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  • Capgemini completes the acquisition of WNS and creates a global leader in Agentic AI-powered Intelligent Operations

    Capgemini completes the acquisition of WNS and creates a global leader in Agentic AI-powered Intelligent Operations





    Capgemini completes the acquisition of WNS and creates a global leader in Agentic AI-powered Intelligent Operations – Capgemini



























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  • Focused improvements yield results: Yara reports solid Q3 performance

    Focused improvements yield results: Yara reports solid Q3 performance

    Yara reports third quarter 2025 EBITDA excluding special items1 of USD 804 million compared with USD 585 million in second quarter 2024. Net income was USD 320 million compared with USD 286 million a year earlier.

    Third quarter 2025 highlights:

    • EBITDA excl. special items1 of 804 MUSD, up 38% from 3Q24
    • Increasing returns through continued improvement focus and cost reductions, supported by favorable market conditions
    • Record high production2 and strong commercial performance
    • YTD 2025 adjusted earnings per share3 at 3.25 USD – up from 1.37 USD last year

    “Our continuous focus on improvement is delivering solid results, and we are pleased to report another strong operational quarter. This quarter’s performance reflects higher margins, strong commercial execution, and record-breaking production levels for the third consecutive quarter. In parallel, we are ahead of schedule in our cost reduction program, further strengthening our returns,” said Svein Tore Holsether, President and Chief Executive Officer.

    Yara makes progress on the improvement agenda to strengthen financial returns by driving sustainable profitability in core operations and pursuing value-accretive growth, supported by strict capital discipline. The group is prioritizing cash conversion by allocating resources to high-return core assets while scaling back non-core and lower-yield activities, ensuring increased capital productivity.

    With the combination of cost reduction, portfolio optimization and a tightening nitrogen market, Yara’s financial position is set to strengthen with increased free cash flow and sustainable profitability. Net income year-to-date 2025 is USD 1,028 million, up from USD 306 million in 2024. While this is supported by a non-cash net foreign currency gain of USD 386 million, it also clearly demonstrates that Yara’s improvement focus yields increased results. This will enable improved shareholder returns through cash distributions and re-investment in value-accretive growth opportunities subject to double digit returns – such as renewing our ammonia portfolio by accessing low-cost ammonia through potential equity positions the US ammonia projects.  

    Link to report, presentation, and webcast on 17th October 2025, at 12:00 CEST:
    https://www.yara.com/investor-relations/latest-quarterly-report/

    1) For definition and reconciliation see APM section in the 3Q report, pages 22-29. 
    2) YIP production performance adjusted for portfolio optimization.
    3) Adjusted basic earnings/(loss) per share excl. foreign currency exchange gain/(loss) and special items. For definition and reconciliation see APM section in the 3Q report, pages 22-29.

    Contact
    Maria Gabrielsen
    Head of Investor Relations
    M: +47 920 900 93
    E: maria.gabrielsen@yara.com

    Tonje Næss
    Head of External Communications
    M: +47 408 446 47
    E: tonje.nass@yara.com  

    This information is considered to be inside information pursuant to the EU Market Abuse Regulation and is subject to the disclosure requirements pursuant to Section 5-12 the Norwegian Securities Trading Act. This stock exchange announcement was published by Maria Gabrielsen, Head of Investor Relations, at Yara International ASA, on 17th October 2025 at 08:00 CEST.

    About Yara

    Yara’s mission is to responsibly feed the world and protect the planet. We pursue a strategy of sustainable value growth through reducing emissions from crop nutrition production and developing low-emission energy solutions. Yara’s ambition is focused on growing a nature-positive food future that creates value for our customers, shareholders and society at large and delivers a more sustainable food value chain.

    To drive the green shift in fertilizer production, shipping, and other energy intensive industries, Yara will produce ammonia with significantly lower emissions. We provide digital tools for precision farming and work closely with partners at all levels of the food value chain to share knowledge and promote more efficient and sustainable solutions.

    Founded in 1905 to solve the emerging famine in Europe, Yara has established a unique position as the industry’s only global crop nutrition company. With 17,000 employees and operations in more than 60 countries, sustainability is an integral part of our business model. In 2024, Yara reported revenues of USD 13.9 billion.

    www.yara.com  

    This information is subject to the disclosure requirements pursuant to Section 5-12 the Norwegian Securities Trading Act
     

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  • screenless smartphone KARRI lets kids send voice messages

    screenless smartphone KARRI lets kids send voice messages

    Kids send voice notes via screenless smartphone KARRI

     

    Pentagram designs the second generation of the screenless smartphone KARRI, a device that lets kids record, listen to, and send voice messages to their parents like a walkie-talkie. Dubbed a…

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  • Orbán’s ‘island of PEACE’ to host Trump-Putin – POLITICO

    Orbán’s ‘island of PEACE’ to host Trump-Putin – POLITICO

    Presented by Amazon

    By SARAH WHEATON

    with ZOYA SHEFTALOVICH

    HOWDY. Sarah Wheaton here with your Friday edition of Brussels Playbook — and the last by this author. Thank…

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  • Rumours of My Demise by Evan Dando review – eye-popping tales of drugs and unpredictability | Autobiography and memoir

    Rumours of My Demise by Evan Dando review – eye-popping tales of drugs and unpredictability | Autobiography and memoir

    Evan Dando’s autobiography opens in early 2021. The singer is living in a mouldering trailer on Martha’s Vineyard. He has a $200-a-day drug habit and is subsisting off a diet of cigarettes and cheeseburgers that he can’t chew because the…

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  • ‘Our brother died after Guernsey’s mental health system failings’

    ‘Our brother died after Guernsey’s mental health system failings’

    Harry WhiteheadChannel Islands

    BBC Lauren and Katy Falla looking at the camera with slight smiles. Lauren, who is on the left hand side of the picture, has blonde shoulder length hair. She is wearing a white top with frilled sleeves. Katy, who is on the right hand side of the picture, is brown-blonde hair which is tied back. she has a white jumper on and you can see green collars from a shirt underneath.BBC

    Katy and Lauren Falla started a petition calling for mental health service improvements after the death of their brother Jeff

    Two sisters are fighting for change in Guernsey’s mental health services after “watching…

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  • ‘A fashion and art moment’: how mediums mix at Frieze art fair | Frieze art fair

    ‘A fashion and art moment’: how mediums mix at Frieze art fair | Frieze art fair

    “When you are at the art fair, you push the fashion to be bold and experiment – no black allowed,” says Belma Gaudio, at the opening of Frieze art fair in London.

    Gaudio is the founder of fashion boutique Koibird and an art collector, and…

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  • What the datacenter boom means for America’s environment – and electricity bills | Environment

    What the datacenter boom means for America’s environment – and electricity bills | Environment

    The headlong rush to build huge new datacenters, in order to support the growth of AI, is raising a number of concerns in the US – around the impact upon the climate crisis, water use and electricity bills. It’s also set to reshape American politics in potentially unusual ways.

    Companies such as Microsoft, Google, OpenAI, Amazon and Meta are pouring hundreds of billions of dollars into new datacenters that will form the backbone to the surging use of AI by businesses and the public.

    This frenzy of building means that datacenters could account for more than 14% of the US’s total power demand by 2030, triple the amount it does now. Utilities predict that the same volume of electricity it would take to power six cities will be required just to keep data centers online by this time.

    More, after this week’s most important reads.

    Essential reads

    In focus

    Inside a datacenter. Photograph: Brittany Hosea-Small/Reuters

    “Meeting this demand will require considerably more electricity than is currently produced in the United States,” a recent report by McKinsey acknowledged of the new thirst for datacenters. “This spike in electricity needs is unprecedented.”

    So where will this new power come from? Under Donald Trump’s vision, it will be from fossil fuels, not the wind turbines and solar panels the president disparages as “garbage” and unwanted in the US.

    Trump has championed the growth of AI and sought to tear down environmental regulations that can slow the building of datacenters and the gas and coal plants that could power them. Forecasts for coal generation, which has been sliding for years in the US, have ticked up recently amid the AI boom and promises of direct subsidies from the Trump administration.

    Clean energy does continue to grow in the US and datacenters could become more efficient over time. But the AI explosion carries a hefty climate risk if it remains hooked to fossil fuels – the International Energy Agency has warned that the amount of planet-heating gases from power plants that run datacenters could double by 2035.

    For most Americans, though, there are more pressing worries that come with the new datacenters. As new facilities have sprouted in places like Virginia – which now has a region called “datacenter alley” – and in Texas, people have started voicing concerns about the billions of gallons of water they are sucking up to cool their computer hardware.

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    Households are also facing steeper bills to fund the new power generation and transmission projects needed for datacenters – electricity costs could rise by an average of 8% nationally in the next five years because of this, recent analysis has found.

    Amid existing alarm over inflation, this sort of trend is unnerving to politicians of all stripes. Both Republican and Democratic leaning voters have expressed opposition to datacenters, making it risky for those running in certain congressional districts to echo Trump’s enthusiastic support for them.

    If the datacenter boom is to be curbed then cost of living woes, rather than the climate crisis, will likely be the telling factor.

    Read more:

    To read the complete version of this newsletter – subscribe to receive Down to Earth in your inbox every Thursday.

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  • Who Packed the Wind? Dressing for October When the Air Is Made of Knives

    Who Packed the Wind? Dressing for October When the Air Is Made of Knives

    You step outside.
    And immediately regret every decision you’ve ever made.

    Because October wind isn’t just wind. It’s a full-body attack. It doesn’t push — it slices. You are now no longer riding a bike. You are participating in…

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  • Cellnex has entered into a put option agreement regarding Towerlink France with Vauban Infra Fibre as part of its strategic focus

    Cellnex has entered into a put option agreement regarding Towerlink France with Vauban Infra Fibre as part of its strategic focus

    The €391 million contemplated transaction would reinforce the Group’s commitment to core telecom infrastructure assets

    Barcelona, 17 October 2025 – Cellnex, through its wholly owned subsidiary Cellnex France, S.A.S., has entered into a put option agreement with Vauban Infra Fibre (VIF) by virtue of which Cellnex France S.A.S can sell 99.99% of the share capital of Towerlink France, S.A.S., the entity responsible for the Group’s main data center operations in France.

    VIF is a French company backed by funds from Vauban Infrastructure Partners, entities of Crédit Agricole Assurances, and Raffles, a subsidiary of GIC, with a strong presence across multiple sites in France, many of which are already operational.

    The contemplated transaction, valued at €391 million, would be settled entirely in cash and is subject to the information and consultation process with employee representative bodies in France, in accordance with applicable regulations. In addition, final closing would remain contingent upon the fulfillment of customary conditions for transactions of this nature, including regulatory approvals and standard contractual requirements.

    This contemplated divestment aligns with Cellnex’s strategic roadmap and will allow the Group to continue focusing on its core areas of activity.

    “We remain committed to operational excellence and disciplined capital allocation, always with the objective of delivering sustainable growth and long-term value for our shareholders” stated Marco Patuano, CEO of Cellnex.

    For its part, Steve Ledoux, CEO of VIF (Vauban Infra Fibre), the acquiring entity, commented: “VIF is pleased to negotiate this investment in line with our investment strategy. Towerlink will thrive within VIF by continuing to deliver our common ambition and accelerate our development in the data centre market and by implementing attractive synergies with other French data centres and digital assets of the portfolio. We look forward to supporting the company in deploying a high quality portfolio of assets throughout France.” 

    Cellnex is advised by BBVA and CACIB as M&A advisor, HSFK as legal advisor and tax advisor and Analysys Mason as commercial advisor.

     

    About Cellnex

    Cellnex is Europe’s largest telecommunications towers and infrastructures operator, enabling operators to access a wide network of telecommunications infrastructures on a shared-use basis, and thus helping to reduce access barriers and to improve services in the most remote areas, whilst also contributing to more sustainable deployment. The Company manages a portfolio of more than 110,000 sites, including forecast roll-outs up to 2030, in 10 European countries, with a significant footprint in Spain, France, the United Kingdom, Italy and Poland. Cellnex, which is listed on the Spanish Stock Exchange, is part of the selective IBEX35 and Euro Stoxx 100 and enjoys outstanding positions on the main sustainability indexes such as FTSE4Good, MSCI and DJSI Europe.

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