We’re running today at locations around the world in support of our colleague, Evan Gershkovich, and to mark the anniversary of his outrageous detention in Russia. #IRunForEvan#IStandWithEvan
Scientists are studying ways to prevent the grass and other plants that livestock eat from wilting under extreme heat and drought, to avert a big threat to the global food supply https://t.co/UVuF21xkp4 via @WSJ@Mike_Cherney
A referendum on giving indigenous Australians more say in their nation’s politics has become the latest flashpoint in global culture wars https://t.co/kXOfE3rMDA via @WSJ@Mike_Cherney
Miners’ rising costs threaten to increase prices that consumers pay and complicate central banks’ inflation fight https://t.co/BKgb9nvjXV via @WSJ@RhiannonHoyle
Vanuatu plans to argue in international courts that the U.S. and others must do more to protect the world from climate change https://t.co/cBQqHiBlmi via @WSJ@Mike_Cherney
The U.S. is among 13 nations holding joint military drills in Australia. The exercise, called Talisman Sabre, reflects the latest U.S. planning as Washington seeks to deter Beijing. https://t.co/ryolXSleb2 via @WSJ@Mike_Cherney
A wave of migration to affluent countries is adding upward pressure to housing costs, making it harder for central bankers to tame inflation https://t.co/s85TuLYd6I via @WSJ@StuartLCondie
This is funny: a new South Korean law kicked today, making everyone a year or two younger. Thirty-somethings drop back to their 20s; middle age is further off. ‘I’m 50, but turning 48 soon.’ https://t.co/yMm32ljrHi via @WSJ
When energy prices rose following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Australia adopted a tactic the U.S. hasn’t used in decades: It capped natural-gas prices https://t.co/2zEJR4XhC6 via @WSJ@RhiannonHoyle
Nearly a decade ago, executives at Albemarle made a $6 billion bet that demand for lithium was poised to take off. Turns out, they were right. https://t.co/UUOwRUO0CM via @WSJ@RhiannonHoyle