Lúcás Ó Rothláin

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Lúcás Ó Rothláin

Lúcás Ó Rothláin

@ecocognito

Strategic, technical + scientific support for businesses wanting to boost their social + environmental performance. #Agriculture #Food #Housing #Carbon #Climate

Wales, Ireland + Worldwide Katılım Kasım 2010
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Madeleine Emerald 🐞
Madeleine Emerald 🐞@emeraldthiele·
Future of first Bramley apple tree in doubt as cottage where it stands is sold by Nottingham Trent University.
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Liz Webster
Liz Webster@LizWebsterSBF·
🚨 Now it’s the £2bn packaging tax hammering British pubs, brewers & supermarkets. Glass bottles get hit hardest. Food prices rise. Jobs at risk. “Taking back control”… of ever more expensive red tape. Another day, another self-inflicted cost.
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Alex Wickham
Alex Wickham@alexwickham·
NEW: Andy Burnham has opened up the possibility of a snap election if he becomes PM Notably - and remarkably - his team is not ruling it out or disputing the idea. They are declining to comment at all on the speculation. It comes after @kateferguson4 and @guidofawkes reported they’re considering an early election. An ally says he’s focusing on the by-election. On the pro side: it would solve the criticism Burnham will get if he tries to govern without a mandate. He may want to capitalise on any poll bounce. He may also want to free himself from the constraints of Labour’s manifesto on tax/Europe. On the con side: Labour has a huge majority. It will be very controversial with MPs who won’t want to risk losing their seats. It means the prospect of a deal with the Greens if there’s a hung parliament. That said, Burnham seems to be embracing Labour deals with other left-wing parties in the future - he told @rsylvester1 he’s committed to proportional representation. bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
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Aaron Bastani
Aaron Bastani@AaronBastani·
Britain at the height of its power and prestige was home to Karl Marx and Giuseppe Mazzini. It was a refuge for Alexander Herzen and Victor Hugo. Now, in 2026, it wont allow American YouTubers & streamers to enter because they criticised Israel. 🥀
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Bernie
Bernie@Artemisfornow·
Can you see it yet? … This was once agricultural land, helping to feed the nation. Now it’s Britain’s largest solar farm. Bill payers have underwritten up to +/- £80 MILLION of revenue on the Contract for Difference, depending on future electricity prices. The land no longer makes food, the returns go to private international investors. And WE underwrite the risk. This is stakeholder capitalism. Socialism on acid. *sigh* you need to read the book!
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James Melville 🚜
James Melville 🚜@JamesMelville·
Fife residents and conservationists have slammed plans for a giant AI data centre near a Fife village - a 600MW data centre near Auchtertool. It has been calculated that the AI data centre would use the energy of more than 50% of Scotland's households. No one voted for this.
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David Richards MBE
David Richards MBE@davidrichards·
First they deindustrialised the North. Now it is the office's turn. A FTSE bank just described 7,800 of its own staff as "lower-value human capital." White-collar work is the new coalfield, and the algorithm doing the cutting will not apologise the way the boss did on Friday.
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Zack Polanski
Zack Polanski@ZackPolanski·
In an era of multiparty politics - first past the post is utterly broken. It is time for Proportional Representation. The climate crisis & our inequality crisis cannot wait for another general election. Failing to fix our democracy immediately will betray future generations.
Zack Polanski tweet media
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Joe Guinan
Joe Guinan@joecguinan·
Why would the disclosure of emails between the Speaker of the House of Commons and a foreign power accused of genocide be prejudicial to the conduct of public affairs? It would better facilitate public affairs to know what our public officials are up to in this murky area.
The National@ScotNational

NEW: Lindsay Hoyle has intervened to block the release of emails he sent to Israeli politicians 🗣️ 'The Speaker of the House of Commons ... has formed the reasonable opinion that disclosure of the information would be likely to prejudice the effective conduct of public affairs'

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Prof. Steve Keen
Prof. Steve Keen@ProfSteveKeen·
I have been saying for years that the problem is not just that economists get things wrong. The problem is the framework itself, because it keeps pretending the economy lives in equilibrium while real capitalism is driven by debt, credit, and instability. For full breakdown, Check out the YouTube video below. #Economics #FinancialCrisis #SteveKeen youtube.com/watch?v=Dx8nnq…
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Pippa Crerar
Pippa Crerar@PippaCrerar·
EXCL: Huge tranche of Mandelson files being published on Monday shows no record of national security mitigations before the former UK ambassador started in Washington. Security officials were sufficiently concerned that they recommended he was denied clearance - but sources say Mandelson was *not* asked to take mitigations. (He was asked to take steps to avoid commercial conflicts of interest - but that's a separate issue). MPs on foreign affairs committee now likely to ask whether they were misled about pre-appointments process. Story by @kiranstacey @Direthoughts & me theguardian.com/politics/2026/…
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Dr Ciarán Ó Carroll
Dr Ciarán Ó Carroll@ClimateCiaran·
⚡𝐌𝐲 𝐥𝐞𝐭𝐭𝐞𝐫 𝐢𝐧 𝐭𝐨𝐝𝐚𝐲’𝐬 𝐈𝐫𝐢𝐬𝐡 𝐓𝐢𝐦𝐞𝐬: why should a family in Ireland pay more for electricity so a billion-dollar tech company can pay less? 💵
Dr Ciarán Ó Carroll tweet media
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TheJournal.ie
TheJournal.ie@thejournal_ie·
Significant loosening of rules around one-off housing will allow those who have an economic or social need to live in a rural location, including returning emigrants, to build a house. jrnl.ie/7057104
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Pickles U Fat Get
Pickles U Fat Get@torysmasher·
Burnham’s Manchester no oasis Property developers rake in huge profits, working class communities in areas like Moss Side & Hulme are being priced out. Residents said that what is called ‘regeneration’ feels less like renewal & more like social cleansing socialistworker.co.uk/labour/burnham…
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Adrian
Adrian@adriansopinion·
Labour are destroying the UK's Farmland....
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole

A tenant farmer in the Cairngorms says land that sold for £500 an acre a few years ago now goes for £5,000. He is being moved off ground his family has worked for generations, because he cannot outbid the people buying it. The buyers are corporations, and they have no intention of farming a single acre of it. Here is how the trick works. A company keeps emitting carbon exactly as before. Same factories, same flights, same supply chain, same product. Then it buys a Scottish hillside, plants some trees, and announces to the world that it is now carbon neutral, or, if it is feeling brave, carbon negative. The emissions never fell. It simply bought a landscape to point at. Take BrewDog. In 2020 it bought a 9,300-acre Highland estate, propped up with public grant money, and promised a million trees and the crown of the world's first carbon negative beer business, removing twice the carbon it emitted, forever. By 2023 roughly half of the 500,000 trees it had managed to plant were dead, killed by drought, with critics noting the planting was drying out the peat and releasing carbon of its own. The advertising regulator ruled its carbon-negative claims misleading. In 2024 it quietly dropped the badge and dismissed the entire carbon credit market as a flood of cheap schemes whose benefit was "questionable, maybe even non-existent." Then it sold the estate to a firm whose actual business is selling carbon offsets. That is the whole model in one story. Public money in. Dead trees out. A green halo worn for four years and then dropped. The farmer who used to be on that land, gone. The hillside passed to a company that exists purely to sell other people the right to keep polluting. This is no fringe case. In one recent year, half of every estate sold in Scotland went to investment funds, corporations and charitable trusts rather than anyone who would farm it. A third of the deals for plantable land are now done off-market, in secret, precisely so the local community never gets the chance to bid. So this is what net zero looks like on the ground. A man who produced food is priced out of his own glen. A corporation that produced emissions buys the glen, calls itself a force for good, and sells the carbon. The land stops feeding anyone. Nobody's emissions actually went down by a gram. The food was real. The farmer was real. The carbon saving is a line in a slide deck. And we have somehow decided the villain in all this is the man with the sheep.

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