Zürcher Nachrichten - 'Doomsday Clock' remains at 90 seconds to midnight

EUR -
AED 4.33804
AFN 76.779267
ALL 96.374356
AMD 447.71893
ANG 2.114485
AOA 1083.182631
ARS 1712.435599
AUD 1.697929
AWG 2.129156
AZN 2.011163
BAM 1.949197
BBD 2.381632
BDT 144.620112
BGN 1.983712
BHD 0.445341
BIF 3515.012221
BMD 1.181224
BND 1.502025
BOB 8.200568
BRL 6.212068
BSD 1.182494
BTN 108.134162
BWP 15.563937
BYN 3.38593
BYR 23151.984599
BZD 2.378154
CAD 1.613144
CDF 2675.471776
CHF 0.921278
CLF 0.025959
CLP 1025.018142
CNY 8.211572
CNH 8.199329
COP 4283.495142
CRC 586.717511
CUC 1.181224
CUP 31.302428
CVE 109.892748
CZK 24.309266
DJF 210.575606
DKK 7.470035
DOP 74.68921
DZD 153.350921
EGP 55.624997
ERN 17.718356
ETB 184.332392
FJD 2.632594
FKP 0.862003
GBP 0.865223
GEL 3.183433
GGP 0.862003
GHS 12.966078
GIP 0.862003
GMD 86.229201
GNF 10375.983988
GTQ 9.073265
GYD 247.402417
HKD 9.225398
HNL 31.214264
HRK 7.534907
HTG 154.976996
HUF 381.085803
IDR 19826.839872
ILS 3.660205
IMP 0.862003
INR 108.080773
IQD 1549.052714
IRR 49759.048718
ISK 144.994919
JEP 0.862003
JMD 185.663438
JOD 0.837461
JPY 183.725144
KES 152.531745
KGS 103.297792
KHR 4761.073794
KMF 490.207333
KPW 1063.101334
KRW 1718.00772
KWD 0.362955
KYD 0.985404
KZT 597.142286
LAK 25429.965772
LBP 105893.477113
LKR 366.184232
LRD 219.356234
LSL 18.93177
LTL 3.487847
LVL 0.714511
LYD 7.470788
MAD 10.783173
MDL 20.020031
MGA 5273.159935
MKD 61.663383
MMK 2480.553789
MNT 4210.619832
MOP 9.512677
MRU 46.954944
MUR 53.92267
MVR 18.261671
MWK 2050.363246
MXN 20.509776
MYR 4.656351
MZN 75.314989
NAD 18.93177
NGN 1646.685402
NIO 43.512605
NOK 11.46028
NPR 173.01539
NZD 1.96659
OMR 0.454064
PAB 1.182499
PEN 3.982709
PGK 5.066837
PHP 69.546314
PKR 331.003457
PLN 4.221091
PYG 7862.366893
QAR 4.322657
RON 5.095918
RSD 117.433734
RUB 90.421532
RWF 1728.744025
SAR 4.429696
SBD 9.510756
SCR 17.716387
SDG 710.496468
SEK 10.592606
SGD 1.50306
SHP 0.886224
SLE 28.733281
SLL 24769.669596
SOS 675.81645
SRD 44.91603
STD 24448.945792
STN 24.417288
SVC 10.347082
SYP 13063.832022
SZL 18.9229
THB 37.308921
TJS 11.044235
TMT 4.134283
TND 3.411544
TOP 2.844103
TRY 51.370125
TTD 8.005948
TWD 37.334917
TZS 3057.585555
UAH 50.925541
UGX 4223.692596
USD 1.181224
UYU 45.874604
UZS 14456.031409
VES 408.634194
VND 30735.440779
VUV 140.750731
WST 3.202039
XAF 653.770082
XAG 0.015034
XAU 0.000251
XCD 3.192316
XCG 2.131081
XDR 0.811755
XOF 653.742502
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.51517
ZAR 18.981261
ZMK 10632.429606
ZMW 23.206373
ZWL 380.353551
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    0.7000

    16.7

    +4.19%

  • CMSC

    -0.0380

    23.712

    -0.16%

  • NGG

    -0.0600

    85.2

    -0.07%

  • GSK

    0.9650

    52.575

    +1.84%

  • RIO

    1.5150

    92.595

    +1.64%

  • VOD

    0.2440

    14.894

    +1.64%

  • BCC

    1.5500

    82.38

    +1.88%

  • RELX

    -0.2100

    35.595

    -0.59%

  • JRI

    0.1080

    13.185

    +0.82%

  • BCE

    -0.0850

    25.76

    -0.33%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    24.09

    -0.04%

  • BTI

    0.1150

    60.805

    +0.19%

  • AZN

    1.7850

    192.225

    +0.93%

  • BP

    -0.0750

    37.805

    -0.2%

'Doomsday Clock' remains at 90 seconds to midnight
'Doomsday Clock' remains at 90 seconds to midnight / Photo: Handout - Hastings Group Media/AFP

'Doomsday Clock' remains at 90 seconds to midnight

The symbolic "Doomsday Clock" was held at 90 seconds to midnight Tuesday, reflecting existential threats to humanity posed by potential nuclear escalation from the war in Ukraine and the multiplying impacts of the climate crisis following Earth's hottest recorded year.

Text size:

Set by top scientists and security experts, the timing of the clock remains the same as last year and the closest it has ever been to midnight in its more than 75-year-history.

"Trends continue to point ominously towards global catastrophe," said Rachel Bronson, president and CEO of the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists. "The war in Ukraine poses an ever present risk of nuclear escalation, and the October 7 attack in Israel and war in Gaza provides further illustration of the horrors of modern war, even without nuclear escalation."

Rather than abandoning nuclear weapons, countries that possess them are upgrading their arsenals, while massive floods, fires and other climate disasters threatened billions of lives and livelihoods in a year that saw record-shattering temperatures caused by mankind's reluctance to turn away from fossil fuels.

"Biological research aimed at preventing future pandemics has proven useful, but also presents the risks of causing one," Bronson said, while recent advances in artificial intelligence (AI) raise questions about how to control a technology "that could improve or threaten civilization in countless ways."

-War in Ukraine looms large -

Russia's invasion of Ukraine, now just a month away from its second anniversary, was the principal reason behind the clock being moved to 90 seconds before midnight in 2023, and continued to overshadow this year's update.

Moscow's thinly veiled threats of nuclear war, its attacks on nuclear sites, and its erosion of international norms of conduct have all contributed to heightened risk, the Bulletin said, while Israel's war in Gaza threatens to evolve into a wider regional conflict involving nuclear states.

Meanwhile, "traditional nuclear arms control really has come to an end for now," said Alex Glaser, a Princeton University professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering. Russia withdrew from the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (New START) and the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT), which the United States never ratified to begin with.

China is increasing its arsenal, which now stands at 500 nuclear weapons, "and for the first time, at least in my adult life, there is now talk in Washington that the US nuclear arsenal will have to increase also in order to match... Russia and China combined," Glaser added.

On climate, Ambuj Sagar, a professor at the Indian Institute of Technology Delhi said there had been a "mixed story," hailing $1.7 trillion invested in clean energy at the climate COP in Dubai as a sign of moving in the right direction, albeit "not as fast or as deeply" as required.

The clock was originally set at seven minutes to midnight in 1947.

The furthest from midnight it has ever been is 17 minutes, following the end of the Cold War in 1991.

The Bulletin was founded in 1945 by Albert Einstein, J. Robert Oppenheimer and other scientists who worked on the Manhattan Project, which produced the first nuclear weapons. The idea of the clock symbolizing global vulnerability to catastrophe followed two years later.

O.Meier--NZN