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Intelligence for Better Decision Making
| Domain | Causal Chain | Possible Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Geopolitics & Defense | (Great-power rivalry intensity ↑ → Military expenditure spike (% GDP) ↑ → Defense-spending burden on fiscal balance ↑ → Arms-race expenditure gap ↑) | The ensuing arms race will worsen fiscal pressures and further intensify great-power rivalry. |
| Geopolitics & Defense | (Alliance interoperability score ↓ → Forward-deployed troop surge ↑ → Escalation probability estimate ↑) | A surge in forward-deployed troops increases contact points, elevating the risk of unintended military escalation. |
| Geopolitics & Defense | (Sanctions & export-control aggressiveness ↑ → Sanctions breadth index ↑ → Supply-chain relocation cost (% GDP) ↑ → Business fixed-investment growth deviation ↓) | Broader sanctions and higher relocation costs will depress business fixed-investment growth. |
| Geopolitics & Defense | (Maritime-claim assertiveness ↑ → Freedom-of-navigation incident count ↑ → Global shipping war-risk premium ↑ → Shipping-insurance cost share of trade value ↑) | Elevated shipping war-risk premiums will increase insurance costs, raising overall trade logistics expenses. |
| Transportation & Logistics | (Aviation bilateral & multilateral ASA openness ↓ → Air-cargo capacity utilisation ↓ → Freight-rate volatility index ↑ → Logistics cost-to-sales ratio ↑) | Reduced air-cargo capacity and volatile freight rates will drive up logistics cost-to-sales ratios for shippers. |
| Transportation & Logistics | (Aviation ASA openness ↓ → Door-to-door export lead time ↑ → Real export-market share change ↓ → Global export-market share shift ↓) | Longer door-to-door lead times will erode Japan’s export competitiveness and shrink its global market share. |
| Energy & Natural Resources | (Critical-mineral import concentration index ↑ → Resource-control share (rare earths) ↑ → Strategic-commodity price volatility ↑ → Battery cost ↑) | Higher strategic-commodity volatility will translate into increased battery costs for Japanese manufacturers. |
| Non-Interstate Conflict & Security | (Cross-border sanctuary ease score ↓ → Conflict-induced displacement flow ↑ → Civilian-conflict fatality toll ↑ → Humanitarian-aid dependency ratio ↑) | Restricted refuge access could amplify displacement and casualties, boosting humanitarian aid dependency. |
| Social Cohesion | (Anti-discrimination enforcement strength ↓ → Online hateful-content visibility share ↑ → Intergroup violence incident frequency ↑ → Social-trust composite swing ↓) | Rising online hate content and intergroup violence will undermine social trust between communities. |
| Politics | (Great-power rivalry intensity ↑ → Political-risk sovereign spread ↑ → Investor political-risk premium ↑ → FDI net inflow (% GDP) ↓) | Increased political-risk premiums will deter foreign investment, reducing FDI inflows as a share of GDP. |
Erudite Risk takes an all risks approach to intelligence reporting. We categorize key intelligence into one of 40 different risk intelligence categories.
The goal is to provide intelligence that allows decision makers to avoid being blindsided by what they may have missed, while informing them to make better decisions as well.
Erudite Risk also includes operations categories so you can monitor the environment for better decision making. Everything is tied together--what happens in risk affects operations and what happens in the market impacts risk profiles.
We categorize key intelligence into one of 30 different operations intelligence categories.
Different roles and functions within the organization can monitor different key issue areas. HR may monitor employment, wages, regulations, labor and management relations, etc., while P&L leaders may monitor overall developing trends.
千葉県環境研究センター公開講座「令和7年の最新情報!千葉県の気候変動影響と熱中症対策」
Chiba Prefectural Environmental Research Center Public Lecture: Latest Information for 2025! Climate Change Impacts and Heatstroke Prevention in Chiba Prefecture
Chiba Prefecture | Local Language | CityState | Nov. 21, 2025 | Climate Change
The Chiba Prefectural Environmental Research Center will hold a public lecture titled "Latest Information for Reiwa 7! Climate Change Impacts and Heatstroke Countermeasures in Chiba Prefecture" on December 19, 2025. The event is scheduled from 1:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m., with doors opening at 12:30 p.m. The lecture aims to provide updated information on climate change effects and heatstroke prevention measures pertinent to Chiba Prefecture, coinciding with the implementation of revised Industrial Safety and Health Regulations that mandate heatstroke countermeasures as a legal responsibility for employers.
The lecture will focus on Chiba Prefecture’s meteorological conditions and heatstroke trends during the summer of 2025, alongside practical heatstroke countermeasures for workplaces and facilities in line with the new regulations. Targeted primarily at corporate and government personnel responsible for safety and facility management, the event is also open to anyone interested in environmental issues. Attendees will learn what preparations are necessary by the summer of fiscal year Reiwa 8 (2026).
The event will be held at Hotel Plaza Nanohana, located in Chuo-ku, Chiba City, with an on-site capacity of 50 attendees available on a first-come, first-served basis, and an online capacity of 500 participants via Zoom Webinar. Applications opened on November 19, 2025, and will close on December 12, 2025. Interested participants must register in advance, either through the Chiba Electronic Application Service for on-site attendance or via Zoom Webinar for the online format. Special accommodations, such as sign language interpretation for the on-site event, need to be requested by December 5, 2025.
The lecture program includes presentations on the long-term climate trends and future projections in Chiba Prefecture by a meteorological expert, heatstroke occurrence data and ongoing initiatives by the Environmental Research Center, workplace heatstroke countermeasures by a pharmaceutical company representative, and a detailed review of the revised Industrial Safety and Health Regulations by a certified social insurance and labor consultant. Additionally, there will be an introduction to a business decarbonization promotion program led by representatives from the Global Warming Countermeasures Promotion Division.
Participation in the lecture is free, though attendees are responsible for their own transportation and communication expenses. Further information and a recruitment flyer are available through related links provided by the Environmental Research Center. Inquiries can be directed to the Environmental Life Department at the Center via phone or fax.
Defense budget surplus exceeds 100 billion yen for fiscal 2024
Asahi Shimbun - E | English | News | Nov. 21, 2025 | UndeterminedBudgets-Budgeting
The defense budget surplus for fiscal 2024 reached approximately 110 billion yen ($708 million), close to the 130 billion yen surplus recorded in fiscal 2023, marking one of the largest unused amounts on record. The government attributed the surplus to lower contract prices for defense equipment procurement due to competitive bidding and fewer recruits for the Self-Defense Forces than anticipated.
The overall defense budget increased to 7.9496 trillion yen for fiscal 2024. Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi plans to accelerate further spending increases by revising three security-related documents earlier than the scheduled 2027 review. The Defense Ministry emphasizes the importance of avoiding budget shortfalls but acknowledges that a certain level of surplus is unavoidable.
Opposition parties have expressed concern over the considerable unused funds. Jiro Hata of the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan stressed the need to prevent the continuation or growth of the surplus moving forward.
関電支援のため?政府が「原発建設に公的融資」なぜなのか
To support Kansai Electric? Why is the government providing public financing for nuclear power plant construction
Mainichi Shimbun | Local Language | News | Nov. 21, 2025 | Regulation
The Japanese government is exploring a system to provide public financing for the construction of nuclear power plants and other large-scale decarbonized power sources. This initiative aims to address the difficulty private financial institutions face in lending for such projects due to their high costs and long construction timelines. The Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry’s Agency for Natural Resources and Energy (ANRE) proposed leveraging government credit to support lending for these projects, which typically require funding over periods exceeding ten years.
Construction of nuclear power plants demands extremely large investments, estimated at 2–6 trillion yen for standard plants and 1–2 trillion yen for small modular reactors (SMRs), with projects often taking over a decade to complete. Cost overruns and delays are common internationally, making it challenging for Japanese utilities to secure traditional private loans. ANRE proposed that a government-authorized public institution, the Organization for the Promotion of Wide-area Operation of Electric Power (wide-area organization), coordinate financing with private lenders to support these investments.
The wide-area organization, established in 2015 to coordinate electricity supply and demand and enhance transmission and distribution network management, is envisioned as the entity to take on lending responsibilities under this system. ANRE highlighted that government support would be required to strengthen the financial base of this organization to enable it to provide loans for the construction and development of major utilities’ decarbonized power sources and associated infrastructure. Although official documents avoid explicitly naming nuclear power plants, it is implied that nuclear energy projects, particularly those above 500,000 kilowatts and subject to long-term decarbonized power auctions, are key targets for this public financing scheme.
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