Scientists have described a new lizard species from Vietnam, naming it Acanthosaura grismeri. The discovery adds a spiny backed member to a genus already rich in Southeast Asia and highlights how much biodiversity remains hidden in the…
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Tata Motors confirms it fixed security flaws, which exposed company and customer data
Indian automotive giant Tata Motors has fixed a series of security flaws that exposed sensitive internal data, including personal information of customers, company reports, and data related to its dealers.
Security researcher Eaton Zveare told…
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Neural Dispatch: Agentic AI’s lack of intelligence, a DeepSeek moment, and Nvidia’s AI supercomputer (HT Tech)
Cognitive warmup. Is this another DeepSeek moment for AI to contend with? Chinese tech giants Alibaba says their Alibaba Cloud platform has successfully tested a new compute pooling system called Aegaeon, which has reduced the number of Nvidia…
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Jofra Archer returns for England as New Zealand wins the toss and bowls in the 2nd cricket ODI
HAMILTON, New Zealand (AP) — New Zealand won a delayed toss and chose to bowl Wednesday in the second one-day…
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Thermo Fisher nears $10bn takeover of drug trial software maker Clario
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Life sciences group Thermo Fisher is nearing a takeover of drug trial software maker Clario in a deal that could value the healthcare technology group at approximately $10bn.
The all-cash deal could be announced as early as Wednesday provided it does not hit any last-minute snags, according to two people familiar with the matter.
The acquisition would give Thermo Fisher access to a platform that is playing an increasingly critical role in managing the clinical data essential to drug trials. Clario’s technology has been used across 26,000 trials in more than 100 countries, generating as much as $400mn a year in adjusted earnings.
If a sale materialises, it would mark one of the biggest full private equity exits of the year.
Founded in 2021 by a merger of health tech groups ERT and Bioclinica, Clario is majority owned by Stockholm-based private equity group Nordic Capital. It also counts Astorg Partners, Novo Holdings and Cinven as minority investors. Clario’s private equity backers had until recently been considering a public listing for the group.
Thermo Fisher, Clario, Nordic, Astorg, Novo Holdings and Cinven did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The deal would mark Thermo Fisher’s biggest acquisition since 2021 when the Massachusetts-based group bought contract research organisation PPD in a deal worth $17.4bn. Earlier this year, Thermo Fisher struck a $4.1bn deal to buy Solventum’s filtration unit.
It comes amid a volatile period for Thermo Fisher and the wider healthcare sector. Shares in Thermo Fisher dropped earlier this year as investors fretted over the impact of President Donald Trump’s cuts to the National Institutes of Health on its sales, but they have since rallied.
Thermo Fisher shares are up 6 per cent this year, giving it a market capitalisation of $210bn.
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Women gain stronger heart protection from exercise than men, study reveals
New research reveals that women achieve equal or greater protection from coronary heart disease and death with far less exercise than men, pointing to the need for personalized, sex-specific activity guidelines.
Study: Sex…
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Sia and ex’s custody battle escalates with drug and child porn claims
Sia is responding to estranged husband Daniel Bernad’s “outrageous” filing for full physical and legal custody of their toddler son.
The 49-year-old “Titanium” singer said Bernad’s emergency child custody request “should be denied in its entirety”…
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Tencent’s CarbonX Program 2.0 Identifies 50 Global Finalists in Race to Scale Climate Solutions
Tencent today announced the top 50 finalists, coming from 12 countries and regions around the world, for its CarbonX Program 2.0 (CarbonX 2.0), a landmark initiative to accelerate next generation climate technologies and the essential capabilities needed for a net-zero world by 2050.These innovators, selected from more than 660 applicants across 54 countries and regions, are competing for a share of RMB200 million (approximately US$28 million) in catalytic funding. Winners will also receive technical resources, expert mentorship, and opportunities to pilot their solutions in real-world environments, including in climate vulnerable regions such as Kenya, the Maldives, and Serbia.
Bridging the “Valley of Death” in Climate Innovation
The path from breakthrough discovery to real-world impact is often blocked by what experts call the ‘Valley of Death’ – the critical gap between early-stage innovation and large-scale deployment. Many climate technologies fail to progress due to limited funding, partnerships, and testing environments.
The CarbonX Program was created to close this gap. It does this by building a global ecosystem where scientists, engineers, entrepreneurs, investors, and industry leaders work together to accelerate the scaling of climate solutions, offering comprehensive support beyond mere financing.
“The climate crisis is the defining challenge of our time and tackling it demands both bold innovation and collective action across the global ecosystem,” said Davis Lin, Senior Vice President of Tencent. “With CarbonX, we are not only investing in groundbreaking ideas, but also creating the pathways to turn them into real-world solutions. By bridging the gap between research and deployment, we aim to accelerate technologies that can store, transform, and reduce CO₂ emissions at scale, laying the foundation for a truly low-carbon future.”
Scaling Climate Innovation Across Borders
Building on the success of its inaugural program focused on China, CarbonX 2.0 has expanded globally to identify and support promising early-stage climate technologies. The 50 finalists represent a diverse mix of universities, research institutes, and startups working at the forefront of four key areas:
1. Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR): Supporting pilots in Kenya to accelerate scalable, cost-effective solutions for permanently removing historic CO₂ emissions, with the potential to reduce direct air capture (DAC) costs substantially.
2. Industrial Decarbonization (CCUS for Steel): Advancing breakthrough approaches to reduce lifecycle emissions in steel production with pilots in Serbia. The focus is on developing cost-effective and scalable industrial carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCUS) solutions for hard-to-abate industries.
3. Carbon Capture and Utilization (CarbonXmade): Transforming captured carbon into chemicals, and ultimately into consumer products. This creates a circular value chain that turns waste into consumer goods, with early market adoption supported by brand premiums in China.
4. Long-Duration Energy Storage (LDES): Providing real-world scenarios in the Maldives to refine and validate emerging technologies, to meet the growing demands of renewable energy expansion – with flow batteries showing strong promise for commercially viable, long-duration storage.
In early 2026, a global panel of multi-disciplinary experts will evaluate and select the winning teams to receive grants and other resources to pilot their technologies in those regions and create measurable impact.
CarbonX Summit 2025: Inspiring Collective Action
The announcement was made at the CarbonX Summit 2025 in Shenzhen, a convening of finalist teams and leaders from business, academia, and policy to explore how innovation ecosystems can accelerate climate action globally. The Summit spotlighted the role of catalytic finance, inclusive deployment, and multilateral collaboration in achieving the Paris Agreement targets.
“Sustainability can only be achieved through innovation,” said Hao Xu, Head of Climate Innovation at Tencent. “By supporting the world’s brightest climate entrepreneurs, we aim to harness technology as a force for good — addressing one of humanity’s most urgent challenges while creating shared value for future generations.”
For more information about CarbonX 2.0, please visit the program website.
Appendix: List of Top 50 Finalists of CarbonX Program 2.0
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First Look Photos Of Episode 4, “Reentry”
Angela Bassett’s Athena and Aisha Hinds’s Hen have been stranded in space on 9-1-1, and the latest episode of the ABC drama series will finally see them come back home.
The logline for Episode 4, titled “Reentry,” reads, “As…
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Dengue Drivers In Pacific Uncovered
As dengue cases in the Pacific reach their highest levels in a decade, new James Cook University (JCU) research highlights how human movement and weather patterns contribute to outbreaks in the region.

Recent JCU research… Continue Reading
