Deep-sea mining emerges as a flashpoint in shift from fossil fuels
Mining the deep seas: The best way forward to a green energy transition, or a looming environmental disaster?
The strategic use of science and technology in diplomacy is increasingly shaping our lives and helping nations navigate geopolitical tensions and address global challenges. As governments retreat from multilateralism, science diplomacy becomes the hidden infrastructure that determines who defines risk, standards, and the future. Also find our sister publication The Science Diplomat here: https://www.thesciencediplomat.com/
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Mining the deep seas: The best way forward to a green energy transition, or a looming environmental disaster?
British diplomats are leading a push at the U.N. that could be a starting point for a multilateral approach to regulating AI.
Nine social robots offered mixed responses to reporters' questions about how strictly they should be regulated.
A new organization to supervise artificial intelligence could be modeled after the U.N. atomic watchdog agency.
Delegates in Geneva mustered a non-binding report that essentially prolongs a decade-old geopolitical impasse.
The new technology accelerator from NATO quietly began taking shape a year before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
The first Swiss-led U.N. Security Council open debate mirrored GESDA's brand of anticipatory science and diplomacy.
The collaboration found parts of genomes remained the same for all mammalian species over millions of years of evolution.
The potential Russian targets for cybercrimes and disinformation included Swiss diplomats and nuclear plants.
The agreement emerged from high-level political talks among 85 countries on the sidelines of an international summit.
Journalists, lawyers, activists, fact checkers, regulators and others have been using a new tool to fight disinformation.
A coalition announced plans for a global institute for quantum computing that equitably shares the new technology.
U.S. President Joe Biden set safeguards against American intelligence agencies misusing personal information.
ITU's next secretary-general will take over a key agency that regulates and sets standards for global telecommunications.
The U.N. and numerous other international organizations offer a wide range of data sets and statistical services.
Scientists cheered as high-energy collisions of protons in the atom smasher were recorded at an unprecedented 13.6 TeV.