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Addressing “Forever” Chemicals through Ultrasound Technology

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Technological development brings many environmental challenges, one of the most serious being pollution, whether from air pollution caused by exhaust fumes or soil and water pollution due to fertilizers and other chemical residues, among other substances. Although wastewater management is becoming more efficient in developed economies, data indicates the presence of so-called “forever chemicals” or PFASs in tap water. For instance, a recent study by the US Geological Survey found that 45% of tap water samples in the US contained traces of PFAS. But what is the problem with these substances, and why turn to ultrasound?

What are “forever” chemicals?

“Forever” chemicals, technically known as per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances or PFAS, are a popular term used to describe certain chemical compounds that are highly resistant to environmental degradation and can persist in the environment for long periods, ranging from hundreds to thousands of years. Common examples of everlasting chemicals include persistent organic compounds (POPs) like PCB, DDT, and brominated flame retardants. Additionally, they can be found in nonstick pans and stain-resistant fabrics. The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has classified over 9,000 PFAS.

These chemicals carry certain risks because they can accumulate in ecosystems and the food chain, impacting human health and biodiversity once released into the environment. Several studies have linked them to cancer, reproductive issues, and problems with the immune system. So the question arises: how can we eliminate a virtually indestructible substance once it enters food chains and water systems?

Ultrasonic cleaning, a potential solution 

Until now, attempts have been made to use oxidizing chemicals. However, scientists at Ohio State University in the US believe they have found a technique that could help solve the problem without relying on additives. Their study, published in The Journal of Physical Chemistry A, explores the potential of ultrasonic cleaning as a sustainable solution.

Researchers have turned to ultrasound emission at frequencies even lower than those used in medical imaging. This type of ultrasound compresses and stretches the liquid solution, generating accumulations of vapor that burst violently in a phenomenon known as cavitation bubbles.

These bubbles resemble small combustion chambers in which very high temperatures, reaching 10,000 degrees Kelvin, are achieved. Thus, the sudden heat decomposes the carbon-fluorine bonds of PFAS and generates harmless residues. Laboratory experiments for ultrasonic water purification were conducted with PFAS of three different sizes commonly found in compounds such as fire extinguisher foams. The result was that, within three hours, they could remove the smaller compounds, which are typically more problematic for other techniques.

The scientists behind this research acknowledge that their technology cannot be applied on a large scale, as it would require a significant amount of energy. However, an intriguing possibility exists – the development of domestic ultrasonic water purification systems. Moreover, as demonstrated in previous studies, this technology can also remove pharmaceuticals from tap water..

Other PFAS removal technologies

US scientists are not alone in their efforts to find ways to eliminate PFAS. In their case, it’s a less flashy system but equally or even more effective, with potentially more practical applications. We’re talking about the solution developed by a team at the University of British Columbia (UBC) based on an advanced silica filter that can absorb up to 99% of the PFAS present in water. The PFAS are then removed through electrochemical and photochemical processes developed by the same researchers.

The UBC team suggests that their system could be used to make water drinkable in remote and isolated areas or in domestic systems, as proposed for ultrasonic cleaning.

In recent years, we have explored various methods for obtaining drinking water. For example, there are large-scale technologies like fog harps or, on a domestic scale, systems like a machine that can generate up to ten liters of drinking water per day from the air. Additionally, there are reverse osmosis desalination technologies, which are the most widely used today for providing drinking water in arid coastal areas without river water or aquifers.

 

Source:

Trump reveals ‘huge’ trade agreement with Japan | Latest updates on Donald Trump

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BREAKING,

US president says Japanese exports will be subject to a 15 percent tariff under the trade agreement.

United States President Donald Trump has announced that he has struck a “massive” trade deal with Japan following months of fraught negotiations.

Under the agreement announced on Tuesday, the US will impose a 15 percent tariff on Japanese exports and Japan will invest $550bn in the US, Trump said.

“We just completed a massive Deal with Japan, perhaps the largest Deal ever made,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.

“Japan will invest, at my direction, $550 Billion Dollars into the United States, which will receive 90% of the Profits. This Deal will create Hundreds of Thousands of Jobs – There has never been anything like it. Perhaps most importantly, Japan will open their Country to Trade including Cars and Trucks, Rice and certain other Agricultural Products, and other things.”

The Japanese government had no immediate confirmation or comment.

More to follow…

Banorte in Mexico Reports 4% Increase in Profits Due to Growth in Loan Book

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Mexico's Banorte posts 4% profit bump as loan book grows

Ozzy Osbourne of Black Sabbath Passes Away Just Weeks After Final Performance

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Mark Savage

Music Correspondent

Getty Images Ozzy Osbourne seated and smiling in a black T shirt and cross necklaceGetty Images

Ozzy Osbourne said at his final gig: “You have no idea how I feel. Thank you from the bottom of my heart”

Ozzy Osbourne, one of the most recognisable and influential musicians in rock, has died at the age of 76.

As frontman of Black Sabbath, the Birmingham-born musician is credited with inventing heavy metal, thanks to songs like Iron Man and Paranoid.

Less than three weeks ago, the self-styled “Prince of Darkness” performed a farewell concert in his hometown, supported by many of the musicians he had inspired, including Metallica and Guns ‘n’ Roses.

In a statement, his family said: “It is with more sadness than mere words can convey that we have to report that our beloved Ozzy Osbourne has passed away this morning. He was with his family and surrounded by love.”

They did not specify a cause of death, although the star had a series of health problems and was diagnosed with Parkinson’s in 2019.

A spokesperson for the family confirmed to BBC News that Osbourne died in the UK.

Watch: Black Sabbath performs Iron Man at final gig

Born John Michael Osbourne, he dropped out of school aged 15, holding several low-paid jobs and spending a short spell in prison for burglary before embarking on his musical career.

After singing with several local bands, he joined Black Sabbath alongside guitarist Tony Iommi, bassist Geezer Butler, and drummer Bill Ward in the late 1960s.

They developed a unique sound, inspired by the blues but slower, louder and more sinister – with frequent references to the occult.

Considered pioneers of heavy metal, they released their self-titled album in 1970 and followed it up with platinum records such as Paranoid and Master of Reality throughout the rest of the decade.

Fired from the band in 1978, he launched a successful solo career with the 1980 album Blizzard of Ozz, featuring the classic single Crazy Train.

The following year’s Diary of a Madman was even more popular, selling more than five million copies.

Along the way, Osbourne developed a reputation for his unhinged live performances, exemplified by the (possibly apocryphal) story that he had once bitten the head off a bat during a concert, having mistakenly thought it was a toy thrown on stage by a fan.

His intake of drink and drugs was legendary, leading to some peculiar behaviour. The rock band Motley Crue once described how Osbourne, in a competition to see whose habits were the most debauched, snorted a line of ants from a hotel floor.

There was also a dark side to his addiction. In 1989, he woke up in jail, having been arrested for the attempted murder of his second wife, Sharon.

Following the arrest, Osbourne was ordered by the court to spend six months in rehabilitation. Believing he was remorseful, Sharon decided not to press charges.

Speaking in the 2020 documentary The Nine Lives of Ozzy Osbourne, she recalled: “I told him, ‘I don’t want the money but if you do this again, either I am going to kill you or you are going to kill me. And do you want that for the kids?’”

In the 1990s, his wild image transformed thanks to the MTV reality show The Osbournes – which portrayed the star as the well-meaning, frequently befuddled patriarch of an unruly household.

This, he said, was his true personality.

“All the stuff onstage, the craziness, it’s all just a role that I play, my work,” he told The New York Times in 1992. “I am not the Antichrist. I am a family man.”

The Osbournes also made stars of his manager-wife Sharon, and children Jack and Kelly – with whom he duetted on a chart topping version of the Sabbath song Changes in 2003.

Getty Images Kelly Osbourne, Ozzy Osbourne, Sharon Osbourne and Jack Osbourne in smart clothes in 2007Getty Images

Kelly Osbourne, Ozzy Osbourne, Sharon Osbourne and Jack Osbourne, pictured in 2007

The same year, however, he suffered a spinal injury in 2003 after a crash involving an all-terrain vehicle, or ATV.

The injury was exacerbated by a late-night fall in 2019, that required several rounds of extensive surgery.

In 2020, the star revealed he had been diagnosed with Parkinson’s and largely stepped back from touring after playing the closing ceremony of the Commonwealth Games in 2022.

However, he was determined to make one last appearance, bowing out with his last concert at Birmingham’s Villa Park on 5 July – a stone’s throw from his childhood home in Aston.

The musician sang while seated on a black throne – clapping, waving his arms and pulling wild-eyed looks as he performed hits including Crazy Train, Mr Crowley and War Pigs.

He appeared overwhelmed at some moments. “You have no idea how I feel. Thank you from the bottom of my heart,” he told the audience – and almost six million more people who tuned in for the live stream.

Speaking on stage, Pantera frontman Phil Anselmo said the artists on the bill “would all be different people” without Osbourne and Black Sabbath.

“That’s the truth. I wouldn’t be up here with this microphone in my hand without Black Sabbath. The greatest of all time.”

‘A true rock legend’

A host of stars including Rolling Stones’ Ronnie Wood and Metallica have paid tribute to Osbourne.

On social media, Black Sabbath co-founder Tony Iommi said he couldn’t “really find the words” adding he and the other band members have “lost our brother”.

Fellow band member, bassist Terence “Geezer” Butler, said “Goodbye dear friend – thanks for all those years – we had some great fun. Four kids from Aston – who’d have thought, eh?”

Elton John said Osbourne was “a dear friend and a huge trailblazer who secured his place in the pantheon of rock gods – a true legend”.

Singer Yungblud, who performed a cover of Changes at the farewell concert with Black Sabbath in Birmingham just weeks ago, hailed Osbourne as a “legend” and said “I didn’t think you would leave so soon”.

Queen guitarist Sir Brian May said “the world will miss Ozzie’s unique presence and fearless talent”, adding that he was grateful to have shared “a few quiet words with him” after Osbourne’s final show.

Green Day singer Billie Joe Armstrong posted a photo of the singer on Instagram and wrote: “No words. We love you Ozzy.”

Sir Rod Stewart said: “Bye, bye Ozzy. Sleep well, my friend. I’ll see you up there – later rather than sooner.”

Former Van Halen frontman Sammy Hagar, who was among musicians who performed during Black Sabbath’s final show, said Osbourne “will always be a one of a kind, a true rock legend”.

Osbourne is survived by his wife and their three children, Aimee, Kelly and Jack Osbourne, and several grandchildren. He also is survived by three children from a previous marriage: Jessica, Louis and Elliot.

Climate fintech startup Eventual secures $7.5 million seed funding from AlleyCorp and Upfront Ventures

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Growing up in Hawaii, Dylan DiMarchi was a sailor. And he watched as the weather shifted throughout his childhood, and adolescence. 

“I’ve been sailing for two decades now, and noticing patterns in the weather is our main job as sailors,” he said. “There are definitely changes in certain venues. Like, in my home venue [on Oahu] Kāneʻohe, we’ve seen wind directions and strength definitely and measurably change over the last two decades. While it’s hard to know exactly what dynamics are leading to that change on that island in the Pacific, it’s really important we spend a lot of time looking at weather models.”

DiMarchi has spent much of his life thinking about weather—his experience sailing is connected to his life as an entrepreneur, as cofounder and CEO of Eventual, a startup helping insurance carriers and homeowners predict climate-driven pricing changes. Founded in 2023 by DiMarchi and Youssef Doss, Eventual built a model—based on historical and current data from 20 million homes and 150,000 commercial properties—that estimates how insurance prices on homes in the U.S. will change in the coming years. 

“We’re focused on not just solving insurance generally, but on a relatively new stress—this unpredictability and timing problem.” said DiMarchi. “Many of our customers have seen premiums, often unexpectedly, increase 50% to 100% over the last three or four years, which is wild to say out loud.”

Now, Eventual has raised a $7.5 million seed round led by AlleyCorp and Upfront Ventures, the company exclusively told Fortune

“Over time, we see this being useful for every homeowner in America,” Luc Ryan-Schreiber, AlleyCorp investor, added via email. “Anyone who owns property should have access to this sort of long-term predictability, as insurance pricing has suddenly become one of the most urgent financial problems in real estate today.”

Eventual’s new key product is called Premium Lock, an AI model predicting how insurance prices will evolve for any given U.S. property as far ahead as five years in the future. Right now, it’s available nationwide. Eventual solves “the rollercoaster ride of property insurance premiums,” said Yoon Lee, founder at Connecticut-based real estate company RoomUnity. 

“When you own multiple properties, getting a clear picture of your expenses is super important for planning,” Lee said via email. “Insurance companies base their premiums on replacement cost, which is highly exposed to increases in construction material and labor inflation. Eventual is a smart way to hedge against that risk; it effectively caps how much our premium can go up for a set period. This kind of predictability is invaluable for our financial planning.”

At a time when the Trump White House has been rolling back policies designed to address climate change, DiMarchi says it’s important to think about the far-off future as much as the near-term.

“We are climate pragmatists,” DiMarchi told Fortune. “You can’t just live your life decades out, working on mitigation. You also need to react to the near-term, on a one, two, or five-year time horizon. So, we think that’s our role in this whole universe—building financial resilience against a financial problem that’s a result of climate change.”

Eyewitnesses recount tragic Bangladesh plane crash

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new video loaded: Witnesses Recall Deadly Bangladesh Plane Crash

By Chevaz Clarke

At least 31 people were killed after a military jet crashed into a school building in Dhaka. The tragedy at the Milestone School and College has led to a national outpouring of grief.

Recent episodes in International

International video coverage from The New York Times.

International video coverage from The New York Times.

Denis Ladegaillerie regains control of his company: Believe consortium’s buyout process nearly finalized, halting trading in France.

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Denis Ladegaillerie, the founder and CEO of Believe, is once again leading a private company.

As previously reported, Ladegaillerie has teamed up with the EQT X fund plus funds advised by TCV to form a private consortium.

As of last month, that consortium owned 96.65% of Believe, with the remaining ~4% of the company still trading on the Paris Euronext.

Today (July 22), Believe has ceased trading on that stock market, with Ladegaillerie’s consortium in the final throes of a ‘squeeze-out’ to regain full control of the business.

Under French financial law, a company’s owners can force public shareholders to sell their shares in a business – aka: a ‘squeeze-out’ – so long as only a fraction of said business remains trading on a public exchange.

Believe’s remaining public shareholders had until yesterday (July 21) to accept the Ladegaillerie consortium’s buyout offer of EUR €17.20 per share.

Some of those shareholders said yes: according to Believe, at yesterday’s close, the consortium ownership had increased to 98.67% of the company’s share capital and 97.40% of the voting rights.

However, some shareholders – those holding just 1.33% of Believe’s equity – didn’t accept Ladegaillerie’s offer by the deadline.

Alas, thanks to the ‘squeeze-out’ element, this was ultimately an offer… they could not refuse.

The 1.33% of Believe shareholders who didn’t accept the consortium’s offer by yesterday are now expected to see their shares transferred to Ladegaillerie and co. anyway via a ‘compulsory withdrawal’ for the €17.20 per share price.

Believe has confirmed that the consortium will file a request with the AMF (France’s equivalent of the USA’s SEC) in the coming days to complete this ‘squeeze-out’ process.

Public trading of Believe’s shares has been suspended today (July 22) ahead of the finalization of the ‘squeeze-out’.

Believe – now effectively private – also says it will cease public financial communications.

As a result, Believe has confirmed that its half-year results for 2025 will not be made public.

Last year, Ladegaillerie’s consortium gained majority control of Believe, securing 94.99% of the company’s share capital through a €15-per-share takeover bid. That transaction valued Believe at about €1.43 billion ($1.63 billion).

EQT previously said that, via its stake in the Ladegaillerie consortium, it expects to be “30-35% invested” in Believe. This implies that EQT X now owns around a third of the equity in Believe.

EQT, a global investment organization with €269 billion ($305.5 billion) in total assets under management, has increased its exposure to music-related assets. It has also invested in Epidemic Sound and talent agency UTA.

Music Business Worldwide

Trump team requests meeting with Ghislaine Maxwell amidst mounting pressure over Epstein scandal | Latest updates on Donald Trump

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The United States Department of Justice (DOJ) has announced one of its top officials has sought a meeting with sex offender Jeffrey Epstein’s imprisoned associate, Ghislaine Maxwell, amid continued scrutiny of President Donald Trump’s handling of the case.

On Tuesday, Attorney General Pam Bondi released a statement from her deputy, Todd Blanche, who explained that he is pursuing a meeting with Maxwell to ensure transparency in the government’s Epstein investigation.

“This Department of Justice does not shy away from uncomfortable truths, nor from the responsibility to pursue justice wherever the facts may lead,” Blanche said.

“President Trump has told us to release all credible evidence. If Ghislane Maxwell has information about anyone who has committed crimes against victims, the FBI and the DOJ will hear what she has to say.”

Blanche’s statement comes as the Trump administration weathers a backlash from his base over the Epstein scandal.

On July 7, the Justice Department and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) issued a memo saying a review of Epstein’s case yielded no new evidence, including no “client list”.

But that finding caused an uproar among Trump’s Make America Great Again (MAGA) base, which noted that Bondi herself had referred to a client list “sitting on my desk right now” earlier this year.

Members of Trump’s base have long embraced conspiracy theories about rings of sex offenders in the highest levels of government, and some have questioned the circumstances surrounding Epstein’s death, speculating that it was an orchestrated cover-up.

According to authorities, the billionaire financier — who had a powerful social circle — committed suicide in a Manhattan jail cell in 2019 as he awaited trial on sex-trafficking charges.

Maxwell, a close confidant and former girlfriend of Epstein’s, has been imprisoned since her 2021 conviction on five federal charges related to her role in the sexual abuse of underage girls.

Blanche said he has “communicated with counsel for Ms Maxwell to determine whether she would be willing to speak with prosecutors from the department”.

“I anticipate meeting with Ms Maxwell in the coming days,” he added.

A lawyer for Maxwell, David Oscar Markus, confirmed her legal team was “in discussions with the government and that Ghislaine will always testify truthfully”.

“We are grateful to President Trump for his commitment to uncovering the truth in this case. We have no other comment at this time,” he said.

The update comes after Trump last week instructed Bondi and Blanche to ask a federal court to unseal grand jury transcripts in both the cases of Epstein and Maxwell.

Trump had supported the FBI and Justice Department in their assessment earlier this month, which failed to produce any new incriminating evidence about any of the high-profile politicians and businessmen in Epstein’s orbit.

One of the conspiracy theories circulating about the case is that Epstein used his sex-trafficking ring to blackmail powerful figures, though the July memo splashed cold water on that assertion.

“This systematic review revealed no incriminating ‘client list’,” the memo said. “There was also no credible evidence found that Epstein blackmailed prominent individuals as part of his actions.”

The situation has drawn renewed scrutiny to Trump’s own years-long relationship with Epstein, as high-profile members of the MAGA base denounced the results of the memo as unsatisfying and inconclusive.

The president has attempted to dismiss the outcry, calling the controversy the “Epstein hoax” and denouncing his supporters as “weaklings” for perpetuating it.

That did little to stem the outrage from some of the most influential voices in the MAGA movement, who have called on Bondi to resign.

Earlier this year, Bondi vowed that the Justice Department would release additional materials, including “a lot of names” and “a lot of flight logs” in connection with Epstein’s clients.

However, the information that the department has released since Trump took office has shed no new light on the case.

Trump himself has had to contend with media reports over his ties to Epstein. He recently filed a lawsuit against The Wall Street Journal after the newspaper reported on a “bawdy” letter Trump allegedly wrote to Epstein for his 50th birthday.

Several of Trump’s top officials have themselves spent years fuelling speculation over the Epstein files, including FBI Director Kash Patel and Deputy Director Dan Bongino.

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Brazil’s Supreme Court Justice warns of potential arrest for Jair Bolsonaro

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A Brazilian Supreme Court justice has threatened to detain former President Jair Bolsonaro.

The judge, Alexandre de Moraes, accused Bolsonaro of breaching a ban which bars him from appearing in audios, videos and interviews shared on social media.

Justice Moraes said the ex-president could face “immediate imprisonment” unless his lawyers could provide a satisfactory explanation within 24 hours as to why their client had appeared in a video shared by Bolsonaro’s son, Eduardo, on Monday.

Bolsonaro is on trial for allegedly plotting a coup to prevent President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva from taking office in 2023, which he denies.

Moraes has been leading the investigation into allegations Bolsonaro and his allies committed “antidemocratic acts”.

Moraes had already imposed a raft of restrictions on Bolsonaro on Friday, including a night-time and a weekend curfew, as well as 24-hour surveillance, to prevent him from fleeing the country while he is on trial.

Bolsonaro has also been ordered to refrain from contacting foreign governments and their embassies in Brazil.

Furthermore, the ex-president has to wear an electronic ankle tag and is barred from communicating with Eduardo, who has been lobbying on his father’s behalf in the United States.

Bolsonaro insists that he has never considered leaving Brazil and called Justice Moraes a “dictator”.

The measures were ordered by Moraes following a request from the federal police and with the endorsement of Brazil’s Attorney-General’s Office.

Police had earlier accused Bolsonaro and his son of trying to obstruct the trial against the ex-president and of violating Brazil’s sovereignty by encouraging the US government to interfere in the trial.

On Monday, Moraes gave further details of the restrictions, explaining that Bolsonaro was not just barred from appearing in videos and audios that he himself shared on social media, but also from appearing in those shared or published by third parties.

Shortly after that, Bolsonaro spoke to journalists as he was leaving Congress, where he had met opposition lawmakers.

He showed them his electronic ankle tag, calling it “a symbol of the utmost humiliation”.

Footage of the interaction was shared on social media by Eduardo Bolsonaro and supporters of his father, in what Moraes says was a breach of the restrictions he had imposed.

The trial of Jair Bolsonaro, who governed Brazil from January 2019 to December 2022, is being closely followed by US President Donald Trump, who has denounced it as a “witch hunt”.

The two men are long-time allies and earlier this month, Trump threatened to slap a 50% tariff on Brazilian goods starting on 1 August.

In his letter to the current Brazilian president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Trump cited Brazil’s treatment of Bolsonaro as a trigger for the tariff hike.

Tension between the two governments rose further on Friday, when – in response to the restrictions imposed on Bolsonaro – the Trump administration revoked the US visa of Moraes and other Supreme Court justices.

President Lula called it an “arbitrary and completely baseless measure” and denounced “the interference of one country in another’s justice system”.