Pipelines in the U.S. carry 25 times more oil than tank cars do, yet derailments are by far the biggest threat.
Types Archives
A Peaceable Solution for the Range War Over Grazing Rights
When environmental groups buy ranchers’ permits, there’s no need for the feds to start rustling up trouble.
Risky Hydraulic Fracturing?
According to scientific research, the environmental costs are real but rare.
Learning How to Fish
Ending the tragedy of the oceans: How property rights can save the world’s fisheries.
Regulating Our Way to Prosperity
With central planners promising such extraordinary economic returns from regulation, what could possibly go wrong?
5 Ways The Government Keeps Native Americans In Poverty
Imagine if the government were responsible for looking after your best interests. How well would this work? Just ask Native Americans.
Can Congress Learn to Fish?
Many environmental problems are exaggerated. The threats facing marine fisheries, however, are quite real. There is a growing consensus among fishery experts that greater reliance on private-property rights can prevent overfishing and ensure sustainability.
The government is spending millions to get you to stop eating cheap catfish
The Farm Bill will make it more difficult for Asian catfish to enter the U.S. market. But critics say it’s a trade barrier in disguise.
Local control is better management for federal lands
Citizens in the West have little say on how most of their land is managed. Some western states are beginning to fight for custody.
Bringing local knowledge to federal lands
In the West, nearly half the land is owned and controlled by the federal government, compared with only 4 percent in the East. Holly Fretwell explains why that difference affects the ability of western states to determine their own destiny.