A new JNeurosci study led by Tian-Ming Gao and colleagues at Southern Medical University examined how adenosine triphosphate (ATP) signaling might influence depression and anxiety in male mice. ATP is best known as the cell’s main source of…
Author: admin
-

A hidden brain energy signal drives depression and anxiety
A new JNeurosci study led by Tian-Ming Gao and colleagues at Southern Medical University examined how adenosine triphosphate (ATP) signaling might influence depression and anxiety in male mice. ATP is best known as the cell’s main source of…
Continue Reading
-
Interreg delivers concrete results for remote northern and Arctic regions
The EU Cohesion Policy Interreg Northern Periphery and Arctic 2014–2020 Programme invested approximately EUR 56 million in 58 main projects, generating impact for communities across eight countries. Check out the key achievements.
Innovation: New Tools and Technologies for SMEs
The TARGET project created a transnational innovation toolkit used by manufacturing SMEs across six countries. For example, Axon Power and Controls (Northern Ireland) used the diagnostic tools to identify logistical bottlenecks, while Lough Erne Cakes cut electricity costs by adopting low-energy lighting and hybrid vehicles following expert mentoring. These interventions delivered direct performance improvements and supported long-term sustainability.
Entrepreneurship: New Business Models and Market Access
The SCITOUR project launched a new “scientific tourism” brand, enabling SMEs in Greenland, Iceland, Finland and Scotland to market authentic cultural and research-based experiences jointly through the Wonderseekers digital platform. This transnational brand offered small providers access to global visibility and new customer segments, while integrating sustainable and culturally sensitive tourism practices.
Energy Efficiency: Community-Led Renewable Solutions
The LECo project supported remote settlements in Finland, Ireland, Sweden and Norway in designing local energy concepts. In Vuollerim (Sweden), community stakeholders identified additional renewable energy options beyond hydropower and improved their understanding of how different technologies interact. Local pilots raised awareness and strengthened community participation in energy decision-making.
Heritage and Governance: Strengthening Land-Use Planning
The BusK project developed practical tools for integrating scientific, local and Indigenous knowledge into land-use planning across Finland, Sweden, Greenland, the Faroe Islands, Ireland, Norway and Iceland. By facilitating shared governance processes, the project helped communities handle resource conflicts and improved regional capacity to manage environmental and cultural heritage in rapidly changing conditions.
Business Development: Circular Models and New Value Chains
Concrete innovations emerged in circular economy sectors. SYMBIOMA demonstrated how food-industry by-products can be repurposed into new value chains. At Bottenvikens Brewery (Sweden), one tonne of weekly spent grain was converted into feedstock for mealworm cultivation, which subsequently replaced imported chicken feed. Residual grain was repurposed as organic fertiliser for greenhouses. These solutions reduced waste, cut emissions and created new business opportunities for rural SMEs.
Improved Access to Services: Digital Health and Remote Care
Seventy-one percent of projects improved access to essential services. The SENDoc project tested wearable sensor technology in 13 pilots to support prevention, diagnostics and rehabilitation for older adults in remote areas. The project produced two operational service models demonstrating how home-based rehabilitation can be delivered using sensor data, and how early intervention needs can be detected through daily-life monitoring. Trials showed high acceptance, especially when devices were comfortable and easy to use.
Raising Awareness: Culturally Sensitive Arctic Tourism
Through the ARCTISEN project, service providers across the Arctic received guidelines, online courses, videos and toolkits promoting culturally sensitive tourism. These materials were based on community interviews, benchmarking and local–Indigenous collaboration. The project strengthened understanding of respectful representation of Sámi and other Indigenous cultures in tourism products.
Changing Attitudes: Empowering Women Entrepreneurs
The W-POWER project introduced gender-sensitive coaching across rural regions, enabling business advisors to better support women, Indigenous entrepreneurs and migrants. Participants reported stronger confidence, expanded networks and improved business capabilities. In Shetland, the Realise group offered peer support that significantly improved local women entrepreneurs’ resilience and visibility.
Influencing Policy: Climate Adaptation Across Northern Ireland
The C.L.I.M.A.T.E. project delivered the International Best Practice Model for climate adaptation planning, used to shape Derry City & Strabane District Council’s Climate Change Adaptation Plan 2020–2025. Following the project, all other Northern Ireland councils joined a new Local Government Climate Action Network to develop their own plans, marking a major shift towards coordinated climate resilience.
Social Cohesion: Supporting Intergenerational Integration
The PLACE-EE project addressed social isolation by organising intergenerational workshops across rural regions. In Limerick County, young people taught older adults how to use digital devices for communication and online services, strengthening independence, reducing loneliness and enhancing community connections.
Arctic Cooperation: Strengthening Cross-Programme Synergies
Four Arctic Cluster projects brought together partners from five Interreg and cross-border programmes. For example, ARCTIC PACER connected 30 organisations across 20 regions to exchange good practices on community energy solutions, building stronger links between national and regional actors across the Arctic.
The Northern Periphery and Arctic 2014–2020 Programme’s results demonstrate how cooperation across long distances can deliver concrete innovation, improve public services and strengthen resilience in remote areas. The Programme continues in 2021–2027, supporting sustainable growth and community wellbeing across the northern periphery and Arctic.
Continue Reading
-

Jingle Bell Heist review – Netflix comedy is slight cut above standard festive filler | Comedy films
We’re a few weeks into the annual Netflix Christmas dump and standards have already fallen below freezing. In both Alicia Silverstone’s A Merry Little Ex-Mas and Minka Kelly’s Champagne Problems, motions were lethargically, and cheaply,…
Continue Reading
-

iQOO 15 Launches as a Comprehensive Flagship with Performance Beyond Next, Delivering a Revolutionary Gaming Experience
iQOO 15 Launches as a Comprehensive Flagship with Performance Beyond Next, Delivering a Revolutionary Gaming Experience
…Continue Reading
-

The Era 300 speaker is on sale for $100 off, plus more discounts
Black Friday is as good a time as any to upgrade your home audio setup. You can get the Sonos Era 300, the company’s only standalone speaker with spatial audio, for $379. That’s $100 off what Engadget’s Nathan Ingraham called “a great speaker,…
Continue Reading
-

Electricity market designs must evolve to keep pace with changing system needs – News
New IEA report examines how targeted policies can support wholesale markets across regions and address common challenges to support secure, affordable and sustainable electricity systems
Well-functioning electricity markets can be an efficient tool for balancing supply and demand, coordinating operational decisions and signalling investment needs. As electricity systems transform to accommodate a broader range of technologies and growing power demand, effective market designs for secure operations and timely investment are essential, according to a new IEA report released today.
The report – Electricity Market Design: Building on strengths, addressing gaps – looks at how wholesale market designs and the policies that complement them are performing across Europe, the United States, Japan and Australia, and provides insights on how they can adapt to changing system needs. It finds that while short-term markets have performed well in supporting efficient and secure electricity dispatch, long-term markets have been less effective in meeting investment and risk-management needs.
Complementary mechanisms, such as capacity remuneration schemes and renewable support programmes, have played a significant role in advancing investment and policy objectives, but in some cases their design has contributed to system inefficiencies and higher costs, the report says.
Across the markets analysed, electricity has been securely supplied more than 99.9% of the time over the past five years. Short-term markets have been broadly effective in maintaining reliable and efficient operations even as systems become more complex. They have enabled efficient scheduling, transparent price formation and broad participation across a diverse set of resources and actors. In Europe, for instance, the day-ahead market processes more than 400 000 bids every hour across thousands of registered actors.
Long-term markets, however, suffer from low liquidity across most of the regions analysed. This limits how easily market participants can find opportunities to protect themselves against short-term price risks. In forward and futures markets, most trading happens no more than 2 years ahead of electricity delivery, far short of the horizons of 10 to 30 years typically required to finance new capital-intensive projects. Overall, long-term market gaps make it harder for market participants to manage price risks over the time frames needed for investing in new generation, storage and electrification projects.
For needs that markets alone cannot meet, complementary mechanisms provide targeted support to bring forward new investment and maintain essential existing capacity. Across many regions, they have helped advance policy objectives such as resource adequacy and emissions reductions targets. These mechanisms have become a structural feature of electricity markets, helping to deliver large-scale, low-emissions generation and retain dispatchable and flexible resources which may operate less frequently with rising shares of variable renewables, while remaining essential for system security.
Overall, the report finds that short-term markets have managed to remain effective, and their strengths should be preserved while refining their designs to reflect the needs of more dynamic and distributed systems. Long-term markets have shown several gaps, undermining investment conditions and risk management. Many market participants would benefit from reforms that increase the liquidity, duration and accessibility of long-term markets.
The report underscores the importance of taking a holistic view of wholesale electricity market design. The analysis highlights the benefits of evolving market designs and emphasises the need for transparent and predictable reform processes to maintain stakeholder confidence and support effective implementation.
Continue Reading
-

Nokia and Telefónica Germany agree 5-year RAN deal to advance 5G expansion
Nokia today announced a new 5-year contract extension with its strategic partner, Telefónica Germany (Telefónica) to modernize and upgrade its nationwide radio access network until 2030. The agreement includes Nokia’s advanced Cloud RAN solutions, and supports Telefónica’s ambitions for rapid 5G expansion and sustainable digitalization across Germany, and delivering premium customer experiences. Nokia’s AI-powered solutions will also support Telefónica’s move to transform its operations and network performance using AI.
Under the agreement, Nokia will supply its energy-efficient and AI-ready AirScale Radio Access Network (RAN) portfolio, including Habrok Massive MIMO radios for the n78 spectrum band, Pandion multi-band remote radio heads, and AirScale Radio small cell solutions. These technologies will ensure comprehensive coverage and seamless indoor connectivity while driving efficiency and scalability. Additionally, Nokia will provide its latest baseband solutions to enhance Telefónica’s 5G network performance and reliability.
The deployment will also feature Nokia’s Interleaved Passive Active Antenna (IPAA+) solution, simplifying site design and accelerating 5G rollout. The contract includes maintenance and network optimization services.
Telefónica will continue to use Nokia’s AI-powered network management solution, MantaRay NM, which supports purpose-built RAN and Cloud RAN, including data center hardware and cloud infrastructure. It provides comprehensive operation and maintenance capabilities for network elements in core, radio, and transport networks, both for managing physical network elements as well as virtualized network functions. This is the first step towards an ambition shared by both companies to evolve Telefónica Germany network to the automation level 4 through AI-powered orchestration solutions.
';
Continue Reading
-
ADB approves $48m additional financing for water project in Balochistan
Funding to support modern piped water supply system which will help reduce water wastage, support employment
Additional financing of $48 million has been…
Continue Reading
-

Fame may shorten singers’ lives beyond occupational hazards
Fame itself may be a critical factor in shortening singers’ lives beyond the hazards of the job-at least those in the UK/Europe and North America-suggests research published online in the Journal of Epidemiology & Community…
Continue Reading