HONG KONG (AP) — China will ban hidden door handles on cars, commonly used on Tesla’s electric vehicles and many other EV models, starting next year.
Related Articles
With caviar McNuggets and heart-shaped pizza, fast food chains hope to win Valentine’s diners
SBA says legal permanent residents will be ineligible for its loan program, effective March 1
The wealthy ramp up spending while other Americans tread water, new study finds
Tech stocks pull Wall Street lower as gold and silver prices bounce back
Big expenses ruining your budget? Try a sinking fund
All car doors must include a mechanical release function for handles, except for the tailgate, according to details released by China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology on Monday.
Officials said the policy aims to address safety concerns after fatal EV accidents where electronic doors reportedly failed to operate and trapped passengers inside vehicles.
The new requirement will take effect on Jan. 1, 2027. For car models that were already approved, carmakers will have until Jan. 1, 2029, to make design changes to match the regulations.
Vehicles including Tesla’s Model Y and Model 3, BMW’s iX3, and other models by many Chinese brands feature retractable car door handles that could be subject to the new rules.
Chris Liu, a Shanghai-based senior analyst at technology research and advisory group Omdia, said the global impact of China’s new rules could be substantial and other jurisdictions may follow suit on retractable door handles. Carmakers will be facing potentially costly redesigns or retrofits.
“China is the first major automotive market to explicitly ban electrical pop-out and press-to-release hidden door handles,” he said. “While other regions have flagged safety concerns, China is the first to formalize this into a national safety standard.”
This photo shows a general view of the handle of a Tesla Model YL electric vehicle inside a showroom in Beijing on February 3, 2026. China will ban hidden door handles on cars sold in the country from next year, phasing out the minimalist design popularised by Tesla over safety concerns. (Photo by Pedro Pardo / AFP via Getty Images)
It’s likely that regulators in Europe and elsewhere will reference or align with China’s approach, Liu said. The new requirements would impact premium EVs more as retractable door handles “are treated as a design and aerodynamic statement,” he added.
A draft of the proposed rules was published by China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology in September for public comment.
Last year, the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration opened an investigation into cases where Tesla’s electronic door handles reportedly failed to work.
PURCHASE, NY (AP) — PepsiCo is cutting prices on Lay’s, Doritos, Cheetos and Tostitos chips this year to win back customers exasperated by years of price hikes.
Related Articles
The wealthy ramp up spending while other Americans tread water, new study finds
Tech stocks pull Wall Street lower as gold and silver prices bounce back
Labor Department delays January jobs report because of partial shutdown
Some companies tie AI to layoffs, but the reality is more complicated
US stocks climb as gold and silver prices keep falling
“For some consumers, low- and middle-income consumers, the biggest friction they have today in our category… is affordability,” PepsiCo Chairman and CEO Ramon Laguarta said Tuesday during a conference call with investors. “So we have been testing multiple ways to give them affordability.”
PepsiCo has leaned on price increases as the cost of packaging, ingredients and transportation rose. In the fourth quarter, PepsiCo hiked prices by 4.5% globally. Prices for PepsiCo beverages rose 7% in North America, while prices for the company’s snacks ticked up 1%.
That has pumped up revenue, including in the most recent quarter. PepsiCo said its net revenue rose 5.6% to $29.3 billion in the October-December period. That was higher than the $28.9 billion Wall Street was expecting, according to analysts polled by FactSet.
But the price hikes have also weakened demand, and consumers have begun swapping out brands they are familiar with for cheaper versions or cutting back altogether.
Volumes for PepsiCo snacks like Doritos and Cheetos fell 1% in the most recent quarter. North American beverage volumes dropped 4%. Globally, PepsiCo said beverage volumes rose 1% while food volumes fell 2%.
SAN ANSELMO, CALIFORNIA – APRIL 23: Packages of Doritos chips are displayed on a store shelf on April 23, 2025 in San Anselmo, California. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced plans to phase out all artificial dyes from the food supply by the end of 2026. The Food and Drug Administration is directing the food industry to replace petroleum-based synthetic dyes with natural alternatives. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
Laguarta said PepsiCo began testing price cuts in some markets in the second half of last year and found that they helped boost sales.
“Volume return is pretty good, and that’s what the category needs,” Laguarta said.
PepsiCo said in December that it planned to cut prices and trim nearly 20% of its product offerings as part of a deal with activist investor Elliott Investment Management.
Elliott, which took a $4 billion stake in PepsiCo in September, has been prodding the company’s board to make changes, saying PepsiCo was being hurt by slowing growth and lower profits in its North American food and beverage business.
In addition to price cuts, PepsiCo plans to accelerate the introduction of new offerings with simpler and healthier ingredients, including Gatorade Lower Sugar and Simply NKD Cheetos and Doritos, which contain no artificial flavors or colors. Lay’s potato chips will soon introduce versions made with avocado oil and olive oil.
Bottles of Mountain Dew are displayed for sale at Hawthorne Market on Tuesday, Jan. 6, 2026, in Portland, Ore. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane)
Laguarta said younger households, in particular, love PepsiCo’s products but won’t shop the category unless the company offers versions without artificial ingredients.
PepsiCo is also responding to growing demand for functional ingredients like protein and fiber. Among its new products are Doritos Protein and Pepsi Prebiotic, which it said sold out within 30 hours after its introduction on Black Friday. PepsiCo said the soda will soon be available across the U.S.
Adjusted for one-time items, PepsiCo earned $2.26 per share in the fourth quarter. That was also higher than analysts expected. Net income attributable to the company of $2.54 billion, or $1.85 per share, is up from $1.52 billion, or $1.11 per share, during the same period last year.
The family of a fallen St. Paul firefighter received a $50,000 donation on Tuesday so they will have “one less thing to worry about.”
The MN 100 Club wanted to help with lost wages and funeral expenses for the family of Timothy Bertz, said the nonprofit formed to provide emergency financial assistance to the families of first responders killed or critically injured in the line of duty.
Bertz, 52, graduated from the St. Paul Fire Department academy on Dec. 17, worked at the training facility on Dec. 19, and had a sudden and major medical event at home on Dec. 20, according to the fire department. He died at the hospital on Dec. 22.
Another nonprofit, the Front Line Foundation, also gave money to his family last month saying, “Bertz dedicated his life to protecting others with courage, humility and an unwavering sense of duty.”
““First Responders need us now. Every day they leave behind families to go to work to protect us, and sometimes they don’t come home. We need to stand in the financial gap and help protect those families as they navigate after a loss,” said Dave Moran, president of the MN 100 Club.
The MN 100 Club has given more than $500,000 to first responders and their families since it was formed in 1972, according to treasurer DeeDee Jankovich.
“We know that it can take weeks or even months for death benefits to be realized,” said MN 100 Club Board Member and former State Fire Marshall Tom Brace. “Our purpose is to make sure that families have one less thing to worry about.”
For more information on how to support Minnesota First Responders, please visit www.mn100club.org.
Related Articles
Skull found in New Brighton identified as remains of woman missing since 2015
Immigration agents draw guns, arrest activists following them in Minneapolis
Woman treated for smoke inhalation after Hugo fire
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — The life of one of the most remote grizzly bear populations in the world is being documented by the animals themselves, with collar cameras that provide a rare glimpse of how they survive on Alaska’s rugged and desolate North Slope.
Related Articles
NASA delays astronauts’ lunar trip until March after hydrogen leaks mar fueling test
NASA hit by fuel leaks during a practice countdown of the moon rocket that will fly with astronauts
NASA delays the first Artemis moonshot with astronauts because of extreme cold at the launch site
It’s one storm after another for much of the US, but the next one’s path is uncertain
Video shows flames flying from NASA plane that touched down without landing gear
Twelve of the 200 or so grizzlies that roam the frigid, treeless terrain near the Arctic Ocean have been outfitted with the cameras as part of a research project by Washington State University and the Alaska Department of Fish and Game.
The videos they record — many partially obscured by the undersides of whiskery muzzles — show the bears playing or fighting with companions, gnawing on a caribou, snarfing up berries, napping on a beach, and swimming in a pond looking for fish.
Packing on the pounds for winter
The bears hibernate about eight months of the year.
“They really have a really short window to obtain enough food resources to pack on enough fat to survive that period,” said Washington State doctoral student Ellery Vincent, who is leading the project with state wildlife biologist Jordan Pruszenski.
“We’re interested in looking at kind of a broad scale of how they’re obtaining the food that allows them to survive through the year and what exactly they’re choosing to eat,” Vincent said.
Among other things, the state is interested in learning to what extent the bears hunt musk oxen. There are about 300 of the shaggy ice-age survivors on the North Slope, according to Pruszenski, but the population is not flourishing.
Eating carcasses, caribou calves and berries
Videos from the first year of the project show that after emerging from hibernation, the bears eat the carcasses of caribou or musk ox that have died over the winter. Then they attack caribou calves. As soon as the tundra greens up, the bears shift their menu toward vegetation, especially blueberries and soapberries, also called buffaloberries.
They don’t fatten up the way salmon-eating bears do. Those bears can reach up to 1,000 pounds. These Arctic grizzlies are small in comparison, reaching up to 350 pounds, Vincent said.
To initially fit the bears with the collar cams, the researchers tracked them through the snow by helicopter last May. Pruszenski fired tranquilizer darts from the air, with Vincent keeping track of injection times and helping determine when the bear was safe to approach on the ground.
They placed the collars on the bears, keeping them loose enough that the bears could grow into them as they put on weight, but not so loose that they would fall off as the bears go about their rough-and-tumble lives.
“It is not difficult, but there is a lot of thought that goes into making sure the collar is adjusted properly,” Vincent said.
The researchers darted the bears again in August to replace the collars and in September to download data. The researchers also measured the bears’ weight gain and body fat.
When those collars came off, the state wildlife department replaced them with GPS collars.
That data could determine how oil-field development is impacting bears and help identify where they den during the winter, areas that oil companies must avoid when they build winter roads between drill sites.
Short clips, but deep insight into bear life
The cameras can record up to 17 hours of video. In the spring and summer, they took a short video clip — four to six seconds — every 10 minutes. In the fall, due to the encroaching darkness, they recorded clips every five minutes during daylight.
This Aug. 5, 2025, photo provided by Rob Kozakiewicz shows Washington State University doctoral student Ellery Vincent, left, and Alaska Department of Fish and Game Wildlife Biologist Jordan Pruszenski taking measurements and samples of an anesthetized grizzly bear prior to affixing a video collar on it in the North Slope of Alaska. (Rob Kozakiewicz via AP)
This undated image provided by Washington State University in January 2026, made from a video taken from a grizzly bear’s collar camera, shows the bear approaching a caribou carcass on the snow-covered tundra of Alaska’s North Slope. (Washington State University via AP)
This undated image provided by Washington State University in January 2026, made from a video taken from a grizzly bear’s collar camera, shows another grizzly bear on the tundra of Alaska’s North Slope. (Washington State University via AP)
This undated image provided by Washington State University in January 2026, made from a video taken from a grizzly bear’s collar camera, shows the bear encountering a wolf pack on the snow-covered tundra of Alaska’s North Slope. (Washington State University via AP)
1 of 4
This Aug. 5, 2025, photo provided by Rob Kozakiewicz shows Washington State University doctoral student Ellery Vincent, left, and Alaska Department of Fish and Game Wildlife Biologist Jordan Pruszenski taking measurements and samples of an anesthetized grizzly bear prior to affixing a video collar on it in the North Slope of Alaska. (Rob Kozakiewicz via AP)
Despite their brevity, the clips provide a rare perspective of how the bears thrive on the desolate North Slope, an area that covers about 94,000 square miles but is home to only about 11,000 people. Nearly half of the residents live in Utqiagvik, the nation’s most northern community, formerly known as Barrow.
“One thing that’s really nice about these bears is that when they’re foraging on a particular food they tend to do that one thing for a long period of time, so these bears will spend pretty much their entire day eating, so the chances of us actually seeing what they’re doing are pretty high,” Vincent said.
The cameras also caught an encounter between a bear and pack of wolves.
It occurred after the bear had emerged from hibernation in May. He was not eating yet, so there was no adverse interaction with the wolves over food, she said. There were no wolves visible in the next clip, indicating it was a peaceful exchange.
“I think they both decided that it wasn’t worth it, so they just looked at each other, then moved on,” Vincent said.
The study will continue for another two years, with plans to add collars to 24 more bears.