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According to the Milken Institute, there are some 200 therapeutics being developed as possible treatments for COVID-19; and a remarkable 123 vaccines under development to prevent against infection by SARS-CoV-2, the virus responsible for causing COVID-19.

Reasons to hope and reasons to keep perspective on a vaccine

By: EBR | Friday, May 15, 2020

In the face of an immense burden of disease and an unfathomable death toll from COVID-19, the world today has an intense need for hope

“Any individual behaviour that limits contagion is contributing to slowing the spread of the virus. And we need to make people internalise this externality.”

Social Norms for the Era of Social Distancing

By: EBR | Friday, May 15, 2020

With nearly four billion people in some kind of lockdown, we now live in a completely different social environment than four months ago. And our daily choices – staying home, wearing masks, limiting our shopping, etc. – all affect the spread of the novel coronavirus

Many of the models forecasting COVID 19 infections and deaths have been wildly off the mark. Those experts trying to prove that the coronavirus threat was overblown, predictably enough, used models forecasting low death rates.

Coronavirus: Information, Misinformation, Disinformation and Outright Lies

By: EBR | Tuesday, May 12, 2020

We urgently need to equip ourselves better for the basic requirements of contemporary truth management. Here is your guide for survival in a very contested field

The epidemic response is very much inter-sectoral; it is not just a public health issue. Experience has shown the importance of the agriculture, transport, education, communication, research and security sectors. But if there is one thing that is different in our arsenal today, it is technology and science, from diagnostics to logistics and communications.

Harnessing Technology in Our Battle With COVID-19

By: EBR | Tuesday, May 12, 2020

Tech companies are pumping out new services and products to tackle pandemic challenges

Globally, nurses are widely credited with the sustained mass immunization campaign which led to the eradication of smallpox, the only human disease ever to achieve that distinction. However, throughout history, there have been many other wars against disease in which nurses have supported similar immunization campaigns: against cholera, diphtheria, measles, mumps and rubella, hepatitis A and B, and H1N1, among many others.

COVID-19 reminds us of the crucial role nurses play

By: EBR | Thursday, May 7, 2020

Nurses today are waging war worldwide against COVID-19, a foe as formidable as any in recorded human history

Risk-averse industries like the energy sector should use the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals as the inspiration for new challenges.

How the SDGs Can Power Innovation

By: EBR | Thursday, May 7, 2020

The energy sector is a risk-averse industry with good reason – if something goes wrong, it goes terribly wrong for many people (like Deepwater Horizon or Fukushima). Disruption at the power plant level is not as easy or exciting as it might be in other markets

Facebook agreed, and set about achieving that diversity by identifying Board members who are experts hailing from different backgrounds and disciplines, with a range of different viewpoints, but all of whom could act in the interest of a global community.

Lessons from the creation of Facebook’s new Oversight Board

By: EBR | Wednesday, May 6, 2020

Facebook has long made important decisions about what content to remove or leave up on its platform

A group of researchers at the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy (CIDRAP) suggest that the COVID-19 outbreak won’t end until 60% to 70% of the human population is immune to the virus, which may take between 18 and 24 months.

The COVID-19 pandemic could last for 2 years, according to US experts

By: EBR | Tuesday, May 5, 2020

The coronavirus pandemic may last until 2022, according to a report

Almost everyone now shops online, banks by using banking apps and pays bills electronically. Even those of us who resisted the Internet before have succumbed to it during the pandemic.

Next After COVID: A Computer Pandemic?

By: EBR | Monday, May 4, 2020

The coronavirus-induced shift to more digital life highlights a new source of significant worry: Computers are also very susceptible to infections by viruses

When SARS struck China and 25 other countries in 2003, smartphones didn’t exist, 3G was the wireless communications standard, and home broadband was the exception rather than the rule.

Digital technology, better equipped to fight a global pandemic

By: EBR | Thursday, April 30, 2020

The pandemic has turned the world upside-down, almost overnight. But technologically, we’re better equipped to address this global threat than we were just 15 years ago

This infrastructure revolution will not happen on its own. Though innovation has flourished, the sector lags behind others in technological sophistication. Existing innovations need to be more widely embraced, and new innovations need more nurturing - both areas where better cooperation with governments could yield positive results.

How sustainable infrastructure can aid the post-COVID recovery

By: EBR | Wednesday, April 29, 2020

The economic fallout caused by the COVID-19 pandemic is forcing governments around the world to come up with policies for stimulating the global economy

Speeding up the adoption of blockchain and other digitised ledger technologies (DLT) can help society reconcile security and privacy.

Safeguarding Privacy in a Pandemic

By: EBR | Wednesday, April 29, 2020

In many countries, privacy is in danger of becoming a casualty of the COVID-19 pandemic. For example, GPS-enabled smartphone apps with liberal data-gathering permissions are now mandatory in Hong Kong, China and South Korea

The World Trade Organization (WTO) says global trade will fall by between 13% and 32% in 2020. EU trade experts predict a decline of 9.2% in EU exports and 8.8% in imports in 2020.

Reviving trade is key to a global recovery – here’s how Europe can help

By: EBR | Tuesday, April 28, 2020

Trade wars aren’t good or easy to win. US President Donald Trump’s breezy approach to trade conflicts is as dangerous as it was two years ago – and as deadly as his advice on the health benefits of disinfectants

Many industry leaders had hoped for a clean energy stimulus that failed to materialize in the $2 trillion stimulus bill passed by the US Congress on 27 March.

The climate and COVID-19: a convergence of crises

By: EBR | Tuesday, April 28, 2020

The clean energy community has spent decades tackling a crisis that has been unfolding in slow motion

"Although this economic crisis is unique, there is good news from the recent and distant past."

Four Reasons for Optimism About the Stock Market

By: EBR | Friday, April 24, 2020

Experts have been forecasting terrible economic consequences of the coronavirus outbreak

The percentage of African, American and Hispanic victims in some states, such as New York, is higher than their population, and there are many victims under the age of 65.

The Great Division

By: EBR | Friday, April 24, 2020

In the pandemic era, the great division of our societies is here

Mass testing combined with AI is our best hope of managing the coronavirus and containing the economic fallout.

Three Keys to Ending the Great Lockdown

By: EBR | Friday, April 24, 2020

Each day that the “Great Lockdown”, triggered by the novel coronavirus, continues, the economic and human cost compounds

This crisis has given us a huge opportunity to reboot how we view economic growth and to recognize what is important for our survival as a species and for the sustainable development of the planet.

What COVID-19 tells us about the changing nature of disaster risk

By: EBR | Friday, April 24, 2020

All over the world, life as we know it has unravelled faster than we could ever have imagined

The power of "social learning": when people learn from each other and change their behaviour accordingly. Madhur Anand

What COVID-19 teaches us about ’social learning’ and the environment

By: EBR | Thursday, April 23, 2020

The horrors of the global human death toll of COVID-19 confront me daily in the news and through my concern for my own vulnerable parents

When the crisis subsides, will we go back to normal? Will we even want to? Or does COVID-19 provide us with an important learning experience?

What Will Life Be Like After the Pandemic?

By: EBR | Thursday, April 23, 2020

Having exposed society’s dysfunction, the COVID-19 crisis invites us to rethink our future

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EU Actually

Border controls are the new normal in the Schengen area

N. Peter KramerBy: N. Peter Kramer

Prime Minister, Michel Barnier, announced that France will control all its borders for illegal immigration from November 1

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Europe

Roberta Metsola: The US ‘understands the language of power’

Roberta Metsola: The US ‘understands the language of power’

The European Union should remain united and speak with one voice because the US understands the language of power, Roberta Metsola said in an interview

Business

Value-based trade policies are on the rise- Here’s what businesses need to know

Value-based trade policies are on the rise- Here’s what businesses need to know

Trade policy is no longer just there to promote efficiency and productivity in the flow of goods and services

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