The UK Is Facing A Water Shortage From Heatwaves
The UK's biggest water company is over £10bn in debt and may enter temporary public ownership to fix collapsing water infrastructure during a water shortage.
The UK's biggest water company is over £10bn in debt and may enter temporary public ownership to fix collapsing water infrastructure during a water shortage.
America's stressed travel infrastructure faces a major test this weekend as it contends with record turnout expected for the annual July 4th festivities.
Industry watchers and commentators, however, think that it is just "buying the dip," or the market "overreacting" and pointed out that the news is positive for the applications.
Military police in Honduras seize control of prisons to crackdown on organized crime after a prison riot started between gangs killing 46 inmates.
The student loan forgiveness program was struck down by the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court decision, which is now embedded in free speech grounds, has fears permeating of what could come next regarding same-sex marriages.
A Brazilian court on Friday reached the majority it needs to bar far-right former president Jair Bolsonaro from politics for eight years over unfounded claims against the voting system.
The UN Security Council on Friday ended a decade-old peacekeeping mission in Mali, whose military junta has aligned with Russia and demanded the withdrawal of the international force battling jihadists.
Several thousand Iraqis gathered near the Swedish embassy in Baghdad Friday for a second day of protests against a Koran burning outside a Stockholm mosque that outraged Muslims around the world.
South Africa's corruption watchdog on Friday absolved President Cyril Ramaphosa of allegations that he breached executive ethics in a farm cash scandal that spawned into one of the biggest storms of his career.
The US Supreme Court ruled Friday that some private businesses can refuse service to same-sex couples for religious reasons, in a landmark erosion of anti-discrimination laws.
Manchester, UK, June 30th, 2023, Chainwire
More than 150 leading companies warned the EU's plans to regulate artificial intelligence risk harming Europe's competitiveness and do not go far enough to tackle challenges, in a letter seen by AFP Friday.
The top 15 countries account for over 90% of the world's total nuclear power production.
With more than 4,700 stores around the U.S. as of 2022, Walmart employs the maximum number of workers across the country and the world.
More than 1 billion surveillance cameras were installed worldwide by the end of 2021.
Visure Solutions, a leading provider of Requirements Management ALM (Application Lifecycle Management) software
Oddsmakers expect LA Knight and Iyo Sky to win big on July 1.
AI experts question the U.K.'s ambitious plan to lead the world in global AI safety regulation, saying the rising powers in Asia lack trust in London and that China, for example, has far stricter regulations than those presented by the West.
A Nigerian referee went viral for how he mimicked VAR and the TV he used.
Experts recommended two breathing exercises to help children manage their emotions.
Pediatric organ donation is one of the rarest kinds of organ donations in the world since child deaths are far less common than adult deaths.
French Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne said Friday that the government was considering "all options" to restore order, including declaring a state of emergency, after a third night of rioting over a police officer's killing of a youth.
Elon Musk, the world's richest man, saw his wealth dramatically rise in ten years and now earns more than $700 per second.
Eurozone inflation eased further in June as energy costs slid but those of food and drinks remained elevated as underlying price pressures persist, official data showed Friday.