Michael Peel has been science editor of the Financial Times since October 2023. He covers all elements of science, from the sub-microscopic to the cosmic.
Michael is a chemistry graduate and has been an FT journalist for more than 25 years, including postings in Lagos, Abu Dhabi, Bangkok and Brussels. He has been seconded in Tokyo as executive editor of Nikkei Asia. He is the author of The Fabulists: How Myth-makers Rule in an Age of Crisis (Paperback 2021) and A Swamp Full of Dollars: Pipelines and Paramilitaries at Nigeria’s Oil Frontier (2009), which was shortlisted for the Guardian First Book Award.
Economists criticise Kamala Harris’s plans to fight the rising cost of living
Deng-Carter pact risks unravelling, with co-ordination limited to specific areas of research
Authorities are rushing to contain latest outbreak fuelled by a more dangerous type of the virus
Leading producer says it needs orders to ramp up supply with outbreaks surging in central and east Africa
Labour ministers want funding to ‘pack a punch’ after shake-up and experts warn against ‘salami-slicing’ of cash
Global health body calls for action to tackle ‘very worrying’ outbreak of highly transmissible virus
Discovery of Altar Stone’s origin is latest twist in creation story of fabled 5,000-year-old neolithic site
Wild birds are more likely to be carriers of antibiotic-resistant bacteria if they live close to humans, says study
Global authorities speed up focus on growing threat to traditional cryptography
Brazil’s Leticia Carvalho sets out pro-conservation stance ahead of vote to elect International Seabed Authority chief
GSK’s Shingrix is latest drug to show potential for targeting previously untreatable brain disorders
Patrick Vallance calls for balanced approach to maintain access for groundbreaking research
Research suggests use of computer-made ‘synthetic data’ to train top AI models could lead to nonsensical results in future
Letter to prime minister seeks boost for new science and tech ‘supercluster’ after plans stalled under previous government
Discovery expected to stoke debate about impact of seabed mining
Advances in predictions promised by machine learning matched with physics in latest model involving Google
Proposed legislation aims to better protect data ‘supply chains’ to essential public services
Treatment based on science that helps axolotl salamanders restore lost limbs is now in human trials
New Labour government seeks to rebuild global reputation after damage done by Brexit
New compound increases strength of antidote for fentanyl and other lethal drugs
More detail and less ‘soundbites’ needed to unlock the sector’s economic potential, say science and tech groups
Discovery could allow more precise and efficient targeting of DNA modifications
Oral formulation offers prospect of cheaper and more convenient access to drug, research suggests
Research estimates how much the fast-evolving technology hits various jobs, from software engineers to mechanics
Researchers are trying to tackle the threat before nature’s ‘flying needles’ become more prevalent and resistant to prevention