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world
2026
- Artificial intelligence could pose a "more urgent" threat to humanity than climate change, AI pioneer Geoffrey Hinton told Reuters in an interview on Friday. Geoffrey Hinton, widely known as one of the "godfathers of AI", recently announced he had quit Alphabet, opens new tab after a decade at the firm, saying he wanted to speak out on the risks of the technology without it affecting his former employer.
Global effort needed to limit effects of pollution, industrial fishing and climate crisis, World Ocean Assessment says
World is approaching point where no one can shut down a rogue AI, says director of body behind research
Y a-t-il un lien entre le plastique et les ouragans Sandy et Katrina, aux États-Unis, la fonte des glaciers dans l’Antarctique, les vagues de chaleur pendant l’été, l’érosion du littoral en Australie — et quantité d’autres catastrophes naturelles qui s’abattent sur nous avec une fréquence accrue ? Nous incriminons le changement climatique. Mais l’impact des déchets plastiques et de l’industrie du plastique sur le changement climatique est souvent méconnu ou, pire, pris à la légère.
Les systèmes d’intelligence artificielle générative, qui parlent si bien, ne comprennent pas encore le monde. De nouvelles méthodes physiques ou statistiques comme les world models, ou « modèles de monde », permettraient de les doter d’une forme de sens commun, qui leur servirait à mieux simuler la réalité et de mieux interagir avec elle.
A climate monster is growing right now in the Pacific Ocean, perhaps the most fearsome El Niño since before scientists even began modeling them. They now know the pattern quite well: A marine heat-wave in the Pacific Ocean scrambles global weather and produces in some places more intense droughts and in others more intense rainfall and flooding; disruptions to hurricane patterns and monsoon seasons, which can cause widespread crop failures; and much more punishing heat.
The European Center for Medium Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) earlier this year issued a forecast of a strong (“Super”) El Nino to begin later this year and peak in early 2027, as we have discussed in two earlier posts.3,4 El Ninos are important because of the large effects that they have on global weather, even though those effects are not always consistent from one El Nino to another. El Ninos have even greater effect in combination with ongoing global warming, e.g., Radfar et al.5 find that the combination of an El Nino with increasingly prevalent marine heat waves results in tropical cyclones consistently producing higher maximum wind speeds, storm surges, and precipitation rates, and Liu et al.6 describe evidence of El Ninos strengthened control over global climate anomalies in a warmer world
Oil has empowered capitalism, and some of the world’s most exploitative regimes. Move away from it and we can solve some of the key issues we face
What is currently happening in Brussels under the guise of regulatory simplification is being presented as something technical and logical. Less regulatory pressure, more competitiveness. A series of so-called omnibus bills are intended to streamline legislation. Reporting obligations are being limited and reassessments of raw materials postponed. It sounds like administrative efficiency. In Washington, things are moving even faster: Trump is dismantling the basis for climate laws while the world continues to warm up. The framing is the same: rules slow down businesses, and a slowed-down business community makes us poor. But that reasoning assumes something that is not true: that everyone wants the same thing from the market.
Doyne Farmer says a super-simulator of the global economy would accelerate the transition to a green, clean world





