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Advancing sustainability through packaging innovation

Microsoft is advancing its efforts to eliminate single-use plastics across its global packaging portfolio through material innovation and design changes across products like Surface and Xbox.

By rethinking how packaging works—from cushioning to coatings and structural components—the company is reducing waste and demonstrating how design decisions at scale can deliver meaningful sustainability impact.

Last week, Microsoft marked a key milestone in reducing single-use plastic in its packaging to just 0.07%, reflecting significant progress toward its broader commitment to become a zero-waste company by 2030.

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UAE to withdraw from OPEC

In this “ask ian,” Ian Bremmer says the United Arab Emirates’ decision to withdraw from OPEC reflects a broader erosion of trust in longstanding institutions amid growing regional instability.
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Hard number: A superyacht gets through Hormuz

While traffic through the Strait of Hormuz is at a standstill amid a double blockade by both the US and Iran, a ship owned by sanctioned Russian billionaire Alexei Mordashov managed to make it through. It’s not clear whether Iran granted the yacht permission to travel between Dubai, in the UAE, and the Omani capital Muscat. Nonetheless, its ability to transit the Strait highlights Tehran’s relationship with Moscow – Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi heaped praise on Russian President Vladimir Putin just yesterday during a visit to the Kremlin. Meanwhile, US-Iran negotiations over the reopening of Hormuz continue to hit a wall.

UAE to exit OPEC, EU-China relations on edge again, Violence erupts in Colombia ahead of election

It’s official: the UAE splits from OPEC

The United Arab Emirates announced Tuesday that it will leave the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), the 12-country cartel that coordinates oil production and exports, on May 1. The Gulf state has long been frustrated with the crude quotas that the group imposes. It will also exit OPEC+, a group that includes other large oil producers like Russia.

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Can the King be the UK’s Trump card?

“Time and again, our two countries have always found ways to come together,” King Charles III is expected to tell the US Congress later today, in what will be the first address to Congress by a British monarch since 1991.

The King’s words are a tacit acknowledgment that his trip to the US, the first British state visit since 2007, comes at a precarious moment for the “special relationship.”

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Trump's Cuba backlash could come from home

Trump's deal-making instincts and Cuba's economic desperation may be pointing toward the same place: an economic opening that keeps the Castro government in place, trades investment for stability, and lets Trump declare a historic victory. Cuba expert Michael Bustamante thinks Trump "might be willing to take that deal any day of the week."

Cuba has signaled it could accept that. Its terms are simple: no interference in the political system, no demands on who stays in prison. But Bustamante says the political calculus is brutal for the rest of the room. Trump has repeatedly cited Cuban American voters as central to his Cuba policy. He has appointed Cuban Americans to key diplomatic roles, including Secretary of State. An economic deal that leaves the Castro regime untouched would be a very hard sell to that community, and could define Rubio's political future in Florida.

"Does he go along with it, and how does he sell it to his own community?" Bustamante asks of Rubio. Trump, who doesn't have to run again, might not care. But for Rubio, and for the Republican coalition in South Florida, the stakes are very different.

In his latest Quick Take, Ian Bremmer warns the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz is deepening into a prolonged global crisis, with rising economic and geopolitical costs and little sign of progress in US-Iran negotiations.

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Trump has promised Cuban Americans that 2026 is the year of change. But University of Miami historian Michael Bustamante says the political reality doesn't match their regime change expectations.

Some parallels have been drawn between Cuba's situation and the Venezuela regime decapitation that took place earlier this year. But Venezuela had a fractious yet organized opposition that came together around the 2024 election and, by most accounts, won it. The same cannot be said about Cuba; its opposition is divided and mostly in jail or in exile, with no clear figure ready to take over if the government was to fall.

Bustamante says the parallel to Venezuela actually cuts the other way. If the Trump administration concluded that even Venezuela's organized opposition wasn't ready to govern, how can it reach a different conclusion about Cuba? "That is not a case that they're making," he says. The gap between the expectations in Miami and the realities in Havana is growing harder to ignore.

On Saturday, an armed man sprinted through a security checkpoint at the annual White House Correspondents’ Dinner in Washington, D.C., where US President Donald Trump and other administration officials had gathered with all of the country’s top political journalists. The gunman shot a Secret Service agent before law enforcement apprehended him – the agent was saved by a bulletproof vest.

Ahead of the incident, the 31-year-old suspect from Torrance, California, allegedly sent writings to family members describing himself as a “friendly federal assassin” and expressing anger at Trump administration policies, giving authorities increasing confidence that the attack was politically motivated. He is due in court for the first time today.

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Killing of Mali’s defense minister exacerbates its security crisis

Jihadist insurgents and Tuareg secessionists assassinated Mali’s Defense Minister Sadio Camara at his home in Kati during coordinated attacks across the West African country on Saturday, as the junta faces yet another major challenge amid the 14-year-long nationwide security crisis. Camara was the architect of the ruling junta’s strategy toward rebel groups since coming to power in 2021. The rebels appear to be gaining ground, as they claimed to have seized full control of the northern town of Kidal on Sunday following the withdrawal of the government-backed Russian Africa Corps – the town has been a separatist stronghold. Mali’s security situation has been deteriorating for months, with the Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam al-Muslimin, the jihadist group that has pledged allegiance to al-Qaeda, surrounding the capital Bamako late last year and blocking the supply of oil ever since. The Russian-backed junta’s position, it appears, is only getting more precarious.

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US Reps. Byron Donalds of Florida, Wesley Hunt of Texas, and John James of Michigan all decided to run for statewide office – although Hunt lost in the Texas Senate primary. US Rep. Burgess Owens of Utah is retiring after his state redrew district lines, making it difficult for him to retain his seat. Some Republicans, notably former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, have been trying to recruit a more diverse group of Republican candidates. That effort appears to be going backward, as US Sen. Tim Scott could be the only Black Republican left in Congress next year. “When you look at the Democrats, they actually look like America,” McCarthy said after leaving Congress in 2023. “When I look at my party, we look like the most restrictive country club in America.”

Cuba is living through its worst economic crisis in decades. Blackouts, fuel shortages, four-day workweeks, and a mass exodus that has cost the island more than 10% of its population. Trump has made no secret of his ambitions, saying he will have "the honor of taking Cuba." But a military invasion is not on the cards, according to University of Miami historian Michael Bustamante. On this week's episode, he joins Ian Bremmer to break down what is really happening on the island, and what Trump can realistically deliver.

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This week, Ian Bremmer sits down with University of Miami historian and Cuba expert Michael Bustamante to make sense of the US-Cuba standoff.

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