The European Perspective
French Sovereign Tech Push
Foxconn, Radiall, and Thales have launched “Tessalia,” a semiconductor joint venture based in Le Barp, France, with production scheduled for 2029 (Il Sole 24 Ore). This represents a calculated shift in European industrial policy: moving from passive dependence on Asian chip foundries to localized, high-resilience manufacturing. By anchoring deep-tech supply chains domestically, France is effectively treating semiconductors as essential national infrastructure, insulating the bloc from the volatility that has defined the last decade of global trade.
Climate Adaptation at the Micro-Scale
As heatwaves become normalized, infrastructure resilience is shifting from massive, centralized civil engineering to low-cost, passive materials. Evidence from Western Cape townships shows that reflective “cool roof” paint significantly lowers internal temperatures, mitigating severe health risks—a critical correction given that 10.5 of the average 13 heatwave days in South Africa in 2024 were directly attributable to climate change (The Guardian). The systemic incentive here is clear: retrofitting existing structures is often more capital-efficient than building new, specialized urban environments.
SpaceX and the Valuation Gap
SpaceX is nearing an IPO with a $2 trillion valuation—a figure predicated on the successful deployment of Martian colonies and orbital data centers (Le Monde). This is a masterclass in “future-value” pricing; capital is flowing into the firm not for current output, but on the bet that private equity can bypass terrestrial physical limitations.
Regulatory Currents
Baden-Württemberg has enacted strict smoking bans across public pools and zoos (DW). Meanwhile, Russia is weighing a two-month gasoline export ban to stabilize domestic supply against Ukrainian refinery strikes (ZDF), and US-Iran tensions persist with cross-border military exchanges (ZDF).
Catch the next Gist for the continent’s moving pieces.
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