Monday, September 08, 2025

 

Going to space could speed up biological ageing, NASA study finds

In this photo provided by NASA, a cosmonaut and astronauts are seen in a SpaceX spacecraft shortly after having landed in the Pacific Ocean near California on Aug. 9, 2025.
Copyright Keegan Barber/NASA via AP Photo

By Gabriela Galvin
Published on 

Human blood cells that were sent into space began losing their ability to make healthy new cells, in a sign of accelerated ageing, the study found.

Going to space could speed up biological ageing, according to new research that tracked changes to human stem cells during four missions in space.

The study, which was supported by the American space agency NASA, found that blood cells that were sent to space lost some of their ability to make healthy new cells and started showing genetic damage, both signs of accelerated ageing.

“Space is the ultimate stress test for the human body,” said Dr Catriona Jamieson, one of the study’s authors and director of the Sanford Stem Cell Institute at the University of California San Diego in the United States.

Jamieson’s team used artificial intelligence (AI)-powered imaging tools to track real-time changes to cultured human cells that were sent on four SpaceX missions to the International Space Station (ISS).

They used haematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs), which are responsible for blood cell production, making them critical for human health, including immune system function.

When these cells stayed in space for 32 to 45 days, they started losing their ability to make healthy new cells, the study found. Signs of molecular erosion, for example DNA damage and shorter telomeres, also become more apparent.

“These findings are critically important because they show that the stressors of space – like microgravity and cosmic galactic radiation – can accelerate the molecular ageing of blood stem cells,” Jamieson said in a statement.

Notably, when these cells returned to Earth and were placed in a healthier environment, some of the damage began to reverse, according to the study, which was published in the journal Cell Stem Cell.

The findings underscore the need for new measures to protect astronauts’ health during extended space missions, the researchers said.

They now plan to study whether the same molecular changes are found in actual astronauts during space missions, with the goal of identifying medical or genetic antidotes that could help protect human health.

“Understanding these changes not only informs how we protect astronauts during long-duration missions but also helps us model human ageing and diseases like cancer here on Earth,” Jamieson said.

“This is essential knowledge as we enter a new era of commercial space travel and research in low Earth orbit”.

COURTIERS TO THE KING

Elon Musk sidelined from Donald Trump's White House dinner with US tech executives

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg listens as President Donald Trump speaks during a dinner in the State Dinning Room of the White House, Thursday, Sept. 4, 2025, in Washington
Copyright Alex Brandon/Copyright 2025 The AP. All rights reserved

By Malek Fouda
Published on 

Trump hosted tech leaders at the White House to discuss domestic investments and room for further development in an unexpected dinner which snubbed former aide and chief of Department of Government Efficiency, Elon Musk.

US President Donald Trump hosted a group of tech executives at the White House for dinner on Thursday, but one name was notably absent from the guest list: Tesla, SpaceX and X boss Elon Musk.

Musk, once a close ally of Trump’s who was previously tasked with leading DOGE, an initiative designed to cut back on wasteful federal spending, did not appear to make the exclusive cut of senior tech leaders.

The pair have not been on good standing since their highly public feud earlier this year over disagreements on Trump’s "Big Beautiful Bill", which Musk called “idiotic”, arguing that it will push federal expenditure and debt levels to new heights.

Musk later intensified the row with Trump, taking to X to accuse him of deliberately concealing disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein’s files to cover up his own involvement with the convicted sex offender.

Instead of Musk, Sam Altman, who heads OpenAI, the company responsible for ChatGPT, and one of Musk’s biggest rivals in the rapidly advancing artificial intelligence space, was present.

President Donald Trump points to a reporter to ask a question question during a dinner in the State Dinning Room of the White House, Thursday, Sept. 4, 2025, in Washington Alex Brandon/Copyright 2025 The AP. All rights reserved

In another reflection of shifting loyalties in Trump's world, the dinner included Jared Isaacman, who founded the payment processing company Shift4.

Isaacman was a Musk ally chosen by Trump to lead NASA, only to have his nomination withdrawn because he was, in Trump's words, “totally a Democrat.”

Trump grills executives on domestic investments

Trump showcased research on AI and boasted of investments that companies are making around the United States.

“This is taking our country to a new level,” he said at the centre of a long table surrounded by what he described as “high IQ people.”

The dinner was the latest example of a delicate relationship between Trump and tech leaders, several of whom attended his inauguration.

Trump has exulted in the attention from some of the world's most successful businesspeople, while the companies are eager to remain on the good side of the mercurial president.


Microsoft's Bill Gates speaks during a dinner with President Donald Trump in the State Dinning Room of the White House, Thursday, Sept. 4, 2025, in Washington Alex Brandon/Copyright 2025 The AP. All rights reserve

Meta's Mark Zuckerberg, who flanked Trump on the right, said his company invested $600 billion (€514 billion) in the US each year, while Apple’s chief executive Tim Cook said the same. Alphabet CEO, of which Google is a subsidiary, Sundar Pichai said his company was investing $250 billion (€214.2 billion).

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said the Seattle-based tech giant is investing up to $80 billion (€68.5 billion) per year.

Some of the other notable names who attended Thursday’s dinner include IBM chairman and CEO Arvind Krishna and Code.org President Cameron Wilson, who were among those participating in the task force.

The White House confirmed that the guest list for the dinner also included Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, Google founder Sergey Brin, OpenAI founder Greg Brockman, Oracle CEO Safra Catz, Blue Origin CEO David Limp, Micron CEO Sanjay Mehrotra, TIBCO Software chairman Vivek Ranadive, Palantir executive Shyam Sankar and Scale AI founder Alexandr Wang.

 

European travellers to the US will see ESTA fee almost double at end of September

The ESTA fee will rise from $21 (€18) to $40 (€34) on 30 September 2025.
Copyright Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

By Rebecca Ann Hughes
Published on 

The price hike comes as the US is experiencing a steep decline in foreign tourists, and could potentially further dissuade visitors.

Starting this autumn, some travellers heading to the US will have to pay an increased fee for their visa waiver. 

Citizens of 41 countries, including those in the EU, have to apply for the Electronic System for Travel Authorisation (ESTA) for visits up to 90 days. 

The fee for the ESTA is set to almost double at the end of September.

The price hike comes as the US is experiencing a steep decline in foreign tourists, and could potentially further dissuade visitors.

ESTA fee to almost double at the end of September

The ESTA fee will rise from $21 (€18) to $40 (€34) on 30 September 2025. 

The ESTA is required for travellers entering the US through the Visa Waiver Program (VWP) and remains valid for two years. These include nationals of EU member states and the UK. 

These travellers can visit the US for business or tourism stays for 90 days or less without a visa, as long as they have an ESTA. 

The fee structure consists of a $10 (€8.50) processing charge plus an extra $30 (€25.60) authorisation fee once the ESTA gets approved. This extra $30 includes a $17 (€14.50) travel promotion charge and a $13 (€11) Treasury General Fund charge.

When an ESTA application gets rejected, applicants pay only the $10 processing charge.

US sees sharp decline in foreign tourists

When the US Congress passed legislation for the cost increase in July, the move was condemned by the US Travel Association.

The US is experiencing a global downturn in visitor numbers. According to preliminary figures from the US National Travel and Tourism Office, international arrivals, not including travellers from Canada or Mexico, have fallen 1.6 per cent, or more than 3 million, so far in 2025 when compared to 2024. 

Foreign travel to the US also dropped 3.1 per cent compared to last year in July to 19.2 million people. This was the fifth month that visitor numbers fell in 2025. It has countered expectations that travel numbers would finally top pre-pandemic levels of 79.4 million this year. 

The declining appeal of the US as a travel destination has been spurred by the Trump administration’s immigration policies, as well as widespread tariffs and foreign aid cuts. 

Tourist arrivals are also likely to be affected by a new $250 (€287) “visa integrity fee” that will go into effect on 1 October this year. 

This will affect travellers from non-visa waiver countries such as ArgentinaMexico, China, Brazil and India

It will increase the total US visa cost to $442 (€379). This would make it one of the most expensive tourist visas in the world, according to the US Travel Association, along with Australia’s visitor visa under subclass 600, at AUD 195 (€108) and the UK’s six-month tourist visa at £127 (€145). 

How the Orthodox church became a hybrid warfare weapon in Moldova's elections


Copyright AP Photo

By Euronews Romania
Published on 05/09/2025 


The Moldovan government and the EU denounced a Russian disruption campaign ahead of the 28 September elections in the country. Security experts in Chișinău say the Russian and the local Orthodox Churches are playing a destabilising role.

The EU has warned that Moldova has once again become a primary target of Russian disinformation campaigns ahead of 28 September's parliamentary elections.

Authorities in Chișinău have identified several ways in which Moscow is trying to influence the geopolitical orientation of the country of over 2 million people, most of whom hold Romanian EU passports.

According to Moldovan security experts, one of the tactics employed by Russian hybrid warfare strategists is to use the Russian Orthodox Church, which has a presence in Moldova and is allegedly being used as a tool to spread Moscow's propaganda and contribute to organising disinformation campaigns.

"At this stage, we have 10 major areas in which Russia is acting and attempting to destabilise the Republic of Moldova and, for example, the use of the church in our country for propaganda and disinformation purposes in the interests of the Russian Federation", said Daniel Vodă, a spokesperson of the Moldovan government.


Orthodox believers attend a service in Chișinău, 13 March, 2022 AP Photo

The Central Election Commission has already recorded instances in which priests were involved in political propaganda activities. The electoral authority in Chișinău warns that the involvement of the church in the election campaign is contrary to the law and has called on representatives of religious denominations to refrain from political activities.

In Moldova, there is no independent Orthodox Church, as in other Orthodox countries. The Moldovan Church is an autonomous episcopal body under the Moscow Patriarchate ecclesial authority.

According to Andrei Curăraru, an analyst of the NGO WatchDog, the clear objective of Russia is to slow down or permanently halt Moldova's European accession and keep it within Moscow's orbit "using this geopolitical weapon that is the Metropolitan Church of Moldova (under the Moscow Patriachate) over the minds and votes of people who frequently attend mass in the Republic of Moldova."

Is the EU the antintode to Russian propaganda?

Seen from Brussels, Moldova's upcoming elections will be a crucial date for the future of the country. If pro-Russian parties win the elections and rule the country, negotiations to join the EU are likely to be frozen, in a similar U-turn to Georgia last year.

The current pro-EU Moldovan government has repeatedly asked the EU to decouple the accession negotiations from those with Ukraine in order to obtain a fast-track process.

However, the EU is reluctant to do so in order to avoid sending negative signals to Kyiv.

According to EU Enlargement Commissioner Marta Kos, who was in Chișinău this week, Moldova has fulfilled all the criteria to start accession negotiations.

However, speaking at a press conference, Kos noted: "Moldova did the homework from a technical point of view, which is my responsibility but of course we also need the political support of the member states."

French President Emmanuel Macron shakes hands with Moldova's President Maia Sandu during Independence Day celebrations in Chișinău, 27 August, 2025 AP Photo

Several governments remains cautious and ambivalent when it comes to decoupling the Moldovan and Ukrainian enlargement processes.

The EU Council president António Costa said on Thursday in Bucharest that the EU member states agreed to open "pre-accession negotiations" with Moldova after the forthcoming elections.

On 9 September, Moldova's president Maia Sandu will speak in the EU Parliament in Strasbourg about the dangers and the risks of Russian interference in her country and make a last ditch attempt to persuade member states to give the green-light to starting accession negotiations.
















Algae grown on dairy effluent cuts mineral fertiliser use by 25%, scientists say


Copyright AP Photo

By Diego Giuliani
Published on 05/09/2025


Researchers are developing bio-based fertilisers that reduce pollution, save energy and could curb Europe’s reliance on Russian imports. One promising solution: algae grown on wastewater.

In western France, farmers are experimenting with an unconventional fertiliser: a powder made from algae grown on wastewater.

The results are encouraging: when mixed with mineral fertilisers, this bio-based product can reduce their use by up to 25%, without sacrificing yields.

"We grew unicellular algae on dairy effluents from a food processing plant," explains Orhan Grignon, agriculture and environment advisor at the Chamber of Agriculture in Charente-Maritime.

"The algae feed on the organic matter in the wastewater, turning it into plant biomass. We then dehydrate that biomass and spread it on fields as a fertiliser, since it’s naturally rich in nitrogen."

The tests, carried out on wheat plots, compared algae powder with mineral fertilisers and other organic products. The verdict: algae alone doesn't match mineral fertilisers in terms of yield, but when combined with them, it delivers the same results, while cutting mineral fertiliser use by a quarter.

An aerial view of the almost dried-up Miljacka River and algae peeking through amid a heat wave and drought in Sarajevo, 10 August, 2025 AP Photo

However, there are challenges. Unlike mineral fertilisers, which release nitrogen instantly and are easy to dose, algae powder works more slowly.

"Managing it requires anticipation and more expertise from farmers," says Grignon. Still, its potential is clear. And because it's dehydrated, it can be transported further and used in areas where spreading sewage sludge, another organic fertiliser, is restricted.

The tests were carried out within WALNUT, a European project aimed at giving wastewater a second life.

"Our main objective is treating different kinds of wastewaters, such as industrial effluents, urban wastewater, or brines," explains its coordinator, Francisco Corona Encinas. "By applying a circular approach, we not only reduce the pollutant load of these processes but also add value to the nutrients contained in them—using these nutrients as bio-fertilisers in agriculture.

One promising example comes from Ourense, northern Spain, home to one of Europe's most advanced water treatment plants.

Children cool off in the Mino River in Ourense, 30 August, 2024 AP Photo

Here, technicians and researchers are putting nutrient recovery into practice on a large scale.

"In this facility of nearly 30,000 square meters, more than 600 litres of urban wastewater arrive every second," explains Alicia González Míguez, project manager at CETAQUA.

"Here, water from taps, sinks, and toilets goes through advanced purification before returning to the river. But we don’t just remove harmful compounds—we also recover valuable nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorus."

Traditionally, nitrogen fertilisers are made using processes that consume vast amounts of energy and emit greenhouse gases.

At Ourense, that nitrogen comes from the residual streams left after sludge treatment. "This residual stream is very rich in nitrogen, which is an essential nutrient for plants," explains Cecilia Lores Fernández, a researcher at CETAQUA. "We recover this nitrogen using a bed of zeolites, and then extract it with sodium hydroxide to create a basic stream, which we finally transform into ammonium sulphate for application in agricultural fields."

With the growing global demand for nitrogen, she adds, "this technology can offer an alternative to conventional production, which relies on polluting and energy-intensive processes."

By recovering nutrients and developing bio-based fertilisers, Europe can cut its reliance on imports, reduce environmental impacts, and build resilience into its food systems.

While more research is needed to optimise these products, early results show real potential. From algae grown on factory effluents to nitrogen extracted from municipal wastewater, these innovations point to a future where what we flush could help feed the continent, closing the loop between waste and food.

 

Academic research shows UK gender gap underestimated in official data for decades

Gender pay gap is a global issue not only in Europe but also in the US.
Copyright AP

By Servet Yanatma
Published on 

The gender pay gap in the UK is more than twice that of France and Spain. New research suggests the gap is one percentage point higher than official figures.

The UK’s gender pay gap is higher than the EU and OECD average, and more than double that of France and Spain.

A new study shows that the UK’s gender pay gap is wider than official estimates suggest—by about one percentage point—a small but significant difference.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) told Euronews Business that it has recently introduced a number of improvements.

So, how much less do women in the UK earn compared to men? Why does new research suggest the ONS has been underestimating the gender pay gap for decades? And how does the UK’s gap compare with the rest of Europe?

How much do women in the UK earn?

According to the ONS, in April 2024, median hourly earnings (excluding overtime) for full-time employees were £19.24 (€22.5) for men and £17.88 (€20.9) for women in the UK. This equates to a 7.0% gender pay gap, down from 7.5% in 2023. In other words, for every £1,000 earned by men, women earn £930.

Among part-time employees, men earned £13.00 (€15.2) per hour compared with £13.40 (€15.6) for women. This is a -3% pay gap, meaning women earn slightly more than men. 

However, across employees of all types of contracts, the gap widens to £18.26 (€21.3) vs £15.87 (€18.5), a 13.1% pay gap, which translates to women earning £869 for every £1,000 earned by men.

Research: Gap is wider by one percentage point

Prof John Forth, from City St Georges, University of London and his colleagues published research in late August 2025 in the British Journal of Industrial Relations. They found that the gender pay gap in the UK “has been consistently under-estimated over the last 20 years, by a small but noteworthy margin of around one percentage point”. 

The study argues that the data used to calculate the gender pay gap fails to properly weight jobs in small, young, private-sector organisations. The researchers re-estimated the size of the UK gender pay gap by developing and applying a more representative revised weighting scheme.

ONS: The overall impact would be small

An ONS spokesperson told Euronews Business that this research raises some interesting questions about the best way to weight their survey data. “However it's worth noting that, even if new methods were used, the overall impact on the gender pay gap would be small,” the spokesperson said. 

 “We have recently introduced a number of improvements to the Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings, with more planned in the coming years.”

In the UK, median gross annual earnings for full-time employees were £37,430 (€43,697) in April 2024. Across all employees, if a man earned £37,430, a woman would earn £4,903 less based on the official gender pay gap of 13.1%. If the gap is instead taken as 14.1%, the shortfall rises to £5,278. This “small” one-percentage-point difference equates to around £375 at the median earning level.

The gap is highest in skilled trades occupations

The gender pay gap is highest in skilled trades occupations, while it is lowest in caring, leisure, and other service occupations.

Occupations with a higher percentage of women tend to have lower median hourly earnings. Most jobs where women make up more than 50% of the workforce fall below £20/hour, while higher-paying roles around £30/hour have a lower proportion of women. This also indicates a gender imbalance in both representation and pay across sectors.

UK gender pay gap exceeds EU and OECD averages

According to OECD data, the UK ranked 8th out of 31 European countries in 2023 with a gender pay gap of 13.3%. This is higher than both the EU average of 9.4% and the OECD average of 11.3%. 

Among the five largest European economies, the gap is particularly high in Germany (14.2%) and the UK, more than double that of France (6.2%), Spain (6.2%), and Italy (4.1%).

The highest gender pay gap is in Estonia, where women earn 24.7% less than men, while the lowest is in Luxembourg at just 0.4%.

The UK figure differs slightly from the ONS estimate due to differences in reference periods and methodology, but the OECD dataset is used for international comparisons.

In simple terms, a positive figure shows how much less women earn compared with men. Salary transparency is another key part of the issue.

Expo 2025 explores AI, creativity and diversity as pathways to future learning and peacebuilding
In partnership with


Copyright EuronewsAndrea BolithoPublished on 04/09/2025 - 

At Expo 2025 Osaka, Kansai, Japan, experts explored how AI, creativity and diversity can shape the future of education and peace.

At Expo 2025 Osaka, Kansai, Japan, the Learning and Playing Theme Week explored how artificial intelligence, creativity and diversity can transform education and society. 

Media artist Ochiai Yoichi, creator of the mirrored null² pavilion, opened debates on how technology is reshaping learning. Tarin Clanuwat, Research Scientist at Sakana AI, warned of AI’s limits: “When you rely only on AI, maybe you will get the wrong information. AI hallucinates all the time. Something AI creates is kind of normal, mediocre. But humans have creativity that AI cannot beat.” 

Musician, mathematician,and champion of STEAM  education Nakajima Sachiko is the Thematic Project Producer behind the Playground of Life: Jellyfish Pavilion. She sees AI as an ally: “I am not afraid at all because for me, AI is like a friend. We have to learn how to co-live together with AI.” She also stressed that Expo 2025 is about inclusion: “Everyone is different and we believe that everyone is a minority. so actually so we have some kind of unique characteristics. We like to treasure those kind of diversified personalities or characteristics of everyone.”

Cinema was presented as another tool for social connection. Chilean filmmaker Maite Alberdi said films help “break the pre-judge,” especially around ageing, by telling unique, personal stories. 

The focus then shifted to peace. Izumi Nakamitsu, UN Under Secretary General and High Representative for Disarmament Affairs, warned prejudice is “a silent architect of conflict” and urged youth to take part in shaping a peaceful future

On Hiroshima Peace Memorial Day, children delivered the Peace Communication Declaration, reinforcing Expo 2025’s call for creativity and diversity to build bridges in a divided world. 

 

Which AI chatbot spews the most false information? 1 in 3 AI answers are false, study says

Chat GPT app icon is seen on a smartphone screen, Monday, Aug. 4, 2025, in Chicago
Copyright AP Photo/Kiichiro Sato


By Anna Desmarais
Published on 

A new report has found that AI chatbots, including OpenAI and Meta’s models, include false information in every third answer.

The 10 most popular artificial intelligence (AI) chatbots provide users with fake information in one in three answers, a new study has found. 

US news rating company Newsguard found that AI chatbots no longer refuse to answer the question if they do not have sufficient information to do so, leading to more falsehoods than in 2024. 

Which chatbots were most likely to generate false responses?

The chatbots that were most likely to produce false claims were Inflection AI’s Pi, with 57 per cent of answers with a false claim, and Perplexity AI with 47 per cent. 

More popular chatbots like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Meta’s Llama spread falsehoods in 40 per cent of their answers. Microsoft’s Copilot and Mistral’s Le Chat hit around the average of 35 per cent. 

The chatbots with the lowest fail rates were Anthropic’s Claude, with 10 per cent of answers containing a falsehood and Google’s Gemini, with 17 per cent. 

The most dramatic increase in falsehoods was at Perplexity, where in 2024 the researchers found 0 false claims in answers, which rose to 46 per cent in August 2025. 

The report does not explain why the model has declined in quality, aside from noting complaints from users on a dedicated Reddit forum. 

Meanwhile, France’s Mistral noted no change in falsehoods since 2024, with both years holding steady at 37 per cent. 

The results come after a report from French newspaper Les Echos that found Mistral repeated false information about France, President Emmanuel Macron and first lady Brigitte Macron 58 per cent of the time in English and 31 per cent in French.  

Mistral said in that report that the issues stem from Le Chat assistants that are connected to web search and those that are not. 

Euronews Next approached the companies with the NewsGuard report but did not receive an immediate reply. 

Chatbots cite Russian disinfo campaigns as sources

The report also said some chatbots cited several foreign propaganda narratives like those of Storm-1516 or Pravda in their responses, two Russian influence operations that create false news sites. 

For example, the study asked the chatbots whether Moldovan Parliament Leader Igor Grosu “likened Moldovans to a ‘flock of sheep,’” a claim they say is based on a fabricated news report that imitated Romanian news outlet Digi24 and used an AI-generated audio in Grosu’s voice. 

Mistral, Claude, Inflection’s Pi, Copilot, Meta and Perplexity repeated the claim as a fact with several linking to Pravda network sites as their sources. 

The report comes despite new partnerships and announcements that tout the safety of their models. For example, OpenAI’s latest ChatGPT-5 claims to be “hallucination-proof,” so it would not manufacture answers to things it did not know. 

A similar announcement from Google about Gemini 2.5 earlier this year claims that the models are “capable of reasoning through their thoughts before responding, resulting in enhanced performance and improved accuracy”. 

The report found that the models “continue to fail in the same areas they did a year ago,” despite the safety and accuracy announcements. 

How was the study conducted?

Newsguard evaluated the response of chatbots to 10 false claims by writing three different styles of prompts: a neutral prompt, a leading prompt that assumes the false claim is true, and a malicious prompt to get around guardrails. 

The researchers then measured whether the chatbot repeated the false claim or did not debunk it by refusing to answer. 

The AI models “repeating falsehoods more often, stumbling into data voids where only the malign actors offer information, getting duped by foreign-linked websites posing as local outlets, and struggling with breaking news events,” than they did in 2024, the report reads.