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Hyundai, Tata Oppose Proposed Emission Concession for Small Cars, Say It Benefits Suzuki

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A sharp division has emerged among India’s biggest carmakers over proposed changes to the country’s Corporate Average Fuel Efficiency (CAFE) norms, with major manufacturers including Tata Motors, Mahindra & Mahindra, JSW MG Motor, and Hyundai urging the government to scrap a weight-based emission concession for small cars.

These companies argue in letters seen by Reuters that this specific provision would unfairly benefit a single competitor—identified by industry data and three auto executives as Maruti Suzuki—and could ultimately hinder India’s progress toward its Electric Vehicle (EV) goals.

The Proposed Leniency and Industry Rift

India’s current CAFE norms apply to all passenger cars under 3,500 kg (7,716 lb). The proposed new rules aim to significantly tighten the permissible average fleet CO2 emissions to 91.7 grams/km, a substantial reduction from the earlier target of 113 grams/km. This tightening makes it more challenging for all manufacturers, especially those relying on Internal Combustion Engine (ICE) vehicles, and is designed to push companies to accelerate sales of cleaner technologies, particularly EVs, to meet the fleet-average target.

The proposed leniency that sparked the current conflict is contained in the latest draft, which suggests an exemption for petrol cars weighing 909 kg or less, measuring under four meters in length, and with an engine capacity of 1200 cc or below. The government justified this specific concession by claiming these vehicles offer “limited potential for efficiency improvements.”

This arbitrary 909 kg threshold has created a sharp split, as the opposing automakers, many of whom are leading the nation’s EV transition, contend that it is not aligned with any global standards and is designed to disproportionately aid Maruti Suzuki. Industry data indicates that over 95% of cars under 909 kg sold in India come from a single carmaker, which is Maruti Suzuki—for whom about 16% of sales still come from cars in this category, despite a general market shift toward larger SUVs.

Opposition Argues EV Goals and Safety

The opposing carmakers have articulated several concerns across their respective letters to the ministries of power, transport, and industries.

Tata Motors, Mahindra, and JSW MG Motor are concerned that the concession provides an easy path for one manufacturer to meet the stricter CAFE norms without significant investment in electrification or advanced powertrain technologies, thereby slowing the overall national transition to cleaner vehicles. Mahindra requested the omission of any “special category” or definitions based on size or weight, warning of “adverse effects in terms of the nation’s progress towards safer, cleaner cars.”

Three company executives stated the 909 kg threshold was arbitrary. Hyundai argued that the exemption may be viewed internationally as a step backward at a time when global markets are moving toward stricter, zero-emission standards. Hyundai also warned that “abrupt policy changes favoring a specific segment risk undermining industry stability” since future investments are planned based on established norms.

While not explicitly mentioned in the primary report, other public comments by opponents (such as Tata Motors Passenger Vehicles MD) have highlighted that lighter vehicles, particularly those around the 909 kg mark, may have lower safety ratings, and the exemption risks jeopardizing the significant safety advancements made by the industry.

Maruti Suzuki’s Defense

Maruti Suzuki, the main beneficiary of the proposal, defended the measure by stating that global car markets, including Europe, the U.S., China, Korea, and Japan, all have some provisions in their emission regulations to protect “very small cars.” The company argued that small cars inherently consume much less fuel and emit less carbon dioxide than bigger cars, and having this “safeguard” would actually help both CO2 reduction and fuel saving overall.

This impasse has led to delays in finalizing the regulation, which is vital for all automakers as they plan future product portfolios and make necessary investments in powertrain technology.

Ethereum Increases Gas Limit to 60M, Marking a Significant Boost in Base-layer Capacity

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Ethereum has successfully increased its block gas limit to 60 million from the previous 45 million, marking a significant boost in base-layer capacity.

This adjustment took effect automatically on November 25, 2025, after over 513,000 validators signaled support, surpassing the required majority threshold.

The move, enabled by EIP-7935, effectively doubles the network’s execution throughput in just one year and aligns perfectly with rising ecosystem activity, where daily transactions have hit record highs of around 31,000 TPS (transactions per second).

The higher gas limit allows more transactions—such as swaps, token transfers, and smart contract executions—to fit into each block, reducing congestion and potentially lowering fees during peak usage. This comes at a time when Ethereum’s Layer 1 (L1) is under increasing pressure from DeFi, NFTs, and rollup activity.

Community initiatives like “Pump The Gas,” led by developers Eric Connor and Mariano Conti, rallied stakers and client teams to push for this change since early 2024. Ethereum Foundation researcher Toni Wahrstätter highlighted the rapid progress:

Just a year after the community started pushing for higher gas limits, Ethereum is now running with a 60M block gas limit.” Tying into the Fusaka UpgradeThis enhancement serves as a timely precursor to the Fusaka hard fork, Ethereum’s next major network upgrade scheduled for activation on December 3, 2025, at slot 13,164,544 (21:49:11 UTC).

Fusaka focuses on deeper scalability improvements, with PeerDAS (Peer Data Availability Sampling) at its core—a redesign of data sampling that Vitalik Buterin has called “key to Ethereum scaling.”

It will enable more reliable and efficient data throughput for rollups (Layer 2 solutions), reducing per-node storage and bandwidth demands while supporting up to 8x higher L2 capacity.

Starting December 9, 2025, phased increases to per-block blob targets from 6/9 to 14/21 to handle larger data volumes safely. Adjusts gas costs for modular exponentiation precompiles to better reflect computational complexity, improving efficiency for cryptographic operations.

Count Leading Zeros Opcode (EIP-7939): A new native opcode for bit-counting, aiding math-heavy tasks, compression, and zero-knowledge proofs while cutting ZK proving costs.

Secp256r1 Support: Enhances compatibility for certain elliptic curve operations. A $2 million audit contest is currently underway to bolster security before mainnet deployment, following successful tests on the Hoodi testnet.

Buterin has noted that future growth will be “more targeted,” emphasizing smarter pricing and larger blocks to sustain expansion without risks. On X, the news has sparked enthusiasm, with users emphasizing “more throughput, faster settlement, stronger #Ethereum” and Bobanetwork noting “bigger blocks = cheaper transactions.”

Broader discussions highlight how this positions Ethereum for a “new phase of scaling experimentation,” especially as investor accumulation in ETH ramps up.

This dual push—immediate capacity via the gas limit and structural upgrades via Fusaka—signals Ethereum’s commitment to handling surging demand while keeping the network decentralized and secure.

From ~15–18M gas used per block ? ~30–35M gas used per block is now realistic without spiking fees. Lower L1 fees during normal traffic: Simple transfers and ERC-20 transactions are already 20–40% cheaper than two weeks ago.

Projects like Uniswap V3, Blur, and OpenSea are seeing a resurgence of direct L1 volume because it’s suddenly competitive again with L2s for many use cases. MEV becomes more lucrative: Bigger blocks = more room for arbitrage bundles ? higher tips for validators ? slightly higher staking yield.

Blob count ramp-up 6?14 target blobs per block by mid-December will cut L2 fees by an estimated 60–80% compared to March 2024 highs. L2s become dramatically cheaper than L1 again ? Expect another migration wave of retail activity from L1 back to L2s starting mid-December.

L1 becomes the “high-throughput settlement layer” for whales and complex DeFi, while L2s reclaim the “sub-cent UX” for everyone else. Both layers win. With Fusaka just days away, expect smoother performance and potentially renewed momentum for ETH’s ecosystem.

Do Kwon Formally Requests That US Judge Cap His Prison Sentence to 5 Years

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Do Kwon, co-founder of Terraform Labs, has formally requested that a U.S. federal judge cap his prison sentence at five years for his role in the 2022 collapse of the TerraUSD (UST) stablecoin and its sister token Luna, which resulted in approximately $40 billion in investor losses.

This request was filed on November 26, 2025, in Manhattan federal court, ahead of his sentencing hearing scheduled for December 11, 2025, before U.S. District Judge Paul Engelmayer.

The case stems from criminal charges of conspiracy and wire fraud brought by the U.S. Department of Justice, accusing Kwon of misleading investors about the stability of Terra’s algorithmic stablecoin ecosystem.

Kwon pleaded guilty in August 2025 to two counts of wire fraud and conspiracy to defraud, shortly after his extradition from Montenegro where he had been detained since March 2023 on unrelated forgery charges.

Under the plea deal, prosecutors agreed to recommend no more than 12 years in prison, a significant reduction from the statutory maximum of 25 years. However, Kwon’s legal team argues that even this is “far greater than necessary,” proposing five years as “more than sufficient” punishment.

In the court filing, Kwon’s lawyers highlighted: Nearly three years already served in detention, including over half under “brutal conditions” in Montenegro. Kwon’s acceptance of civil penalties, including forfeiture of over $19 million in assets.

The broader context of his remorse, as expressed in a prepared statement during the plea: “What I did was wrong, and I want to apologize for my actions.” Kwon faces a separate trial in South Korea for the same conduct, where prosecutors are seeking up to 40 years.

While bound by the plea to cap their recommendation at 12 years, federal sentencing guidelines for fraud of this scale with massive victim impact could suggest far longer terms—potentially approaching life before caps.

Legal experts anticipate the judge may impose 15–20 years, given Engelmayer’s history of strict sentences in financial fraud cases. The Terra ecosystem imploded in May 2022 when UST—a stablecoin meant to maintain a $1 peg through an algorithmic balance with Luna—depegged catastrophically.

This triggered a death spiral, wiping out $40 billion in market value and contributing to broader crypto market turmoil, including the downfall of FTX. The SEC’s parallel civil case against Kwon and Terraform Labs concluded in 2024 with a jury finding them liable for deceiving investors, resulting in additional fines and bans.

This development echoes other high-profile crypto fraud sentencings, such as Sam Bankman-Fried’s 25-year term in 2024 for the FTX collapse involving $8–10 billion in losses. Kwon’s plea has reduced his exposure compared to a trial, but the request for a lenient cap has sparked debate on X and in crypto communities about accountability for systemic risks in decentralized finance.

Observers note that while Kwon’s case highlights regulatory crackdowns on stablecoin fraud, it also underscores ongoing challenges in extradition and international jurisdiction for crypto executives. Post-U.S. sentencing, South Korean authorities are expected to pursue their case aggressively.

Do Kwon’s request for a five-year prison cap highlights the complexities of sentencing in high-stakes financial fraud cases, particularly those involving emerging technologies like blockchain.

Under federal guidelines, fraud causing $40 billion in losses could theoretically justify sentences approaching life imprisonment, but Kwon’s August 2025 guilty plea to conspiracy and wire fraud limited the statutory maximum to 25 years, with prosecutors bound to recommend no more than 12.

His defense argues for proportionality, citing nearly three years already served including over 18 months in “brutal” Montenegrin conditions, $19 million in asset forfeitures, and a public apology where Kwon accepted full responsibility.

However, Judge Paul Engelmayer’s track record in fraud cases suggests a likely outcome of 15–20 years, emphasizing victim impact and deterrence. A lenient sentence could set a precedent for crediting pre-trial detention in international extraditions.

While a harsher one might reinforce aggressive U.S. prosecution of white-collar crypto crimes. Post-U.S. sentencing, Kwon’s transfer to South Korea for a parallel trial—where prosecutors seek up to 40 years—could invoke double jeopardy challenges, though treaties allow concurrent jurisdiction for cross-border fraud.

He must serve at least half his U.S. term before transfer eligibility, potentially extending his total incarceration to decades and underscoring the risks of multi-jurisdictional accountability for global crypto executives.

Invitation to Tekedia AI Lab’s Vibe Coding Module Today

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Tekedia AI Lab Co-Learners (October 2025): This is a reminder and a special invitation to join our current November edition class as I teach Vibe Coding today. When you previously took the course, this module had not yet been introduced. We would be delighted to have you join us and experience it.

The Zoom link is available on your Tekedia Institute class board. And in case the timing is short and you’re unable to attend, we will upload the full session video afterward; so you are fully covered.

In this lab, co-learners will master how to plan, design, and deploy on a cPanel environment. Those using AWS, Google Cloud, or other cloud platforms can also deploy there. The current class has not done VPS setup but you know how to do that and can also setup therein. We will work with Google AI Studio, so please ensure you have a Gmail account.

  • Week 3 Session
  • Sat, Nov 29 | 3pm – 6pm WAT
  • Topic: Building AI Agents & Websites via Vibe Coding – Setup, Implementation, Deployment
  • Venue: Zoom (link on your Tekedia class board)

Meanwhile, for those interested in joining our widely subscribed Tekedia AI Lab, the next edition begins on Jan 24, 2026. Our Black Friday Deals significantly reduce the fee. Reserve your seat here.

The Abia State’s Transformation Under Governor Otti and Unlocking Abundance in Trillion-Naira Budget

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Umu Abia: I want to take this moment to share the good news coming our way in 2026 and beyond. Immediately after the election, His Excellency Dr. Alex Otti invited a group of professionals to help design and architect a roadmap for Abia’s future. I was privileged to be included in the transition council and had the honour of serving as Co-Chair, Economic Transformation.

At that time, the public sentiment was gloomy: Abia was described as broke, unable to pay polytechnic lecturers, unable to keep the state university teaching hospital functioning, with the college of education abandoned and pensioners left without hope. But a comprehensive document was submitted to the new administration, anchored on Governor Otti’s mandate. He improved it, refined it, and embedded his grand execution strategy, a methodical framework built on People, Processes, and Tools.

From day one, Governor Otti understood that Abia was not poor; rather, its wealth was locked away. He began unlocking it systematically. First came the tools, fixing key roads, restoring public infrastructure, repositioning education. Then came the people, clearing pension arrears, paying salaries promptly, restoring dignity. Then the processes, reviving the courts across LGAs, digitizing bureaucracy, and building a governance architecture that works.

Abians responded. Investors responded. Confidence returned. And Governor Otti’s core doctrine came alive: if Aba, the industrial heartbeat, is revived, Aba will revive the rest of Abia. Today, Aba is back: working, producing, exporting, and creating economic velocity that is lifting the entire state. Abia’s IGR, once stuck near N20 billion a few years ago, is projected to hit N100 billion in 2025 and potentially climb to N223.4 billion in 2026!

Now, the game is elevating: in the 2026 budget, Abia will cross the N1 trillion mark: “For the first time in the budget history of Nigeria’s South-East, a state has crossed the trillion-naira threshold. Abia achieved that milestone on Tuesday as Governor Alex Otti presented a N1.016 trillion budget proposal for 2026 to the State House of Assembly”. About 80% will go into capital projects; the rest into recurrent spending. Please understand that Abia is ranked #1 in Nigeria by the federal DMO as the most fiscally responsible in Nigeria.

Tagged “Budget of Acceleration and New Possibilities,” the plan marks a dramatic leap in the state’s financial ambition. It is a development many observers see as a pointed signal of how far Abia has travelled under Otti’s stewardship since 2023. The rise to a trillion-naira estimate, they argue, mirrors a growing administrative confidence backed by an economy that has become more active and more attractive to investors over the past two years.

Otti told lawmakers that the 2026 plan is designed to deepen infrastructure, strengthen social services, and lock in the gains of ongoing reforms. The size of the estimate represents a 13 percent rise from the 2025 budget.

A striking feature of the proposal is its aggressive capital allocation. Abia intends to channel N811.8 billion — or 80 percent — into capital projects, while recurrent spending is capped at N204.4 billion, or 20 percent. Otti explained that the state is targeting a point where internally generated revenue, now rising sharply, fully covers recurrent expenditure.

Fellow Abians, fellow Nigerians, Abia is working. Our Governor leads with merit, pragmatism, and honesty. The 2026 budget is tagged “Budget of Acceleration and New Possibilities” because Mr. Governor wants Abia to fund platforms of commerce (social services, infrastructure, etc), accelerate growth to unlock possibilities and abundance for all. May the good Lord bless Abia, Nigeria.