US faces fuel shortages and higher prices despite record oil production, due to infrastructure and refining constraints.
White House accuses China of large‑scale theft of US AI technology, sharpening geopolitical tech tensions.
US markets show cautious optimism, with gains in discount retail and agricultural commodities amid recession worries.
Cadence and TSMC deepen AI chip‑design collaboration across advanced process nodes.
Governments ramp up AI security, export controls, and IP protections as enterprises expand AI deployment.
Lyrid meteor shower enters its final active night, with reduced but still visible activity.
US fuel shortages despite record oil output
Energy · Source: El País (English edition)
Reporting from El País notes that Donald Trump’s “drill, baby, drill” push has kept the US as the world’s top oil producer but has not prevented domestic fuel shortages.
Infrastructure gaps, refining bottlenecks, and distribution issues are contributing to tight supplies and higher prices, even with record crude output.
An AI news roundup reports that the White House is accusing China of “industrial‑scale” theft of US AI technology, escalating existing geopolitical and technology frictions.
The allegations are framed within a broader contest over advanced chips, leading AI models, and dual‑use AI capabilities with security implications.
Early US market coverage on April 25 points to cautious optimism following prior volatility.
Select sectors, including discount retail and agricultural commodities such as live cattle and feeder contracts, are seeing gains.
Investors are tracking diplomatic developments around global tensions while positioning for potential recession risks.
AI news digests for April 25 highlight governments speeding up work on AI security, export controls, and intellectual‑property protection.
At the same time, enterprises continue to roll out AI models and productivity tools, amid ongoing concern over data security, model misuse, and labor‑market disruption.