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National Grid warns of three-hour UK blackouts this winter and says people will be paid to use energy off-peak     (inews.co.uk)
submitted by knightwarrior41 to WorldNews 2.6 years ago (+13/-0)
10 comments last comment...
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Expert debunks vaccine "fertility myths". She admits there's no way of knowing if they actually cause damage or not, but no true expert thinks they're dangerous so they're safe     (inews.co.uk)
submitted by Broc_Liath to Controlavirus 3.5 years ago (+11/-0)
7 comments last comment...
https://inews.co.uk/news/health/coronavirus-latest-experts-debunk-vaccine-fertility-myths-women-819783

Dr Victoria Male, a lecturer in reproductive immunology at Imperial College London, tells i that full fertility studies are not generally done on new vaccines or medications before they are rolled out, simply because they would take decades, but that based on the Pfizer efficacy and safety trials and the science behind the vaccine, there is no need for concern: “No one who is serious about vaccines or immunology is worried about this.”

I love how she literally admits in the test of the article that no one has properly studied their impact on fertility. Even if the MRNA vaccines were completely on the level this is not something that could be known. Anyone asking us to believe it's safety is essentially saying "just trust the system man!"
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England’s first native oyster hatchery to release a million oysters a year into the Solent     (inews.co.uk)
submitted by MagicMushroom to UnitedKingdom 4.1 years ago (+2/-0)
1 comments last comment...
https://inews.co.uk/news/environment/england-first-native-oyster-hatchery-release-million-oysters-per-year-solent-924948?ITO=newsnow

England’s first native oyster hatchery has opened with ambitious plans to clean up the waters of the Solent on the south coast.

The hatchery, established by the University of Portsmouth and Blue Marine Foundation, will provide a million oysters a year for a restoration project to reduce pollution and boost biodiversity in the area.

The strait between mainland Britain and the Isle of Wight used to be famous for its oyster population, but after years of over-fishing and pollution numbers have declined dramatically. It is a similar story across the UK: according to the Zoological Society London, wild native oyster populations have declined by more than 95 per cent in recent decades.