on September 15th of that year the collapse of Lehman Brothers initiated the acute phase of a chronic financial crisis, tumbling the world economy towards final ruin. And as the indefatigable Larry Elliott [1] notes in  the Guardian, in his masterly obituary of Robert Skidelsky, the ruling classes of the west  were utterly bewildered:

…… there was almost universal disbelief that the crisis was happening. The entire economic establishment – politicians, bankers, Treasury officials, analysts and pundits – were caught unawares, because according to the free-market orthodoxy there was no chance of such a catastrophe occurring

Robert Skidelsky (1929-2026) might have known better. Having devoted a lifetime to studying the works of John Maynard Keynes, he presumably shared that thinker’s suspicion of the axiomatic beneficence of untrammelled Free Markets. Ironically by the summer of 2008 even he felt the Keynesian game was up, and was contemplating other projects, as Elliott points out. Then, as they say-It happened.

For a few fleeting months Keynes was in vogue again, so desperate was the plight of the Great and Good. Interest rates were cut. Money printed. Governments borrowed and spent, Catastrophe was averted. And then? Well, in Britain the Cameron government was elected and reverted to the via dolorosa of financial orthodoxy. Cutting the budget was all that mattered, as if a nation was like a grocer’s shop in a small market town. Keynes was firmly shown the door: and the consequences of poverty, lost growth, wasted lives and appalling political outcomes are with us to this day.

Like Keynes, Skidelsky was not a tribal Party man, having variously flirted with Labour, the SDP, the Tories, and even Jeremy Corbyn in his time. Both Keynes and Skidelsky preferred solutions that worked, reason and evidence over belief and emotion. And both knew that Keynes’ essential insight was that money is about a lot more than just cash, or even more sophisticated accountants’ tricks like stocks and shares. Money is really a network of obligations, contracts, promises and deliveries which facilitate the flow of energy through human societies and by which they live. Any system which depends ultimately on the unregulated competition of lone individuals will ultimately corrupt the information and break the trust on which all depend. A truth now lost in the declining plutocracies of the west, but which certain other parties have understood very well

[1] Lord Skidelsky obituary | Robert Skidelsky | The Guardian

[2] Skidelsky, Robert. John Maynard Keynes: 1883–1946: Economist, Philosopher, Statesman. London: Penguin Books.

#robert skidelski #JM Keynes #economics #politics #financial crash