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  • EJAE, Kali Uchis, Kehlani Named ASCAP Women Behind the Music Honorees

    EJAE, Kali Uchis, Kehlani Named ASCAP Women Behind the Music Honorees

    ASCAP has revealed its lineup of honorees for the 17th annual Women Behind The Music event, taking place Nov. 12 in Los Angeles.

    Kehlani, Kali Uchis and “KPop Demon Hunters’” EJAE will be recognized by the ASCAP Membership team as…

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  • Absolute Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Canadian Oil Sands Increased by Less than 1% in 2024, Even as Production Grew

    Absolute Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Canadian Oil Sands Increased by Less than 1% in 2024, Even as Production Grew

    Efficiency gains continue to lower the greenhouse gas intensity of production, slowing absolute emissions growth

    CALGARY, AB, Oct. 28, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — Absolute greenhouse gas emissions from Canadian oil sands production rose by less than 1% in 2024 even as total production grew, according to a new analysis by S&P Global Commodity Insights. The latest analysis shows a trend of slower emissions growth continuing amid ongoing improvements to the greenhouse gas intensity of production.

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    Absolute annual emissions rose by less than 1 million metric tons of CO2 equivalent (MMtCO2e) in 2024, according to the analysis. Meanwhile, total oil sands production rose 150,000 barrels per day (b/d).

    Since 2019, absolute emissions increased by close to 5 MMtCO2e—an average of 1% annually over that period (excluding 2020)—while production has grown by nearly 400,000 b/d. By comparison, absolute emissions rose by nearly 12 MMtCO2e in the preceding 5 years (2015-2019), when production grew by 600,000 b/d—an annual average increase of 4% (5% from 2009-2019).

    “The story of oil sands intensity reductions is now well established to the extent that it is becoming the expectation,” said Kevin Birn, Chief Canadian Oil Analyst, S&P Global Commodity Insights. “Operators continue to focus on growth through optimization which drives more barrels for similar levels of energy and emissions. The result has been more production with increasingly modest absolute emissions growth.”

    The new S&P Global Commodity Insights Oil Sands Dialogue analysis finds that the average GHG intensity of oil sands production declined 3% to 57 kilograms of “carbon dioxide equivalent” per barrel (kgCO2e/bbl) in 2024, the most recent year that S&P Global Commodity Insights estimates are available. Efficiency improvements occurred across all forms of oil sands extraction in 2024, the analysis finds.

    Since 2009, the average GHG intensity of oil sands production has declined by 28% or nearly 22 kgCO2e/b of marketable product. 

    The increase in 2024 absolute emissions was due mostly to stronger growth in mined SCO production, which outpaced the efficiency gains in that production segment.  

    S&P Global Commodity Insights expects absolute emissions to continue to grow—albeit at a slower rate—as expected GHG intensity reductions may continue to be modestly outpaced by production additions. It remains possible that absolute emissions could stall or even decline modestly should future production growth prove to be lower than the current outlook.

    “Oil sands production growth has exceeded expectations in recent years, with the S&P Global Commodity Insights annual 10-year production outlook being revised upward for four consecutive years,” said Celina Hwang, Director, Crude Oil Markets, S&P Global Commodity Insights. “The potential for a peak in oil sands absolute emissions remains, but each year of stronger-than-expected production growth moves that prospect a bit further into the future.”

    Media Contacts:

    Jeff Marn +1-202-463-8213, Jeff.marn@spglobal.com

    About S&P Global Commodity Insights

    At S&P Global Commodity Insights, our complete view of global energy and commodity markets enables our customers to make decisions with conviction and create long-term, sustainable value.

    We’re a trusted connector that brings together thought leaders, market participants, governments, and regulators and we create solutions that lead to progress. Vital to navigating commodity markets, our coverage includes oil and gas, power, chemicals, metals, agriculture, shipping and energy transition. Platts® products and services, including leading benchmark price assessments in the physical commodity markets, are offered through S&P Global Commodity Insights. S&P Global Commodity Insights maintains clear structural and operational separation between its price assessment activities and the other activities carried out by S&P Global Commodity Insights and the other business divisions of S&P Global.

    S&P Global Commodity Insights is a division of S&P Global (NYSE: SPGI). S&P Global is the world’s foremost provider of credit ratings, benchmarks, analytics and workflow solutions in the global capital, commodity and automotive markets. With every one of our offerings, we help many of the world’s leading organizations navigate the economic landscape so they can plan for tomorrow, today. For more information visit https://www.spglobal.com/commodity-insights/en. 

    SOURCE S&P Global Commodity Insights

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  • Standert’s stainless steel Erdgeshoss “will last a lifetime”, carry a big load, and you can even run it single speed

    Standert’s stainless steel Erdgeshoss “will last a lifetime”, carry a big load, and you can even run it single speed

    Standert has announced its new Erdgeshoss – a gravel bike with a stainless steel frame and mounts designed for any adventure.

    The brand says the stainless steel frame will last a lifetime. It’s mated to a Columbus Cross+ carbon fibre fork up…

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  • Reducing femoral fractures in total hip replacement with safer implant designs

    Reducing femoral fractures in total hip replacement with safer implant designs

    As populations continue to age, total hip replacement (THR) is becoming an increasingly common surgical procedure. Experts estimate that approximately one million THRs are performed each year worldwide. The surgery is often…

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  • Just a moment…

    Just a moment…

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  • Peter Ho-Sun Chan Talks Asia Co-Pro & ‘She Has No Name’ Part Two

    Peter Ho-Sun Chan Talks Asia Co-Pro & ‘She Has No Name’ Part Two

    Hong Kong filmmaker Peter Ho-sun Chan talked through the many changes he’s seen in the Asian film business during his 35-year career in a TIFF Lounge Masterclass at Tokyo International Film Festival (TIFF). He also teased when we might get to…

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  • Alexandra Eala into Hong Kong Open second round as Katie Boulter retires; Filipina to face Victoria Mboko

    Alexandra Eala into Hong Kong Open second round as Katie Boulter retires; Filipina to face Victoria Mboko

    Alexandra Eala is into the next round of the 2025 Hong Kong Open, though not in the way she would have hoped.

    The Filipina tennis star advances to the second round of the WTA 250 tournament in Hong Kong, China, after opponent Katie Boulter of…

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  • Alexandra Eala into Hong Kong Open second round as Katie Boulter forced to retire; Filipina to face Victoria Mboko

    Alexandra Eala into Hong Kong Open second round as Katie Boulter forced to retire; Filipina to face Victoria Mboko

    Alexandra Eala is into the next round of the 2025 Hong Kong Open, though not in the way she would have hoped.

    The Filipina tennis star advances to the second round of the WTA 250 tournament in Hong Kong, China, after opponent Katie Boulter of…

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  • Alan Turing institute launches new mission to protect UK from cyber-attacks | Internet

    Alan Turing institute launches new mission to protect UK from cyber-attacks | Internet

    Britain’s leading AI institute has announced a new mission to help protect the nation from cyber-attacks on infrastructure, including energy, transport and utilities, after it was embroiled in allegations of toxic work culture and the chair resigned amid ministerial pressure.

    The Alan Turing Institute will “carry out a programme of science and innovation designed to protect the UK from hostile threats”, it announced on Tuesday as part of changes following the resignation last month of Jean Innes, its chief executive, after a staff revolt and government calls for a strategic overhaul of the state-funded body.

    The mission comes amid growing concern over Britain’s vulnerability to internet outages and cyber-attacks after this month’s incident affecting Amazon’s cloud computing globally and recent cyber-attacks crippling production at Jaguar Land Rover factories, and supply chains at Marks & Spencer and the Co-op.

    Blythe Crawford, the former commander of the UK’s air and space warfare centre , will report back next month on how the government-funded institute “can best support the scale of government AI ambitions in defence, national security and intelligence”.

    The chair, former Amazon UK boss Doug Gurr, said 78 different research projects at the 440-staff institute have been closed, spun out or completed because they do not align with the new direction.

    The institute has been beset by internal strife since last year as staff protested against changes, culminating in a group of employees filing a whistleblower complaint to the Charity Commission.

    Gurr said in an interview with the BBC that the whistleblower claims were “independently investigated” by a third party that found them to have “no substance”.

    The institute was named after the mathematical genius who helped crack the Enigma code during the second world war and outlined key concepts of AI. He also invented the eponymous test to determine if a computer can show human intelligence.

    It will also focus on deploying AI for the environment and health. The institute will develop ways to use the fast-advancing technology to more rapidly and accurately forecast changes in weather, oceans and sea ice, in part to better inform UK government emergency planners. It will also target “tangible emissions reductions in transportation networks, manufacturing processes and critical infrastructure”.

    On health, it will focus on creating digital twins of human hearts, a frontline of personalised AI-enabled medicine, which could improve medical interventions and patient outcomes for critically ill cardiac patients.

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  • High fever, low GCS, and high lactate: independent risk factors for progression of influenza-associated encephalopathy to acute necrotizing encephalopathy in children | BMC Infectious Diseases

    High fever, low GCS, and high lactate: independent risk factors for progression of influenza-associated encephalopathy to acute necrotizing encephalopathy in children | BMC Infectious Diseases

    Research subjects

    This study is a retrospective case-control study. Data of 6,647 pediatric influenza patients treated at Wuhan Children’s Hospital Affiliated to Tongji Medical College of Huazhong University of Science and Technology from…

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