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Exposome research needed to avoid ‘epidemic of non-communicable diseases’, warns MEP [Advocacy Lab]

Euractiv.com - mer, 06/05/2026 - 09:30
The EU is making strides in incorporating the new exposome concept of exposure cocktails into law. But there is concern that the simplification drive could undo that progress
Catégories: Afrique, European Union

REPORT containing a motion for a non-legislative resolution on the draft Council decision on the conclusion, on behalf of the Union, of the Enhanced Partnership and Cooperation Agreement between the European Union and its Member States, of the one part...

REPORT containing a motion for a non-legislative resolution on the draft Council decision on the conclusion, on behalf of the Union, of the Enhanced Partnership and Cooperation Agreement between the European Union and its Member States, of the one part, and the Republic of Uzbekistan, of the other part
Committee on Foreign Affairs
Ilhan Kyuchyuk

Source : © European Union, 2026 - EP
Catégories: Afrique, Europäische Union

REPORT containing a motion for a non-legislative resolution on the draft Council decision on the conclusion, on behalf of the Union, of the Enhanced Partnership and Cooperation Agreement between the European Union and its Member States, of the one part...

REPORT containing a motion for a non-legislative resolution on the draft Council decision on the conclusion, on behalf of the Union, of the Enhanced Partnership and Cooperation Agreement between the European Union and its Member States, of the one part, and the Republic of Uzbekistan, of the other part
Committee on Foreign Affairs
Ilhan Kyuchyuk

Source : © European Union, 2026 - EP
Catégories: Afrique, European Union

How Santa Marta Finally Made Fossil Fuel Phase-Out Politically Discussable

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - mer, 06/05/2026 - 08:56

Irene Velez Torres, Director of the Colombian National Environmental Agency, during a panel discussion with policy experts at the Santa Marta Conference. Credit: Supplied

By Umar Manzoor Shah
SRINAGAR, India, May 6 2026 (IPS)

The First Conference on Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels in Santa Marta, Colombia, may eventually be remembered as a defining moment in global climate politics, not because it produced a treaty or a formal negotiation outcome, but because it changed the tone, structure, and ambition of the conversation itself.

For decades, international climate diplomacy has been about managing emissions, not addressing the source of those emissions: fossil fuels. Governments continued to discuss carbon markets, offsets and adaptation funds but so too did the growth in oil, gas and coal production. Within the UN climate process itself, producer nations and powerful economic interests often blocked direct discussion of phasing out fossil fuels. However, there was no such case as Santa Marta.

The conference, co-hosted by Colombia and the Netherlands and attended by delegates from almost 60 nations, was not intended to be another COP-style negotiation. It was explicitly designed as a political and practical platform for those countries willing to move faster on the fossil fuel phase-out. That makes a difference.

“This was not a negotiating conference. This is about dialogue and looking together at what we can do and how we can apply our creativity, our collaboration, and the science to find new opportunities,” said Stientje van Veldhoven-van der Meer, Dutch Climate and Green Growth Minister.

The conference’s most important accomplishment might be the single transition from negotiation to problem-solving.

Traditional COP summits often descend into exercises in diplomatic survival, with countries fighting over language late into the night and protecting narrow interests. In Santa Marta, ministers repeatedly stressed that participants were not there to defend positions but to create solutions.

“The contrast was stark,” said Minina Talia, Tuvalu’s Minister for Home Affairs, Climate Change and Environment.

“I’ve been to a lot of COPs over the years and I’ve never felt like this. More chilled, ready to go home. We are not here to bargain. We’re here to find solutions,” he told reporters on the concluding day of the conference.

For small island states like Tuvalu, where climate change is an existential threat now rather than a future risk, this difference is significant. It is the politics of survival.

Several Concrete Results

Ireland and Tuvalu will co-host a second conference, ensuring continuity and signalling a conscious North-South partnership. A dedicated science panel will support countries and regions in their transition away from fossil fuels. Three work streams were established: pathways to transition away from fossil fuels; decarbonisation of trade balances; and new financial mechanisms to finance the transition.

These are not symbols for deliverables. They went to the core of the politics of dependence on fossil fuels.

The biggest challenge in climate politics is no longer to prove that climate change is real. It’s trying to work out how countries that rely on fossil fuel revenues can survive the transition without economic collapse, social unrest or widening inequality.

That means dealing with debt, subsidies, tax systems, labour transitions, industrial planning and trade balances. The focus on financial architecture in Santa Marta is a sign of awareness on the part of the participants.

The debate over fossil fuel subsidies was particularly important. Ministers emphasised the need for transparency on the location of fossil fuel incentives, revenues and dependencies within national economies. This is important because fossil fuels are not just an energy issue. They’re so entrenched in national budgets, banking systems, foreign policy and power structures.

The war in the Middle East, the disruption of oil supplies and the general insecurity of world energy have hastened the need for change. But unlike previous oil crises, this time renewable energy is getting cheaper and cheaper compared to fossil fuels, and electric vehicles are scaling up very fast.

Participants argued that the war has revealed not the need for more oil drilling, but the danger of fossil fuel dependence itself.

“The war really opened up peoples’ eyes to how fragile the fossil fuel system is,” a speaker said. “And this war comes at a time when renewables are cheaper than fossil fuels.

This shifts the transition from a strictly environmental imperative to a strategic economic and security priority.

Action on climate is no longer simply about saving the planet. It’s about stabilising economies, reducing geopolitical vulnerability and avoiding the financial risks of stranded fossil assets.

The reason this is a powerful shift is that finance ministers tend to move faster than environment ministers.

Another remarkable strength of Santa Marta was its insistence on being inclusive. Indigenous Peoples, parliamentarians, peasants, women, NGOs and even children were brought into the heart of the conversation.

“This is a new climate democracy, where governments are no longer the only actors making climate decisions,” said Irene Velez Torres, Director of the Colombian National Environmental Agency.

One of the strongest interventions at the conference came from Indigenous representatives, who warned that a clean energy transition without land justice would simply mean another wave of colonial extraction. Their declaration rejects a future where extraction of fossil fuels is replaced by mining for transition minerals, mega dams or industrial projects imposed on Indigenous lands without consent.

“If we are not part of building the just transition and the phase-out of fossil fuels, it will not be just,” they said in a joint declaration at the end of the conference on April 29.

This revealed one of the deepest contradictions in global climate policy: many governments speak of a green transition but continue with extractive models under a new name.

Indigenous leaders demanded free, prior and informed consent, legal recognition of the rights to their territories, direct access to climate finance and protection for land defenders at risk of criminalisation and violence.

The Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty initiative continues to be central. Tuvalu has been one of its earliest supporters, demanding a legally binding international framework to stop expansion and ensure a fair phase-out of fossil fuels.

Talia welcomed the treaty for raising the bar in terms of moral pressure and providing governments with clearer information but warned against limiting the whole transition conversation to one mechanism.

He said: “The treaty is an initiative. We want to look at all other initiatives so that we have a fair, balanced outcome.”

That’s a sign of strategic maturity. One treaty will not kill the most profitable industry in modern history.

These include UNFCCC processes, national policy, fossil fuel treaty mechanisms, regional declarations, central bank reforms and the involvement of financial institutions.

Participants highlighted China’s green lending strategies and said banking systems need to stop rewarding fossil fuel dependence and instead finance transition at scale.

Likewise, Pacific island nations are advocating for regional “fossil fuel-free zones”, supported by new declarations and intergovernmental task forces. These efforts matter because regional leadership often moves quicker than global consensus.

Hence, the choice of Tuvalu as the venue for the next conference is very significant. It’s shifting the discussion from the diplomatic capitals to one of the world’s most climate-vulnerable countries. It forces political leaders to confront the human reality of rising seas, disappearing land and threatened sovereignty.

History in the Making

Santa Marta won’t solve the fossil fuel crisis. It doesn’t stop new drilling. It does not yet impose binding obligations.But it may have done something more important, which is to make fossil fuel phase-out politically discussable at scale. For years, people saw talking straight about ending oil, gas, and coal as too radical, too unrealistic, or too politically dangerous. In Santa Marta it became the focus of the room.

If this coalition grows from 60 to 100 countries, if its outcomes feed into COP31 and national climate plans, if the finance systems start to shift, and if the Pacific conference deepens the legal momentum, then Santa Marta could be remembered not as a one-off summit but as the moment when climate diplomacy finally stopped treating the symptoms and started tackling the disease. That would be history.

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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L’UE accorde aux Russes PLUS de visas touristiques

Euractiv.fr - mer, 06/05/2026 - 08:49

Également dans l'édition de mercredi : le commerce avec les États-Unis, un porte-parole au langage grossier, le CESE, Várhelyi reste en poste, la Roumanie

The post L’UE accorde aux Russes PLUS de visas touristiques appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Congo Nouveau : Tshisekedi et l’UDPS s’américanisent ?

Radio Okapi / RD Congo - mer, 06/05/2026 - 08:44


Les sanctions américaines contre l’ex-président Joseph Kabila continuent d’alimenter les débats dans les médias de la capitale, ce mercredi 6 mai.


Congo Nouveau : « Joseph Kabila : La fin d’une époque ? »

Catégories: Afrique, France

Addictive design on online platforms

Written by Mar Negreiro with Öykü Dilara Anaç.

Increased time spent online and regulatory pressure.

Social media platforms’ business model relies on keeping users online for as long as possible so they can display more advertising. The platforms are optimised to trigger dopamine, a neurotransmitter the brain releases when it expects a reward, encouraging repeated and prolonged use. Yet excessive social media use – defined as spending more than three hours a day on online platforms – has been linked to poorer mental health, particularly higher levels of depression and anxiety. A 2025 survey conducted by Pew Research Center showed that minors aged between 13 and 17 in the United States (US) are much more likely than they were two years ago to describe their social media use as excessive. Nearly half reported that they spend too much time on these platforms, as they are on the internet ‘almost constantly’.

According to one survey, European teenagers aged 16 and 17 also reported spending more time than they wanted to on online platforms and losing sleep time at night, which might result in displacement from other, healthier activities. For instance, teens who are online late at night are more likely to experience shortened sleep duration and poorer quality of sleep, both risk factors for depression and irritability, a review shows.

Among both children and adults, excessive screen time and social media use have been linked to changes in brain function, including reduced attention and weaker impulse control. The adolescent brain is especially vulnerable. Experts warn that constant exposure to comparison cues, curated content and algorithm-driven engagement loops can create psychological stress that resonates long after the screen is turned off.

Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and TikTok are leading in terms of online monthly users. In the EU, TikTok has more than 200 million active users, making it one of the fastest-growing networks ever. There are over 100 million pieces of content uploaded daily. Users spend an average of 137 minutes on it per day (compared to 27 minutes in 2019) and open it about eight times a day – over 20 % of US teenagers ‘almost constantly’.

At present, TikTok is facing regulatory pressure on both sides of the Atlantic. In Europe, the European Commission started an investigation into TikTok on 19 February 2024 under the DSA, which is ongoing. In the US, TikTok was obliged to restructure its operations under a majority American-owned joint venture, and has settled ahead of trial in a social media addiction lawsuit in California that also involved other platforms, such as Meta and YouTube. They were found negligent for designing addictive online platforms. It is the first time that major social media companies have been found liable by a US jury for this reason. While the damages awarded (US$6 million) are insignificant for two companies worth trillions of dollars, the decision represents a precedent and could impact design choices to avoid further prosecution.

The DSA as a tool to redress online addictive design choices

The Commission has intensified its scrutiny under the DSA of addictive design choices on online platforms. In 2024, it opened an investigation into Meta (ongoing), as it believed both Facebook and Instagram platforms’ designs might stimulate behavioural addictions in minors. Shein is also under scrutiny.

On 6 February 2026, the Commission preliminarily found TikTok in breach of the DSA for its addictive design features, including infinite scroll, autoplay, push notifications and highly personalised recommender systems. Additionally, it found that TikTok disregarded important indicators of compulsive use of the app, such as the time minors spend on TikTok at night, the frequency with which users open the app and other potential indicators. Under the DSA, very large online platforms (VLOPs) such as TikTok have to carry out risk assessments (Article 34) and implement effective measures to mitigate these risks (Article 35). The term ‘addictive design’ does not appear explicitly in the DSA. Instead, the legal link lies in Article 34 (including risks to public health, minors, and users’ physical and mental well-being) and Article 25. The latter prohibits deceptive or manipulative interface design, often associated with ‘dark patterns‘. It introduces a general prohibition applicable to providers of online platforms (not only VLOPs), preventing them from designing or organising their online user interfaces in such a way as to deceive or manipulate users or otherwise materially distort or impair their ability to make free and informed decisions. In addition, Article 28 stipulates general protection of minors online. There are also specific guidelines for all platforms to protect children from addictive behaviours and commercial practices online.

The Commission’s assessment is based on an in-depth investigation (still ongoing) that included an analysis of TikTok’s DSA risk assessment reports, internal data and TikTok’s responses to multiple requests for information, a review of research on this topic and expert interviews. According to the Commission, TikTok’s recommender systems and engagement-maximising interfaces generate systemic risks to the mental well-being of minors and vulnerable adults. Thus, the harm arises from prolonged, compulsive engagement that users struggle to control, stemming from the persuasive design choices made by the platform. The DSA does not provide an explicit definition of a ‘vulnerable adult’. It employs a risk-based approach focusing on protecting users from systemic risks, particularly targeting minors, those with disabilities and vulnerable groups.

TikTok can now exercise its right to defence. It may examine the documents in the Commission’s investigation files and reply in writing to the Commission’s preliminary findings. In parallel, the European Board for Digital Services, an independent advisory group to the Commission, will be consulted. If the Commission’s views are ultimately confirmed, the Commission may issue a non-compliance decision, potentially triggering a fine of up to 6 % of TikTok’s total worldwide annual turnover (estimated at over €30 billion in 2025).

The Commission preliminarily finds that TikTok needs to change the basic design of its service. Specific examples cited by the Commission include disabling key addictive features, such as infinite scroll over time, implementing effective screen time breaks (including during the night) and adapting its recommender system. Incremental adjustments or optional user controls might not be sufficient. Instead, the platform’s core architecture, with features that drive user engagement, might need to be restructured.

Next steps

Safety through design of online platforms for minors is gaining political attention and scrutiny on both sides of the Atlantic. Many argue that age restrictions are not sufficient, as they shift the blame away from platforms’ harmful designs. Likewise, parental control tools are not enough, as they also transfer responsibility from platforms on to children and their parents, and can be difficult to implement depending on parents’ digital literacy. According to the European Consumer Association BEUC, these measures should be complemented with fairness by design components.

If confirmed, these findings will establish the first European precedent for how platforms should mitigate risks from features designed to maximise engagement. The upcoming Digital Fairness Act may introduce even stricter rules, including obligations to switch off manipulative features and greater protections for children. Defining and regulating ‘addictive design’ is complex. Hence, the challenge of this investigation is to assess what constitutes acceptable design. At its core is also whether online platforms’ business models are compatible with children’s safety, and whether platforms’ declarations of intent are enough to mitigate the risks identified in their annual DSA reports. Civil society has criticised the lack of clarity. They argue that DSA risk assessments should be carried out more transparently, as platforms’ methodologies and claims are not always supported by the indicators and data provided.

The European Parliament has been active on this issue. In a December 2023 resolution on addictive design of online services, it called for an end to dark patterns and gaps in consumer protection online. The issue has also been considered more recently in the Internal Market and Consumer Protection Committee (IMCO)’s own initiative report on the protection of minors online and in another report on the impact of social media and the online environment on young people being prepared by the Culture and Education Committee (CULT).

Read this ‘at a glance’ note on ‘Addictive design on online platforms‘ in the Think Tank pages of the European Parliament.

FIRST AID: Commission tackles nicotine yet hits limits on generational ban

Euractiv.com - mer, 06/05/2026 - 08:21
In today's edition: Biotech Act, Section 301, Hantavirus
Catégories: Afrique, European Union

THE HACK: MEPs try divining fact from Mythos

Euractiv.com - mer, 06/05/2026 - 08:14
In today's edition: WhatsApp's rivals hearing, public interest AI, EU eyes Japan’s chips
Catégories: Afrique, European Union

VOLTAGE: Huawei cries ‘discrimination’ over subsidy restrictions

Euractiv.com - mer, 06/05/2026 - 08:07
In today's edition: solar and wind power inverters, aw materials, carmakers' new reality
Catégories: Afrique, European Union

FIREPOWER: Kubilius to Europe’s defence industry: Don’t just do ‘haute couture’

Euractiv.com - mer, 06/05/2026 - 08:02
In today's edition: Ukraine loan, SAFE, energy security
Catégories: Afrique, European Union

HARVEST: Appetite for amendments

Euractiv.com - mer, 06/05/2026 - 07:54
In today's edition: Turnberry deal, food safety, pesticides
Catégories: Afrique, European Union

Iran Has All the Hallmarks of a Forever War

Foreign Policy - mer, 06/05/2026 - 07:51
There is a way out of this mess—but not right away.

En plein cessez-le-feu unilatéral de Kiev, Moscou frappe l'Ukraine

RFI (Europe) - mer, 06/05/2026 - 07:48
L'Ukraine a accusé la Russie d'une nouvelle attaque avec « 108 drones et trois missiles », ce mercredi 6 mai au matin, au lendemain de frappes russes qui ont fait au moins 28 morts dans le pays, alors qu'a pourtant débuté à minuit un cessez-le-feu annoncé unilatéralement par Kiev.
Catégories: France, Union européenne

Incendie du siège du PPRD : la société civile dénonce ''une dérive'' violente du débat politique

Radio Okapi / RD Congo - mer, 06/05/2026 - 07:48


L’indignation est vive au sein de la société civile congolaise après l’incendie du siège du Parti du peuple pour la reconstruction et la démocratie (PPRD), parti de l’ex-président Joseph Kabila, à Kinshasa. Cette structure citoyenne tire la sonnette d’alarme sur une « radicalisation dangereuse » du débat politique en République démocratique du Congo.

Catégories: Afrique, France

EU gives Russians MORE tourist visas

Euractiv.com - mer, 06/05/2026 - 07:40
Also, in Wednesday’s edition: US trade, sweary spox, EESC, Várhelyi stays, Romania
Catégories: Afrique, European Union

Élt 316 napot

Kolozsvári Rádió (Románia/Erdély) - mer, 06/05/2026 - 07:36

Válság válság hátán, a gazdasági és a politikai krízis mellé még egy kormányválság is társul május ötödikétől a romániai belpolitikai freskóhoz. „Szerzői” vastag és egzaltált ecsetvonásokkal pingálnak a vászonra új vagy csak annak vélt erővonalakat. A kilábaláshoz bölcsesség, eltökéltség, a szerepek felelősségének felismerése és betöltése szükségeltetik. A Bolojan-kormány bukásával furamód épp a kabinet leszavazott miniszterelnöke […]

Articolul Élt 316 napot apare prima dată în Kolozsvári Rádió Románia.

Géopolitique de l'énergie : l'Albanie s'ancre dans l'orbite du GNL américain

Courrier des Balkans - mer, 06/05/2026 - 07:34

Adieu, la transition énergétique. L'Albanie a signé un accord prévoyant la construction d'une centrale thermique à Vlora et la fourniture durant vingt ans de gaz liquifié américain via la Grèce. L'opposition et les défenseurs de l'environnement sont vent debout.

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Géopolitique de l'énergie : l'Albanie s'ancre dans l'orbite du GNL américain

Courrier des Balkans / Albanie - mer, 06/05/2026 - 07:34

Adieu, la transition énergétique. L'Albanie a signé un accord prévoyant la construction d'une centrale thermique à Vlora et la fourniture durant vingt ans de gaz liquifié américain via la Grèce. L'opposition et les défenseurs de l'environnement sont vent debout.

- Articles / , , , , , ,

RDC: la proposition de loi sur l’organisation de référendum, porte ouverte sur une révision de la Constitution?

RFI /Afrique - mer, 06/05/2026 - 07:30
En République démocratique du Congo (RDC), une proposition de loi sur l’organisation de référendum est en cours d’examen à l’Assemblée nationale. Le texte a été jugé recevable, mais l’opposition crie au danger : elle y voit une porte ouverte sur une révision de la Constitution que Félix Tshisekedi ne peut pas toucher par la voie ordinaire. Pourquoi ce texte inquiète autant ?
Catégories: Afrique, France

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