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  • Navitas and SRH Expand Partnership with New International College in Munich

    Navitas and SRH Expand Partnership with New International College in Munich

    Navitas and SRH University have announced the expansion of their successful partnership with the launch of a third international college in Munich, building on the strong foundations established in Heidelberg (2023) and Berlin (2025).

    The new SRH International College in Munich will welcome its first cohort in September 2026, offering two Foundation programs designed to prepare students for progression into a range of SRH degree pathways, including Civil Engineering, Medical Engineering, Mechatronics, Biotechnology, Computer Science, and International Business Administration. Applications open in mid-November 2025.

    Expanding access to quality education

    Munich’s status as a globally recognised tourism and education hub — and its proximity to leading multinational companies in the automotive, finance, and technology sectors — will offer students not only world-class learning opportunities but also access to valuable industry experience.

    “We are delighted to have further strengthened our partnership with SRH, building on the strong foundations we have in place in Heidelberg and Berlin,” said Paul Lovegrove, CEO of Navitas University Partnerships Europe. “We are committed to supporting our students to find the right study destination for them, with three locations that each offer unique benefits. Munich is a city recognised worldwide, and Navitas is thrilled to be able to add it to our portfolio.”

    A growing network across Germany

    The new Munich college strengthens the Navitas–SRH partnership’s vision to create multiple entry points for international students across Germany. Students will have the flexibility to continue their studies at over twelve SRH University campuses, including Hamburg, Cologne, Hamm, and Stuttgart, offering diverse academic and lifestyle experiences.

    Dr Thorsten Bagschik, Managing Director at SRH University, said: “With the opening of the SRH International College at the newly opened and state-of-the-art Campus Berlin, as well as Munich, we are sending another strong signal for our internationalisation strategy. Together with Navitas, we look forward to giving even more students from around the world access to high-quality education and preparing them for successful futures.”

    Strengthening global pathways

    Germany continues to emerge as a vibrant hub for international education, combining academic excellence with a strong focus on applied learning and innovation. The latest expansion reinforces Navitas and SRH’s shared commitment to supporting student mobility and global opportunity through high-quality, flexible education pathways.

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  • Dylan Efron Shares He’s ‘All Good’ After ‘DWTS’ Partner Broke His Nose

    Dylan Efron Shares He’s ‘All Good’ After ‘DWTS’ Partner Broke His Nose

    Though Dylan Efron and Dancing with the Stars partner Daniella Karagach have been consistently scoring on the ABC/Disney+ reality dancing competition series, the duo hit a bit of a snag when the latter accidentally broke the…

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  • What Science Says About Their Health Benefits

    What Science Says About Their Health Benefits

    You may wonder about the health benefits of coffee versus tea. Both are rich in health-promoting compounds that may protect against many conditions, including certain cancers and diabetes.

    Although drinking too much caffeine through coffee or…

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  • Humans’ hidden “sixth sense” is now being fully mapped by science

    Humans’ hidden “sixth sense” is now being fully mapped by science

    Every human body hums with quiet communication. Beneath every heartbeat, breath, and immune signal lies a hidden conversation between the brain and internal organs. This constant exchange keeps us alive, yet we rarely notice it.

    Scientists are…

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  • Rio Tinto and China’s State Power Investment Corporation launch battery swap truck trial fleet at Oyu Tolgoi mine

    Rio Tinto and China’s State Power Investment Corporation launch battery swap truck trial fleet at Oyu Tolgoi mine

    ULAANBAATAR, Mongolia–(BUSINESS WIRE)–
    Rio Tinto and China’s State Power Investment Corporation (SPIC) Qiyuan have launched a trial of battery swap electric haul truck technology at the Oyu Tolgoi copper mine in Mongolia.

    This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20251026376828/en/

    The trial is Rio Tinto’s first use of battery swap electric haul trucks in surface mining operations. This is a major step towards developing the cost-effective technology and operational learnings required to reduce emissions from mining haulage fleets – one of the largest contributors to the company’s Scope 1 and 2 carbon footprint.

    Over the last year Rio Tinto and SPIC Qiyuan have delivered and installed a fleet of eight 91-tonne Tonly trucks, together with 13 batteries (each 800 kWh), a battery swapping station, static charger, and supporting infrastructure.

    The trucks will now be used by Oyu Tolgoi for tailings dam construction and top soil transportation tasks, providing Rio Tinto with hands on experience operating and maintaining a complete battery electric truck and swap charging system.

    Battery swapping technology allows the battery of an electric mining truck to be replaced at a battery swap station in less than seven minutes, without the need to charge the vehicle at a fixed charging facility. This minimises downtime and improves equipment efficiency.

    Rio Tinto General Manager Global Equipment and Diesel Transition Ben Woffenden said: “The launch of this trial with SPIC Qiyuan is an important milestone, harnessing China’s widely used and leading battery swap technology in a partnership that supports Rio Tinto’s drive to accelerate low-carbon innovation. The rapid deployment and fast-tracked operational learnings have highlighted the importance of partnerships in advancing low-emission haulage alternatives for our business.

    “By working with partners such as SPIC Qiyuan and Tonly, Rio Tinto is rapidly identifying and adopting cost-effective, proven innovations that can support operational excellence and advance decarbonisation goals.”

    General Manager of Qiyuan Green Power, Mr. Guo Peng said: “We are honoured to partner with Rio Tinto to launch this milestone battery-swap truck trial at the Oyu Tolgoi mine. SPIC Qiyuan is committed to advancing green energy technology innovation, and this partnership showcases the significant potential of our proven battery-swap solutions in helping global mining customers reduce emissions and enhance operational efficiency. We look forward to deepening our collaboration with Rio Tinto to jointly explore broader prospects for the mining industry’s low-carbon transition.”

    The equipment will be tested through to the end of 2026 and will help Rio Tinto identify opportunities for wider adoption of this low emission technology across the company. Rio Tinto’s global fleet of 700 haul trucks includes about 100 small or medium class (100-200t payload) vehicles, offering the potential to adopt current-generation battery swap technology.

    Please direct all enquiries to media.enquiries@riotinto.com

    Media Relations,

    United Kingdom

    Matthew Klar

    M +44 7796 630 637

    David Outhwaite

    M +44 7787 597 493

    Media Relations,

    Australia

    Matt Chambers

    M +61 433 525 739

    Rachel Pupazzoni

    M +61 438 875 469

    Bruce Tobin

    M +61 419 103 454

    Media Relations,

    Canada

    Simon Letendre

    M +1 514 796 4973

    Malika Cherry

    M +1 418 592 7293

    Vanessa Damha

    M +1 514 715 2152

    Media Relations,

    US & Latin America

    Jesse Riseborough

    M +1 202 394 9480

    Investor Relations,

    United Kingdom

    Rachel Arellano

    M:
    +44 7584 609 644

    David Ovington

    M +44 7920 010 978

    Laura Brooks

    M +44 7826 942 797

    Weiwei Hu

    M +44 7825 907 230

    Investor Relations,

    Australia

    Tom Gallop

    M +61 439 353 948

    Phoebe Lee

    M +61 413 557 780

    Rio Tinto plc

    6 St James’s Square

    London SW1Y 4AD

    United Kingdom

    T +44 20 7781 2000

    Registered in England

    No. 719885

    Rio Tinto Limited

    Level 43, 120 Collins Street

    Melbourne 3000

    Australia

    T +61 3 9283 3333

    Registered in Australia

    ABN 96 004 458 404

    riotinto.com

    Category: Oyu Tolgoi

    Source: Rio Tinto


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  • Egypt seal first semi-finals berth, hosts Morocco crash out at 2025 IHF Men’s Under-17 World Championship

    Egypt are the first qualified team to the semi-finals of the 1st IHF Men’s Under-17 World Championship, after they secured their second consecutive win, 42:22, against the United States of America. As Egypt beat both Brazil and the USA so far,…

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  • Graphene boosts accuracy in lithium detection, could help make reliable sensors

    Graphene boosts accuracy in lithium detection, could help make reliable sensors

    Despite advances in sensor technology, achieving devices that are both highly precise, reliable, and durable has long been a significant challenge.

    Researchers at the International Iberian Nanotechnology Laboratory (INL) – Olesia Dudik,…

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  • Novartis to acquire Avidity Biosciences for about $12 billion – Reuters

    1. Novartis to acquire Avidity Biosciences for about $12 billion  Reuters
    2. Novartis (NVS) Announces Acquisition of Avidity Biosciences  GuruFocus
    3. Novartis Agrees to Buy Avidity in $12 Billion Biotech Deal  Bloomberg.com
    4. Novartis to buy Avidity and its neuromuscular RNA pipeline for $12B  FirstWord Pharma
    5. Avidity Biosciences Enters into Agreement to be Acquired by Novartis AG  PR Newswire

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  • Week Ahead for FX, Bonds: Fed Expected to Cut Rates; U.S.-China Talks Eyed

    Week Ahead for FX, Bonds: Fed Expected to Cut Rates; U.S.-China Talks Eyed

    By Dow Jones Newswires staff

    Below are the most important global events likely to affect FX and bond markets in the week starting October 27.

    All eyes in the coming week will be on the U.S. Federal Reserve, which is widely expected to cut interest rates by another 25 basis points, even as the U.S. government shutdown continues.

    In Europe, focus will center on a European Central Bank decision, while in Asia, a highly anticipated meeting between Trump and China's Xi Jinping will be closely watched for signs of de-escalation in trade tensions.

    The U.S. president will also meet with Japan's newly elected prime minister, which comes as the Bank of Japan makes its first rate decision since the country's leadership change. A rate decision is also due in Canada.

    U.S.

    The Federal Reserve announces a rate decision on Wednesday and is widely expected to cut interest rates by 25 basis points, lowering the fed funds rate to 3.75-4.00%, particularly after recent weaker-than-expected inflation data.

    Markets fully price a Fed rate cut amid recent signs of weakness in the U.S. labor market, even as concerns remain that tariffs could increase pressure on inflation.

    "We expect another 25 basis-point rate cut…as persistent labor-market weakness remains the Fed's top concern," analysts at Allianz Research said in a note.

    Investors will focus on the Fed's accompanying comments for signals on how far and how fast rates will fall from here, particularly as the continued U.S. government shutdown is delaying key economic data.

    U.S. money markets are fully pricing in a follow-up rate reduction in December, LSEG data show.

    The government shutdown is now entering its fourth week. Allianz estimates that this has likely already reduced fourth-quarter annualized GDP growth by 0.45 percentage points.

    This will mean official data will continue to be delayed, leaving investors focusing on the Conference Board's consumer confidence data for October on Tuesday.

    Scheduled official data include September durable goods orders on Monday; third-quarter GDP data and weekly jobless claims Thursday; and September PCE inflation figures Friday.

    The Treasury will auction $69 billion in two-year and $70 billion in five-year notes on Monday, and $44 billion in seven-year notes on Tuesday.

    Canada

    The Bank of Canada announces its next policy decision on Wednesday, when it's expected to cut interest rates further.

    The decision comes amid tensions between the U.S. and Canada after President Trump said he was terminating all trade negotiations with Canada.

    "We think that this development slightly increases the chance of another Bank of Canada rate cut," ING analyst Francesco Pesole said in a note.

    Money markets price an 82% chance of a 25 basis points rate cut to 2.25%, according to LSEG. ING expects a 25 basis-point rate cut as trade uncertainty and existing U.S. tariffs weigh on Canadian businesses' investment and hiring plans.

    The worrisome picture for economic activity and jobs should prevail over September's higher-than-expected inflation data, Pesole said.

    Canadian GDP data for August are due on Friday.

    Eurozone

    The European Central Bank's policy decision on Thursday will be in focus, although no change in interest rates is expected, with the deposit rate set to stay at 2%.

    "Central bank officials unanimously signal that they consider the current key interest rate level to be well positioned," DZ Bank analyst Christian Reicherter said in a note. Wait-and-see remains the order of the day, he said.

    While inflation rose above 2% in September, "this should not cause European monetary policymakers any lasting concern," the analyst said.

    Germany will kick off the usual intense end-of-month data flow with the Ifo business climate index for October on Monday.

    The data might add a new layer of investor optimism following significantly better-than-expected flash estimate purchasing managers indices for October.

    This data will be followed on Tuesday by Germany's GfK consumer climate survey and Italy's consumer and business confidence surveys. French consumer spending for September and eurozone business and consumer surveys for October are scheduled for Thursday, alongside unemployment figures from Germany for October, Italy and the eurozone for September.

    First-estimate GDP data for the third quarter for Spain are due Wednesday, followed by similar releases for France, Germany, Italy and the eurozone on Thursday.

    Spain and Germany will release flash estimate consumer-price inflation data for October on Thursday, followed by French, Italian and eurozone CPI releases on Friday.

    "We expect [eurozone] inflation to temporarily fall below 2% in early 2026 due to base effects and one-off factors, but since this undershoot is expected to be short-lived and inflation should return to target by mid-2026, the ECB is unlikely to deliver another rate cut even if we see inflation risks tilted to the downside," said Santander CIB's Antonio Villarroya, head of G10 macro and fixed income strategy research.

    Belgium will sell 2030- and 2035-dated conventional and 2033-dated green bonds on Monday. Germany sells October 2030-dated Bobl on Tuesday and August 2035-dated Bunds on Wednesday. Italy will also hold two auctions, one on Tuesday and another on Thursday.

    U.K.

    In a quiet week for U.K. data, focus will center on Wednesday's release of U.K. mortgage lending, mortgage approvals and consumer credit data for September as investors continue to look ahead to the government's budget on November 26.

    "We expect a continuation in the softness in the data seen last month as uncertainty ahead of the Autumn Budget continues to weigh on activity," Investec economist Lottie Gosling said in a note.

    The BRC's shop price index for October is due Tuesday. Nationwide house price data for October are due during the week.

    The U.K. plans to sell October 2030 gilts by programmatic tender Thursday.

    Scandinavia

    Norway will hold a bond auction on Wednesday.

    Japan

    Trump will visit Japan from Monday to Wednesday for his first summit with Japan's new prime minister, Sanae Takaichi. The meeting will be a test for the new administration, coming as trade data shows that Japan's shipments to the U.S. remain a weak spot, underlining worries about the impact of tariffs.

    Eyes will also be on any comment from Takaichi's cabinet picks, including Japan's new finance minister, Satsuki Katayama, who has said that BOJ policy should align with government policy.

    Speculation about the timing of the next rate hike by the central bank has been swirling ahead of its decision on Thursday. Markets widely expect the BOJ to keep its policy rate on hold at 0.5% as it assesses the full impact of U.S. tariffs on Japan's economy and its corporate sector. Economists also note that the BOJ is likely to want more time to communicate with the new Takaichi administration before making any moves. It will also release growth and price projections.

    On Friday, Tokyo consumer price data for October offers an early indicator of country-wide trends. That will come alongside national industrial production and retail sales figures for September.

    Japan's finance ministry is scheduled to auction about 2.7 trillion yen of two-year sovereign notes Friday--the tenor seen as the most sensitive to interest-rate expectations. Market participants will watch the bond sale as it comes on the heels of the BOJ decision.

    China

    A big week for China kicks off with the release of September industrial profit data, with markets watching to see whether the rebound seen in August will hold as Beijing continues its campaign against excessive competition and price wars, known as "involution."

    But it is the Xi-Trump meeting in South Korea on Thursday that will steal the show. Despite a recent flareup in trade frictions, most analysts expect to see a de-escalation in tensions and some form of truce, which would give markets a big boost.

    China is also scheduled to release October's purchasing managers index figures on Friday. "China's economic activity is expected to remain weak but stable in October," ANZ Research strategist Zhaopeng Xing said.

    He expects the manufacturing PMI to have remained below the 50-mark separating expansion from contraction, tipping a reading of 49.6 versus 49.8 in September. Fewer working days in October typically weigh on production, though longer delivery times linked to new U.S. port fees may provide some support, Xing said. He expects the non-manufacturing PMI--capturing services and construction activity--to have edged up to 50.3.

    Australia

    Australian bond markets will focus on third-quarter inflation data due Wednesday, which could show price pressures persisting near the upper end of the central bank's 1%-3% inflation target.

    If the CPI prints as expected, bets on a cut in interest rates by the Reserve Bank of Australia in November will fade.

    Still, if the RBA passes up the opportunity to deliver its fourth cut this year in November, it will likely keep the door open to further easing next year, given the backdrop of a recent unexpected rise in unemployment.

    More broadly, business surveys have been relatively upbeat, pointing to a gradual recovery in the economy, but one that is not likely to overheat in the near-term.

    Global factors will also encourage the RBA to retain an easing bias.

    South Korea

    South Korea's economic growth likely accelerated in the third quarter, driven by fiscal stimulus and resilient exports. Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal expect GDP in the July-September period to have risen 1.0% on quarter and 1.5% on year-up from 0.7% and 0.6%, respectively, in the second quarter.

    "The anticipated uptick is primarily owing to government cash handouts," said ING economist Min Joo Kang. Strong exports of semiconductors and vessels could continue, but their impact will likely be offset by weak shipments of other goods, Kang said.

    (MORE TO FOLLOW) Dow Jones Newswires

    October 26, 2025 17:14 ET (21:14 GMT)

    Copyright (c) 2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

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  • Earth’s first life may have been sparked by underwater thermal vents

    Earth’s first life may have been sparked by underwater thermal vents

    Before sunlight ever reached the planet, another force may have sparked life—electricity. Deep beneath the ocean floor, ancient hydrothermal vents might have generated natural electric fields strong enough to turn carbon dioxide into the first…

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