These 3 GenAI examples show the power of science diplomacy
Scientists around the world are on a mission to serve society. They are working on solutions to many of the global challenges we face today and those we will face in the future.
Joël Mesot has been President of ETH Zurich since 2019. He studied physics at ETH Zurich, receiving his doctorate degree in 1992 with a thesis on high-temperature superconductors. He
spent several years researching quantum materials in France, the USA, and at the Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI) in Switzerland. Between 2008 and 2018 he served as the Director of the PSI before accepting an appointment as President of ETH Zurich. Under his leadership, the university intensified its policy-relevant research and deepened its dialogue with political actors in Switzerland and internationally. He launched various initiatives in the fields of space, AI, cybersecurity, and energy, and initiated the establishment of an ETH campus in Heilbronn, Germany. Mesot is a member of several advisory boards, including the Board of Trustees of the Swiss Innovation Park and the Board of Directors of CREATE (Singapore).
Scientists around the world are on a mission to serve society. They are working on solutions to many of the global challenges we face today and those we will face in the future.
We are all vulnerable to the impacts of climate change, supply chain disruptions, cybersecurity lapses, and armed conflict in an interdependent world.
According to the United Nation’s Net Zero Coalition, “The energy sector is the source of around three-quarters of greenhouse gas emissions today and holds the key to averting the worst ef...
Current history-making events such as the COVID-19 pandemic reveal the interdependence of our global economy and raise a red flag to the vulnerabilities of an increasingly interconnected ...

