Elon Musk's Tesla and German auto giant BMW have challenged EU import tariffs on China-made electric vehicles at the bloc's top court, the European Commission said Monday.
A poster for "Textures of Time: Contemporary Art from Belgium" exhibition Photo: cguardianart.com
Japan on Thursday formally inaugurated an independent mission to the NATO military alliance as Tokyo and NATO seek to bolster cooperation amid escalating tension from Russia, China and North Korea.
China’s exports of electric vehicles to the European Union rose again in December, prompting fears of an escalating trade conflict in 2025.
By bno - Taipei Bureau Japan has formally launched an independent diplomatic mission to NATO, reflecting its growing collaboration with the alliance as tensions rise with Russia, China, and North Korea.
The growth in export value was largely driven by a surge in shipments to mainland China, following the removal of tariffs on Australian bottled wine at the end of March last year.
Evangelos Marinakis, Angeliki Frangou and Kenneth Rogoff raised the core problem facing Europe vis-a-vis China, Trump’s policies and the challenges posed by AI in their discussion at “The World Ahead
To some State Department officials and Middle East analysts who tracked the issue, it showcased the law of unintended consequences.
Chinese AI app DeepSeek has limited new user registrations due to widespread cyberattacks. The app, developed by Hangzhou-based startup DeepSeek, surpassed OpenAI’s ChatGPT as Apple’s top ...
U.S. President Donald Trump will pursue the "complete denuclearization of North Korea," a White House official said Tuesday, amid questions over whether Trump's recent reference to... The number of victims injured in an airplane fire at a Busan airport the ...
We offer a comprehensive aviation industry database utilised by various entities such as operators, airports, FBO's, charter brokers, aircraft finance, lease and trading, OEMs, MROs, technical suppliers, technology providers and many more.
Speaking to the BBC on Monday, Anne Gravett, from the UK's Food Standards Agency, said: "The Food Standards Agency is investigating if any Coca-Cola products containing 'higher levels' of a chemical called chlorate are on the UK market. If we identify any unsafe food, we'll take action to ensure it is removed and alert consumers."