Une personne ouverte sur le monde, qui s'intéresse vivement aux affaires internationales et suit de près les développements économiques, politiques et environnementaux à l'échelle mondiale, en mettant particulièrement l'accent sur leur interdépendance sur la scène internationale.
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Tech Tensions, Middle‑East Strife, Renewable Energy Surge, Global Governance…
Mercredi 10 décembre 2025 à 10:50
International Developments
China convenes tech giants over Nvidia H200 chip imports
Chinese officials summoned leading firms such as Alibaba, ByteDance and Tencent to assess demand for Nvidia’s advanced H200 chips, a move prompted by recent U.S. export authorisations that complicate Beijing’s self‑sufficiency goals. The emergency meetings underscore the geopolitical stakes of high‑performance AI hardware.
The Information
The Information
Nvidia unveils location‑verification software to curb chip smuggling
Nvidia is developing a new feature that can authenticate the geographic location of its chips, aiming to deter illegal diversion of advanced semiconductors across borders. If deployed, the technology could give manufacturers and regulators a powerful tool against illicit supply‑chain flows.
The Information
Thales and Aireon partner to streamline Asia‑Pacific air traffic
Thales will grant free access to its TopSky‑Flow cloud platform, while Aireon’s ADS‑B data powers the AireonFLOW service, together helping air‑navigation service providers manage soaring traffic volumes in the region’s busiest airspaces. The collaboration seeks to pre‑empt congestion as passenger demand rebounds post‑pandemic.
ABC News
EU’s top court slashes Intel’s antitrust fine by a third
The European Court of Justice reduced Intel’s penalty from €376.3 million to €237.1 million, citing miscalculations in the number of affected PCs and the period of abuse. The decision maintains the Commission’s finding of illegal market‑share tactics against AMD.
ABC News
Tragedy in Fès: building collapse kills at least 19 people
Two residential structures in Morocco’s historic city of Fès collapsed overnight, leaving dozens injured and confirming a death toll of 19, including several children, according to state media. Rescue operations continue amid concerns over building safety standards.
Al Jazeera (english)
Hamas leader pledges to curb Gaza attacks but rejects full disarmament
Khaled Meshaal announced a willingness to limit rocket fire on Israel, arguing that surrendering weapons would “remove the soul” of the movement, even as cease‑fire momentum stalls. The stance reflects internal pressures within the Palestinian faction.
Al Jazeera (english)
Miami elects its first female mayor, ending decades of GOP rule
Democrat Eileen Higgins secured a historic victory in Miami, becoming the city’s first woman mayor and breaking a 28‑year Republican hold on the mayoralty, a result seen as a bellwether for upcoming U.S. elections.
Libération
Economic Shifts
Neoen launches third phase of Western Downs Battery in Australia
Neoen announced construction of the third tranche of its Western Downs Battery, pushing total Australian storage capacity toward 2 GW/6.4 GWh. The expansion, backed by virtual‑battery contracts with Engie, bolsters the nation’s renewable‑energy grid.
ABC News
European equities slip ahead of the Federal Reserve’s policy decision
Major indices such as the Stoxx Europe 600 fell 0.2 % as investors priced in expectations of a 25‑basis‑point rate cut by the Fed, while the CAC 40 and DAX also retreated, reflecting heightened market sensitivity to U.S. monetary signals.
ABC News
Political Landscape
Aegon plans U.S. relocation and rebranding as Transamerica
Dutch insurer Aegon confirmed it will move its legal domicile to the United States and adopt the Transamerica name by early 2028, while also considering divestitures in the UK and a €400 million share‑buyback programme.
ABC News
Environmental Governance
U.S. EPA removes references to anthropogenic climate change from its website
The Environmental Protection Agency faced criticism after deleting content that linked human activity to global warming, opting instead to cite volcanic eruptions and solar variability, a move viewed as a step back for climate transparency.
Libération