Sunday, November 16, 2025

With More U.S. Tariff Clarity Big Money Into Korean Domestic Investment (hundreds of billions USD equiv.)

1 million Korean won =  688 USD.

First up, a quick overview from Global Korea Post, November 16:

Korean Conglomerates Respond to Joint Fact Sheet Meeting with Record Domestic Investment 

  • Following the U.S.–Korea tariff agreement, major chaebol commit to large-scale domestic investment to safeguard Korea’s industrial base
  • Samsung, SK, Hyundai Motor, LG demonstrate coordinated policy alignment with the government ...

MUCH MORE, they go deep on all seven major groups 

And zeroing in on chips: 

The Korea Herald, November 16:

SK to pour 128 tln won into domestic investment through 2028 

South Korean conglomerate SK Group said Sunday it will invest 128 trillion won ($87.9 billion) through 2028 in the domestic market, with a focus on chip manufacturing to meet the growing demand in artificial intelligence fields.

The chip-to-chemical enterprise will build four large-scale semiconductor fabrication plants over the years in its main Yongin chip cluster, south of Seoul, with the amount of investment likely to increase to up to 600 trillion won.

The announcement came after SK Group Chairman Chey Tae-won unveiled the plans during a business leaders' meeting with President Lee Jae Myung earlier in the day, to discuss efforts to spur domestic investments by major companies following the conclusion of a trade deal with the United States.

Chey said during the meeting that the investments could rise to around 600 trillion won for the Yongin chip compound alone, given soaring demand for AI memory chips, including high-bandwidth memory.

SK Group plans to adjust the construction speed of the envisioned fabs depending on chip demand and market conditions, gradually expanding the investment in phases.

SK hynix Inc., the group's semiconductor manufacturing unit, is jointly building the "Trinity Fab" with the government at the Yongin complex, a project worth 860 billion won, to boost the domestic ecosystem of semiconductor components....

....MUCH MORE 

And at Chosun Biz, again November 16:

Chey Tae-won pledges 600 trillion won Yongin investment, vows 20,000 jobs yearly 

Chey Tae-won, chairman of SK Group, met President Lee Jae-myung on the 16th and said about domestic investment plans, “An investment of about 600 trillion won will continue going forward.”

Chey said the same that afternoon at the “public-private joint meeting following the U.S.-Korea tariff negotiations” held at the presidential office in Yongsan, Seoul, saying, “As uncertainties in the trading environment have been resolved, domestic corporations will also continue efforts to produce the fruits of real economic growth.”....

....MUCH MORE  

IEA World Energy Outlook 2025: Regional Insights

Following on November 14's "International Energy Agency World Energy Outlook 2025 (now with WEOGPT)"

From the International Energy Agency:

  • This chapter explores energy sector trends and priorities in countries and regions that cumulatively account for around 90% of the world’s population, GDP and energy demand. Priorities, objectives and national circumstances vary widely between and within regions, but two trends that are visible in most parts of the world are a rise in the electrification of end-uses, and a rise in the share of renewables in electricity generation. 

  • Energy trends in advanced economies are shaped by the structure of their economies, and by high average incomes and rates of vehicle and appliance ownership. Overall energy demand typically has peaked, although electricity use continues to increase, with electric vehicles and data centres adding to demand.  

  • Energy demand per capita is generally lower in emerging market and developing economies. Many of these countries are still developing their industries, some suffer from a lack of universal access to energy, and most have lower average incomes and levels of ownership of energy consuming equipment than advanced economies. However, the picture is a dynamic one: many countries are undergoing rapid urbanisation, building infrastructure, making swift progress on access to modern energy, and seeing their economies and their demand for energy grow strongly.  

  • Energy security is a key determinant of energy policies. While energy security is a broad term that includes affordability and supply chain resilience, an often cited metric is import dependence on fuels, notably oil, natural gas and coal. Several large economies are net importers of energy. These include Japan, Korea, European Union, India and China. Others, notably the Middle East, Eurasia, Africa and the United States, are net exporters of energy. A high level of import dependence can act as a spur to boost renewable and nuclear energy, diversify sources of supply and improve energy efficiency.  

  • This chapter explores energy pathways in different countries and regions. It also includes a deep dive into a pertinent topic for each region. For the United States, Latin America and Africa, we explore themes that focus on the development of domestic resources. For India, Southeast Asia and the Middle East, we explore the strategies and policies being deployed to manage energy demand growth in ways that are aligned with country and regional priorities. For the European Union, Japan and Korea, we explore themes of competitiveness and energy security. We also explore the future of coal demand in China, and prospects for natural gas exports from Russia. 

 Chapter 8 begins on page 357 of the 519 page PDF and is structured thusly:

Regional insights 357
8.1 Introduction.......................................................................................... 359
8.2 United States ........................................................................................ 363
8.3 Latin America and the Caribbean ................................................................ 369
8.4 European Union...................................................................................... 373
8.5 Africa ................................................................................................. 378
8.6 Middle East ........................................................................................... 382
8.7 Eurasia ................................................................................................ 386
8.8 China................................................................................................... 390
8.9 India ................................................................................................... 394
8.10 Japan and Korea ................................................................................... 398
8.11 Southeast Asia ...................................................................................... 402 


"MrBeast revealed how much of his $5 billion company he owned in a deposition last year"

From Business Insider, November 14:

  • MrBeast said last year he owned just over half of his $5 billion company.
  • The YouTuber operates a variety of business lines, including a content studio and a chocolate brand.
  • Beast Industries has been on a hiring spree, adding four new execs to boost content and brand deals.

YouTuber MrBeast said in a deposition last November that he owned "a little over half" of his company, which was valued at roughly $5 billion in its most recent funding round.

By that math, the value of his ownership stake would have topped $2.5 billion.

Beast Industries sought to raise up to an additional $200 million this year, according to investor materials viewed by Business Insider, as an extension to its $300 million Series C round referenced in the deposition. This could have diluted MrBeast's ownership stake.

With over 400 million subscribers, MrBeast, whose real name is Jimmy Donaldson, is the top creator on YouTube. He has expanded well beyond the platform, building out a content studio, a chocolate-bar company called Feastables, the analytics firm Viewstats, and a variety of other ventures. Beast Industries has also explored launching other business lines, including a fintech brand and a wireless phone service.

Beast Industries pulled in over $400 million in revenue last year, according to investor materials viewed by Business Insider. The company was not profitable last year, mainly because of high costs in its media segment. Donaldson said in his deposition that Viewstats and Lunchly did not generate much revenue as of November 2024.

Feastables, however, was profitable, Donaldson said in the 2024 deposition, which he attributed to the product's quality....

....MUCH MORE 

 I should start a YouTube channel.

"Michelle Obama says she's not making a run at the White House until the country grows up a bit."

From TMZ:

"Target reduces prices on 3,000 groceries and other goods" (TGT)

The company has had a brutal year, which has been reflected in the stock price, down $66.66 (42.58%) over the last twelve months, $89.90 last.

From Grocery Dive, November 12:

The price cuts come as food affordability remains a top concern for consumers, especially with the holiday season nearing. 

  • Target announced Tuesday it is lowering prices on 3,000 food, beverage and essential items in stores and online. This is the latest in a string of initiatives the retailer has rolled out to offer shoppers lower prices. 
  • The retailer also announced a $500,000 donation to Feeding America to support its hunger relief efforts amid increased demand at food banks.
  • Target’s efforts come at a time when food insecurity and grocery affordability are top of mind for consumers as they get ready for the winter holiday season.
Dive Insight: 
Lowering prices on thousands of items that shoppers frequently buy “will make a difference for families managing tight household budgets during the holidays,” Lisa Roath, executive vice president and chief merchandising officer of food, essentials and beauty at Target, said in the announcement. The press release noted it will not reduce prices in Alaska and Hawai’i.

The price cuts build on Target’s growing affordability efforts as the holiday season arrives. The retailer highlighted in the Tuesday announcement its lowest price ever for a Thanksgiving meal, which the retailer unveiled earlier this month. The meal feeds four for less than $5 per person and includes a Good & Gather turkey that costs 79 cents per pound....

....MUCH MORE 

And from the company, November 11:

Target Announces Price Reductions on Food and Essentials and Nationwide Food Donation to Support Families this Holiday Season

"Ford CEO Jim Farley laments he can’t fill 5,000 mechanic jobs paying $120K per year: ‘We are in trouble in our country’"

This is also part of the reason that production of turbines for electricity production has maxed out. In addition to having been burned by expanding capacity twice in the last quarter century, the turbine manufacturers simply can't find workers with the skills to make the machines.

And the headline story from the New York Post, November 14:

Ford has been unable to fill some 5,000 openings for mechanics despite offering a salary of $120,000 a year — prompting the company’s chief executive to warn of a dire shortage of skilled tradespeople in the US.

“We are in trouble in our country. We are not talking about this enough,” Ford CEO Jim Farley said on an episode of the “Office Hours: Business Edition” podcast published earlier this week.

“We have over a million openings in critical jobs, emergency services, trucking, factory workers, plumbers, electricians and tradesmen.”

Farley added: “It’s a very serious thing.”

The $120,000 pay is nearly twice the average annual American salary, according to the Social Security Administration.

It takes about five years to learn the skills needed to pull a diesel engine out of a Ford Super Duty truck — and the country isn’t training enough people to do it, Farley said....

....MUCH MORE 

Also at the Post:

Adolf Hitler may have had a micropenis — and just one ball, DNA analysis shows  

"He’s Been Right About AI for 40 Years. Now He Thinks Everyone Is Wrong."

From the Wall Street Journal, November 14:

Yann LeCun invented many fundamental components of modern AI. Now he’s convinced most in his field have been led astray by the siren song of large language models 

As a graduate student in the 1980s, Yann LeCun had trouble finding an adviser for his Ph.D. thesis on machine learning—because no one else was studying the topic, he recalled later.

More recently, he’s become the odd man out at Meta. Despite worldwide renown as one of the godfathers of artificial intelligence, he has been increasingly sidelined as the company’s approach diverged from his views on the technology’s future. On Tuesday, news broke that he may soon be leaving Meta to pursue a startup focused on so-called world models, technology that LeCun thinks is more likely to advance the state of AI than Meta’s current language models. 

Meta Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg has been pouring countless billions into the pursuit of what he calls “superintelligence,” hiring an army of top researchers tasked with developing its large language model, Llama, into something that can outperform ChatGPT and Google’s Gemini. 

LeCun, by his choice, has taken a different direction. He has been telling anyone who asks that he thinks large language models, or LLMs, are a dead end in the pursuit of computers that can truly outthink humans. He’s fond of comparing the current state-of-the-art models to the mind of a cat—and he believes the cat to be smarter. Several years ago, he stepped back from managing his AI division at Meta, called FAIR, in favor of a role as an individual contributor doing long-term research. 

“I’ve been not making friends in various corners of Silicon Valley, including at Meta, saying that within three to five years, this [world models, not LLMs] will be the dominant model for AI architectures, and nobody in their right mind would use LLMs of the type that we have today,” the 65-year-old said last month at a symposium at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 

LeCun has been talking to associates about creating a startup focused on world models, recruiting colleagues and speaking to investors, The Wall Street Journal previously reported. A world model learns about the world around it by taking in visual information, much like a baby animal or young child does, versus LLMs, which are predictive models based on vast databases of text.

LeCun didn’t respond to requests for comment, and Meta declined to comment.

Early innovations
LeCun was born in Paris, raised in the city’s suburbs and attended what’s now known as the Sorbonne University in France in the 1980s. While getting his Ph.D., he married his wife, Isabelle, and they had the first of their three sons. A woodwind musician, he played traditional Breton music for a Renaissance dance troupe.

Always ahead of the curve, LeCun studied machine learning before it was en vogue. He worked in Nobel Prize winner Geoffrey Hinton’s AI lab in Toronto before Hinton became an AI legend, and spent much of his early professional career in New Jersey at Bell Labs, the institute famous for the sheer number of inventions that came out of it. 

“The thing that excites me the most is working with people who are smarter than me, because it amplifies your own abilities,” LeCun told Wired magazine in 2023. 

At Bell, LeCun helped develop handwriting-recognition technology that became widely used by banks to read checks automatically. He also worked on a project to digitize and distribute paper documents over the internet. 

LeCun, who’s said he’s always been interested in physics, mostly worked with physicists at Bell and read a number of physics textbooks. 

“I learned a lot by reading things that are not apparently connected with AI or computer science (my undergraduate degree is in electrical engineering, and my formal CS training is pretty small),” he said during a Reddit ask-me-anything session 12 years ago.

In 2003, LeCun started teaching computer science at New York University, and later he became the founding director of NYU’s Center for Data Science. When he’s in New York, he has been known to frequent the city’s jazz clubs.

In 2013, Zuckerberg personally recruited him to head up a new AI division at what was then called Facebook. LeCun oversaw the lab for four years, stepping down in 2018 to become an individual contributor and Facebook’s chief AI scientist. 

He won the 2018 A.M. Turing Award, the highest prize in computer science, along with Hinton and Yoshua Bengio. The award honored their foundational work on neural networks, multilayered systems that underlie many powerful AI systems, from OpenAI’s chatbots to self-driving cars.

Since then, LeCun, who speaks with a light French accent and is known for wearing black Ray-Ban glasses and collared shirts, has largely become a figurehead for the company. He wasn’t part of the team that helped create Meta’s first open-source large language model, called Llama, and he hasn’t been involved in the day-to-day operations of their development since. 

LeCun works on his own projects and travels to conferences, talking about Meta’s AI glasses and his own views on the path to AI advancement, among other things, people who have worked with him said. 

Léon Bottou, a longtime friend of LeCun’s, previously told The Wall Street Journal that he’s “stubborn in a good way,” meaning he is willing to listen to others’ views, but has strong convictions of his own.

He also holds strong opinions on a variety of other topics. “I am everything the religious right despises,” he wrote on his website: “a scientist, an atheist, a leftist (by American standards at least), a university professor, and a Frenchman.”

Breaking away
Most of his recent takes have been knocks on the LLMs at the center of Zuckerberg’s ambitions–and also of nearly every other major tech company’s.

“We are not going to get to human-level AI just by scaling LLMs,” he said on Alex Kantrowitz’s Big Technology podcast this spring. “There’s no way, absolutely no way, and whatever you can hear from some of my more adventurous colleagues, it’s not going to happen within the next two years. There’s absolutely no way in hell to–pardon my French.”

This summer, as part of a major restructuring, Zuckerberg named 28-year-old Alexandr Wang as Meta’s new chief AI officer–LeCun’s new boss–and ChatGPT co-creator Shengjia Zhao as Meta’s new chief scientist....

....MUCH MORE

Regarding the LLM question, December 2024:
"What is an AI agent? A computer scientist explains the next wave of artificial intelligence tools"
We've been saying it (sometimes literally*) for quite a while, chatbots are not the be-all and end-all of artificial intelligence....
***
*Most recently:

AI: Chatbots Are Sooo 2023; Here Comes Interactive AI

"ChatBots Are Not The Be-All And End-All Of Artificial Intelligence":

Far from it.
And all the focus on ChatBots and LLMs are more than just a distraction, they are a perverse representation of what AI is doing and will do and could potentially cost you money or opportunity or both....

ChatBots Are For Children: "What’s Ahead for OpenAI? Project Strawberry, Orion, and GPT Next"

IEEE Spectrum - "What Are AI Agents?" 

"First impressions of ChatGPT o1: An AI designed to overthink it"

CoinTelegraph has developed an artisanal, homebrew AI specialty. Here's one of our previous visits:

AI Use Case: Biological Immortality By 2030
This would be a pretty good answer to the question "What is the use case for AI?"

But I don't buy it. AI will be like the nanotech revolution that never was, never that is, in the sense of a nanotech industry. Instead, as with nanotech, AI will be embedded in the processes and protocols of every facet of human existence and we won't even notice it.

 "AI agents are the 'next frontier' and will change our working lives forever"

 Former Google CEO Schmidt On The Ever-Increasing Tempo Of AI

Also:

Where Is Artificial Intelligence Going From Here: One Of The Gurus Speaks

And on LeCun:

Tech leaders respond to the rapid rise of DeepSeek

....Yann LeCun, the Chief AI Scientist for Meta’s Fundamental AI Research (FAIR) division, posted on his LinkedIn account:

“To people who see the performance of DeepSeek and think:
‘China is surpassing the US in AI.’
You are reading this wrong.
The correct reading is:
‘Open source models are surpassing proprietary ones.’

DeepSeek has profited from open research and open source (e.g. PyTorch and Llama from Meta)
They came up with new ideas and built them on top of other people’s work.
Because their work is published and open source, everyone can profit from it.
That is the power of open research and open source.”
....

Previously on the LeCun channel:

November 2024 - Chief AI Scientist at Meta, Yann LeCun: "I don't wanna say "I told you so", but I told you so."

February 2024 - "Meta’s A.I. Chief Yann LeCun Explains Why a House Cat Is Smarter Than The Best A.I." 

And many more.

 

The “intoxication thesis”: The evolutionary benefits of getting drunk

From BigThink, October 15:

Getting drunk might be bad for you but good for us.  

In this week’s Mini Philosophy interview, philosopher Edward Slingerland argues that behaviors often dismissed as evolutionary “mistakes” — like masturbation, overeating, and drinking — actually serve deeper adaptive purposes. His “intoxication thesis” suggests that alcohol consumption fosters trust, creativity, and social cohesion, making it an essential part of human evolution. What looks like nature’s errors may, in fact, be evolution’s hidden strategies for survival, bonding, and innovation.  

“The classic example of a hijack is masturbation,” Edward Slingerland tells me. We’re talking about all the evolutionary quirks that humans tend to exploit — the cases where we’re “built” for one purpose, but decide to put that structure to other uses. And masturbation is a classic example.

In this week’s Mini Philosophy interview, I spoke with Slingerland about his book Drunk, in which he outlines his “intoxication thesis.” Slingerland argues it’s quite common to think that getting drunk is an evolutionary mistake. Some early Homo sapiens drank too much fermented fruit juice and discovered it was pretty fun. So they told their mates and, altogether, they clinked their frothy ciders and sang bawdy songs about hunting and gathering. But the human brain and body were not built to get drunk. Alcohol is effectively a poison. Our bodies don’t like it — or so the argument goes.

The intoxication thesis says this is all wrong. For Slingerland, drinking alcohol and getting drunk are important to human well-being and complex societies. It might not be what evolution “intended,” but it’s certainly given us a reproductive and interspecies advantage.

So, how is getting drunk different from other “evolutionary mistakes”? And what possible benefits might getting drunk give us? Today, we find out.

The classic example
The reason that masturbation is the “classic example” of an evolutionary mistake is that there’s a very obvious and simple answer as to why an orgasm feels great — it is nature’s reward for doing what our genes really “want” us to do: copy themselves into the next generation. This is what evolutionary biologists call the “adaptive target” of the orgasm. Have sex, reproduce, copy your genes, and you’ll get this surge of dopamine, oxytocin, and lovely, lovely endorphins.

“But humans and other animals have figured out you can get that reward in lots of wildly non-reproductive ways,” Slingerland tells me. “And once we figured that out, we did that all the time. So here’s the classic ‘mistake,’ right: There’s no relationship between an orgasm and reproduction. Evolution doesn’t want us to masturbate, but it doesn’t care because it’s a relatively non-costly behavior. Contrary to what you may have learned in school, it won’t make you go blind. It’s basically low-cost enough that evolution can kind of let it go.”

In other words, from an evolutionary point of view, the cost of masturbation and hijacking the pleasure surge of an orgasm is worth it, so long as humans do, at least a few times, still have an orgasm during reproductive sex.

The Twinkie problem
The other kind of evolutionary mistake is what Slingerland calls the “Twinkie problem,” which is when the body’s reward system was once connected to a certain evolutionarily beneficial behavior, but our environment has now changed so much that the reward system is actually detrimental to our well-being. This is how Slingerland describes it:

“We’re evolutionarily designed to enjoy fat and sugar. We’ll consume it in large quantities whenever we can get it. And that’s great because for almost all of our evolutionary history, and actually for a disturbing number of people still today, getting enough sugar and fat is a problem. And so, you should try to gorge on it whenever you get it. But it becomes a problem when you live in a modern industrialized society and you’re relatively wealthy. You can gorge on Twinkies and potato chips and ice cream.

So, this type of mistake is costly because it causes obesity, diabetes, and all these problems, but it’s very recent, evolutionarily, and it’s geographically still constrained. Again, there are places in the world where you still have trouble getting enough food.”

In other words, while the Twinkie problem is a problem for a growing portion of society, it’s not enough of a problem to fade away — not least because the time scale’s too short for any kind of adaptation. Maybe, in the future, diabetes and obesity will kill off those who really enjoy fat and sugar, and so change the reward system. But that’d be in the far distant future.

The benefits of alcohol....

....MUCH MORE 

The memory that this article was in the link-vault was triggered by the statement introducing the post immediately below, "Worst acquisition ever." Until Bayer bought Monsanto the worst-ever business combination (wealth-destruction-wise) was generally agreed to be AOL-Time Warner.

And then the Germans said "Hold my bier." 

"Bayer Weighs Roundup Exit as Cancer Legal Bill Nears $18 Billion"

Worst acquisition ever.

From Bloomberg, November 6: 

The world’s most widely used weedkiller is confronting legal battles as well as a cat-and-mouse game with nature. But it’s not clear what can take its place. 

The chemical that revolutionized farming over the last 50 years is in trouble.

Glyphosate, once vaunted for its ability to kill plants and spare animals, is under assault on both fronts. In the UK, weeds are for the first time refusing to die after being sprayed with the herbicide — a problem that’s long tormented American farmers, too. And thousands of former users in the US contend that the world’s most widely used weedkiller might actually be slowly killing them.

Earlier this year, a Georgia jury punished Bayer AG to the tune of almost $2.1 billion after a man who had used Roundup, the German company’s glyphosate-containing weedkiller, developed non-Hodgkin lymphoma. It was only the latest slapdown by a jury. Bayer has coughed up more than $10 billion in legal costs over a product it inherited last decade with its $63 billion acquisition of agrochemical producer Monsanto. Its legal battles are far from over, too, with Bayer facing more than 60,000 outstanding claims from US plaintiffs who say the chemical caused their cancer.

The litigation has cast such a massive cloud over Bayer’s stock, which is down more than 70% since the Monsanto deal, that Chief Executive Officer Bill Anderson is considering whether the company should even make glyphosate anymore.

“Basically it comes down to: We will either find a solution on these things or we will be exiting the business,” Anderson told reporters in August. Glyphosate may be an “essential tool for farmers to produce an abundant and safe food supply for America and frankly around the world,” he said, but the chemical hasn’t had a patent protection for 25 years and is hardly profitable at this point.

Read More: Bayer Hires Judith Hartmann as CFO in Latest Management Change

Still, leaving the business would cause a major hole in Bayer’s books. Glyphosate accounted for about 12% of its crop division’s €22.3 billion ($25.7 billion) in revenue last year — and much of the company’s lucrative corn, soybean and other seed offerings are designed for farmers using glyphosate in the first place.

Marketed as a cleaner and safer alternative to older herbicides, for 30 years glyphosate has offered a relatively simple commercial model: Farmers pay a premium for seeds that are genetically altered to resist the herbicide in hopes of boosting their profits through cheaper, easier weed management. At least $5 billion worth of the chemical is sprayed across the world’s fields each year, from the US and Brazil to China and New Zealand.

But the promise of that paradigm is breaking down amid the combination of weeds that have evolved their own tolerance to glyphosate and growing regulatory and legal challenges over the chemical. Recently, representatives for Bayer have even raised the specter of bankruptcy for the Monsanto division as they engage in high-stakes settlement talks with plaintiff attorneys, according to people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be named discussing private matters.

If Bayer ceases manufacturing glyphosate at its factory in Louisiana and a few related sites, it will expedite the world’s retreat from the chemical, eliminating about 40% of global production capacity in a single step. In the short term, that will leave farmers deeply dependent on supplies manufactured in China. In the longer term, it raises questions about how today’s farmers — some of whom have been nicknamed “Roundup Babies” for coming of age so reliant on the chemical — will feed the world’s growing population as global warming increases the risk crops face from storms, droughts and new types of pests.

“The climate is emerging as a gigantic problem that will compromise our sustainability,” warns Luca Comai, distinguished professor of plant biology at University of California at Davis.

But although the problems with glyphosate are becoming more urgent, it’s not entirely clear what might replace it.

“There are many, many ways of making the process of growing plants more effective and less impactful on the resources and the ecosystem,” Comai says. “Whether you can make money out of it, I don’t know.”

When Monsanto first developed glyphosate for agriculture in its St. Louis labs in the early 1970s, it wasn’t obvious that it would ever turn a profit. A tiny molecule, it works by binding to an enzyme in all plant cells (that animals lack) that helps create essential amino acids for growth. As a result, it pretty much kills everything — weed or crop — that’s green and grows.

Back then, US farmers preferred using other types of herbicides — in particular, ones that didn’t harm their crops. Farmers had other gripes about glyphosate, too. The chemical took days to kill unwanted plants and tended to quickly degrade in the presence of sun or rain, meaning it didn’t stick around in the soil to prevent weeds from emerging later in the season.

Monsanto tried to turn these drawbacks into strengths, marketing glyphosate as less harmful than other weedkillers, many of which were facing fierce criticism over their dangerous effects on people or their tendency to, say, leach into waterways and poison frogs and fish. Beyond that, Monsanto promoted its chemical as a great way to foster more “no-till” agriculture, in which farmers stop plowing their land with tractors and thus reduce carbon emissions and negative impacts like soil erosion and nutrient loss.

But that strategy only really triumphed after Monsanto scientists stumbled on a glyphosate resistance gene in an unlikely place — the waste ponds of the company’s glyphosate factory on the banks of the Mississippi River. There, bacteria had evolved a gene that blunted the chemical’s attack and were thriving. The Monsanto scientists isolated the genetic matter and transferred copies into soybean seeds, kicking off the farming world’s new, genetically modified era....

....MUCH MORE 

Saturday, November 15, 2025

"How GDP Hides Industrial Decline"

From Palladium Magazine, October 3:

For the past few years I have been mulling a paradox: U.S. GDP keeps going up, yet it seems like we make less stuff and that most of the smart people I know work fake jobs. Growing up in the nineties, most of my toys and clothes had tags saying “Made in Hong Kong” or “Made in Vietnam.” But the high-skill, high-tech goods—the washing machine, the car, my computer—were often made in America. Now? From my e-bike to my laptop, from my refrigerator to my mattress, very few goods I own, high-tech or low-tech, were made in the USA.

Meanwhile, I have heard arguments that America is actually making more things than ever. According to The Economist, lost jobs are due to automation, not foreign competition, and it is a good thing that machines have liberated us from factory work and enabled more service jobs. Everyone from the American Enterprise Institute to The Wall Street Journal to Wikipedia agrees that U.S. manufacturing has not just not significantly fallen—but it has never been higher.

Sometimes there are discrepancies between your real-world observations and the data. But this goes far beyond just being a discrepancy: the data is saying the complete opposite of what we see with our own eyes, hear from our acquaintances in the job market, and deduce logically from our knowledge of demographics, technology, industry, and trade. How is this possible? The answer is actually very simple: the data is completely wrong. But you can only figure this out if you go line-by-line into the hundreds of pages of government GDP calculation methodology documentation. Which is exactly what I did.

The most commonly cited graph shared to demonstrate U.S. manufacturing strength is based on the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis’s (BEA) manufacturing “real value-added” data, which looks at manufacturing as a subset of total GDP. This graph has been cited by Federal Reserve economists, Washington Post columnists, professors—all claiming it refutes the idea that the U.S. economy has been hollowed out. Adjusted for inflation, it shows manufacturing is up 71% since the dataset began in 1997, and up a healthy 37% per capita:

 
Patrick Fitzsimmons/U.S. real value-added for manufacturing according to the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, 1997-2024 

You might think that a measure of manufacturing would in some way measure actual manufactured goods emerging from U.S. factories, like tons of steel rolling out of mills, number of CPUs coming out of chip fabs, and cars rolling off the assembly line. But this is not the case. Despite the name, “real GDP” in practice is the result of hundreds of arbitrary and subjective decisions made by government-employed economists, such as “education administrators are more productive than teachers” or that a 25% increase in automobile “quality” can theoretically show up as a 166% increase in “real GDP value added.” 

It is remarkable how there is so much commentary on GDP, yet so few people have truly wrestled with the numbers and where they come from: an advanced MIT macroeconomics textbook will reference GDP over sixty times, yet not once acknowledge the decision-making that goes into making this number. Likewise, pro-market public intellectuals are only too happy to cite GDP to make a point without considering that the metric itself is the antithesis of market capitalism: GDP is a very complicated statistical construct that is made by government bureaucrats behind closed doors without any ability of the public to replicate, audit, or verify assumptions. Sometimes, these kinds of constructs can be useful for accurately representing real-world phenomena, like manufacturing capacity. But a dive into how the sausage is made makes clear that GDP is not one of them. 

Where GDP Comes From

Back in the 1930s, U.S. policy-makers and economists were facing two big problems. The first was that the nation was suffering an economic crisis with millions of people and businesses suffering loss of income, yet there was no existing way to sum up incomes across the economy to get a sense of how the nation as a whole was doing. The second problem was that previous economic statistics focused on raw commodity outputs like bushels of wheat grown or tons of steel produced, but now more of the economy was in services, government work, and heterogeneous manufactured products.

The U.S. government commissioned economists to create a comprehensive set of national income statistics. The economists kept working and went on to develop statistics aimed to measure the economic output by category of the economy and then, ultimately, to sum it up into one number that eventually would be known as “gross domestic product,” or GDP. 

At first glance, summing up the economy into a single number seems impossible. How do you add up apples and oranges? Or, say, apples, cars, and dentist appointments? One’s first inclination may be to add up total sales receipts in each category, since dollar spending can be compared between products and over time. But this fails because a rise in total spending for a product category may be merely the result of a rise in price, not more production. The clever solution was to combine expenditures or sales receipts in dollar terms with measures of the average price of each item. If spending on cars has doubled, but the price of the average car has also doubled, then there was no real change in production of cars. But if spending on cars doubled while the price only increased 50%, then there was a substantial increase in cars purchased.

Statistical agencies built giant databases of prices across all products, then matched the prices with expenditures for each category. Now it seemed as if they had the ability to do what seemed impossible, and add up changes in the economic sectors into one number. The top economic textbooks have called this “truly among the great inventions of the twentieth century.” 

Today, GDP numbers are calculated by the Bureau of Economic Analysis, which is staffed by career economists with no political appointees involved. It’s under the U.S. Department of Commerce. However, the methodology is also an international effort. U.S. economists join with their foreign counterparts at a United Nations committee to define the “System of National Accounts.” These are standards that nations around the world at least try to adhere to—adherence can be a requirement for World Bank loans. The methodology also changes over time. For instance, in 2012 there were major updates to add development of intellectual property (IP) as being its own contributing component to GDP.

Discourse over GDP is frequently confused because there are actually three different calculation approaches: the income approach, the expenditures approach, and the value-added approach. In the textbooks, usually only the expenditures approach is taught. In theory, each approach should sum to the same total number, since everyone’s income must come from someone else’s spending. However, when comparing sectors, such as government or healthcare, the totals differ for each approach, and this can create a lot of confusion. On top of that, each approach has a nominal and a real version. Thus when a news report refers to “GDP for healthcare”, this could be referencing one of six different numbers!

For the income approach to GDP, the process is to add up every person’s compensation, plus corporate retained earnings, plus some adjustments. For the expenditures approach, the formula is to sum the final expenditures of private consumers, the capital expenditures of businesses, the spending of the government, and exports, then subtract imports. “Final expenditures” means that the price of a car bought by a consumer is counted, but the money spent by the car dealership on its electric bill, or the money spent by the car factory on steel, is not counted. Counting non-final expenditures would result in double-counting and would break the number. The expenditures approach is most frequently taught in Economics 101.

Finally, we have the value-added approach. Rather than counting just final sales, this approach counts the sale value minus the input costs at each step. Imagine a gallon of milk sold from a grocery store for $5. Rather than just counting that $5 as a “final expenditure,” the value-added approach counts the cow feed sold to the farmer for $1, then the milk milked by the farmer for $4 (thus adding $3 in value), and then the gallon of milk sold by the store for $5 (adding $1 in value). You add up all the steps and get the same $5.

Each approach has its uses, but you have to be careful with which you use. What percent of GDP is healthcare? You get two different numbers depending on the approach. With the expenditures approach, healthcare is 17% of GDP, but for the value-added approach only 8%. Why? Because the value-added approach only counts expenditures on hospital and clinic workers toward the healthcare category. Money spent on manufacturing medical devices counts as manufacturing; money spent building hospitals counts as construction. For measuring healthcare’s share of the economy, it is probably better to use the expenditures approach because it is reasonable to include pharmaceutical production and hospital electricity bills as part of healthcare.

What percent of GDP is government spending? When debating the value of government spending, Elon Musk was fact-checked by his own platform and informed that “government was only 11.3% of GDP.” But this is using the value-added approach, which only counts direct government employees. In the value-added approach, the money the government spends on everything from constructing buildings to software licenses does not count. Meanwhile, the expenditures approach counts the government as 17% of GDP. This still excludes interest on debt and transfers like social security, but it includes money the government spends on grants or contracts with private businesses, such as SpaceX.

If you want to know GDP by city or region, the BEA uses the income approach. This is a practical decision. The other approaches are too difficult to tie to specific locations, but income tax data makes it easy to tie income to addresses. Since regional GDP is just measuring income, it does not really tell you if that region’s GDP is a result of actual useful market production, or if it is from monopoly profits, rent-seeking, and government deals.

If you want to see what percent of the economy is manufacturing, and how that has changed over time, you can only use the value-added approach. Only the value-added approach separates out each step in the economic chain: from mining the iron ore to transporting it to the factory to manufacturing the product to selling it at the store. The value-added approach categorizes each step, so you can sum together just the increase in price from the manufacturing step across all categories of spending.

There is a second major complexity: for each of these approaches, we have a real and a nominal version. The nominal version is just based on adding up dollar sales or dollar income. It does not even pretend to be a measure of product or production. To get a measure that purports to measure changes in production over time, economists created a statistic called “real” GDP.

Since the problem with nominal GDP is that year-to-year changes are simply a result of money supply changes, not production, the art of real GDP is to factor out price changes. This is done by using price indexes. These price indexes are a joint effort between the U.S. Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) and the BEA. The BLS actually sends out thousands of agents to look at prices in stores, browse websites, and survey producers. A price index for, say, “cereals and bakery products” is thus created by selecting a representative sample of what consumers actually buy, and then for each item in the sample tracking changes in price and then calculating a weighted average of these changes....

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"Who Will Pay for the AI Revolution? Retirees"

Well there you go. Lots-o-loot.

From the Wall Street Journal, November 14:

Insurance companies seeking to fund retirement plans can be natural buyers of data-center debt

The global bet on artificial intelligence could require trillions of dollars of borrowing. Who might lend that much? How about America’s retirees?

Tech companies are facing an enormous investment need that will outstrip even their considerable existing resources. Morgan Stanley analysts in July estimated that of the roughly $3 trillion that is expected in global data-center capital expenditures through 2028, only about half of that could be funded by projected cash flows. That would leave a roughly $1.5 trillion financing gap.

To meet such a tremendous need, the companies will need to turn to the biggest funding markets. And when it comes to corporate borrowing, those include the mainstream, high-grade bond market. Issuance in the investment-grade corporate bond market represented around two-thirds of the more than $2 trillion sold this year through October across the U.S. corporate bond and asset-backed securities markets, according to figures compiled by Sifma.

There have recently been several big bond offerings from tech companies in the AI race, including Oracle, Meta Platforms and Google-parent Alphabet. JPMorgan Chase analysts recently forecast that the high-grade bond market could absorb $300 billion of AI-data-center-related issuance over the next year.

The mainstream corporate bond market is among the biggest, and often one of the cheapest, ways for companies to borrow. Historically, though, that market also has some rules of the road: It is for companies with the highest credit ratings and has been focused on bonds featuring public reporting and fairly straightforward structures. Many bonds mature in less than 10 years.

But the more a company borrows beyond what its cash flows support, the more its credit rating can suffer. And AI still has lots of questions around it: How much end-user demand will there ultimately be? What is the lifespan of the chips needed to power it? Will there be enough cheap electricity?

Meanwhile, life-insurance companies need to invest a growing wave of retirement money to help people generate income when they aren’t working. This year represents the peak for the number of people turning 65 in the U.S., which has helped fuel another record for sales of U.S. annuities, with $345 billion sold through the first nine months of the year, according to industry group Limra.

Demand from insurers has broadly been a driving force in the credit markets. It is one factor helping drive spreads on investment-grade corporate bonds—or the premium they pay above the yield on benchmark Treasurys—to around their tightest levels since the 1990s.

“The biggest change in the technicals of credit markets over the last two to three years has been the emergence of U.S. life insurance companies as the largest marginal buyer,” says Vishwanath Tirupattur, chief fixed income strategist and director of quantitative research at Morgan Stanley. “This has driven credit spreads across the board tight.”

A recent report on life insurers by economists at the Swiss Re Institute said that “in advanced and rapidly aging emerging markets,” increasing demand for retirement income “will likely shift the liability structure towards longer duration.” The so-called longevity risk that retirees will live longer—stemming from advances in biosciences and healthcare—means that insurers need to be on the hunt for longer-term assets, too.

In their investments in recent years, insurers have been willing to turn to less-vanilla instruments. A research analysis published by the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago found that life insurers had been investing more in “higher yielding, but more complex, private placements.” ....

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China’s investment drop highlights property-driven pressures

From Asia Times, November 15:

Property downturn widens economic strains as weakening demand, falling prices and job pressures ripple across households and industries  

China’s fixed asset investment (FAI) suffered a sharp setback in October, signalling renewed stress across the real economy as the property downturn continued to erode activity and put a drag on broader investment performance.

According to the latest data from the National Bureau of Statistics, nationwide FAI for the ten months of January through October reached 40.89 trillion yuan (US$5.7 trillion), marking a 1.7% year-on-year contraction. This sharp deterioration compares with a 0.5% decline for the first nine months of the year.

Based on cumulative figures, China’s FAI in October fell 12% to 3.74 trillion yuan from 4.25 trillion yuan in the same period last year. All three major sectors registered year-on-year declines: primary-industry investment contracted 12.4%, secondary-industry investment slipped 8.4%, and tertiary-industry investment plunged 13.5%.

Residential property development investment decreased 13.8% year-on-year to 5.66 trillion yuan in the first ten months. In October alone, the figure dropped 19.4% to 454.9 billion yuan from a year earlier, highlighting the deepening drag from the ongoing property correction.

“Excluding real estate, China’s FAI grew 1.7% in the first 10 months from the same period of last year,” NBS spokesperson Fu Linghui said at a media briefing on Friday. “The decline in property investment dragged down overall investment growth by about three percentage points. Besides, some industries lack sufficient momentum for expansion, which has objectively weighed on investment growth.”....

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France In Space: U-Space Raises €24 Million

From EU-Startups, November 12:

“One satellite per week” – That’s the aim of France’s U-Space with its new €24 million raise 

Toulouse-based SpaceTech startup U-Space, a satellite constellation manufacturer, has raised a €24 million Series A round with investment bank Avolta acting as exclusive advisor – propelling the company into a new phase of industrial and international growth.

The round saw participation from Blast, Definvest, Expansion, CapSpace, ARIS, Primo Space, Audacia co-invest, and Vertech Finance, to support its industrial ramp-up and international expansion.

Avolta’s role was decisive in this fundraising. Their expertise in the SpaceTech market, their ability to structure a complex operation, and their strategic support enabled us to reach a key milestone in our industrial and international development. Their dedication and commitment by our side truly made the difference in this operation,” said Fabien Apper, President and co-founder, U-Space.

Across the continent, several rounds underscore the breadth of activity in satellite manufacturing, launch systems, and connectivity technologies:

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"Elon Musk's secret fab plan: new US chip plant targets 2026 ramp"

From DigiTimes Asia, November 13:

Elon Musk, owner [sic] of SpaceX and Tesla Inc., is making significant strides to develop a comprehensive semiconductor manufacturing supply chain in the US. Sources indicate that the fan-out panel-level packaging (FOPLP) plant in Texas has reached the equipment delivery phase and aims to commence volume production by late third quarter 2026.

Following unsuccessful attempts to secure priority capacity at Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), Musk shifted production strategy to mitigate supply risks and enhance control. Dojo 3 chip production is now distributed between TSMC and Samsung Electronics, with packaging operations handled at Intel's Arizona facility. Musk also alluded to possible future collaboration or investments with Intel, suggesting potential expansion of joint manufacturing efforts.

Musk's semiconductor ambitions align with a broader national effort to restore US leadership in chip manufacturing amid a global shortage. The US government, alongside industry giants such as Intel, Samsung, and TSMC, is facilitating expansion across multiple technology fronts. After negotiations with TSMC over supply terms faltered, Musk doubled down on in-house production capabilities to reduce dependence on external suppliers.

Musk completes PCB and packaging plants to enhance vertical integration
Insiders confirm that Musk has recently completed construction of a printed circuit board (PCB) factory in Texas, which is already operational, alongside the FOPLP packaging plant currently under deployment. SpaceX is managing the packaging site, aiming to vertically integrate satellite system production, particularly for Starlink components. Controlling packaging technology allows for tighter management of satellite chips, improving performance and reducing costs.

Before the FOPLP plant becomes fully active, SpaceX has placed orders for satellite radio frequency (RF) chips and power management integrated circuits with STMicroelectronics and Innolux Corporation. Equipment delivery for the Texas packaging line started in September 2025, with installation planned for early 2026. The plant is expected to begin limited production by the third quarter of 2026, reaching full volume output by the first quarter of 2027. Initial monthly production is projected at around 2,000 units, gradually reducing reliance on wafers sourced externally from STMicro and Innolux.

Beyond packaging, Musk revealed at Tesla's recent shareholder meeting plans to construct a large wafer fabrication facility starting at 100,000 wafers per month, with potential expansion to one million wafers per month. This is intended to support Tesla's growing demand for AI and robotics chips and may involve cooperation with Intel on wafer manufacturing.

Industry experts highlight the scale of Musk's semiconductor ambitions
Musk continues partnerships with major foundries but remains concerned over persistent chip shortages that could create critical supply bottlenecks. He states that his mind is entirely focused on chips, highlighting Tesla's readiness to produce chips in-house if suppliers cannot meet demand....
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Friday, November 14, 2025

"The Greatest Unsolved Heist in Irish History"

From Atlas Obscura, November 4, 2021:

Scandal, conspiracy, and cover-ups in the theft of the “Irish Crown Jewels” from Dublin Castle.  

Dublin, 1907.

Arthur Vicars was 45 years old in July 1907, just a few weeks from his birthday. His entire life at the time was wrapped up in his job as Ulster King of Arms. This put him in charge of the rules and regulations regarding heraldry and family trees—a very important position in early-20th-century Ireland: He was the arbiter of inheritance. “Most land, power, and wealth were vested in the hands of the aristocracy,” says William Derham, a curator at Dublin Castle, “and the question of who was the legitimate heir to an estate and a title carried with it the question of who would inherit a great deal of money,” in addition to a seat in Parliament. Vicars, from his spacious office in Dublin Castle, was well paid, well respected, and passionate about heraldic history and genealogy.

His job also included guarding what would become known as the Irish Crown Jewels, consisting of a heavily jeweled star, badge, and collars. The star, an eight-pointed wonder about four inches across, featured dozens of pristine Brazilian diamonds, described that year as being “of the purest water,” meaning the highest quality known. That star surrounded both a shamrock made of emeralds and a cross of rubies. The badge was similar: diamonds, emeralds, and rubies, set in silver. The value of the pair, according to a police notice, was, in today’s money, somewhere north of £3 million, or $4.5 million. Vicars did not particularly like this part of his job, but if being in charge of these jewels would allow him to continue his heraldry research, he would put up with it.

The jewels mostly stayed locked in a safe at a jeweler’s, in Dublin. That jeweler had been the official watchmaker for Queen Victoria, and valued security tremendously, to the point of counting the spoons they had provided to the royals, to ensure none had been pilfered. If the King, Queen, or their representatives visited Ireland and had call to wear the jewels, they would be moved to a safe that sat in Dublin Castle, an ancient complex that then served as the seat of the government in Ireland for the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. 

Dublin Castle was full of military and police agents, as it was the headquarters of the Dublin Metropolitan Police, and the safe in which the jewels were kept had only two keys. Vicars, almost universally described as a pedant and nitpicker, wore one on a chain around his neck or in his pocket at all times. The other he hid in his home in Dublin. The castle, and especially Bedford Tower, where the jewel safe was located, was considered one of the most impregnable, well-defended, and heavily observed buildings on the island. From The New York Times, in 1907: “Bedford Tower is the one building in the castle into which the most enterprising burglar would find it hopeless to effect an entrance unobserved.” And the jewels weren’t even taken out of the safe very often.

The summer of 1907 had been a busy summer for the Irish aristocracy and government, which were often one and the same. The Irish International Exhibition, a grand world’s fair, had opened in May and was scheduled to run through November. The massive event featured a Japanese tea garden and an entire Somali village among hundreds of exhibits, and drew around 2.5 million visitors during its run.

King Edward VII, Queen Alexandra, and Princess Victoria were due to visit on July 10, to make an appearance at the exhibition and perform some various royal duties. The political relationship between Ireland and Great Britain was fraught, with a rising tide of Irish nationalism competing with unionists who wanted to remain loyal to the Crown. There had already been debate about how Irish—or British—the International Exhibition should be. (There were separate pavilions for Ireland and Great Britain; the Irish War of Independence would erupt just over a decade later.) On top of that, the king’s nephew, Kaiser Wilhelm II of Prussia, had just months before endured a massive political scandal. King Edward was sensitive to controversy. He needed this visit to go smoothly....

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One more Irish story.
"Rose Dugdale, The Woman Who Stole Vermeer" 

The Location Of Britain's First Small Modular Reactor Site Has Been Revealed

From Power Technology, November 13:

The UK’s first Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) will be developed at the decommissioned Wylfa nuclear power station site on Anglesey. 

The site of the decommissioned Wylfa nuclear power plant has been chosen as the location for the UK’s first Small Modular Reactors (SMR). Wylfa is on the coast of Ynys Môn (Anglesey) and will initially host three SMR units. It is already home to two Magnox AGRs which are being decommissioned. The Rolls-Royce SMR design has a nominal output of 470 MWe, almost as much as the original Wylfa reactors. An investment of more than £2.5bn (US$3.3bn) to develop the units will be administered by the UK government’s nuclear delivery body Great British Energy-Nuclear....

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At the Guardian, November 12:

US ‘disappointed’ that Rolls-Royce will build UK’s first small modular reactors 

Related, August 24:

When going Small, go big or go home: "Vattenfall Narrows SMR Field to Two Finalists: GE Vernova’s BWRX-300 and Rolls-Royce SMR" (GEV; RR.L)
Both companies are big, £87.97 billion ($118 billion) market cap in the case of Rolls-Royce Holdings PLC and $165.26 billion for GE Vernova. The both know a lot about stuff that spins and centrifugal and centripetal forces and all that. What more could you ask for....

 And October 8:

"What Will Rolls-Royce Gain From the UK–US Nuclear Deal?"
Although this reads a bit like a Rolls-Royce promotional piece it is good background. The company will be popping up in more and more discussions of small modular reactors.* 

"Norway uncovers kill switch in Chinese buses that can be shut down remotely - Denmark scrambling for solutions"

From the Economic Times (India), November 15:

A quiet security check in Norway has suddenly sparked concern across Europe. Dozens of Chinese-made electric buses were meant to push cities toward cleaner transport, until a troubling tech discovery changed everything.

Now Denmark is rushing to act, worried it may be facing the same hidden threat.

Norway’s capital, Oslo, had rolled out hundreds of Chinese Yutong electric buses as part of its clean-energy transition. But routine security testing uncovered something no one expected: the buses could reportedly be accessed remotely from China, raising fears that the manufacturer could disable them in seconds, as per a report by Supercar Blondie.

The finding forced Norway’s public transport authority, Ruter, to make a drastic move. Officials removed the SIM cards from the buses, a fix that blocks any potential interference but also prevents software updates that keep the vehicles running smoothly. The sudden discovery left authorities stunned, and other nations quickly took notice, as per a report by Supercar Blondie  

What did Norway discover in its Chinese bus fleet? The issue surfaced after authorities realized the same technology used for over-the-air updates could allow remote shutdowns. That meant the manufacturer had theoretical access to the entire fleet. In a worst-case scenario, the buses could be switched off instantly....

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Here's Supercar Blondie:

November 5 and 14 - Norwegian city buys 300 Chinese electric buses before making startling discovery while testing them 

November 6 and 14 - Denmark is taking urgent action with its 262 Chinese buses after Norwegian city made startling discovery while testing them 

International Energy Agency World Energy Outlook 2025 (now with WEOGPT)

From the IEA, November 12:

About this report

The IEA’s flagship World Energy Outlook (WEO) is the most authoritative source of global energy analysis and projections. Updated annually to reflect the latest energy data, technology and market trends, and government policies, it explores a range of possible energy futures and their implications for energy security, access and emissions. 

The WEO covers the whole energy system, using a scenario-based approach to highlight the central choices, consequences and contingencies that lie ahead. It includes exploratory scenarios that flow from different assumptions about existing policies, as well as normative pathways that achieve energy and emissions goals in full. The multi-scenario approach illustrates how the course of the energy system might be affected by changing key variables, including the energy policies adopted by governments around the world.

This year’s edition comes amid major shifts in global energy policies and markets, and acute geopolitical strains. Governments are reaching different conclusions about the best ways to tackle concerns about energy security, affordability and sustainability. As always, the World Energy Outlook provides unrivalled insights into the consequences of different energy policy and investment choices. An important theme in this year’s WEO is security of supply of critical minerals....

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Press release 

"Model Companies In AI Might Have A Winner’s Curse: Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella"

From OfficeChai, November 13: 

Some AI companies have taken an early lead in the AI race, but this early success might end up being hard to maintain.

That’s the provocative warning from Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, whose company has invested over $13 billion in OpenAI, the current frontrunner in the generative AI space. Speaking on the Dwarkesh podcast, Nadella suggested that being first in AI might actually be a strategic disadvantage—what he calls a “winner’s curse.” His comments come at a time when OpenAI’s ChatGPT has become synonymous with AI chatbots, yet faces mounting competition from every direction.

“I’m a little grounded in the fact that this is still early innings,” Nadella said. “If you’re a model company, you may have a winner’s curse. You may have done all the hard work, done unbelievable innovation, except it’s kind of one copy away from that being commoditized.”...

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"China’s Global Network of Shipping Ports Is Too Big for Trump to Unravel"

From Bloomberg Businessweek, October 19:

Beijing exerts variable degrees of influence over some 90 deepwater ports overseas.

Sitting on either end of the Panama Canal are two massive ports operated by the same Chinese company. Any disruption at the waterway—the conduit for roughly 40% of US container traffic—could cost American businesses hundreds of millions of dollars a day, which explains why President Donald Trump has set his sights on ensuring that the critical maritime choke point is beyond the reach of Beijing’s influence. “China is operating the Panama Canal, and we didn’t give it to China. We gave it to Panama, and we’re taking it back,” Trump said during his inaugural address in January.

Trump’s demand that Panama’s government revoke the rights of CK Hutchison Holding Ltd. to operate the two gateways highlights what for Washington and other world capitals is an uncomfortable reality: China has spent two decades patiently assembling a massive port network spanning every continent except Antarctica.

Chinese companies own or operate terminals at more than 90 deepwater ports overseas, according to data compiled by Isaac Kardon, a senior fellow for China studies at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. That includes 34 of the top 100 busiest ports, as ranked by Lloyd’s List. Holdings include the fifth-largest container port in Europe, the first deep-sea port on South America’s Pacific coast capable of handling ultralarge container vessels and interests in more than one-third of all commercial ports in Africa.

“We often say that to get rich, we must first build roads,” said Chinese President Xi Jinping, addressing workers at Tieshan port on the South China Sea during a 2017 visit. “But in coastal areas, to get rich, we must first build ports.”

***

China, whose share of global merchandise exports totaled about 15% in 2024, by far the largest of any country, has a clear commercial interest in maintaining a presence along important maritime trade routes. A 2018 study by PwC estimated that every $1 China spends on African ports yields $13 in trade—to say nothing of the geopolitical return on investment.  

And for a country with just one overseas military base, collecting ports is a dual-use strategy. In Chinese policymaking circles, the term “maritime strategic strongpoint” has been used interchangeably to describe both types of installations.

“There’s a major Chinese presence in every region, clustered around key maritime choke points,” says Kardon, who’s also the author of China’s Law of the Sea: The New Rules of Maritime Order. “There’s an obvious commercial advantage to this network, but it also raises acute security concerns.”

Ports are part of a broader contest for maritime dominance between China and the US. Both sides have slapped special port fees on each other’s vessels, while the US has rallied allies like South Korea to help revive its moribund shipbuilding industry. In October, China sanctioned the US units of South Korean shipping giant Hanwha Ocean Co. in the latest tit-for-tat move.

The degree of control the Chinese government exercises over these numerous properties varies. Ports operated by CK Hutchison, a conglomerate based in Hong Kong, were once seen as beyond the direct reach of the leadership on the mainland, but that’s changed with the push to limit the territory’s autonomy in recent years. In other cases, Beijing’s influence is less ambiguous: Piraeus in Greece and Chancay in Peru are owned by China Cosco Shipping Corp., which was blacklisted by the Pentagon in January for allegedly having links to the People’s Liberation Army.

Neither Cosco nor Hutchison responded to requests for comment.

US officials claim that Chinese-run ports are helping Beijing to gather intelligence. Ports in Greece, Nigeria and Sri Lanka have welcomed Chinese warships, while China’s first overseas military base, in the tiny African nation of Djibouti, began life as a “logistics hub” next to a Chinese-owned port.

“Ensuring that the world’s ports remain open and secure is critical for global commerce,” said US Senator Andy Kim of New Jersey in a statement to Bloomberg News. “China’s growing global network of ports threatens those objectives.” Kim, a Democrat, sits on the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, which held a hearing in late January on foreign influence over the Panama Canal.
*** 
Chinese analysts and officials say such claims are unfounded. “China is constructing ports for commercial purposes,” says Wang Dong, a professor at Peking University. “Speculation by some US political figures and think tanks about the threat of Chinese ports is groundless.” China’s foreign ministry said in a statement that US accusations about its port network are aimed at “smearing and disrupting China’s economic and trade cooperation with other countries.”

Still, other world leaders share Washington’s concerns. A recent European Commission defense white paper floated the idea of tightening controls on foreign ownership of critical transport infrastructure. India has bristled at Chinese influence over ports in Pakistan and Sri Lanka, while Australia plans to reclaim the port of Darwin from its Chinese leaseholder.

US officials including Secretary of State Marco Rubio say the presence of Chinese ports on the Panama Canal could allow Beijing to slow US naval deployments to Asia in the event of a Chinese invasion or blockade of Taiwan, adding 10 to 22 days to the journey from the Atlantic....

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