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  • China sees robust IP progress, fueling high-quality development

    BEIJING, July 17 — China has made significant strides in intellectual property (IP) protection during its 14th Five-Year Plan period (2021-2025), providing impetus for innovation and high-quality development, the China National Intellectual Property Administration (CNIPA) said on Thursday.

    CNIPA head Shen Changyu, speaking at a press conference on reviewing China’s IP progress, outlined the administration’s comprehensive strategy to establish a world-class IP governance system, institutional framework, cultural environment and professional talent pool. “Our clear objective is to establish China as a global IP powerhouse by 2035.”

    He emphasized four strategic focus areas: advancing the modernization of the IP governance system and its capabilities, supporting China’s high-level self-reliance in science and technology, cultivating new quality productive forces and modern industrial systems, and promoting high-standard opening-up and market system development.

    Through a quality-oriented approach, the CNIPA has refined key performance metrics such as high-value invention patents per 10,000 people, the value-added of patent-intensive industries as a percentage of GDP, the total import and export volume of IP royalties, and IP examination quality and efficiency standards.

    “These indicators reflect a more scientific approach to measuring China’s IP progress,” Shen said, adding that the administration will actively engage stakeholders in shaping the 15th Five-Year Plan (2026-2030) to ensure practical, innovation-friendly policies that boost industries and benefit public welfare.

    As the 14th Five-Year Plan period nears its conclusion, China is clocking up a series of achievements in the transformation and industrialization of patents, IP in green and low-carbon technologies, geographical indication (GI) products and international IP cooperation.

    China has effectively promoted the transformation and industrialization of a large number of patents, with the industrialization rate of enterprise invention patents up from 44.9 percent in 2020 to 53.3 percent in 2024.

    As of June 2025, China’s number of valid domestic invention patents has reached 5.01 million, which is an increase of 13.2 percent year on year, according to Shen, while ownership of high-value invention patents per 10,000 people has reached 15.3.

    Additionally, the dominant position of enterprises in technological innovation continues to be enhanced in China, Shen said.

    There were 524,000 domestic enterprises that held valid invention patents in June 2025, by which time the total number of valid invention patents held by those enterprises had reached 3.7 million, accounting for 74.4 percent of the total number in China — an increase of 6.1 percentage points compared to the end of the 13th Five-Year Plan period (2016-2020).

    China has seen increasingly vibrant innovation in green and low-carbon technologies, with 53,000 invention patents granted in the sector in 2024 alone, said Liang Xinxin, an official of the CNIPA. The 2024 figure, which doubled 2020’s, reflects an average annual growth rate of 19.2 percent.

    The clean energy and energy storage sectors showed robust growth, with respective invention patent authorizations rising 34.9 percent and 32.8 percent year on year — the highest increases among all green technology categories, Liang noted.

    China has cumulatively recognized 2,861 GI products, according to Shen. The annual output value of China’s GI products increased from 639.8 billion yuan (about 89.5 billion U.S. dollars) in 2020 to 969 billion yuan in 2024, he noted.

    A total of 7,424 GIs have been registered as collective or certification trademarks, and over 37,000 business entities have been authorized to use the special GI symbol.

    China has established IP cooperation partnerships with over 80 countries and regions. The China-EU agreement on GIs has come into force, realizing the mutual recognition and protection of the first group of listed products, Shen said, adding that China has successfully acceded to the Hague Agreement Concerning the International Registration of Industrial Designs.

    CNIPA Deputy Commissioner Hu Wenhui noted that the administration treats domestic and foreign enterprises equally in terms of IP protection. In the first half of the year, foreign applicants filed 94,000 trademark applications in China — a year-on-year increase of 7.4 percent, with significant growth of over 20 percent in applications from Germany, Italy and the United States, Hu said.

    By the end of 2024, the CNIPA had provided a total of 2,393 guidance services and 6,885 advisory consultations to domestic enterprises engaging in global expansion, helping them reduce litigation costs by 1.32 billion yuan and recover economic losses amounting to 38.04 billion yuan, he said.

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  • Newly-Discovered Trans-Neptunian Object is Moving in Rhythm with Neptune, Astronomers Say

    Newly-Discovered Trans-Neptunian Object is Moving in Rhythm with Neptune, Astronomers Say

    Discovered by the Large inclination Distant Objects (LiDO) survey and designated 2020 VN40, this trans-Neptunian object is the first confirmed body that orbits the Sun once for every 10 orbits Neptune completes. This discovery, reported in paper in the Planetary Science Journal, helps scientists understand how objects in the outer Solar System behave and how they got there. It supports the idea that many distant objects are temporarily ‘caught’ in Neptune’s gravity as they drift through space.

    An artist’s impression of a trans-Neptunian object. Image credit: NASA / ESA / G. Bacon, STScI.

    “This is a big step in understanding the outer Solar System,” said Dr. Rosemary Pike, an astronomer at the Harvard & Smithsonian’s Center for Astrophysics.

    “It shows that even very distant regions influenced by Neptune can contain objects, and it gives us new clues about how the Solar System evolved.”

    “This is just the beginning,” said Dr. Kathryn Volk, an astronomer at the Planetary Science Institute.

    “We’re opening a new window into the Solar System’s past.”

    2020 VN40 was discovered by the LiDO survey, which searched for unusual objects in the outer Solar System.

    This survey used the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope for the main survey operations, and Gemini Observatory and Magellan Baade for additional observations.

    The survey was designed to search for bodies with orbits that extend far above and below the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the Sun, part of the outer Solar System that hasn’t been well-studied.

    “It has been fascinating to learn how many small bodies in the Solar System exist on these very large, very tilted orbits,” said Dr. Samantha Lawler, an astronomer at the University of Regina and a member of the LiDO team.

    2020 VN40’s average distance is about 139.5 times farther from the Sun than Earth and follows a very tilted path around the Solar System.

    What makes the object even more interesting is how it moves compared to Neptune.

    Most objects with a simple ratio of the duration of their orbit compared to the duration of Neptune’s orbit always come closest to the Sun when Neptune is far away.

    In contrast, 2020 VN40 comes closest to the Sun when Neptune is very close by, if you look at their positions from above the Solar System.

    The tilt of the object’s orbit means that the objects are not actually close, because 2020 VN40 is actually far below the Solar System — they only appear close when flattened onto a map.

    All other known resonant trans-Neptunian objects orbit such that they avoid this alignment at their closest approach to the Sun, even in the flattened view.

    “This new motion is like finding a hidden rhythm in a song we thought we knew,” said Dr. Ruth Murray-Clay, an astronomer at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

    “It could change how we think about the way distant objects move.”

    _____

    Rosemary E. Pike et al. 2025. LiDO: Discovery of a 10:1 Resonator with a Novel Libration State. Planet. Sci. J 6, 156; doi: 10.3847/PSJ/addd22

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  • Japanese walking, protein tips and wildfire smoke: The week in Well+Being – The Washington Post

    1. Japanese walking, protein tips and wildfire smoke: The week in Well+Being  The Washington Post
    2. Why Japanese seniors walk more — and stay younger, longer  The Times of India
    3. The Japanese Walking Method Boosts Fat Loss and Heart Health—Here’s How to Get Started  Yahoo
    4. ‘Japanese walking’ takes over TikTok for weight loss  The Jerusalem Post
    5. Just 30 minutes a day of ‘Japanese walking’ may help you get in shape  University of Cincinnati

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  • BHP logs record copper output but flags Jansen delay and cost blowout

    BHP logs record copper output but flags Jansen delay and cost blowout

    (Reuters) -BHP reported on Friday annual copper production above 2 million metric tonnes for the first time but warned of lower output next year while separately flagging delays and cost blowouts of up to 29% for its key Jansen Stage 1 potash project.

    The world’s largest listed miner achieved copper production of 2.02 Mt in fiscal 2025, at the upper end of its forecast range. However, it expects output to drop to between 1.8 Mt and 2.0 Mt in fiscal 2026, reflecting planned lower grades at its flagship Escondida mine in Chile.

    BHP also reported record annual iron ore production of 290 Mt, at the upper end of its guidance, while its fourth-quarter output of 77.5 Mt beat a Visible Alpha consensus estimate of 75.90 Mt.

    The miner said first production from its Jansen Stage 1 potash project in Canada has been pushed back to mid-2027 from the previously targeted end-2026, while capital expenditure estimates have surged to $7.0 billion-$7.4 billion from $5.7 billion – a cost increase of up to 29%.

    “The estimated cost increase is driven by inflationary and real cost escalation pressures, design development and scope changes, and our current assessment of lower productivity outcomes over the construction period,” BHP said in a statement.

    Strong iron ore production in the June quarter helped offset a weak March quarter that was impacted by two tropical cyclones. BHP had undergone a debottlenecking exercise at its Pilbara operations after ramping up the South Flank mine last year.

    For fiscal 2026, BHP expects iron ore production between 284 Mt and 296 Mt.

    The company is also assessing a potential divestment of its Western Australia Nickel assets as part of an ongoing review, citing balance sheet impacts from the nickel business.

    “Any decision to divest will be subject to an assessment against other options, including continuing temporary suspension, restart or closure,” it said.

    (Reporting by Roushni Nair and Roshan Thomas in Bengaluru, Melanie Burton in Sydney; Editing by Devika Syamnath)

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  • How a cello carried Anita Lasker-Wallfisch through Auschwitz

    How a cello carried Anita Lasker-Wallfisch through Auschwitz

    Anita Lasker-Wallfisch has spent an entire century on this earth, and does not fear death. After all, she’d often looked it in the eye when she was deported to Auschwitz simply for being a Jew. It was the largest and most notorious of the Nazi concentration and extermination camps. There, around 1.1 million people were killed on an industrial scale, reports DW.

    Lasker-Wallfisch survived because she could play the cello.

    For decades, she has raised her voice against antisemitism, right-wing extremism and racism as a dedicated witness to history. She has told scores of schoolchildren unsparingly how the Nazis systematically marginalised Jews and ultimately murdered them. She feels it is a duty “that those who survived must serve as voices for the millions who were silenced.” That’s why she has also taken part in the Dimensions in Testimony project, in which interactive holograms enable Holocaust survivors to answer questions even after their deaths.

    Lasker-Wallfisch and her sister, Renate, had to work as forced laborers at a paper factory. She used this opportunity to forge documents for other forced laborers from France, enabling them to return to their homeland. In 1943, when the two sisters tried to flee with forged passports, they were imprisoned. Five months later, they arrived separately at Auschwitz.

    Because Lasker-Wallfisch could play an instrument, she was assigned to the girls’ orchestra at Auschwitz. “The cello saved my life,” she later said. When the forced labourers left the camp in the morning and returned in the evening, the orchestra played music for them to march to. On Sundays, the girls performed for the SS.

    “Not a single one of us believed we’d make it out of Auschwitz in any other way than up the chimney,” were her words. In 1944, when Soviet troops were advancing on Auschwitz, Lasker-Wallfisch and her sister were moved to the extremely overcrowded concentration camp at Bergen-Belsen, where people died of hunger, thirst and disease. “Auschwitz was a camp that systematically murdered people,” she later wrote in her memoirs, “in Belsen, you just died.”

    A long silence

    In September 1945, she testified against the Lasker-Wallfisch at Bergen-Belsen before a British military court. It would be a long time until Lasker felt able once again to speak of her experience.

    She emigrated to Britain in 1946. In London, she became a founding member of the English Chamber Orchestra and played in this ensemble until the turn of the century. She married pianist Peter Wallfisch, who, like her, was from Breslau. He had emigrated to Palestine as part of he Kindertransport (German for “children’s transport”) — an organised rescue effort of mainly Jewish children from Nazi-controlled territory. The couple did not speak to their children about the past. When her daughter, Maya, asked her mother why she had a phone number tattooed on her arm, she responded “I’ll tell you when you’re older.”

    After many decades, Lasker-Wallfisch was ready to tell her story. Her book Inherit the Truth 1939-1945: The Documented Experiences of a Survivor of Auschwitz and Belsen was published in 1996. It made her internationally known as a witness to history.

    In 2018, on the German Day of Remembrance for the Victims of National Socialism, Lasker-Wallfisch gave a fiery speech in the country’s parliament, the Bundestag, admonishing people not to forget. She said she perceived an increasing societal sentiment to leave such things in the past. Lasker-Wallfisch continued, “What are we meant to draw the line under? What happened, happened, and it cannot be expunged by drawing a line.”

    Now Lasker-Wallfisch is turning 100. A concert is being held in her honour in London. Dignitaries from all over the world are coming to congratulate one of the last living witnesses of the Holocaust. Her daughter Maya, son Raphael, grandchildren and great-grandchildren will also toast her. But what’s important to the centenarian isn’t the extravagant celebration. What Lasker-Wallfisch desires above all is that the poison of hate and antisemitism be eradicated once and for all. A wish that is, unfortunately, not so easy to fulfill.

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  • Endurance Training Leaves Mark on Athletes’ Hearts

    Endurance Training Leaves Mark on Athletes’ Hearts

    TOPLINE:

    Myocardial fibrosis was detected in 47.2% of asymptomatic male veteran endurance athletes and was associated with a nearly fivefold increased risk for ventricular arrhythmia, a study found. During follow-up, 21.7% of athletes experienced episodes of ventricular arrhythmia, with 2.8% developing sustained ventricular tachycardia.

    METHODOLOGY:

    • Researchers conducted a prospective observational cohort study involving 106 asymptomatic male competitive cyclists and triathletes aged 50 years or older who had exercised at least 10 h/wk for more than 15 years.
    • Men were excluded from the study if they had been diagnosed with a preexisting cardiovascular condition.
    • Participants underwent cardiovascular MRI, stress perfusion late gadolinium enhancement, exercise testing, and implantable loop recorder implantation for ventricular arrhythmia detection.
    • Analysis included a median follow-up period of 720 days, during which participants were monitored for the primary endpoint of incident ventricular arrhythmia.

    TAKEAWAY:

    • Cardiac MRI found nearly half (47.2%) of athletes in the study had focal myocardial fibrosis (all nonischemic distribution), predominantly affecting the basal inferolateral left ventricular segment.
    • Myocardial fibrosis was independently associated with an increased risk for ventricular arrhythmia (hazard ratio [HR], 4.7; 95% CI, 1.8-12.8; P = .002), even after adjusting for left ventricular end-diastolic volume (HR, 4.7; 95% CI, 1.7-12.7; P = .002).
    • Athletes with ventricular arrhythmia exhibited significantly greater left ventricular end-diastolic volume (113 ± 18 mL/m² vs 106 ± 13 mL/m²; P = .04) and native T1 times (1252 ± 46 ms vs 1241 ± 39 ms; P = .03).
    • Athletes with fibrosis showed a higher prevalence of premature ventricular contractions during exercise testing than those without (71.4% vs 42%; P = .003), with more atypical features (46.9% vs 18%; P = .002).

    IN PRACTICE:

    “In this prospective study, myocardial fibrosis on cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging was independently associated with the risk of ventricular arrhythmia in healthy, asymptomatic veteran male endurance athletes,” the researchers of the study reported. “Other predictors of ventricular arrhythmia included left ventricular dilatation, and exercise-induced premature ventricular contractions. As the incidence of ventricular arrhythmia may be associated with sudden cardiac arrest, the presence of myocardial fibrosis, left ventricular dilatation and exercise-induced premature ventricular contractions may play a role in indirectly predicting the risk of sudden cardiac arrest among certain athletes. However, further studies are needed to confirm this and to determine whether athletes with myocardial fibrosis on cardiovascular magnetic resonance have a concealed form of cardiomyopathy.”

    SOURCE:

    The study was led by Wasim Javed, PhD, of the Leeds Institute of Cardiovascular and Metabolic Medicine, in the United Kingdom. It was published online July 17 in Circulation: Cardiovascular Imaging.

    LIMITATIONS:

    The researchers acknowledged several key limitations of their study, including the limited sample size and highly selected nature of participants. The findings may not be generalizable to other groups, including female and non-White athletes. The single-lead nature of the implantable loop recorders did not allow for localization of ventricular arrhythmia to confirm its origin from the site of myocardial fibrosis. The endpoint of ventricular arrhythmia only indirectly correlates with sudden cardiac death, requiring further study for clinical implications.

    DISCLOSURES:

    This research was supported by the National Institute for Health and Care Research Leeds Biomedical Research Centre, the British Heart Foundation, and the Leeds Clinical Research Facility.

    This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication.

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  • Capturing New York With the Galaxy Z Fold7 – Samsung Global Newsroom

    Capturing New York With the Galaxy Z Fold7 – Samsung Global Newsroom

    At Galaxy Unpacked 2025 held last week in Brooklyn, New York, Samsung Electronics unveiled the Galaxy Z Fold7, ushering in a new era of mobile photography by bringing professional-grade, Ultra camera capabilities to its foldable smartphone lineup.

     

    To put those capabilities to the test, Samsung Newsroom editors embarked on a special one-day tour across New York City — a photo spot itinerary curated by Gemini. The mission? Capture the magic of the city that never sleeps, one fold at a time.

     

    ▲ An itinerary of New York photo spots curated by Gemini

     

     

    The Manhattan Skyline, Now in 200MP Glory

    The journey began in Brooklyn, where the editors aimed to capture Manhattan’s stunning skyline across the East River in a single frame — bridges, boats and all — while preserving clarity, even at a distance zooming in.

     

    Enter the first-ever 200MP camera on a Z Fold. From bridge cables to distant rooftops, every detail was rendered with striking precision. The ultra-high resolution allowed the team to shoot wide, then zoom in and crop while maintaining exceptional image quality. With the Galaxy Z Fold7, nothing is out of reach — even the subtlest parts of cityscapes, no matter how far the zoom.

     

    ▲ Manhattan’s breathtaking skyline, taken with the Galaxy Z Fold7’s 200MP wide-angle camera

     

    ▲ Zoomed-in crop of a distant boat from the original photo above

     

    ▲ A closer look at the boat — zoomed in from the original 200MP photo

     

     

    No Selfie Stick, No Problem: 100-Degree Wide-Angle Selfies That Capture It All

    What’s a New York adventure without a selfie — or ten? With the Galaxy Z Fold7’s 10MP 100-degree front camera, snapping the perfect shot becomes effortless.

     

    Designed into the main display, this lens’ 100-degree field of view captures not just faces, but full scenes — whether it’s the Brooklyn Bridge or Central Park in the background. No tripod, no selfie stick — just a wide-angle perspective that turns every memory into a postcard.

     

    ▲ A wide-angle selfie with the Galaxy Z Fold7’s 100-degree main display front camera

     

     

    Picture-Perfect Spots, Minus the Crowds

    Next stop: Jane’s Carousel — a popular photo spot known for its vintage charm and sweeping views of the Manhattan skyline.

     

    Iconic landmarks are bound to be crowded, often making it difficult to capture a clean shot. But Galaxy Z Fold7 users need not worry. With the newly added Suggest Erases feature in Generative Edit, the device automatically detects people in the background and allows users to remove them with ease — no manual selection required. The results can then be reviewed side-by-side on a single screen for easy comparison.

     

    ▲ Using Generative Edit, people in the background can be automatically detected and seamlessly removed with a single tap.

     

     

    What’s That? Circle It and Find Out

    As the editors explored the fashion-forward, trendy neighborhood of SoHo, a striking building stood out. What was it?

     

    With Circle to Search, curiosity meets instant answers. A quick snap and circle gesture revealed everything there was to know. Whether it’s architecture, street art or a mystery object, traveling with the Galaxy Z Fold7 means never missing a beat.

     

    ▲ With Circle to Search, circling any part of an image instantly provides relevant information.

     

     

    Clear Sound, Even in Bustling New York

    At Central Park, a street performance filled the air with music. Wanting to capture the buskers’ carefree energy, the editors recorded a video — but along with the music came unwanted background noise. Cue Audio Eraser.

     

    With the AI-powered tool, the Galaxy Z Fold7 isolated the music, filtering out distractions like wind and nearby conversations. The result? A polished and immersive video, ready to be shared.

     

    ▲ Audio Eraser enhances audio clarity by removing unwanted noise from videos.

     

     

    Night Video: New York Nights, Captured in Clarity

    The day wrapped up where it began — by the East River at Brooklyn Bridge Park. This time though, Manhattan’s skyline shimmered under the moonlight, offering a dramatically different atmosphere.

     

    Shooting videos in low light can be tricky, but the Galaxy Z Fold7 handled the scene with ease. Thanks to its default 10-bit HDR powered by the ProVisual Engine, highlights and shadows were rendered with lifelike depth and crisp detail — resulting in clean, noise-free footage.

     

    

    ▲ Night Video footage of the Brooklyn Bridge and Manhattan skyline, captured with the Galaxy Z Fold7

     

    One day in New York was enough to prove the Galaxy Z Fold7’s remarkable versatility. Its noticeably lighter design made all-day shooting effortless, while the spacious display allowed the team to seamlessly edit content on the go.

     

    Powered by AI-driven innovations and designed with real-world-use in mind, the Galaxy Z Fold7 goes beyond the role of a smartphone. It’s a creative tool, a travel companion and a memory keeper.

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  • Uneven vulnerabilities: A global index of climate risk for countries

    Interest in country-level climate risks has grown in recent years, in particular in the years following the 2015 Paris Agreement, which outlined clear decarbonisation pathways for each nation. Investors are also progressively aware about the long-term risks of climate change. Indeed, the exposure to physical climate risk can have negative implications for, among other things, sovereign debt (Zenios 2022, Bernhofen et al. 2024), the cost of debt and sovereign ratings (Beirne et al. 2021, Standard & Poor’s 2015, Agarwala et al. 2021, Revoltella et al. 2022), fiscal sustainability (Agarwala et al. 2021), and even on political stability (Moody’s 2016, Fitch 2022, Volz et al. 2020). Transition risk, by contrast, is linked to three main factors: policies, shifts in consumer preferences, and technological breakthroughs (Semeniuk et al. 2020). Reputational effects and legal actions due to failure to comply with environmental standards are also relevant.

    In practice, three broad approaches are used to assess climate risk at the country level: modelling, scenario analysis, and (index-based) scores. Multidimensional macroeconomic models aim to evaluate the macro impacts of climate change. Some organisations are regularly developing scenario analyses, often based on the output of the models, to sketch multiple plausible and consistent representations of the future (not forecasts) under different policies and circumstances. In general, such scenarios project the possible future outcomes of climate change over the (very) long run (60-80 years from now). In addition to modelling and scenario analysis, index-based scoring help assess climate risk and rank countries (for example, the Notre Dame Global Adaptation Initiative (ND GAIN) and Germanwatch). Ratings agencies have started to develop their own assessments to complement their rating methodologies (Volz et al. 2020, Gratcheva et al. 2020). Typically, they combine environmental, social, and governance (ESG) criteria to support investors in making informed investment decisions.

    New climate risk country scores

    In a recent paper (Ferrazzi et al. 2025 ), we present an index to measure climate risk for over 170 countries, separately assessing physical and transition risk (on a relative basis – relative to other countries and relative to the size of their economies) while accounting for adaptation and mitigation capacity. The most relevant risk factors are carefully selected, and the related weights are assigned based on the literature and empirical evidence. Physical risk scores combine the following:

    • acute risk: damages from extreme weather events, based on historical realisations (as a percentage of GDP, thus relative to the size of the economy);
    • chronic risk: impact on agriculture, sea level rise, impact on infrastructures, impact on labour productivity due to heat, water scarcity (also as a percentage of GDP); and
    • adaptation capacity, based on the economic ability to respond to shocks and the institutional capacity of the country (including rating, fiscal revenues, and governance indicators).

    This approach, based on the relevance of impacts as a percentage of GDP, automatically provides the relative importance of each risk factor for each country, solving the issue of finding adequate weights.

    Transition risk scores reflect the performance of countries in the past, today, and in the near future in the following:

    • CO2 emissions, and the commitments to mitigate emissions;
    • fossil fuel rents from coal, gas, and oil (as a percentage of GDP);
    • deployment of renewable energy (as percentage of final energy consumption);
    • energy intensity of economic activity; and
    • climate policy ambition, based on the Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) required under the Paris Agreement.

    The (very few) existing rankings use a large number of equally weighted indicators, implicitly assigning equal importance to numerous risk factors. Our approach, in contrast, is to select the relevant variables and assign proper weights, focusing on the next 5-10 years as the time horizon. Moreover, our approach incorporates factors that go beyond those typically considered in existing methodologies (chronic risk for physical risk or mitigation for transition risk, for instance) and relies only on publicly available data.

    Who is most at risk?

    Despite climate change being at ‘code red’ level for the entire of humanity (IPCC 2021, Guterres 2021), each country is exposed to different risk intensities. Our climate risk country scores indicate that emerging and developing economies are most exposed to physical risk – in particular, to acute physical events (hurricanes and storms, floods, fires), sea level rise, and high temperatures. In general, emerging and developing economies are more exposed to higher temperatures (as additional increases of temperatures in already hot environments impact human activities) and to agricultural losses (which are the most dependent on weather conditions). These countries are also less able to adapt (i.e. to protect themselves from the effects of weather). Transition risk is more relevant for fossil fuel producers and wealthier countries which need to reduce emissions, and for those countries that are less prepared for the transition to net zero in terms of energy efficiency and deployment of renewable energy.

    Figure 1 Contribution of risk factors

    Note: Non-weighted average across countries. Global average of the scores (including adaptation) is 1.

    Figure 2 Physical and transition risk by country

    Note: Caribbean and Pacific (not clearly visible in the above map due to the size of the countries) face high physical risks and, respectively, high and elevated transition risks. Global average of the scores is 1 for both physical and transition risk.

    Conclusion

    Summarising a country’s climate risks into a score is a complex task that requires careful decisions regarding the objective, time frame, risk factors, and level of granularity. The few climate change indices available rely on a large number of equally weighted factors (‘as much as you can find’) and assume they are all equally relevant. Our climate risk country scores instead identify the main risk factors and calibrate the weights based on the literature and econometric analysis.

    Our climate risk scores for 170 countries confirm that climate risks are not evenly distributed. Emerging and developing economies are the more vulnerable to physical risk and hence need relevant investments in adaptation capacity. In contrast, we find that transition risks are higher for wealthier and fossil fuel-producing countries.

    Our country-level climate change risk scores have a wide range of uses and implications. First, as climate risks intensify and regulatory requirements evolve, banks and international financial institutions can use these scores to support their risk management processes. Indeed, using an earlier vintage of our scores, Cappiello et al. (2025) confirm the relevance of climate risks – in particular, physical risks – for sovereign credit ratings.  The scores can serve as a risk-management tool for sovereign counterparts but also as starting point for evaluating climate-related risks faced by firms and banks within a given country.

    Second, our scores can also represent an opportunity to identify mitigation and adaptation priorities and related financing needs to enhance climate resilience.

    Third, the results highlight the importance of international cooperation, as climate change is a broad-based phenomenon affecting countries across the globe and requires collective efforts.

    Authors’ note: The views expressed here do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the European Investment Bank.

    References

    Agarwala, M, M Burke, P Klusak, M Kraemer, and K Mohaddes (2021), “Rising temperatures, falling ratings: The effect of climate change on sovereign creditworthiness”, Bennett Institute Working Paper, Cambridge University.

    Beirne, J, N Renzhi, and U Volz (2021), “Feeling the heat: Climate risks and the cost of sovereign borrowing”, International Review of Economics and Finance 76: 920–36.

    Bernhofen, M, M Burke, A Puranasamriddhi, N Ranger, and G Shrimali (2024), The impact of physical climate risks and adaptation on sovereign credit ratings, Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment and Environmental Change Institute, University of Oxford.

    Bolton, P and M T Kacperczyk (2020), “Carbon Premium around the World”, CEPR Discussion Paper 14567.

    Bolton, P, M Despres, L A Pereira Da Silva, F Samama, and R Svartzman (2020), The green swan: Central banking and financial stability in the age of climate change, Bank for International Settlements.

    Cappiello, L, G Ferrucci, A Maddaloni, and V Veggente (2025), “Creditworthy: Do climate change risks matter for sovereign credit ratings?”, ECB Discussion Paper No. 3042.

    Ferrazzi, M, F Kalantzis, and S Zwart (2021), “Assessing climate risks at the country level: The EIB climate risk country scores”, European Investment Bank Working Paper 2021/03.

    Ferrazzi, M, F Kalantzis, and S Zwart (2025), “Who’s most at risk? A global index of climate risk for countries”, European Investment Bank Working Paper 2025/06.

    Fitch Ratings (2022), Political risks and climate change: Where are the flashpoints?, Long Reads.

    Gagliardi, N, P Arévalo, and S Pamies (2022), “The fiscal impact of extreme weather and climate events: Evidence for EU countries”, European Commission Discussion Paper 168.

    Gratcheva, E M, T Emery, and D Wang (2020), Demystifying sovereign ESG, World Bank.

    Guterres, A (2021), “Secretary-General’s statement on the IPCC Working Group 1 Report on the Physical Science Basis of the Sixth Assessment”, 9 August.

    IPCC (2021), Climate change 2021: The physical science basis, Contribution of Working Group I to the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,  Cambridge University Press.

    Liu, Z, H Sun, and S Tang (2021), “Assessing the impacts of climate change to financial stability: Evidence from China”, International Journal of Climate Change Strategies and Management 13(3).

    Mejia, S A (2016), “Gone with the wind: Estimating hurricane and climate change costs in the Caribbean”, IMF Working Paper No. 16/199.

    Nordhaus, W D (2010), “The economics of hurricanes and implications of global warming”, Climate Change Economics 1(1): 1–20.

    Revoltella, D, T Bending, R Santos, and S Zwart (2022), “Assessing climate risks for long-term investments and the role of multilateral development banks”, in Scaling Up Sustainable Finance and Investment in the Global South, CEPR Press.

    Semieniuk, G, E Campiglio, J F Mercure, U Volz, and N R Edwards (2021), “Low-carbon transition risks for finance”, WIREs Climate Change 12(1).

    Standard and Poor’s Rating Services (2015), The heat is on: How climate change can impact sovereign ratings, McGraw Hill.

    Volz, U, J Beirne, N Ambrosio Preudhomme, A Fenton, E Mazzacurati, N Renzhi, and J Stampe (2020), Climate change and sovereign risk, SOAS University of London, Asian Development Bank Institute, World Wide Fund for Nature Singapore, Four Twenty Seven.

    Zenios, S A (2022), “Understanding the climate risks to sovereign debt: From data to models”, prepared for the Workshop of the European Fiscal Board Brussels, February.

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  • Recommendations to scale sustainability across EU industry – United Nations Environment – Finance Initiative

    Recommendations to scale sustainability across EU industry – United Nations Environment – Finance Initiative

    In February 2025, the European Commission (EC) announced the Clean Industrial Deal (CID), the EU’s main industrial strategy and a key part of its climate policy. It aims to mobilize the public and banking sectors to make decarbonization a growth driver for European industry. 

    The EC estimates a total annual investment need of €1.24 billion (1.45 billion USD) to reach 2030 targets, and leveraging private capital will be key to the CID’s success. Since banks finance approximately 70% of Europe’s economy, their active involvement is indispensable.  

    To date, the existence of 27 national industrial policy approaches across the EU has led to cross-border confusion—hindering innovation, slowing down projects and deterring private capital. By creating an EU-wide clean industrial policy, the CID can create certainty for project developers, companies, banks and financial institutions and in turn accelerate clean industry development. 

    Over the next two years, the EC will further develop a set of industrial policy initiatives to support the CID’s implementation, making this an important time for conversations among policymakers, banks and industry on where related policies are working, where they are falling short and what’s needed to align capital with net zero. 

    The European Banking Federation (EBF), UNEP Finance Initiative and the Net-Zero Banking Alliance (NZBA) recently convened EU policymakers, banks and industry representatives to discuss these issues. They made the following six recommendations to help the CID achieve its transformative potential.  

    1. Provide innovative support for small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs): Banks can enable greater, more inclusive market participation by developing simpler, more scalable green loans and sustainability-linked products for SMEs, and by providing more targeted advisory services to help them design credible transition plans. Aggregated project financing platforms and simplified voluntary reporting can also help SMEs increase their participation. In addition, venture debt can play an important role in providing growth capital for scaling innovative cleantech companies.
    2. Create secure revenue streams to help address the “green premium” for less mature technologies. Strong, predictable carbon pricing through the EU Emissions Trading System (ETS) and EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) will be important to the CID’s success, along with stable incentives and consistent rules that build investor confidence in new technologies. Carbon contracts for difference (CCfDs) can provide revenue certainty and build market demand by guaranteeing a fixed carbon price over time while supporting the transition to more sustainable production methods. Long-term corporate power purchasing agreements (PPAs) are also important tools to help close the “green premium” gap—the incremental cost of building/manufacturing sustainably with some maturing technologies. 
    3. Expand guarantee and blended finance schemes to help banks take on more project and technology risk. The perceived technological and market risks of first-of-a-kind projects like hydrogen and green steel can limit banks’ ability to finance these projects without compromising prudential standards. By scaling up guarantees, counter-guarantees and blended finance tools, Europe can de-risk investments in clean industry and unlock large pools of private capital. For example, the new Industrial Decarbonisation Bank aims to channel €100 billion (117 billion USD) in funding, combining grants, guarantees and contracts for difference.
    4. Streamline development processes to lower financing costs. Streamlining reporting, permitting and procurement processes to achieve shorter and more predictable project timelines can improve debt profitability and lower financing costs. The Decarbonisation Accelerator Act, anticipated to be released in Q4 2025 as a complementary policy to the CID, is expected to streamline permitting for industrial access to energy and industrial decarbonization, which could speed clean tech development by reducing project construction timelines and their related risks and costs.
    5. Integrate industrial and energy policy. Coordinating energy market reforms and initiatives, such as the Action Plan on Affordable Energy and the European Grids Package, renewable technology build-out and decarbonization incentives can help bring down energy costs and unlock investment at scale.
    6. Maintain a long-term focus on climate. The CID makes it clear that climate ambition is the foundation of Europe’s industrial renewal and strategic autonomy. Sustaining clarity of purpose in policy decisions, setting out clear net-zero pathways and avoiding sudden policy reversals will enhance confidence, positioning banks to support their clients to sustain ambition through political cycles. 

    “The Clean Industrial Deal has great potential to support the EU’s economic and climate goals, especially as it aims to de-risk investments for banks and financial institutions to scale financing for economy-wide low-carbon development.” – Eric Usher, Head of UNEP FI

     

    “Bringing together key stakeholders from banking, business, and policymaking is key to develop understanding of how banks can maximize their participation in the Clean Industrial Deal.” – Wim Mijs, CEO, European Banking Federation

     

    “Mobilizing private capital requires clean technologies and supportive industrial policies. With these in place, banks can play an important role in financing the EU’s industrial ambitions.” – Antoni Ballabriga, Net-Zero Banking Alliance (NZBA) Steering Group member and Global Head Sustainability Intelligence & Advocacy at BBVA

    Creating a financing ecosystem with deep liquid capital markets, better venture funding and more scalable blended finance instruments can support long-term innovation. This can make the difference in moving from setting goals to taking the actions needed to achieve them. 

    UNEP FI, NZBA, and EBF will continue to support banks, financial institutions and policymakers with opportunities for exchange as the Clean Industrial Deal and its supporting policies are further developed.  

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  • Android 16 QPR1 Beta 3: Colorful weather icons return

    Android 16 QPR1 Beta 3: Colorful weather icons return

    Android 16 QPR1 Beta 3 should be the last major preview (excluding any upcoming .1 patches) before the stable launch in September, and Google is making tweaks to weather in At a Glance and the Pixel Launcher search field.

    The first beta introduced a new set of icons for weather conditions that were white, more minimalist, and a bit smaller. Google Clock switched to a similar set last month.

    Android 16 QPR1 Beta 3 is now bringing back the colorful — more expressive — weather set that’s easier to identify at a quick glance, especially on the always-on display. The old approach blended in with the day/date just above. This change appears at the top of your homescreen and underneath the lockscreen clock, as well as the AOD.

    Old vs. new

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    At the same time, the Pixel Launcher search bar has updated the icons for voice search, Google Lens, and AI Mode. Instead of using Google’s four colors, they are now dynamically themed to match the rest of your homescreen. It has the benefit of making the field look less busy if you have all three shortcuts, while giving prominence to the gradient ‘G’ at the left. This change is also present at the top of the app grid.

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