2025-07-17
44 分钟25 years from now, two out of every three people on the planet will live in urban areas.
What will these cities look like?
Will they be resilient, sustainable, equitable?
With Urban Futures, a new global initiative from Economist Impact, we examine how cities can flourish in a world of rapid transformation.
Because the cities of the future won't just be where we live, they'll shape how we live.
Visit impact.economist.com forward slash urban futures to learn more.
The Economist.
On July the 16th, 1945, at 5.29 in the morning, an audacious experiment took place in the deserts of New Mexico.
It was the culmination of five decades of theories, arguments and experiments amongst physicists who'd been trying to crack a scientific mystery.
What lay inside atoms?
On that summer morning, 80 years ago, it had all led to this.
First the flash of light.
That enormous fireball.
The mushroom cloud rising thousands of feet in the sky.
And then, a long time afterwards, the sound.
The rumble.
Thunder in the mountains.
An explosion bigger than anything anyone had ever seen before.
It was the dawn of the nuclear age.
Ever since that day, the world has been grappling with the devastating power of nuclear weapons.