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Chinese factories are halting production over restrictions on energy consumption. They include suppliers for companies like Apple and Tesla.
The Social Democrats narrowly won the German election. The center-left party must form a new coalition, with Olaf Scholz expected to become chancellor.
A bipartisan vote on the US infrastructure bill is expected on Thursday. House speaker Nancy Pelosi must unite Democrats on both the $1 trillion bill and a separate, even more ambitious $3.5 trillion social package.
The UK is suspending its antitrust laws to get fuel into vehicles. Thousands of gas stations are closed because of panic buying and a lack of drivers to deliver supplies, and the British army could be deployed.
Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou returned to a hero’s welcome in China. Following a deal with US prosecutors, she finally left Canada, while Chinese authorities freed Canadians Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor.
The global vaccine program is reportedly rewriting its own rules. According to Reuters, the UK somehow got supplies through Covax ahead of African countries.
What to watch for
Google will defend itself in a five-day antitrust hearing in a EU court starting Monday (Sept. 27). Hanging in the balance is a $5.15 billion fine imposed by EU competition chief Margrethe Vestager in 2018, the largest antitrust penalty in EU history.
European regulators found that Google used its leading market position with its Android operating system to secure contracts with smartphone makers and telecom companies. That helped cement Google’s dominance in mobile search, undermining competitor search engines, Vestager found.
How this hearing goes could foreshadow how successful the US Department of Justice will be in its own antitrust suit against Google on similar grounds. The tech giant is also facing an EU probe into its digital advertising practices, which it has offered to settle, and has previously been fined for antitrust violations related to its shopping services.
What’s new about China’s latest crypto crackdown?
China has taken steps to curb the rise of cryptocurrencies since at least 2013, but with crypto markets booming in 2021, the government is getting more serious.
On Friday, the People’s Bank of China said cryptocurrencies, including bitcoin and ether, are not “legally reparable” and should not be used. Now, not only are financial institutions cut off from providing support to crypto-related businesses, but so are marketing and IT providers, the order said. In other words, any crypto holders or miners are now cut off from legal business dealings in China.
“Whilst this is not a surprise as China has ‘banned’ crypto many times in the past, this time there is no ambiguity,” tweeted Henri Arslanian of PricewaterhouseCoopers. “Crypto transactions and crypto services of all kind are banned in China. No room for discussion. No grey areas.”
Wasted fuel
A proposed rule from the US Federal Aviation Administration has led airlines to run extra, unneeded flights just to cement their takeoff and landing spots at airports. If this sounds like an environmental problem, that’s because it is. To comply with the new rules, airlines could emit 20,000 tons of extra carbon dioxide each day.
Nicolás Rivero, Clarisa Diaz, and David Yanofsky break down the data for Quartz members.
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What we’re reading
🤥 What if Facebook is lying to its own Oversight Board? New reporting reveals the board wasn’t fully aware of how Facebook handles posts from celebrities and politicians.
💸 Why cash will be obsolete within a decade. Digital payments will make financial services cheaper and available to more people.
🌜 NASA’s moon mission is waiting on a fight over meetings. It pits Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin against Elon Musk’s SpaceX.
👟 How hard is it to buy Nikes right now? The company’s sneakers are likely to sell out faster and cost more due to supply chain disruptions.
🇬🇷 Only one country in western Europe has a low opinion of Angela Merkel. The outgoing German chancellor is popular in every country surveyed apart from Greece.
Surprising discoveries
Scientists are fed up with lobsters concealing how old they are. Anatomical markers weren’t sufficient to tell their age, so researchers are now checking changes in the crustaceans’ DNA.
Captain Kirk is going to space. Star Trek actor William Shatner will ride aboard Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin rocket ship.
A turtle delayed a turtle-decorated plane in Japan. The shelled reptile was spotted on the tarmac, holding up a total of five flights.
White toilet paper has an ecological toll. The whiter and softer the paper, the more water and chemicals are used to produce it.
Abraham Lincoln’s hair was fashioned into an eagle sculpture. The artifact is made entirely of hair, including that of Lincoln, his wife, his vice president, and his cabinet.
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