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  • Chart: Solar is driving renewable energy to new…

    Chart: Solar is driving renewable energy to new…

    Between 2025 and 2030, the world is expected to build nearly 4,600 gigawatts — or 4.6 terawatts, if you please — of clean power, according to a new report from the International Energy Agency.

    That’s nearly double the amount built over the previous five-year period, which was in turn more than double the amount built across the five years before that. Put differently, the growth has essentially been exponential.

    Solar is the driving force behind this expansion, which is key to transitioning the world away from planet-warming fossil fuels. It accounts for more than three-quarters of the expected increase in renewables between 2025 and 2030 — the result, IEA says, of not only low equipment costs but also solid permitting rules and a broad social acceptance of the tech.

    This solar boom will be almost equally split between utility-scale installations and distributed projects, meaning panels atop roofs or shade structures in parking lots, for example. Just over 2 TW of large-scale projects will be built compared to 1.5 TW of the smaller, distributed stuff, IEA predicts. The latter category is increasingly popular both in countries with rising electricity rates and in places with unreliable grids, like Pakistan, where residents are taking refuge in the affordable and stable nature of the tech.

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  • Hydrogen Europe

    Hydrogen Europe

    German companies Daimler Truck and Hamburger Hafen und Logistik (HHLA) have signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Japanese Kawasaki Heavy Industries to explore the development of a green liquid hydrogen supply chain via the Port of Hamburg to the European hinterland.

    As disclosed, the partnership intends to enable the import of liquid hydrogen from hydrogen-producing countries to Germany. Over the coming months, the companies are expected to assess the logistical requirements for transshipment and onward transport by road and rail.

    Andreas Gorbach, Member of the Board of Management, Daimler Truck, and Head of Truck Technology, said: “Europe will continue to rely on green energy imports in the future and hydrogen will play a key role here. The partnership is an important step in this direction, and we will need more initiatives like this to strengthen Europe’s position as a leader in liquid hydrogen. What makes it special is that our Mercedes-Benz GenH2 Truck can not only be powered by liquid green hydrogen – the truck can also transport it via road. And the best thing about it: Hydrogen allows us to increase the speed of decarbonization – and reduce the scope and cost of the already slow expansion of the power grid.”

    Click here to read more

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  • Airbus-built SpainSat NG-II successfully launched

    Airbus-built SpainSat NG-II successfully launched

    Getafe, Spain, 24 October, 2025  SpainSat NG-II, the second Airbus-built new generation secure communications satellite for Spain, has been successfully launched from the Kennedy Space Center, in the U.S. 

    The launch of this second satellite…

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  • MIT scientists discover hidden 3D genome loops that survive cell division

    MIT scientists discover hidden 3D genome loops that survive cell division

    Before a cell can split into two, it must first copy all of its chromosomes so each new cell inherits a complete set of genetic material. For years, researchers believed that as this process unfolded, the genome’s intricate three-dimensional…

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  • Warning after Cornwall fireworks displays axed over safety fears

    Warning after Cornwall fireworks displays axed over safety fears

    A warning has been issued to those planning to set off fireworks after the cancellation of organised displays.

    Truro’s annual bonfire and firework display has been cancelled following concerns over traffic congestion, along with another display organised by Falmouth Fire Station.

    Cornwall Fire and Rescue Service said the event had been cancelled as it could not be delivered “to the standard of safety and organisation that our community rightly expects”.

    It urged those planning to set off fireworks at home to “only buy fireworks with a CE mark [those that comply with the current safety standards]”.

    Truro City Council said the decision to cancel the event on 6 November was made after consulting with the safety advisory group.

    Council clerk David Rodda said although the news would be “disappointing” for many residents, safety was the authority’s “highest priority”.

    The fire service warned “children, including babies and toddlers, suffer over half of all firework-related injuries”.

    It advised they should be “closely supervised” around sparklers, bonfires and fireworks, and those planning private events at home should “follow the instructions carefully and let your neighbours know in advance so they can keep pets indoors”.

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  • Disparity of Predictors for Participation in Phase 2 Cardiac Rehabilitation Between Younger and Older Patients With Cardiovascular Diseases

    Disparity of Predictors for Participation in Phase 2 Cardiac Rehabilitation Between Younger and Older Patients With Cardiovascular Diseases

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  • ‘When I told him I’d secretly seen his films, his eyes filled with tears’: Isabella Rossellini remembers her father Roberto | Film

    ‘When I told him I’d secretly seen his films, his eyes filled with tears’: Isabella Rossellini remembers her father Roberto | Film

    In June 1977, Roberto Rossellini died suddenly of a heart attack, home in Rome, less than a week after serving as jury president of the Cannes film festival. The director’s daughter Isabella – the fourth of his seven children – was then in…

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  • ‘Hidden Voices’ Puts Queer Identities of Famous Composers Center Stage

    ‘Hidden Voices’ Puts Queer Identities of Famous Composers Center Stage

    Hidden Voices: Queer Artists in Exchange, which mixes musical and literary performance to put the spotlight on “the all too often hidden voices of queer composers Franz Schubert, Frédéric Chopin, Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Ethel Smyth,…

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  • Delayed inflation report expected to show US prices ticked up last month

    Delayed inflation report expected to show US prices ticked up last month

    WASHINGTON — Friday’s inflation report is likely to show that consumer prices worsened in September for the second straight month as President Donald Trump’s tariffs have lifted the cost of some groceries and other goods.

    The report on the consumer price index is being issued more than a week late because of the government shutdown, now in its fourth week. The Trump administration recalled some Labor Department employees to produce the figures because they are used to set the annual cost-of-living adjustment for roughly 70 million Social Security recipients.

    Friday’s inflation report will be the first comprehensive economic data to be released in more than three weeks and will attract intense interest from Wall Street and officials at the Federal Reserve. Fed officials are cutting their short-term interest rate to buoy the economy and hiring, but they are taking some risk doing so because inflation is still above their 2% target.

    The issues of affordability and the cost of necessities are gaining in political importance. Concerns over the costs of rent and groceries have played a key role in the mayoral race in New York City. And Trump, who has acknowledged that the spike in grocery prices under President Joe Biden helped him win the 2024 election, has been considering importing Argentine beef to reduce record-high U.S. beef prices, angering U.S. cattle ranchers.

    The cost of ground beef has jumped to $6.32 a pound, a record, in part because of tariffs on imports from countries such as Brazil, which faces a 50% duty. Years of drought that have reduced cattle herds have also raised prices.

    Friday’s report is forecast to show that inflation rose 3.1% in September from a year earlier, according to a survey of economists by data provider FactSet. That would be up from 2.9% in August and the highest in 18 months. On a monthly basis, inflation is projected to be 0.4% in September, the same as in August.

    Excluding the volatile food and energy categories, core inflation in September was likely 3.1% for the third straight month. On a monthly basis, core prices likely rose 0.3%, economists project, also for the third straight month.

    Such figures are unlikely to deter the Fed from cutting its key rate by another quarter-point when it meets next week, to about 3.9%. It would be the second cut this year and is driven by Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s concerns that hiring is weakening and poses a threat to the economy.

    Even as inflation has fallen sharply from its peak of 9.1% more than three years ago, it remains a major concern for consumers. About half of all Americans say the cost of groceries is a “major” source of stress, according to an August poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

    And the Conference Board, a business research group, finds that consumers are still referencing prices and inflation in responses to its monthly survey on consumer confidence.

    Still, inflation has not risen as much as many economists feared when Trump first announced a sweeping set of tariffs. Many importers built up inventories of goods before the duties took effect, while Trump reduced many import taxes, including as part of trade deals with China, the United Kingdom, and Vietnam.

    And many economists, as well as some Fed officials, expect that the tariffs will create a one-time lift to prices that will fade by early next year. At the same time, inflation excluding the tariffs is cooling, they argue: Rental price increases, for example, are declining on average nationwide.

    Yet Trump is imposing tariffs in an ongoing fashion that could raise prices in a more sustained fashion.

    For example, the Trump administration is investigating whether to slap 100% tariffs on imports from Nicaragua over alleged human rights violations. The prospect of such steep duties is a major headache for Dan Rattigan, the co-founder of premium chocolate maker French Broad, based in Asheville, N.C.

    “We’ve been shouldering some significant additional costs,” Rattigan said. The United States barely produces any cocoa, so his company imports it from Nicaragua, the Dominican Republic, and Uganda. The imports from Nicaragua were duty-free because the country had a trade agreement with the United States, but now faces an 18% import tax.

    Cocoa prices have more than doubled over the past two years because of poor weather and blights in West Africa, which produces more than 70% of the world’s cocoa. The tariffs are an additional hit on top of that. Rattigan is also paying more for almonds, hazelnuts, and chocolate-making equipment from Italy, which has also been hit with tariffs.

    French Broad raised its prices slightly earlier this year and doesn’t have any plans to do so again. But after the winter holidays, “all bets are off … in what is a very unpredictable business climate,” Rattigan said.

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  • The new Children’s Booker Prize aims to reward quality fiction for kids

    The new Children’s Booker Prize aims to reward quality fiction for kids

    LONDON — Britain’s most prestigious literary prize is getting a younger sibling.

    The Booker Prize Foundation announced Friday that it is setting up the Children’s Booker Prize alongside its existing awards for English-language and translated…

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