Latest news with #FFD


Tom's Guide
21-07-2025
- Tom's Guide
iPhone Fold battery capacity could be way larger than Samsung or Google's foldables'
iPhone Fold could have a big battery as well as a big screen, says a new post from leaker Fixed Focus Digital (via MyDrivers). According to a machine translation of one of FFD's recent posts (plus a little research to understand abbreviations and slang terms), the first foldable iPhone will have a battery capacity between 5,000 mAh and 5,500 mAh. This is quite large for a foldable phone, considering the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold use 4,400 mAh and 4,650 mah batteries, respectively. The other big part of this rumor is an alleged price for the iPhone Fold of over 15,000 yuan, which is worth around $2,000. We had heard rumors of a potentially lower price for the Apple foldable going by the total cost of the phone's components. But unfortunately, with the Galaxy Z Fold 7 now costing 2 grand and the Pixel 9 Pro Fold only slightly cheaper at $1,800, this price point makes a lot of sense for Apple and its first-ever foldable phone. FFD also confirms, or at least repeats, a previous rumor that Samsung will provide the display for the foldable iPhone. We would be happy if Apple put a big battery into the iPhone Fold — foldables need all the power they can get to run their larger displays. That said, it seems odd given Apple's current tendency to offer smaller than average batteries in its phones. For instance, the current largest battery found in an iPhone — the iPhone 16 Pro Max — has a capacity of 4,685 mAh, which is about 10% smaller than equivalent Android phones. Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. The smaller capacity of iPhone batteries, fortunately, doesn't impact their overall battery life, thanks to efficient components used elsewhere. But this still indicates a trend in the company's iPhone hardware that a foldable model would have to break. Chinese foldables like the Oppo Find N5 or the Honor Magic V5 offer similar capacities to the one rumored for the iPhone Fold, which they managed to reach by using silicon-carbon batteries. These allow for a higher capacity in the same space compared to standard lithium cells found in most phones. Apple has yet to use this technology, but we've heard claims that the iPhone 17 Air could use a silicon-carbon cell. After years of rumors, the iPhone Fold could finally launch at the end of 2026. While its hardware may not differ too much from the best foldable phones already available, the fact it's an iPhone could be all it needs to generate a lot of interest, if not sales. Follow Tom's Guide on Google News to get our up-to-date news, how-tos, and reviews in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button.

Straits Times
26-06-2025
- Business
- Straits Times
Explainer-What is the UN's development conference in Seville, and what can it achieve?
FILE PHOTO: World Bank President Ajay Banga attends the Milken Institute Global Conference 2025 in Beverly Hills, California, U.S., May 5, 2025. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo FILE PHOTO: Nigeria's Amina Mohammed, Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations, looks on during the official opening of the World Economic Forum on Africa in Cape Town, South Africa September 5, 2019. REUTERS/Sumaya Hisham/File Photo Explainer-What is the UN's development conference in Seville, and what can it achieve? LONDON - Global leaders will kick off the once-a-decade Conference on Financing for Development (FFD4) in Seville, Spain, on Monday, which aims to improve the world's aid and financial architecture. Ambitious reforms to everything from global tax to climate-focused funding are on the agenda. What is the event, who will attend, and what can it achieve? WHAT IS IT? The fourth such conference brings together political, financial and trade leaders to formulate a coherent approach to issues bedevilling global development - from aid to trade to debt. Leaders will formally adopt a 38-page document - dubbed the "Seville Commitment" - which was painstakingly negotiated and agreed prior to the event. It will be a blueprint for development financing for the coming decade, but it is a political commitment, rather than a legally binding agreement. The first FFD's "Monterrey Consensus" in 2002 produced targets for rich countries to spend 0.7% of gross national product on official development assistance and supported the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Initiative, which eventually yielded billions in debt relief. The last FFD, in Addis Ababa in 2015, produced the 17 sustainable development goals that have guided multilateral funding for the past decade, and focused attention on strengthening taxation and stemming illicit financial flows. This year's backdrop is particularly challenging, with widespread aid cuts across the rich world - and climate change scepticism from U.S. President Donald Trump. WHAT ARE THIS YEAR'S OBJECTIVES? The Seville Commitment focuses on reforms to help poor nations adapt to climate crises, such as debt swaps, natural disasters debt pause clauses and an exploration of "global solidarity levies", which could tax highly polluting activities - or the super-rich - to finance sustainable development. It also targets progress towards better debt restructuring frameworks and innovations to boost funding, such as multilateral development banks' efforts to leverage special drawing rights. Leaders will also launch the Seville Platform for Action, which would form alliances to expedite concrete progress on the goals. WHO WILL BE THERE? UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed said on Wednesday that more than 70 heads of state and government would attend. They include French President Emmanuel Macron, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa - this year's G20 chair - and sustainable finance rock stars such as Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley. World Bank President Ajay Banga is expected, along with development bank chiefs, the Gates Foundation and other campaign groups. Notably absent, however, is the United States, which withdrew during negotiations after it tried, unsuccessfully, to strip climate, sustainability and gender equality from the Seville Commitment. WHAT IMPACT COULD IT HAVE? The U.S. absence, and continued discord over the approach to certain other issues, such as debt, could hobble the event's impact. Trump's opposition to goals such as global tax rule changes could make success on that subject tougher. Meanwhile, disagreements between African leaders and key lending nations, such as China, over a debt convention also bedevil substantive progress. But sources said the event could be more successful without U.S. attendees trying to water down objectives, and there is a strong consensus that the world must take urgent action on issues such as climate adaptation funding. WHAT IS THE BACKDROP? The U.N. pegs the global financing gap for sustainable development at a whopping $4 trillion. Multilateral lenders are working to boost funding - but the cash they have been able to mobilise thus far is in the hundreds of billions, not trillions. At the same time, the average interest costs for developing countries as a share of tax revenues nearly doubled since 2014. China's lending to Africa has turned net negative as loan repayments come due, and an estimated 3.3 billion people - and more than half of Africans - live in countries that spend more on debt than health. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.


Reuters
26-06-2025
- Business
- Reuters
Explainer: What is the UN's development conference in Seville, and what can it achieve?
LONDON, June 26 (Reuters) - Global leaders will kick off the once-a-decade Conference on Financing for Development (FFD4) in Seville, Spain, on Monday, which aims to improve the world's aid and financial architecture. Ambitious reforms to everything from global tax to climate-focused funding are on the agenda. What is the event, who will attend, and what can it achieve? The fourth such conference brings together political, financial and trade leaders to formulate a coherent approach to issues bedevilling global development - from aid to trade to debt. Leaders will formally adopt a 38-page document, opens new tab - dubbed the "Seville Commitment" - which was painstakingly negotiated and agreed prior to the event. It will be a blueprint for development financing for the coming decade, but it is a political commitment, rather than a legally binding agreement. The first FFD's "Monterrey Consensus" in 2002 produced targets for rich countries to spend 0.7% of gross national product on official development assistance and supported the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Initiative, which eventually yielded billions in debt relief. The last FFD, in Addis Ababa in 2015, produced the 17 sustainable development goals that have guided multilateral funding for the past decade, and focused attention on strengthening taxation and stemming illicit financial flows. This year's backdrop is particularly challenging, with widespread aid cuts across the rich world - and climate change scepticism from U.S. President Donald Trump. The Seville Commitment focuses on reforms to help poor nations adapt to climate crises, such as debt swaps, natural disasters debt pause clauses and an exploration of "global solidarity levies", which could tax highly polluting activities - or the super-rich - to finance sustainable development. It also targets progress towards better debt restructuring frameworks and innovations to boost funding, such as multilateral development banks' efforts to leverage special drawing rights. Leaders will also launch the Seville Platform for Action, which would form alliances to expedite concrete progress on the goals. UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed said on Wednesday that more than 70 heads of state and government would attend. They include French President Emmanuel Macron, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa - this year's G20 chair - and sustainable finance rock stars such as Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley. World Bank President Ajay Banga is expected, along with development bank chiefs, the Gates Foundation and other campaign groups. Notably absent, however, is the United States, which withdrew during negotiations, opens new tab after it tried, unsuccessfully, to strip climate, sustainability and gender equality from the Seville Commitment. The U.S. absence, and continued discord over the approach to certain other issues, such as debt, could hobble the event's impact. Trump's opposition to goals such as global tax rule changes could make success on that subject tougher. Meanwhile, disagreements between African leaders and key lending nations, such as China, over a debt convention also bedevil substantive progress. But sources said the event could be more successful without U.S. attendees trying to water down objectives, and there is a strong consensus that the world must take urgent action on issues such as climate adaptation funding. The U.N. pegs the global financing gap for sustainable development at a whopping $4 trillion. Multilateral lenders are working to boost funding - but the cash they have been able to mobilise thus far is in the hundreds of billions, not trillions. At the same time, the average interest costs for developing countries as a share of tax revenues nearly doubled since 2014. China's lending to Africa has turned net negative as loan repayments come due, and an estimated 3.3 billion people - and more than half of Africans - live in countries that spend more on debt than health.
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Business Standard
20-06-2025
- Business
- Business Standard
Blended finance in India: Scaling up needs regulatory clarity and capital
The UN Financing for Development conference offers a pivotal platform to reimagine blended finance for the decade ahead Kartikeya N Desai Listen to This Article As the world's finance ministers, business leaders, fund managers, and foundations convene in Spain for the fourth UN Conference on Financing for Development (FFD), a harsh reality looms large: We are alarmingly off-track, to the tune of $4 trillion, to meet the sustainable development goals (SDGs). Official development assistance (ODA) has been stagnant, and there have been body blows like the reduction by about 80 per cent of the American ODA budget, and the recent withdrawal by the Trump administration from the FFD4 process itself. In this environment, mobilising private capital at scale is essential to achieve the SDGs. This
Yahoo
09-05-2025
- General
- Yahoo
Fountain Fire hosts town hall to discuss mitigation
(FOUNTAIN, Colo.) — The Fountain Fire Department (FFD) hosted a town hall on Thursday evening, May 8, to discuss the City's wildland mitigation efforts. According to FFD, the goal of the town hall was to educate and foster discussion around wildland fire safety and mitigation strategies, especially within the Wildland Urban Interface (WUI)—areas where development meets natural vegetation and fire risk is elevated. Attendees heard from representatives of FFD, the Fountain Police Department, Fountain Utilities, the Fountain Parks Department, and the Office of the City Manager. The department detailed a mitigation project it completed last month in Hibbard Park–a spot City Parks believes has a high wildfire risk. Crews thinned out brush and grass which could help spread a wildland fire. The City has also identified seven to eight open spaces FFD wants to address immediately with mitigation. FFD stressed that the community is pivotal to the department's responses to fire events. 'On those high fire danger days, those high fire risk days, if you see something, say something,' said Division Chief Jared Cass. 'If you see smoke, call 911. Don't assume somebody else has already called, because maybe nobody has. And the sooner we get notified about those, the quicker we can put them out, the smaller they stay, the less damage to the environment and our community.' FPD reminds the community that the best way to stay connected to first responders and be alerted if ever there is a wildland emergency is to sign up for community notifications at Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.