Category: AM-NC

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Appointment of Director of Hong Kong International Legal Talents Training Office announced

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    Appointment of Director of Hong Kong International Legal Talents Training Office announced
    Appointment of Director of Hong Kong International Legal Talents Training Office announced
    ******************************************************************************************

         The Department of Justice announced today (October 8) that following an open recruitment exercise, Dr Yang Ling will take up the appointment as the Director of the Hong Kong International Legal Talents Training Office. Dr Yang will take up the appointment on November 1. The Secretary for Justice, Mr Paul Lam, SC, welcomed the appointment.     Commenting on Dr Yang’s appointment, Mr Lam said, “Dr Yang is a recognised scholar in international legal and dispute resolution with extensive management experience, including from her time at the Hong Kong International Arbitration Centre. I am confident that she will be able to lead the office to take forward the policy initiatives of developing Hong Kong as a capacity-building centre for legal talent in domestic, foreign and international law.”     The Hong Kong International Legal Talents Training Office has been set up to serve as the co-ordinating body to take forward the establishment of the Hong Kong International Legal Talents Training Academy set out in the 2023 Policy Address. The Office will also serve as the secretariat for the Hong Kong International Legal Talents Training Expert Committee, which has been established and formed by three advisory boards comprising eminent legal experts and scholars from renowned international, Mainland and local legal organisations, and universities as members. Members of the Expert Committee are appointed in their personal capacity, and the list of membership is set out in the Appendix.     Capitalising on Hong Kong’s bilingual common law system and international status, the Academy will regularly organise practical training courses, seminars, international exchange programmes and more to promote exchanges among talent in regions along the Belt and Road. It will also provide training for talent in the practice of foreign-related legal affairs for the country, and nurture legal talent conversant with international law, common law, civil law and the country’s legal system. This initiative will be conducive in consolidating Hong Kong’s position as an international legal and dispute resolution services centre in the Asia-Pacific region.     A brief biographical note of Dr Yang is set out below:     Dr Yang was admitted to the Chinese Bar in 2004 and currently holds the position of the Deputy Secretary-General and Head of China Relations of the Hong Kong International Arbitration Centre (HKIAC). She obtained an LL.M. in International Law in 2006 and a PhD in 2009 from Wuhan University. Prior to joining the HKIAC in 2018, she was an Associate Professor at the East China University of Political Science and Law where she taught international arbitration for more than eight years. In addition, she was a visiting scholar at the University of Aix-en-Provence Marseille III in 2008 and at Boston University School of Law in 2017. Dr Yang has published widely on issues of international dispute resolution and arbitration in China, and currently serves as Executive Editor-in-Chief for the Shanghai International Arbitration Review. She has also been appointed as an arbitrator.

     
    Ends/Tuesday, October 8, 2024Issued at HKT 11:30

    NNNN

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Funding and payments – MPTT

    Source: Tertiary Education Commission

    For the full requirements, see the MPTT funding conditions for the relevant year.
    Funding mechanism
    The Minister responsible for tertiary education issues the MPTT funding mechanism. The funding mechanism outlines the general form and essential components of the fund. It provides the mandate for the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) to allocate the funding and what the funding can be used for, and details how we administer the fund.
    Funding is agreed off-Plan via a funding confirmation letter.
    A TEO that receives MPTT funding is required to:

    The overall amount of MPTT funding available is set through the Government’s annual budget process. We determine the appropriate amount of MPTT funding for a TEO through an off-Plan assessment process.
    Funding allocation and payments
    Funding allocations, including any amendments, are available through the My Allocations and Payments app on Ngā Kete.
    MPTT funding is paid in accordance with your funding confirmation documentation, which specifies the amount of funding payable for consortium activities and/or fees top-ups, and/or brokerage services (as applicable).
    For the calculation of indicative allocations see the methodology from the relevant year. The most recent information is at the top.
    For more details regarding your specific allocation, please contact customerservice@tec.govt.nz or your Relationship Manager.
    Fees top-ups and brokerage services (first 50%)
    MPTT fees top-ups and brokerage services is paid in equal monthly instalments, except for the brokerage incentive success payment (second 50%).
    Brokerage success (second 50%)
    Brokerage success payments (second 50%) are made three times per year, based on the MPTT Actuals reports provisioned on Workspace 2.
    For the TEO to receive the success payment:

    the learner must achieve the successful outcome within 18 months of leaving the MPTT programme, and
    the TEO must report the successful outcome through Workspace 2 using the provisioned MPTT Actuals template.

    Both brokerage payments are made to the TEO that the learner first enrolled with.
    Consortium activities funding
    MPTT consortium activities funding is paid in equal monthly instalments.
    Learner Support Funding
    As of 30 June 2020, Learner Support Funding has replaced the MPTT Transitional Tools Grant. Learner Support Funding is allocated to each consortium. 
    Learners have access to the support funding when they need it, as assessed by the consortium.
    Consortia will receive the learner support funding via monthly instalments as part of their consortium funding.
    We determine the amount of funding that each consortium receives by using the number of learners the consortium is funded for. Any unspent funding will be recovered.
    Funding rates
    This page provides information on the MPTT funding rates.
    Interactions with Fees Free
    MPTT interaction with Fees Free
    If a learner enrolled in MPTT on or after 1 July 2020, their MPTT training does not count towards the use of a learner’s fees-free entitlement, or count as prior study. This means learners will not be disadvantaged by enrolling in MPTT initiatives.
    Learners must meet all other Fees Free eligibility criteria to qualify to receive Fees Free.
    See the Fees Free website for more information on eligibility requirements.
    Fees free for learners who completed an MPTT course that started after 1 July 2020
    If a learner completed an MPTT course that started on or after 1 July 2020, this study will not impact their eligibility for Fees Free tertiary education. If the learner has previously accessed Fees Free, and has remaining entitlement, they may be able to use this at a later date (should they meet the criteria applicable at the time of enrolment in further study).
    Credits obtained from MPTT courses that started on or after 1 July 2020 are not included as part of the prior study criteria 60 credits limit. 
    Fees Free for learners who completed an MPTT course prior to 1 July 2020
    Any MPTT study that started before 1 July 2020 will continue to be included in prior study calculations for fees-free eligibility.
    This table shows entitlement based on when a learner started MPTT

    MPTT course start/end date

    Outcome

    Starts on, or after, 1 January 2018, and ends prior to 30 June 2020

    This study will count towards the use of a learner’s fees-free entitlement.

    Starts on, or after, 1 January 2020 and continues after July 2020

    See table below.

    Starts on, or after, 1 July 2020

    The study will not count towards the use of a learner’s fees-free entitlement.

    This table shows the proportion of a course that does count towards a learner’s fees-free entitlement use.

    Course start date 

    Percentage of course post 1 July 

    Proportion of course that counts towards entitlement use

     1 January – 30 April 2020

     Less than 50%

     100%

     1 January – 30 April 2020

     50% to less than 75%

     50%

     1 January – 30 April 2020

     75% or more

     0%

     1 May – 30 June 2020

     33% or more

     0%

     1 May – 30 June 2020

     Less than 33%

     100%

    Funding wash-ups
    For the calculation of funding wash-ups see the methodology and technical specifications from the relevant year. The most recent information is at the top.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: RBI to conduct 3-day Variable Rate Reverse Repo (VRRR) auction under LAF on October 08, 2024

    Source: Reserve Bank of India

    On a review of the current and evolving liquidity conditions, it has been decided to conduct a Variable Rate Reverse Repo (VRRR) auction on October 08, 2024, Tuesday, as under:

    Sl. No. Notified Amount
    (₹ crore)
    Tenor
    (day)
    Window Timing Date of Reversal
    1 50,000 3 11:00 AM to 11:30 AM October 11, 2024
    (Friday)

    2. The operational guidelines for the auction as given in the Reserve Bank’s Press Release 2019-2020/1947 dated February 13, 2020 will remain the same.

    (Puneet Pancholy)  
    Chief General Manager

    Press Release: 2024-2025/1244

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Security: International appeal seeks to uncover identities of 46 deceased women

    Source: Interpol (news and events)

    8 October 2024

    LYON, France – Six European countries and INTERPOL have joined forces to solve 46 cold cases involving unidentified women whose remains were found across Europe years ago.

    Most of the women were either murdered or had died in suspicious or unexplained circumstances. Some of the cases date from decades ago.

    The initiative builds on the success of the Identify Me appeal launched in May 2023 to identify 22 deceased women, with some 1,800 tips received from the public. It has now been expanded to include additional cold cases from Belgium, Germany, and the Netherlands, as well as cases from new participating countries France, Italy, and Spain.

    The appeal highlights the importance of public involvement and international cooperation in solving cold cases. It provides hope that crucial leads can be generated, so more of these women can be identified and that justice is served if murder has been established.

    Identify Me has already seen noteworthy results after a case was solved after 31 years. Within two days of the launch of the first phase of Identify Me on 10 May 2023, relatives of Rita Roberts in the United Kingdom contacted the appeal hotline after they recognized their relative’s tattoo from news coverage.

    Rita Roberts was 31 when she left Cardiff, Wales in February 1992. Her family last heard from her in May 1992, and her unidentified body was discovered in Antwerp on 3 June 1992. An investigation determined that she was a victim of murder. That case remains part of the international effort to request information, identify and seek justice for these deceased women.

    Celebrity ambassadors

    The appeal features the strong support – including in the video below – of the following leading actresses, singers, and sports figures from the participating countries, to help raise awareness of the cold cases and encourage public involvement:

    Belgium: Veerle Baetens and Axelle Red

    France: Marie-José Pérec and Sarah Biasini

    Germany: Regina Halmich and Katrin Müller-Hohenstein

    Italy: Carolina Kostner and Alice Bellandi

    Netherlands: Carice van Houten and Stien den Hollander

    Spain: Luisa Martin and Mabel Lozano

    The cold cases

    Details on each case have been made available on INTERPOL’s Identify Me web page, depicting facial reconstructions of some of the women.

    There are also images of items such as jewellery and clothing which were discovered at the various land and water sites where the women’s remains were abandoned.

    These cases underscore the difficulties in identifying human remains, often found years ago in remote or isolated locations, as well as the challenge of tracing some of these deceased women back to their home countries.

    INTERPOL Secretary General Jürgen Stock said:

    “Our goal in the Identify Me campaign is simple. We want to identify the deceased women, bring answers to families, and deliver justice to the victims. But we can’t do it alone. That is why we are appealing to the public to join us in this effort. Their help could make the difference.

    “Even the smallest piece of information can be vital in helping solve these cold cases. Whether it is a memory, a tip, or a shared story, the smallest detail could help uncover the truth. The public could be the key to unlocking a name, a past, and in delivering long-overdue justice.”

    Role of forensics in cold cases

    The participating member countries and INTERPOL are working closely together in the appeal to leverage their analytical capabilities and advanced forensic methods, such as DNA profiling, facial reconstruction, and isotopic analysis. These techniques can provide significant clues about the victim’s origin, lifestyle, and cause of death. 

    Since 2021, INTERPOL has been providing investigators with a new global tool, the I-Familia database, which contains some 20,000 profiles from almost 80 countries. It has already solved cases by helping identify unknown bodies through international family DNA kinship matching.

    Such cases draw on the voluntary DNA contributions made by relatives of the missing, and underline the role played by the public and partners when it comes to identifying missing persons.

    INTERPOL Black Notices

    INTERPOL has published a Black Notice alert for each of the unknown women, to seek information on the unidentified bodies and determine the circumstances of their death.

    While these alerts are intended for the police only, Identify Me represents the first time INTERPOL has publicly released extracts from Black Notices.

    Black Notices can include information on the location where the body was found, biometric information (DNA, fingerprints, facial images), dental charts, physical descriptions of the body or clothing, and any other details relevant to identifying the deceased.

    What you can do

    Each of these deceased women has a story and relatives who deserve answers. We urge anyone with information to come forward and assist in this vital effort.

    Members of the public, particularly those who remember a missing friend or family member, are invited to consult the INTERPOL website and contact the relevant national police team should they have any information. Details can be found on http://www.interpol.int/IM

    For biological relatives who believe one of the women could be their missing loved one, national police can liaise with INTERPOL for international DNA comparison.

    Contact forms are at the bottom of each case summary, providing a crucial link for families seeking answers and justice.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Sharing the National Collection: Griffith gets decked out in dazzling jewels

    Source: Australian Ministers for Regional Development

    A stunning display of almost 40 pieces of Australian contemporary jewellery from the National Gallery will travel to Griffith Regional Art Gallery in regional NSW for two years as part of the Albanese Labor Government’s Sharing the National Collection program. 

    The pieces – including brooches, rings, necklaces, pendants, bracelets and more – were created by a variety of Australian artists from the 1970s to the 2010s.

    The display will complement a selection of works from the Griffith Regional Art Gallery’s own collection and will coincide with the opening of the National Contemporary Jewellery Awards on 8 November 2024.

    Minister for the Arts, Tony Burke, said the Sharing the National Collection program is already having a positive impact on regional galleries.

    “We’ve seen participating galleries report a serious uptick in visitors as a result of being able to display locally-significant pieces from the National Gallery, and I’m sure it will be the same for Griffith.

    “At any one time 98 per cent of the National Gallery’s collection is in storage. Thanks to this program these pieces are travelling the distance so you don’t have to – being seen and appreciated right across the country.”

    Senator for New South Wales Deborah O’Neill said, “The loan of these beautiful pieces will be the perfect counterpart to the Griffith Regional Art Gallery’s celebrated Jewellery Awards, I hope both the art and the awards will attract even more visitors to the gallery.”

    National Gallery Director Dr Nick Mitzevich said, “This partnership between the National Gallery and Griffith Regional Art Gallery has been made possible through the Sharing the National Collection initiative. 

    “It will bring a significant selection of jewellery to the Western Riverina, reflecting the venue and region’s important contemporary jewellery collection.”

    Raymond Wholohan, Griffith Regional Gallery Coordinator said “This is an incredible opportunity to elevate the Griffith Regional Gallery’s audience around our bi-annual contemporary Jewellery Prize which coincides with the showcasing of treasures from the National Gallery through the Sharing the National Collection initiative.

    “The works of arts that will come on loan reflect the Australian Jewellers represented in our own collection, providing students and artist in the region with a unique opportunity to learn about Australian contemporary jewellery practice in our own community.”

    Sharing the National Collection is part of Revive, Australia’s new national cultural policy, with $11.8m over four years to fund the costs of transporting, installing and insuring works in the national art collection so that they can be seen across the country for extended periods.

    The works can be viewed via the National Gallery’s website.

    Regional and suburban galleries can register their expressions of interest via this link. 

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Plan ahead for three nights partial road closures of SH6, Kawarau Gorge

    Source: New Zealand Transport Agency

    NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi (NZTA) is advising drivers to plan ahead for upcoming night closures on sections of SH6 through the Kawarau Gorge, between Cromwell and Frankton. 

    Three separate sections of SH6 will be closed over three nights, Monday to Wednesday/Thursday morning, for essential post-winter maintenance works at the times listed below: 

    Monday, 14 October  – Thursday morning 17 October: Road closed from 9pm to 5:30am. The road will be under a soft closure and traffic will be piloted through the site.  Expect delays of up to half an hour, says Peter Standring, Maintenance Contract Manager for NZTA in Central Otago.

    Because the Kawarau Gorge is sensitive to weather conditions, work may be postponed at short notice to keep workers safe, says Mr Standring.   

    NZTA is urging drivers to plan their journeys around the closures, and if possible to postpone travel during the closure times. 

    Please check the NZTA on-line Journey Planner at http://www.journeys.nzta.govt.nz(external link) for the latest up to date road conditions.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Spring is sprung, the grass is riz… I wonder where those roadworks is?*

    Source: New Zealand Transport Agency

    Spring is upon us, and so too is the summer roadworks programme on Southland’s state highways.

    “Two road reconstructions are in the final stages of being completed at Wallacetown and Lowther, and another is underway on SH6 near Centre Bush.  We appreciate the patience of road users while we have had traffic management at these sites,” says Justin Reid, Maintenance Contract Manager for NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi (NZTA) in Southland. “Two more reconstruction sites near Mossburn and another near Balfour will also be underway in the next few weeks.” 

    “Our Highways South team will be reconstructing and resurfacing highways from now until the end of March as daylight hours increase, and the warmer temperatures and dry air help new seals stick as intended to the road surface,” he says.  “Major construction and resurfacing work are not possible in Southland outside of this time due to our cooler temperatures.”

    Oreti highway rehabilitation currently under construction.

    “We know that road works can be disruptive for all road users and often residents too, but these are critical reconstruction projects which will improve everyone’s journeys long-term.” 

    • The first road rehabilitation projects began mid-September near Wallacetown, in Lowther and early October Centre Bush. 
    • There is asphalting planned for inner-city Invercargill in the New Year also, with details being finalised.
    • All work is funded through the State Highway Maintenance and Pothole Prevention activity classes in the National Land Transport Programme (NLTP).

    Any road closures required for works will be notified closer to the time.

    The compendium of Southland road rehabilitation projects

    Before the end of the season in March, Highways South is aiming to complete 11 projects:

    • SH1 Bluff highway at Kekeno Place
    • SH6 Dipton-Winton highway at Centre Bush
    • SH6 Five Rivers-Lumsden highway south of Five Rivers
    • SH6 Athol-Five Rivers highway at Jollies Hill
    • SH94 Mossburn-Lumsden highway east of Mossburn township
    • SH94 Te Anau-Mossburn highway west of Mossburn
    • SH94 Lumsden-Riversdale highway west of Balfour
    • SH96 Glencoe highway at Brydone-Glencoe Road
    • SH99 at Lorneville overbridge
    • SH99 Riverton Wallacetown highway west of Wallacetown
    • SH99 Main Road Tuatapere at Jenkins Road.

    “NZTA and our Highways South crews acknowledge that this work will cause disruption and appreciates the patience of our community,” says Mr Reid.   “Give them a wave and keep the mood on the highways relaxed this summer.”

    If there are concerns or questions around these works, road users can call 03 211 1561 to speak with the Highways South team, or sign up for email updates regarding interruptions and possible delays on Southland highways via our Facebook page:

    wwe.facebook.com/HighwaysSouthNZ(external link)

    *(Apologies to the poet, be it Anon, Ogden Nash, or ee cummings)

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: New local road layout between Bethlehem and Tauriko – Takitimu North Link 

    Source: New Zealand Transport Agency

    There is now a new road layout between Bethlehem and Tauriko as part of the Takitimu North Link project.  

    Finishing the local roads in this area makes way for the 4-lane expressway to be built underneath.  

    This big job has seen the relocation of underground cables and pipes, installation of 1660m of subsoil drains, 15,000 cubic metres of dirt moved, construction of the new 100m long bridge and associated tie-in works, as well as construction of the new road and roundabout at St Andrews Drive, and the relocation of Harrison and Cambridge roads. 

    A massive 445 truck and trailer loads of pavement aggregates and over 50,000 litres of bitumen were delivered to site.  

    “Working with our partners Tauranga City Council we have been able to improve the Cambridge/Moffat roads intersection, which was previously a tricky spot for road users. Now there are better sight lines and a safer intersection with left and right turning lanes,” says NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi Senior Manager Project Services, Jo Wilton. 

    Works in the area have also allowed for future development of the Smiths Farm area, with a 25m bridge under construction and a fourth leg from St Andrews Drive roundabout, which will provide access. 

    “Completing extensive work in this area is another great step forward for the project. We’re grateful to our neighbours and the surrounding community for their support and patience as we’ve moved through the different phases. We also acknowledge the mahi of local hapū, who have carried out kaitiaki responsibilities throughout, and played an important role,” Ms Wilton says. 

    There are a couple of finishing touches to do in the coming week as the final chip beds in, including final line-marking. 

    Crews expect to break through the ground underneath Cambridge Road overbridge, as part of the 2024/25 earthworks programme soon, to link the new road sections on either side of Moffatt Road. 

    The project has enjoyed a productive winter earthworks season shifting 120,000 cubic metres of material in the cooler months of the year.  

    “We are now preparing for the upcoming earthworks season with a target of shifting a further 600,000 cubic metres of material over the warmer months,” says Ms Wilton. 

    Major work sites are at SH2/Fifteenth Ave, State Highway 29/Takitimu Drive Toll Road, and Minden Road, Te Puna. These sites will have traffic management in place and changes to road layout while works are underway.  

    Notes to editor 

    Service relocations on Cambridge Road:   

    • 1660m of watermain 
    • 1900m of communication 
    • 2130m of power 
    • 155m of sewer main  

    Takitimu North Link Stage 1 will connect Tauranga and Te Puna with a new 4-lane expressway. This Road of National Significance contributes to building a transport network that enables people and freight to move around efficiently, quickly, and safely.   

    Contractors Fulton Hogan/HEB Joint Venture are designing and constructing the project, with BBO the principal’s advisor. The design of Takitimu North Link is being delivered by Beca, with Holmes Consultancy Limited Partnership as a subconsultant. 

    Read more here:

    Cambridge Road

    The intersection at Cambridge/Moffat roads, to St Andrews Drive roundabout, opened 7 October 2024.

    The connection from St Andrews Drive roundabout to Cambridge/Moffat roads opened 7 October 2024, the new bridge at Cambridge Road is pictured in the background – earthworks are due to break through underneath this summer.  

    Pavements crew make the finishing touches to the local roads between Bethlehem and Tauriko, as part of works on the Takitimu North Link project. 

    Artist impression – bridge at Cambridge Road, Takitimu North Link.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Here comes the Summer Road Renewals

    Source: New Zealand Transport Agency

    The Bay of Plenty will benefit from its share of more than $2 billion in funding for nationwide pothole prevention and maintenance over the next 3 years, with a significant volume of road renewals planned for the region.

    This funding boost enables NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi (NZTA) to focus on road rebuilding and improving the overall network condition through more intensive treatments and increasing the road surface quality.

    Approximately 110 lane kilometres in the Bay of Plenty will either be rebuilt or resealed over coming summers, with a significant portion of this planned to take place over the next 6 months.

    “The Bay of Plenty network is heavily used every day by a variety of road users, including freight operators, commuters, and tourists,” says Sandra King, NZTA’s Bay of Plenty System Manager.

    “To complete the volume of road renewals needed, people can expect disruption across the network. Road rebuilding can often involve replacing all or most of the structural road layers, it’s intensive work with some sections under construction for extended periods of time.

    “We’re looking at how we can minimise disruption by thinking differently and challenging ourselves and our suppliers to be as efficient and effective as possible. This includes using methods such as road closures to allow suppliers to get in and complete work in a quicker and safer way, and with fewer road cones,” Ms King explains.

    While there will be various maintenance worksites across the Bay of Plenty this summer, there is a focus on State Highway 29 (SH29), specifically near Hanga Road, the Kaimai Café and the Kaimai School. To minimise impacts to traffic, this work will be done at night and starts this month.

    Some renewal sites have kicked off early, crews are making the most of the weather now with 2 worksites on State Highway 2 (SH2) between Paengaroa and Ōtamarākau already halfway through construction.

    As much work as possible will be completed before Christmas, then there will be a short break over the holiday period. Workers will then get back into it until autumn sets in.

    “With so much work taking place it is inevitable road users will come across worksites and traffic management. When you see roadworkers out on the road, travel safely through their worksites, follow signage and any instructions you receive, and give them a wave to say thanks for their tremendous work,” says Ms King.

    The sites that will be the most disruptive over the summer months are indicated on the maps  attached.

    This work is funded through the State Highway Maintenance and Pothole Prevention activity classes in the National Land Transport Programme (NLTP).

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Italy

    Source: Australia Safe Travel Advisories

    We’ve reviewed our travel advice for Italy and continue to advise exercise normal safety precautions. From November, the new European Entry/Exit System will start for all non-EU nationals, including Australians, travelling in or out of the Schengen Area, which includes Italy (see ‘Travel’).

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-Evening Report: Productivity is often mistaken for wages. What does it really mean? How does it work?

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By David Peetz, Laurie Carmichael Distinguished Research Fellow at the Centre for Future Work, and Professor Emeritus, Griffith Business School, Griffith University

    Alexey_Rezvykh/Shutterstock

    Australia’s productivity growth has reverted to the same stagnant pattern as before the pandemic, according to the Productivity Commission’s latest quarterly report.

    Productivity is complex and often misunderstood in media and policy debates. So before we read too much into this latest data, here are six key things to understand about productivity.

    1. It’s about quantities, not costs

    Productivity “measures the rate at which output of goods and services are produced per unit of input”. So it’s about how many workers does it take to make how many widgets?

    Most Australian workplace managers don’t know how to measure productivity correctly.

    If someone says “higher wages mean lower productivity”, they don’t know what they’re talking about. Wages aren’t part of the productivity equation. People often cite “productivity” as a reason for a policy they like because they can’t say “we like higher profits”.

    In fact, high wages can encourage firms to introduce new technology that improves productivity. If labour becomes more expensive, it may be more profitable for firms to invest in labour-saving technology.

    But lower productivity isn’t always a bad thing. Sometimes higher selling prices can lower productivity. It seems odd, but works like this: if prices for commodities such as iron ore or coal are high, it becomes profitable for mining companies to dig through more rock to get to it.

    This takes more time. But it’s now worth extracting these small quantities, because they’re so valuable. For this reason, with high commodity prices, mining labour productivity fell by 13% between 2019-20 and 2022-23. Mining productivity had the largest negative impact on national productivity growth in 2022-23.

    2. Productivity is directed by management, not workers

    The biggest single factor that shapes productivity is technology. Who’s responsible for what technology a business introduces? Management. Workers often don’t have much of a say.

    OECD research suggests new technology such as artificial intelligence (AI) meets lower resistance from employees when they are consulted over its introduction. That’s because new technology makes their firms more competitive and they want to keep their jobs.

    Not surprisingly, there’s lots of research showing management that engages and consults workers gets greater output.

    Output will also be better with an educated and skilled workforce. If people can do more things with their brains, they’ll be more productive.

    3. Measuring productivity is dodgier the more complex it gets

    Measuring labour productivity – output per unit of labour input – is fairly straightforward if you’ve got a single output that is sold in a free market, and you’re looking at a single input (labour). It’s not hard to measure, or describe, the number of cars produced per worker in a week.

    It gets very tricky when you’re looking at multi-factor productivity (output per unit of, say, labour-and-capital input). Economists can’t even describe the denominator. (What even is a unit of “labour-and-capital”?) So they express what they measure as an index (giving it a value of 100 in some base year). All sorts of bold assumptions get made.

    Estimates are highly creative. In its report, the Productivity Commission looked at revisions to quarterly growth figures and found productivity estimates are “constantly being revised”.

    On almost a third of occasions, initial estimates are out by 0.5 percentage points or more. When your estimate is that productivity increased by 0.5% – the number for the year to this June quarter – the potential for error is huge.

    Even more creative assumptions are made when you try to measure productivity in the public sector, when the market is not the aim.

    Productivity is higher in classrooms when there are fewer teachers per student. At least, the bean-counters will tell you that, but the students will tell you the opposite.

    So you should be very wary when someone says the “productivity challenge is […] greater and more pressing in the non-market sector”, when the meaning is so contested.

    4. It is best measured over long periods

    Productivity growth is so erratic, that you can tell very little from one quarter’s figures. “Revise, revise, revise again”, as the PC report said.

    Often the best thing to do, as the Australian Bureau of Statistics recognised long ago is to average it over the whole of a “growth cycle”, that is, between one peak of growth and the next.

    Trouble is, growth cycles vary in length, and the end point is not easy to pick when it happens, only later.



    Growth averaged over a long period is a lot more meaningful than growth measured over a short period. At least the Productivity Commission showed five-year averages alongside it’s latest quarterly estimates. But chances are your start date will be at a different stage in the growth cycle to your end date, so it’s not that good a measure.

    5. Productivity is falling here and overseas

    In Australia, productivity growth has been on a long-term decline since the 1960s, with a brief, unsustained upturn in the mid 1990s.

    That pattern gives pause for thought: if big reforms to competition policy, industrial relations and wage fixing were aimed at improving productivity growth, why was that unsustainable, and why did it then continue to decline? It pays to remember that a lot of reforms people advocate in the name of productivity growth have quite different aims and effects anyway.

    Internationally, the picture is not much different.

    Productivity growth across industrialised countries has unevenly but gradually declined since the 1950s and 1960s. The world-wide adoption of what were often called neoliberal reforms from the 1980s failed to improve productivity growth.

    6. Productivity growth once drove living standards. Not any more

    In theory, higher labour productivity enables higher living standards. In practice, that is driven by the ability of workers to negotiate for higher wages.



    It depends on how you measure it and what years you focus on, but from at least the early 2010s, productivity growth was much faster than hourly compensation per employee.

    Again, it’s not just Australia. The OECD calls this the “decoupling” of wages and productivity.

    Just because something can increase potential earnings growth, it does not follow that it will.

    As a university employee and since then, David Peetz has undertaken research over many years with occasional financial support from governments from both sides of politics, employers and unions. He has been and is involved in several Australian Research Council-funded and approved projects, some of which included contributions from an employer body, a superannuation fund, and two unions. The projects do not concern the subject matter of this article.

    ref. Productivity is often mistaken for wages. What does it really mean? How does it work? – https://theconversation.com/productivity-is-often-mistaken-for-wages-what-does-it-really-mean-how-does-it-work-240113

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Secretary-General of ASEAN participates in the 28th ASEAN Political-Security Community Council Meeting

    Source: ASEAN

    Secretary-General of ASEAN, Dr. Kao Kim Hourn, today participated in the 28th ASEAN Political-Security Community (APSC) Council Meeting in Vientiane, Lao PDR. The APSC Council took stock of the progress of the work of APSC sectoral bodies and reviewed the implementation of the APSC Blueprint 2025 in preparations for the 44th and 45th ASEAN Summits and Related Summits to be convened in Vientiane, Lao PDR, later this week.

    The post Secretary-General of ASEAN participates in the 28th ASEAN Political-Security Community Council Meeting appeared first on ASEAN Main Portal.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Paraguay achieves inter-institutional commitment to risk management in the Jesuit Guarani Missions

    Source: UNESCO World Heritage Centre

    Presentation events were held to present the results of the project with technical assistance from UNESCO and financed by the Netherlands Funds-in-Trust.

    Asunción hosted on 6 August the presentation of the initial results of the project ‘Design and implementation of the Risk Management Plan for the Jesuit Missions of Santísima Trinidad de Paraná and Jesús de Tavarangüe, World Heritage site in Paraguay’, financed by the Netherlands Funds-in-Trust and implemented by the National Secretariat of Tourism-SENATUR and UNESCO Montevideo, in coordination with the Latin America and Caribbean Unit of the UNESCO World Heritage Centre. 

    The participation of the National Secretariat of Culture and other national and local stakeholders in this process was fundamental in the framework of the technical assistance project for the elaboration of a risk management plan for the Jesuit Missions of Santísima Trinidad de Paraná and Jesús de Tavarangüe, a site included in the World Heritage List since 1993. 

    ‘This document is intended to be a National Risk Plan due to the responsibility that all Paraguayans have towards World Heritage and the different risks that have been identified and those that will continue to be added,’ said Paraguay’s Minister of Tourism, Angie Duarte

    The work carried out for the preparation of the risk management plan document through various workshops and training sessions lays the foundations for a long-term inter-institutional commitment between SENATUR and the National Secretariat of Culture-SNC, as well as coordination with local and departmental governments and other key institutions of the central administration, such as the Ministry of Environment and Sustainable Development, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, National Emergency Secretariat, National Institute of Indigenous People, Armed Forces, National Police, INTERPOL Paraguay, among others. 

    This cooperation will continue in the future to further develop risk prevention and risk management protocols that will prevent or reduce the negative effects of potential disasters on the World Heritage property and thus protect its outstanding universal value. 

    In this sense, the Minister of Culture, Adriana Ortiz underlined the relevance of the project implemented in view of the need to ‘continuously promote and coordinate this type of action to preserve this world heritage that distinguishes us as unique’.

    Subsequently, on 8 August, two presentations of the results of the project were held in the Mission of Jesus and the Mission of Trinidad, respectively, in the presence of national authorities from SENATUR, local authorities and officials from the Missions, as well as members of local communities, civil society, universities and the Church. 

    During the event, a message was delivered by Elma Stoffelen, Head of Policy, Press and Culture of the Netherlands Representation in Buenos Aires, who stressed: ‘The identification and mitigation of risks is key to the management of world heritage and for this reason we are grateful for the cooperation we have with the State of Paraguay for the implementation of this project and for the participation of other state agencies’. 

    Alcira Sandoval Ruiz, Culture Specialist at UNESCO’s Regional Office in Montevideo, said that ‘with this project, Paraguay is fulfilling one more of the requirements established for the proper conservation of the site’ and thanked the national consultants and the international consultant in charge of the implementation of the plan in coordination with the counterparts. 

    The project has also enabled the preparation of a carrying capacity study at the World Heritage site, as well as a climate change impact study, relevant documents that complement the risk management plan and align with the provisions of the 2014-2024 Action Plan for World Heritage in the Latin America and Caribbean Region and the Policy Document on Climate Action for World Heritage

    A second stage is planned, in which working groups will be held to elaborate protocols for action and responsibilities with the partners who have participated in the process. 

    The project’s consulting team was made up of Francisco Vidargas, Bettina Bray and Edgar García.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Marine Pollution Incident Resilience workshop begins in Honiara

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    It brings together key stakeholders to enhance local and regional collaboration, communication and strengthen environmental response capabilities.

    Group photo with the Supervising Minister of Environment for Solomon Islands, Hon. Rexon Ramofafia and British High Commissioner to Solomon Islands H.E Thomas Coward.

    A four-day workshop on “Strengthening Marine Pollution Incident Resilience in the Pacific begins in Honiara, Solomon Islands today.

    It is funded by the Ocean Country Partnership Programme (OCPP) an Official Development Assistance (ODA) programme under the UK’s Blue Planet Fund, in collaboration with the Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environment Programme (SPREP).

    The objective is to bring together key stakeholders to enhance local and regional collaboration, communication and strengthen environmental response capabilities for marine pollution emergency incidents in the Pacific.

    It hopes to increase awareness and education around the risks and threats of pollution from marine activities in the Pacific (including Potentially Polluting Wrecks) by sharing global best practice, guidance, and knowledge.

    Other workshop outcomes include enhancing knowledge and bridge gaps in contingency planning to respond to a marine incident and increase the capacity for local stakeholders to engage, assess and monitor potentially polluting wrecks.

    Exploring actions to empower communities to further value and protect the marine environment and ensure participation in future actions on wrecks and marine pollution emergency response also forms part of the workshop outcomes.

    It is also expected to enhance communication and collaboration between key stakeholders in the Pacific.

    Delivered by OCPP, SPREP and Major Projects Foundation with support from the British High Commission in Honiara, a range of topics will be discussed.

    They include from national contingency planning, roles and responsibilities, oil 7 chemical fate and transport modelling, vessel traffic analysis, risks and impacts from spills and potentially polluting wrecks and a table top exercise are among the various topics that will be covered.

    PacPlan Project Officer, Paul Irving said:

    SPREP is very proud to partner and work with the OCPP to assist Solomon Islands and other Pacific Island nations build marine pollution response preparedness and capability. The Pacific Marine Oil Pollution Contingency Plan (PacPlan) strongly encourages multilateral practical support like this workshop. Participants will leave better informed, and more capable to lead preparedness, response and recovery, should a marine emergency occur.

    Held from 8 to 11 October at the Nahona conference, Heritage Park Hotel, the workshop will feature comprehensive discussions, knowledge sharing sessions, presentations and exercises.

    Participants will be invited to exchange knowledge and ideas during the workshop exercises to encourage effective collaboration between stakeholders, the sharing of data, expertise and tools to bring together experiences, knowledge and expertise to learn together on how to better prepare for marine pollution incidents in the region.

    Government, non-government, industry and academia are expected to attend including those who are involved in marine pollution emergency response or have an interest in the subject.

    Delegates from Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, Fiji, Kiribati, Australia, Samoa and the United States are expected to attend the four days’ workshop in the capital.

    Updates to this page

    Published 8 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Legal training office director named

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    The Department of Justice announced today that Yang Ling will take up the appointment as Director of the Hong Kong International Legal Talents Training Office with effect from November 1.

    Secretary for Justice Paul Lam welcomed Dr Yang’s appointment, which was made following an open recruitment exercise, noting that she is a recognised scholar in international legal and dispute resolution with extensive management experience, including her time at the Hong Kong International Arbitration Centre.

    “She will be able to lead the office to take forward the policy initiatives of developing Hong Kong as a capacity-building centre for legal talent in domestic, foreign and international law,” he added.

    The International Legal Talents Training Office has been set up to serve as the co-ordinating body to take forward the establishment of the Hong Kong International Legal Talents Training Academy set out in the 2023 Policy Address.

    The office will also serve as the secretariat for the Hong Kong International Legal Talents Training Expert Committee, which was formed by three advisory boards comprising eminent legal experts and scholars from renowned international, Mainland and local legal organisations, and universities as members.

    Capitalising on Hong Kong’s bilingual common law system and international status, the academy will regularly organise training courses, seminars, international exchange programmes and more to promote exchanges among talent in regions along the Belt & Road.

    It will also provide training for talent in the practice of foreign-related legal affairs for the country, and nurture legal talent conversant with international law, common law, civil law and the country’s legal system.

    Dr Yang was admitted to the Chinese Bar in 2004 and currently holds the position of Deputy Secretary-General and Head of China Relations of the Hong Kong International Arbitration Centre (HKIAC).

    Prior to joining the HKIAC in 2018, Dr Yang was Associate Professor at the East China University of Political Science & Law where she taught international arbitration. She was also a visiting scholar at the University of Aix-en-Provence Marseille III in 2008 and at Boston University School of Law in 2017.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-Evening Report: 700 million plastic bottles: we worked out how much microplastic is in Queensland’s Moreton Bay

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Elvis Okoffo, PhD candidate in Environmental Science, The University of Queensland

    M-Productions/Shutterstock

    When it rains heavily, plastic waste is washed off our streets into rivers, flowing out to the ocean. Most plastic is trapped in estuaries and coastal ecosystems, with a small fraction ending up offshore in the high seas.

    In the coastal ocean, waves and tides break down plastic waste into smaller and smaller bits. These micro and nanoplastics linger in the environment indefinitely, impacting the health of marine creatures from microorganisms all the way up to seabirds and whales, which mistake them for food.

    When we look at the scale of the problem of microplastics (smaller than 5mm) and nanoplastics (defined as 1 micrometer or less), we find something alarming. Our new research shows the shallow embayment of Moreton Bay, off Brisbane in Southeast Queensland now has roughly 7,000 tonnes of accumulated microplastics, the same as 700 million half-litre plastic bottles.

    This bay accumulates plastics fast, as the Brisbane River funnels the city’s waste into it, along with several other urban rivers. The research hasn’t yet been done, but we would expect similar rates of microplastics in Melbourne’s Port Phillip Bay and Sydney Harbour.

    Our research shows how much plastic waste from a big city makes it into its oceans.

    Brisbane’s Moreton Bay has mangroves and seagrass meadows as well as a port and many urban rivers.
    Ecopix/Shutterstock

    Plastic buildup in Moreton Bay

    What volume of microplastics does a large city accumulate offshore? It’s hard to measure this for cities built on open coastlines. That’s because sediments and microplastics are rapidly washed away from the original source by waves and currents.

    But Moreton Bay is different. The large sand islands, Moreton (Mugulpin) and North Stradbroke (Minjerribah) Islands largely protect the bay from the open ocean. This is why the bay is better described as an enclosed embayment. These restricted bays act as a trap for sediments and pollutants, as waves and currents have limited ability to wash them out. These bays make it possible to accurately measure a city’s microplastic build-up.

    The bay supports a range of marine habitats from mangroves, seagrass and coral reefs, as well as an internationally recognised wetland for migrating seabirds. Dugong and turtles have long grazed the seagrass in Moreton Bay’s shallow protected waters, while dolphins and whales are also present. But microplastic buildup may threaten their existence.

    Most types of plastic are denser than water, which means most microplastics in coastal seas will eventually sink to the seafloor and accumulate in sediment. Mangroves and seagrass ecosystems are particularly good at trapping sediment, which means they trap more microplastics.

    We wanted to determine whether Moreton Bay’s varying ecosystems had accumulated different amounts of plastics in the sediment.

    We measured the plastic stored in 50 samples of surface sediment (the top 10cm) from a range of different ecosystems across Moreton Bay, including mangroves, seagrass meadows and mud from the main tidal channels.

    The result? Microplastics were present in all our samples, but their concentrations varied hugely. We found no clear pattern in how plastics had built up. This suggests plastics were entering the bay from many sources.

    We tested for seven common plastics: polycarbonate (PC), polyethylene (PE), polyethylene terephthalate (PET), poly (methyl methacrylate) (PMMA), polypropylene (PP), polystyrene (PS), and polyvinyl chloride (PVC).

    Of these, the most abundant microplastic was polyethylene (PE). This plastic is widely used for single-use plastic items such as chip packets, plastic bags and plastic bottles. It’s the most commonly produced and used plastic in Australia and globally.

    In total, we estimate the bay now holds about 7,000 tonnes of microplastic in its surface sediments.

    In our follow-up paper we explored how rapidly these plastics had built up over time. We took two sediment cores from the central part of the bay, where sediment is accumulating. Cores like this act as an archive of sediment and environmental changes over time.

    The trend was clear. Before the 1970s, there were no microplastics in Moreton Bay. They began appearing over the next three decades. But from the early 2000s onwards, the rate rose exponentially. This is in line with the soaring rate of plastic production and use globally. Our analysis shows a direct link between microplastic concentration and population growth in Southeast Queensland.

    The challenge of measuring microplastics

    To date, we have had limited knowledge of how much plastic is piling up on shallow ocean floors. This is because measuring microplastics is challenging. Traditionally, we’ve used observation by microscope and a technique called absorption spectroscopy, in which we shine infrared light on samples to determine what it’s made up of. But these methods are time-consuming and can only spot plastic particles larger than 20 micrometres, meaning nanoplastics weren’t being measured.

    Our research team has been working to get better estimates of microplastic and nanoplastic using a different technique: pyrolysis-gas chromatography mass spectrometry. Here, a sample is dissolved in a solvent and then heated until it vaporises. Once in vapour form, we can determine the concentration of plastic and what types of plastics are present.

    This method can be used to estimate how much plastic pollution is present in everything from water to seafood to biosolids and wastewater.

    What’s next?

    It’s very likely microplastics are building up rapidly in other restricted bays and harbours near large cities, both in Australia and globally.

    While we might think microplastics are safe once buried in sediment, they can be consumed by organisms that live in the sediments. Currents, tides and storms can also wash them out again, where marine creatures can eat them.

    This is not a problem that will solve itself. We’ll need clear management strategies and policies to cut plastic consumption and improve waste disposal. Doing nothing means microplastics will keep building up, and up, and up.

    Elvis Okoffo receives funding from the Goodman Foundation, The Australian Academy of Science and The Australian Research Council (ARC) Training Centre for Hyphenated Analytical Separation Technologies (HyTECH).

    Alistair Grinham has received funding from state and federal government, industry and NGOs. He has an honorary role at the University and works for environmental monitoring company Fluvio.

    Ben Tscharke receives funding from the Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission and the Australian Research Council.

    Helen Bostock receives funding from the Australian Research Council.

    Kevin Thomas receives funding from the Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission, Australian Research Council, Goodman Foundation, Minderoo Foundation, National Health and Medical, Research Council, Queensland Corrective Services, Queensland Health and Research Council of Norway.

    ref. 700 million plastic bottles: we worked out how much microplastic is in Queensland’s Moreton Bay – https://theconversation.com/700-million-plastic-bottles-we-worked-out-how-much-microplastic-is-in-queenslands-moreton-bay-238892

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: Australia will protect a vast swathe of the Southern Ocean, but squanders the chance to show global leadership

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Andrew J Constable, Adviser, Antarctica and Marine Systems, Science & Policy, University of Tasmania

    The Albanese government has today declared stronger protections for the waters around Heard Island and McDonald Islands, one of Australia’s wildest, most remote areas. The marine park surrounding the islands will be extended by 310,000 square kilometres, quadrupling its size.

    Announcing the decision, Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek said Heard Island and McDonald Islands – about 4,000 kilometres southwest of Perth – are a “unique and extraordinary part of our planet. We are doing everything we can to protect it.”

    But the announcement, while welcome, is a missed opportunity on several fronts.

    Important areas around the islands remain unprotected, despite a wealth of scientific evidence pointing to the need for safeguards. On this measure, the government could have done far more to protect this unique wildlife haven.

    A special place

    Heard Island and McDonald Islands are a crucial sanctuary for marine life in the Southern Ocean. The land and surrounding waters support a food chain ranging from tiny plankton to fish, invertebrates, seabirds and marine mammals such as elephant seals and sperm whales.

    Both the marine and land environments of the islands are globally recognised for their ecological significance, and include species not found elsewhere in Australia.

    In 2002, a marine reserve was declared over the islands and parts of the surrounding waters. The reserve was extended in 2014.

    The expansion announced today means most waters around the islands have protection. The new safeguards primarily extend to foraging areas for seals, penguins and flying birds such as albatrosses.

    The expansion covers some deep water areas but excludes important deeper water locations including underwater canyons and seamounts, and a feature known as Williams Ridge.

    This is an important oversight that compromises the strength of the expanded protections.

    The protections do not extend to an important undersea feature known as William’s Ridge.

    The science is clear

    In March this year, my colleagues and I released a report showing existing protections for Heard Island and McDonald Islands were no longer adequate and should urgently be expanded.

    The report drew on more than two decades’ of research and new scientific understanding. In particular, we found climate change was warming the waters around the islands, posing risks to marine life such as the mackerel icefish.

    The icefish lives in shallow water and is an important food source for other animals. To maintain the islands’ biodiversity as the climate warms, we recommended extending the existing marine reserve to cover more shallow waters in the east, and protecting currently unprotected deeper waters.

    Today’s announcement does not protect these deeper waters. This is a major shortcoming. Our report showed deeper water areas to the east of Heard Island are significant to the region’s biodiversity, and to its ability to cope with warmer seas under climate change.

    The government says its decision came after extensive consultation with a range of parties – including the fishing industry and conservation groups.

    Heard Island and McDonald Islands host valuable fisheries for Patagonian toothfish and mackerel icefish. The footprint of fishing operations has expanded over the past 30 years.

    The fishery for mackerel icefish uses a range of methods including bottom trawling. This is the only fishery in the Southern Ocean to use bottom trawling methods. This is a damaging fishing technique that uses towed nets to catch fish and other marine species on or near the seabed.




    Read more:
    These extraordinary Australian islands are teeming with life – and we must protect them before it’s too late


    Deeper water areas to the east of Heard Island are significant to the region’s biodiversity.
    Wikimedia/Tristannew, CC BY

    A range of non-target fish species, especially skates, are accidentally caught by the fisheries around Heard Island and McDonald Islands. Skates are a vulnerable species because they are slow to grow and mature. Indicators suggest skate bycatch is too high.

    The new measures should have prevented fishing in some deeper waters to reduce pressure on this and other vulnerable species. In particular, bottom trawling should have been prohibited.

    As climate change worsens and fishing activity continues, the area must be managed to take account of these dual pressures. The management should also maximise the resilience of species imperilled by climate change, such as mackerel icefish – a cold-adapted species not found anywhere else in Australia’s marine zone.

    My colleagues and I proposed deep-sea protections over about 30% of the existing fishing grounds around Heard Island and McDonald Islands. Catch limits would not have been adjusted, and the fisheries were not likely to have been substantially affected.

    The decision to allow fishing, including bottom-trawling, in some areas of high conservation value means other measures will be needed to protect marine life in deep areas under pressure from climate change.

    An opportunity missed

    Today’s announcement follows a decision by the government last year to triple the size of Macquarie Island Marine Park. The move was largely in keeping with the science, and both protected important biodiversity regions and provided for fisheries.

    The protection awarded to Heard Island and McDonald Islands falls short of this standard. It fails to protect vulnerable marine species from climate change and fishing, and squanders a chance for Australia to show international leadership.

    Andrew J Constable received part funding from Pew Charitable Trusts and Australian Marine Conservation Society to produce the independent report on “Understanding the marine ecosystems surrounding Heard Island and McDonald Islands (HIMI) and their conservation status”.

    ref. Australia will protect a vast swathe of the Southern Ocean, but squanders the chance to show global leadership – https://theconversation.com/australia-will-protect-a-vast-swathe-of-the-southern-ocean-but-squanders-the-chance-to-show-global-leadership-240789

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Federal Court orders Qantas to pay $100m in penalties for misleading consumers

    Source: Australian Competition and Consumer Commission

    Scam warning: The ACCC is aware that scammers have been calling people, falsely claiming to help them get payments. They may be using this media release about Qantas refunds to convince you that it is real.

    If you receive a call from anyone offering to help you with a payment or refund, hang up immediately. Never give personal information to anyone calling you out of the blue, never give access to your computer or bank account and never click on a link in a text message or open an attachment in an email if you were not expecting the text or email. If you have given information to a scammer or lost money, contact your bank immediately. Report scams to Scamwatch.

    Qantas, Australia’s largest airline, has today been ordered by the Federal Court to pay $100 million in penalties for misleading consumers by offering and selling tickets for flights it had already decided to cancel, and by failing to promptly tell existing ticketholders of its decision, in a case brought by the ACCC.

    These penalties were imposed after Qantas admitted that it had contravened the Australian Consumer Law (ACL) and agreed to make joint submissions with the ACCC to the Court that penalties of $100 million were appropriate to deter Qantas and other businesses from breaching the ACL in the future, while recognising Qantas’ cooperation in resolving the proceedings at an early stage.

    “This is a substantial penalty, which sets a strong signal to all businesses, big or small, that they will face serious consequences if they mislead their customers,” ACCC Chair Gina Cass-Gottlieb said.

    In addition to these penalties, on 5 May 2024 Qantas gave an undertaking to the ACCC that it would pay about $20 million to consumers who purchased tickets on flights that Qantas had already decided to cancel, or in some cases who were re-accommodated on those flights after their original flights were cancelled. These payments are on top of any remedies these consumers already received from Qantas, such as alternative flights or refunds. Consumers are encouraged to follow the steps outlined below to check if they are eligible for a payment. 

    “We all know the inconvenience of cancelled flights. When this happens, consumers need to know about the cancellation as soon as possible, so they can work out alternative arrangements which suit them.”

    “Up to about 880,000 consumers were affected by Qantas’ conduct. People had made plans, and may have spent money on other related purchases, relying on the fact that the flight would depart as advertised. And the delay in notifying them of the cancellation may have made it more stressful and costly to make alternative arrangements,” Ms Cass-Gottlieb said.

    Qantas knew of the issues and benefited from misleading consumers

    Qantas admitted that senior managers responsible for different aspects of Qantas’ systems and operations between them knew that cancelled flights were not immediately removed from sale; that some consumers booked tickets for flights that had already been cancelled; that existing ticketholders were not immediately notified; and that the ‘Manage Booking’ pages were not promptly updated when flights were cancelled.

    Qantas admitted that it benefited from the conduct by obtaining revenue from consumers who may have chosen a cheaper Qantas flight or a flight with another carrier had they known their chosen flight had already been cancelled. Qantas also benefited by retaining revenue from consumers who were less likely to change carrier when they were eventually notified their flight had been cancelled. In addition, by delaying fixing its systems, Qantas saved the costs of doing so at an earlier point in time.

    How Qantas breached the Australian Consumer Law

    Qantas admitted it breached the Australian Consumer Law by engaging in misleading or deceptive conduct, making false or misleading representations and engaging in conduct liable to mislead the public about more than 82,000 flights scheduled to depart between May 2022 and May 2024.

    Qantas breached the law in two ways. First, it continued to offer and sell tickets for flights for two or more days after it had decided to cancel those flights. Second, Qantas continued to display flight details on the ‘Manage Booking’ page of existing ticketholders for two or more days after it had decided to cancel the relevant flight with no indication that Qantas had decided to cancel that flight. Qantas also did not otherwise notify consumers that their flight had been cancelled.

    Qantas continued to sell tickets to cancelled flights

    Qantas continued to offer tickets for sale to tens of thousands of domestic and international flights for two or more days after it had decided to cancel those flights and sold tickets to consumers on some of those flights. This affected:

    • 70,543 flights (69,237 domestic and trans-Tasman flights, and 1,306 international flights).
    • 86,597 consumers who made bookings on, or were re-accommodated to, a flight that had already been cancelled (81,238 of those consumers made a booking on a domestic or trans-Tasman flight and 5,359 made a booking on an international flight).

    On average, tickets for these cancelled flights were offered for sale for about 11 days after cancellation, and in some cases, for up to 62 days after cancellation.

    Qantas delayed notifying ticketholders of flight cancellation

    Qantas also continued to display details for flights on the ‘Manage Booking’ page of ticketholders for two or more days after Qantas had decided to cancel the flight with no indication that Qantas had already decided to cancel the flight. This affected:

    • 60,297 flights (57,274 domestic/trans-Tasman and 3,023 international).
    • 883,977 consumers (806,406 had bookings on a domestic/trans-Tasman flight and 77,571 held bookings on an international flight).

    On average, it took Qantas about 11 days for ticketholders to be notified of the cancellation of their flight. In some cases, this took up to 67 days.

    Payments of around $20 million to certain affected consumers

    In addition to the $100 million in penalties, Qantas has undertaken to pay around $20 million to consumers who made bookings on flights that Qantas had already decided to cancel, or were reaccommodated onto these flights after the cancellation of another flight.

    Consumers who made a booking (or were reaccommodated) on a flight two or more days after a decision had already been made to cancel that flight are eligible to receive payments of $225 for domestic/trans-Tasman passengers or $450 for international passengers.

    These payments are in addition to any remedies consumers already received from Qantas, such as alternative flights or refunds.

    The payments are being made in accordance with a court-enforceable undertaking Qantas gave to the ACCC, which requires it to establish a consumer remediation program.

    Consumers should check their emails for communications from Qantas and Deloitte, which they should have received if they are eligible to make a claim.

    Qantas contacted the majority of eligible consumers on or before 10 July 2024. Consumers have until 6 May 2025 to submit their claim for a payment through the Qantas Customer Remediation Program.

    “The ACCC urges all eligible consumers impacted by this conduct to submit their claims as soon as possible, so they can receive their payment,” Ms Cass-Gottlieb said.

    Qantas is required to make all payments to eligible consumers within 60 days of payment information being provided by the consumer (or a person on their behalf) and acceptance of this information by Qantas/Deloitte.

    Payments are made to the banking details nominated by the relevant person. The intention is that payments will be made to affected travellers.

    Further information is available at https://www.qantas.com/au/en/book-a-trip/flights/qantas-customer-remediation-program.html which links to the secure online portal hosted by Deloitte through which eligibility assessment and collection of payment information are conducted.

    If the amount paid does not reach $20 million at the conclusion of the remediation program (6 May 2025), the residual balance will be donated to a charitable organisation to be approved by the ACCC.

    Qantas systems changed

    After the start of the proceedings, Qantas made changes to its operating and scheduling systems so that it is no longer engaging in the conduct.

    “A large, well-resourced company like Qantas should have had strong operating and compliance programs in place that would have prevented these issues from arising. However, we are pleased that Qantas has made changes to its operating and scheduling, and has undertaken to amend its compliance programs,” Ms Cass-Gottlieb said.

    The ACCC acknowledges Qantas’ cooperation in resolving this proceeding at an early stage, and its undertaking to implement a remediation program ahead of the Court hearing to finalise this case.

    The court also ordered Qantas to pay a contribution to the ACCC’s costs, by consent.

    Background

    Qantas is Australia’s largest domestic airline operator. It is a publicly listed company which operates domestic and international passenger flights under its mainline brand, Qantas, and through its subsidiary Jetstar. It offers flights for sale through direct channels, such as its website and app, and indirect channels, such as travel agents and third-party online booking websites.

    The ACCC is an independent statutory government authority and Australia’s peak consumer protection and competition agency.

    The ACCC uses a range of tools to promote compliance with the Competition and Consumer Act (CCA) and the Australian Consumer Law.

    This includes commencing proceedings in the Federal Court for alleged breaches of the CCA and ACL. The ACCC is not able to determine a breach of the law – only a Court can find that a contravention has occurred.

    If the ACCC is successful in a Federal Court matter, the penalty imposed is determined by the Court. The ACCC makes submissions to the Court on the appropriate penalty it considers should be imposed. In this instance the submissions were jointly made with Qantas.

    The ACCC commenced its court action against Qantas on 31 August 2023, and Qantas agreed to make joint submissions in support of $100 million in penalties with the ACCC in May 2024.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Defence News – RNZN divers assess sunken ship in Samoa

    Source: New Zealand Defence Force

    HMNZS Manawanui is in water about 30m deep and a light oil sheen from its initial capsize is being dispersed by wind and waves, Maritime Component Commander Commodore Shane Arndell says.

    Royal New Zealand Navy (RNZN) divers were on the water at first light today to assess the wreckage of the ship, which ran on to a reef south of Upolu on Saturday night and sunk on Sunday morning.

    “The dive team has begun assessing the area where HMNZS Manawanui sank to better understand the environmental impacts and clean-up efforts required in Samoa,” Commodore Arndell said.

    A number of government agencies are involved in supporting the Samoan Government’s response to the incident, Experts from Maritime New Zealand and other agencies are also assisting with understanding the environmental impacts and initiating clean-up actions. Wildlife experts from Massey University have been assisting with the response and the New Zealand Defence Force, which has 28 personnel in Samoa, is working closely with the Samoan Government.

    A range of equipment was sent to Samoa with New Zealand Defence Force personnel (NZDF) to assist with the initial response and help address environmental impacts to the area.

    Equipment includes remotely operated vehicles used to establish the debris field, and also Maritime NZ spill response equipment, which can be used both in the water and on the land.

    “Our personnel have begun clearing flotsam from the beach area and environmental assessments and clean up activities are under way,” Commodore Arndell said.

    “A light oil sheen from the ship’s initial capsizing is being dispersed by wind and waves.”

    Maritime NZ responders are working closely with Samoan authorities, and NZDF personnel on the ground, to develop plans around how to support the environmental response.

    The Royal Navy’s HMS Tamar is helping provide security and logistical support in the immediate area.

    “As more information is gathered from the responders on the ground, NZDF will bring further equipment from New Zealand to support the response,’’ Commodore Arndell said.

    The site of the sunken vessel – which is lying about 30m deep – had been declared a “prohibited area” by Samoan officials.

    Late on Monday night, 72 of the 75 crew and passengers rescued from Manawanui arrived back in New Zealand on board a RNZAF C-130J Hercules.

    They were being provided welfare support and were re-uniting with families this afternoon.

    The three other members from another government agency were due to return today on a commercial flight.

    HMNZS Manawanui Commanding Officer Commander Yvonne Gray said the incident was when her “very worst imagining became a reality”.

    “However, my team responded in exactly the way I needed them to. They acted with commitment, with comradeship and, above all, with courage.”

    BACKGROUND INFORMATION:

    • The group of NZDF personnel in Samoa includes members of the Navy’s specialist hydrography and dive unit.
    • Maritime NZ’s response team currently includes six staff.
    • Two expert wildlife maritime incident responders from Massey University are supporting the response, and have specialist equipment, including wildlife medication and cleaning facilities.
    • HMNZS Manawanui carried several marine standard chemicals on-board for use with ships husbandry e.g. cleaning products. There were no hazardous chemicals on-board beyond those that would be carried by most commercial ships.
    • The ship carried about 950 tonnes of Automotive Gas Oil for this deployment. This is a light oil commercial diesel commonly used by both commercial and military vessels.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Sen. Johnson Honors October 7 Victims, Reaffirms Unwavering Support for Israel

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Wisconsin Ron Johnson

    WASHINGTON – On Monday, U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) joined Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) and all Senate Republicans in a resolution fully condemning Hamas, calling for American hostages’ safe return home, and reaffirming U.S. support for an enduring and prosperous Israel.  A year ago today, Iran-backed Hamas terrorists launched a heinous attack on Israel, killing approximately 1,200 individuals and taking 251 hostages. One year later, 97 hostages still remain unaccounted for, including seven Americans. 

    The resolution reiterated the senators’ support for “an outcome that ensures the forever survival of Israel; the complete denial of the ability of Hamas to reconstitute in the region, and the safe release of United States hostages from the Gaza Strip.”

    Sens. Johnson and Ernst were joined by Senators Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.), John Barrasso (R-Wyo.), Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), John Boozman (R-Ark.), Mike Braun (R-Ind.), Katie Britt (R-Ala.), Ted Budd (R-N.C.), Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.), Bill Cassidy (R-La.), Susan Collins (R-Maine), John Cornyn (R-Texas), Tom Cotton (R-Ark.), Mike Crapo (R-Idaho), Ted Cruz (R-Texas), Steve Daines (R-Mont.), Deb Fischer (R-Neb.), Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Bill Hagerty (R-Tenn.), Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), John Hoeven (R-N.D.), Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-MS), John Kennedy (R-LA), James Lankford (R-OK), Mike Lee (R-UT), Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.), Roger Marshall (R-Kan.), Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), Jerry Moran (R-Kan.), Markwayne Mullin (R-Okla.), Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), Rand Paul (R-Ky.), Pete Ricketts (R-Neb.), Jim Risch (R-Idaho), Mitt Romney (R-Utah), Mike Rounds (R-S.D.), Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), Eric Schmitt (R-Mo.), Rick Scott (R-Fla.), Tim Scott (R-S.C.), Dan Sullivan (R-Alaska), John Thune (R-S.D.), Thom Tillis (R-N.C.),  Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.), J.D. Vance (R-Ohio), Roger Wicker (R-Miss.), and Todd Young (R-Ind.).

    Full text of the bill can be found here.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Sen. Johnson and Colleagues Hold DOJ Accountable for Failure to Prosecute Noncitizen Voter Registration

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Wisconsin Ron Johnson

    WASHINGTON – On Wednesday, U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) joined U.S. Sens. Katie Britt (R-Ala.), Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.), and Bill Hagerty (R-Tenn.), along with 68 bicameral Republican colleagues in a letter to U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland exposing the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) failure to prevent noncitizens from registering to vote in America’s federal elections and its refusal to prosecute those who have done so. 

    The lawmakers demanded more information about the incidence of noncitizens registering to vote, and steps that the DOJ is taking to deal with the issue and secure U.S. elections.

    “We are deeply concerned by reports of non-citizens registering to vote and voting in federal elections,” the lawmakers wrote. “As of today, there has been no response from you or your Department regarding the inquiry on July 12, 2024, seeking information on efforts undertaken by your Department to enforce laws prohibiting non-citizen voting. Given the 2024 Presidential Election is in less than 34 days, your Department’s inaction and refusal to provide any information regarding its efforts to promote public trust and confidence in our elections is especially alarming.” 

    “Clearly, there is a non-negligible amount of voter participation by non-citizens in federal elections, which is not only a serious threat to the integrity of our elections and the democratic process they represent, but also has the potential to reduce Americans’ trust and confidence in election results,” they continued.

    Sens. Johnson, Britt, Tuberville, and Hagerty were joined by Senators Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), Roger Marshall (R-Kan.), Thom Tillis (R-N.C.), Rick Scott (R-Fla.), James Lankford (R-Okla.), Jim Risch (R-Idaho), Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.), Mike Crapo (R-Idaho), Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-Miss.), Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), Steve Daines (R-Mont.), Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.), Tim Scott (R-S.C.), Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), John Thune (R-S.D.), Shelley Moore Capito (R-W. Va.), Ted Cruz (R-Texas), Eric Schmitt (R-Mo.), John Barrasso (R-Wyo.), Pete Ricketts (R-Neb.), Deb Fischer (R-Neb.), Mike Rounds (R-S.D.), Mike Braun (R-Ind.), Ted Budd (R-N.C.), John Hoeven (R-N.D.), Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), John Kennedy (R-La.), Roger Wicker (R-Miss.), and Markwayne Mullin (R-Okla.). 

    Additional House co-signers include Reps. Andy Harris (R-Md.), Clay Higgins (R-La.), Gary Palmer (R-Ala.), Matt Rosendale (R-Mont.), Ralph Norman (R-S.C.), Eli Crane (R-Ariz.), Andy Ogles (R-Tenn.), Aaron Bean (R-Fla.), Josh Brecheen (R-Okla.), Nancy Mace (R-S.C.), Bob Good (R-Va.), Eric Burlison (R-Mo.), Mike Ezell (R-Miss.), Chuck Fleischmann (R-Tenn.), Tom Tiffany (R-Wis.), Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.), Claudia Tenney (R-N.Y.), Michael Guest (R-Miss.), Diana Harshbarger (R-Tenn.), Ben Cline (R-Va.), Chip Roy (R-Texas), Barry Loudermilk (R-Ga.), Mary Miller (R-Ill.), Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.), Lance Gooden (R-Texas), Jeff Duncan (R-S.C.), Harriet Hageman (R-Wyo.), Barry Moore (R-Ala.), Mike Collins (R-Ga.), Tim Burchett (R-Tenn.), Greg Lopez (R-Colo.), Keith Self (R-Texas), Brian Babin (R-Texas), August Pfluger (R-Texas), Alex Mooney (R-W. Va.), Dusty Johnson (R-S.D.), Randy Weber (R-Texas), Rich McCormick (R-Ga.), and Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.).

    Full text of the letter can be found here.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Warren, Markey, Massachusetts Delegation Secure Nearly $60 Million in Federal Funding to Fight the Opioid Crisis

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Massachusetts – Elizabeth Warren
    October 07, 2024
    Funding will support efforts to mitigate the overdose crisis in Massachusetts, which has one of the highest overdose mortality rates in the country
    Boston, MA – U.S. Senators Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Ed Markey (D-Mass.), along with Representatives Katherine Clark (D-Mass.), Richard Neal (D-Mass.), Jim McGovern (D-Mass.), Stephen Lynch (D-Mass.), Bill Keating (D-Mass.), Seth Moulton (D-Mass.), Lori Trahan (D-Mass.), Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.), and Jake Auchincloss (D-Mass.), announced the Massachusetts Department of Public Health and Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe will receive nearly $60 million in federal grants for state and tribal opioid response and prevention from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.
    The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration’s 2022 National Survey on Drug Use and Health revealed that over 48 million people experienced substance use disorder in the past year, but only a quarter of those in need of substance use disorder treatment services actually received them.
    “The opioid crisis is something we feel deeply across this country, especially in Massachusetts,” said Senator Warren. “Thanks to the Biden-Harris Administration’s leadership, we can provide vital resources to hard-hit communities in Massachusetts, and I’ll keep fighting for more resources that allow us to address this crisis like the public health crisis it is.”
    “The opioid crisis is indiscriminate in the impact it has on communities across Massachusetts, but the most effective solutions are driven by the communities on the frontline, living through the devastation that addiction and overdose can cause. The funding that the Massachusetts Department of Public Health and Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe will receive will fuel strategies for prevention, expanding access to treatment, and providing holistic care that puts people’s health and dignity first. In short, this funding can help save lives,” said Senator Markey.
    “The opioid epidemic has devastated families and entire communities in Massachusetts and across America,” said Democratic Whip Katherine Clark. “Under the steadfast leadership of the Biden-Harris administration, we are expanding access to treatment options for Americans struggling with substance use disorder and ensuring they receive the care they deserve. This award builds upon that progress, and I am proud to have partnered with local and state champions to bring these critical dollars back home.”
    “Every community here in Massachusetts and across our nation has been impacted by the immense grief and hardship caused by the opioid crisis. The disease of addiction is a battle that no family should have to bear alone,” said Congresswoman Lori Trahan. “Critical investments like these that support prevention and treatment programs are instrumental in expanding access to treatment, supporting recovery, and preventing tragic overdose deaths.”
    The funds will be used to address the overdose crisis in Massachusetts and in tribal communities through prevention, harm reduction, treatment, and recovery support. This includes opioid reversal drugs such as naloxone, as well as medications for opioid use disorder.
    In May 2024, Senator Warren led 86 lawmakers in reintroducing the Comprehensive Addiction Resources Emergency (CARE) Act, the most ambitious legislation in Congress to confront the substance use epidemic. Supported by tribal nations, 29 organizations, and 28 Massachusetts state elected officials, the CARE Act would provide state and local governments with $125 billion in federal funding over ten years, including nearly $1 billion per year directly to tribal governments and organizations. 

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-Evening Report: What is amortisation, and what does it have to do with Peter Dutton’s nuclear proposal?

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jessica Yi, Course coordinator, University of South Australia

    atk work/Shutterstock

    This article is part of The Conversation’s “Business Basics” series where we ask experts to discuss key concepts in business, economics and finance.


    Nuclear power is expensive, but it remains a cornerstone of the Coalition’s plan to get Australia to net-zero emissions.

    The federal opposition is yet to release its own costings for the proposal.

    Nonetheless, federal Opposition Leader Peter Dutton caused something of a stir when in a recent speech, he said the costs of Australia’s nuclear plants could be “amortised” over their 80-year lifespan.

    If hearing a word like “amortised” immediately makes your eyes glaze over, you’re probably not alone.

    To make things even more confusing, Dutton may have confused the term with the closely related concept of “depreciation”. We’ll discuss why later.

    But amortisation and depreciation are both important concepts in any corporate decision making.

    So what exactly was the opposition leader talking about here, and what does it mean to write off the cost of an asset over time?

    What is amortisation?

    Amortisation has a wide range of applications across finance, including credit, loans and investment planning.

    Here, though, we’ll focus on what amortisation means in the accounting context.

    You might notice amortisation looks a bit like the more familiar term “mortgage”. This is because both are derived from the same root in Latin.

    Amortise comes from “ad” – Latin for “to” – and “mortus” – which means “dead”.

    Obviously, we usually don’t mean dead in a literal sense – rather, the more abstract process of bringing something to an end.

    Spreading costs over time

    In corporate accounting, amortisation is a technique used to gradually write down the cost or value of an intangible asset over its expected period of use.

    It helps to think of intangible assets as things that don’t have a “grabbable” physical presence. Companies can operate using all kinds of intangible assets, such as copyrights, trademarks and patents.

    In contrast, tangible assets are physical things like land, machinery, buildings and vehicles.

    Companies can purchase intangible assets, but they can also generate them internally.

    Company trademarks are examples of intangible assets.
    rvlsoft/Shutterstock

    Finite or infinite

    Intangible assets can also have a “finite” or “infinite” useful life. If deemed infinitely useful, an asset does not need to be amortised.

    If only finitely useful, however, its economic benefit to a company will be systematically reduced over the span of its useful life.

    To account for this, we list some of its consumption as an expense on the company’s balance sheet each year. This process helps spread the cost of an asset evenly over its life.

    It’s important to note that amortisation is a “non-cash” expense. It appears on a company’s balance sheet as an expense and can lower profit, but it doesn’t affect a company’s cash flows.

    How is it calculated?

    There are a few different ways to calculate how costs should be spread over an asset’s useful life. For amortisation, one of the most common is the straight-line method.

    Using the straight-line method, amortisation can be calculated by dividing an asset’s “depreciable amount” by its useful life.

    Intangible assets – such as software – often have only a finite useful life.
    CapturePB/Shutterstock

    The depreciable amount is the cost or value of an asset minus its “residual value” – what it is worth at the end of its useful life.

    The residual value of an intangible asset will usually be zero, unless a third party has committed to purchase it at the end of its life, or its value can be determined on some active market.

    What’s depreciation then?

    You might be more familiar with the related term “depreciation”. Both accounting concepts refer to spreading the costs of long-life assets over their finite useful life.

    The main difference is that amortisation is used to expense intangible assets while depreciation expenses tangible assets – physical things such as buildings, machinery and plant.

    This leads to another key difference. Often, it is much easier to estimate the residual value of a tangible asset at the end of its useful life, because it or its component parts can be more easily sold.

    Depreciation deals with tangible assets, such as machinery.
    Another77/Shutterstock

    Wait, how are nuclear reactors ‘intangible’?

    Reading this, you may have spotted something. As explained above, the main difference between the “amortisation” and the “depreciation” is the type of depreciable assets.

    If we go back to how Dutton used the concept of amortisation in his speech, we can reasonably conclude the term depreciation would have been more technically correct.

    He was speaking specifically about the useful life of nuclear plants, which clearly have tangible, physical forms.

    You could argue he was referring to one of amortisation’s other meanings: the amortisation of a loan or other liability in finance. Amortisation in this sense refers to spreading out loan payments over time.

    This is unlikely, however, given he was specifically speaking about the useful life of the nuclear plants and the cost of depreciable assets.

    Careful with your calculations

    It should be noted that just because an asset has a long useful life, that doesn’t mean its amortisation or depreciation costs will be small.

    Let’s look at some of the examples employed by Dutton: nuclear plants, touted to have 80 years of useful life, and renewables, such as wind turbines with 20 to 30 years.

    It might be tempting to assume nuclear plants would have a lower depreciation expense, with a significantly longer useful life, but that risks ignoring their enormous initial upfront costs and continuous restructure costs that need to be capitalised.

    If the initial and capitalised cost or value of nuclear plants are significantly greater than those of renewables, the annual depreciation expense of nuclear plants could end up being significantly greater.

    It all depends on what goes into the equation. Depreciating costs can’t give us anything for free.

    Jessica Yi 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. What is amortisation, and what does it have to do with Peter Dutton’s nuclear proposal? – https://theconversation.com/what-is-amortisation-and-what-does-it-have-to-do-with-peter-duttons-nuclear-proposal-240321

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI USA: October 9, 2024 CDI Monthly Meeting: Statement of Interest Lightning Presentations

    Source: US Geological Survey

    The October 9, 2024 CDI monthly virtual meeting will feature 90-second lightning presentations from the statements of interest submitted to the CDI Request for Proposals.

    Join us at our monthly meeting on October 9, 2024 from 11:00 am – 12:30 pm Eastern Time to hear lightning talks from our FY 2025 CDI Statement of Interest submitters!

     ID Project Title
    A Enabling Accurate Positioning: Critical Updates needed in GIS Protocols to Support Lunar and Planetary Science
    B Leveraging the National Water Model to Inform Binational Management of Invasive Carp in North America
    C Is it me or the data source? Providing real-time download reliability metrics to users
    D Incorporating landscape change into a climate-driven water model for California
    E Development of machine-learning models for delineating areas of high groundwater discharge potential
    F Scaling-up phenological date matching for invasive species mapping: a free opensource workflow
    G In-Person Git/Software Release Workshop for USGS and Python/R Data Retrieval Demo for Open Science
    H Develop a natural language processing web application to analyze large amounts of text
    I Big Carp, Bigger Data: Creating an API for the Riverine Acoustic Fish Telemetry (RAFT) Network
    J Increasing understanding of large river dynamics through an open-source bedform toolbox
    K Speedy Trends: An R package to rapidly estimate trends for big data
    L An application for automation and streamlining of workflow for modeling of time-series data
    M GeoDRAW (Geospatial Data Retrieval and Alignment Workflow) to advance data-visualization and earth systems model development
    N Data quality control for everyone: a course and recipes for well-documented data workflows in R
    O Automated evaluation of interpolation techniques available in ArcGIS Pro
    P Terrestrial Remote Sensing Data Ingestion with PyHAT (Python Hyperspectral Analysis Tool)
    Q Seeing Below the Surface: Geospatial Delivery of Hi-Res Aquatic Ecosystem Data from Autonomous Underwater Vehicles
    R Developing a web-based data repository and inference tool for sediment fingerprinting
    S An open-source workflow combining 3DEP and NAIP data to support meadow conservation and restoration 
    T Community Tools for Standardized Glacier Change Research
    U Bridging the learning gap in the R computing environment using Water-Quality Data
    V Understanding and streamlining environmental DNA QA/QC analysis
    W Advancing the Geophysical Survey (GS) data standard and GSPy toolbox
    X An Open-Source Workflow for Point Cloud based Geomorphic Change Detection and Sediment Budget Analysis
    Y Snakemake training: Building data pipelines in Python
    Z Standard North American Fish Sampling Data Webtool: Sharing, Improving and Maintaining 

    Find abstracts and more information, including how to join, on SharePoint or by joining the CDI mailing list.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI China: Theater festival helps support new work

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    The 2024 Peiyuan Art Festival, gathering theater lovers, was held in Beijing from Sept 20 to 22.

    Since 2019, Peiyuan has been focused on supporting market-oriented productions with the help of veteran theater experts, producers, directors, and playwrights.

    So far, 147 have been conceived and 64 of those works have been staged in theaters in the country.

    During the festival, a Chinese play, Fan Shan Hai, or Alley-Oop, by scriptwriter and director Zhu Hongxuan, was staged as the opening production. It tells the story of a female basketball team set against the historical backdrop of the Minguo period (1912-49).

    By working with the Beijing Quju Opera Troupe, the platform also produced a Quju opera work, The Life of Mine, based on renowned Chinese writer Lao She’s novel of the same name, telling the sad story of a lowly ranked policeman in Beijing during the early 20th century. In 1952, Lao She wrote a play, The Willow Well, in an art form that he invented, based on Beijing’s Quyi art, and named it Quju Opera.

    The festival saw 20 new theatrical works being premiered , some still being worked on, that covered a wide range of art forms, including musical, Yueju Opera and dance.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Music festival harmonizes past and present

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    The Beijing Music Festival opened on Saturday with a stunning fusion of the East and the West. As dusk settled over the capital city, the National Centre for the Performing Arts concert hall glowed against the cool autumn evening, inviting the audience into a world where music and nature seemed to harmonize.

    The China National Symphony Orchestra and composer-conductor Tan Dun opened the concert with the Golden Bell Chimes (bianzhong) of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), a remarkable artifact housed at the Palace Museum in Beijing.

    The opening piece Ancient Bells of Peking’s Central Axis is composed by Tan and features pipa (four-stringed Chinese lute) player Zhao Cong.

    The music piece was inspired by Beijing’s Central Axis — the 7.8-kilometer north-south line through the capital’s historical center, inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List on July 27.

    As Zhao’s fingers move across the strings of the pipa, the instrument’s ancient timbre felt as timeless as the city itself, invoking images of iconic buildings from the past, such as the Forbidden City, China’s imperial palace from 1420 to 1911, now known as the Palace Museum, Jingshan Park and the Bell and Drum Towers, blending seamlessly with the contemporary orchestral sounds behind her.

    An old friend of the Beijing Music Festival, the annual classical music event launched in 1998 by maestro Yu Long, Tan made his debut at the festival in 2001, performing his Oscar-winning music piece Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, a film score Tan composed for director Ang Lee’s 2001 film of the same name.

    “I have performed at the festival many times and every time it feels like a reunion with old friends,” says Tan a day before the concert in Beijing. “Music is like a flowing river; a continuous, ever-evolving force that transcends time. Just as a river never stops moving, music flows from generation to generation, carrying the contributions of countless musicians across eras.”

    “The Beijing Music Festival, over nearly 30 years, carries stories, emotions and historical contexts, acting as a bridge between the past and the present, the East and the West. Many great musicians from around the world perform during the festival. Just like a river connecting different lands and people, the festival connects generations of cultures,” Tan says.

    During the first half of the concert, Tan also led the China National Symphony Orchestra to perform his music piece Passacaglia: Secret of Wind and Birds, during which the orchestra members held up their phones to play the recordings of birds chirping to traditional Chinese instruments.

    Young Chinese suona player Liu Wenwen, a first-time performer at the Beijing festival, shared the stage with the orchestra and Tan, performing the famous suona piece Hundreds of Birds Paying Homage to Phoenix. As the nation’s first student in a doctoral program for the suona at the Shanghai Conservatory of Music, Liu, a 13th-generation suona player, is also one of the most active young players in China.

    “We had many discussions about programs for the opening concert for this year’s Beijing Music Festival. Thanks to Tan, we presented Chinese music works during the first half of the concert and Western music pieces in the second half, bringing a sonic journey that bridges Chinese heritage with Western traditions,” says Zou Shuang, artistic director of the Beijing festival, from Oct 5 to 13, with nine concerts by international musicians.

    One of the highlights during the second half of the concert was cellist Wang Jian and violinist Lu Wei playing Mozart’s Symphonie Concertante in E-flat Major, K 364 under Tan’s baton.

    Composed in 1779, the piece, one of Mozart’s most famous works written specifically for the violin, the viola and the orchestra, is played in three movements, showcasing the interplay between the violin and viola supported by a full orchestra.

    “If a cellist were to attempt to play the viola part, there would be both technical and musical challenges. The highly skilled cellist Wang Jian did a great job,” says Yu, an old friend of Wang who first invited the cellist to perform at the Beijing Music Festival in 1999.

    “How hard is it for the cellist to interpret the viola part? Just imagine star tennis player Zheng Qinwen playing ping-pong using a tennis racket and winning,” adds Yu.

    “The viola’s range sits higher than a cello, which can be physically demanding and requires mastery of the thumb position and fluent shifting. Mozart’s style calls for light, delicate articulation, especially in the interplay between the violin and viola,” he says. “The cellist would need to overcome challenges in range, articulation, tone production, and ensemble balance to maintain the integrity of Mozart’s delicate and intricate writing.”

    Considered a child prodigy, Wang was enrolled in the primary school affiliated to the Shanghai Conservatory of Music at 9.

    In 1979, celebrated violinist Isaac Stern made a historic visit to China with a documentary crew. In 1981, the documentary about Stern’s visit titled From Mao to Mozart: Isaac Stern in China was released, winning an Oscar for Best Documentary. Wang became known internationally as the child prodigy in the film who played the cello with seriousness.

    In 1985, Wang entered the Yale School of Music. The following year, he made his debut at Carnegie Hall. Since then, he has embarked on an international career.

    “When I first performed at the Beijing Music Festival in 1999, I had lived and toured abroad for decades. The festival’s atmosphere created an intimate connection between the performers and the audience, which impressed me and allowed me to frequently return to my home country,” says Wang, 56. “The festival has made great contributions to the country’s booming classical music scene.”

    Tan says he will embark on a trip to France with the China National Symphony Orchestra from Wednesday to Oct 15, performing in Toulouse, Aix-en-Provence and Paris to celebrate the 60th anniversary of China-France diplomatic relations.

    They will bring the same programs as the Beijing concert, which also include French composer Maurice Ravel’s famous Bolero and Russian composer Igor Stravinsky’s The Firebird.

    “The concert celebrates musical diversity and cultural fusion. It is a powerful reminder of music’s ability to transcend boundaries, inspiring us for the upcoming performances in France,” says Tan.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Lower Thames Crossing: development consent decision extension

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments 2

    The application decision deadline is extended to 23 May 2025.

    This statement confirms that it is necessary to extend the deadline for a decision on the application by National Highways under the Planning Act 2008, for the A122 (Lower Thames Crossing) Development Consent Order.

    Under section 107(1) of the Planning Act 2008, a decision on an application must be made within 3 months of receipt of the Examining Authority’s report, unless the power, under section 107(3), is exercised to extend the deadline, and a Written Ministerial Statement is made to Parliament announcing the new deadline.

    The Examining Authority’s report on the Lower Thames Crossing Development Consent Order was received on 20 March 2024. The current deadline for a decision is 4 October 2024, having been extended from 20 June 2024 by way of a Written Ministerial Statement, dated 24 May 2024.

    The deadline for the decision is to be further extended to 23 May 2025 in order to allow more time for the application to be considered further, including any decisions made as part of the spending review.

    The decision to set a new deadline is without prejudice to the decision on whether to grant the application development consent.

    Updates to this page

    Published 7 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI China: China to provide emergency humanitarian medical supplies to Lebanon

    Source: China State Council Information Office 2

    People fleeing from Lebanon arrive at the Jdeidet Yabous crossing between Syria and Lebanon, on Oct. 7, 2024. [Photo/Xinhua]
    China will provide emergency humanitarian medical supplies to Lebanon under the request from the Lebanese government, a spokesperson of the China International Development Cooperation Agency (CIDCA) said Tuesday.
    The situation in Lebanon and Israel has escalated recently, and explosions of communication devices and airstrikes occurring in various parts of Lebanon have resulted in a large number of casualties, spokesperson Li Ming noted in a statement released by the CIDCA.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Secretary-General of ASEAN attends the 35th ASEAN Coordinating Council Meeting

    Source: ASEAN

    Secretary-General of ASEAN, Dr. Kao Kim Hourn, today attended the 35th ASEAN Coordinating (ACC) Council Meeting at the National Convention Center in Vientiane, Lao PDR. During the meeting, Dr. Kao briefed the Ministers on the progress achieved in the work of ASEAN and that of the ASEAN Secretariat. The Meeting also discussed and finalized remaining issues in preparations for the upcoming 44th and 45th ASEAN Summits and Related Summits.

    The post Secretary-General of ASEAN attends the 35th ASEAN Coordinating Council Meeting appeared first on ASEAN Main Portal.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Frank Elderson: Interview with Delo

    Source: European Central Bank

    Interview with Frank Elderson, Member of the Executive Board of the ECB and Vice-Chair of the Supervisory Board of the ECB, conducted by Miha Jenko

    8 October 2024

    You hold two high positions in the European Central Bank: you are a member of the ECB’s Executive Board as well as the Vice-Chair of its Supervisory Board. You are responsible for both monetary matters and banking supervision in the euro area. Can you explain your dual role at the ECB?

    Let me clarify that, at the ECB, decision-making on monetary policy and banking supervision is separate, and for good reason. We want these two functions to pursue their specific objectives and we want to avoid potential conflicts of interest.

    That being said, it is important for each side to be aware of what the other is thinking and to understand how the decisions being taken affect the other side. Let me give you a couple of examples. During our strategy review in 2021 we explicitly recognised the importance of safe and sound banks for our price stability mandate, acknowledging that financial stability is a precondition for price stability. Moreover, banks that are safe and sound are able to effectively pass through our monetary policy.

    So in the governance of the ECB there is a bridge between the two sides. And I currently occupy this bridge as a member of the Executive Board, which has six members including President Lagarde, as a member of the Governing Council and as Vice-Chair of the Supervisory Board. In practice, this means that I inform the Executive Board about what was discussed in the Supervisory Board, and I debrief the Supervisory Board on the decisions taken by the Governing Council. In short, my role is to help ensure that the ECB does not carry out these two separate tasks in isolation.

    What is the purpose of your current visit to Slovenia?

    The ECB’s two decision-making bodies – the Supervisory Board and the Governing Council – will meet in Slovenia in the space of a week. The Supervisory Board will meet for its regular retreat to discuss strategic issues, while the Governing Council will hold its next monetary policy meeting here. Our colleagues at Banka Slovenije are kindly hosting both events.

    Turning to banking supervision, how are banks’ activities and lending affected by the current environment of weak economic growth and deteriorating economic trends, which include increasing bankruptcies in some euro area countries? How resilient is the banking sector in Europe?

    European banks are resilient. They have sufficient and adequate capital and liquidity buffers which enable them to absorb losses and withstand shocks. But they should not be complacent, especially in the context of the worsening geopolitical environment, which could have direct and indirect effects on banks. Near-term growth prospects have deteriorated and are subject to high uncertainty because of these rising geopolitical risks. And banks also face several medium-term, more structural challenges.

    In this context, our supervisory priorities, which we update every year, help us focus on both the near-term and medium-term challenges faced by banks. We want to ensure that banks are resilient not only today, but also in the long run. As part of our priorities, we want to increase their resilience to sudden macroeconomic and geopolitical shocks and to accelerate the remediation of shortcomings in the governance and management of climate-related and environmental risks. At the same time, banks need to make further progress with their digital transformation and build up their operational resilience.

    In short, banks are resilient, but we should not be complacent amid these longer-term challenges, which we will address through our supervision over the coming years.

    What lessons have the ECB and the Eurosystem learned from the last financial crisis in order to be better prepared for a possible new crisis, which will not necessarily originate in the banking sector itself, but in companies connected to it?

    Since the global financial crisis we have created strong pan-European supervision – the Single Supervisory Mechanism. The financial reforms implemented after that crisis have strengthened banks without compromising their lending capacity. Several things have happened since the global financial crisis: we have had a pandemic, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, an energy shock and high inflation. So European economies have been exposed to unforeseen challenges. We also witnessed turmoil in international banking markets last year, which exposed fragilities in banks’ risk management and internal governance.

    The European banking sector has shown itself to be resilient in the face of these challenges. Take non-performing loans, for example, which have fallen significantly in the European banking system. In 2015, their share was 7%, while in 2023 it was below 2%. That is a big step forward. And as I said, capital and liquidity indicators are now much higher than they were a decade ago. But as supervisors, we should never be complacent, especially given the new risk drivers, such as energy prices, cyberattacks, climate and nature-related risks and geopolitical risks.

    Turning now to current developments in the European banking sector, where UniCredit Group’s intention to take over the German bank Commerzbank has recently made headlines. What is your view as euro area banking supervisor?

    Let me first say that I cannot comment on individual banks, so my answer will be more general.

    We have been crystal clear that cross-border consolidation can be an instrument for further integration of the European banking sector, and we stand by that. Consolidation can also help address long-standing issues in the European banking sector, such as low profitability.

    Nonetheless, mergers always carry risks and, as supervisors, we assess them carefully, always applying the limitative criteria set out in Article 23 of the Capital Requirements Directive. Our job is to ensure that every banking transaction – whether at cross-border or national level – results in a banking group that can comply with supervisory requirements in the foreseeable future.

    What is your view of the banking sector in our country? What is your message to Slovenia?

    Thanks to the reforms implemented after the great financial crisis, banks in Slovenia have come a long way, and in the right direction. When the crisis hit, the Government had to support the three largest banks with a recapitalisation of €3.5 billion. And, naturally, it has taken several years for lending to strengthen. More recently, the privatisation of state-owned banks increased competition in the sector, and this has attracted international banks. Slovenian banks are now well-capitalised, highly profitable and are above the euro area average for profitability, mainly on account of very high net interest margins. Some of this progress can also be attributed to the work of supervisors, including those at Banka Slovenije, with whom we work very well.

    So, like in the rest of Europe, your banks are robust but they will continue to face a number of headwinds stemming from the macro-financial environment, geopolitical shocks and challenges related to the green and digital transitions.

    As mentioned, our central bank will host a Governing Council meeting next week. Do you expect a new interest rate decision at this meeting?

    We will come to Slovenia with an open mind, so I am looking forward to the trip to Ljubljana and to a very genuine and open discussion. Before the meeting, we will take note of all the data and analysis and, as we have said many times before, we will take a meeting-by-meeting approach. A number of recent indicators suggest that downside risks to economic growth are already materialising, so we will need to carefully assess whether this has any implications for our inflation outlook.

    What is very clear, however, is the direction of travel in the period ahead. If our projections that inflation will converge towards our 2% target in the second half of 2025 continue to be confirmed, we will continue to gradually ease our restrictive policy stance. At the same time, we need to maintain flexibility regarding the pace of adjustments. This will depend on incoming data, on the economic situation and on inflation. The latest data will of course be taken into account in whatever decision we take in Slovenia.

    What specific downside risks to growth do you have in mind?

    Economic growth came in at 0.2% in the second quarter, falling somewhat short of our projections. We look at a broad range of data, but we have seen that households are consuming less than anticipated and firms are less keen to invest than we had projected.

    What is your view on the exact nature of inflation in the euro area? In particular, services price inflation remains very persistent. Why?

    We expect inflation to decline to our target in the second half of 2025. Headline inflation is projected to average 2.5% in 2024, then 2.2% in 2025 and 1.9% in 2026. Services inflation remains strong but, according to our projections, we will see a deceleration going into the new year.

    We always look at the upside and downside risks surrounding these projections. Geopolitical tensions could raise energy prices, shipping costs and other transport costs in the short term, which could also lead to disruptions to global trade, which would push prices up. Inflation could also increase if wages rise more than expected or if profit margins increase, and extreme weather events and the climate crisis could increase food prices. However, there are also downside risks to inflation, such as lower than expected demand or an unexpected deterioration in the economic environment in the United States and globally.

    At the ECB, you are also responsible for monitoring the effects of climate change, in addition to the dual tasks mentioned at the beginning. This year we saw the catastrophic effects of floods in some central European countries, and last year we experienced them in Slovenia as well. Greece, Spain and other parts of southern Europe are ravaged by catastrophic droughts and fires. Can the ECB and national central banks contribute more effectively to mitigating the effects of climate change? After all, you have the power – you have monetary policy and banking supervision in your hands…

    I am very aware of the consequences of floods, and of those last year in Slovenia. They caused €10 billion of damage and more than two-thirds of the country was affected. Some places in the Koroška region were cut off from the world and most roads were completely submerged. Recently, we have seen similar things in several other EU countries.

    When talking about climate, nature and the ECB, I always say that we are not climate policymakers. We are not involved in climate policy. This is a task for governments, who implement legislation and policies like the European Climate Law and the EU “Fit for 55” plan, for example.

    But this topic is also extremely relevant for our mandate, because extreme events like flooding, wildfires and summer droughts also lead to financial risks for banks and the wider economy. In our banking supervision, we check whether banks are adequately managing their climate and nature-related risks. We also take climate and nature into account in our macroeconomic projections.

    Are you in favour of introducing more decisive measures that would offer banks more targeted incentives to grant loans for more environmentally friendly or “greener” purposes?

    It would be speculative to talk about possible measures that we might hypothetically take in the future. What is clear is that any measure we implement must be consistent with our primary objective of price stability. Our current monetary policy stance is restrictive, so a green lending facility would be something for us to consider in the future, in another phase of the cycle.

    That being said, climate change is part of our monetary policy strategy, and we have committed to regularly reviewing our climate-related measures to ensure that we continue to support a decarbonisation path that is consistent with the EU’s climate objectives. For this, within our mandate, all options are on the table. If we were to design new instruments in the future, it’s fair to assume that they would include climate considerations.

    In terms of global competitiveness, the EU is falling behind the United States and China. Former ECB President Mario Draghi recently presented a very ambitious plan to increase European competitiveness, including investments of up to €800 billion per year. In his opinion, this money could also be raised through European borrowing, so common European debt. What is your take on this proposal and Mr Draghi’s other recommendations?

    We welcome the publication of this report, how concrete it is and its call for urgent action. Competitiveness is critical for sustainable growth, improving the living standards of citizens and boosting economic resilience, especially in the current environment of heightened geopolitical fragmentation. We strongly support this urgent call for coordinated action at the European and national levels. It is now a matter of turning these proposals into concrete measures.

    Meeting the strategic investment needs identified in the report requires completing the capital markets union, which we have been advocating for a long time.

    The private sector will not be able to finance all of these investment needs alone. European initiatives, including financing through common European funds, could help finance common European public goods such as defence, public procurement, energy grids, disruptive innovation and cross-border infrastructure. Under the right conditions, the potential issuance of common European debt could help bridge the financing gap.

    Finally, a new European Commission is expected to start its work in a few weeks’ time. How do you see your cooperation, including on the common objective of making Europe more competitive?

    I am very much looking forward to continuing our excellent interactions with the European Commission, both with the outgoing Commission and the incoming one. There are a number of common European initiatives that we both have a very strong interest in. I have already mentioned the capital markets union. Further progress could be made on that, as well as on finalising all aspects of the banking union. And we know from the ECB’s stress tests that the longer we take to complete the green transition, the more it will cost us, so we would very much welcome further progress on that front as well.

    MIL OSI Europe News