๐ A visitor from another star just got photographed โ and the image is stunning
For only the third time in recorded history, an object from outside our solar system is passing through โ and this time, we were ready for it.
Comet 3I/ATLAS was first spotted in July 2025, screaming through space at 137,000 mph on a trajectory that could only mean one thing: it came from interstellar space, likely from the direction of the Milky Way's Galactic Center. Scientists believe it's been traveling for billions of years.
ESA's JUICE spacecraft โ originally headed to Jupiter's moons โ managed to photograph it from 66 million km away, revealing a glowing coma and a sweeping tail of gas and dust. Over 120 images were taken across multiple wavelengths. The data only arrived on Earth in February 2026, and researchers are still analyzing it.
Why does this matter? Unlike any comet born in our solar system, 3I/ATLAS carries material from another part of the galaxy entirely โ a time capsule from a foreign star system. What it's made of could tell us how planets and comets form in places we'll never be able to visit.
Full findings are expected later in March. This story is just getting started. ๐
๐ Read more โ Scientific American
For only the third time in recorded history, an object from outside our solar system is passing through โ and this time, we were ready for it.
Comet 3I/ATLAS was first spotted in July 2025, screaming through space at 137,000 mph on a trajectory that could only mean one thing: it came from interstellar space, likely from the direction of the Milky Way's Galactic Center. Scientists believe it's been traveling for billions of years.
ESA's JUICE spacecraft โ originally headed to Jupiter's moons โ managed to photograph it from 66 million km away, revealing a glowing coma and a sweeping tail of gas and dust. Over 120 images were taken across multiple wavelengths. The data only arrived on Earth in February 2026, and researchers are still analyzing it.
Why does this matter? Unlike any comet born in our solar system, 3I/ATLAS carries material from another part of the galaxy entirely โ a time capsule from a foreign star system. What it's made of could tell us how planets and comets form in places we'll never be able to visit.
Full findings are expected later in March. This story is just getting started. ๐
๐ Read more โ Scientific American
Scientific American
Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS captured speeding through the solar system by Jupiter-bound spacecraft
This mysterious interstellar visitor is on a whirlwind journey through our solar system
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๐ฌ Anthropic Study: AI Could Already Do a Quarter of Our Work โ But Humans Rarely Use It Yet
@science
๐ A new analysis from Anthropicโs Economic Index looks at millions of real interactions with the AI assistant Claude to understand how AI is actually used at work today โ and how much more it could do.
๐ Key insight:
Thereโs a huge gap between AI capability and real-world usage.
What the data shows:
โช๏ธ Around 44โ49% of jobs contain tasks that AI could already assist with.
๐น At least ~25% of tasks in the U.S. economy are technically accessible to current AI systems.
โช๏ธ But most of those capabilities remain largely unused in practice.
๐น When AI is used, it usually augments humans rather than replacing them.
In other words:
AI could already do far more work than it currently does โ but adoption is still catching up.
๐ If widely adopted, current-generation AI could increase labor productivity growth by roughly ~1โ1.8 percentage points per year, potentially doubling recent productivity trends.
๐ก The implication:
The real transformation may not come from new AI breakthroughs โ but from people gradually using the tools that already exist.
๐ฌ Question:
Which tasks in your job could AI already handle today โ but nobody is actually using it for yet?
๐ Source:
https://www.anthropic.com/research/labor-market-impacts
#AI #FutureOfWork #Anthropic #Productivity #Technology
@science
๐ A new analysis from Anthropicโs Economic Index looks at millions of real interactions with the AI assistant Claude to understand how AI is actually used at work today โ and how much more it could do.
๐ Key insight:
Thereโs a huge gap between AI capability and real-world usage.
What the data shows:
โช๏ธ Around 44โ49% of jobs contain tasks that AI could already assist with.
๐น At least ~25% of tasks in the U.S. economy are technically accessible to current AI systems.
โช๏ธ But most of those capabilities remain largely unused in practice.
๐น When AI is used, it usually augments humans rather than replacing them.
In other words:
AI could already do far more work than it currently does โ but adoption is still catching up.
๐ If widely adopted, current-generation AI could increase labor productivity growth by roughly ~1โ1.8 percentage points per year, potentially doubling recent productivity trends.
๐ก The implication:
The real transformation may not come from new AI breakthroughs โ but from people gradually using the tools that already exist.
๐ฌ Question:
Which tasks in your job could AI already handle today โ but nobody is actually using it for yet?
๐ Source:
https://www.anthropic.com/research/labor-market-impacts
#AI #FutureOfWork #Anthropic #Productivity #Technology
Anthropic
Labor market impacts of AI: A new measure and early evidence
Anthropic is an AI safety and research company that's working to build reliable, interpretable, and steerable AI systems.
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๐ง Scientists Ran a Real Fly Brain Inside a Virtual Body
@science
๐ A team of researchers has recreated the entire brain of a fruit fly neuron-by-neuron and launched it inside a simulated body.
This isnโt a neural network trained to imitate a fly.
Itโs something far stranger: a structural copy of the real biological brain.
The system includes roughly:
โช๏ธ ~125,000 neurons
โช๏ธ ~50 million synapses
โช๏ธ The original wiring diagram reconstructed from connectomics data
Virtual sensory signals enter the model, neural activity propagates through the network exactly as it would in the real insect, and the simulated body moves in response.
In other words: the flyโs brain is effectively running inside a digital organism.
๐ฌ Researchers built the system using detailed neural mapping and simulation tools developed in the emerging field of whole-brain emulation.
The long-term goal is even more ambitious:
๐ the same approach could eventually be applied to mouse brains, which are several orders of magnitude more complex.
If that succeeds, it would represent a major step toward true digital organisms โ simulated bodies driven by real biological neural architectures.
๐ค Anime fans of Pantheon may feel a sense of dรฉjร vu.
๐ More details: https://eon.systems
๐ฌ Discussion:
If a brainโs wiring and signals can be perfectly reproduced in software, where exactly does the organism โexistโ?
#neuroscience #connectomics #simulation #digitalbiology #AI #science
@science
๐ A team of researchers has recreated the entire brain of a fruit fly neuron-by-neuron and launched it inside a simulated body.
This isnโt a neural network trained to imitate a fly.
Itโs something far stranger: a structural copy of the real biological brain.
The system includes roughly:
โช๏ธ ~125,000 neurons
โช๏ธ ~50 million synapses
โช๏ธ The original wiring diagram reconstructed from connectomics data
Virtual sensory signals enter the model, neural activity propagates through the network exactly as it would in the real insect, and the simulated body moves in response.
In other words: the flyโs brain is effectively running inside a digital organism.
๐ฌ Researchers built the system using detailed neural mapping and simulation tools developed in the emerging field of whole-brain emulation.
The long-term goal is even more ambitious:
๐ the same approach could eventually be applied to mouse brains, which are several orders of magnitude more complex.
If that succeeds, it would represent a major step toward true digital organisms โ simulated bodies driven by real biological neural architectures.
๐ค Anime fans of Pantheon may feel a sense of dรฉjร vu.
๐ More details: https://eon.systems
๐ฌ Discussion:
If a brainโs wiring and signals can be perfectly reproduced in software, where exactly does the organism โexistโ?
#neuroscience #connectomics #simulation #digitalbiology #AI #science
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Modern teens are sleeping less than ever โ study finds
A new study suggests that todayโs teenagers are getting far less sleep than their peers did in the 2000s โ and the trend is becoming a serious health concern.
Researchers analyzed data from more than 120,000 U.S. high school students collected between 2007 and 2023. Their findings show that a full 8 hours of sleep on school nights is becoming increasingly rare.
Key findings:
โข The share of teens sleeping less than 7 hours rose from 68.9% to 76.8%
โข The proportion sleeping less than 5 hours increased from 15.8% to 23%
โข Nearly 1 in 4 high school students now lives with extremely severe sleep deprivation
The researchers say the issue is not only that teens are sleeping a bit less overall โ the number of adolescents getting catastrophically little sleep is also rising.
The trend was observed not only in vulnerable groups, but across the board. Teenagers with depression appear to be especially affected.
Chronic sleep deprivation is associated with higher risks of:
โข depression
โข cardiovascular disease
โข diabetes
The study is based on self-reported sleep data, but the authors argue that the findings are serious enough to justify changes in school policy โ including later school start times, which could improve sleep, mental health, and academic performance.
Source: JAMA
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/article-abstract/2845759
A new study suggests that todayโs teenagers are getting far less sleep than their peers did in the 2000s โ and the trend is becoming a serious health concern.
Researchers analyzed data from more than 120,000 U.S. high school students collected between 2007 and 2023. Their findings show that a full 8 hours of sleep on school nights is becoming increasingly rare.
Key findings:
โข The share of teens sleeping less than 7 hours rose from 68.9% to 76.8%
โข The proportion sleeping less than 5 hours increased from 15.8% to 23%
โข Nearly 1 in 4 high school students now lives with extremely severe sleep deprivation
The researchers say the issue is not only that teens are sleeping a bit less overall โ the number of adolescents getting catastrophically little sleep is also rising.
The trend was observed not only in vulnerable groups, but across the board. Teenagers with depression appear to be especially affected.
Chronic sleep deprivation is associated with higher risks of:
โข depression
โข cardiovascular disease
โข diabetes
The study is based on self-reported sleep data, but the authors argue that the findings are serious enough to justify changes in school policy โ including later school start times, which could improve sleep, mental health, and academic performance.
Source: JAMA
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/article-abstract/2845759
Jamanetwork
Insufficient Sleep Among US Adolescents Across Behavioral Risk Groups
This study examines national trends in insufficient sleep from 2007-2023 and whether trends differed by demographic or behavioral risk subgroups.
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Some Australian crypto-schizo basement vibe-coded a cancer vaccine for his dog.
โข Aussie IT guy adopts a shelter dog with terminal cancer โ vets say sheโs got a couple months left
โข refuses to give up
โข pays $3,000 to sequence the tumor DNA
โข dumps the data into ChatGPT and AlphaFold
โข has zero formal biology background
โข finds mutated proteins, matches them to drug targets
โข designs a custom mRNA cancer vaccine from scratch
โข professor of genomics is basically like: what the hell, this random dog owner actually did it
โข then comes the real final boss: ethics approval
โข bureaucracy takes longer than designing the vaccine
โข 3 months later โ approval finally comes through
โข he drives 10 hours to get Rosie her first shot
โข tumor shrinks by half
โข her coat gets shiny again
โข dog is alive, happy, wagging
โข professor says: โIf we can do this for a dog, why arenโt we doing this for humans?โ
original tweet: https://x.com/IterIntellectus/status/2032858964858228817
Australian TV segment: https://youtu.be/COYSRbF1F-Y?si=pjf6wdwSYjWPgXHq
โข Aussie IT guy adopts a shelter dog with terminal cancer โ vets say sheโs got a couple months left
โข refuses to give up
โข pays $3,000 to sequence the tumor DNA
โข dumps the data into ChatGPT and AlphaFold
โข has zero formal biology background
โข finds mutated proteins, matches them to drug targets
โข designs a custom mRNA cancer vaccine from scratch
โข professor of genomics is basically like: what the hell, this random dog owner actually did it
โข then comes the real final boss: ethics approval
โข bureaucracy takes longer than designing the vaccine
โข 3 months later โ approval finally comes through
โข he drives 10 hours to get Rosie her first shot
โข tumor shrinks by half
โข her coat gets shiny again
โข dog is alive, happy, wagging
โข professor says: โIf we can do this for a dog, why arenโt we doing this for humans?โ
original tweet: https://x.com/IterIntellectus/status/2032858964858228817
Australian TV segment: https://youtu.be/COYSRbF1F-Y?si=pjf6wdwSYjWPgXHq
X (formerly Twitter)
vittorio (@IterIntellectus) on X
this is actually insane
> be tech guy in australia
> adopt cancer riddled rescue dog, months to live
> not_going_to_give_you_up.mp4
> pay $3,000 to sequence her tumor DNA
> feed it to ChatGPT and AlphaFold
> zero background in biology
> identify mutatedโฆ
> be tech guy in australia
> adopt cancer riddled rescue dog, months to live
> not_going_to_give_you_up.mp4
> pay $3,000 to sequence her tumor DNA
> feed it to ChatGPT and AlphaFold
> zero background in biology
> identify mutatedโฆ
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๐ง A brain floating in space โ and itโs real
NASAโs James Webb Space Telescope just released the sharpest images ever taken of nebula PMR 1, nicknamed the โExposed Craniumโ โ because it looks almost exactly like a human brain inside a transparent skull.
PMR 1 is a planetary nebula โ an expanding shell of ionized gas and dust expelled by a star in the final stages of its life, as the nuclear fuel in its core runs out.
Webb captured it in both near- and mid-infrared light. The images reveal a distinctive dark lane running vertically through the center, dividing the nebula into two lobes โ just like left and right brain hemispheres. That eerie split is likely carved by twin polar jets blasting outward from the dying star at its core.
The central star is several times more massive than our Sun and is just a few thousand years from its ultimate fate โ either a spectacular supernova or a quiet collapse into a white dwarf. Scientists arenโt sure yet which way it will go.
The nebula was first spotted by the Spitzer telescope back in 2013, but Webbโs more advanced instruments now reveal features that were previously invisible, making its brain-like structure stand out with unprecedented clarity.
The universe has a sense of aesthetics.
๐ Source: https://science.nasa.gov/missions/webb/nasas-webb-examines-cranium-nebula/
#space #JWST #astronomy #nebula #science
NASAโs James Webb Space Telescope just released the sharpest images ever taken of nebula PMR 1, nicknamed the โExposed Craniumโ โ because it looks almost exactly like a human brain inside a transparent skull.
PMR 1 is a planetary nebula โ an expanding shell of ionized gas and dust expelled by a star in the final stages of its life, as the nuclear fuel in its core runs out.
Webb captured it in both near- and mid-infrared light. The images reveal a distinctive dark lane running vertically through the center, dividing the nebula into two lobes โ just like left and right brain hemispheres. That eerie split is likely carved by twin polar jets blasting outward from the dying star at its core.
The central star is several times more massive than our Sun and is just a few thousand years from its ultimate fate โ either a spectacular supernova or a quiet collapse into a white dwarf. Scientists arenโt sure yet which way it will go.
The nebula was first spotted by the Spitzer telescope back in 2013, but Webbโs more advanced instruments now reveal features that were previously invisible, making its brain-like structure stand out with unprecedented clarity.
The universe has a sense of aesthetics.
๐ Source: https://science.nasa.gov/missions/webb/nasas-webb-examines-cranium-nebula/
#space #JWST #astronomy #nebula #science
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Metaโs Tribe v2 AI predicts human brain response to visuals & audio โ without needing new training for unseen languages
๐ง Meta* has developed Tribe v2, an artificial intelligence model that can reliably predict how the human brain reacts to visual and auditory content. According to Meta, the model is designed for scientific purposes, aimed at advancing neuroscience research.
๐ The system was trained on fMRI data from four individuals, plus brainโactivity records from over 700 volunteers. Participants were shown images, videos, text, and listened to podcasts while their neural signals were recorded.
๐ฎ Tribe v2 learned to โreliablyโ forecast brain activity โ and can even make predictions for languages that were not included in the original dataset, with no extra training. Meta emphasizes that the modelโs goal is to help neuroscientists test hypotheses without involving human subjects.
#AI #Neuroscience #BrainImaging #MachineLearning #Science #NeuroscienceResearch
๐ง Meta* has developed Tribe v2, an artificial intelligence model that can reliably predict how the human brain reacts to visual and auditory content. According to Meta, the model is designed for scientific purposes, aimed at advancing neuroscience research.
๐ The system was trained on fMRI data from four individuals, plus brainโactivity records from over 700 volunteers. Participants were shown images, videos, text, and listened to podcasts while their neural signals were recorded.
๐ฎ Tribe v2 learned to โreliablyโ forecast brain activity โ and can even make predictions for languages that were not included in the original dataset, with no extra training. Meta emphasizes that the modelโs goal is to help neuroscientists test hypotheses without involving human subjects.
#AI #Neuroscience #BrainImaging #MachineLearning #Science #NeuroscienceResearch
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Chinese engineers shift from nimble androids to hyperโrealistic robot faces โ sparking ethics debate
๐จ๐ณ After achieving solid results in creating agile, fastโmoving androids, Chinese engineers have now turned to developing hyperโrealistic robot faces. A demonstration of a female robot face by Yuhang Hu, founder of Shouxing Technology, has ignited public discussion.
๐ค Experts are debating the ethics of humanoid machines that are indistinguishable from real humans. This video proves that such technology is already within reach of today's robotics industry.
#Robotics #AI #science #HumanoidRobots #ChinaTech #FutureTech
๐จ๐ณ After achieving solid results in creating agile, fastโmoving androids, Chinese engineers have now turned to developing hyperโrealistic robot faces. A demonstration of a female robot face by Yuhang Hu, founder of Shouxing Technology, has ignited public discussion.
๐ค Experts are debating the ethics of humanoid machines that are indistinguishable from real humans. This video proves that such technology is already within reach of today's robotics industry.
#Robotics #AI #science #HumanoidRobots #ChinaTech #FutureTech
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Saturnโs winds are far deeper than we thought โ and that changes everything ๐
Saturn is famous for its extreme winds โ reaching up to ~1,600โ1,800 km/h.
But the real mystery wasnโt speed.
It was depth.
For decades, scientists didnโt know whether these jet streams were just shallow โweatherโโฆ or something much bigger.
Now, thanks to data from the CassiniโHuygens mission, we finally have an answer.
๐ New studies show that Saturnโs winds donโt just skim the surface โ
they extend thousands of kilometers deep into the planet.
โข Equatorial winds may reach depths of up to ~10,000 km
โข High-latitude winds are shallower, but still massive
โข Below the clouds, winds can even become stronger than what we see at the surface
Why does this happen?
Because Saturn isnโt like Earth.
๐ Earthโs atmosphere is thin and sits on solid ground
๐ช Saturn has no solid surface, and its atmosphere blends into its interior
Add to that:
โข intense internal heat
โข rapid rotation (~10.7 hours per day)
โข almost no friction
โ and you get a planet-scale engine of continuous motion
Even more fascinating:
these deep flows actually affect Saturnโs gravity field, which is how scientists detected them in the first place.
๐ English source:
Read the study overview
โธป
Saturn isnโt just a gas giant.
Itโs a 10,000-km-deep storm system.
Imagine weather that doesnโt just happen in the sky โ
but inside the planet itself.
#space #saturn #astronomy #science #cosmos
Saturn is famous for its extreme winds โ reaching up to ~1,600โ1,800 km/h.
But the real mystery wasnโt speed.
It was depth.
For decades, scientists didnโt know whether these jet streams were just shallow โweatherโโฆ or something much bigger.
Now, thanks to data from the CassiniโHuygens mission, we finally have an answer.
๐ New studies show that Saturnโs winds donโt just skim the surface โ
they extend thousands of kilometers deep into the planet.
โข Equatorial winds may reach depths of up to ~10,000 km
โข High-latitude winds are shallower, but still massive
โข Below the clouds, winds can even become stronger than what we see at the surface
Why does this happen?
Because Saturn isnโt like Earth.
๐ Earthโs atmosphere is thin and sits on solid ground
๐ช Saturn has no solid surface, and its atmosphere blends into its interior
Add to that:
โข intense internal heat
โข rapid rotation (~10.7 hours per day)
โข almost no friction
โ and you get a planet-scale engine of continuous motion
Even more fascinating:
these deep flows actually affect Saturnโs gravity field, which is how scientists detected them in the first place.
๐ English source:
Read the study overview
โธป
Saturn isnโt just a gas giant.
Itโs a 10,000-km-deep storm system.
Imagine weather that doesnโt just happen in the sky โ
but inside the planet itself.
#space #saturn #astronomy #science #cosmos
Science
Winds of Change on Saturn
At long last, scientists figure out which way the wind blows on gas giant
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"EBIDTA - Earnings Before Iran & Donald Trump
Announcements"
Announcements"
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๐ Historic Moon Mission: Artemis II Launches!
For the first time in half a century, the United States has sent a rocket carrying astronauts toward the Moon. The Artemis II mission lifted off from Kennedy Space Center in Florida earlier today.
Crew:
โข Three NASA astronauts
โข One Canadian Space Agency astronaut
Mission profile:
The flight will last approximately 10 days. Unlike the Apollo missions, Artemis II will not land on the lunar surfaceโthat milestone is planned for 2028 under the Artemis III mission.
๐จโ๐๐๐ #ArtemisII #NASA #MoonMission #SpaceExploration #ScienceNews #science
For the first time in half a century, the United States has sent a rocket carrying astronauts toward the Moon. The Artemis II mission lifted off from Kennedy Space Center in Florida earlier today.
Crew:
โข Three NASA astronauts
โข One Canadian Space Agency astronaut
Mission profile:
The flight will last approximately 10 days. Unlike the Apollo missions, Artemis II will not land on the lunar surfaceโthat milestone is planned for 2028 under the Artemis III mission.
๐จโ๐๐๐ #ArtemisII #NASA #MoonMission #SpaceExploration #ScienceNews #science
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A view of the Earth from NASAโs Orion spacecraft as it orbits above the planet during the Artemis II test flight. NASA astronauts Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, and Mission Specialist Christina Koch, and CSA (Canadian Space Agency) astronaut Mission Specialist Jeremy Hansen, launched at 6:35 p.m. EDT on Wednesday, April 1, 2026, on an approximately 10-day mission around the Moon and back to Earth.
NASA
NASA
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A global fuel crunch may be unfolding โ and the signals are getting harder to ignore.
Across Asia, Africa, and parts of Europe, governments are already introducing emergency measures: fuel rationing, shorter work weeks, and restrictions on daily life.
Hereโs whatโs happening:
๐ง๐ฉ Bangladesh โ fuel rationing in place, universities closed, military deployed to guard oil depots.
๐ฑ๐ฐ Sri Lanka โ private vehicles limited to ~15 liters per week; schools shifted to a four-day schedule.
๐ฉ๐ช Germany โ fuel prices exceeding โฌ3 per liter in some regions; industrial pressure rising.
๐ธ๐ฎ Slovenia โ daily fuel caps: ~50 liters for private drivers, ~200 liters for businesses and agriculture.
๐ต๐ญ Philippines โ national energy emergency declared; four-day work week introduced.
๐ฐ๐ช Kenya โ fuel shortages spreading outside major cities.
๐ช๐ฌ Egypt โ rationing of fuel and electricity; businesses closing earlier to conserve energy.
๐จ๐ณ China โ export restrictions on diesel, gasoline, and aviation fuel.
๐ฐ๐ท South Korea โ fuel price caps introduced for the first time in ~30 years.
๐ฌ๐ง United Kingdom โ authorities considering potential fuel rationing scenarios.
๐ช๐บ European Union โ emergency discussions underway as fuel reserves in some countries reportedly fall below ~30% of required minimum levels.
Meanwhile, major industrial players like BASF are already raising prices (reportedly up to +30%), signaling pressure across supply chains.
โธป
What does this mean?
This isnโt just about fuel โ itโs a systemic stress signal:
โข Energy shortages โ industrial slowdown
โข Logistics disruptions โ rising prices
โข Policy interventions โ changes in daily life
If the trend continues, we may be looking at a broader energy-driven economic shift rather than isolated regional issues.
โธป
The key question:
Are we seeing a temporary imbalanceโฆ or the early stage of a global energy reset?
#energy #economy #geopolitics #fuel #science
Across Asia, Africa, and parts of Europe, governments are already introducing emergency measures: fuel rationing, shorter work weeks, and restrictions on daily life.
Hereโs whatโs happening:
๐ง๐ฉ Bangladesh โ fuel rationing in place, universities closed, military deployed to guard oil depots.
๐ฑ๐ฐ Sri Lanka โ private vehicles limited to ~15 liters per week; schools shifted to a four-day schedule.
๐ฉ๐ช Germany โ fuel prices exceeding โฌ3 per liter in some regions; industrial pressure rising.
๐ธ๐ฎ Slovenia โ daily fuel caps: ~50 liters for private drivers, ~200 liters for businesses and agriculture.
๐ต๐ญ Philippines โ national energy emergency declared; four-day work week introduced.
๐ฐ๐ช Kenya โ fuel shortages spreading outside major cities.
๐ช๐ฌ Egypt โ rationing of fuel and electricity; businesses closing earlier to conserve energy.
๐จ๐ณ China โ export restrictions on diesel, gasoline, and aviation fuel.
๐ฐ๐ท South Korea โ fuel price caps introduced for the first time in ~30 years.
๐ฌ๐ง United Kingdom โ authorities considering potential fuel rationing scenarios.
๐ช๐บ European Union โ emergency discussions underway as fuel reserves in some countries reportedly fall below ~30% of required minimum levels.
Meanwhile, major industrial players like BASF are already raising prices (reportedly up to +30%), signaling pressure across supply chains.
โธป
What does this mean?
This isnโt just about fuel โ itโs a systemic stress signal:
โข Energy shortages โ industrial slowdown
โข Logistics disruptions โ rising prices
โข Policy interventions โ changes in daily life
If the trend continues, we may be looking at a broader energy-driven economic shift rather than isolated regional issues.
โธป
The key question:
Are we seeing a temporary imbalanceโฆ or the early stage of a global energy reset?
#energy #economy #geopolitics #fuel #science
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๐ A new human distance record in space
Astronauts aboard Artemis II mission have traveled farther from Earth than any humans before โ breaking the record of Apollo 13 (400,171 km).
๐ New peak: 406,778 km from Earth (within hours)
After that, the Orion spacecraft will begin its return journey.
A historic step toward deep space exploration ๐
Astronauts aboard Artemis II mission have traveled farther from Earth than any humans before โ breaking the record of Apollo 13 (400,171 km).
๐ New peak: 406,778 km from Earth (within hours)
After that, the Orion spacecraft will begin its return journey.
A historic step toward deep space exploration ๐
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