
Chipmaker SiPearl Raises €130 Million in EU Sovereign AI Push
The French startup, which makes high-performance, energy-efficient processors for artificial intelligence and supercomputing, said it would use the Series A financing to invest in research and development and to industrialize its Rhea1 chip, which features 80 cores from chip designer Arm Holdings Plc and more than 61 billion transistors, according to a statement on Tuesday.

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Loungers-owner Fortress plots stay at Malmaison hotels
The owner of the Loungers bar chain and Poundstretcher, the discount retailer, is weighing a takeover of two of Britain's best-known hotel chains. Sky News has learnt that Fortress Investment Group is among the parties considering offers for Malmaison and Hotel du Vin, which sit under the same ownership structure. Cushman & Wakefield (C&W), the commercial property agent, is handling the auction. The group trades from 37 hotels in 27 UK cities, with the portfolio split almost equally between the two brands. The chains have been through a succession of owners over the last 20 years, including the private equity firm KSL Capital Partners. They are now owned by Singapore-based Frasers Hospitality Group, which reportedly paid more than £360m to acquire the group in 2015. A number of other bidders are also said to be participating in the auction, although the current valuation attached to the business was unclear. Fortress has been on a buying spree in Britain in recent years, snapping up assets including Majestic Wine. Earlier this year, the investment firm bought Loungers for about £350m, while it also explored a takeover of the supermarket chain Wm Morrison in 2021 before being beaten to a deal by buyout giant Clayton Dubilier & Rice. Fortress declined to comment, while C&W has been contacted for comment.
Yahoo
22 minutes ago
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Factbox-Cancelled and postponed green hydrogen projects
MADRID (Reuters) -Developers of green hydrogen have scaled back investments and scrapped projects globally as elevated production costs and weak demand for the low-carbon fuel have made many ventures unviable. Here are some projects that have been cancelled, postponed or scaled back. EUROPE ** Energy company LEAG's plans to build one of Europe's largest green energy hubs on the site of disused coal-fired power plant units in eastern Germany have been postponed indefinitely, it said in June. ** Steelmaker ArcelorMittal had planned to convert two plants in Germany to green hydrogen, but it shelved the 2.5 billion euro ($2.9 billion) plan in June despite the offer of 1.3 billion euros in public subsidies. ** Iberdrola, Europe's largest utility, scaled back its green hydrogen ambitions by almost two thirds in March 2024 after funding delays for some projects. Its 2030 production target fell to about 120,000 tons of green hydrogen a year, compared with a previous goal of 350,000 tons. ** Spain's Repsol cut its 2030 target for green hydrogen production by up to 63% in February to between 0.7 gigawatts (GW) and 1.2 GW of electrolyser capacity by the end of the decade, with Chief Executive Josu Jon Imaz highlighting the challenges of a high-cost industry heavily reliant on subsidies. ** BP said in April that it was shutting its team looking into hydrogen and liquefied natural gas (LNG) for transport. ** Shell scrapped plans for a low-carbon hydrogen plant on Norway's west coast owing to lack of demand, it said in September, days after Equinor cancelled a similar project planned for Norway. ** Oil refiner and biofuel maker Neste withdrew in October from an investment into renewable hydrogen production at its plant in Porvoo, Finland, citing challenging market conditions. AUSTRALIA ** Origin Energy said in October that it intended to exit a potential hydrogen development project in the Hunter Valley Hydrogen Hub (HVHH) in New South Wales. ** Global commodities trader Trafigura in March abandoned plans to build a A$750 million ($491.5 million) green hydrogen plant at its Port Pirie lead smelter in South Australia. ** Australian billionaire Andrew Forrest in July last year cut back plans for his company, Fortescue, to produce 15 million metric tons of green hydrogen by 2030, blaming costs and the amount of renewable energy sources needed. ** Woodside Energy, Australia's largest independent oil and gas producer, shelved two green hydrogen projects in Australia and New Zealand last September. ** The Queensland state government this year pulled funding for a A$12.5 billion plant to produce 200 tons of liquefied hydrogen by 2028, placing the future of one of Australia's largest and most advanced green hydrogen projects in serious doubt. Japanese investors Kansai Electric and Iwatani exited soon after. UNITED STATES ** U.S. startup Hy Stor Energy in September cancelled its reservation for more than 1 GW of electrolyser capacity with Norwegian electrolyser manufacturer Nel. ** Air Products said in February that it was looking to cancel plans to construct a 35 ton per day facility to produce green liquid hydrogen in Massena, New York, largely because of regulatory developments rendering existing hydroelectric power supply ineligible for the Clean Hydrogen Production Tax Credit. ASIA ** Japan's Kawasaki Heavy Industries walked away from a coal-to-hydrogen project in Latrobe last December, citing time and cost pressures. ($1 = 1.5260 Australian dollars) ($1 = 0.8613 euros) (Compiled by Pietro LombardiEditing by David Goodman) Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
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22 minutes ago
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Australia's WiseTech to cut some jobs in AI-driven efficiency push
(Reuters) -Australia's WiseTech Global confirmed on Wednesday it was cutting some roles as part of a workforce review to focus on "maximizing efficiency via automation and use of artificial intelligence". The software firm did not specify the number of jobs to be impacted in an emailed response to a Reuters query. The Australian Financial Review reported earlier in the day that the Sydney-headquartered logistics software provider has told employees it is increasing the use of AI across the business as part of a broad restructure, citing an email from WiseTech's chief of staff, Zubin Appoo. WiseTech, known for its flagship CargoWise platform, has a team of around 3,500 people across 38 countries, as of June 30, 2024, according to its 2024 annual report. A spokesperson said the firm is "supporting all impacted team members through this transition, including access to professional outplacement services." Wisetech's move mirrors broader industry trends, with technology companies worldwide reducing headcount to fund heavy investments in AI infrastructure. Earlier this month, Microsoft announced plans to lay off nearly 4% of its workforce, while big tech peers including Amazon, Facebook parent Meta and Alphabet's Google have all trimmed their labour forces in recent years.