Bakeries to Invade Space Soon

A worker moves a loaf of bread before being packaged at the
Bread Factory on August 5, 2008 in London, England. Many bakeries are
feeling the pinch with the rising cost of wheat being a major factor/
SOPHIE ROSE/GETTY IMAGES
A worker moves a loaf of bread before being packaged at the Bread Factory on August 5, 2008 in London, England. Many bakeries are feeling the pinch with the rising cost of wheat being a major factor/ SOPHIE ROSE/GETTY IMAGES
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Bakeries to Invade Space Soon

A worker moves a loaf of bread before being packaged at the
Bread Factory on August 5, 2008 in London, England. Many bakeries are
feeling the pinch with the rising cost of wheat being a major factor/
SOPHIE ROSE/GETTY IMAGES
A worker moves a loaf of bread before being packaged at the Bread Factory on August 5, 2008 in London, England. Many bakeries are feeling the pinch with the rising cost of wheat being a major factor/ SOPHIE ROSE/GETTY IMAGES

Just to make sure, he flattens the roll halves with his hand, with no crumbs at all. Food technician Malte Gerken is cutting a bread roll in half, and still no crumb has fallen on the cutting board, according to the German news agency (DPA).

That's important. You can't tell by looking at it, but the roll is special…It's a space roll.

Gerken is part of a team aiming to provide astronauts on the International Space Station (ISS) with freshly baked rolls, which looks an imaginary idea till now. Behind the plans to leave space travelers’ freeze-dried meals with a touch of home is a startup called Bake in Space, based in Bremen, Germany.

The company's ultimate goal is to recreate the entire value chain, from growing the grain to baking the final product, in microgravity, with an eye to future manned missions to the moon and Mars. For starters, though, ISS astronauts will simply be able to warm up rolls pre-baked on Earth - itself a major challenge since the bread can't shed any crumbs.

Sebastian Marcu, managing director of Bake in Space said: “That would be a safety risk,” noting that crumbs floating around in the near-weightlessness of the station could damage equipment, or the astronauts could inhale them and choke.

So Bake in Space has enlisted food experts from the Technology Transfer Centre (TTZ) in Bremerhaven - a research institution in the fields of food, health and the environment - to come up with absolutely crumb-free rolls.

Florian Stukenborg, who is in charge of developing the recipe said: “We're working on the basis of a perfectly normal pretzel-type dough.” His team has already tested about 30 different types.
Anyway, the dough will be saltier than is usual. "In space, like on an airplane, things taste different," notes Stukenborg, highlighting the dulled sense of taste that prompts astronauts to ask for food like hot spiced sausages.

Space bread will be designed to keep for at least a half year due to the long intervals between resupply missions to the ISS. And they've got to be nice and soft despite the electricity limits on the oven as well as other constraints.

While an oven on Earth is an ordinary appliance, it's a potential hazard on the ISS. Under no circumstances should it allow heat to escape, which would hang in the air and not disperse throughout the station.
"The astronauts could be injured," says Volker Schmid, mission manager at the German Aerospace Centre (DLR), chief partner of Bake in Space.

They will have to put the rolls into a cold oven and not take them out until the oven has cooled. So the baking time will be much longer than on Earth, and the temperature will be lower.

Matthias Boehme of OHB, a Bremen-headquartered multinational technology corporation with expertise in aerospace explained: “If you don't add moisture on bread, something like twice-baked bread comes out,” He was tasked by Bake in Space to develop a prototype of a space oven, which the food technicians are now using to test their recipes.

It's small, with room for only three rolls. The astronauts won't even be allowed to switch it on themselves, as the entire baking process will be controlled from the ground.

A lot of effort is obviously going into giving them a baked break from their bagged and tinned meals. "It might sound trivial, but it's a quality-of-life boost for the astronauts up there," Schmid says. Launching pre-baked rolls into space may work for an ISS mission, which typically lasts about six months, but wouldn't be practicable for longer ones, for example to the moon or Mars.

Schmid said: "You can't maintain a supply chain from Earth to Mars. So we're trying to develop closed loops."

This is precisely what Bake in Space has in mind too, and it plans to use the ISS as a testing platform. The next step is to have the astronauts make their own dough in space, and later to grow their own grain and grind it to flour there.

"All this is technically possible," says Schmid, adding that the problem at present is a financial one.

Marcu estimates the total cost of bringing fresh rolls to the ISS at between 1.5 million and 3 million euros (about $3.5 million). Although they were supposed to be delivered along with the oven next year, the ambitious timetable can't be met.

Bake in Space, founded this past spring, and hasn’t yet been able to raise all of the money needed.



Over 60 Endangered Species Released into King Khalid Royal Reserve

These efforts align with the National Environment Strategy and Saudi Vision 2030 - SPA
These efforts align with the National Environment Strategy and Saudi Vision 2030 - SPA
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Over 60 Endangered Species Released into King Khalid Royal Reserve

These efforts align with the National Environment Strategy and Saudi Vision 2030 - SPA
These efforts align with the National Environment Strategy and Saudi Vision 2030 - SPA

In collaboration with the National Center for Wildlife (NCW), the Imam Abdulaziz bin Mohammed Royal Reserve Development Authority has released over 60 endangered species into the King Khalid Royal Reserve. This initiative supports a national program to reintroduce wildlife into their natural habitats.

CEO of the authority Dr. Talal Al-Harigi stated that the release aims to enhance biodiversity and restore natural habitats. He emphasized that the project fosters a stable environment for wildlife adaptation, SPA reported.

These efforts align with the National Environment Strategy and Saudi Vision 2030, which seek to improve the quality of life and promote sustainability. Dr. Al-Harigi noted that the partnership with NCW exemplifies institutional integration and the use of global best practices for successful reintroduction.

The release included species such as Arabian sand gazelles, Arabian oryx, wild hares, and mountain gazelles, contributing to biodiversity, ecological balance, and eco-tourism in the region.


'The Best Gift Ever': Baby is Born after the Rarest of Pregnancies, Defying All Odds

This photo provided by the family shows Ryu Lopez in California in October 2025. (Lopez family via AP)
This photo provided by the family shows Ryu Lopez in California in October 2025. (Lopez family via AP)
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'The Best Gift Ever': Baby is Born after the Rarest of Pregnancies, Defying All Odds

This photo provided by the family shows Ryu Lopez in California in October 2025. (Lopez family via AP)
This photo provided by the family shows Ryu Lopez in California in October 2025. (Lopez family via AP)

Suze Lopez holds her baby boy on her lap and marvels at the remarkable way he came into the world.

Before little Ryu was born, he developed outside his mom’s womb, hidden by a basketball-sized ovarian cyst — a dangerous situation so rare that his doctors plan to write about the case for a medical journal, The AP news reported.

Just 1 in 30,000 pregnancies occur in the abdomen instead of the uterus, and those that make it to full term “are essentially unheard of — far, far less than 1 in a million,” said Dr. John Ozimek, medical director of labor and delivery at Cedars-Sinai in Los Angeles, where Ryu was born. “I mean, this is really insane.”

Lopez, a 41-year-old nurse who lives in Bakersfield, California, didn’t know she was pregnant with her second child until days before giving birth.

When her belly began to grow earlier this year, she thought it was her ovarian cyst getting bigger. Doctors had been monitoring the mass since her 20s, leaving it in place after removing her right ovary and another cyst.

Lopez experienced none of the usual pregnancy symptoms, such as morning sickness, and never felt kicks. Though she didn’t have a period, her cycle is irregular and she sometimes goes years without one.

For months, she and her husband, Andrew Lopez, went about their lives and traveled abroad.

But gradually, the pain and pressure in her abdomen got worse, and Lopez figured it was finally time to get the 22-pound (10-kilogram) cyst removed. She needed a CT scan, which required a pregnancy test first because of the radiation exposure. To her great surprise, the test came back positive.

Lopez shared the news with her husband at a Dodgers baseball game in August, handing him a package with a note and a onesie.

“I just saw her face,” he recalled, “and she just looked like she wanted to weep and smile and cry at the same time.”

Shortly after the game, Lopez began feeling unwell and sought help at Cedars-Sinai. It turned out she had dangerously high blood pressure, which the medical team stabilized. They also did blood work and gave her an ultrasound and an MRI. The scans found that her uterus was empty, but a nearly full-term fetus in an amniotic sac was hiding in a small space in her abdomen, near her liver.

“It did not look like it was directly invading any organs,” Ozimek said. “It looked like it was mostly implanted on the sidewall of the pelvis, which is also very dangerous but more manageable than being implanted in the liver.”

Dr. Cara Heuser, a maternal-fetal specialist in Utah not involved with the case, said almost all pregnancies that implant outside the uterus — called ectopic pregnancies — go on to rupture and hemorrhage if not removed. Most commonly, they occur in the fallopian tubes.

A 2023 medical journal article by doctors in Ethiopia described another abdominal pregnancy in which the mother and baby survived, pointing out that fetal mortality can be as high as 90% in such cases and birth defects are seen in about 1 in 5 surviving babies.

But Lopez and her son beat all the odds.

On Aug. 18, a medical team delivered the 8-pound (3.6-kilogram) baby while she was under full anesthesia, removing the cyst during the same surgery. She lost nearly all of her blood, Ozimek said, but the team got the bleeding under control and gave her transfusions.

Doctors continually updated her husband about what was happening.

“The whole time, I might have seemed calm on the outside, but I was doing nothing but praying on the inside,” Andrew Lopez said. “It was just something that scared me half to death, knowing that at any point I could lose my wife or my child.”

Instead, they both recovered well.

“It was really, really remarkable,” Ozimek said.

Since then, Ryu — named after a baseball player and a character in the Street Fighter video game series — has been healthy and thriving. His parents love watching him interact with his 18-year-old sister, Kaila, and say he completes their family.

With Ryu’s first Christmas approaching, Lopez describes feeling blessed beyond measure.

“I do believe in miracles,” she said, looking down at her baby. “God gave us this gift — the best gift ever.”


Daughters of King Charles' Brother Andrew Join Royals for Christmas Service

Britain's Princess Beatrice, Princess Eugenie, and Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi leave after attending the Royal Family's Christmas Day service at St. Mary Magdalene's church, as the royals take residence at the Sandringham estate in eastern England, Britain, December 25, 2025. REUTERS/Hannah McKay
Britain's Princess Beatrice, Princess Eugenie, and Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi leave after attending the Royal Family's Christmas Day service at St. Mary Magdalene's church, as the royals take residence at the Sandringham estate in eastern England, Britain, December 25, 2025. REUTERS/Hannah McKay
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Daughters of King Charles' Brother Andrew Join Royals for Christmas Service

Britain's Princess Beatrice, Princess Eugenie, and Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi leave after attending the Royal Family's Christmas Day service at St. Mary Magdalene's church, as the royals take residence at the Sandringham estate in eastern England, Britain, December 25, 2025. REUTERS/Hannah McKay
Britain's Princess Beatrice, Princess Eugenie, and Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi leave after attending the Royal Family's Christmas Day service at St. Mary Magdalene's church, as the royals take residence at the Sandringham estate in eastern England, Britain, December 25, 2025. REUTERS/Hannah McKay

Britain's Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie attended the royal family's traditional Christmas Day church service on Thursday, while their father Andrew, recently stripped ​of his titles over ties to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, was absent.

King Charles and Queen Camilla led senior royals to a church in Sandringham in eastern England, about 110 miles (175 km) northeast of London, greeting well-wishers in crisp winter weather, Reuters reported.

Charles and Camilla walked ahead while the Prince and Princess of ‌Wales, William ‌and Kate, and their ‌three ⁠children, followed.

Other ​family members ‌included Princess Anne and her husband Tim Laurence, the Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh with their children, as well as the king's niece Zara and her husband Mike Tindall.

Now known only as Andrew Mountbatten Windsor, the king's younger brother has faced mounting pressure over his ⁠links to Epstein. In October, Charles stripped him of all titles, including ‌Duke of York and prince, and ‍ordered him to vacate ‍his Windsor home and move to private accommodation on ‍the Sandringham estate, which has been the royal family's traditional venue for their Christmas Day service since 1988.

Buckingham Palace had said the steps taken against Andrew were necessary to ​protect the monarchy's reputation, adding that the king's thoughts and sympathies were with victims of ⁠abuse.

The attendance of his daughters Beatrice, 37, and Eugenie, 35, underscores their continuing presence at family events despite the controversy surrounding their father.

The royals ‌are expected to return to Sandringham House for lunch before the king's televised Christmas message later in the day.