Monday, January 19, 2026

 

Lava up: New mineral study reveals buried 'dirt' about bath time in ancient Pompeii


By Tokunbo Salako
Published on 

New secrets have been revealed about bathing culture in ancient Pompeii. Researchers have found mineral deposits under lava which suggest the city's famous aqueducts were influenced by the Greeks, thousands of years before the establishment of the Roman empire.

Bath time in ancient Pompeii has been revealed as not the wholesome and clean experience as some might have thought.

A new study on newly found minerals buried deep under lava, in 79 AD from the eruption of Mount Vesuvius, indicate that water in communal areas was unlikely to have been changed regularly.

Combined research by scientists from Germany's University of Mainz suggests the city's bathing culture was influenced by Greeks and then the Samnites, thousands of years before the Roman invasion.

Their findings, buried under ash, come from the discovery of calcium carbonate deposits, a mineral which reveals the composition of communal water and the presence of human contamination.

Water works

Through geochemical historical analysis the team was able to reconstruct the chronology of the city's water system.

This unearthed evidence that illustrates how Pompeii was influenced by the Greeks and then the Samnites way before the Romans ruled the roost.

The Samnites are described by the British Museum as a warlike mountain people, who, in Italy put up the fiercest resistance to the Romans.

Researchers say the city’s entire water system including the Samnite wells, public baths and the aqueduct the Romans built were preserved by the lava which destroyed Pompeii.

Cees Passchier is Professor of Tectonophysics and Structural Geology at the University of Mainz and a co-author of the study on the baths which is published in PNA (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences).

"The water in the early stages of the baths was apparently not very clean. It's not surprising because the water was supplied by a water lifting machine, so you must imagine there was probably a slave running in a kind of a hamster wheel lifting up water buckets and supplying the baths with water," says Passchier.

The great innovation came in the wealthy Augustan Period from from 27 BC to 14 CE when Passchier says communal bathing experienced a boon as every city wanted an aqueduct.

"People could not afford to build long, long distance aqueducts, they also didn't have the knowledge of it to build them and it's only the starting Greek time, the Greeks started to build longer and larger aqueducts, but it was the Romans, really, with their talent for organizing things, who managed to set up really large aqueducts supplying cities.

It all came to an end in Pompeii, however, before the height of the Roman era according to Passchier.

"The Central Baths of Pompeii were under construction when the volcano erupted and they were never put in use, so there were a pretty large number of public baths in Pompeii, and they were increasing in size in the course of time because Pompeii was unfortunately destroyed even before the peak of Roman imperial civilization."

 

Portugal presidential election: Far-right Ventura heads for runoff against centre-left Seguro

Presidential candidate Antonio Jose Seguro delivers a speech at his campaign closing rally ahead of Sunday's presidential election, in Lisbon, Friday, Jan. 16, 2026.
Copyright Armando Franca/Copyright 2026 The AP. All rights reserved

By Joana Mourão Carvalho
Published on 

In one of the closest contests in recent decades, António José Seguro won most votes in the first round of Portugal's presidential election, with far-right candidate André Ventura securing a place in the runoff set for 8 February.

Portugal's far-right presidential candidate André Ventura placed second in Portugal's presidential election on Sunday, securing a place in a runoff next month against centre-left Socialist (PS) candidate António José Seguro.

Ventura’s strong showing was another milestone in Europe’s shift to the far-right, as populist parties have got their hands on, or edged closer to, the levers of power in recent years.

With almost 98% of votes counted, André Ventura, leader of the Chega (Enough) party that he founded less than seven years ago, captured 24% of the vote and placed second behind Seguro who led with almost 31%. They will face off in a second-round ballot between the two top candidates on 8 February.

It was the best result for a Socialist candidate since Jorge Sampaio in 2001, who at the time obtained 2,411,453 votes (55.76%).

Seguro will now have the arduous task of increasing his vote in a political environment marked by the decline in the weight of the left.

Presidential candidate Antonio Jose Seguro sings the national anthem on stage at the end of his campaign closing rally, in Lisbon, Friday, Jan. 16, 2026. AP Photo/Armando Franca

The PS-backed candidate promised to "honour the vote of confidence" given to him, reaffirming the independent nature of his candidacy: "I am free, I live without ties".

Seguro declared his victory in the first round as one that "won democracy", vowing to do so again on 8 February.

In his speech late on Sunday night, he invited "all democrats, progressives and humanists" to join his candidacy and together "defeat extremism".

The winning candidate in the first round also promised to be "the President of all Portuguese people".

"I'm ready to be the President of the new times. It's time to defeat fear and raise hope," he said, adding that his victory in the second round is the "victory of Portugal, of freedom and democracy".

Ventura winks at non-socialist voters

Ventura's sudden and growing presence in Portuguese politics has snatched support from the country’s two main parties that have alternated in power for the past half-century: the center-right Social Democratic Party (PSD), currently in government, and the centre-left Socialist Party.

One of André Ventura's most significant results in these presidential elections is in the Autonomous Region of Madeira, the historic bastion of the Social Democrats, where he won with 33% of the vote.

André Ventura has qualified for the second round and promises to be the candidate of the non-socialist space Armando Franca/Copyright 2026 The AP. All rights reserved

On Sunday evening, when he addressed his supporters, he said that the country believed he was the "alternative" despite the "talk of the far right and the manipulation of the polls".

"We're going to lead the non-socialist space in Portugal. The right has fragmented like never before, but the Portuguese have given us the leadership of that right," he summarised.

"We managed to defeat the candidate of the government and of Montenegrinism; the candidate who claimed to be liberal, but had been on the globalist agenda, woke, and against Portugal; and we campaigned without personal picardy, without offence," he said.

In an appeal to the non-socialist vote, he addressed "leaders who are not socialists", reiterating that "the right will only lose elections with the selfishness of the PSD, IL and others who call themselves right-wing". "Now we'll see what fibre they're made of."

One of Ventura’s main targets has been what he calls excessive immigration, as foreign workers have become more conspicuous in Portugal in recent years. “Portugal is ours,” he says.

During the election campaign, Ventura put up billboards across the country saying, “This isn’t Bangladesh” and “Immigrants shouldn’t be allowed to live on welfare.”

At the same time, more moderate voters remain sceptical of Ventura, and various opinion polls have pointed to a defeat against António José Seguro in the second round.

PSD faces weakest performance in 25 years

Currently at the head of the government, the PSD and People's Party (CDS-PP) decided to support Luís Marques Mendes, the former leader of the Social Democrats, in this presidential election.

With Marques Mendes not receiving more than 11% of the vote, in fifth place, it was the worst result for a PSD-backed candidate since Joaquim Ferreira do Amaral in 2001, when he got 34.5% of the vote and came second to Jorge Sampaio.

In previous presidential elections, the two social-democratic candidates secured first-round victories and were re-elected for a second term.

Aníbal Cavaco Silva won the 2006 presidential elections with 50.5% of votes, and was re-elected in the 2011 presidential elections with 52.95% of votes.

His successor Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa won the 2016 presidential election with 52% of votes and was re-elected in the 2021 presidential election with 60.67%.

Luís Marques Mendes publicly took full responsibility for his defeat in the presidential elections and revealed that he is not supporting any other candidates in the second round of the presidential elections.

Marques Mendes and PSD do not endorse any candidate in the second round Armando Franca/Copyright 2026 The AP. All rights reserved

In a speech at PSD headquarters, Prime Minister Luís Montenegro also sought to prevent Marques Mendes' result from contaminating the government and the PSD's electoral expression in the legislative elections.

"Our political space will not be represented in this second round. We accept this choice with democratic humility. The PSD will not be involved in the electoral campaign. We won't be giving any indications, nor are we supposed to," said the Social Democrat leader, adding that "the PSD was chosen to govern the country and that's what it will be doing over the next three weeks, as well as over the next few years".

"The PSD will be governing Portugal, the autonomous regions, the majority of local councils, in the course of a legitimate, free, democratic choice by the Portuguese," he emphasised.

When questioned by journalists, Montenegro repeatedly tried to avoid associating a defeat for Marques Mendes with a defeat for the PSD.

"That's what democracy is," he relativised, stressing that the Portuguese make a "distinction" in the different elections. "The Portuguese chose us to govern and we will continue to govern."

Nine other candidates ran in what was the most hotly contested presidential election ever, but none came close to the 50% required for a first-round victory.

The winner will replace President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, who has served the limit of two five-year terms.

 

Carbon-sucking fungi and 'forever chemical' crackdowns: Positive environmental stories from 2026

Tackle eco-anxiety with Euronews Green's round-up of positive environmental stories.
Copyright Canva

By Angela Symons
Published on 

Eco anxiety is very real, so we share this year's most uplifting stories to prove there’s hope for our climate.

With powerful nations rolling back climate protections and temperatures soaring ever closer to dangerous thresholds, it's hard not to feel worried about the state of the planet.

As green journalists, climate anxiety, climate doom and even environmental existential dread are a daily presence.

These terms all describe the negative feelings, such as stress, fear, anger and grief, that confront us when the reality of a warming Earth hits home. With almost daily stories of destruction and loss of life due to extreme weather, it’s impossible to escape the impacts of climate change.

Rather than being paralysed by helplessness, though, experts suggest that we channel these feelings into action.

At Euronews Green, we know we play a key role in combatting climate doom. While it’s our job to be truthful and accurate in our reporting and not downplay or greenwash the realities, we also want to remind you that there is always hope.

This is why, for the past four years, we’ve kept a roundup of positive environmental news. Every year we cover hundreds of good news stories, from eco-innovations and green breakthroughs to climate wins and feel-good reports on nature.

Here are this year's top positive stories so far - including the small and local, the silly that made us smile - and the enormous and potentially world-changing.

If you came across a great, positive story that we haven't covered, please reach out to us on Instagram or X to share your ideas.

Positive environmental stories from January 2026

We’ve neglected the power of carbon-sucking fungi. Meet the scientist determined to change that

An “invisible” key to tackling the climate crisis has taken centre stage after evolutionary biologist Dr Toby Kiers was named the winner of the 2026 Tyler Prize for Environmental Achievement.

The Laureate, which is often touted as the ‘Nobel Prize’ for the climate, recognises “outstanding” scientific work in environmental science, health and energy that benefits humanity. It comes with a $250,000 (around €215,000) cash prize.

How the oceans’ coral reefs could be a secret weapon to tackle food insecurity around the world

Coral reefs could become a crucial part of the pathway to help fight global hunger and improve nutrition around the world.

New research from the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI) says that rebuilding coral fish stocks and managing them at a “sustainable level” is still feasible and may be a solution to tackling malnutrition. In some places, this could be achieved in as little as six years.

A rare whale is having an encouraging season for births

One of the world's rarest whale species is having more babies this year than in some recent seasons, but experts say many more young are needed to help stave off the possibility of extinction.

The North Atlantic right whale's population numbers an estimated 384 animals and is slowly rising after several years of decline.

France’s ban on ‘forever chemicals’ comes into force. Here’s what will change

France’s ban on "forever chemicals" came into force on 1 January following mounting concern over the adverse health impacts of these persistent pollutants.

The landmark bill was passed on 20 February 2025, with more than 140,000 citizens calling on their MPs to support the ban.

 

Will AI replace jobs? Anthropic report finds the answer is not so straightforward

The Anthropic website and mobile phone app are shown in this photo, in New York, July 5, 2024.
Copyright AP Photo/Richard Drew

By Roselyne Min
Published on 

A report by Anthropic looks at how people and companies used the AI assistant Claude, using a large sample of anonymised conversations.

Despite widespread fears about artificial intelligence (AI) replacing jobs, the technology is currently assisting workers instead of t killing jobs, a study by AI firm Anthropic suggests.

Despite the job worries, the research is more complex as AI was found to reshape jobs differently, depending on the role. It marks a contrast to CEO Dario Amodei’s past comments that AI could wipe out half of all entry-level white-collar jobs.

Instead of focusing only on how often AI is used, the report looked more closely at what kind of tasks it is given and whether it succeeds, introducing a set of measures the authors call “economic primitives”.

These measures examine the types of tasks people use AI for, how difficult those tasks are, the level of education required to understand both the user’s request and the AI’s response, how much autonomy is given to the AI, and how reliably it completes the task.

The authors said these markers are intended to give “a new window for understanding AI’s impact on the economy”.

The study found that 49 percent of jobs can now use AI in at least a quarter of the tasks involved, which is a 13 per cent increase from early 2025.

The report analysed how people and businesses used Anthropic’s AI assistant Claude in November 2025, drawing on an anonymised sample of two million real conversations from its free and paid services.

Usage remains uneven across jobs and economies

According to the report, Claude usage is concentrated among certain tasks, most of which relate to coding.

Overall, AI is most often used for assignments that require higher levels of education than the average in the economy, such as Software development requests, the report found.

Not all office jobs are affected in the same way by AI and the technology can both upskill or deskill workers, it added.

“For some occupations ,it (AI) removes the most skill-intensive tasks, for others the least,” the report stated.

The report also highlights geographic differences. Countries with higher incomes tend to use AI more frequently, and more often for work and personal tasks. Lower-income countries show a higher share of educational use.

While work-related tasks account for the largest share of Claude usage, educational use is highest in countries with lower Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita. Wealthier countries, by contrast, show higher levels of personal use.

Anthropic said this reflects different stages of adoption, with users in lower-income countries more likely to use AI for education, while usage in richer economies broadens to include everyday and personal tasks.

Understanding how AI is used is ‘important’

Researchers also examined whether people were using Claude to fully automate a task for them or to "augment" their work.

Automation typically involves giving the AI a task to complete with little interaction, such as translating text into another language. Augmentation involves collaboration, such as drafting and revising a document together.

On the Claude site, 52 percent of work-related conversations involved augmented tasks. That share is down five percent from January of last year.

The report also found that more complex tasks tend to be less reliable. As tasks become longer or more difficult, Claude’s success rate falls, which reduces the amount of time humans ultimately save.

Earlier estimates assumed AI tasks were successful whenever the technology was used. By taking account of errors and the need for human checking and correction, the report reached more cautious conclusions about productivity gains.

“Claude struggles on more complex tasks: As the time it would take a human to do the task increases, Claude’s success rate falls,” the authors noted in the report.

This is the fourth edition of Anthropic’s economic index, which tracks how AI is being integrated into work and its potential effects on jobs and productivity.

Authors of the report argue that understanding how AI is used is as important as measuring how widely it is adopted.

“How willing users are to experiment with AI, and whether policymakers create a regulatory context that advances both safety and innovation, will shape how AI transforms economies,” the report said.




China’s electricity consumption surpasses 10 trillion kWh for the first time, outpacing US and EU combined

China’s electricity consumption surpasses 10 trillion kWh for the first time, outpacing US and EU combined
China produced 10 trillion kWh for the first time, making itself the globel electricity champion. / bne IntelliNews
By bne IntelliNews January 18, 2026

China’s annual electricity consumption surpassed 10 trillion kilowatt-hours for the first time in 2025, according to government data released this week, underscoring the country’s accelerating industrial output and surging demand from high-tech sectors including electric vehicles and artificial intelligence.

The milestone, described by Chinese officials as a first in human history, places China’s power usage at more than twice that of the United States and above the combined consumption of the European Union, Russia, India and Japan. The figure reflects growing energy demands from both traditional manufacturing and a rapidly expanding digital economy.

“Electricity is a country’s lifeline and a driving force behind advanced technological progress such as EVs and AI,” state media reported on January 17, citing data from China’s National Energy Administration.

Demand was largely driven by high-end manufacturing sectors and strategic industries supported under the government’s “new quality productive forces” strategy. In 2025, power consumption in the manufacturing of new energy vehicles rose by more than 20%, while wind power equipment manufacturing usage climbed by over 30%.

The digital economy also played a significant role. The expansion of infrastructure including 5G base stations and EV charging stations led to a more than 30% increase in electricity use in the internet and related services sector. The battery charging and swapping sector posted the highest annual rise, with power consumption soaring nearly 50% in 2025.

By the end of November 2025, the number of EV charging guns in China had reached 19.32mn, representing a 52% year-on-year increase, according to official figures.

During the 14th Five-Year Plan period (2021–2025), green electricity accounted for roughly one-third of total power consumption. Between January and November 2025, electricity traded on power markets reached more than 6tn kWh, comprising 63.7% of overall consumption.

China has also established the world’s largest clean power system and carbon trading market, part of its broader transition to low-carbon energy.

“The country has built the world’s largest clean power system and carbon trading market, and its green industries continue to grow,” the report stated.

Electricity prices remain stable amid reform and rising demand

Despite surging demand and global energy market volatility, the cost of electricity in China has remained largely stable over the past three years, due in large part to continued state regulation and targeted policy interventions.

Despite its position as the world’s largest power consumer, China continues to offer some of the lowest electricity prices globally, particularly for residential users. Industrial electricity rates in China typically range from $0.08 to $0.11 per kWh, broadly in line with the US but significantly lower than in most EU member states, where prices for industry often exceed $0.15 per kWh and can reach $0.25 or more, enhancing China’s competativeness on the global market.

Residential users in China pay an average of just $0.08 per kWh, compared to $0.15–0.17 in the US and up to $0.40 in parts of Europe. China’s limited carbon pricing and state-managed grid infrastructure also contribute to keeping costs down. While the EU’s carbon prices regularly exceed $85 per tonne, China’s national carbon market remains in its early stages, with prices closer to $8. The country’s ability to maintain low-cost electricity is a key competitive advantage as it scales up energy-intensive industries such as electric vehicle manufacturing, semiconductors and artificial intelligence.

While China liberalised pricing for industrial and commercial users in 2021, residential tariffs remain under strict government control. In response to widespread power shortages that year—driven by tight coal supplies and surging fuel costs—authorities permitted coal-fired electricity prices to fluctuate by up to 20% from benchmark levels and removed caps entirely for energy-intensive sectors. The move marked a significant shift in pricing policy, aimed at preventing supply disruptions and allowing producers to recover rising input costs.

Coal prices, which had more than doubled at their peak in late 2021, gradually stabilised through 2022 and 2023 as the government expanded long-term supply contracts and increased domestic production quotas. These measures helped to buffer end-user prices and restore grid stability without triggering the sharp increases seen in Europe or parts of Asia.

Meanwhile, China has accelerated power market reform through the expansion of electricity spot trading. As of 2023, more than 63% of total electricity consumption was traded through market mechanisms, up from less than one-third five years earlier. The trend reflects a gradual shift towards pricing based on supply and demand, though the state continues to play a central role in market coordination.

The growing share of renewable energy—particularly solar and wind—has also influenced the generation mix, but has not yet translated into significant changes in end-user tariffs. Integration costs, including grid upgrades and storage, have been offset by subsidies and policy support.

The government’s approach has allowed it to meet rising electricity demand—now the highest in the world—while maintaining broad price stability. However, analysts note that further liberalisation could introduce greater price variation in the years ahead as China deepens market reform.

 

Afghanistan’s heroin boom years ended with US military exit, UN report shows

Afghanistan’s heroin boom years ended with US military exit, UN report shows
Opium poppy fields in Afghanistan are nowadays a far less common site than they were in the first two decades of this century. / pd, davric, cc/public domain
By bne Eurasia bureau January 17, 2026

Opium production in Afghanistan boomed during the two decades in which largely US forces propped up a Washington-approved government – but it has collapsed since the Taliban retook power in the country in August 2021.

The stark decline in both poppy cultivation and opium output is explored in the Aghanistan Opium Survey 2025, released by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

It shows that sustained enforcement of a ban on growing opium poppy crops, combined with drought conditions that caused crop failures, have driven down output, especially in Badakhshan, a northeastern province of Afghanistan bordering Tajikistan, China and Pakistan that is the country’s main opium poppy producing province.

The survey says that last year in Afghanistan there was an estimated potential production of 296 tonnes of opium that could be converted into approximately 22-34 tonnes of export-quality heroin. That compares to an estimated 32-50 tonnes in 2023 and an estimated 350-580 tonnes in 2022.

Credit: Afghanistan Opium Survey, UNDOC.

The report notes that in “the 2025 season, most farmers continued to adhere to the ban on opium poppy cultivation, which is in its third year of enforcement.

“The total area under opium poppy cultivation in 2025 was estimated at 10,200 hectares, 20% lower than in 2024 (12,800 hectares) and a fraction of the pre-ban levels recorded in 2022, when an estimated 232,000 hectares were cultivated nationwide.”

The UNODC – which refers to the Taliban administration as the De facto Authorities, or DfA, of Afghanistan, given their lack of international recognition beyond that lately granted by Russia – said that the DfA reported that over 4,000 hectares of opium poppy were eradicated in  the country in 2025, “although UNODC could not technically verify this number”.

While lower than the 16,000 hectares reported by the Taliban – ideologically opposed to all illicit narcotics – as eradicated in 2024, “this still corresponds to about 40% of the estimated cultivation area”, the UNODC report says.

It adds: “Eradication efforts occasionally sparked violent resistance, particularly in the northeast, where protests led to unrest and casualties.”

The report also assesses that given falling production and falling prices, Afghan farmers’ income from opium sales to traders dropped by 48% from $260mn in 2024 to $134mn in 2025. This decline resulted from falling production and falling prices.

A truck carrying thousands of pounds of processed wheat rolls goes by in Helmland province. Persuading farmers to swtich to legal crops is tough when the profits available from poppy cultivation are so much higher (Credit: Cpl. Marco Mancha, USMC, cc, ID 110719-M-PE262-373).

Afghan farmers’ income from opium sales remained at historic lows last year, observes the report, stating: “In 2025, opium prices declined from the previous year but remained well above pre-ban levels. Although opium is traded at elevated prices, relative to the pre-ban period, the amounts produced in the most recent year have been some of the lowest in decades.

“In 2024, the average seasonal price for a kilogram of dry opium was US$780 at the trader level; in 2025, the average seasonal price was at US$570, a year-on-year decline of about 26%, but still more than five times higher than the long-running pre-ban average below US$100 a kilogram.”

Credit: Afghanistan Opium Survey, UNDOC.

The report reflects on difficulties in persuading farmers to switch from growing opium poppy to standard, lawful crops, pointing out: “Opium poppy continues to be far more profitable per hectare than wheat or cotton, deepening rural vulnerability.

“In 2025, declining opium prices and smaller yields meant that a hectare of opium generated about US$17,000 in Helmand (a 43% decline from the previous year) and around US$12,000 in Badakhshan (35% less than in 2024).

“Despite this drop, opium remained far more profitable than most licit crops. For comparison, staple crops such as wheat yielded only about US$800 per hectare, while a key cash crop like cotton provided roughly US$1,600 per hectare to farmers.”

The sustained high opium crop prices might have triggered opium poppy cultivation in countries in the immediate region around Afghanistan, the report warns.

“For instance, [providing an indication of this] eradication of opium poppy in two countries near Afghanistan increased from 5,868 hectares in 2022 to 13,200 in 2023 (latest official data available),” says the report.

It adds: “Market indicators suggest supply from elsewhere, too, as opiates seizures and opium prices fell despite reduced opium production from Afghanistan and the fairly steady nature of demand for opiates.

“Such a shift could be an example of the so-called balloon effect, where enforcement in one country leads to the displacement of illegal activities to another – a phenomenon that has been observed elsewhere.”

Looking at another consequence of the ban on opium poppies in Afghanistan, the report says: “Trafficking in synthetic drugs, especially methamphetamine, seems to have increased since the ban, with seizure events in and around Afghanistan higher than before, indicating a growing risk of synthetic drug substitution as opiate production falls.

“Prices for methamphetamine in Afghanistan and neighbouring countries have also decreased in line with higher seizure volumes. UNODC’s systematic monitoring of methamphetamine prices in Afghanistan began in late 2022, and monthly kilogram prices initially fluctuated between US$600 and US$850.

“Beginning in late 2024, methamphetamine prices fell sharply, dropping below US$600 per kilogram. The price decline together with increasing seizures can reflect an increase in production capacity or greater availability stemming from inflows from other countries; at present, neither dynamic has been conclusively verified, and both remain plausible contributors to the observed shift.”