The Taiwanese government has unveiled a four-year national pharmaceutical resilience preparedness programme with a budget of NewTaiwan$24bn. The programme will focus on three areas: domestic production for domestic use, smart allocation, and international partnerships to comprehensively build Taiwan’s pharmaceutical supply, from source production to clinical use.
Researchers have investigated how psilocybin targets brain circuits to relieve pain. A single dose of the compound reduced pain and depression-like behaviours in lab mice with nerve injury and inflammatory pain. Those effects lasted for almost two weeks.
A collaboration between researchers in the US and Canada has yielded a method that reveals precisely where drugs end up in a mammalian body. Their method used click chemistry and was demonstrated with two cancer drugs, afatinib and ibrutinib.
The World Health Organization (WHO) has published three new Target Product Profiles (TPPs) for antibiotics designed to address key drug-resistant bacteria causing infections in at-risk populations worldwide.
US researchers have created a new high-energy compound suitable for rocket fuel. The boron-containing compound could make return flights from Mars possible, says the group at the University of Albany, New York.
A short video clip posted on social media by Tesla in January 2026 served as a perhaps modest introduction of a major development: the electric vehicle maker’s new lithium refinery – the largest in North America – becoming operational.
About 20% of the world’s oil and liquid natural gas is transported through the Strait of Hormuz, with about 20m barrels of crude oil and oil products usually passing through the narrow sea passage each day.
The EU Commission’s proposed EU Industrial Accelerator Act (IAA) has been welcomed by the European chemical industry association, Cefic, as having the potential to accelerate industrial decarbonisation and strengthen resilience and competitiveness. Cefic adds, however, that more is needed, particularly on the demand side, where public procurement provisions remain limited for the chemical sector.
A Danish research group has invented a legally binding fingerprint for individual consumer items that is based on random nanoparticle patterns.
A group in the US has created the first ever materials that can change colour and texture, inspired by nature. Octopus and cuttlefish are famed for their ability to change not just colour but texture to blend into their background.