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Exclusive: ‘If China attacks Taiwan, you will be affected too,’ Taiwan’s deputy FM warns Europe
Euronews Next sat down with Taiwan’s deputy foreign minister Wu Chih-chung in an exclusive interview to talk about the silicon shield and why the world cannot afford to ignore the political tensions. Taiwan may feel distant to most Europeans, but a Chinese takeover of the island would send shockwaves from Washington to Tokyo, Taiwan’s deputy foreign minister François Chih-chung Wu told Euronews Next. "If China attacks Taiwan, France, Europe, the United States, and Japan will all be affected.
From AI robot baristas to military drones: The weird and wonderful tech at Computex 2026
Euronews Next spotlights the most innovative and intriguing tech at the conference in Taiwan. With advances in robotics, artificial intelligence, an array of laptops and drones, the Computex technology conference in Taiwan went far beyond Nvidia's headline-making announcements to showcase the technologies that could have a wide-ranging impact our daily lives. Euronews Next attended the conference and scoured the show floors to find the weird and wonderful as well as useful technological...
Taiwan's Asus unveils 'AI City' and Nvidia-powered laptops at Computex
Euronews Next spoke to Asus' co-CEO about Nvidia-powered AI laptops and the company's plan to export its 'AI City' model. When the Taiwanese tech company ASUS took to the stage of the Computex conference this year, the conversation quickly moved beyond laptops. The company’s co-CEO, Samson Hu, told Euronews Next about a future in which the East Asian island nation becomes more than just the semiconductor hub and transforms into an "AI city" and a model for the rest of the world.
'The era of deportations has begun,' right-wing MEP tells Euronews
MEP Charlie Weimers told Euronews’ flagship morning show Europe Today that an “era of deportations” has begun in the EU, following a deal on what is described as the strictest-ever migration law, which includes return hubs outside the bloc. The “era of deportations” has begun in the European Union, according to Charlie Weimers, a Swedish conservative MEP and one of the negotiators of the bloc’s strictest-ever migration law, which was agreed on Monday and marked the most significant shift in...
Inside Amazon’s busiest European warehouse, where robots, lasers and humans deliver the future
Amazon says robots will make work safer and deliveries faster. Euronews Next saw them in action. Amazon used its Delivering the Future event on Thursday in the United Kingdom to make a series of major announcements for Europe, promising billions in new investment, thousands of jobs and a new generation of robots that could reshape the lives of consumers, warehouse workers and the wider logistics economy.
Off the Record: Politics, protests and dead flamingos dominate EU-Western Balkans summit
Euronews Europe editor Maria Tadeo provides highlights and analysis from the EU-Western Balkans summit held this week in her signature newsletter Off the Record. When I launched this newsletter, I promised you zeitgeist, so here's the zeitgeist — I am filing this at ungodly hours, from a flat in Tivat, on the coast of Montenegro, on five hours' sleep, praying for no typos and my keyboard on fire. But oh boy how I love this job.
Patience imperative for EU-China trade relations, Australian trade minister says
As Europe tries to stabilise turbulent trade relations with China, Australian Trade Minister Don Farrell recommends that Brussels hold its nerve. Australian Trade Minister Don Farrell told Euronews's flagship morning programme Europe Today that his message for the Europeans when dealing with China over trade is simple: “patience”.
The Baltic states need more drone-detection radars. Europe's defence bottlenecks may slow them down
The Baltic States, like the rest of Europe, are grappling with equipment shortages for the key technologies that will make it easier to respond to drone incursions, experts say. Recent drone incursions along NATO's eastern flank have reinforced the Baltic states' push to strengthen their air defences. But defence experts say a shortage of equipment and specialised personnel across Europe could slow efforts to close critical gaps in drone detection and response.
Why are European governments reevaluating their agreements with US defence tech contractor Palantir?
Critics have flagged Palantir for their links to militaries involved in ongoing conflicts and ICE immigration enforcement in the United States. European governments are moving to reduce their reliance on Palantir, the US-based data analytics companyy whose platforms serve as the data and artificial intelligence (AI) backbone for militaries worldwide. Derk Boswijk, the Dutch State Secretary for Defence, said in the House of Representatives this week that a “fully fledged alternative” to...
Solar Energy Saves Europeans $135M a Day
Solar Energy Saves Europeans $135 Million A Day Support CleanTechnica's work through a Substack subscription or on Stripe. You would think the fighting in the Middle East and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz would be sending the price of oil and methane for power plants in Europe soaring, and cause the price people and businesses pay for electricity to increase. You would be right, except for one thing.