Filtered to
Science & Biosecurity
Ongoing12 daysView timeline
+5
CN · DE · EU · FR +4Geopolitics·Active 12d · 15 updates · 3 decisions · 27 sources
RiskHigh78ImpactHigh72ActivityHigh80
Latest update·2d ago

The IAEA’s 19 June 2025 update on the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant said any reactor restart would require unresolved cooling-water and off-site power issues to be fixed first, while continuing to describe nuclear safety and security at the site as precarious. This does not indicate a new radiological release, but it is a fresh authoritative warning that conflict-linked vulnerabilities around the plant remain unresolved.

Δ New official IAEA guidance adds a clearer condition against any near-term reactor restart and reiterates that cooling-water and external power vulnerabilities remain unresolved at Zaporizhzhia.

Possible outcomes
  • Primary scenario
    Follow-on strikes or unclear damage trigger wider nuclear-risk alarm

    Broader nuclear-site alarm remains a Developing risk over the short_term as follow-on strikes or reporting gaps could intensify concern.

  • Secondary scenario
    Ukraine contains nuclear-safety fallout and secures partner backing

    Ukrainian crisis containment is Likely over the immediate timeframe if regulators and the IAEA rapidly verify site safety.

MX · USScience Biosecurity·Active 3d · 2 updates · 2 decisions · 2 sources
RiskLow38ImpactMedium42ActivityHigh74
Latest update·2d ago

USDA publicly detailed the scope of its anti-screwworm initiative with DHS and research partners, including a $105 million investment across 40 projects and the use of drones, detector dogs, and fungal-control methods in Texas. This adds material program scale and implementation detail beyond the previously tracked partnership announcement.

Δ New funding scale, project count, and operational methods were disclosed, indicating the partnership has moved from a general collaboration announcement toward concrete execution planning.

Decision

State-federal surveillance integration decision

Texas Animal Health Commission and USDA APHIS
StatusAwaiting decisionWindowWithin a weekDuein 5dConfidenceDeveloping
Ongoing7 daysView timeline
+1
AU · BR · CL · USEnvironment Climate·Active 7d · 2 updates · 3 decisions · 2 sources
RiskMedium54ImpactMedium58ActivityMedium59
Latest update·1d ago

A federal interministerial meeting held on June 17 reportedly examined a possible 'Super El Niño' scenario for Brazil and convened government, research, and civil-society participants around prevention, adaptation, and response. This is a fresh official coordination signal that goes beyond earlier forecasting by indicating active cross-government discussion of preparedness measures.

Δ What changed is the emergence of a recent federal coordination step: an interministerial meeting explicitly addressing a severe El Niño scenario and response planning, which strengthens evidence that preparedness activation is moving from warning to organized government deliberation.

Decision1 of 2

Wildfire resource pre-positioning in high-risk biomes

Ibama/Prevfogo and Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change
StatusAwaiting decisionWindowWithin 24hDue5d agoConfidenceDeveloping
EU · USScience Biosecurity·Active 14h · 1 update · 2 decisions · 2 sources
RiskMedium42ImpactLow38

The European Council's 19 June conclusions included a specific reference to Ebola transmission in DRC and Uganda. Heads of state and government expressed concern, endorsed the rapid WHO-led emergency response, and asked the Council and European Commission to monitor the situation and coordinate any operational measures that may become necessary.

Why it matters · A formal European Council reference raises the visibility of the outbreaks inside the EU system and can accelerate institutional coordination, contingency planning, and possible support decisions if the health situation deteriorates.

Watch for
  • European Commission Directorate-General for Health and Food Safety acknowledgement on or after Saturday, 20th of June of an EU-level health security coordination step tied to Ebola in DRC or Uganda
  • WHO Africa situation update on or after Saturday, 20th of June showing a change in case counts, geographic spread, or risk classification for Uganda or DRC
  • EU Health Security Committee notice or member-state health ministry readout on or after Saturday, 20th of June confirming coordination on traveller guidance, screening, or preparedness measures
  • European Commission humanitarian or civil protection service announcement by Tuesday, 23rd of June of funding, logistics, or expert deployment linked to the Ebola outbreaks
Decision

Council-level coordination on any necessary EU support measures

Council of the European Union
StatusAwaiting decisionWindowWithin a weekConfidenceDeveloping
Possible outcomes
  • Primary scenario
    EU coordination stays precautionary as outbreak response stabilises

    EU precautionary coordination is Likely over the short term as leaders have already tasked institutions to monitor and align support.

  • Secondary scenario
    Case growth forces operational EU health and humanitarian action

    Broader EU operational activation remains a Developing possibility over the short term if WHO reporting shows widening transmission.

Ongoing38 daysView timeline
JP · USTechnology·Active 38d · 11 updates · 6 decisions · 9 sources
RiskMedium60ImpactMedium55ActivityMedium45
Latest update·4d ago

On June 15, 2026, Cybersecurity Minister Hisashi Matsumoto held a new expert meeting in Tokyo on the misuse of advanced AI for cyberattacks and publicly called for countermeasures to be implemented with urgency. This adds a fresh official convening and signals acceleration pressure on the government's existing AI-cyber mitigation work.

Δ A minister-level expert meeting was newly convened, with explicit emphasis on urgent implementation rather than general preparation alone.

Narrative contested30% divergenceView framings
+6
CN · DE · EU · FR +5Geopolitics·Active 54d · 72 updates · 5 decisions · 107 sources
RiskHigh80ImpactHigh75ActivityHigh80
Latest update·6h ago

New reporting says drone strikes near and at the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant damaged non-reactor infrastructure and, according to Rosatom and Russian-installed management, killed one worker in Enerhodar and seriously injured another. While reactor systems were not reported hit, the incidents point to further degradation of staffing and support functions around Europe's largest nuclear plant.

Δ What changed is a fresh set of reported strikes on Zaporizhzhia-related personnel and support facilities, including claimed worker casualties and damage to a transport workshop from at least 14 drone strikes on June 18-19.

Why it matters today · Hitting staff and repair facilities erodes the plant's ability to maintain safe operations and raises outage and accident risks.

Possible outcomes
  • Primary scenario
    Increased military conflict near Chernobyl

    Highly likely over the next 24 hours (97% confidence).

  • Secondary scenario
    International diplomatic efforts mitigate risks

    Likely over the coming week.

Ongoing108 daysView timeline
+2
AR · CN · DE · FR +1Technology·Active 108d · 6 updates · 1 decision · 4 sources
RiskLow38ImpactHigh70ActivityLow25
Latest update·15h ago

TÜBİTAK has opened the 2026 Artificial Intelligence Ecosystem Call, marking an operational step after the announcement of Türkiye's 2026-2030 National AI Action Plan. The call moves the strategy from policy framing into an active funding and consortium-building phase involving firms, universities, public R&D centers and the TÜBİTAK AI Institute.

Δ The AI strategy has advanced from announcement to implementation, with a live 2026 funding call and application process now launched.

CA · MX · USScience Biosecurity·Active 9h · 1 update · 2 decisions · 2 sources
RiskMedium42ImpactLow38

On 2026-06-19, the IAEA and FAO launched a joint research project aimed at containing the screwworm outbreak in the Americas, including support for sterile-fly production that could be required at very high weekly volumes in an emergency response. The announcement comes as affected zones include parts of Central America and Mexico and after confirmation of the pest in the U.S.; Canada has already restricted cattle imports from affected areas.

Why it matters · This is a concrete multilateral response to a transboundary animal-health threat with direct implications for livestock production, trade flows, veterinary capacity, and border biosecurity across the Americas.

Watch for
  • Canadian Food Inspection Agency update on cattle or animal-product import restrictions from affected U.S., Mexican, or Central American zones by Tuesday, 23rd of June
  • U.S. Department of Agriculture APHIS release on additional screwworm detections, quarantine boundaries, or sterile-fly deployment requirements by Tuesday, 23rd of June
  • IAEA or FAO publication of project implementation details identifying production sites, partner labs, or operational milestones by Tuesday, 23rd of June
  • World Organisation for Animal Health notification of new confirmed New World screwworm events in the Americas by Tuesday, 23rd of June
Decision

Federal and provincial livestock surveillance escalation

Canadian Food Inspection Agency and provincial agriculture ministries
StatusAwaiting decisionWindowWithin a weekConfidenceDeveloping
Possible outcomes
  • Primary scenario
    Containment effort stabilizes regional outbreak

    Regional containment is Likely over the short_term if sterile-fly production and movement controls scale without major new detections.

  • Secondary scenario
    North American spread drives tighter biosecurity and trade disruption

    Further North American spread remains a Developing possibility over the short_term, contingent on new detections and containment performance.

Ongoing15 daysView timeline
CA · MX · USScience Biosecurity·Active 15d · 13 updates · 10 decisions · 13 sources
RiskMedium58ImpactMedium52ActivityMedium60
Latest update·2d ago

The CDC on June 17 activated a Level 3 emergency response for the New World screwworm detections in southern Texas and New Mexico, adding a federal public-health response layer to the existing USDA-led animal health operations. Officials said human health risk remains low and there are no confirmed U.S. human cases, while urging clinicians and veterinarians in affected areas to increase vigilance and reporting.

Δ New federal escalation: CDC formally activated a Level 3 emergency response, indicating broader interagency coordination beyond prior livestock-focused containment measures.

Why it matters today · CDC's Level 3 activation broadens the fight from livestock control to national surveillance, speeding detection, reporting and interagency response.