Category: Agriculture

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Shri Dharmendra Pradhan to launch 3 AI – Centres of Excellence on Healthcare, Agriculture and Sustainable Cities on 15th October, 2024

    Source: Government of India

    Posted On: 14 OCT 2024 1:28PM by PIB Delhi

    Union Minister for Education, Shri Dharmendra Pradhan, will be launching three AI Centres of Excellence (CoE) focused on Healthcare, Agriculture, and Sustainable Cities on 15th October 2024 in New Delhi.

    To realize the vision of “Viksit Bharat,” these three CoEs for Artificial Intelligence (AI) will be led by top educational institutions, in consortium with industry partners and startups. They will conduct interdisciplinary research, develop cutting-edge applications, and create scalable solutions in these three areas. This initiative aims to galvanize an effective AI ecosystem and nurture quality human resources in these critical fields.

    As part of the vision to “Make AI in India and Make AI work for India,” the establishment of these centres was announced under Para 60 of the Budget Announcement for 2023-24. In alignment with this, the Government has approved the creation of the three AI Centres of Excellence, with a total financial outlay of Rs. 990.00 Cr over the period of FY 2023-24 to FY 2027-28.

    To oversee the implementation of this initiative, an industry heavy Apex Committee has been constituted, co-chaired by Dr. Sridhar Vembu, Founder and CEO of Zoho Corporation.

    Shri K.Sanjay Murthy, Secretary/HE will grace the occasion, along with Directors of IITs, Heads of higher educational institutions (HEIs), industry leaders, start-up founders and senior officials from various ministries of the Government of India.

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    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Shri Dharmendra Pradhan to announce 3 AI – Centres of Excellence on Healthcare, Agriculture and Sustainable Cities on 15th October, 2024

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Posted On: 14 OCT 2024 1:28PM by PIB Delhi

    Union Minister for Education, Shri Dharmendra Pradhan, will be announcing three AI Centres of Excellence (CoE) focused on Healthcare, Agriculture, and Sustainable Cities on 15th October 2024 in New Delhi.

    To realize the vision of “Viksit Bharat,” these three CoEs for Artificial Intelligence (AI) will be led by top educational institutions, in consortium with industry partners and startups. They will conduct interdisciplinary research, develop cutting-edge applications, and create scalable solutions in these three areas. This initiative aims to galvanize an effective AI ecosystem and nurture quality human resources in these critical fields.

    As part of the vision to “Make AI in India and Make AI work for India,” the establishment of these centres was announced under Para 60 of the Budget Announcement for 2023-24. In alignment with this, the Government has approved the creation of the three AI Centres of Excellence, with a total financial outlay of Rs. 990.00 Cr over the period of FY 2023-24 to FY 2027-28.

    To oversee the implementation of this initiative, an industry heavy Apex Committee has been constituted, co-chaired by Dr. Sridhar Vembu, Founder and CEO of Zoho Corporation.

    Shri K.Sanjay Murthy, Secretary/HE will grace the occasion, along with Directors of IITs, Heads of higher educational institutions (HEIs), industry leaders, start-up founders and senior officials from various ministries of the Government of India.

    *****

    SS/AK

    (Release ID: 2064613) Visitor Counter : 311

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – Measures and action following the ruling by the CJEU suspending the agreement with Morocco – E-001964/2024

    Source: European Parliament

    Question for written answer  E-001964/2024
    to the Commission
    Rule 144
    Carmen Crespo Díaz (PPE)

    The ruling issued by the Court of Justice of the European Union annulling the trade agreements between the European Union and Morocco is creating uncertainty about how the European Commission’s new negotiations with the Kingdom of Morocco will impact European producers.

    In view of the above:

    • 1.What will be the terms of the negotiation for the new trade agreements between the EU and Morocco?
    • 2.What measures will the Commission take in response to the CJEU ruling on the agreement with Morocco in order to protect European farmers?

    Submitted: 4.10.2024

    Last updated: 14 October 2024

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Hearings – Strategic Dialogue on the future of EU agriculture – 14-10-2024 – Committee on Agriculture and Rural Development

    Source: European Parliament

    On 14 October, the Committee on Agriculture and Rural Development will hold a public hearing on the Strategic Dialogue on the future of EU agriculture, which has enabled the main stakeholders to envision the development of the European farming and food systems.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Alexander Novak held a meeting on the current economic situation

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Government of the Russian Federation – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Previous news Next news

    Alexander Novak held a meeting on the current economic situation

    Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak held a meeting within the framework of the incident on the current situation in the economy. The event was attended by representatives of the Ministry of Economic Development, the Ministry of Finance, the Ministry of Industry and Trade, the Ministry of Energy, the Ministry of Construction, the Ministry of Agriculture, the Ministry of Transport, the Ministry of Labor, the Bank of Russia, as well as the scientific and expert community.

    “Overall, our economy is developing better than expected: GDP growth for the first eight months of this year was 4.2%, industrial production – 4.5%, including manufacturing – 8.1%. The unemployment rate remains at historical lows and was 2.4% in January – August,” noted Alexander Novak.

    The meeting examined the main development trends and possible risks for the Russian economy, taking into account the task of forming a supply-side economy and the need to achieve national goals.

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    http://government.ru/nevs/52989/

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI USA: OpenET: Balancing Water Supply and Demand in the West

    Source: NASA

    At the end of 2022, 65 percent of the Western United States was in severe drought, the result of a two decades long mega drought in the Colorado River Basin that had captured headlines around the world. 
    However, it was flooding, not drought, that was making headlines when we began our research for this story about OpenET, a revolutionary new online platform geared towards helping farmers and water managers monitor and reduce water use in watersheds where supplies were not keeping up with demand.  
    The start of 2023 brought flooding to many counties in California, leaving 68 percent of the state with suddenly little to no drought. And caused Forrest Melton, the NASA Project Scientist for OpenET and Associate Program Manager for agriculture and water resources with the NASA Earth Action program, to pause our video interview after a tree fell down outside his Bay Area home on a rainy day in March, 2023. 
    Coming online again after calling the fire department, Melton didn’t seem all too optimistic that the wet conditions would last. “California tends to swing between the two extremes of drought and flood,” Melton said. He referenced the 2016/17 winter which had particularly high precipitation but was followed by dry conditions during the following years, before the relief brought by the heavy rains, and flooding, in early 2023. 
    According to NOAA’s National Integrated Drought Information System it will take more than one wet winter to replenish groundwater in many parts of the western United States. Groundwater levels across the California Central Valley and many parts of the Ogallala Aquifer continue to decline. The need for better water management remains essential, and yet the data necessary to support new approaches has not been broadly available. 
    Enter the OpenET project, a multi-disciplinary, collaborative effort to make satellite-based evapotranspiration (ET) data available to the public. Melton describes the project as providing invaluable and scientifically robust data at all scales, “that can be used to support day to day decision making and long range planning to try to solve some really long standing and important water management challenges in the West.”

    Evapotranspiration is the combined process of evaporation and transpiration, both of which transfer water from the land surface to the atmosphere as water vapor. Evaporation transforms water from the surface of the ground or bodies of water into water vapor, while transpiration is water vapor that is evaporated from plant tissues and escapes through the stomata, the tiny pores in plant leaves and stems. It is a process that is happening all around us almost all the time, but because water vapor is invisible to the human eye, it is very hard to measure on the ground.  

    To understand the effect evapotranspiration has on a local water cycle, picture a large decorative fountain. Typically, these fountains recycle the same water over and over. As a fountain runs, water is pumped out of the fountain heads, falls back into the fountain’s basin, and then flows back through the pipe system before starting the process all over again. We can think of the water remaining within this fountain’s local water system as non-consumptive water use. Some water, however, will be lost from the fountain’s local water system by evaporating from the pool’s surface or mist from the fountain’s spray.
    Imagine the fountain also has lily pads growing in its basin. The lily pads will use the fountain’s water to survive and grow, losing some of that water to transpiration. The total water lost is evapotranspiration, and is considered consumptive water use, because it cannot be reused by the fountain. Tracking evapotranspiration can tell you how much water is removed or “depleted” from a local water system, and how much water needs to be added back in to support plant growth and maintain a healthy balance between water supply and water use. If too much water leaves the fountain, it will stop running. If too much water is added, it will overflow.  
    These concepts can be applied more broadly to the hydrologic cycle as a whole, and evapotranspiration data can play an important part in designing and implementing sustainable water management practices to combat larger issues like drought, as well as both short and long-term reductions in water availability. Historically, ET data have been obtained from ground-based instruments and methods, such as weighing lysimeters, which weigh soil and plants to track the water volume lost by evaporation or transpiration. Another common method is called eddy covariance, which calculates the amount of water vapor transported away from the land surface by wind eddies as they move across the land surface. But both are expensive and difficult to install and maintain, and measurements are only representative of a small portion of an individual agricultural field. It is cost prohibitive to collect these measurements over larger areas. 

    The OpenET team saw the important niche left open by traditional evapotranspiration measurement methods and filled it. They built upon decades of research funded by NASA, USDA and USGS and developed a new platform that can take easily accessible and already available data from satellite programs, like Landsat, and combine it with weather data to calculate the ET for every quarter acre of land. Satellites can record information like the Earth’s surface temperature and how much of the incoming light from the sun is being reflected back out to space. OpenET is able to use physically-based mathematical models to combine the satellite and weather data and output accurate data on evapotranspiration rates and volumes. 
    This information is then made easily accessible through OpenET’s Data Explorer, a free web-based tool that allows anyone with an internet connection to access the data OpenET provides. Users begin by selecting an area of interest from a map of the western United States that provides data at the satellite resolution of a quarter-acre, and also broken down into known areas of interest and individual agricultural fields, each color coded with a heat map of evapotranspiration. Cooler colors indicate higher rates of evapotranspiration while warmer colors indicate lower rates. Users can zoom into specific areas on the map, and with just a click, a chart pops up showing the evapotranspiration trends for a given area, for the current year and the past five years. 
    The chart can show monthly ET trends, useful for understanding seasonal fluctuations, and also cumulative trends, useful for understanding year-to-year changes in evapotranspiration. “The OpenET team took a user-driven design approach from the beginning, and each element of the Data Explorer and the open data services is there because a water manager or farmer asked for it,” Melton explained. As we played around with the map, it became apparent how much work was put into developing this project. Scientists needed to improve models and assess the accuracy of data, programmers had to develop the user interface and data services, designers needed to make the interface intuitive enough to be impactful, agriculture and environmental groups needed to help validate the model’s accuracy, and users of all types needed to provide requirements and then test the product to make sure their needs were actually met. 
    The OpenET consortium includes NASA, USGS, USDA Agricultural Research Service (ARS), Environmental Defense Fund (EDF), Google Earth Engine, California State University Monterey Bay (CSUMB), Desert Research Institute (DRI), Habitat Seven, Chapman University, Cornell University, University of Nebraska-Lincoln and close to a dozen other universities and experts across the U.S. NASA Ames Research Center and CSUMB have played key roles in the scientific and technical leadership of the effort from the outset, working closely with DRI, EDF and the recently formed non-profit OpenET, Inc. In addition, over 100 partners from the water management, agriculture and conservation community provided user requirements and assisted with the design and testing of the OpenET platform and tools.
    “OpenET would not be possible without the contributions of each one of those partners,” Melton said. “Both on the implementation side and those who are translating the data from OpenET into solutions to long standing challenges.” 

    Models like those built into OpenET can be extremely useful tools for understanding patterns in ET and water use, but are only helpful if their accuracy is known. The OpenET science team recently completed the largest accuracy assessment to date for field-scale satellite-based ET data, comparing the satellite data to ground-based measurements at more than 150 sites across the U.S. Led by John Volk of the Desert Research Institute, the study was published in Nature Water earlier this year. A key finding was that across all sites, an ensemble value computed from six different ET models performed the best overall, leveraging the strengths of each individual satellite-driven model. 
    However, the study also found that some models performed best for particular crop types or regions, which is important information for water managers and farmers who need the most accurate data possible. Publishing the results as an open access study with all data and analysis made publicly available was also important to build trust in the data. While the study highlighted some limitations of the models and priorities for future research, the rigorous and reproducible accuracy assessment helps to build user confidence that they can use the data, while being aware of the expected accuracy for different applications of the data.  

    OpenET has already contributed to one significant win for farmers that affects how water use will be monitored and reported in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. 
    This inland river delta covers 750,000 acres and is an important water resource in California, but one where accelerated demand combined with habitat loss and water quality issues has led to major concerns. In the Delta, large portions of the agricultural land are below sea level. Levees protect the fields and contain the river channels that supply water for irrigation. In 2023, the state began requiring farmers to maintain a water meter or measuring device on each diversion, where water is diverted from a river for irrigation. However, this measurement proved challenging and costly as there are thousands of diversions in the Delta, and the measuring equipment was inaccurate and difficult to maintain in this environment. In addition, water users also had to pay for meters at the locations where water that drained from the fields was pumped back over the levees and into the river channels.

    “Mostly, what the state was interested in was the consumptive use: how much (water) was actually removed from the supply in that region,” Melton said. “So, it’s the perfect place for using OpenET because evapotranspiration really is the majority of the consumptive use in the Delta, if not all of it.”
    After the launch of OpenET, farmers in the Delta worked with the Delta Watermaster, the California State Water Resources Control Board, the OpenET team and the Delta Measurement Consortium to develop an alternative compliance plan that used OpenET data to help streamline the water use required reporting for this complex region. Once the alternative compliance plan was approved, Forrest Melton and Will Carrara of NASA worked with the state Water Resources Control Board, the Delta Watermaster and water management agencies, and Jordan Harding of HabitatSeven to implement this solution. The Delta Alternative Compliance Plan, also known as the Delta ACP, allows farmers to use OpenET data to estimate their water usage; enabling farmers to complete their use reports in a matter of minutes. 
    “It’s the first time that satellite-based evapotranspiration data has been automatically integrated with a state-managed water reporting system,” Melton said. 
    Last year, more than 70% of farmers in the Bay-Delta region chose to use OpenET and to report their water use through the Delta ACP website, and they expect this percentage to continue to increase over time. 
    “The best part is that it is saving farmers hundreds of hours on preparing and submitting reports, avoiding millions of dollars in costs for farmers to deploy and maintain meters, and giving the state consistent and reproducible data on water use that has been reviewed and approved by the water user,” Melton said. 
    According to Delta Watermaster, Jay Ziegler, this approach has a clear benefit in the unique water flow setting of the Delta. “In reality, OpenET – and the use of publicly accessible data measuring ET is the only way to really discern consumptive use of water in the Delta on a reliable basis,” Ziegler said. “Candidly, we don’t really have a viable “plan B” in the absence of applying Open ET for water use reporting.”

    Jay ziegler
    Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta Watermaster

    As water scarcity is increasingly becoming an urgent issue all around the world, it’s easy to imagine how many countries could benefit from OpenET data. 
    OpenET’s first international partnership is led by Anderson Ruhoff, a professor in Hydrology and Remote Sensing at the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, where his team developed an evapotranspiration model called geeSEBAL for Brazil’s Water Agency.
    Ruhoff learned about OpenET while he was in the US on a visiting professorship in Nebraska. He was intrigued and reached out to Melton who encouraged him to attend an upcoming conference in Reno, Nevada, where OpenET would be featured. The conference was due to start in just a few days time.
    “So I had to find a last minute ticket to Reno and I’m glad I bought it, because when I arrived there they invited me to join Open ET. It was quite a coincidence,” Ruhoff said, smiling as he remembered the spontaneous decision. “We adapted our model for the US and started to participate in their work.”
    In March, 2024, Ruhoff and OpenET launched an extension of the tool, called OpenET Brazil, with financial support from the Agência Nacional de Águas e Saneamento Básico (ANA), the Brazilian national water agency. The tool, called OpenET Brazil, will have similar goals as OpenET in the U.S., and the data collected will help improve Open ET’s accuracy overall.
    Melton feels this will be a “great test case” for both working with new environmental conditions (in Brazil there frequently is more cloud cover than in the US during key parts of the growing season) and also developing new collaborations.
    “The partnership will help us figure out how we can work with international partners to make the ET data useful,” Melton said. “The key aspect of our approach to geographic expansion is that leading scientists in each country and region, like Dr. Ruhoff, will lead the implementation, accuracy assessment, and the development of applications and partnerships for their country.”
    Brazil has one of the world’s largest sources of freshwater, the Amazon River, and yet it can still be affected by drought. This is partly due to the fact that deforestation in the Amazon Rainforest has an impact on the entire region’s water cycle. Trees draw water up from the soil and during photosynthesis they release vapor into the atmosphere. This water vapor will accumulate and form precipitation. Trees are “basically a huge water pump,” Ruhoff said, and the Amazon Rainforest is large enough that it helps to produce the rainy season. But when deforestation is allowed to happen over large areas, that mechanism is interrupted. As a result of this disruption, the dry season is predicted to intensify, becoming longer and dryer, which in turn can affect crop production in Brazil as well as the rainfall that is critical for sustaining water supplies in Brazil and other areas of South America.
    “Water doesn’t see borders. It doesn’t follow our rules,” Ruhoff said. “Deforestation in one place can affect people thousands of kilometers away.”

    Anderson Ruhoff
    Professor of Hydrology and Remote Sensing, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

    Studying evapotranspiration can reveal the impacts of deforestation with even more clarity. And importantly, it’s also public information. “So not only the farmers and water managers but every citizen can check how much water is being used in their area, especially during drought. It’s democratic information in that way,” Ruhoff said. “I think it’s important to have this information openly available and to try and reach as many people as possible.”
    Melton feels there’s the potential to expand the project, if more people like Ruhoff are there to lead the way.
    “There’s huge potential, but there do need to be stakeholders that come to the table and say that this is something that they’re interested in,” Melton said. “Water is so important and at times so contentious that it’s really important the data is seen as trusted. When there is a local leader, that substantially increases the likelihood that it will be trusted, and most importantly, used to bring people together to develop solutions.”

    Even when you live in a water-scarce region like California it’s easy to take water for granted. What platforms like OpenET can do for us, however, is make water, even in its most diffuse form, more visible to everyone.
    Written by Jane Berg and Rachel Sender, co-published with the Bay Area Environmental Research Institute
    To learn more about OpenET, visit https://etdata.org/
    Program Contact:Forrest MeltonNASA Ames Research Centerforrest.s.melton@nasa.gov

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Appointment of Deputy Director General for the Southern Africa Regional Development, Integration and Business Delivery Office Mrs. Moono Mupotola

    Source: African Development Bank Group

    The African Development Bank Group is pleased to announce the appointment of Mrs. Moono Mupotola as Deputy Director General for the Southern Africa Regional Development, Integration and Business Delivery Office, effective from 16th October 2024.

    Mrs. Moono Mupotola, a Zambian national, brings over 25 years of development experience across Africa to her new role, with a proven track record in infrastructure development, trade and regional integration.

    Prior to this appointment, Mrs. Mupotola served as the Bank’s Country Manager for Zimbabwe since December 2020. During her tenure, she played an instrumental role in the Bank’s support to Zimbabwe in its re-engagement agenda with the international community and in its efforts to address outstanding debt and arrears obligations.

    Mrs. Mupotola’s experience with the Bank began in 2009, when she was appointed Division Manager, Regional Integration and Trade. She was appointed as Director of NEPAD, Regional Integration & Trade in 2015, and Director of Regional Integration Coordination Office in 2018.

    Her oversight of the Lusophone Compact, a program that supports private sector in six Portugues-speaking Africa countries, demonstrated Mrs. Mupotola’s commitment to advancing regional integration. She also initiated the Bank’s Africa Trade Fund, the Visa Openness Index, and the Regional Integration Index with the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa and the African Union Commission. She managed the African Development Fund’s Regional Operations Envelope and oversaw the Bank’s regional project preparation facility.

    Mrs. Mupotola led the Bank’s trade and regional integration agenda by supporting research, infrastructure projects, capacity-building programmes and the reform of regulations and policies in regional member countries.

    Before joining the African Development Bank Group, Mrs. Mupotola held several senior positions, including Regional Policy Specialist for the Food and Agriculture Organization in Zimbabwe, Trade Specialist at the Southern African Development Community Trade Hub in Botswana and Zimbabwe. She served as the Division Head of Trade and Marketing at the Ministry of Agriculture in Namibia. She also served as a Researcher at the Namibian Economic Policy Research Unit and a Banker at Zambia National Commercial Bank.

    She holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in Economics from Bennington College, Vermont, United States of America and a MPhil of Philosophy from Cambridge University, United Kingdom and post-graduate qualifications in leadership and strategic management from the Wharton Business School, USA, and the Cranfield Business School, United Kingdom.

    Commenting on her appointment, Mrs. Mupotola said: “I am deeply honoured by this opportunity and grateful to President Adesina for his trust and confidence in me. The role of Deputy Director General for the Southern Africa Regional Development, Integration and Business Delivery Office, is challenging and exciting. I look forward to working efficiently with our teams and stakeholders to deliver on the African Development Bank’s vision and High 5 priorities for sustainable development”.

    Commenting on the appointment, the President of the African Development Bank Group, Dr. Akinwumi A. Adesina said: “I am delighted to appoint Mrs. Moono Mupotola as Deputy Director General for the Southern Africa Regional Development, Integration and Business Delivery Office. Moono has extensive experience in regional operations, having served previously as Director of Regional Operations. She was subsequently assigned to Zimbabwe as Country Manager. Moono has demonstrated exceptional leadership, diplomatic acumen and strong execution capacity in working with the Government of Zimbabwe and all the development partners in advancing the structured dialogues for the arrears clearance for Zimbabwe, as well as major reforms. Her astute leadership and experience and in-depth knowledge of the countries in the Southern Africa region will significantly advance the work and partnerships of the African Development Bank Group in the region”.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Security: Annual Awards Ceremony Recognizes Outstanding Contributions From Western Pennsylvania Law Enforcement Officers and Prosecutors

    Source: United States Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco Firearms and Explosives (ATF)

    PITTSBURGH, Pa. – The Law Enforcement Agency Directors (LEAD) of Western Pennsylvania recognized more than three dozen area law enforcement officers and prosecutors during its 26th Annual LEAD Awards Ceremony, announced United States Attorney Eric G. Olshan. Comprising the Western Pennsylvania heads of federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies, LEAD bestows awards annually as a way of recognizing outstanding performance from law enforcement agents and officers, as well as prosecutors.

    Notable among the LEAD Awards presented were:

    • The Lifetime Service Award was presented to (Retired) Supervisory Special Agent Louis “Lou” Weiers for his outstanding service with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF). Weiers began his career with the ATF in January 1991 as a Special Agent with the Pittsburgh field office’s Arson/Explosives group, also serving as a member of the National Response Team from 1998 until 2005. Weiers was promoted to Resident Agent in Charge of the Pittsburgh Firearms Trafficking and Violent Crime group in March 2005, and was among the longest tenured supervisory investigators within the ATF upon his September 2024 retirement. Among the many investigations on which he worked during his career, Weiers served as the first-line supervisor at the 2018 Tree of Life shooting in Pittsburgh, where his group led the ATF response and firearms investigation with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI); represented ATF at the September 11, 2001, Flight 93 crash site in Shanksville, Pennsylvania; and was involved in the 2014 48-day manhunt for Eric Frein, who killed a Pennsylvania State Trooper and critically injured another during an attack at a State Police barracks. Weiers also served in several acting Assistant Special Agent in Charge details within the Philadelphia Field Division throughout the decades.

    • The Courage Under Hostile Fire Award was presented to Pittsburgh Bureau of Police Officer Craig Claflin, who, as the first officer on the scene of a domestic dispute call at a Kincaid Street residence in Pittsburgh’s Garfield neighborhood in July 2024, was immediately fired upon by the assailant. Officer Claflin quickly neutralized, disarmed, and detained the assailant, saving lives and preventing injuries to neighboring civilians and fellow law enforcement officers.

    • An individual LEAD award was presented to Assistant U.S. Attorney Katherine Jordan of the U.S. Attorney’s Office. AUSA Jordan’s work has consistently involved the handling of both complex, long-term investigations and prosecutions of violent individuals and drug traffickers. During the past year, her cases included multiple long-term drug trafficking investigations conducted by FBI’s Greater Pittsburgh Safe Streets Task Force—one of which was a Title-III wiretap investigation—as well as a long-term Drug Enforcement Administration investigation into a large-scale drug trafficking organization, the latter of which included the execution of multiple search warrants in late-June 2024 that ultimately resulted in the seizure of nearly 120 kilograms of cocaine, over $1.2 million in cash, and eight firearms, in addition to the charging of numerous individuals. In September 2024, shortly after the takedown of her FBI Title-III investigation, AUSA Jordan secured a guilty verdict in the jury trial of local large-scale drug trafficker Leon Ford Sr., whom Jordan and her team of investigators had indicted and successfully convicted of conspiracy to distribute five kilograms or more of cocaine and 400 grams or more of fentanyl, as well as possession with intent to distribute 400 grams or more of fentanyl.

    • Several individuals from the ATF, along with Assistant U.S. Attorney Maureen Sheehan-Balchon of the U.S. Attorney’s Office, received a team award for outstanding performance for their seven-month investigation and prosecution of a complex illegal firearms manufacturing and distribution network out of Altoona, Pennsylvania. The criminal conspiracy involved the manufacture and sale of untraceable ghost guns, AR-15 style rifles, and “hit kits” containing a Polymer 80 privately made firearm with no serial number, a threaded barrel to attach an included silencer, subsonic ammunition, and latex gloves.

    • Members of the Mt. Lebanon Police Department, Allegheny County Police Department, Allegheny County Sheriff’s Office, and FBI received a team award for their investigation of a series of crimes involving the sexual exploitation of children.

    • Corporals and troopers from Pennsylvania State Police Troops B and D Forensic Services Units were honored with a team award for their processing of a particularly complex Pittsburgh crime scene.

    • Two U.S. Postal Inspection Service officials received individual LEAD awards for their roles in helping to uncover and disrupt criminal operations in separate investigations involving, in one case, a California-to-Western Pennsylvania drug trafficking network, and, in the other, a games of chance theft ring. Officers and agents from organizations including the Allegheny County Sheriff’s Office, ATF, FBI, Homeland Security Investigations, Internal Revenue Service – Criminal Investigation, and Pennsylvania State Police also received individual awards for their performance in a variety of incidents and investigations involving firearms, narcotics, sexual exploitation of minors, tax evasion, and public safety.

    LEAD is composed of the following law enforcement agencies: Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives; Drug Enforcement Administration; Federal Bureau of Investigation; U.S. Attorney’s Office, Western District of Pennsylvania; Homeland Security Investigations; Internal Revenue Service – Criminal Investigation; U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Transportation Security Administration; U.S. Department of Defense – Defense Criminal Investigative Service; U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development; U.S. Marshals Service; U.S. Postal Service Office of Inspector General; U.S. Postal Inspection Service; U.S. Probation & Pretrial Services; United States Secret Service; U.S. Social Security Administration – Office of Inspector General; U.S. Department of State – Diplomatic Security Service; U.S. Department of Transportation, Federal Air Marshal Service; U.S. Department of Transportation – Office of Inspector General; U.S. Department of Veterans Administration – Office of Inspector General; U.S. Department of Labor – Office of Inspector General; U.S. Department of Agriculture – Office of Inspector General; U.S. Department of Homeland Security – Federal Protective Service; U.S. Food and Drug Administration – Office of Criminal Investigations; Pennsylvania Office of Attorney General; Pennsylvania State Police; Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole; Western Pennsylvania Chiefs of Police Association; Allegheny County Police Department; Allegheny County Sheriff’s Office; Allegheny County District Attorney’s Office; Allegheny County Chiefs of Police Association; Allegheny County Housing Authority Police Department; Port Authority of Allegheny County Police Department; Washington County District Attorney’s Office; Westmoreland County District Attorney’s Office; Pittsburgh Bureau of Police; Mt. Lebanon Police Department; Carnegie Mellon University Police Department, and University of Pittsburgh Department of Public Safety.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI China: Policy to boost cotton industry in Xinjiang

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    The Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs has pledged more support to help the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region reclaim its vast areas of infertile land and expand its competitive edge in growing long-staple cotton — a crop that underpins a sprawling supply chain that stretches from textile production in Guangdong province to the fashion industry in Shanghai.

    Minister Han Jun had a meeting with regional government officials on Saturday, during which he announced that his administration would enhance policy measures to support Xinjiang in increasing its comprehensive crop production capacity, including for long-staple cotton, according to a media release on the ministry’s website.

    The support will be provided in areas such as treating saline-alkali land, promoting water-efficient irrigation technologies, and sponsoring the research, development and dissemination of homegrown cotton-picking machines.

    “Continued efforts will be made to promote the development of high-quality long-staple cotton,” the release quoted the minister as saying.

    Home to more than 90 percent of China’s annual cotton output, Xinjiang has remained the top provincial-level jurisdiction in terms of both cotton output and productivity for the past three decades.

    The use of machines in cotton harvesting in the region has also soared in recent decades to over 85 percent, with domestic branded machines emerging as the predominant choice in the industry, Xinhua News Agency has reported.

    As part of a national campaign to raise China’s crop output and self-sufficiency, Xinjiang launched a program earlier this year to boost cotton productivity through initiatives such as promoting higher-yielding varieties.

    Data published earlier this month by local authorities revealed significant progress.

    Output has surpassed 11.5 metric tons per hectare in an experimental field spanning approximately 7 hectares, with over 8.4 tons achieved in a demonstration zone covering about 670 hectares.

    These figures represent a substantial improvement compared to the mainstream cotton varieties planted across Xinjiang, which typically yield from 6 to 7.5 tons per hectare.

    More importantly, the increased yield had not affected the quality of the harvest, local authorities stressed.

    In some areas, including Kashgar, a major cotton-growing region, AI-powered breeding techniques have been deployed to develop cotton varieties endowed with traits such as drought tolerance and pest resistance.

    The next-generation varieties, coupled with smart farming management that has minimized the use of fertilizers and pesticides, have improved productivity to almost 8 tons per hectare at a local experimental field.

    The ministry’s announcement coincided with an increased effort to utilize otherwise infertile areas for crop production as China aims to expand planting areas and ensure self-sufficiency for key materials amid vulnerable global supply chains and more frequent extreme weather events.

    At a meeting in July last year, central authorities emphasized the need to tap the potential of saline-alkali land and increase overall agricultural production capacity.

    They called for better use of abandoned and nonconventional farmland, and more funding for related research. They also highlighted the significance of development model innovations in overcoming the natural constraints of farmland scarcity.

    Efforts to enhance the cotton industry in Xinjiang, once home to some of the nation’s most entrenched poverty, are also part of a national rural vitalization initiative.

    Erkin Tuniyaz, chairman of the region, said at the meeting that efforts will be made to vigorously increase the production of important agricultural products, including cotton, and strengthen the development of high-standard farmland that is more resilient to extreme weather.

    He said the government will spare no effort in promoting the prosperity and stable income growth of agricultural and pastoral areas, and make more contributions to ensure national food security and the supply of important agricultural products.

    With an aim to improve the added value of cotton production, Liang Yong, a national political adviser and director of Xinjiang’s cotton industry development leading group office, told China Daily that there is a need to further bolster the development of Xinjiang’s cotton-textile-apparel industry chain.

    “This entails facilitating more cotton-related manufacturing in Xinjiang relocated from the eastern regions, and driving forward the convergence of the cotton and petrochemical industries,” he said.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Banking: ADB Invests $12.5 Million in Khan Bank’s Milestone Green Bonds, a First in Mongolia

    Source: Asia Development Bank

    ULAANBAATAR, MONGOLIA (15 October 2024) — The Asian Development Bank (ADB) has invested $12.5 million in a green bond issued by Khan Bank JSC under the first green thematic bond program on the Mongolian Stock Exchange. The proceeds from the three-year bonds will be used to provide green sub-loans, with a strong focus on supporting small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and microenterprises, particularly those owned or managed by women.

    The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) has invested an equal amount in the Khan Bank bond, together ADB and the EBRD as strategic investors, fully subscribed to the entire United States dollar tranche. An additional $5 million tranche denominated in togrog was offered to local retail investors.

    “This landmark green bond offering deepens Mongolia’s green finance market while enabling inclusive investments to support small businesses, including those run by women, and improve the livelihoods of smallholder farmers,” said ADB’s Director General for the Private Sector Operations Department Suzanne Gaboury. “ADB is pleased to support Khan Bank in this milestone green bond issuance, which sets a precedent for future inclusive green financing in Mongolia.”

    In 2019, the Financial Stability Council of Mongolia approved a green taxonomy to help identify and classify investments based on their environmental sustainability. The banking sector has committed to achieving a green loan target of 10% by 2030. So far only a few banks are funding green investments, and their green loan book is nascent at only 3.2% of loans outstanding as of June 2024.

    “This placement of a United States dollar-denominated green bond in Mongolia highlights Khan Bank’s ability to attract new international funds in its capital market. This is through an innovative asset class while demonstrating the confidence that international investors have in Khan Bank,” said Khan Bank Chief Executive Officer Munkhtuya Rentsenbat. “This issuance aligns with our strategy to become the leading provider of green finance in the country while supporting our clients on their journey towards transition and adopting green and sustainable practices while contributing to the country’s climate goals.” 

    Khan Bank is Mongolia’s largest bank, serving over half a million borrowers, including low-income small and microenterprise, and self-employed farmholders and livestock herders. More than half of Khan Bank’s customers come from rural regions, and over half of SME borrowers are women

    ADB is committed to achieving a prosperous, inclusive, resilient, and sustainable Asia and the Pacific, while sustaining its efforts to eradicate extreme poverty. Established in 1966, it is owned by 69 members—49 from the region.

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: S.I. National Museum goes virtual with UK and Australia’s support

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Researchers, teachers, students, academia and those interested in knowing their cultural heritage will for the first time have access to National Museum collections online.

    High school students experiencing first hand browsing the virtual museum.

    Today the Solomon Islands National Museum becomes one of the first cultural heritage institutions in the region to have an openly accessible catalogue of collections on a publicly viewable website.

    …said the British High Commissioner to Solomon Islands and Nauru, His Excellency Thomas Coward at the launch of the first virtual museum for Solomon Islands last week.

    Researchers, teachers, students, academia and those interested in knowing their cultural heritage will for the first time have access to National Museum collections online.

    Launched at the National Museum Auditorium, the virtual museum culminated from discussions and partnership between the British High Commission, Australian High Commission, Solomon Islands National Museum, the National Library of New Zealand and National Library of Australia through the Australian Government-funded Digital Pasifik project.

    Thanks to Tim Kong and the Digital Pasifik project team, the National Museum now has a website through which it can make its collection available to the world. The site will now be led, delivered, owned and sustained by the National Museum.

    The country’s National Museum is looking forward to setting up a modernized museum that everyone can have access to in the future. With the virtual launch, its collections can now be viewed online.

    Permanent Secretary of the Minister of Culture and Tourism, Bunyan Sivoro said:

    Despite challenges faced by the National Museum, today we are taking an innovative step forward. The launch of the Virtual Museum is not only a response to the limitations we face but also a vision for the future. It is a timely and necessary solution that allows us to begin sharing the treasures of our national collection with the world in a way that transcends physical boundaries.

    British High Commission to Solomon Islands, His Excellency Thomas Coward said:

    Over the last 12 months these ideas came together, with huge amount of effort from a range of people. The Digital Pasifik team engaged by the Australian Government and led by Tim Kong, supported the idea from the start. Their enthusiasm and funding allowed the fantastic teams from the National Library of New Zealand and National Library of Australia to provide the technical knowledge and support that was needed. Deputy Director Kiko and the Solomon Islands National Museum team then worked together with their support to build up this platform.

    Acting Australian High Commissioner to Solomon Islands, His Excellency Andrew Schloeffel said:

    Solomon Islands has a rich and vibrant history, and the importance of capturing and sharing this history for current and future generations cannot be overstated. I am proud of the work Australia has done to support this initiative through our Digital Pasifik project, alongside the Solomon Islands National Museum and the British High Commission. Digital Pasifik aims to empower people in and of the Pacific Islands, by building digital platforms that enable them to see, discover and explore items of digitised cultural heritage that are held in collections around the world.

    Director of the Solomon Islands National Museum, Tony Heorake said:

    While the launch was a celebration of the Museum’s latest innovation, it presents a breakthrough in the use of technology to provide quality and accessible museum services to the public, students and visitors.

    Today is a celebration of hard work and relentless pursuit of excellence. Our team led by His Excellency Thomas Coward is very proud and excited to finally share it with you. This endeavour exemplifies our commitment to delivering the best museum services to our visitors, students and the public while staying relevant in the museum space.

    Updates to this page

    Published 15 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Import of poultry meat and products from Csongrád-Csanád County in Hungary suspended

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

         â€‹The Centre for Food Safety (CFS) of the Food and Environmental Hygiene Department announced today (October 15) that in view of a notification from the Ministry of Agriculture of Hungary about an outbreak of highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza in Csongrád-Csanád County in Hungary, the CFS has instructed the trade to suspend the import of poultry meat and products from the area with immediate effect to protect public health in Hong Kong.

         A CFS spokesman said that Hong Kong has currently established a protocol with Hungary for the import of poultry meat but not for poultry eggs. According to the Census and Statistics Department, Hong Kong imported about 40 tonnes of frozen poultry meat from Hungary in the first six months of this year. 

         “The CFS has contacted the Hungarian authority over the issue and will closely monitor information issued by the World Organisation for Animal Health and the relevant authorities on the avian influenza outbreak. Appropriate action will be taken in response to the development of the situation,” the spokesman said.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Members appointed and reappointed to the Parole Board

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    The Secretary of State has approved the appointment and reappointments of Parole Board members.

    Appointment of Independent members

    The following members have been appointed for a 5-year term from 1 May 2024 until 30 April 2029:

    • Celeste Myrie
    • Heidi Leavesley
    • Rob McKeon
    • Emma Pusill

    Reappointment of existing members

    The reappointments of 115 Parole Board members have been approved. Details of those reappointed and the duration of each reappointment are provided below.

    Judicial members

    The following member has been reappointed for a further term of 2 years from 1 October 2023 until 31 July 2025

    • HH Jeremy Roberts

    The following member has been reappointed for a further term of 5 years from 1 October 2024 until 30 September 2029:

    •  Sir Timothy King

    The following members have been reappointed for a further term of 5 years from 1 October 2022 until 30 September 2027:

    • HH Ruth Downing
    • HH Andrew Jefferies
    • HH Anthony Lowe
    • HH Barbara Mensah

    The following members have been reappointed for a further term of 5 years from 1 September 2023 until 31 August 2028:

    • HHJ Noel Lucas
    • HHJ David Nathan Miller
    • HH Marcus Tregilgas-Davey

    The following members have been reappointed for a further term of 5 years from 1 November 2023 until 31 October 2028:

    • HH John Hand KC
    • HH Peter Jones
    • HH Roger Kaye
    • HH Anne Kiernan
    • HH James Orrell
    • HH Erik Salomonsen
    • HH Patrick Thomas
    • HH Michael Topolski

    The following members will be reappointed for a further term of 7 years from 1 December 2024 until 30 November 2031:

    • HH Anthony Ansell
    • HH Pamela Badley
    • HH Stephen Dawson
    • HH John Harrow

    The following members will be reappointed for a further term of 5 years from 1 October 2025 until 30 September 2030:

    • HJ Anthony Bate
    • HH Martin Beddoe
    • HH Geoffrey Kamil CBE
    • HHJ Louise Kamill
    • HH Graham White

    The following member will be reappointed for a further term of 7 years from 24 November 2024 until 23 November 2031:

    • Sir John Saunders

    Psychologist members

    The following members will be reappointed for a further term of 5 years from 1 October 2024 until 30 September 2029:

    • Rachel Atkinson
    • Dr Taljinder Basra
    • Gerhard Fritz
    • Julia Houston
    • Noreen Shami
    • Claire Thompson
    • Victoria Tunbridge

    The following member will be reappointed for a further term of 5 years from 1 October 2025 – 30 September 2030:

    • Joanne Lackenby

    Psychiatrist members

    The following members have been reappointed for a further term of 5 years from 1 November 2023 until 31 October 2028:

    • Dr Dawn Black
    • Dr Sandra Evans
    • Dr Kevin Murray
    • Dr Amanda Taylor

    Independent members

    The following member has been reappointed for a further term of 5 years from 2 August 2023 until 1 August 2028:

    • Stephanie McIntosh

    The following members have been reappointed for a further term of 5 years from 3 December 2022 until 2 December 2027:

    • Lindsay Addyman
    • Simon Ash
    • Dawn Baker
    • Kerrie Bell
    • Dr Andrew Dale
    • Christopher Emerson
    • Kay Fielding
    • Philip Geering
    • Kirsten Hearn
    • Aikta-Reena Solanki
    • Jane Thomson
    • David Watson

    The following members will be reappointed for a further term of 5 years from 1 October 2024 until 30 September 2029:

    • Maneer Afsar
    • Ifty Ahmed
    • Aysha Allibhaye
    • Zaiada Bibi
    • Malcolm Brain
    • Derek Bray
    • Marcia Brooks
    • Ngozi Lyn Cole
    • Rachel Craven
    • Stephen Garrett OBE
    • David Gravells
    • Joanna Hinds
    • Damian Hughes
    • Murad Hussain
    • Akeel Hussain
    • Sara Johnson
    • Michael Mellun
    • Jenny Mooney
    • Shubhada Patil
    • Rachel Pickering
    • Sukbinder Rai
    • Rachel Robertson
    • Vinnett Walsh
    • Sheila Wright

    Independent Members to be reappointed for a further term of 7 years from 1 December 2024 to 30 November 2031:

    • Shazia Ahmed
    • Katy Barrow
    • Daniel Bunting
    • Dr Rob Cawley
    • Michelle Coulson
    • Jo Dowling
    • Hedd Emrys-Vine
    • Melanie Essex
    • Elaine Moloney
    • Victoria Farmer
    • Douglas Paxton
    • Alison Pearson
    • Margaret Prythergch
    • Elizabeth Rantzen
    • Karol Sanderson
    • Lisa Sanderson
    • Sarah Wells
    • Cassie Williams

    The following members will be reappointed for a further term of 5 years from 1 October 2024 to 30th September 2029:

    • Jane Christian
    • Lucy Gampell OBE
    • Ronno Griffiths
    • Glyn Hibberd
    • Brenda McAll-Kersting
    • David Mylan
    • Aruna Walsh

    The following members will be reappointed for a further term of 5 years from 1 October 2025 to the 30th September 2030:

    • Peter Coltman
    • Geoff Crowe
    • Victoria Doughty
    • Sir Stewart Eldon
    • Rebecca Hunt
    • Chitra Karve
    • Susan Lewis
    • Tom Millest
    • Steve Pepper
    • Jenny Portway
    • Nigel Stone
    • Jennie Sugden
    • Kay Terry
    • Alan Whiffin

    Updates to this page

    Published 15 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Riverside Sunderland regeneration boosted by new £30 million Homes England investment

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Latest development in long-term partnership sees government’s housing and regeneration agency invest £29.75 million to boost Council’s £49.94 million investment in Riverside Sunderland infrastructure

    Credit: Sunderland City Council, Faulknerbrowns and Pillar Visuals

    Major works to transform Sunderland’s former industrial heartland into a thriving new urban quarter has been turbo-charged by £30 million of additional funding.

    Sunderland City Council and Homes England have agreed a funding package that will help accelerate the ongoing transformation and implementation of the Riverside Sunderland masterplan.

    The government’s housing and regeneration agency will provide £29.75 million to support the delivery of critical infrastructure, in addition to previously approved council funding of £49.94 million, taking the total infrastructure investment to almost £80 million.

    The funding package will underpin numerous interventions across the site, which will create around 1,000 new homes, new community infrastructure and 1million square ft of employment space, which is essential to the Council’s social and economic growth strategy.

    Immediate priorities include works to the New Wear footbridge and the creation of connections between the new residential development sites at Sheepfolds, Vaux and Farringdon Row.

    The funding is helping to leverage significant private sector investment, with contributions from Canada Life, Legal and General, and Placefirst Limited forming part of over £600m already invested in the Riverside Regeneration programme.

    Councillor Michael Mordey, leader of Sunderland City Council, said:

    Sunderland is growing its reputation as one of the most ambitious and innovative local authorities in the country, leveraging public and private sector investment to deliver a world-class place to live, work and play. 

    Securing investment on this scale is only possible because we commit and then deliver – time and time again – and this is a fantastic vote of confidence in our plans for a dynamic, vibrant new urban residential district.  We’re proud to be leading this from the front.

    Homes England chief executive Peter Denton said:

    Riverside Sunderland embodies how it’s possible to breathe new life into a place of huge historical significance for the area, and I’m very happy the Agency can support what is a strong, locally-led vision to become a reality.

    It’s our job and privilege to help put these plans into action by providing funding and wider expertise, working hand in glove with local leaders to create a sustainable, high-quality place that really works for people.

    The funding announcement signals the latest commitment to long-term partnership between Homes England and North East local authorities, galvanised by the announcement of a Strategic Place Partnership between the Agency and North East Combined Authority on 11 October.

    ENDS

    Notes to editors

    Contact information

    For further information, imagery or interview requests please contact media@HomesEngland.gov.uk or 0207 874 8262.

    Updates to this page

    Published 15 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Dairy export quota Bill passes first reading

    Source: New Zealand Government

    The Government’s work to boost export value has hit another milestone, with a new dairy Bill passing its first reading in Parliament today, Agriculture Minister Todd McClay announced.

    “The Dairy Industry Restructuring (Export Licences Allocation) Amendment Bill will modernise New Zealand’s dairy export quota system to grow export and farmgate returns,” Mr McClay says.

    “More dairy companies are manufacturing niche and high-value products, but the current system excludes many of them from receiving dairy export quota – this is a lost opportunity for those businesses and for New Zealand.”

    This Bill follows a review of the dairy export quota system in 2023, which identified opportunities to improve quota allocation, to better reflect the diversity of the dairy industry.

    New Zealand currently administers quota allocation for bovine dairy exports to the United States, the United Kingdom, the European Union, Japan, and the Dominican Republic.

    “The Bill proposes changes to the export quota system that include shifting quota allocation from the proportion of milk solids a company collects from farmers, to a system based on their export history. 

    This will maximise and further boost dairy’s $23 billion in annual export revenue by allowing a wider range of exporters to tap into new markets and opportunities,” Mr McClay says.

    The Bill also enables portions of individual quotas to be reserved for dairy exporters currently ineligible for quota and those only eligible for less than 200 tonnes.

    “It will also unlock quota for non-bovine animal dairy exporters, such as sheep, goat and deer milk processors, opening up new export opportunities and revenue streams.”

    “This is all part of the Government’s work to support a successful primary sector and achieve our ambitious goal of doubling exports by value in ten years. 

    “The Government is committed to backing our primary producers, returning value to the fame gate and boosting our economy, because it is only through a strong economy we can lift incomes, reduce the cost of living and afford the public services Kiwis deserve.”

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Briefing – Confirmation hearings of the Commissioners-designate: Dan Jørgensen – Energy and Housing – 15-10-2024

    Source: European Parliament

    Dan Jørgensen has most recently served as Danish Minister for Development Cooperation and Minister for Global Climate Policy. His role has been to oversee Denmark’s international development initiatives and global climate policies, including co-facilitating COP28 climate negotiations and co-chairing a number of working groups and alliances. Jørgensen is a member of the Social Democratic Party in Denmark, which is affiliated to the S&D group in the European Parliament. He has been a member of the Danish parliament since 2015 and previously served as Minister for Food, Agriculture and Fisheries, as well as Minister for Climate, Energy and Utilities, where he co-facilitated COP26 and COP27 negotiations and served as chair of the International Energy Agency’s Global Commission on People-Centred Clean Energy Transitions. Jørgensen was a Member of the European Parliament (2004-2013), where he served as vice-chair of the Committee on Environment, president of the Animal Welfare Intergroup and head of the Danish delegation of Social Democrats (2009-2013). Born in 1975, Jørgensen holds a master’s degree in political science from Aarhus University. His professional career also includes academic positions as adjunct professor and external lecturer. This is one of a set of briefings designed to give an overview of issues of interest relating to the portfolios of the Commissioners designate. All these briefings can be found at: https://epthinktank.eu/commissioner_hearings_2024.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – Impact of the EU-Mercosur free trade agreement on the competitiveness of EU companies – E-001988/2024

    Source: European Parliament

    Question for written answer  E-001988/2024
    to the Commission
    Rule 144
    Pierre Pimpie (PfE), Julie Rechagneux (PfE), Fabrice Leggeri (PfE), Valérie Deloge (PfE), Marie-Luce Brasier-Clain (PfE), Mathilde Androuët (PfE), Jean-Paul Garraud (PfE), France Jamet (PfE), Angéline Furet (PfE), Philippe Olivier (PfE), Aleksandar Nikolic (PfE)

    France’s opposition to the EU-Mercosur free trade agreement is justified. This draft agreement poses a serious threat to our food and environmental sovereignty. We have to protect our farmers against products that do not comply with the standards applied within Europe.

    There are also legitimate concerns about the agreement’s impact on the competitiveness of EU firms and fairness in international trade. This agreement could distort competition as a result of the discrepancy in the social and environmental standards in the two regions. Allowing products that do not meet our standards to enter the EU would weaken our farmers and the most vulnerable sectors.

    The competitiveness of EU firms is thus at risk from products from countries where the social and environmental standards are much less rigorous. Competition with less regulated countries undermines our competitiveness and the economic balance in the EU, irrespective of the repeated assurances from the Commission, which appear to be insufficient.

    In view of this:

    • 1.How will the Commission assess and prevent the economic and social impact of the EU-Mercosur free trade agreement on the vulnerable sectors of the EU economy?
    • 2.What steps will it take to support our producers who are at risk from distortions of competition?

    Submitted: 8.10.2024

    Last updated: 15 October 2024

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI China: Aerial view of farms in Ningxia, NW China

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    Aerial view of farms in Ningxia, NW China

    Updated: October 13, 2024 09:08 Xinhua
    An aerial drone photo taken on Sept. 23, 2024 shows farms in northwest China’s Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region. [Photo/Xinhua]
    An aerial drone photo taken on Sept. 23, 2024 shows farms in northwest China’s Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region. [Photo/Xinhua]
    An aerial drone photo taken on Sept. 23, 2024 shows farms in northwest China’s Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region. [Photo/Xinhua]
    An aerial drone photo taken on Sept. 20, 2024 shows vegetable farms in Lanfeng village of Ligang township, Helan county in Yinchuan, northwest China’s Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region. [Photo/Xinhua]
    An aerial drone photo taken on Oct. 5, 2024 shows farms in Yuanzhou District of Guyuan City, northwest China’s Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region. [Photo/Xinhua]
    An aerial drone photo taken on Sept. 23, 2024 shows farms in northwest China’s Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region. [Photo/Xinhua]
    An aerial drone photo taken on Sept. 23, 2024 shows farms in northwest China’s Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region. [Photo/Xinhua]
    An aerial drone photo taken on Sept. 23, 2024 shows harvested corn at a farm in northwest China’s Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region. [Photo/Xinhua]
    An aerial drone photo taken on Oct. 11, 2024 shows a grain market in Pingluo county of Shizuishan city in northwest China’s Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region. [Photo/Xinhua]
    An aerial drone photo taken on Sept. 25, 2024 shows farms in Jingui township of Helan county in Yinchuan, northwest China’s Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region. [Photo/Xinhua]
    An aerial drone photo taken on Sept. 25, 2024 shows farms in Jingui township of Helan county in Yinchuan, northwest China’s Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region. [Photo/Xinhua]
    An aerial drone photo taken on Sept. 30, 2024 shows farmers harvesting dates in Dongta township of Lingwu city in northwest China’s Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region. [Photo/Xinhua]

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI USA: DLNR News Release – DLNR TRANSFERS 34 HAWAI‘I ISLAND LEASES AND REVOCABLE PERMITS TO DOA, Oct. 11, 2024

    Source: US State of Hawaii

    DLNR News Release – DLNR TRANSFERS 34 HAWAI‘I ISLAND LEASES AND REVOCABLE PERMITS TO DOA, Oct. 11, 2024

    Posted on Oct 11, 2024 in Latest Department News, Newsroom

    DEPARTMENT OF LAND AND NATURAL RESOURCES 

     

    JOSH GREEN, M.D. 
    GOVERNOR 

     

    DAWN CHANG 
    CHAIRPERSON 

     

    NEWS RELEASE 

     

     

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 

    Oct. 11, 2024

     

    DLNR TRANSFERS 34 HAWAI‘I ISLAND LEASES AND REVOCABLE PERMITS TO DOA

    Continuance of Act 90 Requirements

     

    (HONOLULU) – At its meeting today, the state Board of Land and Natural Resources (BLNR) approved transferring more than 7,000 acres of land on Hawai‘i Island from DLNR jurisdiction to the Hawai‘i Dept. of Agriculture (DOA).

    The nine leases and 25 revocable permits represent a continuation of the transfers under Act 90. Passed by the legislature in 2003, the act is to “ensure the long-term productive use of public lands available to be leased by the DLNR for agricultural purposes by allowing those lands to be transferred to and managed by DOA.”   

    This process under Act 90, ensures that both BLNR and Board of Agriculture agree on which parcels of parcels of land are appropriate to be transferred from DLNR  to DOA. 

    “We have appreciated the collaborative process of Act 90 to ensure that there is a balanced approach between supporting sustainable ag and protection and preservation of important public lands for forestry management, watershed protection, recreational trail access, and hunting,” stated Chair Dawn Chang.

     Previously, DLNR had processed executive orders setting aside approximately 24,528 acres to DOA. Last year, the BLNR and the state Board of Agriculture approved an additional 24,767 acres in Kau under lease and revocable permit to Kapapala Ranch for transfer to DOA, but surveys and subdivision are needed before an executive order can be completed for the transfer. In addition, late last year, the Board of Agriculture approved acceptance of 21,672 acres. Under the terms of Act 90, more than 70,000 acres of ag land has been transferred, or approved for transfer, so far. 

    In the latest transfer, most of the land is in pasture, with two parcels described as being utilized for “intensive agriculture.” Five acres will be under a revocable permit to Volcano Island Honey Co. for an apiary. The largest transfer, this time around, is to Parker Ranch, with approximately 4,529 acres of pastureland.

    The DLNR Division of Forestry and Wildlife (DOFAW) indicates it needs to establish public or management access over nine additional leases and permits before those lands are transferred to DOA. Those leases and permits will require further coordination with DOFAW on the location of access points before staff can make a recommendation to the BLNR. 

    Comments on the land transfers were solicited from state, county, and federal agencies and no objections or responses were received. In the event the lands are no longer needed for agricultural purposes, the set-asides will be cancelled or amended as appropriate, and those lands will be returned to the DLNR inventory.

     

    # # #

     

    RESOURCES 

    (All images/video courtesy: DLNR) 

     

    HD video – Parker Ranch, Hawai‘i Island (Sept. 14, 2022):

    [embedded content]

    Photographs – Parker Ranch, Hawai‘i Island (Sept. 14, 2022):

    https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fo/6jk0gq3dc1rpt8s6a2muq/AM_0jqJOv-B6zlXtP4inN7c?rlkey=q9ouic7uhpgte4v6jph85gd1g&e=1&st=3h53pi0e&dl=0

     

    Media Contact: 

    Dan Dennison 

    Communications Director 

    808-587-0396 

    [email protected] 

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: News release on new Coconut Rhinoceros Beetle interim rule on movement of host material

    Source: US State of Hawaii

    News release on new Coconut Rhinoceros Beetle interim rule on movement of host material

    Posted on Oct 11, 2024 in Latest Department News, Newsroom

        

         

     

    DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE

    ʻOIHANA MAHIʻAI

     

    JOSH GREEN, M.D.
    GOVERNOR

    KIAʻĀINA
                                                                           

    SHARON HURD
    CHAIRPERSON

    HAWAI`I BOARD OF AGRICULTURE

     

     

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                               

    NR24-29

    October 11, 2024

     

    NEW INTERIM RULE CONTINUES RESTRICTIONS ON THE MOVEMENT OF PALM PLANTS AND ORGANIC MATERIAL THAT MAY CONTAIN COCONUT RHINOCEROS BEETLES

     

    HONOLULU – The Hawai‘i Department of Agriculture (HDOA) today established a new interim rule to help stop the movement of the coconut rhinoceros beetle (CRB) from designated CRB-infested areas to non-infested areas in the state. Today, the Advisory Committee on Plants and Animals recommended approval of a new interim rule that restricts the movement of palm plants; decomposing plant material, such as compost, wood or tree chips; mulch; potting soil; and other landscaping products that may harbor CRB, from infested areas to non-infested areas. In addition, the interim rule restricts the movement of palm plants higher than four feet in height, which will enable closer inspection of palm crowns where CRB are most likely to bore into a tree. The interim rule designates the island of O‘ahu as a CRB-infested area and is subsequent to other interim rules that were issued in June 2022 and October 2023.

     

    The interim rule was signed today by HDOA Chairperson Sharon Hurd and is effective immediately. It is valid for one year, while HDOA finalizes a permanent rule which is slated to be considered by the Hawai‘i Board of Agriculture later this month.

     

    Any individual, company, or organization that violates the rule will be charged with a misdemeanor and fined not less than $100 and up to $10,000. Penalties for a second offense committed within five years will require the violator to pay for the cost of clean-up and decontamination fees to remove contaminated materials, as well as the cost to fully eradicate any CRB infestations caused by the violation. Repeat violators will be fined not less than $500 and up to $25,000.

    HDOA’s Plant Quarantine Branch inspectors at all island ports are concentrating efforts on inspections of potential CRB host material transported between islands.

    Residents on all islands are asked to be vigilant when purchasing mulch, compost and soil products, and to inspect bags for evidence of entry holes. An adult beetle is about two inches long, all black and has a single horn on its head. CRB grubs live in decomposing plant and animal waste. Adult CRB prefer to feed on coconut and other larger palms and are a major threat to the health of these plants.

     

    Residents may go to the CRB Response website at:  https://www.crbhawaii.org/ to learn more about how to detect the signs of CRB damage and how to identify CRB life stages. Reports of possible CRB infestation may also be made to the state’s toll-free Pest Hotline at 808-643-PEST (7378).

     

    Surveillance for CRB has been ongoing on all neighbor islands, including pheromone traps at airports, harbors and other strategic locations. The traps are used for early detection of CRB infestations and are being monitored by HDOA, island Invasive Species Committees and the University of Hawai‘i.

     

    The CRB is a large scarab beetle that was first detected on O‘ahu in 2013. The beetle has since been detected in many neighborhoods on O‘ahu, In May 2023, CRB was detected on Kaua‘i and collaborative eradication efforts continue on the island. On Hawai‘i Island, CRB was detected in a palm tree stump Waikoloa in October 2023 and a single CRB was found dead in a trap last month in that same area. CRB grubs were found in Kīhei, Maui, in November 2023, but have not been detected on the island since.

     

    CRB is a serious pest of palm trees, primarily coconut palms, as the adult beetles bore into the crowns of the palms to feed on the trees’ sap. New unopened fronds are damaged in this way and when fully opened, may break and fall unexpectedly. If CRB kill or damage the growing point of the palm, the tree may die. Secondary fungal or bacterial pathogens may also attack the wounds caused by CRB, thereby killing the tree as well. Tree mortality after CRB attack has been reported to be anywhere from 10 percent to 50 percent. Dead trees then become a safety hazard as they may fall unexpectedly after the trunk rots, potentially resulting in bodily injury or property damage.

    CRB is a major pest of palms in India, the Philippines, Palau, Fiji, Wallis and Futuna, Nukunono, American and Western Samoa and Guam. It is still not known exactly how the beetles arrived in Hawai‘i.

    ###

    Media Contact:
    Janelle Saneishi, Public Information Officer
    Hawaiʻi Department of Agriculture
    Phone: 808-973-9560
    Cell: 808-341-5528
    [email protected]
    http://hdoa.hawaii.gov

    Aloha,

    Janelle Saneishi

    Public Information Officer

    Hawai‘i Department of Agriculture
    ph: (808) 973-9560
    email: [email protected]

    Website: https://hdoa.hawaii.gov/

     

     

    Confidentiality Notice:  This e-mail message, including any attachments, is for the sole use of the intended recipient(s) and may contain confidential and/or privileged information.  Any review, use, disclosure, or distribution by unintended recipients is prohibited.  If you are not the intended recipient(s), please contact the sender by reply e-mail and destroy all copies of the original message.

     

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: New Interim Rule Continues Restrictions on the Movement of Palm Plants and Organic Material That May Contain Coconut Rhinoceros Beetles

    Source: US State of Hawaii

    New Interim Rule Continues Restrictions on the Movement of Palm Plants and Organic Material That May Contain Coconut Rhinoceros Beetles

    Posted on Oct 11, 2024 in Main

    October 11, 2024
    NR24-29

    HONOLULU – The Hawai‘i Department of Agriculture (HDOA) today established a new interim rule to help stop the movement of the coconut rhinoceros beetle (CRB) from designated CRB-infested areas to non-infested areas in the state. Today, the Advisory Committee on Plants and Animals recommended approval of a new interim rule that restricts the movement of palm plants; decomposing plant material, such as compost, wood or tree chips; mulch; potting soil; and other landscaping products that may harbor CRB, from infested areas to non-infested areas. In addition, the interim rule restricts the movement of palm plants higher than four feet in height, which will enable closer inspection of palm crowns where CRB are most likely to bore into a tree. The interim rule designates the island of O‘ahu as a CRB-infested area and is subsequent to other interim rules that were issued in June 2022 and October 2023.

    The interim rule was signed today by HDOA Chairperson Sharon Hurd and is effective immediately. It is valid for one year, while HDOA finalizes a permanent rule which is slated to be considered by the Hawai‘i Board of Agriculture later this month.

    Any individual, company, or organization that violates the rule will be charged with a misdemeanor and fined not less than $100 and up to $10,000. Penalties for a second offense committed within five years will require the violator to pay for the cost of clean-up and decontamination fees to remove contaminated materials, as well as the cost to fully eradicate any CRB infestations caused by the violation. Repeat violators will be fined not less than $500 and up to $25,000.

    HDOA’s Plant Quarantine Branch inspectors at all island ports are concentrating efforts on inspections of potential CRB host material transported between islands.

    Residents on all islands are asked to be vigilant when purchasing mulch, compost and soil products, and to inspect bags for evidence of entry holes. An adult beetle is about two inches long, all black and has a single horn on its head. CRB grubs live in decomposing plant and animal waste. Adult CRB prefer to feed on coconut and other larger palms and are a major threat to the health of these plants.

    Residents may go to the CRB Response website at:  https://www.crbhawaii.org/ to learn more about how to detect the signs of CRB damage and how to identify CRB life stages. Reports of possible CRB infestation may also be made to the state’s toll-free Pest Hotline at 808-643-PEST (7378).

    Surveillance for CRB has been ongoing on all neighbor islands, including pheromone traps at airports, harbors and other strategic locations. The traps are used for early detection of CRB infestations and are being monitored by HDOA, island Invasive Species Committees and the University of Hawai‘i.

    The CRB is a large scarab beetle that was first detected on O‘ahu in 2013. The beetle has since been detected in many neighborhoods on O‘ahu, In May 2023, CRB was detected on Kaua‘i and collaborative eradication efforts continue on the island. On Hawai‘i Island, CRB was detected in a palm tree stump Waikoloa in October 2023 and a single CRB was found dead in a trap last month in that same area. CRB grubs were found in Kīhei, Maui, in November 2023, but have not been detected on the island since.

    CRB is a serious pest of palm trees, primarily coconut palms, as the adult beetles bore into the crowns of the palms to feed on the trees’ sap. New unopened fronds are damaged in this way and when fully opened, may break and fall unexpectedly. If CRB kill or damage the growing point of the palm, the tree may die. Secondary fungal or bacterial pathogens may also attack the wounds caused by CRB, thereby killing the tree as well. Tree mortality after CRB attack has been reported to be anywhere from 10 percent to 50 percent. Dead trees then become a safety hazard as they may fall unexpectedly after the trunk rots, potentially resulting in bodily injury or property damage.

    CRB is a major pest of palms in India, the Philippines, Palau, Fiji, Wallis and Futuna, Nukunono, American and Western Samoa and Guam. It is still not known exactly how the beetles arrived in Hawai‘i.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI China: Rural charms harvest online appeal

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    Mo (right) and his team livestream the benefits of pomelos. [Photo/Xinhua]

    As the morning light streams through the window and roosters crow, Mo Zhou yawns, steps out, calls his dog, grabs his tools, and embarks on a day’s work.

    The 26-year-old differs from other farmers in that he always carries a smartphone to record his day-today life. He’s a vlogger, filming snippets of rural life and traditional homemade food for his 12 million followers on short-video platform Douyin.

    From traditional dishes to heartfelt narratives, his videos capture the essence of rural life, showcasing the beauty of his hometown and its culinary delights.

    His recording of the tranquil village of Chenjiazhai in Tongren, Southwest China’s Guizhou province, has garnered a total of 320 million likes on Douyin. Named Zhouzhou on the platform, he has posted 577 videos.

    I cherish the earthy scent I carry and hope to encourage more young people to stay in rural areas and contribute to their hometowns through my experiences,” Mo says.

    Mo cuts preserved pork for a video shooting. [Photo/Xinhua]

    Born to a rural family in 1998, Mo has two older sisters. His life changed when his mother was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2015. To ease the financial burden, Mo decided to quit school and take care of his mother at home in 2019 as his mother’s health deteriorated.

    Hearing about the man’s story, fellow villager Mo Zhilin found that Mo Zhou had the potential to become a vlogger by sharing his daily life. Later in 2020, Mo Zhilin, Mo Zhou, Mo Jun and Yang Xudong set up their e-commerce company.

    Facing challenges with shyness and camera presence, Mo Zhou overcame his inhibitions by studying other accounts, taking online courses in video production and seeking advice from others on how to authentically showcase rural life and cuisine in his videos.

    As their fan base grew, they raised the bar for video quality, embracing the natural rhythm of rural life. They sourced local ingredients based on the seasons, fostering a sense of nostalgia and connection with their audience.

    “I will continue to anchor myself in the countryside, utilizing my online influence to capture and share more of Guizhou’s beauty, culture and culinary heritage,” the man says.

    Since Li Ziqi, a rural Chinese woman, became an online sensation in the late 2010s, an increasing number of rural life vloggers have put their countryside in the frame.

    Mo (right) and Yang Xudong promote kiwifruit online. [Photo/Xinhua]

    Thanks to the popularity of short-video platforms, they share their lives online and use the internet as sales channels.

    These channels not only bring higher incomes but also inject new life into the country’s rural vitalization.

    Data from Douyin shows that last year, the platform had about 176 million rural content creators, posting more than 1 billion videos and selling about 4.73 billion orders of agricultural products.

    According to data from the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, from 2012 to the end of 2022, over 12.2 million people had returned or moved to rural areas with the aspiration of starting businesses. The number is expected to reach 15 million by 2025.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Hong Kong Customs seizes suspected scheduled dried shark fins, dried sea cucumbers and proprietary Chinese medicine with ingredients of suspected scheduled Gastrodia Elata (with photos)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    Hong Kong Customs seizes suspected scheduled dried shark fins, dried sea cucumbers and proprietary Chinese medicine with ingredients of suspected scheduled Gastrodia Elata (with photos)
    Hong Kong Customs seizes suspected scheduled dried shark fins, dried sea cucumbers and proprietary Chinese medicine with ingredients of suspected scheduled Gastrodia Elata (with photos)
    ******************************************************************************************

         Hong Kong Customs on October 10 seized about 460 kilograms of suspected scheduled dried shark fins, 200kg of suspected scheduled dried sea cucumbers and 3 300 boxes of proprietary Chinese medicine with ingredients of suspected scheduled Gastrodia Elata, with a total estimated market value of about $2.3 million, at Hong Kong International Airport.     Through risk assessment, Customs officers inspected an air consignment, declared as carrying household goods and arriving in Hong Kong from Indonesia, on that day. Upon inspection, the batch of dried shark fins, sea cucumbers and proprietary Chinese medicine suspected to be scheduled under the Protection of Endangered Species of Animals and Plants Ordinance (Ordinance) (Cap. 586), was found inside 33 carton boxes.     The case was handed over to the Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department (AFCD) for follow-up action.     Under the Ordinance, any person importing, exporting or possessing specimens of endangered species not in accordance with the Ordinance commits an offence and will be liable to a maximum fine of $10 million and imprisonment for 10 years upon conviction with the specimens forfeited. For licensing requirements for the species listed on different appendices, members of the public may visit the website: http://www.cites.hk. For enquiries, please contact the AFCD through email (hk_cites@afcd.gov.hk) or call 1823.     Members of the public may report any suspected smuggling activities to Customs’ 24-hour hotline 182 8080 or its dedicated crime-reporting email account (crimereport@customs.gov.hk) or online form (eform.cefs.gov.hk/form/ced002/).

     
    Ends/Sunday, October 13, 2024Issued at HKT 15:15

    NNNN

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Eight animals found dead in Hong Kong Zoological and Botanical Gardens

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

         â€‹The Leisure and Cultural Services Department (LCSD) announced today (October 14) that eight animals were found dead in the Hong Kong Zoological and Botanical Gardens (HKZBG) yesterday (October 13), including one De Brazza’s Monkey, one Common Squirrel Monkey, three Cotton-top Tamarins and three White-faced Sakis. The LCSD had liaised with the Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department. Necropsy and laboratory tests have been arranged immediately to help find out their cause of death.

         While awaiting test results, the Mammals Section of the HKZBG will be closed from today for disinfection and cleaning works. We will also closely monitor the health conditions of other animals. During this period, other facilities of the HKZBG will remain open.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: OSCE-supported Organic Expo 2024 fosters sustainable agriculture in Central Asia

    Source: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe – OSCE

    Headline: OSCE-supported Organic Expo 2024 fosters sustainable agriculture in Central Asia

    Ambassador Alexey Rogov, Head of the OSCE Programme Office in Bihskek speaks at the Organic Expo 2024. (OSCE) Photo details

    20 – 22 September, Kyrgyzstan – Bishkek hosts the Organic Expo 2024 – a significant milestone in Central Asia’s agricultural development. This regional event aimed to promote sustainable practices, organic farming, and preservation of biodiversity in mountainous areas.
    The Organic Expo brought together over 200 farmers, entrepreneurs, government officials along with 50 experts and speakers from Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Mongolia, Russia, and Germany to take active part in a diverse agenda encompassing organic agriculture, ecology, climate change, and sustainable development.
    To enhance regional organic agriculture and strengthen co-operation among Central Asian countries a practical three-day Regional Forum was conducted as a side event to the Expo. Keynote speakers underscored that organic farming is crucial for food security, boosting export potential, and combating climate change.
    Head of the OSCE Programme Office in Bishkek, Ambassador Alexey Rogov stated, “This forum is a vital step toward promoting organic agriculture as the backbone of a sustainable economy in Central Asia.”
    Organic Expo 2024, supported by the Ministry of Water Resources, Agriculture, and Processing Industry of Kyrgyzstan, the Secretariat of the Special Representative of the President for the Implementation of the Five-Year Programme for Mountain Region Development, and international organizations, contributed to the exchange of agricultural practices in the region. The Expo fostered a unified approach to achieving sustainable development goals by promoting innovative, eco-friendly farming methods and strengthening collaboration across the region.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI: Nexif Ratch Energy Secures Financial Close for Its 145MWp Bacolod Solar Power Project in the Philippines

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    METRO MANILA, Philippines, Oct. 14, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Nexif Ratch Energy, a leading independent power producer focused on renewable energy solutions, is thrilled to announce the financial close of its 145MWp Bacolod Solar Power Project, its second solar power project in the Philippines.

    The Bacolod Solar Power Project, developed by Negros PH Solar Inc, is located across Bacolod City and Bago City in the Negros Occidental province. It is a 145 MWp ground-mounted solar photovoltaic project that will connect to NGCP’s Bacolod Substation and can potentially power to up to 52,600 households. Majority of its output will be sold through a 10-year Power Supply Agreement to a subsidiary of Aboitiz Power Corporation, with the remainder to the Wholesale Electricity Spot Market.

    The project investment of more than US$100m is funded by equity from Nexif Ratch Energy and project finance facilities from Security Bank Corporation and Philippine National Bank on a limited recourse basis, with SB Capital Investment Corporation acting as the Mandated Lead Arranger and Bookrunner and PNB Capital and Investment Corporation acting as Arranger.

    Construction is set to begin in October 2024, with the goal of achieving commercial operations by Q4 2025. Focus is now on an expansion on the existing site, through increased solar PV capacity of up to 20 MW and a Battery Energy Storage System.

    Beyond its Calabanga and Bacolod solar projects, Nexif Ratch Energy is developing wind energy projects including the San Miguel Bay Project, a nearshore wind project with a capacity of up to 500 MW and the Lucena Project, an offshore wind project with a capacity of up to 475 MW.

    Mr Surender Singh, Chairman of Nexif Ratch Energy, said “The successful financial close of our 145MWp Bacolod Solar Farm highlights the exceptional collaboration with our partners and the dedication of our local development team. We are excited to bring this project into construction. This Financial Close, in quick succession to start of commercial operations of Calabanga Solar project and rapid progress that more than 900 MW of the wind projects, showcase our commitment to Philippine renewable energy.”

    Mr. Sakarin Tangkavachiranon, Director of Nexif Ratch Energy, added: “Reaching financial close for the 145 MWp NPSI solar project is a key milestone in our growth in the Philippines. This achievement, along with the start of commercial operations for our CARE solar project, lays a strong foundation for accelerating the development of our offshore wind projects in the country.”

    For more information, please visit http://www.nexifratch.com.

    About Nexif Ratch Energy:

    Nexif Ratch Energy is a renewable energy company that originates, acquires, develops, constructs, and operates power projects in the Asia Pacific region. Headquartered in Singapore with regional offices across Southeast Asia, the Company has a 298 MW portfolio of operating and under construction hydro, solar and wind assets and a development pipeline of wind, solar, and energy storage projects totaling 3.5 GW.

    Nexif Ratch Energy is owned 51% by Nexif Energy (Singapore) and 49% by RATCH Group (Thailand).

    Media Contact:
    Chariya Poopisit
    Nexif Ratch Energy
    Communications@nexifratch.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Pakenham Roads Upgrade ahead of schedule

    Source: Australian Executive Government Ministers

    The Pakenham Roads Upgrade, south east of Melbourne, is ahead of schedule with works on the Princes Freeway and McGregor Road set for completion in the upcoming months.

    Major works on the Princes Freeway will finish six months ahead of schedule while major works on the McGregor Road Upgrade north of the freeway are complete.

    In the meantime, works to upgrade the McGregor Road inbound freeway entry ramp are continuing and are scheduled for completion in early 2025.

    The project is building seven kilometres of upgraded roads across three stages of works.

    This includes a new Healesville-Koo Wee Rup Road bridge over the Princes Freeway to double capacity of traffic to and from the freeway, as well as Pakenham’s manufacturing hub and town centre.

    Several key intersections will also be upgraded to ease congestion. 

    The $415.7 million Pakenham Roads Upgrade is being fully funded by the Australian Government and is part of a wider investment in improving transport infrastructure in Pakenham, together with the likes of the Suburban Roads Upgrade – South Eastern Roads and Northern Roads project.   

    This wider investment also includes the removal of the level crossings at Racecourse Road, McGregor Road and Main Street, upgrades to the Pakenham train station, the development of a new train station at East Pakenham, and upgrades to Healesville-Koo Wee Rup Road between Southeast Boulevard and Livestock Way and Manks Road.  

    Construction of the Pakenham Roads Upgrade has created about 860 full-time-equivalent jobs, with a further 1,540 indirect jobs forecasted across Victoria over the life of the upgrade. 

    Work crews have amassed approximately half a million work hours across the project since construction began in 2022, Another 31,000 hours were completed by cadets, apprentices and trainees, cementing the Australian and Victorian governments’ commitment to investing in future talent.

    Quotes attributable to Federal Minister for Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Local Government Catherine King:

    “The Pakenham Roads Upgrade will have a massive impact on Pakenham’s booming population, improving congestion and road safety.

    “This $415 million project is already changing Pakenham’s transportation network, improving the movement of motorists and freight across Melbourne’s south-east.  

    “As well as the Pakenham Roads Upgrade, the Australian Government has also invested significantly in the Suburban Roads Upgrade – South Eastern Roads and Northern Roads project to get the south east moving smoothly and safely.”

    Quotes attributable to Victorian Minister for Transport Infrastructure Danny Pearson:

    “The early completion of these packages builds on the recently completed Healesville-Koo Wee Rup Road Upgrade and Pakenham Level Crossing Removal Project to overhaul Pakenham’s road and rail infrastructure.

    “The Pakenham Roads Upgrade is making a significant impact on how everyone gets around Pakenham.

    “Doubling capacity with an additional road bridge over the Princes Freeway, new signalised intersections as well as the McGregor Road freeway diamond interchange and road duplication – it’s a game changer for getting around town.

    “With $1 billion worth of transport investment in Pakenham’s road and rail network, the Australian and Victorian governments are hard at work changing the way everyone moves throughout the south east.

    “With a strong focus on social procurement, the Pakenham Roads Upgrade has engaged with 15 Aboriginal-owned businesses and nine social enterprises, ensuring the Victorian Government’s commitment to support social and sustainable enterprises.”

    Quotes attributable to Senator for Victoria Jess Walsh:

    “The Australian and Victorian governments are getting on with the job of delivering quality infrastructure that the local residents of Melbourne’s south-east need and deserve. 

    “It’s terrific to see work progressing so well on the Pakenham Roads Upgrade, which will make it safer and more efficient for commuters travelling throughout Melbourne.” 

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: 218-2024: Scheduled Service Disruption: Saturday 19 October to Sunday 20 October 2024 – DAFF messaging, SeaPest

    Source: Australia Government Statements – Agriculture

    14 October 2024

    Who does this notice affect?

    All users of the Seasonal Pests (SeaPest) system.

    All clients submitting the below declarations:

    • Full Import Declaration (FID)
    • Long Form Self Assessed Clearance (LFSAC)
    • Short Form Self Assessed Clearance (SFSAC)
    • Cargo Report Self Assessed Clearance (CRSAC)
    • Cargo Report Personal Effects (PE)

    Information

    Due to scheduled infrastructure maintenance at the Department of…

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Deaths of eight animals probed

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    The Leisure & Cultural Services Department said today that eight animals were found dead yesterday in the Hong Kong Zoological & Botanical Gardens (HKZBG), adding that necropsy and laboratory tests were arranged immediately to ascertain the causes of their deaths.

    The dead animals include one De Brazza’s Monkey, one Common Squirrel Monkey, three Cotton-top Tamarins and three White-faced Sakis.

    The department said it had liaised with the Agriculture, Fisheries & Conservation Department on the matter.

    It added that with the test results pending the Mammals Section of the HKZBG has been closed from today for disinfection and cleaning.

    The department will closely monitor the health conditions of other animals. Other facilities in the HKZBG remain open.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Exercise empowers lung cancer patients to take active role in treatment

    Source: University of South Australia

    14 October 2024

    Coughing, chest pain and a shortness of breath – they’re all distressing symptoms of lung cancer. So, while exercise may seem a counterintuitive activity for lung cancer patients, new research shows otherwise.

    In a cornerstone review from a team of global experts*­ – including Southern Cross University and the University of South Australia – researchers show that exercise may not only improve quality of life and treatment effectiveness, but also boost survival rates for lung cancer patients.

    Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide. In Australia, it is estimated that 15,122 people will be diagnosed with lung cancer this year alone.

    Examining the effects of exercise on various lung-cancer associated health outcomes, researchers have now developed recommendations for patients and health practitioners, to support exercise before, during and after lung cancer treatments.

    Combined aerobic and resistance training, performed 2-5 times per week, is typically prescribed across the cancer continuum. Researchers say that exercise can support lung cancer patients by:

    • Improving quality of life: Exercise programs demonstrate improvements in fitness, strength, and quality of life for people with lung cancer before, during, and after treatment.
    • Reducing symptoms: Exercise can help manage cancer-related symptoms such as fatigue, breathlessness, and muscle weakness.
    • Reducing post-op complications: Preoperative exercise programs may lead to reduced postoperative complications and shorter hospital stays.
    • Boosting wellbeing: Exercise during treatment can help patients maintain muscle mass, reduce fatigue, and improve psychological well-being.
    • Increasing appetite: Exercise may play a role in managing cancer cachexia (a common complication of cancer that causes you to lose significant amounts of skeletal muscle and body fat) and can be safe for patients with bone metastases when properly prescribed.
    • Easing advanced symptoms: Exercise can be beneficial even for patients with advanced-stage lung cancer, helping to manage symptoms and improve quality of life.

    Lead author Southern Cross University’s Associate Professor Kellie Toohey says to optimise exercise interventions for lung cancer patients, an integrated approach across interdisciplinary care teams was needed.

    “Lung cancer care involves a broad range of healthcare professionals – oncologists, clinical exercise physiologists, dieticians, psychologists, and physical therapists – all of whom must work together to support a patient with exercise,” Associate Professor Toohey says.

    “To facilitate this integration, we need to educate healthcare providers and patients about exercise in lung cancer care.

    “By highlighting the mental and physical benefits of exercise, we hope that patients can be empowered to take a more active role in their treatment and recovery, potentially transforming their lung cancer journey from passive endurance to active participation in health improvement.”

    UniSA researcher Dr Ben Singh says the research challenges beliefs about the inability of people with lung cancer to exercise.

    “There’s an often-held misconception that lung cancer patients are too ill or frail to exercise, particularly because their illness affects their lungs and breathing. But contrary to this belief, research shows that exercise can have many benefits for people with lung cancer,” Dr Singh says.

    “Exercise has the potential to counteract many health issues, not only improving their quality of life, but also potentially influencing treatment outcomes.

    “This is particularly striking given the historically poor prognosis associated with lung cancer.

    “Regular, tailored exercise can help improve a patient’s physical condition, helping them better tolerate the physical demand of diagnosis, surgery, treatment, and recovery. It can also vastly improve a patient’s mental health, helping counteract feelings of depression and anxiety, so often associated with a lung cancer diagnosis.”

    Notes for editors:

    *This research has been conducted by a team of researchers from Southern Cross University, University of Canberra, University of Sydney, University of Technology Sydney, Edith Cowan University, Flinders University, Queensland University of Technology, University of Notre Dame Australia, University of South Australia, Universidade de Caxias do Sul (Brazil), Institute for Respiratory Health, University of Western Australia, University of Queensland, University of Pittsburgh (USA), Campbelltown Hospital, University of Melbourne, The Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Griffith University, and Cancer Council Queensland.

    Media contacts

    Southern Cross University: Sharlene King, media office, M +61 429 661 349 E scumedia@scu.edu.au
    UniSA: Annabel Mansfield, media & communications, M +61 479 182 489 E Annabel.Mansfield@unisa.edu.au
    UniSA contact for interview:  Dr Ben Singh E: Ben.Singh@unisa.edu.au

    MIL OSI News