Pipe Launches Embedded Business Card for Software and Payment Companies, Expanding Their Suite of Embedded Financial Solutions

Pipe, a fintech company partnering with software platforms to deliver embedded financial solutions for SMBs, announced it has expanded its suite of products with the launch of Pipe Business Card1. With the Pipe Business Card, software and payments companies can now launch a new business card program for their customers without managing underwriting, capital markets, fraud, or credit risk on their own.
77% of SMBs are concerned about capital access2 and 55% of them have reported putting business-related expenses on a personal credit card just to get by3. SMBs need spend management solutions just like mid-market and enterprise businesses have access to today.
The Pipe Business Card is designed specifically for small to medium-sized businesses and is available as an embedded offering for Pipe’s software partners. It’s an SMB-friendly business card with up to 1.5% unlimited cash back4, up to 45 days to pay for day-to-day business expenses, and no annual fees. No personal guarantees or credit checks are required to apply for the card.
Catch more Fintech Insights : Global Fintech Series Interview with Tanya Thomas, EVP for EMEA, Q4
A growing number of small businesses are obtaining capital in minutes through Pipe and its partners, based on their business performance, without the traditional lengthy and arduous application process. The launch of the Pipe Business Card is part of Pipe’s commitment to making capital and financial tools more accessible to SMBs that need them. The Pipe Business Card utilizes the same underwriting model as Pipe Capital, which is based on a customer’s revenue. It integrates directly into the software and payment applications SMBs use day-to-day. Pipe intends to roll out additional services through its partners over the next 12 to 18 months, such as spend management solutions for SMBs.
Pipe offers software companies numerous advantages when launching the Pipe Business Card to their customers, including:

Speed to market – Pipe can help partners rapidly launch an embedded card program in days, not months.
Tailored underwriting models – Pipe’s customized underwriting models can be calibrated for partners based on revenue data from their customer base to provide optimal access to capital.
Comprehensive support – Pipe’s US-based customer success team handles all dispute management and resolution for partners.

“In the six months since we launched our embedded Capital, Pipe, and its partners, have helped to finance the dreams of tens of thousands of small businesses. We will continue to develop innovative products that remove the friction from their business,” said Luke Voiles, Chief Executive Officer, Pipe. “The Pipe Business Card is the logical expansion of our suite of capital services, and we expect it to have a meaningful impact on our customers, partners, and the overall SMB market.”
Read More on Fintech : Global Fintech Series Interview with Deepak Gupta, EVP of Demand Fulfillment at Volante and US Faster Payments Council Board Member
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Business News | IBC D-Serve 2024: Reliance Jio Named ‘Digital Enterprise of the Year,’ Xapads Media Secures ‘Digital Services Provider’ Award

SMPLMumbai (Maharashtra) [India], October 28: The Indian Business Council (IBC) proudly announced the winners of the much-anticipated Digital Services Awards (D-Serve) 2024 today. The D-Serve Awards honor and celebrate the most transformative, impactful, and innovative achievements in digital services across various industries in India, recognizing organizations that are setting new standards in digital transformation, marketing, customer engagement, and technological advancements.Also Read | Is Lionel Messi Nominated for Ballon d’Or 2024? Check Full Nominee List of France Football Awards.Reliance Jio Infocomm emerged as the Digital Enterprise of the Year, showcasing its commitment to leveraging cutting-edge digital strategies to drive growth and impact across industries. Xapads Media received the prestigious Digital Services Provider of the Year award, recognized for its exceptional contributions to digital marketing services through innovative and effective solutions.SUD Life Insurance also took center stage as it was recognized as the Leading Brand in Video Marketing (under Stream 2024 program) for its pioneering use of video content to enhance customer engagement and brand awareness. The brand’s success highlights the power of creative and strategic video marketing in today’s digital-first world.Also Read | Bharti Airtel Appoints Gopal Vittal As Executive Vice Chairman, Names COO Shashwat Sharma As MD and CEO.This year’s winners represent a diverse array of sectors, from finance and e-commerce to healthcare, automotive, and more. Each organization and agency nominated showcased exceptional leadership in leveraging digital tools, platforms, and strategies to enhance operational efficiency, improve customer experiences, and drive business growth.Click here to see the complete Winners List of 2024.Over 300 entries were submitted across 50 award categories, reflecting the rapidly growing role of digital transformation in today’s competitive business environment.The winners will be felicitated at the grand awards ceremony at the India Digital Meet 2025 scheduled for February 13, 2025 at the iconic Jio Institute in Ulwe, Navi Mumbai. Attendees will also have the opportunity to engage in dynamic panel discussions, keynote sessions from industry leaders, and exclusive networking opportunities with pioneers in the digital landscape.”We are thrilled to recognize the achievements of our 2024 D-Serve Award winners,” said Soumya Meria Samuel, Director at the Indian Business Council. “These organizations and their leaders have not only embraced the digital future but have set a new benchmark for what can be achieved through exemplary digital services. We believe their work will continue to inspire and propel the industry forward.”About the Indian Business Council (IBC)The Indian Business Council is a leading industry body committed to fostering economic growth, innovation, and collaboration across India’s business sectors. Through initiatives like the D-Serve Awards, IBC continues to support and recognize companies that drive progress and excellence in digital and technological advancements.Media ContactIffat ZamanMarketing ManagerIndian Business CouncilPhone: +91 9158542448Email: [email protected](ADVERTORIAL DISCLAIMER: The above press release has been provided by SMPL. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of the same)(This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body)

News24 Business | Scientists warn of possible collapse of Atlantic currents

A group of scientists warned Monday of the greatly underestimated risk of a collapse of ocean currents in the Atlantic which could have catastrophic consequences for the Nordic countries as the region’s leaders gathered in Iceland. In an open letter addressed to the Nordic Council, which is meeting this week in Iceland’s capital Reykjavik, the scientists said they wanted to bring attention “to the serious risk of a major ocean circulation change in the Atlantic.”The “Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation” (AMOC) is a complex system of ocean currents, including the Gulf Stream, which carries heat from warmer regions to the north and is therefore crucial to living conditions in the Arctic.The collapse of the system – which according to a recent study has already weakened – is one of the tipping points that concern scientists because of cascading effects they could trigger.But there is no consensus on when this is likely to happen. The sixth assessment report by the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), expressed “medium confidence that the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation will not collapse abruptly before 2100.” However, the signatories of the open letter, argued that new research indicated that the risk had so far been “greatly underestimated,” and the “passing of this tipping point is a serious possibility already in the next few decades.”They warned the impact on Nordic countries “would likely be catastrophic, including major cooling in the region while surrounding regions warm.”That in turn would “likely lead to unprecedented extreme weather” and “potentially threaten the viability of agriculture in northwestern Europe,” they added.But the impact would likely be felt globally, they said, with possible shifts in tropical rainfall belts and major additional rises in sea levels.The Nordic Council gathers Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden and their leaders are meeting in Reykjavik on Monday and Tuesday for a summit to which Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has also been invited.

Gen AI adoption increases across key business functions

A new study reveals that 72 percent of business leaders report using Gen AI at least once a week, up from 37 percent in 2023.

The report by The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, in collaboration with GBK Collective, shows a dramatic rise in generative AI adoption across key business functions, as enterprises move from cautious exploration to rapid integration.

“Generative AI has rapidly evolved from a tool of experimentation to a core driver of business transformation,” says Stefano Puntoni, Sebastian S. Kresge professor of marketing at the Wharton School and co-director of AI at Wharton. “Companies are no longer just exploring AI’s potential — they are embedding it into their strategies to scale growth, streamline operations, and enhance decision-making. The novelty phase is over. We’re now starting to see the integration of AI into various business processes, as companies look to unlock its long-term value across the enterprise.”

The focus has moved from initial curiosity to practical application, and 55 percent of organizations are now actively using Gen AI across multiple business functions, such as coding, data analysis, idea generation, brainstorming, content creation, and legal contract generation. Despite this progress, challenges around accuracy, privacy, team integration, and ethics persist, though these concerns have slightly eased compared to last year. Notably, 58 percent rate Gen AI’s performance as ‘great.’

AI adoption in marketing and sales has tripled, from 20 percent in 2023 to 62 percent in 2024, with AI usage in operations, HR, purchasing, and procurement doubling.

“This transition from experimentation to widespread usage marks a pivotal moment,” adds Puntoni. “Companies are now leveraging AI for tangible business outcomes, but they’re also facing new challenges in governance and integration as they scale AI solutions across the enterprise.”

Spending on AI is up too, increasing by 130 percent, with 72 percent of companies planning further investment in 2025.

The research finds 90 percent of leaders agree that AI enhances employee skills, up from 80 percent in 2023, while concerns about job replacement have eased, dropping from 75 percent to 72 percent.

“We continue to see investment in Gen AI grow across industries, but ensuring measurable ROI is now a key factor for sustained impact,” says Mary Purk, executive director, AI at Wharton. “Businesses must refine their AI strategies not only to integrate AI across functions but also to demonstrate its value. The real competitive edge will come from those who can scale AI effectively and confidently.”

You can read more on the GBA Collective site.

Image credit: BiancoBlue/depositphotos.com

Japanese picture book author Keiko Sena dies at 92

Picture book author Keiko Sena died from old age at her home in Zushi, Kanagawa Prefecture, on Wednesday, people familiar with the matter have said. She was 92.

A Tokyo native, Sena, whose real name was Keiko Kuroda, studied under the late Takeo Takei, a writer of stories for children, after graduating from Ochanomizu University Senior High School in Tokyo.

Picture book author Keiko Sena was popular for her collages that portray characters in an expressive way and for her writing style, with which she conveyed children’s feelings candidly and humorously.
| Family of Keiko Sena / via jiji

In 1969, Sena made her debut as a picture book author with “Iyada no Ehon,” a four-piece book series for which she used paper collage for illustrations. She won the Sankei children’s book award for the work the following year.

“Nenaiko Dareda” from the series, in which a night-owl child is spirited away to a world of ghosts, became a bestseller, with cumulative sales exceeding 3 million copies.

Sena was popular for her collages that portray characters in an expressive way and for her writing style, with which she conveyed children’s feelings candidly and humorously.

“Nenaiko Dareda,” a picture book written by author Keiko Sena, in which a night-owl child is spirited away to a world of ghosts, became a bestseller, with cumulative sales exceeding 3 million copies.
| Jiji

Among her other works were the “Megane Usagi” series, including “Obake no Tempura,” and the “An no Ehon” series, which includes “Ruru-chan no Kutsushita.”

Sena also produced books, such as “Hayaoki Obake,” with her daughter Kaoru Kuroda, who is also a picture book author. Linguist Ryunosuke Kuroda is her son.

EU to spend €900M on expanding critical technologies

With the fund, the European Commission aims to dissuade the bloc’s tech companies from tapping non-EU funds when they want to expand their operations significantly after their initial build-out. The United States, for example, is known to have far larger scale-up funds than Europe.

It has made the EU dependent on other regions, such as the U.S. and China, for technologies such as microchips and cloud services. The EU’s incoming tech boss, Finland’s Henna Virkkunen, is responsible for making the EU technologically “sovereign” again.

But even before she assumes office, the EU executive is already lining up cash to avoid strategically important tech companies from falling into foreign hands.

Under the new program, eligible companies can apply for an equity investment of between €10 million and €30 million — giving Brussels effective part ownership of these companies.

The fund is meant to scale up companies working on tech, clean tech or biotech that have already raised money. The companies should also be able to demonstrate interest from other, private, investors in joining the funding round.

Brussels’ share is also a minority of the funding round: The total sum should be three to five times Brussels’ investment.

12 books to read about climate action ahead of the election

For this October, the month before the presidential election, Yale Climate Connections has identified enough timely titles to fill two bookshelves: one on climate action, the other on electoral politics. 

This bookshelf presents the titles on climate action – or perhaps we should say inaction. 

Read: 12 books to help you understand the 2024 election – and its aftermath

Scientists and concerned citizens have been crying out for action on climate change for so long – for decades, in fact – that several histories of American inaction have now been written. The most recent of these is “Glacial: The Inside Story of Climate Politics.” Even regular readers of this monthly column will be surprised by how far back the story told by environmental policy analyst Chelsea Henderson goes. 

There have been bright spots, the Paris Climate Agreement, for one. President Obama’s Special Envoy for Climate Change Todd Stern provides a firsthand account of the American side of those negotiations. Nevertheless, the available evidence indicates that we will “overshoot” the temperature targets set in the agreement, both the preferred (below 1.5°C) and the fallback (2°C) targets. In their new book, activists and academics Wim Carton and Andreas Malm play out the consequences of inaction going forward.   

Reporter Peter Schwartzstein and security analyst Sherri Goodman already see the dire consequences of climate change shaping international politics and strategic planning. People migrating away from climate-damaged environments, and the violence such breakdowns unleash, will destabilize the countries and polities to which they flee. 

How should citizens in these countries respond? Professor of environmental law David Spence provides a detailed account of how effective energy regulation has sometimes been possible in the U.S. over the last century. But he now sees new stresses on the political system that are creating vicious circles of contempt and inaction. Journalist Cameron Abadi and activist Margaret Klein Salamon offer opposing takes on climate radicalism. Both would agree, however, that climate action is among the best remedies for climate anxiety. Social philosophers Dominic Pettman and Eugene Thacker go further, suggesting that we need to create new mental and social spaces for experiencing and understanding the emotions that arise from our (in)actions in response to climate change.

The last three titles in this bookshelf offer new paths to action. Graphic designer Esther Gonstalla has created an “atlas” of climate threats and solutions. Climate scientist Rob Jackson provides an update on the science and technologies of carbon removal and places that story in a bigger picture of comprehensive climate action. In conversations with people deeply engaged in a wide variety of climate actions, marine biologist and climate advocate Ayana Elizabeth Johnson sketches a path forward by imagining our destination: “What if we get it right?”

As always, the descriptions of the titles are adapted from copy provided by their publishers. 

Glacial: The Inside Story of Climate Politics by Chelsea Henderson (Turner Publishing Co., 2024, 432 pages, $19.99 paperback) 

Glacial: The Inside Story of Climate Politics is the first inside-the-Beltway account to lay bare the machinations of what went wrong in Washington – how and why our leaders failed to act on climate change as mounting scientific evidence underscored the urgency to do so. The good news today is that public opinion is at its highest level of support for climate action, from corporate boardrooms embracing sustainability for business reasons to movements led by passionate younger generations who can’t afford to stand mute because it is they who will inherit the worst environmental catastrophes. If the missed opportunities in Washington are instructive, the path to acting is clear. Our elected officials must use their offices not solely for the power and prestige it bestows, but for the public good – and they must do so while there is still time.

Landing the Paris Climate Agreement: How It Happened, Why It Matters, and What Comes Next by Todd Stern (The MIT Press 2024, pages, $32.95)

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The 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change was one of the most difficult and hopeful achievements of the twenty-first century: 195 nations finally agreed, after 20 years of trying, to establish an ambitious, operational regime to address one of the greatest civilizational challenges of our time. In Landing the Paris Climate Agreement, Todd Stern, the chief U.S. negotiator on climate change, provides an engaging account from inside the rooms where it happened: the full, charged, seven-year story of how the Paris Agreement came to be, following an arc from Copenhagen, to Durban, to the secret U.S.-China climate deal in 2014, to Paris itself. A unique peek behind the curtain, Landing the Paris Climate Agreement is a vital and fascinating read for anyone who cares about the future of our one shared home.

Overshoot: How the World Surrendered to Climate Breakdown by Wim Carton and Andreas Malm (Verso Books 2024, 416 pages, $29.95)

The world is on the cusp of one and a half degrees of warming. But even before one and a half, climate disasters have struck with ever more devastating force. And that limit will be overshot – perhaps two degrees as well. How did this happen? What forces are driving us into a climate that people – particularly poor people in the Global South – won’t be able to cope with? In Overshoot: How the World Surrendered to Climate Breakdown, Andreas Malm and Wim Carton present a history of the present phase of the crisis, as the fossil fuel industry swims in the largest profits ever made. Money continues to flow into the construction of pipelines, platforms, terminals, mines – assets that will have to be destroyed for the planet to remain livable. Sweeping in scope, stirring and sobering, Overshoot lays out the stakes for the climate struggle in the years ahead.

The Heat and the Fury: On the Frontlines of Climate Violence by Peter Schwartzstein (Island Press 2024, 328 pages, $32.00) 

As a journalist on the climate security beat, Peter Schwartzstein has visited ravaged Iraqi towns where ISIS used drought as a recruiting tool and weapon of terror. In Bangladesh, he has interviewed farmers-turned-pirates who can no longer make a living off the land and instead make it off bloody ransoms. Security forces blocked him from a dam being constructed along the Nile that has brought Egypt and Ethiopia to the brink of war. In The Heat and the Fury, Schwartzstein deftly shows that climate change is often the spark that ignites long smoldering fires, the extra shove that pushes individuals, communities, and even nations over the line between frustration and lethal fury. Schwartzstein’s unparalleled on-the-ground reporting and keen sense of human nature offer the clearest picture to date of the violence that threatens us all.

Threat Multiplier: Climate, Military Leadership, and the Fight for Global Security by Sherri Goodman (Island Press 2024, 272 pages, $35.00) 

Threat Multiplier takes us onto the battlefield and inside the Pentagon to show how the U.S. military is confronting the biggest security risk in global history: climate change. More than thirty years ago, when Sherri Goodman became the Pentagon’s first Chief Environmental Officer, no one would have imagined this role for our armed forces. But now the Pentagon considers climate in war games, disaster relief planning, international diplomacy, and even the design of its own bases. What was the key to this dramatic change in military thinking? No one is better poised to answer these questions than Sherri Goodman, an environmental leader among our armed forces and civilian representatives. In Threat Multiplier, she tells the inside story of the military’s fight for global security, a tale that is as hopeful as it is harrowing.

Climate of Contempt: How to Rescue the U.S. Energy Transition from Voter Partisanship by David B. Spence (Columbia University Press 2024, 380 pages, $28.00 paperback) 

Why is the United States struggling to enact policies to reduce carbon emissions? In Climate of Contempt, David B. Spence offers a voter-centric, bottom-up explanation of national climate and energy politics, one that pinpoints bitter partisanship as the key impediment to transitioning to a net zero carbon future. Members of Congress respond to voters whose animosity toward the opposing party makes compromise politically risky. The social media that constitute today’s information environment amplifies anger, spreads half-truths and falsehoods, and sows division. How, then, can we build a broader climate coalition? Spence contends that cooperation on this crucial issue is still possible, but it will require sustained person-to-person engagement. With its incisive understanding of our politics, Climate of Contempt offers hope for a net-zero future.

Climate Radicals: Why Our Environmental Politics Isn’t Working by Cameron Abadi (Columbia Global Reports 2024, 192 pages, $18.00 paperback)

In Climate Radicals, Cameron Abadi profiles the fascinating activists of Letzte Generation, known for throwing food on works of art; Ende Gelände, which demands the immediate phaseout of coal; and the German leaders of Fridays for Future, which organizes school strikes and large-scale demonstrations. Abadi finds that the groups’ uncompromising stances and outrage over narrowly defined policy failures have led them to extreme acts of publicity that feed their sense of urgency. In contrast, Joe Biden’s American Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 represents the most significant move toward green energy in U.S. history. The law did not impress groups like Letzte Generation, but Climate Radicals shows that political compromise and incremental progress might be the only way for governments to fight climate change.

Facing the Climate Emergency: How to Transform Yourself with Climate Truth (2E) by Margaret Klein Salamon (New Society Publishers 2024, 154 pages, $19.99 paperback)

Facing the Climate Emergency offers a cure to climate anxiety. With the skill of a psychologist and the passion of an activist, Salamon helps readers process fear and grief and find their place in the climate movement. This second edition of the radical self-help book offers much that is new: an updated analysis of the context of the climate movement including COVID-19; a review of the accelerating impacts of climate change; concrete strategies for tackling climate anxiety; inspiring profiles of ordinary people sounding the alarm; and resources and exercises for self-reflection, and an invitation to the Climate Awakening, the climate emotions platform. Whether you’re drawn to the front lines of nonviolent direct action, or prefer to play a supporting role, this guide will help you combat the forces of climate denial and discover your own power.

Sad Planets by Dominic Pettman & Eugene Thacker (Polity 2024, 488 pages, $19.95 paperback)

In this series of meditations, Dominic Pettman and Eugene Thacker explore some of the key “negative affects” – both eternal and emergent – associated with climate change. In so doing they unearth something so obvious that it has gone largely unnoticed: the question of how we should feel about climate change. Between the information gathered by planetary sensors and the simple act of breathing the air, new unsettling moods are produced for which we currently lack an adequate language. Should we feel grief over the loss of our planet? Or is the strange feeling of witnessing mass extinction an indicator that the planet was never “ours” to begin with? Sad Planets explores this relationship between human melancholia and a more impersonal sorrow; in their essays, Pettman and Thacker reckon with the limits of human existence and comprehension.

Atlas of a Threatened Planet: 150 Infographics to Help Anyone Save the World by Esther Gonstalla (Island Press 2024, 224 pages, $35 paperback) 

Our planet is a fascinating and complex place, but the challenges we face can seem overwhelming. How does our climate actually work? Should we worry about the global supply of drinking water? How much land do we need to grow food? In Atlas of a Threatened Planet, award-winning book and graphic designer Esther Gonstalla digs into these questions and many more through her attractive and easy-to-understand infographics. Best known for her popular “Our World in 50 Graphics,” Gonstalla turns her eye in this book to the most critical threats to our environment, from shrinking glaciers and declining biodiversity to shifting ocean currents. These accessible illustrations will show readers that, although the threats are grave, not all is lost. Changes in technology, infrastructure, and outlook can still help us protect the places we love.Into the Clear Blue Sky: The Path to Restoring Our Atmosphere by Rob Jackson (Simon & Schuster 2024, 304 pages, $29.99) 

Climate scientist and chair of the Global Carbon Project Rob Jackson thinks we need to redefine our goals. We shouldn’t only be trying to stabilize the Earth’s temperature at some arbitrary value; we should aim to restore the atmosphere. Restoring the atmosphere means reducing the amount of greenhouse gases in the air to preindustrial levels – starting with super-potent methane – to heal the harm we have done. Emissions must be cut, first and foremost. It is easier to stop emissions from happening than to remove greenhouse gases from the air later. But while mitigation is crucial, decades of inaction have convinced Jackson that we need to remove greenhouse gases from the air using everything from nature to cutting-edge technologies.Into the Clear Blue Sky is a heart- and mind-changing book; together we can restore the planet. 

What If We Get It Right? Visions of Climate Futures by Ayana Elizabeth Johnson (One World 2024, 496 pages, $34.00) 

Sometimes the bravest thing we can do while facing an existential crisis is imagine life on the other side. This provocative and joyous book maps an inspiring landscape of possible climate futures. Through clear-eyed essays and vibrant conversations, infused with data, poetry, and art, Ayana Elizabeth Johnson guides us through solutions and possibilities at the nexus of science, policy, culture, and justice. Visionary farmers and financiers, architects and advocates, help us conjure a flourishing future, one worth the effort it will take – from all of us, with whatever we have to offer – to create. If you haven’t yet been able to picture a transformed and replenished world – or to see yourself, your loved ones, and your community in it – this book is for you. 

We help millions of people understand climate change and what to do about it. Help us reach even more people like you.

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Ranbir to start filming ‘Love & War’ in November: Report”

Simplifying…
Inshort

Ranbir Kapoor is set to begin filming for ‘Love & War’ in November 2024, with Alia Bhatt joining post her project ‘Alpha’.

The movie, produced by Bhansali, will be shot across India for a year and is slated for a March 20, 2026 release.

Post ‘Love & War’, Kapoor will shoot for ‘Ramayana: Part 2’, ‘Dhoom 4’, and ‘Animal Park’, while Bhatt reconsiders her lineup.

Was a long read? Making it simpler…

Next Article

‘Love & War’ shooting to begin in November

Oct 28, 2024

04:39 pm

What’s the story

Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s much-awaited film, Love & War, will reportedly start rolling in November with Ranbir Kapoor.

Although the movie was delayed due to Mumbai rains, it is now back on track with sets being erected for a November 7 start.

A source close to the project told Pinkvilla that “Kapoor will shoot for his solo sequences for a couple of weeks” before Vicky Kaushal joins him.

Cast schedule

Alia Bhatt to join ‘Love & War’ sets in December

Alia Bhatt, the third lead of the upcoming movie, will start her portion after wrapping up her ongoing project Alpha in early December, according to the report.

The shooting for Bhansali’s epic tale will travel across India for a year, from November 2024 to October 2025.

“Bhatt and Kaushal have reserved 200 plus days to shoot for Love & War until October next year,” added the source.

Actor’s timeline

Kapoor’s wrap-up plans and future projects

Kapoor plans to finish his portion in Love & War by July/August 2025. After that, he has promised to shoot for Ramayana: Part 2 from July/August 2025.

His calendar also has two other big projects: Dhoom 4 and Sandeep Reddy Vanga’s Animal Park.

Meanwhile, Bhatt was looking to start a romantic film in November 2025 but is now rethinking her post-Love & War lineup.

Film release

‘Love & War’ production details and release date

Bhansali is producing Love & War on a self-financing model, with a studio attachment possible in the future.

One of the most awaited releases of 2026, the film will hit theaters on March 20, 2026.

Kapoor and Kaushal will reportedly play characters from the Indian Armed Forces in this epic tale of romance and action.

Details about the plot and additional cast members remain under wraps.

Northern Ontario Tourism Summit celebrates 10 years in North Bay this November

Destination Northern Ontario, in partnership with Nature and Outdoor Tourism Ontario and Tourism North Bay, is pleased to host the 10th annual Northern Ontario Tourism Summit November 19-21 in North Bay, Ontario.Building on 80+ years of successful fall conferences for the outfitting sector, the Northern Ontario Tourism Summit was developed as a partnership event between Nature and Outdoor Tourism Ontario and Destination Northern Ontario to bring together tourism businesses, organizations and suppliers as well as all levels of government at a single event to find solutions to challenges facing the industry.

What to Expect at the Summit

This year’s summit promises a lineup packed with inspiring speakers, interactive workshops, and engaging panel discussions including a renowned evolutionary biologist, award-winning television presenter, and bestselling author, Dan Riskin. Attendees can expect to hear from industry leaders, local business owners, and tourism experts who will share insights on marketing trends, best practices, and innovative strategies to boost tourism in the North. In addition, there are numerous opportunities for networking including a sold-out tradeshow of product and service providers to the tourism industry.

“I am absolutely thrilled to welcome leaders, innovators and passionate individuals to North Bay to celebrate the 10th annual Northern Ontario Tourism Summit.  This is a fantastic opportunity for us to gather, share our visions and ignite new ideas in a region renowned for its natural beauty and warm hospitality,” said Tanya Bédard, Executive Director, Tourism North Bay “I can’t wait to see the incredible conversations and collaborations that will emerge as we work together to elevate the tourism industry to new heights”.  

We are excited to announce that we will be hosting the opening reception at the Canadore Sports Dome, a venue that promises to provide a vibrant and engaging atmosphere for attendees. The 85,000-square-foot dome caters to a multitude of sports dry land training and sports conditioning. Attendees can indulge in some delicious locally sourced appetizers and cold refreshments to kick off the first day of a great summit.

“Bringing tourism businesses and organizations together through one annual event has been such a beneficial project for us. The number of partnerships and collaborations that have been forged through the Northern Ontario Tourism Summit over the years has played such a critical role in enhancing the products and strength of our tourism industry in the North,” said Laurie Marcil, Executive Director, Nature and Outdoor Tourism Ontario “Seeing the industry come together to learn and share speaks to the passion of the people in this sector”.

The event will close with the Gala Awards dinner that recognizes excellence in the province’s tourism industry. Recipients of the awards provide outstanding leadership, exemplify best business practices and deliver tourism experiences that contribute to the success of Ontario’s tourism industry, which generates over $36 billion in economic activity and supporting more than 400,000 jobs.

A Decade of Growth and Innovation

Reflecting on ten years of the summit, it’s amazing to see how far the Northern Ontario tourism industry has come. There is great promise in Northern Ontario. The momentum we have created together will lead to our industry’s growth, prosperity and sustainability. 

“We are thrilled to host the 10th annual Northern Ontario Tourism Summit in North Bay, this fall, bringing together industry leaders, innovators, and tourism operators under one roof. This event not only commemorates a decade of achievements and collaboration in our tourism sector but highlights the successes we’ve shared over the years and looks forward to the opportunities that lie ahead,” said David MacLachlan, Executive Director, Destination Northern Ontario “We are grateful for our host Tourism North Bay as well as our sponsors for their generous support, which allows us to recognize and appreciate the remarkable efforts within the tourism industry.” 

This year’s theme focuses on working together to build quality tourism experiences. It highlights key areas such as adapting to changing traveler preferences, implementing low-budget marketing strategies, and accessibility requirements. 

Join the Celebration

Come celebrate a decade of achievements and look ahead to an exciting future for tourism in Northern Ontario. Don’t miss the chance to connect and learn, secure your ticket today! 

Register online here or contact [email protected] for more information.