- Aurangzeb lauds FBR for record tax collection Dawn
- The tax lacunae The Express Tribune
- Revenue gap widens as FBR faces Rs336bn shortfall in first six months Geo News
- FBR chief convenes moot to finalise tax target strategy Business Recorder
- Tax…
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Aurangzeb lauds FBR for record tax collection – Dawn
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Farmers’ congress on current challenges – Dawn
- Farmers’ congress on current challenges Dawn
- Kissan Ittehad urges agri emergency, potato purchase at government level Daily Times
- Experts call for ‘deep’ agrarian reforms Business Recorder
- Climate shocks agriculture The Express Tribune
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China’s BYD overtakes Tesla as world’s top EV seller – Dawn
- China’s BYD overtakes Tesla as world’s top EV seller Dawn
- China’s BYD overtakes Tesla as world’s top EV seller BBC
- Tesla loses place as world’s top electric vehicle seller to China’s BYD Al Jazeera
- China’s BYD overtakes Tesla as world’s top EV seller for the first time CNBC
- The world has a new EV king. It’s not Tesla CNN
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PM says GDP growth in first quarter encouraging – Dawn
- PM says GDP growth in first quarter encouraging Dawn
- How the economy fared in 2025 Geo News
- Islamabad LG polls face fresh delay as amendment ordinance approved Daily Times
- Pakistan forecasts inflation to remain in moderate 5.5-6.5 percent range
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Coronation Street and Emmerdale collide in crossover episode to launch scaled-back schedule
Ian YoungsCulture reporter
ITVA series of unfortunate road traffic events brings characters together somewhere between Coronation Street and Emmerdale The worlds of TV soaps Coronation Street and Emmerdale will collide – literally – in an explosive…
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Gretzky swaps stories, reminisces ahead of Winter Classic
MIAMI — Wayne Gretzky looked out from the stage during the Discover Face-Off Panel and marveled at the sizeable crowd of Florida Panthers and New York Rangers fans in front of him outside loanDepot park on Friday.
“This is amazing how our…
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Changes in macadamia nut labeling law are now in effect
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – New labeling requirements for macadamia nut products sold in Hawaii took effect Jan. 1.
If a product contains macadamia nuts grown outside the state, it must now include a label saying, “This package contains macadamia nuts that were not grown in Hawaii.”
Gov. Josh Green signed the new requirements into law to strengthen truth-in-labeling laws and provide consumers with greater clarity on the origin of macadamia nuts in products.
The exact geographical location is not required, nor is the percentage of macadamia nuts not grown in Hawaii.
“The new law aims to enhance, preserve, and protect the premium brand of Hawaii-grown macadamia nuts,” said Sharon Hurd, chair of the Hawaii Board of Agriculture and Biosecurity.
“Truth in labeling should prevent companies from misrepresenting the origin of the macadamia nuts used and help assure consumers that they are getting a true Hawaii product rather than one that has been outsourced from another country,” Hurd said.
Items that include macadamia nuts but not as a predominant ingredient are exempt from the new requirements, such as candies, energy bars, cookies, some other baked goods, and ice cream.
The Hawaii Department of Agriculture and Biosecurity’s Measurement Standards Branch has been working with the industry since the law was enacted in 2024 to help guide implementation of the new packaging requirements.
Copyright 2026 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
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PSX tops 179,000 as equities extend rally
The new flat 15% CGT rate for filers and 20% for non-filers will be applicable to only those shares that are bought and sold on and after July 1, 2017. PHOTO: FILE
KARACHI:Pakistan equities extended their bullish run at the start of 2026, with the benchmark KSE-100 Index surging 1.52% on Friday to close slightly above 179,000, driven largely by sustained buying from local institutional investors. The rally followed a strong weekly performance marked by gains in banking, fertiliser and energy stocks, while robust fertiliser sales data further boosted investor sentiment. Despite foreign investors remaining net sellers, broad-based participation and heavy trading volumes underscored growing confidence in the market’s near-term outlook.
“The rally was once again driven by domestic institutional buying, with broad-based participation across blue-chip stocks, reinforcing the prevailing positive trend,” said Ali Najib, Deputy Head of Trading at Arif Habib Limited.
At the close of trading, the benchmark KSE-100 Index posted a gain of 2,679.44 points, or 1.52%, to settle at 179,034.93.
According to Arif Habib Limited (AHL), the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) witnessed a strong start to 2026, with the KSE-100 Index gaining 3.85% on a week-on-week basis. On Friday, market breadth remained positive as 64 shares closed higher, while 35 declined. United Bank Limited (UBL), Engro Fertilisers (EFERT) and Engro Holdings (ENGROH) were the major contributors to index gains, rising by 4.73%, 10.0% and 2.89%, respectively. In contrast, Lucky Cement (LUCK), Maple Leaf Cement (MLCF) and DG Khan Cement (DGKC) emerged as the biggest drags on the index, shedding 0.54%, 1.09% and 1.16%, respectively.
On the macroeconomic front, data from the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS) showed that Pakistan recorded a trade deficit of $3.7 billion in December 2025. Exports during the month stood at $2.3 billion, reflecting a sharp decline of 20.4% year-on-year and 4.3% month-on-month, while imports rose to $6.0 billion, up 2.0% year-on-year and 13.5% month-on-month. Cumulatively, during the first half of FY26, the trade deficit widened by 34.6% year-on-year to $19.2 billion.
Meanwhile, the government is reportedly considering imposing a levy of up to 5% on the import of mobile phones and electronic devices under a proposed policy framework for 202633, a move expected to be positive for Airlink, whose shares gained 1.21%. From a technical perspective, AHL noted that immediate support for the KSE-100 is placed at 175,000 points, while 182,000 points represents the near-term upside target for the coming week.
A Topline Securities market review said the KSE-100 Index continued its bullish momentum, gaining 1.52% to close at 179,039. The rally was attributed to recent buying by local institutions on new allocations. Investor interest was particularly evident in the fertiliser sector, following Topline Securities Limited’s report, “Pakistan Fertiliser – Urea sales for Dec 2025 at an all-time high of 1,356,000 tonnes; inventory at 0.31 million tonnes.” The fertiliser sector closed 2.7% higher.
The top positive contribution to the index came from UBL, EFERT, ENGROH, PPL, OGDC and FFC, which cumulatively added 1,663 points. In terms of traded value, Bank of Punjab (Rs4.28 billion), PSO (Rs3.98 billion), PPL (Rs3.33 billion), OGDC (Rs3.24 billion), MARI (Rs3.16 billion), HUBC (Rs2.56 billion) and MEBL (Rs2.55 billion) dominated trading activity. Traded volume and value for the day stood at 1.1 billion shares and Rs64 billion, respectively.
Overall trading volume in the Ready Market was recorded at approximately 1.11 billion shares, compared with 1.40 billion in the previous session. The value of shares traded stood at Rs64.34 billion.
Shares of 484 companies were traded in the Ready Market. Of these, 253 stocks closed higher, 201 declined and 30 remained unchanged.
Bank of Punjab was the volume leader, with trading in 102.5 million shares, gaining Rs1.89 to close at Rs42.23. It was followed by K-Electric with 100.09 million shares, losing Rs0.12 to close at Rs6.35, and Media Times Limited with 43.63 million shares, gaining Re1 to close at Rs5.84.
Foreign investors sold shares worth Rs7 billion, according to data released by the National Clearing Company.
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The year angry men dominated Bollywood
Jio StudiosRanveer Singh’s Dhurandhar was the biggest hit last year For the Indian film industry, 2025 felt like a return to familiar ground.
The year before that, women-led stories had briefly reshaped India’s global cinematic image, bringing…
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About Us | UC ANR Innovate
Agricultural innovation doesn’t fail for lack of ideas; it fails for lack of connection.
California has world class research universities, a diverse and productive agricultural sector, ambitious climate economic development goals, growing ecosystem entrepreneurs building solutions. But too often, these pieces don’t come together. Researchers develop promising technologies that never leave the lab. Startups build products without grower input. Growers hear about innovations they can’t access or evaluate. Policymakers invest in programs infrastructure to turn funding into outcomes.
The ideas are there. The connection is what’s missing.
UC ANR Innovate exists change that. As arm University Agriculture Natural Resources, we connect people, ideas, resources around real challenges agriculture, food, biotechnology. We work across full pathway, from early stage technology engagement commercialization support. What makes us distinct our position as trusted, neutral platform within land grant system. We’re not funder, VC, an accelerator. convener: aligning resources, brokering relationships, creating conditions where startups engage directly with growers, shaped by practical need, delivers measurable impact its workforce, communities.
How We Work
UC ANR Innovate works across four areas, each designed to move innovation closer to adoption.
Advancing Practical Technologies
We find high-potential innovations and help them get to the field, connecting startups to growers for testing, linking researchers to commercial partners, and creating pathways to capital.
Generating Use-Inspired Research
We produce research and analysis that shapes how innovation happens, data on technology performance, policy guidance, and ecosystem mapping.
Enabling an Innovation-Ready Workforce
We train students and workers for careers that don’t fully exist yet, through competitions, academies, and hands-on programs.
Building Regional Innovation Ecosystems
We help regions organize around shared goals, aligning institutions, capital, and infrastructure so innovation doesn’t depend on luck.
2025 Impact
UC ANR Innovate’s role is to turn connection into outcomes. We focus on translating research into practice, aligning innovation with real agricultural needs, and ensuring that public investment results in measurable progress across California.
In 2025, our work moved beyond planning and pilots into delivery. Programs across our portfolio emphasized field validation, workforce readiness, and ecosystem coordination, reducing friction between ideas and implementation while operating at regional and statewide scale.
$16M+
State funding secured
10,000+
Educators and students reached
Read the 2025 Annual Report
Our Foundation
Mission
UC ANR Innovate drives agriculture, food, and biotechnology innovation in California. We connect people, ideas, and resources to tackle real-world challenges, empowering entrepreneurs, strengthening industries, and building an inclusive future for California agriculture.
Vision
A California whose agricultural innovation ecosystem is the global model, where researchers turn discoveries into solutions, entrepreneurs find the support they need to scale, and farmers shape the technologies that serve them.
Values
Collaborative
The best ideas come from shared knowledge and teamwork across experts, workers, policymakers, and entrepreneurs.
Forward Thinking
We bring actionable ideas to life that address real-world agricultural needs.
Action-Oriented
We focus on practical outcomes and measurable difference.
Inclusive
We ensure small farmers, farmworkers, and historically underserved groups are part of innovation and benefit equally.
Environmentally Conscious
We balance economic growth with environmental responsibility.
Our Team
The people behind UC ANR Innovate.
Contractors
UC ANR Innovate is supported by a team of contractors: Hannah Johnson, Connie Bowen, Nat Irwin, Micki Seibel, Deborah Tucker, Penny McBride, Sarah Masterson, Nick Popadopolous, and Ignacio Rodriguez.
Partners
Our work depends on collaboration.
Institutional Partners
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Ecosystem Partners
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