Category: AM-NC

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: expert reaction to air traffic control issue

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Scientists comment on a UK air traffic control issue which led to flight delays and cancellations.

    Dr Guy Gratton, Associate Professor of Aviation and the Environment, Cranfield University, said:

    “National Air Traffic Services (NATS) have said there was a fault with their radar system, and this caused a stop on departing and arriving airline traffic on Wednesday afternoon for about an hour.  They control the upper airways of the UK from two sites – Swannick near Southampton, and Prestwick near Glasgow.  It’s very integrated, and any interruption, as occurred, can only be solved in the short term by reducing the volume of traffic so as to make absolutely sure that in Britain’s very busy airways system, they achieve safe separation of all aircraft.  As the systems come back up, they have to maintain that safe separation whilst introducing new traffic back into the airways system, so even a short delay will cause disruption for some time.

    “It looks to me that NATS handled this very well, with departures and arrivals only stopped for about an hour.  There’s no sign that safety was compromised, and hopefully the overnight reduction in air traffic will give them a chance to clear the disruption and recommence flying on Thursday morning with only minimal residual delays.  It’s inevitable that people directly affected are frustrated, but safety has to be the primary concern.”

    Junade Ali, a Fellow at the Institution of Engineering and Technology (IET), said:

    “The cause of this significant grounding of aircraft appears to be a technical issue at National Air Traffic Services (NATS).  As of 16:25, NATS report a fix is being rolled out, meaning the issue was addressed promptly.

    “In late 2023, there was a similar incident related to the IT systems that NATS uses.  Given the short duration of the outage, it seems likely this is also an IT or software outage.

    “NATS has previously thoroughly investigated such incidents and implemented suitable measures.  From prior incident reports, the software is understood to not compromise safety at the expense of keeping airspace open.  This is the right approach as, whilst keeping airspace open is important, the public risk appetite demands a high standard of safety when it comes to air travel.  Incidents like this remind us of the need for robust IT systems that are resilient.” 

    Statement from the National Air Traffic Control Services: https://www.nats.aero/statement/statement-technical-issue-at-swanwick/

    Declared interests

    Junade Ali: “No conflicts of interest.”

    For all other experts, no reply to our request for DOIs was received.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Trading standards seize nearly £700,000 of illegal tobacco and vapes in latest crackdown

    Source: City of Stoke-on-Trent

    Published: Thursday, 31st July 2025

    Stoke-on-Trent City Council is stepping up its crackdown on illegal tobacco and vape sales after seizing more illegal cigarettes, tobacco and vapes.

    Trading Standards officers carried out a visit to a storage facility in Etruria on Wednesday 23 July, supported by police officers and a tobacco dog and handler from JMS Accelerant Search.

    The teams seized 638,380 cigarettes, 108kg of hand rolling tobacco and 1262 vapes – with a total retail value of £671,363.

    The individual who hired the two shipping containers, which stored the illegal goods, is now under investigation.

    The work is part of Operation CeCe – a national operation with HMRC and National Trading Standards to tackle illegal tobacco.

    Councillor Amjid Wazir, cabinet member for city pride, environment and sustainability at Stoke-on-Trent City Council, said: “This work clearly shows that illegal tobacco sales will not be tolerated. Those involved in the storage, distribution, or sale of illicit tobacco will face serious consequences.

    “Smuggling and counterfeiting on this scale is organised crime – the shops these goods were destined for don’t care who they sell to and are happy to sell to the city’s children.

    “Our message is clear, those engaging in crime will be held accountable. We are committed to making Stoke-on-Trent a greener, fairer, cleaner, safer city and keeping these substances off our streets.”

    Lord Michael Bichard, Chair, National Trading Standards, said: “The illicit tobacco trade is driven by organised criminal gangs and poses serious risks to local communities, especially young people.

    “Since its launch in January 2021, Operation CeCe – a National Trading Standards initiative in partnership with HMRC – has removed 69 million illegal cigarettes, 19,750kg of hand-rolling tobacco and almost 175kg of shisha products from sale, helping to clamp down on this illicit trade and protect communities and honest businesses across the UK.”

    Anyone with concerns about illegal tobacco, vapes and underage sales can contact Trading Standards on the hotline at 01782 238884 or visit www.stoke.gov.uk/tradingstandards

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Ofsted praises Plymouth’s progress in supporting care leavers

    Source: City of Plymouth

    Significant strides have been made in how care-experienced young people are supported in Plymouth according to Ofsted inspectors, who found ‘many improvements’ since their last visit in February 2024. The Council’s ambition and commitment to its role as a corporate parent were particularly highlighted.

    A focused visit in early July looked specifically at the arrangements for care leavers, who are young people aged 16 to 25-years-old who have previously lived in the local authority’s care. While focused visits do not result in a graded judgement, inspectors published a letter detailing their findings and areas for improvement today.

    The inspection found that ‘Plymouth City Council is an ambitious Corporate Parent, driven effectively by the Director of Children’s Services’.

    Councillor Jemima Laing, Cabinet Member for Children’s Social Care said: “There is a lot in this inspection letter to celebrate and I am incredibly proud that we are now delivering a better service to all our care-experienced young people.

    “We are absolutely committed to being corporate parents, which means supporting our care-experienced young people as a family would support their own young adult children. As every parent knows, your responsibility does not end once your child reaches adulthood.

    “By working closely with partners across the city, we can ensure that care leavers are properly supported at this crucial time in their lives.”

    Corporate parenting means that it is the collective responsibility of the Council and partner organisations to support children in care and care leavers. 

    Plymouth City Council is committed to supporting care leavers as set out in the updated corporate parenting strategy, ‘The Sky’s the Limit’ and in the comprehensive local support offer, which was commended by Ofsted. This includes dedicated help to access health, education and wellbeing services, as well as financial support.

    The Council also agreed to treat care experience as a protected characteristic in March 2023 and is a signatory of the Care Leavers Covenant.

    The Council’s Corporate Parenting Board meets four times a year and works to advise on best practices in fulfilling the council’s role as a corporate parent to ensure the best possible outcomes for children in care and care leavers. Ofsted inspectors noted that the Board ‘provides effective governance and oversight of the council’s work with care-experienced young people’.

    There are currently 200 care-experienced young people in Plymouth aged 18 to 21-years-old, and a further 86 young people aged between 21 and 25 who have chosen to continue receiving support from the Council.

    Each of these young people has a personal adviser (PA) who works closely with them to offer advice and support. The inspectors highlighted how positive these trusting relationships are: young people ‘describe their PAs as always being responsive and kind’ and ‘receive timely practical and emotional support from social workers and PAs who know them well’.

    One young person shared that their PA ‘is amazing, I have no negatives about her, she is trying her best to get the right support for me.’

    Inspectors also noted that care-experienced young people who are pregnant or parents receive ‘dedicated effective support’ to help them ‘succeed in their parenting, and reduce risks in meeting the needs of their children’.

    Karen Blake, Head of Service for Permanence at Plymouth City Council, said: “I am delighted by the recognition we have received from Ofsted about the improvements that have been made for our care-experienced young people. Our staff are extremely dedicated and work incredibly hard every day to support young people as they transition into adulthood.

    “While we’re very proud of these achievements, we know what we need to do to make our service even better and will be focusing on the further improvements that are required as a priority.”

    The inspection letter outlines two key areas for improvement. The first is the effectiveness of joint working with housing to improve the quality and availability of accommodation for care leavers, with a small number of young people having spent too long living in bed and breakfast accommodation.

    Joint working across the Council is already taking place to address this issue, which includes finding alternative accommodation that is more suited to individual young people’s needs.

    The other area for improvement is the identification and management of risk for young people. An additional team manager had already been recruited and has since started with the team, providing additional management capacity which will help to address this issue and work is being undertaken to improve quality assurance across the service.

    Councillor Laing continued: “We completely accept that there are still improvements that need to be made in order to give our young people the best possible start to their adult life. Council teams are working collaboratively to make these improvements as swiftly as possible and the Corporate Parenting Board will have oversight of these improvements.”

    The inspection letter also positively highlights how partnership working between the Council and health organisations means that ‘the physical health needs of young people are well considered and well met’, with access to a flexible nursing team and dental services. Support is given to help young people access mental health services and more work is underway to develop bespoke mental health support.

    Penny Smith, Chief Nursing Officer at NHS Devon said: “It is great to see the hard work that has been put into improving health services for care-experienced young people in Plymouth over the last 18 months recognised by OFSTED.

    “These improvements include improved access to mental health support and dental services and are the result of strong partnership working between numerous organisations.

    “Care-experienced young people in Plymouth have for some time had access to well established, flexible, and responsive nursing teams and these improvements further enhance the support offer available to them.

    “We are committed to continuing to further improve health services for care-experienced young people in Plymouth and growing the strong partnership arrangements we have in place to do this.”

    Read the full inspection letter on the Ofsted website.

    For more information about Plymouth’s offer to care-experienced young people, please visit: www.plymouth.gov.uk/care-leavers.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Aberdeen parks retain world-wide accolade

    Source: Scotland – City of Aberdeen

    Parks, gardens, and allotments all over Aberdeen have retained accolades in a world-wide awards which rewards well managed spaces – just before the city is judged in Britain in Bloom.

    Hazlehead Park, Seaton Park, Westfield Park, Victoria Park, Johnstone Gardens, Garthdee Field Allotments, and Slopefield Allotments have been given the Green Flag Award which sets the benchmark standard for the management of recreational outdoor spaces across the UK and around the world. Duthie Park has been awarded Green Heritage Site from the awards which celebrates its historical and cultural significance alongside environmental beauty.  

    Aberdeen City Council Co-Leader Councillor Ian Yuill said: “Aberdeen is famous for its parks and green spaces. They offer a splendid array of beautiful and peaceful environments for all to enjoy. The Green Flag award is welcome recognition of the high quality of these open places. It is important to maintain them to high standards because of the recreational and health benefits that they offer to residents and to the environment.”

    Aberdeen City Council Net Zero, Environment and Transport vice convener Councillor Miranda Radley said: “The Green Flag and Green Heritage Site accolades are thanks to the great work carried out by our enthusiastic gardeners and greenkeepers as well as all the amazing community organisations, groups and individuals who help to continue make Aberdeen’s green spaces beautiful.”

    The purpose and aim of The Green Flag Award is:

    • To ensure that everybody has access to quality green and other open spaces, irrespective of where they live;
    • To ensure that these spaces are appropriately managed and meet the needs of the communities that they serve;
    • To establish standards of good management;
    • To promote and share good practice amongst the green space sector;
    • To recognise and reward the hard work of managers, staff, and volunteers.

    The Green Heritage Site accreditation acknowledges parks which excel as guardians of history, bring history to life, a place for exploration, preserving authenticity, and understanding the past while inspiring the future.

    Aberdeen is in the 2025 finals of the prestigious Britain in Bloom competition after winning the overall best in Scotland award – the Rosebowl – along with the City Trophy, the Royal Caledonian Horticultural Society Award, the VisitScotland Award for Tourism and a Gold Medal Certificate, at the Beautiful Scotland Awards. Britain in Bloom judges will be in Aberdeen next month.

    Aberdeen has won a medal in either Britain in Bloom or Beautiful Scotland every year since 2008 and has been award-winning in the competitions since 1964. Aberdeen City Council this year is also celebrating 61 years competing in Britain in Bloom and Beautiful Scotland.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: More chewing gum tackled on Union Street

    Source: Scotland – City of Aberdeen

    An additional thousands of pieces of chewing gum have been removed from Union Street thanks to a grant administered by environmental charity Keep Britain Tidy.

    The £27,500 grant, from the Chewing Gum Task Force, contributed towards additional cleaning and signage aimed at preventing people from littering again – estimates suggest the annual clean-up cost of chewing gum for councils in the UK is about £7million.

    Aberdeen City Council Co-Leader Councillor Ian Yuill said: “This additional action to remove chewing gum really helps with the shared aim of improving the city centre. The area should be pleasant and attractive for the benefit of all businesses, visitors and residents.

    “The £27,500 grant from the Chewing Gum Task Force is a welcome boost to enable more cleaning and to introduce signage aimed at preventing the unacceptable practice of discarding chewing gum. The collective work is important and will hopefully be able to make a lasting difference.”

    Aberdeen City Council Net Zero, Environment and Transport vice convener Councillor Miranda Radley said: “The Council’s cleansing team work hard keeping Union Street free of litter.

    “We’d ask people as always not to drop litter, including chewing gum, as it is unsightly and its removal takes time and money.”

    Aberdeen City Council was one of 52 local authorities across the country which successfully applied to the Chewing Gum Task Force, now in its fourth year and funded by major gum manufacturers including Mars Wrigley and Perfetti Van Melle with an investment of up to £10million spread over five years.

    Allison Ogden-Newton OBE, Chief Executive of Keep Britain Tidy, said: “Chewing gum continues to be an unsightly form of litter in our public spaces – though thankfully the scheme is leading to significant reductions.

    People need to remember that disposing irresponsibly of their gum causes harm to our environment as it takes years to decompose naturally – and, ultimately, costs the public purse to clean it up.”

    Established by Defra (Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs) and run by environmental charity Keep Britain Tidy, the Chewing Gum Task Force Grant Scheme is open to councils across the UK who wish to clean up gum in their local areas and invest in long-term behaviour change to prevent gum from being dropped in the first place.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Urumqi Airport Records Significant Growth in Passenger and Cargo Traffic in First Half of 2025

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

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

    BEIJING, July 31 (Xinhua) — The number of people crossing the Chinese border at the Tianshan International Airport checkpoint in Urumqi, capital of northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, totaled 449,900 in the first half of 2025, up 63.58 percent year-on-year, the Xinjiang Daily newspaper reported, citing data from the airport administration.

    In addition, during the same period, 43 thousand tons of cargo were imported and exported through Tianshan Airport, which is 465 percent more than during the same period last year.

    In the first six months of this year, the checkpoint handled 3,575 inbound and outbound passenger flights, up 51 percent from a year earlier. The airport currently operates 32 international passenger routes, connecting Urumqi with 27 cities in 19 countries.

    From January to June this year, airport customs officers processed 2,549 incoming and outgoing cargo flights, up 620 percent year-on-year. The total value of imported and exported goods passed through the airport checkpoint increased by 221.4 percent year-on-year.

    Today, 24 international cargo routes operate at the specified border crossing, covering key hub cities in Europe, as well as Central and Western Asia.

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

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    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: /China Focus/ Beijing steps up recovery efforts after rare rainfall in city’s history

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

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

    BEIJING, July 31 (Xinhua) — Beijing is stepping up efforts to restore power, clear roads and deliver essential supplies to residents displaced by flash floods and landslides caused by some of the most intense rainfall in the capital’s mountainous suburbs.

    In Miyun District, one of the hardest-hit areas of the Chinese capital, a temporary supply center in the village of Xizhuangzi was bustling with activity as of the morning of July 30, with supplies of bottled water, instant noodles, sausages and canned eggs ready to be shipped out.

    More than 60 tons of relief supplies were distributed across Miyun District on July 28 and 29, and four helicopters were deployed on the morning of July 30 to further deliver relief supplies. Repair crews were also dispatched to restore damaged communication and power lines, according to local authorities.

    As of midnight on July 28, 30 people had been confirmed dead in Beijing, including 28 in Miyun District and two in Yanqing District. Authorities said the Miyun Reservoir had recorded its highest inflow, highest water level and fastest outflow since it was built in 1959.

    In Yanqing, more than 4,200 people were evacuated. Some 488 rescue teams with a total of more than 8,300 personnel were dispatched to provide emergency assistance. Communications were restored to all previously cut-off villages, while damaged roads were cleared and basic utilities such as electricity were restored.

    Taotiaogou, a remote village in Yanqing, was the hardest hit. After more than 48 hours of rescue work, its 49 residents were gradually brought to safety.

    “I have never seen such a powerful flood in my life,” said 89-year-old Zhai Cheng’an, recalling how his home was quickly inundated by torrents of dirty water.

    Zhai Yonghui, deputy secretary of the Taotiaogou village party branch, said the downpour intensified at 10:20 p.m. on July 26, breaking local rainfall records. Yanqing County plans to help residents of the devastated village start new lives elsewhere.

    “The waters will recede and we will have our homes again. We believe in that,” he added.

    As part of ongoing restoration work, train services on the Beijing-Baotou high-speed railway will resume on Thursday after being suspended due to heavy rains in Beijing and Hebei province earlier this week, China Railway Hohhot Group Co., Ltd. said.

    Heavy rains also hit other parts of northern China.

    In Hebei province, eight people were confirmed dead and 18 were missing in Xinglong County, while eight people were killed after a rain-triggered landslide hit a village in Luanping County. Ten people were confirmed dead in Shanxi province after a mid-size bus carrying 14 passengers went missing on the morning of July 27 amid days of heavy rainfall. -0-

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

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    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: China’s New Growth Drivers Continue Accelerated Expansion in 2024

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

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

    BEIJING, July 31 (Xinhua) — China’s new economic growth drivers are expected to continue expanding steadily in 2024, making an even larger contribution to the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) growth, data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) showed Thursday.

    The volume of value-added production from new industries, new forms of business and new business models increased by 6.7 percent year-on-year, the data showed.

    By the end of 2024, their share in GDP increased to 18.01 percent, which is 0.43 percentage points more than in the previous year.

    Meanwhile, the latest data showed that the country’s high-tech sectors continued to grow rapidly in the first half of this year, with the value-added industrial output of high-tech manufacturing growing by 9.5 percent. The growth rate was 3.1 percentage points higher than the country’s overall industrial output in the same period. -0-

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    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Chinese border town becomes key hub for importing Russian Kamchatka crabs

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

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

    BEIJING, July 31 (Xinhua) — Did you know that out of five Russian Kamchatka crabs eaten by Chinese, four came from the border town of Hunchun, (Yanbian Korean Autonomous Prefecture, Northeast China’s Jilin Province), which is not actually a coastal town?

    At the King Crab Exhibition Hall located in the Northeast Asia Cross-Border E-Commerce Industrial Park in Hunchun, hundreds of blue and red king crabs from the Bering Strait live comfortably in a huge pool.

    The cool air in the exhibition hall mixes with the faint salty taste of sea water. It turns out that the pool is filled with sea water from the “native land” of king crabs, and its temperature is maintained at about 2 degrees Celsius.

    “The king crabs, which cost more than 320 yuan (US$44.5) per kilogram, were transported to China using original transport and water environment to ensure their longer life,” said Cui Ling, an employee of Hunchun Shengjin International Trade Co., Ltd., adding that July to August is the busiest time of the year. On average, up to 150 king crabs are sold per day through online and offline sales. These king crabs are shipped from here and delivered across the country within two weeks. In many regions, customers who order this seafood delicacy in the morning receive it the next day.

    Why hasn’t the coastal city of Hunchun become the key hub for importing Russian Kamchatka crabs?

    Previously, Kamchatka crabs imported from Russia to China had to be transported through the Republic of Korea and Japan, which led to higher costs and a deterioration in the quality of king crabs.

    After Hunchun Port was approved as a specialized port for importing chilled seafood and edible aquatic animals, this “golden corridor” for importing king crabs into China was opened. In addition, the Kamchatka-Zarubino-Hunchun route made the transportation of aquatic products between China and Russia more stable and smooth.

    To ensure the freshness of imported seafood, Hunchun Customs has opened a “green channel” to provide inspection and release services by appointment all year round and around the clock, speeding up customs clearance.

    “In 2024, about 1.5 million pieces of king crab worth 3.31 billion yuan were imported into China through Hunchun Port, accounting for more than 80 percent of the country’s total market,” said Sun Jufeng, head of the Hunchun Port Management Service Center.

    According to him, in recent years the efficiency of customs clearance has been constantly improving. If the driver registers in advance, the passage through the checkpoint can be completed in a matter of minutes.

    Let us recall that last year, construction of a new terminal began in Hunchun on the territory of the checkpoint in order to meet the increasing volumes of cargo flow between China and Russia. The new terminal with a design capacity of 2 million tons will be put into operation during this year, and then the volume of transportation through the Hunchun checkpoint will increase more than fourfold.

    In recent years, Chinese consumers’ interest in Russian Kamchatka crabs has grown rapidly. According to the General Administration of Customs of China, the total value of China’s imports of live, fresh and frozen crabs from Russia exceeded US$1.14 billion last year, up 16.7 percent from the previous year. -0-

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  • MIL-OSI Russia: Comment: Dialogue and mutual benefit are the key to long-term stability in China-US trade relations

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

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

    BEIJING, July 31 (Xinhua) — The two sides had a frank, in-depth and constructive exchange of views on major topics of common interest during the latest round of China-U.S. economic and trade talks in Stockholm from Monday to Tuesday, sending a clear signal that the world’s two largest economies remain committed to dialogue, resolving differences and strengthening global stability.

    Based on the consensus reached during the talks, the parties will continue to promote a 90-day extension of the pause in the 24 percent mirror tariffs of the US side and the countermeasures of the Chinese side.

    The progress achieved in the talks once again demonstrates that as long as both sides follow the important consensus reached by the two heads of state and adhere to the principle of equal dialogue and consultation, they can effectively resolve differences, enhance mutual trust and push bilateral economic and trade relations in a healthy, stable and sustainable direction.

    During the talks, the Chinese side emphasized that the essence of Chinese-American trade and economic relations is mutual benefit. China and the United States benefit from cooperation and lose from confrontation. The American side also stated that stable trade and economic relations between Washington and Beijing are of great importance for the economies of both countries and the world as a whole.

    This shared awareness has become a key foundation for both sides to come together, engage in constructive dialogue and make tangible progress.

    For decades, the two largest economies have been deeply integrated, with broad common interests and enormous potential for cooperation in trade and economic matters. Such strong economic complementarity cannot be easily destroyed by any artificial tariff barriers.

    China approaches the consultations with 100 percent sincerity, firmly adhering to its principles without compromise, and consistently emphasizing the need to respect each other’s core interests. China’s position on the mirror tariffs unilaterally imposed by the United States is clear and consistent: they are essentially acts of unilateralism and protectionism that violate the rules of the World Trade Organization.

    China is willing to properly resolve differences and find solutions through dialogue and consultation. However, such dialogue must take place on an equal basis. China’s right to development is inalienable, and its determination to safeguard its core interests and development rights remains unwavering. Any attempt to pressure China to make concessions on fundamental issues is unrealistic.

    Some of the deeper problems in China-US trade and economic relations are difficult to resolve overnight, but progress begins with concrete steps. /The Chinese side/ hopes that Washington will move in the same direction as Beijing, implementing the important consensus reached by the two heads of state and the positive momentum gained from the talks.

    In this way, both sides can contribute to stabilizing their economic ties, strengthening mutual trust, reducing misjudgments, deepening cooperation, and quickly returning bilateral relations to the track of healthy and sustainable development. –0–

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  • MIL-OSI Russia: 43 killed in Nepal monsoon disasters

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

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

    KATHMANDU, July 31 (Xinhua) — Nepal has seen 43 people killed and 116 injured since the monsoon season began in late May, the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Authority said.

    According to a report released by the department on Wednesday evening, 16 people were missing in 569 monsoon-related disasters.

    Floods were the deadliest, killing 15 people and injuring seven others. Lightning strikes were next, killing 14 and injuring 95. Landslides were the third deadliest natural disaster, killing 14 people.

    The monsoon season in Nepal usually lasts until early October. –0–

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  • MIL-OSI Russia: The number of visitors to the Chinese pavilion at Expo 2025 in Osaka has exceeded 1 million people.

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

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

    TOKYO, July 31 (Xinhua) — A welcoming ceremony for the one millionth visitor, a Japanese family, was held at the China Pavilion at the World Expo 2025 Osaka on Wednesday.

    Upon entering the pavilion, Teruwa Asakawa and his family were greeted by the words “Welcome to the millionth visitor to the China Pavilion” displayed on a large screen. The family was presented with a panda doll and other souvenirs.

    The Asakawas said they were honored to be the millionth visitor. They praised the beautiful appearance of the pavilion and the variety of exhibits, saying that it “allowed us to deeply feel China’s rich historical and cultural heritage.”

    Zhang Shujing, director of the China Pavilion, told Xinhua that since the opening of Expo 2025, the China Pavilion has consistently been one of the most popular. Welcoming the millionth visitor is an important moment worth celebrating, he said.

    The exhibition runs from April 13 to October 13. The Chinese pavilion occupies an area of about 3.5 thousand square meters and is one of the largest foreign pavilions built by China itself. –0–

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  • MIL-OSI Russia: The text of Xi Jinping’s speech at the All-China Conference on Ecology and Environment Protection will be published in the journal “Qiushi”

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

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

    BEIJING, July 31 (Xinhua) — The text of the speech delivered by Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, at the National Conference on Ecology and Environment Protection on July 17, 2023, will be published in the 15th issue of Qiushi, a leading journal of the CPC Central Committee, on Friday.

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  • MIL-OSI Russia: During the 14th Five-Year Plan in the PRC, 250 thousand demobilized officers and soldiers found work

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

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

    BEIJING, July 31 (Xinhua) — China has employed 250,000 demobilized officers and soldiers during the 14th Five-Year Plan period (2021-2025), and the quality and efficiency of work in this area have improved significantly, Vice Minister of Veterans Affairs Xu Yao said Thursday.

    Veterans are playing an increasingly important role in the country’s socio-economic development, he said at a press conference on Thursday.

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  • MIL-Evening Report: Labor well-placed to win three Bass seats in Tasmanian election, giving left a total of 20 of 35 MPs

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Adrian Beaumont, Election Analyst (Psephologist) at The Conversation; and Honorary Associate, School of Mathematics and Statistics, The University of Melbourne

    Labor is well-placed to win three seats in the electorate of Bass at the Tasmanian election, although its party totals imply it deserves only two. This would give left-leaning MPs a total of 20 of 35 seats. Interstate, New South Wales Labor has surged to a large lead in a Resolve poll.

    The postal receipt deadline for the July 19 Tasmanian state election passed at 10am Tuesday. Final statewide vote shares
    were 39.9% Liberals (up 3.2% since the March 2024 election), 25.9% Labor (down 3.2%), 14.4% Greens (up 0.5%), 2.9% Shooters, Fishers and Farmers (up 0.6%), 1.6% Nationals (new) and 15.3% independents (up 5.7%).

    Tasmania uses the proportional Hare-Clark system to elect its lower house. There are five electorates corresponding to Tasmania’s five federal seats, and each electorate returns seven members, for a total of 35 lower house MPs.

    Under this system, a quota for election is one-eighth of the vote or 12.5%, but half of this (6.2%) is usually enough to give a reasonable chance of election. There’s no above the line section like for the federal Senate. Instead, people vote for candidates not parties, with at least seven preferences required for a formal vote.

    Robson rotation means that candidates for each party are randomised across ballot papers for that electorate, so that on some ballot papers a candidate will appear at the top of their party’s ticket and on others at the bottom.

    This means parties can’t control the ordering of their candidates. Independents can be listed in single-candidate columns.

    Leakage occurs when party candidates with more than one quota are elected and their surplus distributed, or when minor candidates are excluded and their preferences distributed. In the federal Senate, the large majority of votes are cast above the line, and these votes cannot leak from the party that received a first preference vote.

    The consequence of leakage is that parties will lose votes from their totals during the distribution of preferences when their own candidates are elected or excluded. Single-candidate tickets can’t lose votes, and will only gain as other candidates are excluded.

    Unlike other states and federally, the Tasmanian distribution of preferences is done manually. Before the distributions, analyst Kevin Bonham had called 14 of the 35 seats for the Liberals, ten for Labor, five for the Greens and four for left-leaning independents, leaving two undecided (the final seats in Bass and Lyons).

    Labor well-placed to win three seats in Bass

    Final primary votes in Bass gave the Liberals 3.34 quotas, Labor 2.20, the Greens 1.32, the Shooters 0.32 and independent George Razay 0.27. The Shooters and Razay had single-candidate tickets that can’t leak votes.

    After three days of preference distributions, vote shares in Bass are 3.30 quotas for the Liberals, 2.25 for Labor, 1.31 for the Greens, 0.40 for the Shooters and 0.37 for Razay.

    On quota fractions, the final seat in Bass looks as if it should go to the Shooters or Razay. However, with one Labor candidate already elected, the two leading Labor candidates (Jess Greene and Geoff Lyons) each have about 0.37 quotas with two Labor candidates still to be excluded.

    If the remaining Labor votes divide roughly evenly between Greene and Lyons, they would each have about 0.62 quotas. Greens preferences will then favour Labor whether their final opponent is the Shooters or the Liberals. So Labor is well-placed to win three seats in Bass despite their party total implying they only deserve two.

    If Labor wins the final Bass seat, Labor, the Greens and left-leaning independents would have a total of 20 of the 35 seats, making any Labor attempt to form government easier.

    In Lyons, final primary votes gave the Liberals 3.36 quotas, Labor 2.27, the Greens 1.08, the Shooters 0.53 and the Nationals 0.33. The Shooters had a single-candidate ticket.

    The Liberals now have 3.36 quotas, Labor 2.44, the Greens one, the Shooters 0.68 and the Nationals 0.34. Neither Labor nor the Liberals have any chance of pulling off an even split across candidates, so the Shooters will win the final Lyons seat.

    NSW Resolve poll: Labor surges to large lead

    A New South Wales state Resolve poll for The Sydney Morning Herald, conducted July 13–18 from a sample of 1,054, gave Labor 38% of the primary vote (up five since April), the Coalition 32% (down four), the Greens 13% (up two), independents 8% (down six) and others 10% (up four).

    Resolve does not usually give a two-party estimate for its state polls, but The Poll Bludger estimated a Labor lead by 57–43. Despite the strong voting intentions for Labor, Labor incumbent Chris Minns’ lead over Liberal Mark Speakman as preferred premier narrowed from 40–15 to 35–16. This indicates that Labor’s surge is due to the federal election result.

    Resolve polls taken well before an election have overstated the independent vote as they give independent as an option in all seats, when many seats don’t have viable independents. The six-point drop for independents in this poll suggests a different method is now being used.

    By 32–25, respondents expected their personal outlook in the next year to get better rather than worse, but by 25–21 they expected the NSW state outlook to get worse.

    Additional questions from federal Resolve poll

    I previously covered a national Resolve poll for Nine newspapers that gave Labor a 56–44 lead. On reforms, 36% thought the government should take the opportunity from its landslide re-election to undertake reforms, while 32% thought it should restrict itself to policies put forward at the election.

    By 47–20, respondents opposed raising the GST rate even if it would reduce other taxes. By 31–26, they supported reducing or ditching negative gearing concessions. By 36–27, they supported reducing or ditching capital gains tax concessions on properties.

    By 57–18, respondents thought the opposition should work with the government to negotiate changes, rather than just oppose major reforms.

    By 53–18, respondents thought Donald Trump’s election as United States president last November a bad outcome for Australia (68–11 bad in April, after Trump’s “liberation day” tariffs).

    By 46–22, they thought Australia becoming more independent from the US on foreign policy and national security would be good. By 38–26, voters blamed Trump more than Albanese for the lack of a meeting.

    Adrian Beaumont does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. Labor well-placed to win three Bass seats in Tasmanian election, giving left a total of 20 of 35 MPs – https://theconversation.com/labor-well-placed-to-win-three-bass-seats-in-tasmanian-election-giving-left-a-total-of-20-of-35-mps-261751

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: Espionage cost Australia $12.5 billion in 2023-24, ASIO boss Mike Burgess says

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra

    Espionage cost Australia $12.5 billion in 2023-24, according to a study by ASIO and the Australian Institute of Criminology.

    The figure includes the direct costs of known espionage incidents, including state-sponsored theft of intellectual property, as well as the indirect costs of countering and responding.

    Details of the Cost of Espionage report were released by the head of ASIO, Mike Burgess, in delivering the annual Hawke Lecture on Thursday night. Espionage is defined as “the theft of Australian information by another country that is seeking an advantage over Australia”.

    Burgess said the Institute estimated foreign cyber spies stole nearly $2 billion from Australian companies and businesses in trade secrets and intellectual property in 2023-24.

    In one instance, spies hacked into a major Australian exporters computer network, stealing commercially sensitive information.

    “The theft gave the foreign country a significant advantage in subsequent contract negotiations, costing Australia hundreds of millions of dollars.”

    Burgess pointed to another espionage incident several years ago when an overseas delegation visited a sensitive Australian horticultural facility.

    A delegation member entered a restricted area and photographed a rare, valuable variety of fruit tree. A staff member intervened and deleted the image but it later turned out several of the tree’s branches had been stolen and smuggled out of Australia.

    “Almost certainly, the stolen plant material allowed scientists in the other country to reverse engineer and replicate two decades of Australian research and development.”

    In another instance, an Australian defence contractor invented and sold a world-leading innovation.

    At first sales boomed but then they collapsed, and “customers began flooding the company’s repair centre with faulty products. While the returns looked genuine, closer examination revealed they were cheap and nasty knock offs.

    “An investigation uncovered what happened.

    “One year earlier, a company representative attended a defence industry event overseas and was approached by an enthusiastic local. She insisted on sharing some content via a USB, which was inserted into a company laptop. The USB infected the system with malware allowing hackers to steal the blueprints for the product.

    “Almost certainly, the ‘enthusiastic local’ worked for a foreign intelligence service. The blueprints were given to a state-owned enterprise which mass-produced the knock-offs and deprived the Australian company millions of dollars in lost revenue – the tangible cost of espionage.”

    Burgess said many entities do not realise their secrets have been stolen by espionage.

    He stressed the institute was deliberately conservative, only modelling costs it could confirm and calculate.

    “That means many of the most serious, significant and cascading costs of espionage are not included in the 12.5 billion dollar figure. The potential loss of strategic advantage, sovereign decision-making and warfighting capacity hold immense value, but not a quantifiable dollar value.”

    “The Institute estimates Australia prevented tens of billions of dollars of additional costs by stopping or deterring spying,” Burgess said.

    He said ASIO estimated the espionage threat “will only intensify. It is already more serious and sophisticated than ever before, so our response must also be more serious and sophisticated than ever before.”

    Russian spies booted out in 2022

    Burgess confirmed that in 2022 a number of “undeclared Russian intelligence officers” were removed from Australia.

    “The decision followed a lengthy ASIO investigation that found the Russians recruiting proxies and agents to obtain sensitive information, and employing sophisticated tradecraft to disguise their activities.”

    Last year, two Russian born Australian citizens were charged with an espionage related offence.

    Russian remained a persistent and aggressive espionage threat, Burgess said. “But Russia is by no means the only country we have to deal with.

    “You would be genuinely shocked by the number and names of countries trying to steal our secrets.

    “The obvious candidates are very active – I’ve previously named China, Russia and Iran – but many other countries are also targeting anyone and anything that could give them a strategic or tactical advantage, including sensitive but unclassified information.”

    Burgess said increasingly foreign intelligence services were broadening their collection efforts beyond traditional categories. They were aggressively targeting science and technology, and public and private sector projects, negotiations and investments. This includes Antarctic research, green technology, critical minerals and rare earths extraction and processing.

    ‘A very unhealthy’ interest in AUKUS

    Burgess said foreign intelligence services were “taking a very unhealthy interest in AUKUS and its associated capabilities.”

    “Australia’s defence sector is a top intelligence collection priority for foreign governments seeking to blunt our operational edge, gain insights into our operational readiness and tactics, and better understand our allies’ capabilities.

    “Targets include maritime and aviation-related military capabilities, but also innovations with both commercial and military applications.

    “And with AUKUS, we are not just defending our sovereign capability. We are also defending critical capability shared by and with our partners.”

    He said foreign intelligence services were “proactive, creative and opportunistic” in targeting present and former defence employees.

    There was relentless cyber espionage, in-person targeting and technical collection.

    “In recent years, for example, defence employees travelling overseas have been subjected to covert room searches, been approached at conferences by spies in disguise and given gifts containing surveillance devices.”

    Two dozen major disruptions in the last three years

    Burgess said that ASIO had detected and disrupted 24 major cases of foreign interference in the last three years alone.

    This was more than in the previous eight years combined. They were just the major disruptions – there were many other cases. Among the examples he gave were:

    • spies recruited a security clearance holder who handed over official documents on free trade negotiations

    • foreign companies connected to intelligence services sought to buy access to personal data sets; sought to buy land near sensitive military sites, and sought to collaborate with researchers developing sensitive technologies

    • foreign intelligence services tried to get someone employed as a researcher in a media outlet, aiming to shape reporting and receive early warning of critical stories

    • spies convinced a state bureaucrat to login to a database to obtain details of people considered dissidents by a foreign regime

    • nation state hackers compromised a peak industry body’s network getting sensitive information

    • a foreign intelligence service had multiple agents and their family members apply for Australian government jobs to get access to classified information.

    Michelle Grattan does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. Espionage cost Australia $12.5 billion in 2023-24, ASIO boss Mike Burgess says – https://theconversation.com/espionage-cost-australia-12-5-billion-in-2023-24-asio-boss-mike-burgess-says-262349

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • Tata Motors announces euro 3.8 billion acquisition of Iveco Group

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Tata Motors Limited has announced plans to acquire Iveco Group N.V., a leading European commercial vehicle and mobility company, through an all-cash voluntary tender offer valued at approximately €3.8 billion.

    The proposed acquisition is subject to regulatory approvals and the successful separation of Iveco’s defence business. The deal aims to create a powerful global player in the commercial vehicle industry, combining complementary capabilities, a broader market presence, and a shared commitment to sustainable mobility.

    Under the terms of the deal, Tata Motors will acquire all issued common shares of Iveco Group—excluding its defence division—at €14.1 per share in cash. Completion of the transaction is conditional upon the separation of the defence business, which is expected to be finalised by March 31, 2026.

    The offer represents a 22–25% premium over Iveco’s average share price in the three months ending July 17, 2025. Factoring in the estimated €5.5–€6.0 per share extraordinary dividend from the defence division’s sale, the premium could increase to 34–41%.

    The merger will combine Tata Motors’ commercial vehicle division with Iveco’s operations, bringing together annual sales of approximately 540,000 units and revenues of €22 billion (INR 2.2 lakh crore). The combined revenue base will be spread across Europe (50%), India (35%), and the Americas (15%).

    “This is a logical next step following the demerger of Tata Motors’ Commercial Vehicle business,” said Tata Motors Chairman Natarajan Chandrasekaran. “It will allow the combined group to compete globally with two strategic home markets in India and Europe.”

    Olof Persson, CEO of Iveco Group, said the partnership with Tata Motors would strengthen industrial capabilities, accelerate innovation in zero-emission transport, and expand the company’s presence in key global markets.

    Tata Motors has secured full financing for the acquisition through a consortium led by Morgan Stanley and MUFG Bank. Clifford Chance, PwC, and Kearney are advising Tata Motors, while Goldman Sachs and law firms De Brauw and PedersoliGattai are advising Iveco Group.

    — ANI

  • Centre constructs 16,207 km of highways, sanctions ₹69,342 crore for railway projects in Northeast

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    The Central Government has constructed 16,207 km of National Highways and sanctioned ₹69,342 crore for railway projects to bolster infrastructure and accelerate economic development in the Northeastern Region (NER), the Parliament was informed on Thursday.

    Minister of State for Development of North Eastern Region Sukanta Majumdar told the Rajya Sabha that the Ministry of Railways has approved 12 railway projects – including 8 new lines and 4 doubling projects – spanning a total length of 777 km, either partially or fully within the NER. Of this, 278 km have already been commissioned, and ₹41,676 crore has been expended up to March 2025.

    Under the Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana (PMGSY), the government has sanctioned 17,637 road works covering 89,436 km and 2,398 bridges in the Northeast. Out of these, 16,469 road works (80,933 km) and 2,108 bridges have been completed, the Minister added.

    To enhance digital connectivity in remote and rural areas of the Northeast, several initiatives have been undertaken with support from the Digital Bharat Nidhi. As many as 6,355 Gram Panchayats have been made service-ready under the BharatNet project. In addition, 3,297 mobile towers have been commissioned in the region under various government-funded mobile connectivity schemes.

    The Ministry of Civil Aviation, through the UDAN (Ude Desh ka Aam Nagrik) scheme, has significantly improved regional air connectivity by operationalising 90 routes in the Northeast. These routes connect 12 airports and heliports across the region, aiming to make air travel more accessible and affordable for the masses.

    Further, the Ministry of Development of North Eastern Region (MDoNER) is providing financial assistance to all eight Northeastern states for developmental projects related to infrastructure, connectivity, and communication, under five Central Sector Schemes.

    A key initiative in this regard is the Prime Minister’s Development Initiative for North East Region (PM-DevINE). This 100% centrally funded scheme, launched with a total outlay of ₹6,600 crore, is scheduled to run from 2022–23 to 2025–26. The scheme focuses on funding infrastructure projects in line with PM GatiShakti, supporting social development, and promoting livelihood opportunities for youth and women, while addressing developmental gaps in critical sectors.

    The DoNER Ministry is also providing financial support to boost tourism development across the eight Northeastern states through its various Central Sector Schemes.

    (With inputs from IANS)

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Government cracks down on water mafia

    Source: Government of South Africa

    Water and Sanitation Deputy Minister David Mahlobo has reaffirmed government’s commitment to tackling the growing challenge of water infrastructure sabotage and criminal activities of the so-called “water mafia”, who continue to violate citizens’ constitutional right to water access.

    Speaking during a webinar hosted by the South African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC), Mahlobo described the destruction, vandalism and extortion within the water sector as acts of “economic sabotage that preys on the most vulnerable and obstructs the country’s developmental goals”.

    He highlighted how criminal syndicates, often in collusion with unscrupulous individuals, are deliberately disrupting water supply networks, including damaging pump stations, pipelines, and valves. They then profit by selling water through tankers at inflated prices.

    “These activities not only cripple infrastructure but also endanger public health, inflate municipal budgets through recurring repair costs and degrade the dignity of affected communities,” Mahlobo said.

    The webinar held this week under the theme: ‘Sabotage of Essential Water Infrastructure and Water Mafias: What Can Be Done?’, focused on initiatives underway to address the sabotage of essential water infrastructure and water mafias.

    Mahlobo noted that the widespread and coordinated criminal operations have led to water outages due to the theft of critical components like pipes, cables and meters.

    He warned that the problem is not only limited to urban centres but is emerging across the country and requires urgent, coordinated and forceful action.

    He said department would intensify its collaboration with law enforcement agencies and all levels of government to ensure that those behind the sabotage are identified and prosecuted.

    “We will not tolerate the deliberate sabotage of our water infrastructure. These criminal acts are an attack on our constitutional democracy and our commitment to human rights.

    “There will be no hesitation in acting against those responsible. We are closing the space for criminals to operate, and we will pursue them relentlessly through law enforcement, community mobilisation and with the full weight of State institutions,” the Deputy Minister warned.

    Mahlobo underscored the importance of community participation in protecting infrastructure. He urged citizens to report suspicious activities, support educational campaigns, and embrace a culture of whistleblowing to expose criminal networks and corruption within the water sector.

    He also called for a culture of whistleblowing, encouraging individuals with knowledge of criminal networks or corruption in the sector to come forward, adding that their role is vital in rooting out entrenched criminality.

    The Deputy Minister outlined the department’s comprehensive response, including the implementation of the 2025 National Water and Sanitation Indaba resolutions, which prioritise infrastructure protection strategies, public education campaigns and partnerships with law enforcement.

    “Communities are also being urged to embrace innovation, as municipalities begin deploying technology such as surveillance systems, remote sensors and smart infrastructure to detect and prevent sabotage.”

    Mahlobo called on all South Africans, particularly civil society, organised labour, water activists, conservation groups and traditional leaders, to unite against the sabotage of national infrastructure.

    “All acts of theft, vandalism or extortion should be reported without delay to local law enforcement or municipal security authorities,” he said.

    Mahlobo reaffirmed government’s stance that water access is a non-negotiable human right and “must never be held hostage by criminals”.

    “Water is life, and no criminal syndicate will be allowed to hijack the public’s right to it. We are acting decisively, and we urge every South African to be part of the solution.

    “We must defend this resource together. Through strong partnerships, community vigilance and courageous whistleblowing, we will protect our water and secure our future,” he said. – SAnews.gov.za
     

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Gauteng Education provides update on municipal debt payment 

    Source: Government of South Africa

    The Gauteng Department of Education (GDE) has paid R426.27 million of the R426.45 million that was owed to municipalities and Eskom for schools without Section 21(1)(d) functions. 

    “As of 30 June 2025, the GDE had successfully paid a total of R426.27 million, representing 99.95% of the R426.45 million that was owed to municipalities and Eskom for schools without Section 21(1)(d) functions. The small outstanding balance of R175,853.61 (0.05%) was due to a delay resulting from updates to the Standard Chart of Accounts (SCOA), a reform implemented by the Provincial Treasury to improve public financial management systems,” the provincial department said.

    Earlier this month, the department reiterated that, in line with legislation, schools – specifically those granted Section 21 functions – are entrusted with managing their own finances. These schools are responsible for a range of functions, including the payment of municipal services such as electricity and water.

    READ | Gauteng Education allocates funds to schools 

    This as the department provided an update on the fulfilment of its commitment to settle all outstanding municipal debts owed by schools as of 31 March 2025 and outline critical infrastructure interventions aimed at addressing overcrowding across the province’s public schools.

    In its update on Thursday, the department confirmed that the remaining balance will be paid during the scheduled payment runs between 25 July and 8 August 2025. 

    “This payment will bring the total settlement to 100%, thereby closing the commitment made in April 2025,” it said.

    The GDE provides annual allocations to schools in accordance with the Amended National Norms and Standards for School Funding. School Governing Bodies (SGBs) are guided through circulars and compliance workshops to ensure appropriate usage of these funds and are expected to supplement state resources to ensure sustainability.

    Currently, the GDE retains direct financial oversight of 40 schools in the province that have not been granted Section 21 functions. 

    “As of 30 June 2025, these schools collectively owed R105,391.24 in municipal debt. The department confirms that none of these schools experienced any water or electricity disconnections and continues to monitor and manage service payments on their behalf. The department reaffirms its commitment to ensuring no public school in Gauteng is or will be disconnected from water and electricity due to unpaid accounts,” it explained.
     

    Overcrowding 

    As part of efforts to address overcrowding in provincial schools, the department has allocated R2.8 billion in the 2025/26 financial year toward school infrastructure. 

    “Of this allocation, R1.489 billion is dedicated to the construction of new and replacement schools; R615 million will support upgrades and additions, including mobile classrooms and self-build projects; R166 million is earmarked for refurbishment and rehabilitation; and R476 million is allocated for maintenance interventions.”

    The GDE’s approach to overcrowding combines various infrastructure strategies, including the construction of new schools on available sites, brick-and-mortar self-build classroom projects within existing schools, and the provision of mobile classrooms where immediate relief is required. 

    It added that it procures mobile classrooms are procured directly and not through monthly lease agreements, ensuring cost-effectiveness in their deployment.

    To accelerate school infrastructure delivery in high-pressure areas, the department is exploring a Public-Private Partnership (PPP) model.

    Under this model, private sector partners would finance, design, build, and potentially operate or maintain public schools for a defined period, with the department amortising payments over time. This model aims to unlock private capital, fast-track delivery timelines, and ensure long-term sustainability while maintaining public oversight and accountability.

    MEC Matome Chiloane said the department remains committed to ensuring sound financial governance.

    “As the department, we remain committed to ensuring sound financial governance, transparency, and service continuity in all public schools. We call on all education stakeholders, particularly parents, communities, and School Governing Bodies, to continue working closely with the Department to deliver quality learning environments across Gauteng,” he said. –SAnews.gov.za

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Western Cape school transfer applications to open on 4 August

    Source: Government of South Africa

    Parents in the Western Cape, who wish to apply for a school transfer for their children for the 2026 school year, can submit their applications between 4 and 18 August 2025. 

    According to the Western Cape Education Department (WCED), this applies to learners currently enrolled in Grades 2 to 7 and Grades 9 to 12.

    “Transfer applications can also be submitted at the relevant school to which the parent or caregiver wishes to transfer, or at the relevant district office,“ the department explained. 

    Parents applying will need supporting documents, including the last school report card, identity document (ID), birth certificate, passport, study permit or proof of application or police affidavit, and proof of address or police affidavit. 

    “Parents who have not registered on the online system previously will first need to register on the online site. Once registration is completed, they can then proceed to the application,” the statement read. 

    According to the department, schools can only capture applications for their institution, but the online system allows for applications to multiple schools.

    Parents or caregivers will be required to fill out the WCED application form, which can also be downloaded from the WCED website. The form can only be submitted to schools or the district office from 4 August 2025 onwards.

    Parents can drop off the application form and supporting documents directly at the school or contact the school for details on electronic submissions using only the official WCED form.

    Regarding Grades R, 1, and 8 applications, the department announced that schools are currently finalising their admission lists and confirming placements for children on their waiting lists. This process is still ongoing.

    “We do, however, appeal to all parents and caregivers who have not yet applied for Grade 1 and Grade 8 for the 2026 school year to do so immediately. The online platform is closed for these late applications.” 

    Parents are advised to contact their district office or call 0861 819 919 for more information.

    Online video tutorials and step-by-step guidelines for school transfer applications are available on the website: https://wcedonline.westerncape.gov.za/admissions

    Visit the admissions site for the form and relevant details: https://wcedonline.westerncape.gov.za/admissions

    Applications can be done online at: https://www.westerncape.gov.za/education/service/learner-admissions. – SAnews.gov.za

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Monetary Statistics for June 2025

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region – 4

    The following is issued on behalf of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority:

    According to statistics published today (July 31) by the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, total deposits with authorized institutions increased by 0.9 per cent in June 2025. Among the total, Hong Kong dollar deposits decreased by 0.9 per cent while foreign currency deposits increased by 2.4 per cent in June, mainly reflecting fund flows of corporates. For the first half of 2025 as a whole, total deposits and Hong Kong dollar deposits increased by 7.6 per cent and 7.0 per cent respectively. Renminbi deposits in Hong Kong decreased by 9.6 per cent in June to RMB882.1 billion at the end of June, mainly reflecting fund flows of corporates. The total remittance of renminbi for cross-border trade settlement amounted to RMB1,223.5 billion in June, compared with RMB1,123.6 billion in May. It should be noted that changes in deposits are affected by a wide range of factors, such as interest rate movements and fund-raising activities. It is therefore more appropriate to observe the longer-term trends, and not to over-generalise fluctuations in a single month.
     
    Total loans and advances increased by 1.1 per cent in June, and increased by 2.5 per cent in the first half of 2025. Among the total, loans for use in Hong Kong (including trade finance) and loans for use outside Hong Kong increased by 0.9 per cent and 1.8 per cent respectively in June. The Hong Kong dollar loan-to-deposit ratio increased to 72.0 per cent at the end of June from 70.5 per cent at the end of May, as Hong Kong dollar deposits decreased while Hong Kong dollar loans increased.
     
    For the second quarter of 2025 as a whole, loans for use in Hong Kong (including trade finance) increased by 1.6 per cent after increasing by 0.5 per cent in the previous quarter. Analysed by economic use, the increase in loans during the second quarter was mainly led by loans to financial concerns and loans to electricity and gas.
     
    Hong Kong dollar M2 and M3 both decreased by 0.8 per cent in June, while both increased by 8.4 per cent when compared to a year ago. The seasonally-adjusted Hong Kong dollar M1 increased by 4.4 per cent in June and increased by 23.7 per cent compared to a year ago, reflecting in part investment-related activities. Total M2 and total M3 both increased by 0.8 per cent in June. Compared to a year earlier, total M2 and total M3 both increased by 11.5 per cent.  
     
    As monthly monetary statistics are subject to volatilities due to a wide range of transient factors, such as seasonal funding demand as well as business and investment-related activities, caution is required when interpreting the statistics.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Hong Kong Customs detects case involving precious metals and stones dealer carrying out specified cash transaction without Category B registration

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region – 4

    Hong Kong Customs yesterday (July 30) detected a case involving a local watch company that conducted a cash transaction valued at over HK$120,000, while not being a Category B registrant under the Dealers in Precious Metals and Stones Regulatory Regime. A director of the company was arrested.
     
    The investigation is ongoing. The arrested person has been released on bail.
     
    According to the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorist Financing Ordinance (Cap. 615), the Regime came into effect on April 1, 2023. Any person who is seeking to carry on a business of dealing in precious metals and stones in Hong Kong and engage in any transaction(s) (whether making or receiving a payment) with a total value at or above HK$120,000 in Hong Kong is required to register with the Commissioner of Customs and Excise.
     
    In particular, no person other than a Category B registrant may carry out a cash transaction with a total value at or above HK$120,000 in the course of business of dealing in precious metals and stones. Any dealer who is not a Category B registrant, who claims to be a Category B registrant, claims to be authorised to carry out, or carries out any cash transaction(s) with a total value at or above HK$120,000, commits an offence and is liable on conviction to a maximum fine of HK$100,000 and imprisonment for six months.
     
    Customs reminds dealers in precious metals and stones that they must obtain the relevant registration before they can carry out any cash or non-cash transaction(s) with a total value at or above HK$120,000.
     
    For the forms, procedures and guidelines to submit applications for registration, please visit the website for the Dealers in Precious Metals and Stones Registration System (www.drs.customs.gov.hk) or Customs’ webpage (www.customs.gov.hk/en/service-enforcement-information/anti-money-laundering/supervision-of-dealers-in-precious-metals-and-ston/index.html).
     
    Members of the public may report any suspected transactions involving precious metals and stones with a total value at or above HK$120,000 conducted without the required registration 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).

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Residential mortgage loans in negative equity: End of June 2025

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region – 4

    The following is issued on behalf of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority:

    The Hong Kong Monetary Authority announced today (July 31) the results of its survey on residential mortgage loans (RMLs) in negative equity at end-June 2025.
      
    The estimated number of RMLs in negative equity was 37 806 cases at end-June 2025, as compared to 40 741 cases at end-March 2025. These cases were mainly related to bank staff housing loans or RMLs under mortgage insurance programme, which generally have a higher loan-to-value ratio.
     
    The aggregate value of RMLs in negative equity decreased to HK$190.2 billion at end-June 2025 compared with HK$205.9 billion at end-March 2025.
     
    The unsecured portion of these loans decreased to HK$14.3 billion at end-June 2025 from HK$16.4 billion at end-March 2025.
     
    The three-month delinquency ratio of RMLs in negative equity remained at a low level of 0.21 per cent at end-June 2025 as compared to 0.17 per cent at end-March 2025.
     
    It is important to note that the figures derived from this survey relate only to RMLs provided by authorized institutions on the basis of first mortgages and which the reporting institution knows to be in negative equity (i.e. the outstanding loan amount with the reporting institution exceeds the current market value of the mortgaged property). Not included in these figures are RMLs associated with co-financing schemes which would be in negative equity if the second mortgages were taken into account. The extent to which such RMLs are in negative equity is not known because authorized institutions do not maintain records on the outstanding balances of the second mortgages. 
     
    The mortgage portfolios of the surveyed authorized institutions represent about 99 per cent of the industry total. The survey results have been extrapolated to estimate the position of the banking sector as a whole. 

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Residential Mortgage Survey Results for June 2025

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region – 4

    The following is issued on behalf of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority:
     
         The Hong Kong Monetary Authority announced the results of the residential mortgage survey for June 2025.
     
         The number of mortgage applications in June increased month-on-month by 4.8 per cent to 8 581.
     
         Mortgage loans approved in June increased by 3.3 per cent compared with May to HK$27.5 billion. Among these, mortgage loans financing primary market transactions increased by 4.2 per cent to HK$9.3 billion and those financing secondary market transactions increased by 2.4 per cent to HK$15 billion. Mortgage loans for refinancing increased by 5.2 per cent to HK$3.2 billion. 
     
         Mortgage loans drawn down during June increased by 8.9 per cent compared with May to HK$17.7 billion. 
     
         The ratio of new mortgage loans priced with reference to HIBOR increased from 93.4 per cent in May to 94.7 per cent in June. The ratio of new mortgage loans priced with reference to best lending rates decreased from 1.9 per cent in May to 1.7 per cent in June.
     
         The outstanding value of mortgage loans increased month-on-month by 0.1 per cent to HK$1,885.6 billion at end-June. 
     
         The mortgage delinquency ratio stood at a low level of 0.13 per cent and the rescheduled loan ratio was unchanged at nearly 0 per cent.

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Hospital Authority streamlines clinical research approval to promote medical research development (with photo)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region – 4

    The following is issued on behalf of the Hospital Authority:

         The Hospital Authority (HA) held a sharing session today (July 31) with representatives from the Greater Bay Area International Clinical Trial Institute (GBAICTI) and Hong Kong’s pharmaceutical industry to outline a series of enhancement measures implemented by the HA for promoting clinical research development, including the recently implemented streamlined approval procedures aiming at attracting more clinical research projects from the industry.
     
         Last year, the HA established a Central Clinical Research and Innovation Office and Cluster Clinical Research Support Offices in each cluster to provide support for frontline healthcare professionals and proactively encourage participation in clinical research. In April this year, the HA further enhanced the application and approval procedures for commercially sponsored clinical research, including revising the long-standing standard clinical research agreement template to provide more up-to-date content and balance the interests of all parties. The HA has also engaged a professional organisation to assist in the review and approval of commercially sponsored clinical research applications, expediting the approval process and timeframe through the incorporation of industry expertise.
     
         The Director (Quality and Safety) of the HA, Dr Michael Wong, expressed confidence that the new measures will promote the clinical research development. “As a key player in local clinical research with professional medical teams and extensive healthcare data, the HA has been aligning with government policies and engaging in communication and exchange with various healthcare institutions and industry stakeholders. Through optimising processes and streamlining approval procedures, the HA aims to facilitate efficient implementation and execution of clinical research, fostering a more conducive environment for medical innovation and enhancing Hong Kong’s competitiveness in international clinical research.”
     
         About 100 participants in the sharing session included members and representatives from the GBAICTI and the Hong Kong Association of the Pharmaceutical Industry, who had in-depth exchanges on the development of clinical research in Hong Kong.
     
         The HA Central Institutional Review Board (Central IRB) completed the integration of all cluster Research Ethics Committees in March 2024 and has processed over 1 000 clinical research applications. The Central IRB serves as a co-ordinator and has been further streamlining the research ethics application and approval process and facilitating cross-cluster clinical research applications. Following process optimisation, simple clinical research applications can now be processed through an expedited review procedure, with approval times significantly reduced to within 30 days, while the ethics review for complex research applications can be completed within 60 days.
     
         The HA will continue to dovetail with government policy directions and the needs of the pharmaceutical industry, deepen collaboration with the GBAICTI, and fully support various clinical research applications, thereby promoting Hong Kong’s medical and scientific research, enhancing healthcare standards, and benefitting patients.

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  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Government revises eligibility criteria for government-subsidised post-secondary student places and subsidies

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region – 4

         The Government today (July 31) announced the revision of the eligibility criteria for government-subsidised post-secondary student places and subsidies: introducing two categories of tuition fees and revising the eligibility criteria. The revision will apply to the 2027/28 academic year and thereafter (the application cycle for the 2027/28 academic year commencing in October 2026). This will allow the affected persons reasonable time to make their own plans and the Joint University Programmes Admissions System (JUPAS) Office and the admissions offices of various institutions (including the University Grants Committee (UGC)-funded universities, the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts, and the Vocational Training Council) sufficient time to make corresponding administrative arrangements.
     
    A Government spokesperson said, “Under the current admissions arrangements, dependant visa/entry permit holders who were below 18 years old when first issued with such visa/entry permit by the Immigration Department (ImmD) are considered local students. There has been recent concern that some of these students did not come to reside in Hong Kong but applied for government-subsidised student places at UGC-funded universities as local students, which affected opportunities for university admission and the targeted use of public funds.
     
         “To clarify the eligibility criteria for government-subsidised post-secondary student places and subsidies, and to ensure the proper use of public funds, the Education Bureau, having regard to overseas practices and the practical situation in Hong Kong, considers it necessary for dependant children to reside in Hong Kong for two years before becoming eligible for government-subsidised post-secondary student places. Holders of a full-time employment visa/work permit or a visa/entry permit for various admission schemes will no longer be eligible for government-subsidised post-secondary student places.”
     
         Two categories of tuition fees are introduced under the revision. Category I refers to subsidised fees. Persons holding the following documents are eligible for government-subsidised student places in relation to sub-degree, undergraduate and taught postgraduate programmes:
     

    • A Hong Kong permanent identity card, other documents issued by the ImmD showing the right to land/right of abode in Hong Kong, and a visa label for unconditional stay;
    • A One-way Permit for entry to Hong Kong; and
    • A dependant visa/entry permit: holders who were below 18 years old when first issued with such visa/entry permit by the ImmD, provided that they have resided in Hong Kong for two years immediately preceding the first day of their respective programmes. Regarding first-year student places, to facilitate institutions’ admissions procedures, the two-year period will be specified appropriately by the JUPAS office or the institutions concerned having regard to the first day of the respective programmes. Whether the residency requirement is met is determined at or before the start of each academic year and shall remain the same for the remainder of that academic year. The first day of the academic year of a programme is determined by the programme’s start day. 

     
         Category II refers to non-subsidised fees and applies to persons not meeting the eligibility criteria in the above-mentioned Category I. These persons include:
     

    • Dependant visa/entry permit holders who were below 18 years old when first issued with such visa/entry permit by the ImmD, and they do not meet the two-year residency requirement;
    • Holders of a full-time employment visa/work permit;
    • Holders of a visa/entry permit for various admission schemes (including the Quality Migrant Admission Scheme, the Capital Investment Entrant Scheme or the Admission Scheme for the Second Generation of Chinese Hong Kong Permanent Residents); and
    • Non-local students (such as holders of a student visa/entry permit; holders of a visa/entry permit under the Immigration Arrangements for Non-local Graduates; dependant visa/entry permit holders who were 18 years old or above when first issued with such visa/entry permit by the ImmD).

     
         Category II persons may still apply for government-subsidised sub-degree, undergraduate and taught postgraduate programmes but have to pay non-subsidised fees. The institutions may determine appropriate non-subsidised fee levels, following the established principles, having regard to their own circumstances and programme costs, and taking a holistic view of various factors. The levels have to be at least sufficient to recover all additional direct costs, and to be on par with those applicable to non-local students.
     
         The Government will put in place a transitional arrangement for the above-mentioned revision, whereby the residency requirement for the 2027/28 academic year (its application cycle commencing in October 2026) will be set at one year. The two-year residency requirement will be implemented starting from the 2028/29 academic year.
     
    The spokesperson said, “When formulating the revision, the Government fully listened to various views in society and struck the right balance. The revision is not expected to have a significant impact on families with genuine intentions to come to Hong Kong for development.”
     
    Regarding the residency requirement for JUPAS applications for government-subsidised first-year-first-degree student places, applicants are required to provide the following proof:

    (a) proof from the applicant that he or she is enrolled as a full-time student in a school offering a formal curriculum in Hong Kong for the two-year period ending on May 31 in the year in which his or her respective programme begins; or
     
    (b) for those who cannot provide the proof in (a) above, a statement of travel records of the applicant which can be obtained at a fee from the ImmD covering the two-year period to demonstrate that the applicant is not absent from Hong Kong for a maximum of 90 days in each year of the two-year period.
       
         Regarding other government-subsidised post-secondary student places, including those in relation to sub-degree, senior year undergraduate and taught postgraduate programmes of UGC-funded universities, the relevant institutions are required to process the applications in an approach similar to the above-mentioned one.
     
         The eligibility criteria and related arrangements for government scholarship, fellowship or subsidy schemes which are currently premised on the definitions of “local students” and “non-local students” (such as the Hong Kong Future Talents Scholarship Scheme for Advanced Studies, the Tuition Waiver for Local Research Postgraduate Students, the Study Subsidy Scheme for Designated Professions/Sectors, and the Non-means-tested Subsidy Scheme for Self-financing Undergraduate Studies in Hong Kong) will also be correspondingly revised to ensure consistency. 

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: HD implements multipronged mosquito control measures against chikungunya fever (with photos)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region – 4

         In response to the recent surge in chikungunya fever cases reported in neighbouring regions, the Housing Department (HD) announced today (July 31) that the HD has stepped up mosquito prevention and control efforts through a multipronged approach in all public rental housing estates under the HD’s management, and appeals to residents to strengthen mosquito prevention and control measures.

         “To prevent mosquito-borne diseases effectively, all estate offices under the HD have strengthened anti-mosquito measures and prevention work jointly with different stakeholders and other government departments. They are strengthening inspections in public areas and flower beds; upon detection of mosquito breeding grounds, immediate actions will be taken, including conducting fogging operations to eliminate adult mosquitoes, removal of stagnant water and water-holding containers, application of larvicides (e.g. temephos sand granules), and installation of mosquito traps,” said an HD spokesman.

         “We have taken measures to keep drains free of blockage and level all defective ground surfaces to prevent water accumulation. We have also continuously enhanced public education and publicity through posters and leaflets to remind the public to adopt mosquito control measures. We also invited the Food and Environmental Hygiene Department to conduct educational talks to disseminate the latest information on chikungunya fever and mosquito prevention to the residents,” the spokesman added.

         Public participation is crucial in addition to the efforts of government departments. The HD urged residents to join hands to implement mosquito prevention and control measures at home and other places promptly. The measures include:
     

    • Keep the environment clean by disposing of rubbish properly. Refuse like empty cans and food containers where water can accumulate easily should be disposed of in covered litter containers;
    • Clean the saucers under potted plants weekly to prevent water accumulation;
    • Change the water in vases and scrub their internal surfaces every week;
    • Keep water storage containers, such as buckets and basins, tightly covered; and
    • Check air-conditioner drip trays to prevent any water accumulation.

         Please visit the Centre for Health Protection’s thematic webpage for more information on chikungunya fever: www.chp.gov.hk/en/features/109029.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: More online travel agencies commit to refund within 14 days for cancelled flights, following a dialogue with the Commission and consumer authorities

    Source: EuroStat – European Statistics

    European Commission Press release Brussels, 31 Jul 2025
    Following a dialogue with the European Commission and the Consumer Protection Cooperation (CPC) Network of national consumer authorities, Expedia and Lastminute.com have committed to better inform consumers of their rights and ensure they receive ticket refunds within 14 days in case of a flight cancellation by the airline.

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  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – Study on the potential costs and impact of the Urban Wastewater Treatment Directive (UWWTD) on the pharmaceutical and cosmetic sectors. – E-002988/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    Question for written answer  E-002988/2025
    to the Commission
    Rule 144
    Elżbieta Katarzyna Łukacijewska (PPE), Ewa Kopacz (PPE), Danuše Nerudová (PPE), Marta Wcisło (PPE), Magdalena Adamowicz (PPE), Dolors Montserrat (PPE), Dariusz Joński (PPE), Elena Nevado del Campo (PPE), Susana Solís Pérez (PPE), Bartłomiej Sienkiewicz (PPE), Michał Wawrykiewicz (PPE), Dimitris Tsiodras (PPE), Michalis Hadjipantela (PPE), Massimiliano Salini (PPE), Flavio Tosi (PPE), Borys Budka (PPE), Oliver Schenk (PPE), Jan Farský (PPE), Tomáš Zdechovský (PPE), Laurent Castillo (PPE), Adam Jarubas (PPE), Dan-Ştefan Motreanu (PPE), Christophe Grudler (Renew), Peter Liese (PPE), Marie-Pierre Vedrenne (Renew)

    The UWWTD[1] raises concerns, as its EPR scheme assigns 80 % of quaternary treatment costs to cosmetics and pharmaceuticals.

    The scheme appears scientifically unfounded and contrary to the ‘polluter pays’ principle (PPP). New Commission data shows that cosmetics contribute only around 1.5 % of toxic load, far below the 26 % cited in the impact assessment, an overestimation by at least 15 times.

    This discrepancy calls the fairness and effectiveness of the UWWTD into question and places a disproportionate administrative burden on the cosmetics sector, especially SMEs.

    The water resilience strategy states the Commission will update its cost and impact analysis under Article 9 UWWTD before implementing EPR.

    • 1.When does the Commission plan to conduct an updated study on EPR costs and the potential impact on the sectors concerned, as envisaged in the water resilience strategy?
    • 2.Will the Commission propose pausing implementation work until the above study is conducted to ensure that national-level discussions are based on both robust data and contributions from sectors concerned by the toxic load in urban wastewater?
    • 3.What regulatory measures does the Commission envisage to help adjust and improve the efficacy of the EPR scheme and ensure a fair application of the PPP, and can it introduce a switch from a sector-based approach to a substance-based approach to reflect the complexity of water pollution EPR?

    Submitted: 17.7.2025

    • [1] Directive (EU) 2024/3019 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 27 November 2024 concerning urban wastewater treatment, (OJ L, 2024/3019, 12.12.2024, ELI: http://data.europa.eu/eli/dir/2024/3019/oj).

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