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Tahawul Techa day ago
"@nokia is likely to be a go-to for other data centres Empyrion Digital plans for the Asia Pacific region".
Learn more about the future of this collaboration below.
https://www.tahawultech.com/channel/nokia-empowers-asia-pacific-data-centres/
#Nokia #EmpyrionDigital #tahawultech #DataCentres
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India presses for global 'code of conduct' over pilot poaching
India presses for global 'code of conduct' over pilot poaching

Khaleej Times

time7 hours ago

  • Khaleej Times

India presses for global 'code of conduct' over pilot poaching

India wants countries to agree on a new code of conduct on hiring each other's airline staff after raising concerns that its fast-growing aviation system is being stifled by the poaching of Indian pilots and cabin crew without adequate notice. India, one of the world's fastest-growing aviation markets, is wrestling with a shortage of experienced pilots, denting Prime Minister Narendra Modi's aspiration of developing a job-creating global aviation hub. The recent fatal crash of an Air India jetliner has sparked tighter scrutiny of the sector. But foreign airlines are repeatedly hiring skilled staff from Indian airlines, "adversely impacting India's ability to develop its civil aviation sector in an orderly manner," India said in an August 1 working paper submitted to the UN's aviation agency, the International Civil Aviation Organisation. "Airlines from other (countries) tend to recruit experienced pilots, engineers, technicians, and cabin crew from Indian carriers, preventing India's civil aviation sector from achieving planned and orderly growth," India wrote in the paper, without identifying any foreign airline by name. "This practice creates a vicious cycle where Indian carriers are forced to continuously recruit and train replacement personnel by diverting resources from expansion activities and operational improvements." The paper was released on the ICAO website ahead of its triennial assembly. It has not previously been reported. India's Civil Aviation Ministry was not immediately available for comment. India's government said in April the country would need 30,000 pilots over the next 15 to 20 years, up from the current 6,000–7,000, as airlines collectively had more than 1,700 aircraft on order. India's domestic aviation sector is led by IndiGo and Air India, while all major international airlines from Emirates to British Airways to Lufthansa operate regular flights. In 2023, Air India exchanged barbs with Akasa Air over the poaching of pilots domestically. The working paper asks for the creation of a code of conduct on the movement of skilled aviation workers among ICAO's member countries. It doesn't specify how the code of conduct would work. "These challenges cause economic losses that affect Indian carriers' ability to compete in international markets ... and achieve its ambitious target of 300 million domestic passengers by 2030," the paper said. ICAO, which seeks to use consensus to set standards on everything from runways to seat belts, was created after the United States invited more than 50 allies to agree in 1944 to a common air navigation system.

HK-listed IVD Medical Invests HK$149M in Ethereum through HashKey Exchange
HK-listed IVD Medical Invests HK$149M in Ethereum through HashKey Exchange

Zawya

time14 hours ago

  • Zawya

HK-listed IVD Medical Invests HK$149M in Ethereum through HashKey Exchange

HONG KONG SAR - Media OutReach Newswire - 9 August 2025 - HashKey Exchange, Hong Kong's largest * licensed virtual asset trading platform, has entered into a strategic partnership with IVD Medical Holdings Limited ( a publicly listed company on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. The two parties will collaborate to advance enterprise-level digital asset adoption and explore new models for integrating blockchain with industrial capital. IVD Medical has made a pioneering move with a HK$149 million Ethereum purchase via HashKey Exchange. With access to trading and liquidity services provided by HashKey Exchange, IVD Medical is poised to become a pioneering "Ethereum treasury" among HK-listed companies. This partnership also marks a further step by HashKey Exchange in advancing the compliant adoption and integration of digital assets within traditional industries and Hong Kong's capital markets. Key areas of collaboration include: Block Trade Execution: Access to highly efficient and cost-effective ETH execution via HashKey OTC. Liquidity Provision: Support for large-scale transactions through HashKey Exchange's global liquidity network. Asset Optimization Initiatives: Explore yield-enhancement opportunities, including ETH staking, restaking, and DeFi yield strategies, in collaboration with HashKey Cloud, the Web3 infrastructure arm of HashKey Group. Randall Chan, VP of HashKey Exchange, commented: "IVD Medical's forward-looking move into digital assets demonstrates how traditional industries are embracing innovation to drive growth. HashKey Exchange remains committed to the highest standards of compliance, security, and transparency, and we look forward to supporting IVD Medical in building its Ethereum treasury and exploring the tokenization of healthcare assets. Together, we aim to bridge the digital and real economies and contribute to Hong Kong's position as a global hub for financial innovation." Gary Deng, Chief Strategy Officer of IVD Medical, added: "We are delighted to partner with HashKey Exchange. The digital economy is the engine of future growth, and traditional industries must actively integrate to stay ahead in this new wave of technological transformation. Through this collaboration, IVD Medical aims to establish itself as a leading Ethereum Treasury player, strengthen its resilience against market volatility, and deliver long-term value to shareholders." Hashtag: #IVDMedical #HashKeyExchange The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement. About HashKey Exchange HashKey Exchange is setting a new benchmark for virtual asset trading platforms with its commitment to regulatory compliance, fund security, and platform safety. Operated by Hash Blockchain Limited, it is one of the first licensed retail virtual asset exchanges in Hong Kong. The platform is fully regulated by the Securities and Futures Commission (SFC), holding Type 1 (Dealing in Securities) and Type 7 (Providing Automated Trading Services) licenses under the Securities and Futures Ordinance, as well as a virtual asset trading platform license under the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorist Financing Ordinance. As the flagship business of HashKey Group, HashKey Exchange offers a one-stop trading platform for both professional and retail investors. The exchange is certified under ISO 27001 (Information Security Management) and ISO 27701 (Privacy Information Management), ensuring the highest standards of operational and data security. In strict compliance with applicable regulations, HashKey Exchange does not provide services to users in Mainland China, the United States, and certain other jurisdictions. * As of August 8, 2025, HashKey Exchange ranks 17th on CoinGecko, making it the highest-ranked licensed virtual asset exchange in Hong Kong. IVD Medical

How to cool AI data centres in the desert
How to cool AI data centres in the desert

The National

timea day ago

  • The National

How to cool AI data centres in the desert

In the epic 1962 film Lawrence of Arabia, there's a line from Omar Sharif's character, Sherif Ali, that inadvertently illustrates the current conundrum posed by AI data centres. 'The well is everything,' Sherif Ali tells T E Lawrence, pointing to a well – a subtle motif that recurs throughout the film emphasising how scarce and coveted water supplies are in the desert. Fast forward to 2025, and although water is more readily available throughout the region, supplies are still vulnerable. According to the World Bank, of the 17 most water-stressed countries in the world, 11 are in the Middle East and North Africa, making it one of the worst-affected regions. At the same time, the region is in the middle of an economic renaissance made possible through artificial intelligence. Along with the promise of AI, however, comes the need for huge data centres capable of handling all the commands from users around the world. The data centres, consisting of incredibly powerful servers with thousands of central processing units and graphics processing units, need to stay cool somehow. This cannot be achieved by the small fans we've grown accustomed to in our laptops and desktop PCs. Many of the newest data centres have elaborate air conditioning systems and geothermal cooling set-ups, but they also often rely on liquid-based cooling methods – and that's where water comes in. According to Alphabet-owned Google's 2024 environmental impact report, the company's data centres 6.1 billion gallons of water, a 17 per cent increase compared to 2022. While not all data centres are the same, experts tell The National that cooling methods pose a challenge in terms of equitably maintaining supplies. 'The Gulf's data‑centre boom is running head‑on into the laws of physics,' said Mohammed Soliman, director of the strategic technology programme at the Washington-based Middle East Institute think tank. 'AI workloads generate far more heat than traditional cloud operations, and in a region where summer air can hit 50°C, cooling at scale is the gating factor on how big you can build up at scale to capture a significant percentage of the global compute map outside of the US and China.' Unlike the US and Europe, the Middle East cannot count on ample supplies of cold water for heat exchange, he added. That simple factor means companies operating data centres in the Middle East will have to use what is known as two-phase immersion cooling systems. These systems can help recycle and save water, though it can be expensive and they are far from perfect. Mr Soliman said newer data centres planned for throughout the Middle East might also be able to be paired with existing desalination plants, so the heat generated by the centres can be 'put to work' rather than wasted. He added that while the warmer climate in the region poses an initial problem, technology is quickly evolving, and once the cooling and water conservation methods are perfected for data centres, the Middle East will ultimately benefit. 'If you crack the cooling challenge in the Gulf … you unlock the one missing piece in an otherwise world‑class AI ecosystem,' he said. 'It would give the Gulf the ability to compete head‑to‑head with the natural climate advantages of Scandinavia and Canada.' Innovations could lead to the Middle East being the most optimal place to 'bring chips online', Mr Soliman added. Even in climates deemed more ideal for data centres, problems persist when it comes to keeping them cool. In late March, OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman said so many people around the world were using a new feature in the company's ChatGPT offering that the company's own servers began to encounter problems. 'Our GPUs are melting,' he posted on X. OpenAI temporarily put limits on how many people could use the new feature, he added. Meanwhile, as data centre construction has boomed over the past decade, the cooling technology making it all possible has blossomed. According to Markets and Markets' research, as of 2025, the cooling sector was worth about $11 billion, and if current trends continue, it is set to reach $24 billion by 2032. With environmental stewardship remaining paramount in many countries, companies in the technology sector seem keenly aware of the need to improve the efficiency of data centres, along with the need to cut down on the water many of them use. Thar Casey, chief executive of AmberSemi, a company that has 'pioneering and patented' digital power management technology, said increasing efficiency was key to maintaining the cool temperatures necessary inside data centres. 'If we're cutting the losses inside the centres through efficiency, are we going to need that much cooling? The answer would be no,' he said. Mr Casey – who recently attended the Pennsylvania Energy and Innovation Summit along with Khaldoon Al Mubarak, Mubadala's managing director and chief executive, and chairman of the UAE Executive Affairs Authority – said Gulf countries are showing tremendous interest in increasing the efficiency of data centres. He added that the UAE, which recently announced plans for 5GW UAE-US AI Campus, is showing a particular affinity for lessening the environmental footprint of data centres while maximising the newest cooling technology. 'It's extremely important to them and my message to these countries is that there is a way to solve the energy challenge inside the data centre,' he said, referring to AmberSemi's conversion lines and switch controllers used by semiconductor companies and makers of electrical products. Even the smallest increases of efficiency, Mr Casey said, could lead to significant electricity consumption, as well a major reduction in potential water used for liquid cooling methods of CPUs and GPUs. With the Middle East rapidly stepping up its AI ambitions, coupled with the region's affinity for improving water security, those data centre efficiencies could prove to be long-term game-changers.

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