Category: Americas

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Oral question – Cuba on the so-called ‘list of state sponsors of terrorism’ – O-000006/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    Question for oral answer  O-000006/2025
    to the Council
    Rule 142
    João Oliveira (The Left), Ana Miranda Paz (Verts/ALE), Danilo Della Valle (The Left), Özlem Demirel (The Left), Pernando Barrena Arza (The Left), Tilly Metz (Verts/ALE), Dario Tamburrano (The Left), Leila Chaibi (The Left), Estrella Galán (The Left), Lynn Boylan (The Left), Rudi Kennes (The Left), Marc Botenga (The Left), Konstantinos Arvanitis (The Left), Giorgos Georgiou (The Left), Irene Montero (The Left), Isabel Serra Sánchez (The Left), Giuseppe Antoci (The Left), Mario Furore (The Left), Carolina Morace (The Left), Valentina Palmisano (The Left), Gaetano Pedulla’ (The Left), Pasquale Tridico (The Left), Matjaž Nemec (S&D), Vicent Marzà Ibáñez (Verts/ALE), Jaume Asens Llodrà (Verts/ALE), Kathleen Funchion (The Left), Katarína Roth Neveďalová (NI), Kostas Papadakis (NI), Lefteris Nikolaou-Alavanos (NI), Alex Agius Saliba (S&D), Daniel Attard (S&D), Kateřina Konečná (NI), Judita Laššáková (NI), Branislav Ondruš (NI), Fabio De Masi (NI), Maria Zacharia (NI)

    Cuba is being subjected to an economic, commercial and financial blockade unilaterally imposed by the United States, the application of which has been aggravated by its extraterritorial scope and by the adoption of other measures, such as the inclusion of Cuba on the US list of so-called ‘state sponsors of terrorism’.

    The blockade imposed on Cuba has had a profound impact on the country’s economy, with serious repercussions for the living conditions of its people. Companies, including those from EU Member States, are reducing or halting their cooperation with Cuba in the face of US threats and coercive measures. Cuba’s inclusion on the US list of so-called ‘state sponsors of terrorism’ has forced several financial institutions to suspend their operations with the country, including transfers for the purchase of food, medicine, fuel and other essential goods.

    The UN General Assembly has called for an end to this blockade 32 times. Its most recent resolution, entitled ‘Necessity of ending the economic, commercial and financial embargo imposed by the United States of America against Cuba’, was adopted on 10 October 2024 by 187 votes in favour, two against and one abstention.

    In the light of the above, we ask the Council:

    • 1.What measures will the European Union take with the US authorities to remove Cuba from the list of so-called ‘state sponsors of terrorism’?
    • 2.What measures will the European Union take with the US authorities to implement the position expressed in 32 UN General Assembly resolutions with a view to putting an end to the economic, commercial and financial blockade imposed by the United States on Cuba?
    • 3.What measures will the Council take to defend the interests of the Member States in view of the extraterritorial nature of the blockade unilaterally imposed on Cuba by the United States?

    Submitted: 18.2.2025

    Lapses: 19.5.2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Oral question – Cuba on the so-called ‘list of state sponsors of terrorism’ – O-000007/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    Question for oral answer  O-000007/2025
    to the Commission
    Rule 142
    João Oliveira (The Left), Ana Miranda Paz (Verts/ALE), Danilo Della Valle (The Left), Özlem Demirel (The Left), Pernando Barrena Arza (The Left), Tilly Metz (Verts/ALE), Dario Tamburrano (The Left), Leila Chaibi (The Left), Estrella Galán (The Left), Lynn Boylan (The Left), Rudi Kennes (The Left), Marc Botenga (The Left), Konstantinos Arvanitis (The Left), Giorgos Georgiou (The Left), Irene Montero (The Left), Isabel Serra Sánchez (The Left), Giuseppe Antoci (The Left), Mario Furore (The Left), Carolina Morace (The Left), Valentina Palmisano (The Left), Gaetano Pedulla’ (The Left), Pasquale Tridico (The Left), Matjaž Nemec (S&D), Vicent Marzà Ibáñez (Verts/ALE), Jaume Asens Llodrà (Verts/ALE), Kathleen Funchion (The Left), Katarína Roth Neveďalová (NI), Kostas Papadakis (NI), Lefteris Nikolaou-Alavanos (NI), Alex Agius Saliba (S&D), Maria Zacharia (NI), Daniel Attard (S&D), Kateřina Konečná (NI), Judita Laššáková (NI), Branislav Ondruš (NI), Ľuboš Blaha (NI), Fabio De Masi (NI)

    Cuba is being subjected to an economic, commercial and financial blockade unilaterally imposed by the United States, the application of which has been aggravated by its extraterritorial scope and by the adoption of other measures, such as the inclusion of Cuba on the US list of so-called ‘state sponsors of terrorism’.

    The blockade imposed on Cuba has had a profound impact on the country’s economy, with serious repercussions for the living conditions of its people. Companies, including those from EU Member States, are reducing or halting their cooperation with Cuba in the face of US threats and coercive measures. Cuba’s inclusion on the US list of so-called ‘state sponsors of terrorism’ has forced several financial institutions to suspend their operations with the country, including transfers for the purchase of food, medicine, fuel and other essential goods.

    The UN General Assembly has called for an end to this blockade 32 times. Its most recent resolution, entitled ‘Necessity of ending the economic, commercial and financial embargo imposed by the United States of America against Cuba’, was adopted on 10 October 2024 with 187 votes in favour, two against and one abstention.

    In the light of the above, we ask the Commission:

    • 1.What measures will the European Union take with the US authorities to remove Cuba from the list of so-called ‘state sponsors of terrorism’?
    • 2.What measures will the European Union take with the US authorities to implement the position expressed in 32 UN General Assembly resolutions with a view to putting an end to the economic, commercial and financial blockade imposed by the United States on Cuba?
    • 3.What measures will the Commission take to defend the interests of the Member States in view of the extraterritorial nature of the blockade unilaterally imposed on Cuba by the United States?

    Submitted: 18.2.2025

    Lapses: 19.5.2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – Radio Televisión Española and the Recovery and Resilience Facility – E-000573/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    Question for written answer  E-000573/2025
    to the Commission
    Rule 144
    Isabel Benjumea Benjumea (PPE), Dolors Montserrat (PPE)

    The Spanish Government has allocated over EUR 20.5 million in Recovery and Resilience Facility funding to Generación D, a project run by the Spanish broadcasting company Radio Televisión Española (RTVE). One of the TV series made as part of the project was Brigada Big Tech, which had thirteen 45-minute episodes and cost EUR 4 565 353. The cost per episode was EUR 351 181 and the production cost per minute was EUR 7 804. This is dearer than the top-level football matches – such as European Championship ties – that RTVE broadcasts.

    The host of Brigada Big Tech, Luján Argüelles, took home EUR 15 000 per episode, the third‑highest salary at Televisión Española at the time, and the highest on the ‘La 2’ channel. For comparison, star presenters like those on Spain’s MasterChef earn EUR 10 000 per episode. However, Brigada Big Tech was a catastrophic flop in terms of viewing figures.

    In light of the above:

    • 1.Has the Commission asked for data on the Generación D project, including data on the final implementation of the project, the list of subcontractors and the amount of money each subcontractor received?
    • 2.How does it view EU funds being used for projects like this one, with salaries well above the market average and a budget that is at odds with the quality of the programme?

    Submitted: 7.2.2025

    Last updated: 20 February 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – Radio Televisión Española and the Recovery and Resilience Facility – E-000571/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    Question for written answer  E-000571/2025
    to the Commission
    Rule 144
    Isabel Benjumea Benjumea (PPE), Dolors Montserrat (PPE)

    The Spanish Government has allocated over EUR 117 million in Recovery and Resilience Facility funding to the Spanish broadcasting company Radio Televisión Española (RTVE). This would make RTVE, a public entity, one of the main beneficiaries of those EU recovery funds.

    The various projects RTVE has financed using those EU funds have not had the impact expected – they have actually been very controversial owing to breaches of regulatory requirements, the return of some of the funding, and the state of RTVE’s finances.

    In light of the fact that RTVE is in such dire financial straits that it, firstly, has been forced by the unsustainable state of its accounts to turn to a government reserve fund, and secondly, continues to run up debt: should the Recovery and Resilience Facility be used to fund such a public entity – especially if the projects funded have not achieved the targets they were designed to?

    Submitted: 7.2.2025

    Last updated: 20 February 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI: BigCommerce Announces Fourth Quarter and Fiscal Year 2024 Financial Results

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    AUSTIN, Texas, Feb. 20, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — BigCommerce Holdings, Inc. (“BigCommerce” or the “Company”) (Nasdaq: BIGC), a leading provider of open, composable commerce solutions for B2C and B2B brands and retailers, today announced financial results for its fourth quarter and fiscal year ended December 31, 2024.

    “Over the last several months, we have focused on executing our go-to-market transformation, aligning our strategy, structure and messaging to reflect the full power of BigCommerce,” said Travis Hess, CEO of BigCommerce. “Transformations like this are not easy, and I am encouraged by the progress, feedback and traction we are seeing, and I am energized by the path ahead. I took on this role because of my belief in what BigCommerce is today and, more importantly, where we can take commerce into the future as a leader in modern commerce with a differentiated approach, a world-class team and an immense market opportunity.”

    Fourth Quarter Financial Highlights:

    • Total revenue was $87.0 million, up 3% compared to the fourth quarter of 2023.
    • Total annual revenue run-rate (“ARR”) as of December 31, 2024 was $349.6 million, up 4% compared to December 31, 2023.
    • Subscription solutions revenue was $62.3 million, up 3% compared to the fourth quarter of 2023.
    • ARR from accounts with at least one enterprise plan (collectively, “Enterprise Accounts”) was $261.6 million as of December 31, 2024, up 7% from December 31, 2023.
    • ARR from Enterprise Accounts as a percent of total ARR was 75% as of December 31, 2024, compared to 73% as of December 31, 2023.
    • GAAP gross margin was 78%, compared to 77% in the fourth quarter of 2023. Non-GAAP gross margin was 78%, compared to 79% in the fourth quarter of 2023.

    Other Key Business Metrics

    • Number of enterprise accounts was 5,884, down 2% compared to the fourth quarter of 2023.
    • Average revenue per account (ARPA) of enterprise accounts was $44,458 up 9% compared to the fourth quarter of 2023.
    • Revenue in the Americas grew by 4% compared to the fourth quarter of 2023.
    • Revenue in EMEA grew by 5% and revenue in APAC declined by 1% compared to the fourth quarter of 2023.

    Loss from Operations and Non-GAAP Operating Income (Loss)

    • GAAP loss from operations was ($0.8) million, compared to ($5.7) million in the fourth quarter of 2023.
    • Included in GAAP loss from operations was a restructuring charge of $1.2 million, including but not limited to the 2024 Restructuring.
    • Non-GAAP operating income was $10.1 million, compared to $5.4 million in the fourth quarter of 2023.

    Net Income (Loss) and Earnings Per Share

    • GAAP net loss was ($2.4) million, compared to ($3.2) million in the fourth quarter of 2023.
    • Non-GAAP net income was $8.4 million or 10% of revenue, compared to $7.9 million or 9% of revenue in the fourth quarter of 2023.
    • GAAP basic net loss per share was ($0.03) based on 78.4 million shares of common stock, compared to ($0.04) based on 76.2 million shares of common stock in the fourth quarter of 2023.
    • Non-GAAP basic net income per share was $0.11 based on 78.4 million of shares, compared to $0.10 based on 76.2 million shares in the fourth quarter of 2023.
    • Non-GAAP diluted net income per share was $0.11 based on 80.1 million shares of dilutive shares, compared to $0.09 based on 83.7 million dilutive shares in the fourth quarter of 2023.

    Adjusted EBITDA

    • Adjusted EBITDA was $11.0 million, compared to $6.5 million in the fourth quarter of 2023.

    Cash

    • Cash, cash equivalents, restricted cash, and marketable securities totaled $179.6 million as of December 31, 2024.
    • For the three months ended December 31, 2024, net cash provided by operating activities was $12.4 million, compared to $13.3 million provided by operating activities for the same period in 2023. The Company reported free cash flow was $11.6 million in the three months ended December 31, 2024.

    Debt

    • As of December 31, 2024 the Company had $63.1 million in outstanding aggregate principal amount of its 2026 Convertible Notes, and $150.0 million in outstanding aggregate principal amount of its 2028 Convertible Notes. Subsequent to year end the Company repurchased approximately $59.0 million in principal amount of the 2026 Convertible notes for $54.0 million in cash. The Company’s total outstanding debt is approximately $154.1 million.

    Fiscal Year 2024 Financial Highlights:

    • Total revenue was $332.9 million, up 8% compared to fiscal year 2023.
    • Subscription solutions revenue was $247.9 million, up 8% compared to fiscal year 2023.
    • GAAP gross margin was 77%, compared to 76% in fiscal year 2023. Non-GAAP gross margin was 78%, for both fiscal year 2024 and 2023.

    Operating Loss and Non-GAAP Operating Income (Loss)

    • GAAP operating loss was ($41.7) million, compared to ($72.4) million in fiscal year 2023.
    • Included in GAAP loss from operations was a restructuring charge of $13.7 million, including but not limited to the 2024 Restructuring.
    • Non-GAAP operating income (loss) was $19.5 million, compared to ($5.7) million in fiscal year 2023.

    Net Income (Loss) and Earnings Per Share

    • GAAP net loss was ($27.0) million, compared to ($64.7) million in fiscal year 2023.
    • Non-GAAP net income was $22.0 million or 7% of revenue, compared to $2.1 million or 1% of revenue in fiscal year 2023.
    • GAAP net loss per share was ($0.35) based on 77.6 million shares of common stock, compared to ($0.86) based on 75.1 million shares of common stock in fiscal year 2023.
    • Non-GAAP diluted net income per share was $0.28 based on 79.4 million shares of dilutive shares, compared to $0.03 based on 82.9 million dilutive shares in fiscal year 2023.

    Adjusted EBITDA

    • Adjusted EBITDA was $23.5 million, compared to ($1.6) million in fiscal year 2023.

    Cash

    • For the twelve months ended December 31, 2024, net cash provided by operating activities was $26.3 million, compared to ($24.2) million used in operating activities for the same period in 2023. The Company reported free cash flow of $22.5 million for the year ended December 31, 2024.

    Business Highlights:

    Corporate Highlights

    • The Company made several additions to its leadership team. In January, Michelle Suzuki joined as BigCommerce’s Chief Marketing Officer, Rob Walter joined as Chief Revenue Officer, and Marcus Groff started as Senior Vice President of Engineering. In November, Tracy Turner joined as Senior Vice President of Revenue Operations.
    • BigCommerce and its customers achieved another successful Cyber Week, the eleventh in a row with 100% uptime on the platform. Customers on BigCommerce experienced a 26% increase, year over year, in gross merchandise value (GMV) during the five-day period from November 28 through December 2. BigCommerce merchants also saw total orders increase 13% and average order value rise 11%, year over year.

    Customer Highlights

    • 4Patriots, a family-founded company that sells emergency preparedness products, launched a new headless ecommerce store with BigCommerce, utilizing BigCommerce APIs and open source checkout to run a custom tax app, offer their own installment plans to customers, and provide one-click, post-purchase upsell opportunities.
    • Lube-Tech, a longstanding engine fluid brand, partnered with BigCommerce agency partner Codal to launch their first of three enterprise-level stores. They incorporated StagingPro to mirror sandbox and production stores.
    • ABC Fine Wine & Spirits, a retail chain that specializes in wine, spirits, and beer, launched a new online storefront featuring custom pickup and delivery options implemented by BigCommerce partner Irish Titan.
    • Bunzl, a leading distributor in the food processing industry since 1883, launched their ecommerce store using BigCommerce’s B2B Edition, assisted by BigCommerce partner Groove Commerce.
    • Witmer Public Safety Group successfully launched four online stores for firefighters, EMTs, and police officers, and more on BigCommerce’s B2B Edition and using the platform’s Multi-Storefront functionality. Designed by BigCommerce partner Jamersan, the sites are integrated with Witmer’s NetSuite ERP and leverage Algolia’s search technology, resulting in a robust online experience for customers and increased uptimes.

    Partner Highlights

    • We finalized a new global preferred partnership with payments provider Klarna to provide buy now, pay later services to merchants on the BigCommerce platform, helping them optimize checkout and conversion.

    Q1 and 2025 Financial Outlook:

    For the first quarter of 2025, we currently expect:

    • Total revenue between $81.2 million to $83.2 million.
    • Non-GAAP operating income is expected to be between $4 million to $5 million.

    For the full year 2025, we currently expect:

    • Total revenue between $342.1 million and $350.1 million.
    • Non-GAAP operating income between $20 million and $24 million.

    Our first quarter and 2025 financial outlook is based on a number of assumptions that are subject to change and many of which are outside our control. If actual results vary from these assumptions, our expectations may change. There can be no assurance that we will achieve these results.

    We do not provide guidance for loss from operations, the most directly comparable GAAP measure to Non-GAAP operating income (loss), and similarly cannot provide a reconciliation between its forecasted Non-GAAP operating income (loss) and Non-GAAP income (loss) per share and these comparable GAAP measures without unreasonable effort due to the unavailability of reliable estimates for certain items. These items are not within our control and may vary greatly between periods and could significantly impact future financial results.

    Conference Call Information

    BigCommerce will host a conference call and webcast at 7:00 a.m. CT (8:00 a.m. ET) on Thursday, February 20, 2025, to discuss its financial results and business highlights. The conference call can be accessed by dialing (833) 634-1254 from the United States and Canada or (412) 317-6012 internationally and requesting to join the “BigCommerce conference call.” The live webcast of the conference call can be accessed from BigCommerce’s investor relations website at http://investors.bigcommerce.com.

    Following the completion of the call through 11:59 p.m. ET on Thursday, February 27, 2025, a telephone replay will be available by dialing (877) 344-7529 from the United States, (855) 669-9658 from Canada or (412) 317-0088 internationally with conference ID 9139950. A webcast replay will also be available at http://investors.bigcommerce.com for 12 months.

    About BigCommerce

    BigCommerce (Nasdaq: BIGC) is a leading open SaaS and composable ecommerce platform that empowers brands, retailers, manufacturers and distributors of all sizes to build, innovate and grow their businesses online. BigCommerce provides its customers sophisticated professional-grade functionality, customization and performance with simplicity and ease-of-use. Tens of thousands of B2C and B2B companies across 150 countries and numerous industries rely on BigCommerce, including Coldwater Creek, Harvey Nichols, King Arthur Baking Co., MKM Building Supplies, United Aqua Group and Uplift Desk. For more information, please visit www.bigcommerce.com or follow us on X and LinkedIn.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This press release contains “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. In some cases, you can identify forward-looking statements by terms such as “anticipate,” “believe,” “estimate,” “expect,” “intend,” “outlook,” “may,” “might,” “plan,” “project,” “will,” “would,” “should,” “could,” “can,” “predict,” “potential,” “strategy, “target,” “explore,” “continue,” or the negative of these terms, and similar expressions intended to identify forward-looking statements. However, not all forward-looking statements contain these identifying words. These statements may relate to our market size and growth strategy, our estimated and projected costs, margins, revenue, expenditures and customer and financial growth rates, our Q1 and fiscal 2025 financial outlook, our plans and objectives for future operations, growth, initiatives or strategies. By their nature, these statements are subject to numerous uncertainties and risks, including factors beyond our control, that could cause actual results, performance or achievement to differ materially and adversely from those anticipated or implied in the forward-looking statements. These assumptions, uncertainties and risks include that, among others, the anticipated benefits and opportunities related to the 2024 Restructure may not be realized or may take longer to realize than expected, our ability to pay the interest and principal on our indebtedness depends upon cash flows generated by our operating performance, our business would be harmed by any decline in new customers, renewals or upgrades, our limited operating history makes it difficult to evaluate our prospects and future results of operations, we operate in competitive markets, we may not be able to sustain our revenue growth rate in the future, our business would be harmed by any significant interruptions, delays or outages in services from our platform or certain social media platforms, and a cybersecurity-related attack, significant data breach or disruption of the information technology systems or networks could negatively affect our business. Additional risks and uncertainties that could cause actual outcomes and results to differ materially from those contemplated by the forward-looking statements are included under the caption “Risk Factors” and elsewhere in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”), including our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023 and the future quarterly and current reports that we file with the SEC. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date the statements are made and are based on information available to BigCommerce at the time those statements are made and/or management’s good faith belief as of that time with respect to future events. BigCommerce assumes no obligation to update forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances after the date they were made, except as required by law.

    Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures

    We have provided in this press release certain financial information that has not been prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles in the United States (“GAAP”). Our management uses these Non-GAAP financial measures internally in analyzing our financial results and believes that use of these Non-GAAP financial measures is useful to investors as an additional tool to evaluate ongoing operating results and trends and in comparing our financial results with other companies in our industry, many of which present similar Non-GAAP financial measures. Non-GAAP financial measures are not meant to be considered in isolation or as a substitute for comparable financial measures prepared in accordance with GAAP and should be read only in conjunction with our consolidated financial statements prepared in accordance with GAAP. A reconciliation of our historical Non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures has been provided in the financial statement tables included in this press release, and investors are encouraged to review these reconciliations.

    Annual Revenue Run-Rate

    We calculate annual revenue run-rate (“ARR”) at the end of each month as the sum of: (1) contractual monthly recurring revenue at the end of the period, which includes platform subscription fees, invoiced growth adjustments, feed management subscription fees, recurring professional services revenue, and other recurring revenue, multiplied by twelve to prospectively annualize recurring revenue, and (2) the sum of the trailing twelve-month non-recurring and variable revenue, which includes one-time partner integrations, one-time fees, payments revenue share, and any other revenue that is non-recurring and variable.

    Enterprise Account Metrics

    To measure the effectiveness of our ability to execute against our growth strategy, we calculate ARR attributable to Enterprise Accounts. We define Enterprise Accounts as accounts with at least one unique Enterprise plan subscription or an enterprise level feed management subscription. These accounts may have more than one Enterprise plan or a combination of Enterprise plans and non-enterprise plans.

    Average Revenue Per Account

    We calculate ARPA for accounts in the Enterprise cohort at the end of a period by including customer-billed revenue and an allocation of partner and services revenue, where applicable. We allocate partner revenue, where applicable, primarily based on each customer’s share of GMV processed through that partner’s solution. For partner revenue that is not directly linked to customer usage of a partner’s solution, we allocate such revenue based on each customer’s share of total platform GMV. Each account’s partner revenue allocation is calculated by taking the account’s trailing twelve-month partner revenue, then dividing by twelve to create a monthly average to apply to the applicable period in order to normalize ARPA for seasonality.

    Adjusted EBITDA

    We define Adjusted EBITDA as our net loss, excluding the impact of stock-based compensation expense and related payroll tax costs, amortization of intangible assets, acquisition related costs, restructuring charges, depreciation, gain on convertible note extinguishment, interest income, interest expense, other expense, and our provision or benefit for income taxes. Acquisition related costs include contingent compensation arrangements entered into in connection with acquisitions and achieved earnout related to an acquisition.

    Restructuring charges include severance benefits, right-of-use asset impairments, lease termination gain, software impairments, accelerated depreciation and amortization, and professional services costs.

    Depreciation includes depreciation expenses related to the Company’s fixed assets.

    The most directly comparable GAAP measure is net loss.

    Non-GAAP Operating Income (Loss)

    We define Non-GAAP Operating Income (Loss) as our GAAP Loss from operations, excluding the impact of stock-based compensation expense and related payroll tax costs, amortization of intangible assets, acquisition-related costs, and restructuring charges. The most directly comparable GAAP measure is our loss from operations.

    Non-GAAP Net Income (Loss)

    We define Non-GAAP Net Income (Loss) as our GAAP net loss, excluding the impact of stock-based compensation expense and related payroll tax costs, amortization of intangible assets, acquisition-related costs, restructuring charges, and gain on convertible notes extinguishment. The most directly comparable GAAP measure is our net loss.

    Non-GAAP Basic and Dilutive Net Income (Loss) per Share

    We define Non-GAAP Basic Net Income (Loss) per Share as our Non-GAAP net income (loss), defined above, divided by our basic and diluted GAAP weighted average shares outstanding. The most directly comparable GAAP measure is our basic net loss per share.

    Free Cash Flow

    We define Free Cash Flow as our GAAP cash flow provided by (used in) operating activities less our GAAP purchases of property and equipment (Capital Expenditures). The most directly comparable GAAP measure is our cash flow provided by (used in) operating activities.

    Consolidated Balance Sheets
    (in thousands)

        December 31,   December 31,  
        2024   2023  
               
    Assets          
    Current assets          
    Cash and cash equivalents   $ 88,877   $ 71,719  
    Restricted cash     1,479     1,126  
    Marketable securities     89,283     198,415  
    Accounts receivable, net     48,117     37,713  
    Prepaid expenses and other assets, net     14,641     24,733  
    Deferred commissions     8,822     8,280  
    Total current assets     251,219     341,986  
    Property and equipment, net     9,128     10,233  
    Operating lease, right-of-use-assets, net     1,993     4,405  
    Prepaid expenses and other assets, net of current portion     3,146     1,240  
    Deferred commissions, net of current portion     5,559     7,056  
    Intangible assets, net     17,317     27,052  
    Goodwill     51,927     52,086  
    Total assets   $ 340,289   $ 444,058  
    Liabilities and stockholders’ equity          
    Current liabilities          
    Accounts payable   $ 7,018   $ 7,982  
    Accrued liabilities     3,194     2,652  
    Deferred revenue     46,590     32,242  
    Operating lease liabilities     2,438     2,542  
    Other liabilities     28,766     25,332  
    Total current liabilities     88,006     70,750  
    Convertible notes     216,466     339,614  
    Operating lease liabilities, net of current portion     1,680     7,610  
    Other liabilities, net of current portion     768     551  
    Total liabilities     306,920     418,525  
    Commitments and contingencies (Note 8)          
    Stockholders’ equity          
    Common stock, $0.0001 par value; 500,000 shares authorized at December 31, 2024 and 2023, respectively; 78,573 and 76,410 shares issued and outstanding at December 31, 2024 and 2023, respectively.     7     7  
    Additional paid-in capital     654,905     620,021  
    Accumulated other comprehensive income     145     163  
    Accumulated deficit     (621,688 )   (594,658 )
    Total stockholders’ equity     33,369     25,533  
    Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity   $ 340,289   $ 444,058  
    Consolidated Statements of Operations
    (in thousands, except per share amounts)
    (unaudited)
     
        Three months ended
    December 31,
      Year ended
    December 31,
     
        2024   2023   2024   2023  
    Revenue   $ 87,028   $ 84,149   $ 332,927   $ 309,394  
    Cost of revenue (1)     19,476     18,946     77,589     74,202  
    Gross profit     67,552     65,203     255,338     235,192  
    Operating expenses: (1)                  
    Sales and marketing     29,605     34,332     129,602     140,230  
    Research and development     19,763     19,509     80,879     83,460  
    General and administrative     14,994     13,574     61,794     58,838  
    Amortization of intangible assets     2,383     2,323     9,736     8,422  
    Acquisition related costs     333     935     1,334     10,252  
    Restructuring charges     1,225     219     13,677     6,434  
    Total operating expenses     68,303     70,892     297,022     307,636  
    Loss from operations     (751 )   (5,689 )   (41,684 )   (72,444 )
    Gain on convertible note extinguishment     0     0     12,110     0  
    Interest income     1,761     3,183     10,568     11,493  
    Interest expense     (2,703 )   (719 )   (6,051 )   (2,884 )
    Other expenses     (373 )   (503 )   (958 )   (836 )
    Loss before provision for income taxes     (2,066 )   (3,728 )   (26,015 )   (64,671 )
    Benefit (provision) for income taxes     (324 )   552     (1,015 )   0  
    Net loss   $ (2,390 ) $ (3,176 ) $ (27,030 ) $ (64,671 )
    Basic net loss per share   $ (0.03 ) $ (0.04 ) $ (0.35 ) $ (0.86 )
    Shares used to compute basic net loss per share     78,438     76,226     77,600     75,143  

    (1) Amounts include stock-based compensation expense and associated payroll tax costs, as follows:

        Three months ended
    December 31,
      Year ended
    December 31,
     
        2024   2023   2024   2023  
    Cost of revenue   $ 735   $ 1,147   $ 3,533   $ 4,949  
    Sales and marketing     920     3,415     9,252     13,474  
    Research and development     3,099     1,908     13,614     13,478  
    General and administrative     2,141     1,105     10,000     9,785  
    Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
    (in thousands)
    (unaudited)
     
      Three months ended
    December 31,
      Year ended
    December 31,
     
      2024   2023   2024   2023  
                     
    Cash flows from operating activities                
    Net loss $ (2,390 ) $ (3,176 ) $ (27,030 ) $ (64,671 )
    Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash provided by (used in) operating activities:                
    Depreciation and amortization expense   3,329     3,500     13,811     12,480  
    Amortization of discount on convertible note   244     496     1,582     1,976  
    Amortization of premium on convertible note   (396 )   0     (636 )   0  
    Stock-based compensation expense   6,821     7,635     35,377     41,185  
    Provision for expected credit losses   206     (656 )   3,208     805  
    Real estate and internal-use software charges   502     70     3,533     70  
    Gain on lease modification   0     0     (988 )   0  
    Gain on convertible note extinguishment   0     0     (12,110 )   0  
    Other   6     (5 )   (31 )   167  
    Changes in operating assets and liabilities:                
    Accounts receivable   (5,273 )   534     (14,206 )   (3,877 )
    Prepaid expenses and other assets   5,477     4,581     6,493     2,063  
    Deferred commissions   757     (354 )   955     (2,128 )
    Accounts payable   (672 )   1,710     (895 )   962  
    Accrued and other liabilities   3,511     (1,083 )   2,843     (25,836 )
    Deferred revenue   238     27     14,348     12,561  
    Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities   12,360     13,279     26,254     (24,243 )
    Cash flows from investing activities:                
    Cash paid for acquisition   0     (7,891 )   (100 )   (7,891 )
    Purchase of property, equipment, leasehold improvements and capitalized internal-use software   (787 )   (1,043 )   (3,721 )   (4,179 )
    Maturity of marketable securities   53,603     36,960     205,238     243,167  
    Purchase of marketable securities   (10,167 )   (39,207 )   (96,124 )   (228,281 )
    Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities   42,649     (11,181 )   105,293     2,816  
    Cash flows from financing activities:                
    Proceeds from exercise of stock options   225     136     1,708     3,849  
    Taxes paid related to net share settlement of stock options   (38 )   (12 )   (2,449 )   (3,294 )
    Holdback payments related to business combination   (1,000 )   0     (1,000 )   0  
    Proceeds from financing obligation   0     0     0     1,081  
    Payment of convertible note issuance costs   (656 ) 0     (3,176 ) 0  
    Repayment of convertible notes and financing obligation   (139 )   (263 )   (109,119 )   (394 )
    Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities   (1,608 )   (139 )   (114,036 )   1,242  
    Net change in cash and cash equivalents and restricted cash   53,401     1,959     17,511     (20,185 )
    Cash and cash equivalents and restricted cash, beginning of period   36,955     70,886     72,845     93,030  
    Cash and cash equivalents and restricted cash, end of period $ 90,356   $ 72,845   $ 90,356   $ 72,845  
    Supplemental cash flow information:                
    Cash paid for interest $ 3   $ 21   $ 2,466   $ 894  
    Cash paid for taxes $ 106   $ 242   $ 381   $ 583  
    Noncash investing and financing activities:                
    Changes in capital additions, accrued but not paid $ 84   $ 168   $ 84   $ 168  
    Fair value of shares issued as consideration for business combinations $ 0   $ 496   $ 248   $ 1,417  
    Principal amount of 2028 Convertible Notes exchanged $ 0   $ 0   $ 150,000   $ 0  

    Disaggregated Revenue:

        Three months ended
    December 31,
      Year ended
    December 31,
     
    (in thousands)   2024   2023   2024   2023  
    Subscription solutions   $ 62,288   $ 60,613   $ 247,870   $ 229,265  
    Partner and services     24,740     23,536     85,057     80,129  
    Revenue   $ 87,028   $ 84,149   $ 332,927   $ 309,394  

    Revenue by Geography:

        Three months ended
    December 31,
      Year ended
    December 31,
     
    (in thousands)   2024   2023   2024   2023  
    Revenue:                  
    Americas – U.S.   $ 66,078   $ 64,055   $ 253,484   $ 236,502  
    Americas – other (1)     4,217     3,837     15,662     14,103  
    EMEA     9,994     9,475     38,031     34,661  
    APAC     6,739     6,782     25,750     24,128  
    Revenue   $ 87,028   $ 84,149   $ 332,927   $ 309,394  

    (1)Americas-other revenue includes revenue from North and South America, other than the U.S.

    Reconciliation of GAAP to Non-GAAP Results
    (in thousands, except per share amounts)
    (unaudited)
     
    Reconciliation of loss from operations to Non-GAAP operating income (loss):
     
        Three months ended
    December 31,
        Year ended
    December 31,
       
        2024     2023     2024     2023    
    (in thousands)                          
    Revenue   $ 87,028     $ 84,149     $ 332,927     $ 309,394    
                               
    Loss from operations   $ (751 )   $ (5,689 )   $ (41,684 )   $ (72,444 )  
    Plus: stock-based compensation expense and associated payroll tax costs     6,895       7,575       36,399       41,686    
    Amortization of intangible assets     2,383       2,323       9,736       8,422    
    Acquisition related costs     333       935       1,334       10,252    
    Restructuring charges     1,225       219       13,677       6,434    
    Non-GAAP operating income (loss)   $ 10,085     $ 5,363     $ 19,462     $ (5,650 )  
    Non-GAAP operating income (loss) as a percentage of revenue     11.6   %   6.4   %   5.8   %   (1.8 ) %

    Reconciliation of net loss & basic net loss per share to Non-GAAP net income & Non-GAAP net income per share:

        Three months ended
    December 31,
        Year ended
    December 31,
       
        2024     2023     2024     2023    
    (in thousands)                          
    Revenue   $ 87,028     $ 84,149     $ 332,927     $ 309,394    
                               
    Net loss   $ (2,390 )   $ (3,176 )   $ (27,030 )   $ (64,671 )  
    Plus: stock-based compensation expense and associated payroll tax costs     6,895       7,575       36,399       41,686    
    Amortization of intangible assets     2,383       2,323       9,736       8,422    
    Acquisition related costs     333       935       1,334       10,252    
    Restructuring charges     1,225       219       13,677       6,434    
    Gain on convertible note extinguishment     0       0       (12,110 )     0    
    Non-GAAP net income   $ 8,446     $ 7,876     $ 22,006     $ 2,123    
    Basic net loss per share   $ (0.03 )   $ (0.04 )   $ (0.35 )   $ (0.86 )  
    Non-GAAP basic net income per share   $ 0.11     $ 0.10     $ 0.28     $ 0.03    
    Non-GAAP diluted net income per share   $ 0.11     $ 0.09     $ 0.28     $ 0.03    
    Shares used to compute basic Non-GAAP net income per share     78,438       76,226       77,600       75,143    
    Shares used to compute diluted Non-GAAP net income per share     80,081       83,679       79,544       82,938    
    Non-GAAP net income as a percentage of revenue     9.7   %   9.4   %   6.6   %   0.7   %

    Reconciliation of net loss to adjusted EBITDA:

        Three months ended
    December 31,
        Year ended
    December 31,
       
        2024     2023     2024     2023    
    (in thousands)                          
    Revenue   $ 87,028     $ 84,149     $ 332,927     $ 309,394    
                               
    Net loss   $ (2,390 )   $ (3,176 )   $ (27,030 )   $ (64,671 )  
    Plus: stock-based compensation expense and associated payroll tax costs     6,895       7,575       36,399       41,686    
    Amortization of intangible assets     2,383       2,323       9,736       8,422    
    Acquisition related costs     333       935       1,334       10,252    
    Restructuring charges     1,225       219       13,677       6,434    
    Depreciation     946       1,177       4,075       4,058    
    Gain on convertible note extinguishment     0       0       (12,110 )     0    
    Interest income     (1,761 )     (3,183 )     (10,568 )     (11,493 )  
    Interest expense     2,703       719       6,051       2,884    
    Other expenses     373       503       958       836    
    Benefit (provision) for income taxes     324       (552 )     1,015       0    
    Adjusted EBITDA   $ 11,031     $ 6,540     $ 23,537     $ (1,592 )  
    Adjusted EBITDA as a percentage of revenue     12.7   %   7.8   %   7.1   %   (0.5 ) %

    Reconciliation of cost of revenue to Non-GAAP cost of revenue:

        Three months ended
    December 31,
        Year ended
    December 31,
       
        2024     2023     2024     2023    
    (in thousands)                          
    Revenue   $ 87,028     $ 84,149     $ 332,927     $ 309,394    
                               
    Cost of revenue   $ 19,476     $ 18,946     $ 77,589     $ 74,202    
    Less: stock-based compensation expense and associated payroll tax costs     735       1,147       3,533       4,949    
    Non-GAAP cost of revenue   $ 18,741     $ 17,799     $ 74,056     $ 69,253    
    As a percentage of revenue     21.5   %   21.2   %   22.2   %   22.4   %

    Reconciliation of sales and marketing expense to Non-GAAP sales and marketing expense:

        Three months ended
    December 31,
        Year ended
    December 31,
       
        2024     2023     2024     2023    
    (in thousands)                          
    Revenue   $ 87,028     $ 84,149     $ 332,927     $ 309,394    
                               
    Sales and marketing   $ 29,605     $ 34,332     $ 129,602     $ 140,230    
    Less: stock-based compensation expense and associated payroll tax costs     920       3,415       9,252       13,474    
    Non-GAAP sales and marketing   $ 28,685     $ 30,917     $ 120,350     $ 126,756    
    As a percentage of revenue     33.0   %   36.7   %   36.1   %   41.0   %

    Reconciliation of research and development expense to Non-GAAP research and development expense:

        Three months ended
    December 31,
        Year ended
    December 31,
       
        2024     2023     2024     2023    
    (in thousands)                          
    Revenue   $ 87,028     $ 84,149     $ 332,927     $ 309,394    
                               
    Research and development   $ 19,763     $ 19,509     $ 80,879     $ 83,460    
    Less: stock-based compensation expense and associated payroll tax costs     3,099       1,908       13,614       13,478    
    Non-GAAP research and development   $ 16,664     $ 17,601     $ 67,265     $ 69,982    
    As a percentage of revenue     19.1   %   20.9   %   20.2   %   22.6   %

    Reconciliation of general and administrative expense to Non-GAAP general and administrative expense:

        Three months ended
    December 31,
        Year ended
    December 31,
       
        2024     2023     2024     2023    
    (in thousands)                          
    Revenue   $ 87,028     $ 84,149     $ 332,927     $ 309,394    
                               
    General & administrative   $ 14,994     $ 13,574     $ 61,794     $ 58,838    
    Less: stock-based compensation expense and associated payroll tax costs     2,141       1,105       10,000       9,785    
    Non-GAAP general & administrative   $ 12,853     $ 12,469     $ 51,794     $ 49,053    
    As a percentage of revenue     14.8   %   14.8   %   15.6   %   15.9   %

    Reconciliation of net cash provided by (used in) operating activities to free cash flow:

        Three months ended
    December 31,
        Year ended
    December 31,
     
        2024     2023     2024     2023  
    (in thousands)                        
    Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities   $ 12,360     $ 13,279     $ 26,254     $ (24,243 )
    Purchase of property, equipment, leasehold improvements and capitalized internal-use software     (787 )     (1,043 )     (3,721 )     (4,179 )
    Free cash flow   $ 11,573     $ 12,236     $ 22,533     $ (28,422 )

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Kaltura Announces Financial Results for Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2024

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NEW YORK, Feb. 20, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Kaltura, Inc. (“Kaltura” or the “Company”), the video experience cloud, today announced financial results for the fourth quarter and full year ended December 31, 2024, as well as outlook for first quarter and full year 2025.

    “We surpassed our guidance for the fourth quarter, delivering record total and subscription revenue, as well as the highest Adjusted EBITDA since the second quarter of 2020, fueled by record high gross margin. We also posted sequential and year-over-year growth in gross and net dollar retention rates, and in new bookings for the third quarter in a row,” said Ron Yekutiel, Co-founder, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of Kaltura.

    “For the full year, we are pleased to report we achieved record annual subscription revenue, total revenue, and Adjusted EBITDA profit, surpassing our annual guidance for all. We also achieved record gross margin and cash flow from operations. We ended the year with record ARR and RPO, having delivered on our plans to reaccelerate new bookings and revenue throughout the second half of the year, and posted positive cash flow from operations for the year, for the first time since 2020.” Mr. Yekutiel continued, “As we look ahead to 2025 and beyond, we anticipate continued improvement in the market environment for enterprise video offerings, and believe our path to increased growth and profitability will be fueled by customer consolidation around our platform, maturity of our newer products, leveraging our exciting new generative artificial intelligence (“Gen AI”) capabilities, growth potential within our great customer base, and a regrowth of our sales force.”

    Fourth Quarter 2024 Financial Highlights:

    • Revenue for the fourth quarter of 2024 was $45.6 million, an increase of 3% compared to $44.5 million for the fourth quarter of 2023.
       
    • Subscription revenue for the fourth quarter of 2024 was $43.4 million, an increase of 6% compared to $40.8 million for the fourth quarter of 2023.
       
    • Annualized Recurring Revenue (ARR) was $173.9 million, an increase of 6% compared to $164.7 million in 2023.
       
    • GAAP Gross profit for the fourth quarter of 2024 was $32.3 million, representing a gross margin of 71% compared to a GAAP gross profit of $28.6 million and gross margin of 64% for the fourth quarter of 2023. 
       
    • Non-GAAP Gross profit for the fourth quarter of 2024 was $32.6 million, representing a non-GAAP gross margin of 71%, compared to a non-GAAP gross profit of $29.1 million and non-GAAP gross margin of 65% for the fourth quarter of 2023. 
       
    • GAAP Operating loss was $3.8 million for the fourth quarter of 2024, compared to an operating loss of $8.8 million for the fourth quarter of 2023.
       
    • Non-GAAP Operating income was $1.5 million for the fourth quarter of 2024, compared to a non-GAAP operating loss of $0.3 million for the fourth quarter of 2023.
       
    • GAAP Net loss was $6.6 million or $0.04 per diluted share for the fourth quarter of 2024, compared to a GAAP net loss of $12.1 million, or $0.09 per diluted share, for the fourth quarter of 2023.
       
    • Non-GAAP Net loss was $1.3 million or $0.01 per diluted share for the fourth quarter of 2024, compared to a non-GAAP net loss of $3.6 million, or $0.03 per diluted share, for the fourth quarter of 2023.
       
    • Adjusted EBITDA was $2.7 million for the fourth quarter of 2024, compared to Adjusted EBITDA of $0.8 million for the fourth quarter of 2023.
       
    • Net cash provided by operating activities was $4.3 million for the fourth quarter of 2024, compared to $1.6 million in the fourth quarter of 2023.

    Full Year 2024 Financial Highlights:

    • Revenue for the full year of 2024 was $178.7 million, an increase of 2% compared to $175.2 million for the full year of 2023.
       
    • Subscription revenue for the full year of 2024 was $167.7 million, an increase of 3% compared to $162.8 million for the full year of 2023.
       
    • GAAP Gross profit for the full year of 2024 was $119.1 million, representing a gross margin of 67% compared to a GAAP gross profit of $112.2 million and gross margin of 64% for the full year of 2023. 
       
    • Non-GAAP Gross profit for the full year of 2024 was $120.5 million, representing a gross margin of 67% compared to a non-GAAP gross profit of $113.8 million and gross margin of 65% for the full year of 2023. 
       
    • GAAP Operating loss was $24.1 million for the full year of 2024, compared to an operating loss of $38.7 million for the full year of 2023.
       
    • Non-GAAP Operating income was $2.7 million for the full year of 2024, compared a non-GAAP operating loss of $6.7 million for the full year of 2023.
       
    • GAAP Net loss was $31.3 million or $0.21 per diluted share for the full year of 2024, compared to a GAAP net loss of $46.4 million, or $0.34 per diluted share, for the full year of 2023.
       
    • Non-GAAP Net loss was $4.5 million or $0.03 per diluted share for the full year of 2024, compared to a non-GAAP net loss of $14.4 million, or $0.10 per diluted share, for the full year of 2023.
       
    • Adjusted EBITDA was $7.3 million for the full year of 2024, compared to an Adjusted EBITDA of negative $2.5 million for the full year of 2023.
       
    • Net cash provided by operating activities was $12.2 million for the full year of 2024, compared to $8.3 million net cash used in operating activities for the full year of 2023.

    Fourth Quarter 2024 Business Highlights:

    • Closed four new seven-digit deals and twenty-nine six-digit deals – the highest combined number of six and seven-digit deals since the third quarter of 2022.
    • Highest new subscription bookings since the fourth quarter of 2022 – third quarter in a row of sequential and year-over-year growth.
    • Sequential and year-over-year improvement in gross retention, and 103% Net Dollar Retention rate.
    • Launched Gen AI based “Class Genie” and “Work Genie” that power real-time hyper-personalized video-first experiences. Our Beta program for evaluating our Work and Class Genies saw strong interest from dozens of large organizations.
    • Kaltura’s Media and Telecom new Gen AI features for streaming services earned a place in the FEED Magazine 2024 Honors List, in the “Special Recognition in AI” category.

    Financial Outlook:

    For the first quarter of 2025, Kaltura expects:

    • Subscription Revenue to grow by 5%-7% year-over-year to between $43.4 million and $44.2 million.
    • Total Revenue to grow by 2%-4% year-over-year to between $45.7 million and $46.5 million.
    • Adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $2.5 million to $3.5 million.

    For the full year ending December 31, 2025, Kaltura expects:

    • Subscription Revenue to grow by 2%-3% year-over-year to between $170.4 million and $173.4 million.
    • Total Revenue to grow 1%-2% year-over-year to between $179.9 million and $182.9 million.
    • Adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $12.7 million to $14.7 million.

    The guidance provided above contains forward-looking statements and actual results may differ materially. Refer to “Forward-Looking Statements” below for information on the factors that could cause our actual results to differ materially from these forward-looking statements. Kaltura has not provided a quantitative reconciliation of forecasted Adjusted EBITDA to forecasted GAAP net loss within this press release because the Company is unable, without making unreasonable efforts, to calculate certain reconciling items with confidence. The reconciliation for Adjusted EBITDA includes but is not limited to the following items: stock-based compensation expenses, depreciation, amortization, financial expenses (income), net, provision for income tax, and other non-recurring operating expenses. These items, which could materially affect the computation of forward-looking GAAP net loss, are inherently uncertain and depend on various factors, some of which are outside of the Company’s control. The guidance above is based on the Company’s current expectations relating to the macro-economic climate trends.

    Additional information on Kaltura’s reported results, including a reconciliation of the non-GAAP financial measures to their most comparable GAAP measures, is included in the financial tables below.

    Investor Deck

    Our fourth quarter and full year 2024 Investor Deck has been posted in the investor relations page on our website at: www.investors.kaltura.com.         

    Conference Call

    Kaltura will host a conference call today on February 20, 2025 to review its fourth quarter and full year 2024 financial results and to discuss its financial outlook.

      Time: 8:00 a.m. ET  
      United States/Canada Toll Free: 1-877-407-0789  
      International Toll: 1-201-689-8562  
           

    A live webcast will also be available in the Investor Relations section of Kaltura’s website at: https://investors.kaltura.com/news-and-events/events

    A replay of the webcast will be available in the Investor Relations section of the company’s web site approximately two hours after the conclusion of the call and remain available for approximately 30 calendar days.

    About Kaltura

    Kaltura’s mission is to power any video experience for any organization. Our Video Experience Cloud offers live, real-time, and on-demand video products for enterprises of all industries, as well as specialized industry solutions, currently for educational institutions and for media and telecom companies. Underlying our products and solutions is a broad set of Media Services that are also used by other cloud platforms and companies to power video experiences and workflows for their own products. Kaltura’s Video Experience Cloud is used by leading brands reaching millions of users, at home, at school and at work, for communication, collaboration, training, marketing, sales, customer care, teaching, learning, virtual events, and entertainment experiences.

    Investor Contacts:
    Kaltura
    John Doherty
    Chief Financial Officer
    IR@Kaltura.com

    Sapphire Investor Relations
    Erica Mannion and Michael Funari
    +1 617 542 6180
    IR@Kaltura.com

    Media Contacts:
    Kaltura
    Nohar Zmora
    pr.team@kaltura.com

    Headline Media
    Raanan Loew
    raanan@headline.media
    +1 347 897 9276

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. All statements contained in this press release that do not relate to matters of historical fact should be considered forward-looking statements, including but not limited to, statements regarding our future financial and operating performance, including our guidance; our business strategy, plans and objectives for future operations, including new products and capabilities and growth of our salesforce; our expectations regarding growth and profitability goals; and general economic, business and industry conditions, including expectations with respect to trends in customer consolidation and adoption of Gen AI technology.

    In some cases, you can identify forward-looking statements by terminology such as “aim,” “anticipate,” “assume,” “believe,” “contemplate,” “continue,” “could,” “due,” “estimate,” “expect,” “goal,” “intend,” “may,” “objective,” “plan,” “predict,” “potential,” “positioned,” “seek,” “should,” “target,” “will,” “would” and other similar expressions that are predictions of or indicate future events and future trends, or the negative of these terms or other comparable terminology, although not all forward-looking statements contain these words. Any forward-looking statements contained herein are based on our historical performance and our current plans, estimates and expectations and are not a representation that such plans, estimates, or expectations will be achieved. These forward-looking statements represent our expectations as of the date of this press release. Subsequent events may cause these expectations to change, and we disclaim any obligation to update the forward-looking statements in the future, except as required by law. These forward-looking statements are subject to known and unknown risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from our current expectations.

    Important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those anticipated in our forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, the current volatile economic climate and its direct and indirect impact on our business and operations; political, economic, and military conditions in Israel and other geographies; our ability to retain our customers and meet demand; our ability to achieve and maintain profitability; the evolution of the markets for our offerings; our ability to keep pace with technological and competitive developments; risks associated with our use of certain artificial intelligence and machine learning models; our ability to maintain the interoperability of our offerings across devices, operating systems and third-party applications; risks associated with our Application Programming Interfaces, other components in our offerings and other intellectual property; our ability to compete successfully against current and future competitors; our ability to increase customer revenue; risks related to our approach to revenue recognition; our potential exposure to cybersecurity threats; our compliance with data privacy and data protection laws; our ability to meet our contractual commitments; our reliance on third parties; our ability to retain our key personnel; risks related to revenue mix and customer base; risks related to our international operations; risks related to potential acquisitions; our ability to generate or raise additional capital; and the other risks under the caption “Risk Factors” in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2023, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”), as such factors are updated in our Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarterly period ended September 30, 2024, filed with the SEC, and as such factors may be updated from time to time in our other filings with the SEC, including our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2024, to be filed with the SEC, which are accessible on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov and the Investor Relations page of our website at investors.kaltura.com.

    Non-GAAP Financial Measures

    Kaltura has provided in this press release and the accompanying tables measures of financial information that have not been prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles in the U.S. (“GAAP”), including non-GAAP gross profit, non-GAAP gross margin (calculated as a percentage of revenue), non-GAAP research and development expenses, non-GAAP sales and marketing expenses, non-GAAP general and administrative expenses, non-GAAP operating loss, non-GAAP operating margin (calculated as a percentage of revenue), non-GAAP net loss, non-GAAP net loss per share and Adjusted EBITDA. Kaltura defines these non-GAAP financial measures as the respective corresponding GAAP measure, adjusted for, as applicable: (1) stock-based compensation expense; (2) the amortization of acquired intangibles; (3) facility exit and transition costs; (4) restructuring charges; and (5) war-related costs. Kaltura defines EBITDA as net profit (loss) before financial expenses (income), net, provision for income taxes, and depreciation and amortization expenses. Adjusted EBITDA is defined as EBITDA (as defined above), adjusted for the impact of certain non-cash and other items that we believe are not indicative of our core operating performance, such as non-cash stock-based compensation expenses, facility exit and transition costs, restructuring charges and other non-recurring operating expenses. We believe these non-GAAP financial measures provide useful information to management and investors regarding certain financial and business trends relating to Kaltura’s financial condition and results of operations. These non-GAAP metrics are a supplemental measure of our performance, are not defined by or presented in accordance with GAAP, and should not be considered in isolation or as an alternative to net profit (loss) or any other performance measure prepared in accordance with GAAP. Non-GAAP financial measures are presented because we believe that they provide useful supplemental information to investors and analysts regarding our operating performance and are frequently used by these parties in evaluating companies in our industry.

    By presenting these non-GAAP financial measures, we provide a basis for comparison of our business operations between periods by excluding items that we do not believe are indicative of our core operating performance. We believe that investors’ understanding of our performance is enhanced by including these non-GAAP financial measures as a reasonable basis for comparing our ongoing results of operations. Additionally, our management uses these non-GAAP financial measures as supplemental measures of our performance because they assist us in comparing the operating performance of our business on a consistent basis between periods, as described above. Although we use the non-GAAP financial measures described above, such measures have significant limitations as analytical tools and only supplement but do not replace, our financial statements in accordance with GAAP. See the tables below regarding reconciliations of these non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures.

    Key Financial and Operating Metrics

    Annualized Recurring Revenue. We use Annualized Recurring Revenue (“ARR”) as a measure of our revenue trend and an indicator of our future revenue opportunity from existing recurring customer contracts. We calculate ARR by annualizing our recurring revenue for the most recently completed fiscal quarter. Recurring revenues are generated from SaaS and PaaS subscriptions, as well as term licenses for software installed on the customer’s premises (“On-Prem”). For the SaaS and PaaS components, we calculate ARR by annualizing the actual recurring revenue recognized for the latest fiscal quarter. For the On-Prem components for which revenue recognition is not ratable across the license term, we calculate ARR for each contract by dividing the total contract value (excluding professional services) as of the last day of the specified period by the number of days in the contract term and then multiplying by 365. Recurring revenue excludes revenue from one-time professional services and setup fees. ARR is not adjusted for the impact of any known or projected future customer cancellations, upgrades or downgrades or price increases or decreases. The amount of actual revenue that we recognize over any 12-month period is likely to differ from ARR at the beginning of that period, sometimes significantly. This may occur due to new bookings, cancellations, upgrades or downgrades, pending renewals, professional services revenue, foreign exchange rate fluctuations and acquisitions or divestitures. ARR should be viewed independently of revenue as it is an operating metric and is not intended to be a replacement or forecast of revenue. Our calculation of ARR may differ from similarly titled metrics presented by other companies.

    Net Dollar Retention Rate. Our Net Dollar Retention Rate, which we use to measure our success in retaining and growing recurring revenue from our existing customers, compares our recognized recurring revenue from a set of customers across comparable periods. We calculate our Net Dollar Retention Rate for a given period as the recognized recurring revenue from the latest reported fiscal quarter from the set of customers whose revenue existed in the reported fiscal quarter from the prior year (the numerator), divided by recognized recurring revenue from such customers for the same fiscal quarter in the prior year (denominator). For annual periods, we report Net Dollar Retention Rate as the arithmetic average of the Net Dollar Retention Rate for all fiscal quarters included in the period. We consider subdivisions of the same legal entity (for example, divisions of a parent company or separate campuses that are part of the same state university system) ,as well as Value-add Resellers (“VARs”) (meaning resellers that directly manage the relationship with the customer) and the customers they manage, to be a single customer for purposes of calculating our Net Dollar Retention Rate. Our calculation of Net Dollar Retention Rate for any fiscal period includes the positive recognized recurring revenue impacts of selling new services to existing customers and the negative recognized recurring revenue impacts of contraction and attrition among this set of customers. Our Net Dollar Retention Rate may fluctuate as a result of a number of factors, including the growing level of our revenue base, the level of penetration within our customer base, expansion of products and features, and our ability to retain our customers. Our calculation of Net Dollar Retention Rate may differ from similarly titled metrics presented by other companies.

    Remaining Performance Obligations. Remaining Performance Obligations represents the amount of contracted future revenue that has not yet been delivered, including both subscription and professional services revenues. Remaining Performance Obligations consists of both deferred revenue and contracted non-cancelable amounts that will be invoiced and recognized in future periods. We expect to recognize 58% of our Remaining Performance Obligations as revenue over the next 12 months, and the remainder over the next four years. However, we cannot guarantee that any portion of our Remaining Performance Obligations will be recognized as revenue within the timeframe we expect or at all.

     
    Consolidated Balance Sheets (U.S. dollars in thousands; Unaudited)
     
        December 31,
          2024       2023  
    ASSETS        
    CURRENT ASSETS:        
    Cash and cash equivalents   $ 33,059     $ 36,684  
    Marketable securities     48,275       32,692  
    Trade receivables     19,978       23,312  
    Prepaid expenses and other current assets     9,481       8,410  
    Deferred contract acquisition and fulfillment costs, current     10,765       10,636  
             
    Total current assets     121,558       111,734  
    LONG-TERM ASSETS:        
    Marketable securities     3,379       5,844  
    Property and equipment, net     16,190       20,113  
    Other assets, noncurrent     2,983       3,100  
    Deferred contract acquisition and fulfillment costs, noncurrent     13,605       17,314  
    Operating lease right-of-use assets     12,308       13,872  
    Intangible assets, net     212       689  
    Goodwill     11,070       11,070  
             
    Total noncurrent assets     59,747       72,002  
    TOTAL ASSETS   $ 181,305     $ 183,736  
    LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY        
    CURRENT LIABILITIES:        
    Current portion of long-term loans     3,110       1,612  
    Trade payables     3,265       3,629  
    Employees and payroll accruals     15,399       12,651  
    Accrued expenses and other current liabilities     14,262       17,279  
    Operating lease liabilities     2,504       2,374  
    Deferred revenue, current     63,123       62,364  
    Total current liabilities     101,663       99,909  
    NONCURRENT LIABILITIES:        
    Deferred revenue, noncurrent     67       369  
    Long-term loans, net of current portion     29,153       33,047  
    Operating lease liabilities, noncurrent     15,263       17,796  
    Other liabilities, noncurrent     10,772       2,295  
             
    Total noncurrent liabilities     55,255       53,507  
    TOTAL LIABILITIES   $ 156,918     $ 153,416  
    STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY:        
    Common stock     15       14  
    Treasury stock     (7,801 )     (4,881 )
    Additional paid-in capital     500,024       471,635  
    Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)     959       1,047  
    Accumulated deficit     (468,810 )     (437,495 )
             
    Total stockholders’ equity     24,387       30,320  
             
    TOTAL LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY   $ 181,305     $ 183,736  
     
    Consolidated Statements of Operations (U.S. dollars in thousands, except for share data; Unaudited)
     
        Three Months ended
    December 31
      Twelve Months ended
    December 31,
         2024    2023     2024       2023  
                     
    Revenue:                
                     
    Subscription   $ 43,414   $ 40,787   $ 167,681     $ 162,750  
    Professional services     2,195     3,689     11,036       12,422  
                     
    Total revenue     45,609     44,476     178,717       175,172  
                     
    Cost of revenue:                
                     
    Subscription     9,852     11,118     42,552       44,224  
    Professional services     3,476     4,712     17,059       18,714  
                     
    Total cost of revenue     13,328     15,830     59,611       62,938  
                     
    Gross profit     32,281     28,646     119,106       112,234  
                     
    Operating expenses:                
                     
    Research and development     12,970     12,737     49,430       52,400  
    Sales and marketing     12,345     12,309     47,766       48,798  
    General and administrative     10,759     12,420     46,009       48,718  
    Restructuring                   973  
                     
    Total operating expenses     36,074     37,466     143,205       150,889  
                     
    Operating loss     3,793     8,820     24,099       38,655  
                     
    Financial expenses (income), net     1,238     1,847     (434 )     (1,200 )
                     
    Loss before provision for income taxes     5,031     10,667     23,665       37,455  
    Provision for income taxes     1,574     1,400     7,650       8,911  
                     
    Net loss     6,605     12,067     31,315       46,366  
                     
    Net loss per share   $ 0.04   $ 0.09   $ 0.21     $ 0.34  
                     
    Weighted-average shares used in computing net loss per share     150,452,462     141,791,191     147,925,797       138,237,017  
     
    Consolidated Statements of Operations (U.S. dollars in thousands, except for share data; Unaudited)
     
    Stock-based compensation included in above line items:
     
        Three Months ended
    December 31,
      Twelve Months ended
    December 31,
         2024    2023    2024    2023
                     
    Cost of revenue   $ 195   $ 301   $ 1,002   $ 1,128
    Research and development     1,178     1,295     4,775     4,734
    Sales and marketing     518     840     2,701     3,187
    General and administrative     3,308     5,588     17,786     20,931
                     
    Total   $ 5,199   $ 8,024   $ 26,264   $ 29,980
     
    Revenue by Segment (U.S. dollars in thousands; Unaudited):
     
        Three Months Ended
    December 31,
      Twelve Months Ended
    December 31,
         2024    2023    2024    2023
                     
    Enterprise, Education and Technology   $ 32,958   $ 31,569   $ 128,704   $ 125,154
    Media and Telecom     12,651     12,907     50,013     50,018
                     
    Total   $ 45,609   $ 44,476   $ 178,717   $ 175,172
     
    Gross Profit by Segment (U.S. dollars in thousands; Unaudited):
     
        Three Months Ended
    December 31,
      Twelve Months Ended
    December 31,
         2024    2023    2024    2023
                     
    Enterprise, Education and Technology   $ 25,901   $ 22,998   $ 96,928   $ 91,624
    Media and Telecom     6,380     5,648     22,178     20,610
                     
    Total   $ 32,281   $ 28,646   $ 119,106   $ 112,234
     
    Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows (U.S. dollars in thousands; Unaudited)
     
        Twelve Months Ended December 31,
          2024       2023  
    Cash flows from operating activities:        
    Net loss   $ (31,315 )   $ (46,366 )
    Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash provided by (used in) operating activities:        
    Depreciation and amortization     5,064       4,717  
    Stock-based compensation expenses     26,264       29,980  
    Amortization of deferred contract acquisition and fulfillment costs     11,447       11,669  
    Non-cash interest income, net     (1,219 )     (1,023 )
    Gain on foreign exchange     (90 )     (728 )
    Changes in operating assets and liabilities:        
    Decrease in trade receivables     3,334       5,475  
    Decrease (Increase) in prepaid expenses and other current assets and other assets, noncurrent     (949 )     648  
    Increase in deferred contract acquisition and fulfillment costs     (7,497 )     (6,561 )
    Decrease in trade payables     (534 )     (5,884 )
    Increase in accrued expenses and other current liabilities     5,376       797  
    Increase (Decrease) in employees and payroll accruals     2,748       (2,233 )
    Increase (Decrease) in other liabilities, noncurrent     (14 )     443  
    Increase in deferred revenue     458       1,626  
    Operating lease right-of-use assets and lease liabilities, net     (840 )     (863 )
             
    Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities     12,233       (8,303 )
             
    Cash flows from investing activities:        
             
    Investment in available-for-sale marketable securities     (50,874 )     (47,708 )
    Proceeds from maturities of available-for-sale marketable securities     38,981       51,976  
    Purchases of property and equipment     (521 )     (2,607 )
    Capitalized internal-use software development costs           (1,493 )
    Investment in restricted bank deposit           (1,751 )
             
    Net cash used in investing activities     (12,414 )     (1,583 )
             
    Cash flows from financing activities:        
             
    Proceeds from long-term loans           3,500  
    Repayment of long-term loans     (2,187 )     (4,500 )
    Proceeds from exercise of stock options     1,620       1,383  
    Payment of debt issuance costs     (17 )     (274 )
    Repurchase of common stock     (2,920 )      
    Payments on account of repurchase of common stock     (30 )      
             
    Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities     (3,534 )     109  
             
    Effect of exchange rate changes on cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash   $ 90     $ 728  
             
    Net decrease in cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash   $ (3,625 )   $ (9,049 )
    Cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash at the beginning of the year     36,784       45,833  
             
    Cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash at the end of the year   $ 33,159     $ 36,784  
     
    Reconciliation from GAAP to Non-GAAP Results (U.S. dollars in thousands; Unaudited)
     
        Three Months   Twelve Months
        Ended December 31,   Ended December 31,
          2024       2023       2024       2023  
    Reconciliation of gross profit and gross margin                
    GAAP gross profit   $ 32,281     $ 28,646     $ 119,106     $ 112,234  
    Stock-based compensation expense     195       301       1,002       1,128  
    Amortization of acquired intangibles     107       107       427       426  
    Non-GAAP gross profit   $ 32,583     $ 29,054     $ 120,535     $ 113,788  
    GAAP gross margin     71 %     64 %     67 %     64 %
    Non-GAAP gross margin     71 %     65 %     67 %     65 %
    Reconciliation of operating expenses                
    GAAP research and development expenses   $ 12,970     $ 12,737     $ 49,430     $ 52,400  
    Stock-based compensation expense     1,178       1,295       4,775       4,734  
    Amortization of acquired intangibles                        
    Non-GAAP research and development expenses   $ 11,792     $ 11,442     $ 44,655     $ 47,666  
    GAAP sales and marketing   $ 12,345     $ 12,309     $ 47,766     $ 48,798  
    Stock-based compensation expense     518       840       2,701       3,187  
    Amortization of acquired intangibles     11       13       50       128  
    Non-GAAP sales and marketing expenses   $ 11,816     $ 11,456     $ 45,015     $ 45,483  
    GAAP general and administrative expenses   $ 10,759     $ 12,420     $ 46,009     $ 48,718  
    Stock-based compensation expense     3,308       5,588       17,786       20,931  
    Amortization of acquired intangibles                        
    Facility exit and transition costs (a)                       154  
    War related costs (b)     22       331       44       331  
    Non-GAAP general and administrative expenses   $ 7,429     $ 6,501     $ 28,179     $ 27,302  
    Reconciliation of operating loss and operating margin                
    GAAP operating loss   $ (3,793 )   $ (8,820 )   $ (24,099 )   $ (38,655 )
    Stock-based compensation expense     5,199       8,024       26,264       29,980  
    Amortization of acquired intangibles     118       120       477       554  
    Restructuring (c)                       973  
    Facility exit and transition costs (a)                       154  
    War related costs (b)     22       331       44       331  
    Non-GAAP operating income ( loss)   $ 1,546     $ (345 )   $ 2,686     $ (6,663 )
    GAAP operating margin     (8 )%     (20 )%     (13 )%     (22 )%
    Non-GAAP operating margin     3 %     (1 )%     2 %     (4 )%
    Reconciliation of net loss                
    GAAP net loss attributable to common stockholders   $ (6,605 )   $ (12,067 )   $ (31,315 )   $ (46,366 )
    Stock-based compensation expense     5,199       8,024       26,264       29,980  
    Amortization of acquired intangibles     118       120       477       554  
    Restructuring (c)                       973  
    Facility exit and transition costs (a)                       154  
    War related costs (b)     22       331       44       331  
    Non-GAAP loss attributable to common stockholders   $ (1,266 )   $ (3,592 )   $ (4,530 )   $ (14,374 )
                     
    Non-GAAP net loss per share – basic and diluted   $ 0.01     $ 0.03     $ 0.03     $ 0.10  

            

     
    Adjusted EBITDA (U.S. dollars in thousands; Unaudited)
     
      Three Months Ended December 31,   Twelve Months Ended December 31,
        2024       2023       2024       2023  
       
    Net loss $ (6,605 )   $ (12,067 )   $ (31,315 )   $ (46,366 )
    Financial expenses (income), net (d)   1,238       1,847       (434 )     (1,200 )
    Provision for income taxes   1,574       1,400       7,650       8,911  
    Depreciation and amortization   1,230       1,308       5,065       4,717  
    EBITDA   (2,563 )     (7,512 )     (19,035 )     (33,938 )
    Non-cash stock-based compensation expense   5,199       8,024       26,264       29,980  
    Facility exit and transition costs (a)                     154  
    Restructuring (c)                     973  
    War related costs (b)   22       331       44       331  
    Adjusted EBITDA $ 2,658     $ 843     $ 7,273     $ (2,500 )
    (a)   Facility exit and transition costs for the year ended December 31, 2023, include losses from sale of fixed assets and other costs associated with moving to our temporary office in Israel.
    (b)   The years ended December 31, 2024, and 2023 include costs related to conflicts in Israel. These costs are attributable to the temporary relocation of key employees from Israel for business continuity purposes, the purchase of emergency equipment for key employees, charitable donations to communities directly impacted by the war, and office fixes and modifications.
    (c)   The year ended December 31, 2023 includes employee termination benefits incurred in connection with our 2023 reorganization plan.
    (d)   The three months ended December 31, 2024 and 2023, and the year ended December 31, 2024 and 2023 include $551, $692, $2,682 and $3,178, respectively, of interest expenses and $902, $538, $3,355, and $2,735, respectively, of interest income.
    Reported KPIs
     
        December 31,
         2024    2023
        (U.S. dollars amounts in thousands)
    Annualized Recurring Revenue             $ 173,900   $ 164,723
    Remaining Performance Obligations             $ 203,379   $ 185,305
     
        Three Months Ended December 31,
        2024     2023  
    Net Dollar Retention Rate             103 %   98 %

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: TransAlta Reports Strong 2024 Results, Announces Dividend Increase and 2025 Annual Guidance

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    CALGARY, Alberta, Feb. 20, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — TransAlta Corporation (TransAlta or the Company) (TSX: TA) (NYSE: TAC) today reported its financial results for the fourth quarter and year ended Dec. 31, 2024.

    “Our business delivered solid results within the upper range of our guidance, driven by high availability across our generation portfolio, along with the enduring performance of our optimization and hedging strategies. During the year, we added 2.2 GW of generation to our fleet, with three contracted wind facilities achieving commercial operation in addition to the acquisition of Heartland Generation. We also returned $214 million, or $0.71 per share, of value to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases at an average price of $10.59 per share,” said John Kousinioris, President and Chief Executive Officer of TransAlta.

    “Given our confidence in the future, we are pleased to announce that our Board of Directors has approved an eight per cent increase to our common share dividend, now equivalent to $0.26 per share on an annualized basis. This represents our sixth consecutive annual dividend increase, affirming our Company’s commitment to returning value to shareholders,” added Mr. Kousinioris.

    “Our portfolio of generating facilities continues to perform well. In 2025, we expect to generate between $450 and $550 million of free cash flow. We maintain a balanced, prudent and disciplined approach to capital allocation and balance sheet strength. We remain focused on advancing development opportunities at our legacy thermal energy campuses, along with pursuing longer term growth options with a commitment to maximizing shareholder value. Looking to 2025 and beyond, I am optimistic about our Company’s momentum and opportunities.”

    Fourth Quarter 2024 Financial Highlights

    • Adjusted EBITDA(1) of $285 million, compared to $289 million for the same period in 2023
    • Free Cash Flow (FCF)(1) of $48 million, or $0.16 per share, compared to $121 million, or $0.39 per share, for the same period in 2023
    • Cash flow from operating activities of $215 million, compared to $310 million from the same period in 2023
    • Net loss attributable to common shareholders of $65 million, or $0.22 per share, compared to $84 million, or $0.27 per share, for the same period in 2023

    Full Year 2024 Financial Highlights

    • Achieved the upper range of both 2024 adjusted EBITDA and FCF guidance
    • Returned $143 million of capital to common shareholders through the buyback of 13.5 million common shares at an average price of $10.59 per share
    • Adjusted EBITDA of $1,253 million, compared to $1,632 million from the same period in 2023
    • FCF of $569 million, or $1.88 per share, compared to $890 million, or $3.22 per share, from the same period in 2023
    • Net earnings attributable to common shareholders of $177 million, or $0.59 per share, compared to $644 million, or $2.33 per share, from the same period in 2023
    • Exited 2024 with a strong financial position, with adjusted net debt to adjusted EBITDA of 3.6 times and available liquidity of $1.6 billion

    Other Business Highlights and Updates

    • Announced an annual dividend increase of eight per cent, now equivalent to $0.26 per share on an annualized basis, which represents the sixth year of consecutive dividend growth
    • Provided 2025 guidance including adjusted EBITDA of $1.15 to $1.25 billion and FCF of $450 to $550 million, or $1.51 to $1.85 per share
    • Completed the acquisition of Heartland Generation at a purchase price of $542 million in December 2024, which added 1.7 GW to gross installed capacity
    • Achieved strong operational availability of 91.2 per cent in 2024, compared to 88.8 per cent in 2023
    • 2024 Total Recordable Injury Frequency of 0.56 compared to 0.30 in 2023
    • Reduced scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions intensity in 2024 to 0.35 tCO2e/MWh from 2023 levels of 0.41 tCO2e/MWh
    • Achieved commercial operation at the White Rock West and East wind facilities in January and April 2024, respectively
    • Achieved commercial operation at the Horizon Hill facility in May 2024
    • Completed the Mount Keith 132kV expansion project during the first quarter of 2024

    Key Business Developments

    Declared Increase in Common Share Dividend
    The Company’s Board of Directors has approved a $0.02 annualized increase to the common share dividend, or 8 per cent increase, and declared a dividend of $0.065 per common share to be payable on July 1, 2025 to shareholders of record at the close of business on June 1, 2025. The quarterly dividend of $0.065 per common share represents an annualized dividend of $0.26 per common share.

    TransAlta Acquired Heartland Generation from Energy Capital Partners

    On Dec. 4, 2024, the Company closed the acquisition of Heartland Generation Ltd. and certain affiliates (collectively, Heartland) for a purchase price of $542 million from an affiliate of Energy Capital Partners (ECP), the parent of Heartland (the Transaction). To meet the requirements of the federal Competition Bureau, the Company entered into a consent agreement with the Commissioner of Competition pursuant to which TransAlta agreed to divest Heartland’s Poplar Hill and Rainbow Lake assets (the Planned Divestitures) following closing of the Transaction. In consideration of the Planned Divestitures, TransAlta and ECP agreed to a reduction of $80 million from the original purchase price for the Transaction. ECP will be entitled to receive the proceeds from the sale of Poplar Hill and Rainbow Lake, net of certain adjustments following completion of the Planned Divestitures. TransAlta also received a further $95 million at closing of the Transaction to reflect the economic benefit of the Heartland business arising from Oct. 31, 2023 to the closing date of the Transaction, pursuant to the terms of the share purchase agreement. The net cash payment for the Transaction, before working capital adjustments, totalled $215 million, and was funded through a combination of cash on hand and draws on TransAlta’s credit facilities.

    Excluding the Planned Divestitures, the Transaction adds 1.7 GW (net interest) of complementary capacity from nine facilities, including contracted cogeneration and peaking generation, legacy gas-fired thermal generation, and transmission capacity, all of which will be critical to support reliability in the Alberta electricity market.

    Mothballing of Sundance Unit 6

    On Nov. 4, 2024, the Company provided notice to the Alberta Electric System Operator (AESO) that Sundance Unit 6 will be mothballed on April 1, 2025, for a period of up to two years depending on market conditions. TransAlta maintains the flexibility to return the mothballed unit to service when market fundamentals improve or opportunities to contract are secured. The unit remains available and fully operational for the first quarter of 2025.

    Production Tax Credit (PTC) Sale Agreements

    On Feb. 22, 2024, the Company entered into 10-year transfer agreements with an AA- rated customer for the sale of approximately 80 per cent of the expected PTCs to be generated from the White Rock and the Horizon Hill wind facilities.

    On June 21, 2024, the Company entered into an additional 10-year transfer agreement with an A+ rated customer for the sale of the remaining 20 per cent of the expected PTCs.

    The expected average annual EBITDA(1) from the two agreements is approximately $78 million (US$57 million).

    Normal Course Issuer Bid (NCIB)

    TransAlta remains committed to enhancing shareholder returns through appropriate capital allocation such as share buybacks and its quarterly dividend. In the first quarter of 2024, the Company announced an enhanced common share repurchase program for 2024, allocating up to $150 million, and targeting up to 42 per cent of 2024 FCF guidance, to be returned to shareholders in the form of share repurchases and dividends.

    On May 27, 2024, the Company announced that it had received approval from the Toronto Stock Exchange to purchase up to 14 million common shares pursuant to an NCIB during the 12-month period that commenced May 31, 2024, and terminates May 31, 2025. Any common shares purchased under the NCIB will be cancelled.

    For the year ended Dec. 31, 2024, the Company purchased and cancelled a total of 13,467,400 common shares at an average price of $10.59 per common share, for a total cost of $143 million, including taxes.

    Horizon Hill Wind Facility Achieves Commercial Operation

    On May 21, 2024, the 202 MW Horizon Hill wind facility achieved commercial operation. The facility is located in Logan County, Oklahoma and is fully contracted to Meta Platforms Inc. for the offtake of 100 per cent of the generation.

    White Rock Wind Facilities Achieve Commercial Operation

    On Jan. 1, 2024, the 100 MW White Rock West wind facility achieved commercial operation. On April 22, 2024, the 202 MW White Rock East wind facility also completed commissioning. The facilities are located in Caddo County, Oklahoma and are contracted under two long-term power purchase agreements (PPAs) with Amazon Energy LLC for the offtake of 100 per cent of the generation.

    Mount Keith 132kV Expansion Complete

    The Mount Keith 132kV expansion project, located in Western Australia, was completed during the first quarter of 2024. The expansion was developed under the existing PPA with BHP Nickel West (BHP), which extends until Dec. 31, 2038. The expansion will facilitate the connection of additional generating capacity to the transmission network which supports BHP’s operations.

    Year Ended and Fourth Quarter 2024 Highlights

    $ millions, unless otherwise stated Year Ended Three Months Ended
    Dec. 31, 2024 Dec. 31, 2023 Dec. 31, 2024   Dec. 31, 2023  
    Operational information        
    Availability (%) 91.2 88.8 87.8   86.9  
    Production (GWh) 22,811 22,029 6,199   5,783  
    Select financial information        
    Revenues 2,845 3,355 678   624  
    Adjusted EBITDA(1) 1,253 1,632 285   289  
    Earnings (loss) before income taxes 319 880 (51 ) (35 )
    Net earnings (loss) attributable to common shareholders 177 644 (65 ) (84 )
    Cash flows        
    Cash flow from operating activities 796 1,464 215   310  
    Funds from operations(1) 810 1,351 137   229  
    Free cash flow(1) 569 890 48   121  
    Per share        
    Net earnings (loss) per share attributable to common shareholders, basic and diluted 0.59 2.33 (0.22 ) (0.27 )
    Funds from operations per share(1),(2) 2.68 4.89 0.46   0.74  
    FCF per share(1),(2) 1.88 3.22 0.16   0.39  
    Dividends declared per common share 0.24 0.22 0.12   0.12  
    Weighted average number of common shares outstanding 302 276 298   308  


    Segmented Financial Performance

    $ millions

    Year Ended Three Months Ended
    Dec. 31, 2024   Dec. 31, 2023   Dec. 31, 2024   Dec. 31, 2023  
    Hydro 316   459   57   56  
    Wind and Solar 316   257   95   82  
    Gas 535   801   116   141  
    Energy Transition 91   122   28   26  
    Energy Marketing 131   109   27   14  
    Corporate (136 ) (116 ) (38 ) (30 )
    Adjusted EBITDA 1,253   1,632   285   289  
    Earnings (loss) before
    income taxes
    319   880   (51 ) (35 )


    Full Year 2024 Financial Results Summary

    For the year ended Dec. 31, 2024, the Company demonstrated strong financial and operational performance. The results were within the upper range of management’s expectations due to active management of the Company’s merchant portfolio and hedging strategies. During 2024, the Company settled a higher volume of hedges at prices that were significantly above the spot market in Alberta and achieved commercial operation at the White Rock and Horizon Hill wind facilities. On Dec. 4, 2024, the Company completed the acquisition of Heartland Generation, which added 1.7 GW to gross installed capacity. Refer to the Significant and Subsequent Events section of our MD&A dated Dec. 31, 2024, for details on the Heartland acquisition and the Planned Divestitures.

    Availability for the year ended Dec. 31, 2024, was 91.2 per cent, compared to 88.8 per cent in 2023, an increase of 2.4 percentage points, primarily due to:

    • The addition of the White Rock and Horizon Hill wind facilities; and
    • The return to service of the Kent Hills wind facilities.

    Total production for the year ended Dec. 31, 2024, was 22,811 GWh, compared to 22,029 GWh for the same period in 2023, an increase of 782 GWh, or four per cent, primarily due to:

    • Production from new facilities, including the White Rock West and East wind facilities commissioned in January and April 2024, respectively, the Horizon Hill wind facility commissioned in May 2024, and the Northern Goldfields solar facilities commissioned in November 2023;
    • Production from the facilities acquired with Heartland;
    • Favourable market conditions in the Ontario wholesale power market that enabled higher dispatch at the Sarnia facility in the Gas segment that resulted in higher merchant production to the Ontario grid;
    • The return to service of the Kent Hills wind facilities in the first quarter of 2024; and
    • Full-year production from the Garden Plain wind facility; partially offset by
    • Increased economic dispatch at the Centralia facility due to lower market prices compared to the prior year in the Energy Transition segment; and
    • Higher dispatch optimization in Alberta.

    Adjusted EBITDA for the year ended Dec. 31, 2024, was $1,253 million, compared to $1,632 million in 2023, a decrease of $379 million, or 23.2 per cent. The major factors impacting adjusted EBITDA include:

    • Gas adjusted EBITDA decreased by $266 million, or 33 per cent, compared to 2023, primarily due to lower power prices in the Alberta market and resulting increase in economic dispatch, an increase in the price of carbon, higher carbon costs and fuel usage related to production and lower capacity payments, partially offset by a higher volume of favourable hedging positions settled, the utilization of emission credits to settle a portion of our 2023 GHG obligation and lower natural gas prices;
    • Hydro adjusted EBITDA decreased by $143 million, or 31 per cent, compared to 2023, primarily due to lower spot power prices and ancillary services prices in the Alberta market, partially offset by realized premiums above the spot power prices, higher environmental and tax attributes revenues due to higher sales of emission credits to third parties and intercompany sales to the Gas segment and higher ancillary service volumes due to increased demand by the AESO;
    • Energy Transition adjusted EBITDA decreased by $31 million, or 25 per cent, compared to 2023, primarily due to increased economic dispatch driven by lower market prices which negatively impacted merchant production, partially offset by lower fuel and purchased power costs; and
    • Corporate adjusted EBITDA decreased by $20 million, or 17 per cent, compared to 2023, primarily due to higher spending to support strategic and growth initiatives; partially offset by
    • Wind and Solar adjusted EBITDA increasing by $59 million, or 23 per cent, compared to 2023, primarily due to new sales of production tax credits, the return to service of the Kent Hills wind facilities, the commercial operation of the White Rock and Horizon Hill wind facilities, partially offset by lower realized power pricing in the Alberta market and higher OM&A due to the addition of new wind facilities; and
    • Energy Marketing adjusted EBITDA increasing by $22 million, or 20 per cent, compared to 2023, primarily due to favourable market volatility and timing of realized settled trades during the current year in comparison to the prior year and lower OM&A.

    Cash flow from operating activities totalled $796 million for the year ended Dec. 31, 2024, compared to $1,464 million in the same period in 2023, a decrease of $668 million, or 46 per cent, primarily due to:

    • Lower gross margin due to lower revenues, excluding the effect of unrealized losses from risk management activities, partially offset by lower fuel and purchased power;
    • Higher OM&A due to increased spending on planning and design of an ERP system upgrade, higher spending on strategic and growth initiatives, penalties assessed by the Alberta Market Surveillance Administrator for self-reported contraventions and Heartland acquisition-related transaction and restructuring costs;
    • Higher current income tax expense due to the full utilization of Canadian non-capital loss carryforwards in 2023, which was partially offset by lower earnings before income tax in 2024;
    • Unfavourable change in non-cash operating working capital balances due to lower accounts payables and accrued liabilities, partially offset by lower collateral provided as a result of market price volatility;
    • Higher interest expense on debt primarily due to lower capitalized interest resulting from lower construction activity in 2024 compared to 2023; and
    • Lower interest income due to lower cash balances and lower interest rates.

    FCF totalled $569 million for the year ended Dec. 31, 2024, compared to $890 million for the same period in 2023, a decrease of $321 million, or 36 per cent, primarily driven by:

    • The adjusted EBITDA items noted above;
    • Higher current income tax expense due to the full utilization of Canadian non-capital loss carryforwards in 2023, partially offset by lower earnings before income taxes in 2024; and
    • Higher net interest expense due to lower capitalized interest resulting from lower construction activity in 2024 compared to 2023, and lower interest income due to lower cash balances and interest rates in 2024 compared to prior year; partially offset by
    • Lower distributions paid to subsidiaries’ non-controlling interests relating to lower TA Cogen net earnings resulting from lower merchant pricing in the Alberta market and the cessation of distributions to TransAlta Renewables non-controlling interest;
    • Lower sustaining capital expenditures due to the receipt of a lease incentive related to the Company’s head office and lower planned major maintenance at our Alberta and Western Australian gas facilities, partially offset by higher major maintenance at our Alberta Hydro assets; and
    • Higher provisions accrued in the current year compared to the prior year resulting in higher FCF.

    Earnings before income taxes totalled $319 million for the year ended Dec. 31, 2024, compared to $880 million in the same period in 2023, a decrease of $561 million, or 64 per cent.

    Net earnings attributable to common shareholders totalled $177 million for the year ended Dec. 31, 2024, compared to $644 million in the same period in 2023, a decrease of $467 million, or 73 per cent, primarily due to:

    • The adjusted EBITDA items discussed above;
    • Higher asset impairment charges due to an increase in decommissioning and restoration provisions on retired assets, driven by a decrease in discount rates and revisions in estimated decommissioning costs and higher impairment charges related to development projects that are no longer proceeding;
    • Lower unrealized mark-to-market gains and lower realized gains on closed exchange positions in the Energy Marketing segment mainly driven by market volatility across North American power and natural gas markets;
    • Higher unrealized mark-to-market losses recorded in the Wind and Solar segment primarily related to the long-term wind energy sales at the Oklahoma facilities;
    • Higher interest expense due to lower capitalized interest during 2024 resulting from lower construction activity in 2024 compared to 2023;
    • Lower capacity payments in 2024 for Southern Cross Energy in Western Australia due to the scheduled conclusion on Dec. 31, 2023 of the demand capacity charge under the customer contract, partially offset by the commencement in March 2024 of capacity payments for the Mount Keith 132kV expansion;
    • Heartland acquisition-related transaction and restructuring costs;
    • Lower interest income due to lower cash balances and lower interest rates during 2024;
    • Higher spending in connection with planning and design work on a planned upgrade to the ERP system;
    • Lower income tax expense due to lower earnings; and
    • Penalties assessed by the Alberta Market Surveillance Administrator for self-reported contraventions pertaining to Hydro ancillary services provided during 2021 and 2022; partially offset by
    • Lower depreciation and amortization compared to 2023 related to revisions of useful lives of certain facilities in prior and current periods, partially offset by the commercial operation of new facilities during the year and the return to service of the Kent Hills wind facilities;
    • Higher unrealized mark-to-market gains recorded in the Energy Transition segment primarily related to favourable changes in forward prices;
    • A recovery related to the reversal of previously derecognized Canadian deferred tax assets; and
    • Higher net other operating income mainly due to Sundance A decommissioning cost reimbursement.

    Fourth Quarter Financial Results Summary

    Fourth quarter 2024 results were in-line with management’s expectations due to active management of the Company’s merchant portfolio and hedging strategies, despite lower power prices in the Alberta and mid-Columbia markets. The Company settled a higher volume of hedges that were significantly above average spot prices during the period. The acquisition of Heartland on Dec. 4, 2024 positively contributed to production in the Gas segment and further diversifies TransAlta’s competitive portfolio in the highly dynamic and shifting electricity landscape in Alberta by adding 1.7 GW to gross installed capacity.

    Availability for the three months ended Dec. 31, 2024, was 87.8 per cent, compared to 86.9 per cent for the same period in 2023, an increase of 0.9 percentage points, primarily due to:

    • The addition of the White Rock and Horizon Hill wind facilities which operated with high availability;
    • The return to service of the Kent Hills wind facilities;
    • Higher availability in the Hydro segment due to lower planned outages;
    • Higher availability in the Energy Transition segment due to lower unplanned outages; and
    • Positive contribution from the addition of the gas facilities acquired with Heartland; partially offset by
    • Lower availability for the Gas segment due to planned outages at Sarnia, Sheerness and Keephills.

    Production for the three months ended Dec. 31, 2024, was 6,199 GWh, compared to 5,783 GWh for the same period in 2023. The increase of 416 GWh, or seven per cent, was primarily due to:

    • Higher production in the Wind and Solar segment due to the addition of the Horizon Hill and White Rock West and East wind facilities during 2024;
    • Higher production in the Hydro segment compared to the same period in 2023 due to water conservation in the fourth quarter of 2023 that resulted in lower production volumes compared to the current period; partially offset by
    • Lower production in the Energy Transition segment due to higher dispatch optimization, which negatively affected merchant production; and
    • Lower production in the Gas segment driven by lower availability at the Sarnia facility due to planned outages, higher economic dispatch in Alberta and lower production from Western Australia due to lower demand, partially offset by positive contribution from the Heartland gas facilities.

    Adjusted EBITDA for the three months ended Dec. 31, 2024, was $285 million, compared to $289 million in the same period of 2023, a decrease of $4 million, or one per cent. The major factors impacting adjusted EBITDA are summarized below:

    • Gas adjusted EBITDA decreased by $25 million, or 18 per cent, due to lower realized power prices in Alberta, an increase in the carbon price in Canada and higher OM&A driven by higher maintenance costs at the South Hedland facility, partially offset by a higher volume of favourable hedging positions settled, positive contribution from the Heartland gas facilities and lower capacity payments;
    • Corporate adjusted EBITDA decreased by $8 million, or 27 per cent, due to higher spending to support strategic and growth initiatives; partially offset by
    • Wind and Solar adjusted EBITDA increasing by $13 million, or 16 per cent, due to environmental and tax attributes revenues from the sale of PTCs from the White Rock and Horizon Hill wind facilities to taxable US counterparties, higher revenues driven by increased production from the addition of the White Rock and Horizon Hill wind facilities and the return to service of the Kent Hills wind facilities, partially offset by unfavourable merchant power prices in Alberta;
    • Energy Marketing adjusted EBITDA increasing by $13 million, or 93 per cent, due to favourable market volatility and the timing of realized settled trades during 2024 in comparison to the same period in 2023;
    • Energy Transition adjusted EBITDA increasing by $2 million, or eight per cent, compared to 2023, primarily due to lower fuel and purchased power costs, partially offset by increased economic dispatch due to lower market prices; and
    • Hydro adjusted EBITDA increasing by $1 million, or two per cent, due to higher merchant revenues driven by higher volumes, partially offset by lower spot power prices and lower environmental and tax attributes revenues.

    FCF totalled $48 million for the three months ended Dec. 31, 2024, compared to $121 million in the same period in 2023, a decrease of $73 million, or 60 per cent, primarily due to:

    • The adjusted EBITDA items noted above;
    • Higher realized foreign exchange losses compared to realized foreign exchange gains in the comparative period;
    • Higher current income tax expense due to the full utilization of Canadian non-capital loss carryforwards in 2023, partially offset by a higher loss before income taxes in the current period compared to the same period in 2023;
    • Higher net interest expense due to lower capitalized interest as a result of capital projects being completed in the first half of 2024 and lower interest income due to lower cash balances in 2024; and
    • Higher dividends paid on preferred shares; partially offset by
    • Lower distributions paid to subsidiaries’ non-controlling interests due to lower TA Cogen net earnings;
    • Lower sustaining capital due to lower planned maintenance at the Alberta gas facilities, partially offset by higher planned maintenance at the Sarnia cogeneration facility and Alberta hydro facilities; and
    • Higher provisions accrued in the current year compared to the prior year resulting in higher FCF.

    Net loss attributable to common shareholders for the three months ended Dec. 31, 2024, was $65 million, compared to a net loss of $84 million in the same period of 2023, an improvement of $19 million, or 23 per cent, primarily due to:

    • The adjusted EBITDA items discussed above;
    • Higher interest expense due to lower capitalized interest in the fourth quarter of 2024 resulting from lower capital activity compared to the same period in 2023;
    • Heartland acquisition-related transaction and restructuring costs in the fourth quarter of 2024;
    • Higher ERP upgrade costs related to planning and design work;
    • Penalties assessed by the Alberta Market Surveillance Administrator for self-reported contraventions pertaining to Hydro ancillary services provided during 2021 and 2022;
    • Higher depreciation and amortization due to the commercial operation of the White Rock and Horizon Hill wind facilities during 2024; and
    • Higher taxes other than income taxes, mainly consisting of property taxes due to the addition of new wind facilities during 2024; partially offset by
    • Higher realized and unrealized foreign exchange gains;
    • Lower realized gains on closed exchange positions in 2024 compared to the same period in 2023;
    • An income tax recovery relative to the prior period expense as a result of a higher loss before income taxes due to the above noted items; in addition to lower non-deductible expenses;
    • Lower net earnings attributable to non-controlling interest compared to the same period in 2023 due to lower merchant pricing in the Alberta market;
    • Higher net other operating income mainly due to Sundance A decommissioning cost reimbursement; and
    • Lower asset impairment charges related to the decommissioning and restoration provisions on retired assets driven by lower discount rates in the current period compared to the same period in 2023, partially offset by impairment charges related to development projects that are no longer proceeding.

    Alberta Electricity Portfolio

    For the three months and year ended Dec. 31, 2024, the Alberta electricity portfolio generated 3,150 GWh and 11,809 GWh, respectively, compared to 2,989 GWh and 11,759 GWh, respectively, in the same periods in 2023. The annual production increase of 50 GWh, or 0.4 per cent, was primarily due to:

    • Higher production in the Gas segment due to the addition of gas facilities from the acquisition of Heartland; and
    • A full-year of production from the addition of the Garden Plain wind facility, which was commissioned in August 2023; partially offset by
    • Higher dispatch optimization in the Gas segment; and
    • Lower production from the Alberta hydro facilities due to lower water resources compared to the prior year.

    The fourth quarter production increase of 161 GWh, or five per cent, benefited from:

    • Higher production from the Gas segment due to the Heartland acquisition; and
    • Higher production from the Alberta hydro facilities due to significant water conservation during the fourth quarter of 2023; partially offset by
    • Higher economic dispatch for the Alberta gas facilities; and
    • Lower production in the Wind and Solar segment due to lower wind resource.

    Gross margin for the Alberta portfolio for the three months and year ended Dec. 31, 2024, was $191 million and $856 million, respectively, a decrease of $24 million and $392 million, respectively, compared to the same periods in 2023. The annual decrease was primarily due to:

    • The impact of lower Alberta spot power prices and lower hydro ancillary services prices;
    • Increased dispatch optimization in the Gas segment driven by lower power prices; and
    • An increase in the carbon price per tonne from $65 in 2023 to $80 in 2024; partially offset by
    • Higher gains realized on financial hedges settled in the period;
    • Higher environmental and tax attributes revenues due to the increased sales of emission credits to third parties and intercompany sales from the Hydro segment to the Gas segment;
    • The utilization of emission credits in the Gas segment in 2024 to settle a portion of our 2023 GHG obligation;
    • Higher hydro ancillary services volumes due to increased demand by the AESO; and
    • Lower natural gas prices.

    Gross margin for the three months ended Dec. 31, 2024 was impacted by:

    • Lower Alberta spot power prices;
    • Higher carbon compliance costs due to increase in the carbon price from $65 per tonne in 2023 to $80 per tonne in 2024; and
    • Higher purchased power due to the contractual requirement to fulfill physical power trades; partially offset by
    • Higher gains realized on financial hedges settled in the period.

    Alberta power prices for 2024 were lower compared to 2023. The average spot power price per MWh for the three months and year ended Dec. 31, 2024, was $52 and $63, respectively, compared to $82 and $134, respectively, in the same periods in 2023. This was primarily due to:

    • Higher generation from the addition of increased supply of new renewables and combined-cycle gas facilities into the market compared to the prior period; and
    • Lower natural gas prices.

    Hedged volumes for the three months and year ended Dec. 31, 2024, were 2,637 GWh and 9,080 GWh at an average price of $80 per MWh and $84 per MWh, respectively, compared to 1,824 GWh and 7,550 GWh at an average price of $90 per MWh and $110 per MWh, respectively, in 2023.

    Liquidity and Financial Position

    We maintain adequate available liquidity under our committed credit facilities. As at Dec. 31, 2024, we had access to $1.6 billion in liquidity, including $336 million in cash, which exceeds the funds required for committed growth, sustaining capital and productivity projects.

    2025 Outlook and Financial Guidance

    For 2025, management expects adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $1.15 to $1.25 billion and FCF to be in the range of $450 to $550 million, based on the following, relative to 2024:

    • Higher contribution from the wind and solar portfolio due to a full-year impact of new asset additions of the White Rock and Horizon Hill wind facilities;
    • Contribution from assets acquired with Heartland;
    • Lower contributions from the legacy merchant hydro, wind and gas assets in Alberta which are expected to step down due to lower expected average power prices in Alberta given baseload gas and renewables supply additions in late 2024 and 2025;
    • Lower current income tax expense in 2025 compared to 2024 actual; and
    • Increased net interest expense in 2025 as a result of the Heartland acquisition and lower interest income earned on lower cash deposits and lower capitalized interest on growth projects.

    The following table outlines our expectations regarding key financial targets and related assumptions for 2025 and should be read in conjunction with the narrative discussion that follows and the Governance and Risk Management section of the MD&A for additional information:

    Measure 2025 Target 2024 Target 2024 Actual
    Adjusted EBITDA $1,150 to $1,250 million $1,150 to $1,300 million $1,253 million
    FCF $450 to $550 million $450 to $600 million $569 million
    FCF per share $1.51 to $1.85 $1.47 to $1.96 $1.88
    Annual dividend per share $0.26 annualized $0.24 annualized $0.24 annualized

    The Company’s outlook for 2025 may be impacted by a number of factors as detailed further below.

    Market 2025 Assumptions 2024 Assumptions 2024 Actual
    Alberta spot ($/MWh) $40 to $60 $75 to $95 $63
    Mid-Columbia spot (US$/MWh) US$50 to US$70 US$85 to US$95 US$76
    AECO gas price ($/GJ) $1.60 to $2.10 $2.50 to $3.00 $1.29

    Alberta spot price sensitivity: a +/- $1 per MWh change in spot price is expected to have a +/-$3 million impact on adjusted EBITDA for 2025.

    Other assumptions relevant to the 2025 outlook

      2025 Assumptions 2024 Assumptions 2024 Actual
    Energy Marketing gross margin $110 to $130 million $110 to $130 million $167 million
    Sustaining capital $145 to $165 million $130 to $150 million $142 million
    Current income tax expense $95 to $130 million $95 to $130 million $143 million
    Net interest expense $255 to $275 million $240 to $260 million $231 million
    Hedging assumptions Q1 2025 Q2 2025 Q3 2025 Q4 2025  2026
    Hedged production (GWh)  2,117  1,758  1,942  1,845  4,713
    Hedge price ($/MWh) $72 $70 $70 $70 $75
    Hedged gas volumes (GJ) 14 million 6 million 6 million 6 million 18 million
    Hedge gas prices ($/GJ) $2.98 $3.63 $3.77 $3.65 $3.67


    Conference call

    TransAlta will host a conference call and webcast at 9:00 a.m. MST (11:00 a.m. EST) today, Feb. 20, 2025, to discuss our fourth quarter and year end 2024 results. The call will begin with comments from John Kousinioris, President and Chief Executive Officer, and Joel Hunter, EVP Finance and Chief Financial Officer, followed by a question-and-answer period.

    Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2024 Conference Call

    Webcast link: https://edge.media-server.com/mmc/p/zd49obg6 

    To access the conference call via telephone, please register ahead of time using the call link here: https://register.vevent.com/register/BI5c12d9a2da0e4e06892f413e217f0350. Once registered, participants will have the option of 1) dialing into the call from their phone (via a personalized PIN); or 2) clicking the “Call Me” option to receive an automated call directly to their phone.

    Related materials will be available on the Investor Centre section of TransAlta’s website at https://transalta.com/investors/presentations-and-events/. If you are unable to participate in the call, the replay will be accessible at https://edge.media-server.com/mmc/p/zd49obg6. A transcript of the broadcast will be posted on TransAlta’s website once it becomes available.

    Notes

    (1)These items (adjusted EBITDA, FCF and annual average EBITDA) are not defined and have no standardized meaning under IFRS. Presenting these items from period to period provides management and investors with the ability to evaluate earnings (loss) trends more readily in comparison with prior periods’ results. Please refer to the Non-IFRS Measures section of this earnings release for further discussion of these items, including, where applicable, reconciliations to measures calculated in accordance with IFRS.
    (2)Funds from operations (FFO) per share and free cash flow (FCF) per share are calculated using the weighted average number of common shares outstanding during the period. Refer to the Additional IFRS Measures and Non-IFRS Measures section of the MD&A for the purpose of these non-‍IFRS ratios.

    Non-IFRS financial measures and other specified financial measures

    We use a number of financial measures to evaluate our performance and the performance of our business segments, including measures and ratios that are presented on a non-IFRS basis, as described below. Unless otherwise indicated, all amounts are in Canadian dollars and have been derived from our consolidated financial statements prepared in accordance with IFRS. We believe that these non-IFRS amounts, measures and ratios, read together with our IFRS amounts, provide readers with a better understanding of how management assesses results.

    Non-IFRS amounts, measures and ratios do not have standardized meanings under IFRS. They are unlikely to be comparable to similar measures presented by other companies and should not be viewed in isolation from, as an alternative to, or more meaningful than, our IFRS results.

    Adjusted EBITDA

    Each business segment assumes responsibility for its operating results measured by adjusted EBITDA. Adjusted EBITDA is an important metric for management that represents our core operational results. Interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization are not included, as differences in accounting treatments may distort our core business results. In addition, certain reclassifications and adjustments are made to better assess results, excluding those items that may not be reflective of ongoing business performance. This presentation may facilitate the readers’ analysis of trends.

    Average Annual EBITDA

    Average annual EBITDA is a forward-looking non-IFRS financial measure that is used to show the average annual EBITDA that the project is expected to generate.

    Funds From Operations (FFO)

    FFO is an important metric as it provides a proxy for cash generated from operating activities before changes in working capital and provides the ability to evaluate cash flow trends in comparison with results from prior periods. FFO is a non-IFRS measure. The most directly comparable IFRS measure is Cash Flow from Operations.

    Free Cash Flow (FCF)

    FCF is an important metric as it represents the amount of cash that is available to invest in growth initiatives, make scheduled principal repayments on debt, repay maturing debt, pay common share dividends or repurchase common shares. Changes in working capital are excluded so FFO and FCF are not distorted by changes that we consider temporary in nature, reflecting, among other things, the impact of seasonal factors and timing of receipts and payments. FCF is a non-IFRS measure. The most directly comparable IFRS measure is Cash Flow from Operations.

    Non-IFRS Ratios

    FFO per share, FCF per share and adjusted net debt to adjusted EBITDA are non-IFRS ratios that are presented in the MD&A. Refer to the Reconciliation of Cash Flow from Operations to FFO and FCF and Key Non-IFRS Financial Ratios sections of the MD&A for additional information.

    FFO per share and FCF per share

    FFO per share and FCF per share are calculated using the weighted average number of common shares outstanding during the period. FFO per share and FCF per share are non-IFRS ratios.

    Reconciliation of these non-IFRS financial measures to the most comparable IFRS measure are provided below.

    Reconciliation of Non-IFRS Measures on a Consolidated Basis

    The following table reflects adjusted EBITDA by segment and provides reconciliation to earnings before income taxes for the three months ended Dec. 31, 2024:

    Three months ended Dec. 31, 2024
    $ millions
    Hydro   Wind & Solar(1)   Gas   Energy Transition   Energy
    Marketing
    Corporate   Total   Equity accounted investments(1)   Reclass adjustments   IFRS financials  
    Revenues 93   104   319   155   14   685   (7 )   678  
    Reclassifications and adjustments:                  
    Unrealized mark-to-market (gain) loss 4   23   26   (8 ) 19   64     (64 )  
    Realized gains (losses) on closed exchange positions     (1 ) 2   1   2     (2 )  
    Decrease in finance lease receivable   1   5       6     (6 )  
    Finance lease income   2   3       5     (5 )  
    Revenues from Planned Divestitures     (1 )     (1 )   1    
    Brazeau penalties (20 )         (20 )   20    
    Unrealized foreign exchange gain on commodity     (1 )     (1 )   1    
    Adjusted revenues 77   130   350   149   34   740   (7 ) (55 ) 678  
    Fuel and purchased power 3   8   136   102     249       249  
    Reclassifications and adjustments:                  
    Fuel and purchased power related to Planned Divestitures     (1 )     (1 )   1    
    Australian interest income     (1 )     (1 )   1    
    Adjusted fuel and purchased power 3   8   134   102     247     2   249  
    Carbon compliance     39       39       39  
    Gross margin 74   122   177   47   34   454   (7 ) (57 ) 390  
    OM&A 47   27   67   19   7 68   235   (1 )   234  
    Reclassifications and adjustments:                    
    Brazeau penalties (31 )         (31 )   31    
    ERP integration costs         (14 ) (14 )   14    
    Acquisition-related transaction and restructuring costs         (16 ) (16 )   16    
    Adjusted OM&A 16   27   67   19   7 38   174   (1 ) 61   234  
    Taxes, other than income taxes 1   3   4       8   1     9  
    Net other operating income   (3 ) (10 ) (9 )   (22 )     (22 )
    Reclassifications and adjustments:                    
    Sundance A decommissioning cost reimbursement       9     9     (9 )  
    Adjusted net other operating income   (3 ) (10 )     (13 )   (9 ) (22 )
    Adjusted EBITDA(2) 57   95   116   28   27 (38 ) 285        
    Equity income                   2  
    Finance lease income                   5  
    Depreciation and amortization                   (143 )
    Asset impairment charges                   (20 )
    Interest income                   11  
    Interest expense                   (92 )
    Foreign exchange gain                   17  
    Loss before income taxes                   (51 )

    (1)  The Skookumchuck wind facility has been included on a proportionate basis in the Wind and Solar segment.
    (2)  Adjusted EBITDA is not defined and has no standardized meaning under IFRS. Refer to the Non-IFRS financial measures and other specified financial measures section in this earnings release and may not be comparable to similar measures presented by other issuers.

    The following table reflects adjusted EBITDA by segment and provides reconciliation to loss before income taxes for the three months ended Dec. 31, 2023:

    Three months ended Dec. 31, 2023
    $ millions
    Hydro   Wind &
    Solar
    (1)
      Gas   Energy
    Transition
    Energy
    Marketing
      Corporate   Total   Equity
    accounted
    investments
    (1)
      Reclass
    adjustments
      IFRS
    financials
     
    Revenues 77   94   246   175 39     631   (7 )   624  
    Reclassifications and adjustments:                  
    Unrealized mark-to-market (gain) loss (2 ) 20   53   7 (19 )   59     (59 )  
    Realized gain on closed exchange positions     23   4     27     (27 )  
    Decrease in finance lease receivable     15       15     (15 )  
    Finance lease income     2       2     (2 )  
    Unrealized foreign exchange gain on commodity     1       1     (1 )  
    Adjusted revenues 75   114   340   182 24     735   (7 ) (104 ) 624  
    Fuel and purchased power 5   8   127   138     278       278  
    Reclassifications and adjustments:                  
    Australian interest income     (1 )     (1 )   1    
    Adjusted fuel and purchased power 5   8   126   138     277     1   278  
    Carbon compliance     27       27       27  
    Gross margin 70   106   187   44 24     431   (7 ) (105 ) 319  
    OM&A 13   25   56   18 10   29   151   (1 )   150  
    Taxes, other than income taxes 1   1       1   3       3  
    Net other operating income   (3 ) (10 )     (13 )     (13 )
    Adjusted net other operating income   (2 ) (10 )     (12 )   (1 ) (13 )
    Adjusted EBITDA(2) 56   82   141   26 14   (30 ) 289        
    Equity income                   3  
    Finance lease income                   2  
    Depreciation and amortization                   (132 )
    Asset impairment charges                   (26 )
    Interest income                   12  
    Interest expense                   (66 )
    Foreign exchange loss                   (7 )
    Loss before income taxes                   (35 )

    (1)  The Skookumchuck wind facility has been included on a proportionate basis in the Wind and Solar segment.
    (2)  Adjusted EBITDA is not defined and has no standardized meaning under IFRS. Refer to the Non-IFRS financial measures and other specified financial measures section in this earnings release and may not be comparable to similar measures presented by other issuers.

    The following table reflects adjusted EBITDA by segment and provides reconciliation to earnings before income taxes for the year ended Dec. 31, 2024:

    Year ended Dec. 31, 2024
    $ millions
    Hydro Wind &
    Solar
    (1)
      Gas   Energy
    Transition
      Energy
    Marketing
      Corporate   Total   Equity
    accounted
    investments
    (1)
      Reclass
    adjustments
      IFRS
    financials
     
    Revenues 409   357   1,350   616   168   (34 ) 2,866   (21 )   2,845  
    Reclassifications and adjustments:                  
    Unrealized mark-to-market (gain) loss 1   84   (60 ) (36 ) 14     3     (3 )  
    Realized gain (loss) on closed exchange positions     7   2   (15 )   (6 )   6    
    Decrease in finance lease receivable   2   19         21     (21 )  
    Finance lease income   6   8         14     (14 )  
    Revenues from Planned Divestitures     (1 )       (1 )   1    
    Brazeau penalty (20 )           (20 )   20    
    Unrealized foreign exchange loss on commodity     (2 )       (2 )   2    
    Adjusted revenues 390   449   1,321   582   167   (34 ) 2,875   (21 ) (9 ) 2,845  
    Fuel and purchased power 16   30   475   418       939       939  
    Reclassifications and adjustments:                  
    Fuel and purchased power related to Planned Divestitures     (1 )       (1 )   1    
    Australian interest income     (4 )       (4 )   4    
    Adjusted fuel and purchased power 16   30   470   418       934     5   939  
    Carbon compliance     145   1     (34 ) 112       112  
    Gross margin 374   419   706   163   167     1,829   (21 ) (14 ) 1,794  
    OM&A 86   97   198   69   36   173   659   (4 )   655  
    Reclassifications and adjustments:                    
    Brazeau penalty (31 )           (31 )   31    
    ERP implementation costs           (14 ) (14 )   14    
    Acquisition-related transaction and restructuring costs           (24 ) (24 )   24    
    Adjusted OM&A 55   97   198   69   36   135   590   (4 ) 69   655  
    Taxes, other than income taxes 3   16   13   3     1   36       36  
    Net other operating income   (10 ) (40 ) (9 )     (59 )     (59 )
    Reclassifications and adjustments:                    
    Sundance A decommissioning cost reimbursement       9       9     (9 )  
    Adjusted net other operating income   (10 ) (40 )       (50 )   (9 ) (59 )
    Adjusted EBITDA(2) 316   316   535   91   131   (136 ) 1,253        
    Equity income                   5  
    Finance lease income                   14  
    Depreciation and amortization                   (531 )
    Asset impairment charges                   (46 )
    Interest income                   30  
    Interest expense                   (324 )
    Foreign exchange gain                   5  
    Gain on sale of assets and other                   4  
    Earnings before income taxes                   319  

    (1)  The Skookumchuck wind facility has been included on a proportionate basis in the Wind and Solar segment.
    (2)  Adjusted EBITDA is not defined and has no standardized meaning under IFRS. Refer to the Non-IFRS financial measures and other specified financial measures section in this earnings release and may not be comparable to similar measures presented by other issuers.

    The following table reflects adjusted EBITDA by segment and provides reconciliation to earnings before income taxes for the year ended Dec. 31, 2023:

    Year ended Dec. 31, 2023
    $ millions
    Hydro   Wind &
    Solar
    (1)
      Gas   Energy
    Transition
      Energy
    Marketing
      Corporate   Total   Equity
    accounted
    investments
    (1)
      Reclass
    adjustments
      IFRS
    financials
     
    Revenues 533   357   1,514   751   220   1   3,376   (21 )   3,355  
    Reclassifications and adjustments:                  
    Unrealized mark-to-market loss (4 ) 16   (67 ) (5 ) 23     (37 )   37    
    Realized gain (loss) on closed exchange positions     10     (91 )   (81 )   81    
    Decrease in finance lease receivable     55         55     (55 )  
    Finance lease income     12         12     (12 )  
    Unrealized foreign exchange gain on commodity     1         1     (1 )  
    Adjusted revenues 529   373   1,525   746   152   1   3,326   (21 ) 50   3,355  
    Fuel and purchased power 19   30   453   557     1   1,060       1,060  
    Reclassifications and adjustments:                  
    Australian interest income     (4 )       (4 )   4    
    Adjusted fuel and purchased power 19   30   449   557     1   1,056     4   1,060  
    Carbon compliance     112         112       112  
    Gross margin 510   343   964   189   152     2,158   (21 ) 46   2,183  
    OM&A 48   80   192   64   43   115   542   (3 )   539  
    Taxes, other than income taxes 3   12   11   3     1   30   (1 )   29  
    Net other operating income   (7 ) (40 )       (47 )     (47 )
    Reclassifications and adjustments:                  
    Insurance recovery   1           1     (1 )  
    Adjusted net other operating income   (6 ) (40 )       (46 )   (1 ) (47 )
    Adjusted EBITDA(2) 459   257   801   122   109   (116 ) 1,632        
    Equity income                   4  
    Finance lease income                   12  
    Depreciation and amortization                   (621 )
    Asset impairment reversals                   48  
    Interest income                   59  
    Interest expense                   (281 )
    Foreign exchange gain                   (7 )
    Gain on sale of assets and other                   4  
    Earnings before income taxes                   880  

    (1)  The Skookumchuck wind facility has been included on a proportionate basis in the Wind and Solar segment.
    (2)  Adjusted EBITDA is not defined and has no standardized meaning under IFRS. Refer to the Non-IFRS financial measures and other specified financial measures section in this earnings release and may not be comparable to similar measures presented by other issuers.


    Reconciliation of cash flow from operations to FFO and FCF

    The table below reconciles our cash flow from operating activities to our FFO and FCF:

      Three Months Ended Year Ended
    $ millions, unless otherwise stated Dec. 31, 2024   Dec. 31, 2023   Dec. 31, 2024   Dec. 31, 2023  
    Cash flow from operating activities(1) 215   310   796   1,464  
    Change in non-cash operating working capital balances (97 ) (135 ) (38 ) (124 )
    Cash flow from operations before changes in working capital 118   175   758   1,340  
    Adjustments        
    Share of adjusted FFO from joint venture(1) 4   3   8   8  
    Decrease in finance lease receivable 6   15   21   55  
    Clean energy transition provisions and adjustments(2)   4     11  
    Sundance A decommissioning cost reimbursement (9 )   (9 )  
    Realized gain (loss) on closed exchanged positions 2   27   (6 ) (81 )
    Acquisition-related transaction and restructuring costs 11     19    
    Other(3) 5   5   19   18  
    FFO(4) 137   229   810   1,351  
    Deduct:        
    Sustaining capital(1) (67 ) (74 ) (142 ) (174 )
    Productivity capital (1 ) (1 ) (1 ) (3 )
    Dividends paid on preferred shares (13 ) (12 ) (52 ) (51 )
    Distributions paid to subsidiaries’ non-controlling interests (6 ) (19 ) (40 ) (223 )
    Principal payments on lease liabilities (3 ) (2 ) (6 ) (10 )
    Other 1        
    FCF(4) 48   121   569   890  
    Weighted average number of common shares outstanding in the period 298   308   302   276  
    FFO per share(4) 0.46   0.74   2.68   4.89  
    FCF per share(4) 0.16   0.39   1.88   3.22  

    (1)  Includes our share of amounts for the Skookumchuck wind facility, an equity-accounted joint venture.
    (2)  2023 includes amounts related to onerous contracts recognized in 2021 and a voluntary contribution to the US Defined Benefit Pension Plan for the Centralia thermal facility.
    (3)  Other consists of production tax credits, which is a reduction to tax equity debt, less distributions from an equity-accounted joint venture.
    (4)  These items are not defined and have no standardized meaning under IFRS and may not be comparable to similar measures presented by other issuers. Refer to the Non-IFRS Measures section in this earnings release .

    The table below provides a reconciliation of our adjusted EBITDA to our FFO and FCF:

      Three Months Ended Year Ended
    $ millions, unless otherwise stated Dec. 31, 2024   Dec. 31, 2023   Dec. 31, 2024   Dec. 31, 2023  
    Adjusted EBITDA(1)(4) 285   289   1,253   1,632  
    Provisions 2   (1 ) 10   (1 )
    Net interest expense(2) (64 ) (41 ) (231 ) (164 )
    Current income tax recovery (expense) (20 ) 5   (143 ) (50 )
    Realized foreign exchange gain (loss) (20 ) 9   (27 ) (4 )
    Decommissioning and restoration costs settled (12 ) (15 ) (41 ) (37 )
    Other non-cash items (34 ) (17 ) (11 ) (25 )
    FFO(3)(4) 137   229   810   1,351  
    Deduct:        
    Sustaining capital(4) (67 ) (74 ) (142 ) (174 )
    Productivity capital (1 ) (1 ) (1 ) (3 )
    Dividends paid on preferred shares (13 ) (12 ) (52 ) (51 )
    Distributions paid to subsidiaries’ non-controlling interests (6 ) (19 ) (40 ) (223 )
    Principal payments on lease liabilities (3 ) (2 ) (6 ) (10 )
    Other 1        
    FCF(4) 48   121   569   890  

    (1)  Adjusted EBITDA is defined in the Additional IFRS Measures and Non-IFRS Measures of this earnings release and reconciled to earnings (loss) before income taxes above.
    (2) Net interest expense includes interest expense less interest income and excludes non-cash items like financing amortization and accretion.
    (3)  These items are not defined and have no standardized meaning under IFRS and may not be comparable to similar measures presented by other issuers. FFO and FCF are defined in the Non-IFRS financial measures and other specified financial measures section of in this earnings release and reconciled to cash flow from operating activities above.
    (4)  Includes our share of amounts for Skookumchuck wind facility, an equity-accounted joint venture.

    TransAlta is in the process of filing its Annual Information Form, Audited Consolidated Financial Statements and accompanying notes, as well as the associated Management’s Discussion & Analysis (MD&A). These documents will be available today on the Investors section of TransAlta’s website at www.transalta.com or through SEDAR at www.sedarplus.ca.

    TransAlta will also be filing its Form 40-F with the US Securities and Exchange Commission. The form will be available through their website at www.sec.gov. Paper copies of all documents are available to shareholders free of charge upon request.

    About TransAlta Corporation:

    TransAlta owns, operates and develops a diverse fleet of electrical power generation assets in Canada, the United States and Western Australia with a focus on long-term shareholder value. TransAlta provides municipalities, medium and large industries, businesses and utility customers with clean, affordable, energy efficient and reliable power. Today, TransAlta is one of Canada’s largest producers of wind power and Alberta’s largest producer of hydro-electric power. For over 112 years, TransAlta has been a responsible operator and a proud member of the communities where we operate and where our employees work and live. TransAlta aligns its corporate goals with the UN Sustainable Development Goals and the Future-Fit Business Benchmark, which also defines sustainable goals for businesses. Our reporting on climate change management has been guided by the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) S2 Climate-related Disclosures Standard and the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) recommendations. TransAlta has achieved a 70 per cent reduction in GHG emissions or 22.7 million tonnes CO2e since 2015 and received an upgraded MSCI ESG rating of AA.

    For more information about TransAlta, visit our web site at transalta.com.

    Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking Information

    This news release includes “forward-looking information,” within the meaning of applicable Canadian securities laws, and “forward-looking statements,” within the meaning of applicable United States securities laws, including the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (collectively referred to herein as “forward-looking statements”). Forward-looking statements are not facts, but only predictions and generally can be identified by the use of statements that include phrases such as “may”, “will”, “can”, “could”, “would”, “shall”, “believe”, “expect”, “estimate”, “anticipate”, “intend”, “plan”, “forecast”, “foresee”, “potential”, “enable”, “continue” or other comparable terminology. These statements are not guarantees of our future performance, events or results and are subject to risks, uncertainties and other important factors that could cause our actual performance, events or results to be materially different from those set out in or implied by the forward-looking statements. In particular, this news release contains forward-looking statements about the following, among other things: the strategic objectives of the Company and that the execution of the Company’s strategy will realize value for shareholders; our capital allocation and financing strategy; our sustainability goals and targets, including those in our 2024 Sustainability Report; our 2025 Outlook; our financial and operational performance, including our hedge position; optimizing and diversifying our existing assets; the increasingly contracted nature of our fleet; expectations about strategies for growth and expansion, including opportunities for Centralia redevelopment, and data centre opportunities; expected costs and schedules for planned projects; expected regulatory processes and outcomes, including in relation to the Alberta restructured energy market; the power generation industry and the supply and demand of electricity; the cyclicality of our business; expected outcomes with respect to legal proceedings; the expected impact of future tax and accounting changes; and expected industry, market and economic conditions.

    The forward-looking statements contained in this news release are based on many assumptions including, but not limited to, the following: no significant changes to applicable laws and regulations; no unexpected delays in obtaining required regulatory approvals; no material adverse impacts to investment and credit markets; no significant changes to power price and hedging assumptions; no significant changes to gas commodity price assumptions and transport costs; no significant changes to interest rates; no significant changes to the demand and growth of renewables generation; no significant changes to the integrity and reliability of our facilities; no significant changes to the Company’s debt and credit ratings; no unforeseen changes to economic and market conditions; and no significant event occurring outside the ordinary course of business.

    These assumptions are based on information currently available to TransAlta, including information obtained from third-party sources. Actual results may differ materially from those predicted. Factors that may adversely impact what is expressed or implied by forward-looking statements contained in this news release include, but are not limited to: fluctuations in power prices; changes in supply and demand for electricity; our ability to contract our electricity generation for prices that will provide expected returns; our ability to replace contracts as they expire; risks associated with development projects and acquisitions; any difficulty raising needed capital in the future on reasonable terms or at all; our ability to achieve our targets relating to ESG; long-term commitments on gas transportation capacity that may not be fully utilized over time; changes to the legislative, regulatory and political environments; environmental requirements and changes in, or liabilities under, these requirements; operational risks involving our facilities, including unplanned outages and equipment failure; disruptions in the transmission and distribution of electricity; reductions in production; impairments and/or writedowns of assets; adverse impacts on our information technology systems and our internal control systems, including increased cybersecurity threats; commodity risk management and energy trading risks; reduced labour availability and ability to continue to staff our operations and facilities; disruptions to our supply chains; climate-change related risks; reductions to our generating units’ relative efficiency or capacity factors; general economic risks, including deterioration of equity and debt markets, increasing interest rates or rising inflation; general domestic and international economic and political developments, including potential trade tariffs; industry risk and competition; counterparty credit risk; inadequacy or unavailability of insurance coverage; increases in the Company’s income taxes and any risk of reassessments; legal, regulatory and contractual disputes and proceedings involving the Company; reliance on key personnel; and labour relations matters.

    The foregoing risk factors, among others, are described in further detail under the heading “Governance and Risk Management” in the MD&A, which section is incorporated by reference herein.

    Readers are urged to consider these factors carefully when evaluating the forward-looking statements and are cautioned not to place undue reliance on them. The forward-looking statements included in this news release are made only as of the date hereof and we do not undertake to publicly update these forward-looking statements to reflect new information, future events or otherwise, except as required by applicable laws. The purpose of the financial outlooks contained herein is to give the reader information about management’s current expectations and plans and readers are cautioned that such information may not be appropriate for other purposes.

    Note: All financial figures are in Canadian dollars unless otherwise indicated.

    For more information:

    Investor Inquiries: Media Inquiries:
    Phone: 1-800-387-3598 in Canada and US Phone: 1-855-255-9184
    Email: investor_relations@transalta.com Email: ta_media_relations@transalta.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – Including Mexican drug cartels on the EU list of terrorist organisations – E-000631/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    Question for written answer  E-000631/2025
    to the Council
    Rule 144
    Jorge Martín Frías (PfE)

    One of the first measures taken by the incoming President of the United States, Donald Trump, was to designate Mexican drug cartels as ‘foreign terrorist organisations’[1] in order to be able to allocate the necessary resources to the war on drugs.

    However, at the end of January, the Council renewed the EU list of terrorist persons, groups and entities[2] without including the Mexican drug cartels as the Trump administration had done.

    As this Member has warned in previous questions (E-001790/2024[3], E-002382/2024[4] and E-002686/2024/rev.1[5]), the complicity of Claudia Sheinbaum’s government with drug trafficking organisations – with the approval of the botched judicial reform or with an unambitious ‘zero impunity’ security strategy, for instance – is making life easy for these organisations and ensuring their impunity in Mexico.

    In light of the above:

    • 1.Will the Council include Mexican cartels on the list as part of the forthcoming review of Common Position 2001/931/CFSP of 27 December 2001 on the application of specific measures to combat terrorism?
    • 2.Will the Council attempt to coordinate a security strategy with the United States so as to jointly combat drug trafficking?

    Submitted: 11.2.2025

    • [1] THE WHITE HOUSE – Designating Cartels And Other Organizations As Foreign Terrorist Organizations And Specially Designated Global Terrorists – EXECUTIVE ORDER – 20 January 2025.
    • [2] Council Decision (CFSP) 2025/207 of 30 January 2025 updating the list of persons, groups and entities covered by Common Position 2001/931/CFSP on the application of specific measures to combat terrorism, and repealing Decision (CFSP) 2024/2056.
    • [3] https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/E-10-2024-001790_ES.html.
    • [4] https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/E-10-2024-002382_ES.html.
    • [5] https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/E-10-2024-002686_ES.html.
    Last updated: 20 February 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Statement by President von der Leyen at the joint press conference with Barbadian Prime Minister Mottley

    Source: European Commission

    European Commission Statement Bridgetown, 19 Feb 2025 Prime Minister, dear Mia,
    Thank you for hosting me here in Barbados. It is indeed the first time that I am here, it is fantastic. It is a big pleasure to join you and our partners at this CARICOM Summit. I have crossed the Atlantic to share with you how much Europe values its partnership with the Caribbean. We live in an unpredictable world. In these times, it is more important than ever to stick together; to stand up for our values; and to deepen ties with friends.

    Despite being an ocean apart, Europe and the Caribbean are very close at heart. We are strong and vibrant democracies; we are convinced that it is of big importance to defend multilateralism and the rule of law; we believe in freedom and the right of people to choose their own future. This is why you have been standing with Ukraine since the very beginning of the war. Ukraine is a future member of the European family. So supporting them means also supporting us. And it is important to also call for a just peace not only in Ukraine but also in the Middle East, in Sudan and Haiti, which is what you have always done.

    While sharing our values, we also face some of the same challenges. When devastating hurricanes sweep through your islands, like hurricane Beryl last July, Europe wants to be by your side: We provide emergency support to those who have lost everything, we are rebuilding together. Actually, we are currently supporting Grenada to rebuild Carriacou and Petite Martinique with the goal of making the islands 100% powered by renewable energy. And we have just discussed how to strengthen our cooperation in resilience and preparedness, so to work closer together to have a foresight when these natural disasters and extreme weather events, which are often related to climate change, hit.

    We know that the fight against climate change is truly existential. In the face of hardship, the Caribbean are showing incredible leadership. Especially you, my dear Mia. You have amplified the voice of small island nations on the global stage, for the benefit of all humanity. This was key, for example, to the launch of the Loss and Damage Fund together at COP29. It amounts to almost USD 750 million in pledge, half of it covered by Europe and its Member States. Because climate financing is another very important challenge. Europe is the leading provider. We contribute well beyond our fair share of the USD 100 billion annual target.

    But we know that given the scale of the transition and its urgency, we need new and innovative financing tools – in addition – like green bonds and carbon and nature credits, for example, which is what we are working on. And we need to bring the private sector fully on board, with a smarter use of private and public funds. With your Bridgetown Initiative, dear Mia, you are leading the way to making green and development financing fairer, more accessible and more affordable so that the climate targets can be met.

    Another initiative you mentioned is renewable energy. At COP28 we agreed on global targets for renewables and energy efficiency. We want to triple renewable energy and double energy efficiency by 2030. To implement these goals, we created the Global Energy Transition Forum, because only what gets measured gets done, and we really need that the goals on paper are achieved on the ground. And this year, Barbados joined the Global Energy Transition Forum, I am very glad about that, that is great. It will allow us to deliver concrete projects on the ground and unlock more investment for the transition. And I hope that many Caribbean nations will follow your example.

    This brings me to our bilateral work. The starting point for us is our investment programme Global Gateway. That is the investment programme abroad for partners. It is already at work – here in Barbados and across the Caribbean. Together with Hydrogen de France we have just signed the first green hydrogen storage project in Barbados. What is important is that renewable energy is homegrown, and therefore it is cheaper: It gives you energy independence and it gives you energy security, and it is the energy of the future, because it is clean energy.

    We are, as you said, also working on the health sector. I think both of us have learnt our bitter lessons during COVID-19 and how vulnerable we are. And therefore, we support your pharmaceutical sovereignty. It means vaccines and medication produced in the Caribbean, for the Caribbean, but also to be a hub for the rest of the world. We have just signed a biomedical partnership between BioMedX, a European biotech company, and Barbados. And tomorrow, we will launch ‘PharmaNext’, a project that really boosts innovation and investments across the Atlantic. Because it also aligns the regulatory environment that is so important to move forward.

    We have other great projects in the Caribbean. One has really caught my attention: In Barbados and Grenada, we are turning the sargassum threat into an opportunity, and I think it is really smart. We are working to transform this harmful alga into fertiliser, biomass and even cosmetics.This project has, and this is phenomenal, the potential to leverage almost EUR 400 million in investments. And actually, we are bringing thus a harmful alga, fighting a harmful alga but turning it into an opportunity that brings revenue. So it could not be better. Finally, we are bringing the Caribbean closer together and closer to us – with digital connectivity. Tomorrow, we will commit with Spain to deliver high-speed internet via satellite to even the most remote communities here. So the last kilometre that is always so difficult, we are going to manage that now via satellite.

    To me, the spirit of Global Gateway is needed more than ever. We are investing in value chains, skills and jobs. We are sharing knowledge and technology for the benefit of both sides. We are looking into a long-term and trusted partnership. And we are convinced that a win-win situation is the most beneficial for our people and our economy.

    Thank you very much again for having me here.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI: Donegal Group Inc. Announces Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2024 Results

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    MARIETTA, Pa., Feb. 20, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Donegal Group Inc. (NASDAQ:DGICA) and (NASDAQ:DGICB) today reported its financial results for the fourth quarter and full year ended December 31, 2024.

    Significant items for fourth quarter of 2024 (all comparisons to fourth quarter of 2023):

    • Net premiums earned increased 4.6% to $236.6 million
    • Combined ratio of 92.9%, compared to 106.8%
    • Net income of $24.0 million, or 70 cents per diluted Class A share, compared to net loss of $2.0 million, or 6 cents per Class A share
    • Net investment gains (after tax) of $0.2 million, or 1 cent per diluted Class A share, compared to $1.8 million, or 5 cents per Class A share, are included in net income (loss)

    Significant items for full year of 2024 (all comparisons to full year of 2023):

    • Net premiums earned increased 6.2% to $936.7 million
    • Combined ratio of 98.6%, compared to 104.4%
    • Net income of $50.9 million, or $1.53 per diluted Class A share, compared to $4.4 million, or 14 cents per diluted Class A share
    • Net investment gains (after tax) of $3.9 million, or 12 cents per diluted Class A share, compared to $2.5 million, or 8 cents per diluted Class A share, are included in net income
    • Book value per share of $15.36 at December 31, 2024, compared to $14.39 at year-end 2023

    Financial Summary

      Three Months Ended December 31,     Year Ended December 31,  
      2024   2023   % Change     2024   2023   % Change  
      (dollars in thousands, except per share amounts)    
                               
    Income Statement Data                      
    Net premiums earned $   236,635   $   226,185   4.6 %   $   936,651   $   882,071   6.2 %
    Investment income, net 12,050   10,710   12.5     44,918   40,853   10.0  
    Net investment gains 256   2,243   -88.6     4,981   3,173   57.0  
    Total revenues 249,954   239,468   4.4     989,605   927,338   6.7  
    Net income (loss) 24,003   (1,970)   NM2     50,862   4,426   NM  
    Non-GAAP operating income (loss)1 23,801   (3,742)   NM     46,927   1,919   NM  
    Annualized return on average equity 18.1%   -1.7%   19.8 pts     9.9%   0.9%   9.0 pts  
                               
    Per Share Data                        
    Net income (loss) – Class A (diluted) $         0.70   $        (0.06)   NM     $         1.53   $         0.14   NM  
    Net income (loss) – Class B 0.64   (0.06)   NM     1.38   0.11   NM  
    Non-GAAP operating income (loss) – Class A (diluted) 0.69   (0.11)   NM     1.41   0.06   NM  
    Non-GAAP operating income (loss) – Class B 0.63   (0.11)   NM     1.27   0.04   NM  
    Book value 15.36   14.39   6.7 %   15.36   14.39   6.7 %
                               

    ¹The “Definitions of Non-GAAP Financial Measures” section of this release defines and reconciles data that we prepare on an accounting basis other than U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”).
    ²Not meaningful.

    Management Commentary

    Kevin G. Burke, President and Chief Executive Officer of Donegal Group Inc., stated, “We concluded 2024 with strong performance in the fourth quarter that we believe reflected our unrelenting focus in recent years on execution, whether on strategic initiatives to broaden our market capabilities or on profit-improvement measures to enhance our operating performance. As we move into 2025, we are striving to further enhance our performance while also pursuing intentional, strategic premium growth.

    “For the fourth quarter of 2024, our loss ratio improved substantially compared to the prior-year quarter, as premium rate increases contributed to higher net premiums earned and numerous underwriting initiatives we implemented in recent years resulted in lower claim activity. Our weather-related loss ratio compared favorably to both the prior-year quarter and our previous five-year average for the fourth quarter of the year. Net development of reserves for claims incurred in prior years had virtually no effect on the loss ratio for the fourth quarter of 2024 or 2023.

    “We effectively mitigated the higher costs associated with our major systems modernization project and higher underwriting-based incentive costs by implementing targeted expense-reduction strategies across our operations. We remain committed to refining the efficiency of our insurance operations, leveraging our substantial investments in technology, data and analytics, to maintain a sustainable expense ratio.”

    Mr. Burke concluded, “As the insurance industry landscape continues to evolve, our dedicated team will maintain focus on the effective execution of the strategies we believe will lead to successful achievement of our long-term objectives. We will continue to implement premium rate increases as needed to maintain rate adequacy and achieve targeted risk-adjusted returns. We are also actively pursuing new business opportunities across our regional footprint, concentrating primarily on high quality new commercial middle market and small business accounts, while also seeking strategic new business growth within our personal lines segment. We have refined our state-specific strategies and action plans to meet current market challenges and opportunities. We believe that the successful execution of those actions will allow us to further enhance underwriting performance, drive sustainable measured growth and strengthen our competitive position with our independent agents, ultimately increasing the value of our stockholders’ investment in Donegal Group Inc.”

    Insurance Operations

    Donegal Group is an insurance holding company whose insurance subsidiaries and affiliates offer property and casualty lines of insurance in three Mid-Atlantic states (Delaware, Maryland and Pennsylvania), five Southern states (Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia), eight Midwestern states (Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Nebraska, Ohio, South Dakota and Wisconsin) and five Southwestern states (Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, Texas and Utah). Donegal Mutual Insurance Company and the insurance subsidiaries of Donegal Group conduct business together as the Donegal Insurance Group.

      Three Months Ended December 31,     Year Ended December 31,  
      2024   2023   % Change     2024   2023   % Change  
      (dollars in thousands)    
                               
    Net Premiums Earned                        
    Commercial lines $    136,701   $    133,602   2.3 %   $    539,683   $    533,029   1.2 %
    Personal lines        99,934          92,583   7.9          396,968        349,042   13.7  
    Total net premiums earned $    236,635   $    226,185   4.6 %   $    936,651   $    882,071   6.2 %
                               
    Net Premiums Written                      
    Commercial lines:                        
    Automobile $      42,922   $      39,888   7.6 %   $    184,989   $    174,741   5.9 %
    Workers’ compensation        20,934          22,283   -6.1          103,533        107,598   -3.8  
    Commercial multi-peril        50,431          48,010   5.0          213,959        195,632   9.4  
    Other          9,790          10,544   -7.2            45,439          50,458   -9.9  
    Total commercial lines      124,077        120,725   2.8          547,920        528,429   3.7  
    Personal lines:                        
    Automobile        54,078          54,609   -1.0          243,036        215,957   12.5  
    Homeowners        30,958          34,653   -10.7          140,613        139,688   0.7  
    Other          2,329            2,706   -13.9            10,712          11,623   -7.8  
    Total personal lines        87,365          91,968   -5.0          394,361        367,268   7.4  
    Total net premiums written $    211,442   $    212,693   -0.6%     $    942,281   $    895,697   5.2 %
                               


    Net Premiums Written

    The 0.6% decrease in net premiums written¹ for the fourth quarter of 2024 compared to the fourth quarter of 2023, as shown in the table above, represents the combination of 2.8% growth in commercial lines net premiums written and a 5.0% decrease in personal lines net premiums written. The $1.3 million decrease in net premiums written for the fourth quarter of 2024 compared to the fourth quarter of 2023 included:

    • Commercial Lines: $3.3 million increase that we attribute primarily to solid premium retention and a continuation of renewal premium increases in lines other than workers’ compensation, offset partially by planned attrition in classes of business we have targeted for profit improvement.
    • Personal Lines: $4.6 million decrease that we attribute primarily to planned attrition due to non-renewal actions and lower new business writings, offset partially by a continuation of renewal premium rate increases and solid policy retention.

    The $46.6 million increase in net premiums written for the full year of 2024 compared to the full year of 2023 included:

    • Commercial Lines: $19.5 million increase that we attribute primarily to strong premium retention and a continuation of renewal premium increases in lines other than workers’ compensation, offset partially by planned attrition in states we exited or classes of business we have targeted for profit improvement.
    • Personal Lines: $27.1 million increase that we attribute primarily to a continuation of renewal premium rate increases and solid policy retention, offset partially by planned attrition due to non-renewal actions and lower new business writings.

    Underwriting Performance

    We evaluate the performance of our commercial lines and personal lines segments primarily based upon the underwriting results of our insurance subsidiaries as determined under statutory accounting practices. The following table presents comparative details with respect to the GAAP and statutory combined ratios¹ for the three months and full years ended December 31, 2024 and 2023:

      Three Months Ended     Year Ended  
      December 31,     December 31,  
      2024     2023     2024     2023  
                           
    GAAP Combined Ratios (Total Lines)                
    Loss ratio – core losses 52.3 %   61.8 %   54.0 %   57.5 %
    Loss ratio – weather-related losses 3.3     5.9     7.2     8.3  
    Loss ratio – large fire losses 4.0     4.8     4.9     5.2  
    Loss ratio – net prior-year reserve development -0.2     -0.4     -1.6     -1.9  
    Loss ratio 59.8     72.1     64.5     69.1  
    Expense ratio 32.8     34.1     33.7     34.7  
    Dividend ratio 0.3     0.6     0.4     0.6  
    Combined ratio 92.9 %   106.8 %   98.6 %   104.4 %
                           
    Statutory Combined Ratios                  
    Commercial lines:                    
    Automobile 115.7 %   104.8 %   102.6 %   97.3 %
    Workers’ compensation 105.6     107.9     104.4     96.6  
    Commercial multi-peril 79.4     107.8     95.0     112.3  
    Other 84.7     95.0     80.0     85.5  
    Total commercial lines 97.3     105.8     98.2     101.6  
    Personal lines:                    
    Automobile 96.5     119.7     97.4     109.7  
    Homeowners 76.2     101.3     99.6     108.6  
    Other 106.3     59.2     99.5     75.8  
    Total personal lines 89.5     111.1     98.3     108.2  
    Total lines 94.0 %   107.8 %   98.3 %   104.2 %
                           

     
    Loss Ratio – Fourth Quarter

    For the fourth quarter of 2024, the loss ratio decreased to 59.8%, compared to 72.1% for the fourth quarter of 2023. The core loss ratio, which excludes weather-related losses, large fire losses and net development of reserves for losses incurred in prior accident years, was 52.3% for the fourth quarter of 2024, which improved significantly compared to 61.8% for the fourth quarter of 2023. For the commercial lines segment, the core loss ratio of 55.2% for the fourth quarter of 2024 improved from 59.6% for the fourth quarter of 2023, primarily as the result of ongoing premium rate increases in all lines except workers’ compensation and reduced exposures in underperforming states and classes of business. For the personal lines segment, the core loss ratio of 48.4% for the fourth quarter of 2024 decreased significantly from 65.1% for the fourth quarter of 2023, due largely to the favorable impact of premium rate increases on net premiums earned for that segment.

    Weather-related losses of $7.7 million, or 3.3 percentage points of the loss ratio, for the fourth quarter of 2024 decreased from $13.4 million, or 5.9 percentage points of the loss ratio, for the fourth quarter of 2023. Our insurance subsidiaries did not incur significant losses from any single weather event during the fourth quarters of 2024 or 2023. The impact of weather-related loss activity to the loss ratio for the fourth quarter of 2024 was lower than our previous five-year average of 5.2 percentage points for fourth quarter weather-related losses.

    Large fire losses, which we define as individual fire losses in excess of $50,000, were $9.5 million, or 4.0 percentage points of the loss ratio, for the fourth quarter of 2024, compared to $10.8 million, or 4.8 percentage points of the loss ratio, for the fourth quarter of 2023. The modest decrease primarily reflected lower average severity in homeowner fire losses.

    Net development of reserves for losses incurred in prior accident years had virtually no impact to the loss ratio for the fourth quarter of 2024 or 2023. For the fourth quarter of 2024, our insurance subsidiaries experienced unfavorable development primarily in personal automobile and commercial automobile losses that was offset by favorable development in commercial multi-peril losses and other lines of business. For the fourth quarter of 2023, our insurance subsidiaries experienced favorable development in personal automobile, workers’ compensation, homeowners and commercial automobile losses, offset partially by unfavorable development in commercial multi-peril and other commercial losses.

    Loss Ratio – Full Year

    For the full year of 2024, the loss ratio decreased to 64.5%, compared to 69.1% for the full year of 2023. The 2024 core loss ratio decreased by 3.5 percentage points to 54.0% from 57.5% for 2023. For the commercial lines segment, the core loss ratio of 54.4% for 2024 improved from 56.5% for 2023, primarily as the result of ongoing premium rate increases in all lines except workers’ compensation and reduced exposures in underperforming states and classes of business. For the personal lines segment, the core loss ratio of 53.5% for 2024 decreased from 59.1% in 2023, due largely to the favorable impact of premium rate increases on net premiums earned for that segment.

    Weather-related losses for the full year of 2024 were $67.7 million, or 7.2 percentage points of the loss ratio, compared to $72.9 million, or 8.3 percentage points of the loss ratio, for the full year of 2023. The loss ratio impact of weather-related losses for the full year of 2024 was in line with the previous five-year average of 7.0 percentage points of the loss ratio.

    Large fire losses were $45.8 million, or 4.9 percentage points of the loss ratio, for the full year of 2024, relatively in line with $45.4 million, or 5.2 percentage points of the loss ratio, for the full year of 2023.

    Net favorable development of reserves for losses incurred in prior accident years of $15.0 million reduced the loss ratio for the full year of 2024 by 1.6 percentage points. For the full year of 2024, our insurance subsidiaries experienced favorable development in losses primarily in the commercial multi-peril, personal automobile and homeowners lines of business, offset partially by unfavorable development in the workers’ compensation and commercial automobile lines of business. Net favorable development of reserves for losses incurred in prior accident years of $16.7 million reduced the loss ratio for the full year of 2023 by 1.9 percentage points. For the full year of 2023, our insurance subsidiaries experienced favorable development in losses primarily in the commercial automobile, personal automobile, workers’ compensation and homeowners lines of business.

    Expense Ratio

    The expense ratio was 32.8% for the fourth quarter of 2024, compared to 34.1% for the fourth quarter of 2023. The expense ratio was 33.7% for the full year of 2024, compared to 34.7% for the full year of 2023. The decrease in the expense ratios for the fourth quarter and full year of 2024 primarily reflected the impacts of various expense reduction initiatives, including agency incentive program revisions, commission schedule adjustments, targeted staffing reductions, and hiring restrictions for open employment positions, among others. These impacts were offset partially by an increase in underwriting-based incentive costs as well as higher technology systems-related expenses that were primarily due to increased costs related to our ongoing systems modernization project, a portion of which Donegal Mutual Insurance Company allocates to our insurance subsidiaries. We expect the impact from allocated costs from Donegal Mutual Insurance Company to our insurance subsidiaries related to the ongoing systems modernization project peaked at approximately 1.3 percentage points of the expense ratio for the full year of 2024 and will subside gradually in 2025 and subsequent years.

    Investment Operations

    Donegal Group’s investment strategy is to generate an appropriate amount of after-tax income on its invested assets while minimizing credit risk through investment in high-quality securities. As a result, we had invested 95.6% of our consolidated investment portfolio in diversified, highly rated and marketable fixed-maturity securities at December 31, 2024.

      December 31, 2024     December 31, 2023  
      Amount   %     Amount   %  
      (dollars in thousands)    
    Fixed maturities, at carrying value:                  
    U.S. Treasury securities and obligations of U.S.                  
    government corporations and agencies $    170,423   12.3 %   $    176,991   13.3 %
    Obligations of states and political subdivisions      409,560   29.5          415,280   31.3  
    Corporate securities      440,552   31.8          399,640   30.1  
    Mortgage-backed securities      304,459   22.0          278,260   21.0  
    Allowance for expected credit losses         (1,388 ) -0.1             (1,326 ) -0.1  
    Total fixed maturities   1,323,606   95.5       1,268,845   95.6  
    Equity securities, at fair value        36,808   2.7            25,903   2.0  
    Short-term investments, at cost        24,558   1.8            32,306   2.4  
    Total investments $ 1,384,972   100.0 %   $ 1,327,054   100.0 %
                       
    Average investment yield 3.3%         3.1%      
    Average tax-equivalent investment yield 3.4%         3.2%      
    Average fixed-maturity duration (years)              5.2                      4.3      
                       

    Net investment income of $12.1 million for the fourth quarter of 2024 increased 12.5% compared to $10.7 million in net investment income for the fourth quarter of 2023, due primarily to higher average invested assets and an increase in the average investment yield compared to the prior-year fourth quarter. Net investment income of $44.9 million for the full year of 2024 increased 10.0% compared to the full year of 2023, due primarily to higher average invested assets and an increase in the average investment yield compared to the prior year.

    Net investment gains were minimal for the fourth quarter of 2024, compared to $2.2 million for the fourth quarter of 2023. We attribute the gains to the quarterly increases in the market value of the equity securities held at the end of the respective periods.

    Net investment gains were $5.0 million for the full year of 2024, compared to $3.2 million for the full year of 2023. We attribute the gains to the change in the market value of the equity securities held at the end of the respective periods.

    Our book value per share was $15.36 at December 31, 2024, compared to $14.39 at December 31, 2023, as increases from net income and unrealized gains within our available-for-sale fixed-maturity portfolio during 2024 were partially offset by the dividends we declared during the year.

    Definitions of Non-GAAP Financial Measures

    We prepare our consolidated financial statements on the basis of GAAP. Our insurance subsidiaries also prepare financial statements based on statutory accounting principles state insurance regulators prescribe or permit (“SAP”). In addition to using GAAP-based performance measurements, we also utilize certain non-GAAP financial measures that we believe provide value in managing our business and for comparison to the financial results of our peers. These non-GAAP measures are net premiums written, operating income or loss and statutory combined ratio.

    Net premiums written and operating income or loss are non-GAAP financial measures investors in insurance companies commonly use. We define net premiums written as the amount of full-term premiums our insurance subsidiaries record for policies effective within a given period less premiums our insurance subsidiaries cede to reinsurers. We define operating income or loss as net income or loss excluding after-tax net investment gains or losses, after-tax restructuring charges and other significant non-recurring items. Because our calculation of operating income or loss may differ from similar measures other companies use, investors should exercise caution when comparing our measure of operating income or loss to the measure of other companies.

    The following table provides a reconciliation of net premiums earned to net premiums written for the periods indicated:

      Three Months Ended December 31,     Year Ended December 31,  
      2024   2023   % Change     2024   2023   % Change  
      (dollars in thousands)    
                               
    Reconciliation of Net Premiums                          
    Earned to Net Premiums Written                          
    Net premiums earned $       236,635   $     226,185   4.6 %   $     936,651   $     882,071   6.2 %
    Change in net unearned premiums          (25,193        (13,492 86.7               5,630           13,626   -58.7  
    Net premiums written $       211,442   $     212,693   -0.6   $     942,281   $     895,697   5.2 %
                               
                               

    The following table provides a reconciliation of net income (loss) to operating income (loss) for the periods indicated:

      Three Months Ended December 31,      Year Ended December 31,  
      2024   2023     % Change     2024   2023   % Change  
      (dollars in thousands, except per share amounts)    
                                 
    Reconciliation of Net Income (Loss)                            
    to Non-GAAP Operating Income (Loss)                            
    Net income (loss) $ 24,003   $ (1,970 )   NM     $ 50,862   $ 4,426   NM  
    Investment gains (after tax)   (202 )   (1,772 )   -88.6 %     (3,935 )   (2,507 ) 57.0 %
    Non-GAAP operating income (loss) $ 23,801   $ (3,742 )   NM     $ 46,927   $ 1,919   NM  
                                 
    Per Share Reconciliation of Net Income (Loss)                            
    to Non-GAAP Operating Income (Loss)                            
    Net income (loss) – Class A (diluted) $ 0.70   $ (0.06 )   NM     $ 1.53   $ 0.14   NM  
    Investment gains (after tax)   (0.01 )   (0.05 )   -80.0 %     (0.12 )   (0.08 ) 50.0 %
    Non-GAAP operating income (loss) – Class A $ 0.69   $ (0.11 )   NM     $ 1.41   $ 0.06   NM  
                                 
    Net income (loss) – Class B $ 0.64   $ (0.06 )   NM     $ 1.38   $ 0.11   NM  
    Investment gains (after tax)   (0.01 )   (0.05 )   -80.0 %     (0.11 )   (0.07 ) 57.1 %
    Non-GAAP operating income (loss) – Class B $ 0.63   $ (0.11 )   NM     $ 1.27   $ 0.04   NM  
                                 

    The statutory combined ratio is a standard non-GAAP measurement of underwriting profitability that is based upon amounts determined under SAP. The statutory combined ratio is the sum of:

    • the statutory loss ratio, which is the ratio of calendar-year incurred losses and loss expenses, excluding anticipated salvage and subrogation recoveries, to premiums earned;
    • the statutory expense ratio, which is the ratio of expenses incurred for net commissions, premium taxes and underwriting expenses to premiums written; and
    • the statutory dividend ratio, which is the ratio of dividends to holders of workers’ compensation policies to premiums earned.

    The statutory combined ratio does not reflect investment income, federal income taxes or other non-operating income or expense. A statutory combined ratio of less than 100% generally indicates underwriting profitability.

    Dividend Information

    On December 19, 2024, we declared regular quarterly cash dividends of $0.1725 per share for our Class A common stock and $0.155 per share for our Class B common stock, which we paid on February 18, 2025 to stockholders of record as of the close of business on February 4, 2025.

    Pre-Recorded Webcast

    At approximately 8:30 am EDT on Thursday, February 20, 2025, we will make available in the Investors section of our website a pre-recorded audio webcast featuring management commentary on our quarterly and annual results and general business updates. You may listen to the pre-recorded webcast by accessing the link on our website at http://investors.donegalgroup.com. A supplemental investor presentation is also available via our website.

    About the Company

    Donegal Group Inc. is an insurance holding company whose insurance subsidiaries and affiliates offer property and casualty lines of insurance in certain Mid-Atlantic, Midwestern, Southern and Southwestern states. Donegal Mutual Insurance Company and the insurance subsidiaries of Donegal Group Inc. conduct business together as the Donegal Insurance Group. The Donegal Insurance Group has an A.M. Best rating of A (Excellent).

    The Class A common stock and Class B common stock of Donegal Group Inc. trade on the NASDAQ Global Select Market under the symbols DGICA and DGICB, respectively. We are focused on several primary strategies, including achieving sustained excellent financial performance, strategically modernizing our operations and processes to transform our business, capitalizing on opportunities to grow profitably and providing superior experiences to our agents, policyholders and employees.

    Safe Harbor

    We base all statements contained in this release that are not historic facts on our current expectations. Such statements are forward-looking in nature (as defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995) and necessarily involve risks and uncertainties. Forward-looking statements we make may be identified by our use of words such as “will,” “expect,” “intend,” “plan,” “anticipate,” “believe,” “seek,” “estimate” and similar expressions. Our actual results could vary materially from our forward-looking statements. The factors that could cause our actual results to vary materially from the forward-looking statements we have previously made include, but are not limited to, adverse litigation and other trends that could increase our loss costs (including social inflation, labor shortages and escalating medical, automobile and property repair costs), adverse and catastrophic weather events (including from changing climate conditions), our ability to maintain profitable operations (including our ability to underwrite risks effectively and charge adequate premium rates), the adequacy of the loss and loss expense reserves of our insurance subsidiaries, the availability and successful operation of the information technology systems our insurance subsidiaries utilize, the successful development of new information technology systems to allow our insurance subsidiaries to compete effectively, business and economic conditions in the areas in which we and our insurance subsidiaries operate, interest rates, competition from various insurance and other financial businesses, terrorism, the availability and cost of reinsurance, legal and judicial developments (including those related to COVID-19 business interruption coverage exclusions), changes in regulatory requirements, our ability to attract and retain independent insurance agents, changes in our A.M. Best rating and the other risks that we describe from time to time in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. We disclaim any obligation to update such statements or to announce publicly the results of any revisions that we may make to any forward-looking statements to reflect the occurrence of anticipated or unanticipated events or circumstances after the date of such statements.

    Investor Relations Contacts

    Karin Daly, Vice President, The Equity Group Inc.
    Phone: (212) 836-9623
    E-mail: kdaly@equityny.com

    Jeffrey D. Miller, Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer
    Phone: (717) 426-1931
    E-mail: investors@donegalgroup.com

    Financial Supplement

    Donegal Group Inc.  
    Consolidated Statements of Income (Loss)  
    (unaudited; in thousands, except share data)  
             
      Quarter Ended December 31,  
      2024   2023  
             
    Net premiums earned $ 236,635   $ 226,185  
    Investment income, net of expenses 12,050   10,710  
    Net investment gains 256   2,243  
    Lease income 77   85  
    Installment payment fees 936   245  
    Total revenues 249,954   239,468  
             
    Net losses and loss expenses 141,435   163,154  
    Amortization of deferred acquisition costs 39,853   39,149  
    Other underwriting expenses 37,649   38,032  
    Policyholder dividends 826   1,225  
    Interest 269   156  
    Other expenses, net 255   233  
    Total expenses 220,287   241,949  
             
    Income (loss) before income tax expense (benefit) 29,667   (2,481 )
    Income tax expense (benefit) 5,664   (511 )
             
    Net income (loss) $ 24,003   $ (1,970 )
             
    Net income (loss) per common share:        
    Class A – basic $ 0.71   $ (0.06 )
    Class A – diluted $ 0.70   $ (0.24 )
    Class B – basic and diluted $ 0.64   $ (0.06 )
             
    Supplementary Financial Analysts’ Data        
             
    Weighted-average number of shares        
    outstanding:        
    Class A – basic 28,979,432   27,702,646  
    Class A – diluted 29,224,696   27,726,318  
    Class B – basic and diluted 5,576,775   5,576,775  
             
    Net premiums written $ 211,442   $ 212,693  
             
    Book value per common share        
    at end of period $ 15.36   $ 14.39  
             
    Donegal Group Inc.
    Consolidated Statements of Income
    (unaudited; in thousands, except share data)
           
      Year Ended December 31,
      2024   2023
           
    Net premiums earned $          936,651   $          882,071
    Investment income, net of expenses              44,918                40,853
    Net investment gains                4,981                  3,173
    Lease income                   314                     347
    Installment payment fees                2,741                     894
    Total revenues            989,605              927,338
           
    Net losses and loss expenses            604,118              609,178
    Amortization of deferred acquisition costs            160,311              154,214
    Other underwriting expenses            155,254              151,748
    Policyholder dividends                4,073                  5,313
    Interest                   946                     620
    Other expenses, net                2,564                  1,201
    Total expenses            927,266              922,274
           
    Income before income tax expense              62,339                  5,064
    Income tax expense              11,477                     638
           
    Net income $            50,862   $              4,426
           
    Net income per common share:      
    Class A – basic and diluted $                1.53   $                0.14
    Class B – basic and diluted $                1.38   $                0.11
           
    Supplementary Financial Analysts’ Data      
           
    Weighted-average number of shares      
    outstanding:      
    Class A – basic       28,155,276         27,469,250
    Class A – diluted       28,245,356         27,562,785
    Class B – basic and diluted         5,576,775           5,576,775
           
    Net premiums written $          942,281   $          895,697
           
    Book value per common share      
    at end of period $              15.36   $              14.39
           
    Donegal Group Inc.
    Consolidated Balance Sheets
    (in thousands)
               
          December 31,   December 31,
          2024   2023
          (unaudited)    
               
    ASSETS      
    Investments:      
      Fixed maturities:      
        Held to maturity, at amortized cost $ 705,714   $ 679,497
        Available for sale, at fair value 617,892   589,348
      Equity securities, at fair value 36,808   25,903
      Short-term investments, at cost 24,558   32,306
        Total investments 1,384,972   1,327,054
    Cash   52,926   23,792
    Premiums receivable 181,107   179,592
    Reinsurance receivable 420,742   441,431
    Deferred policy acquisition costs 73,347   75,043
    Prepaid reinsurance premiums 176,162   168,724
    Other assets 46,776   50,658
        Total assets $ 2,336,032   $ 2,266,294
               
    LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY          
    Liabilities:        
      Losses and loss expenses $ 1,120,985   $ 1,126,157
      Unearned premiums 612,476   599,411
      Accrued expenses 2,917   3,947
      Borrowings under lines of credit 35,000   35,000
      Other liabilities 18,878   22,034
        Total liabilities 1,790,256   1,786,549
    Stockholders’ equity:      
      Class A common stock 329   308
      Class B common stock 56   56
      Additional paid-in capital 369,680   335,694
      Accumulated other comprehensive loss (28,200)   (32,882)
      Retained earnings 245,137   217,795
      Treasury stock (41,226)   (41,226)
        Total stockholders’ equity 545,776   479,745
        Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity $ 2,336,032   $ 2,266,294
               

     

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Take part in the ESU Olympiad and get admitted to a master’s degree program on a budget

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: State University of Management – Official website of the State –

    The State University of Management invites you to take part in the II Eurasian Olympiad – the international student Olympiad of the Eurasian Network University.

    SUM is a member of the Eurasian Network University and a co-organizer of the ESU Olympiad. It should be noted that it is held in Russian in an online format by participating universities with the support of the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of Russia, as well as the Eurasian Economic Commission (EEC).

    This year the Olympiad is held in the form of a personal championship in 5 profiles:

    Economics and Management; International Relations and Humanities; Information and Computer Sciences; Biomedicine and Cognitive Sciences; Engineering and Future Technologies.

    Students and graduates of Russian and foreign universities who are receiving or already have higher education (bachelor’s or specialist’s degree level) and who are citizens of member countries and observer states of the Eurasian Economic Union can take part:

    Russian Federation; Republic of Belarus; Republic of Kazakhstan; Republic of Armenia; Kyrgyz Republic; Republic of Moldova; Republic of Uzbekistan; Republic of Cuba; Islamic Republic of Iran.

    Registration and portfolio submission are available until March 16 on the official website of the Olympiad. The winners of the selection round will be invited to online interviews, which will be held from March 24 to 30.

    Winners and prize winners of the main track of the Olympiad (except for citizens of the Russian Federation) have the opportunity to enroll in budget places in master’s programs of Russian universities participating in the ESU in areas of training in accordance with the declared profile of the Olympiad.

    Citizens of the Russian Federation and other EAEU countries, including observer countries, can take part in the international track of the Olympiad, the winners and prize winners of which will qualify for benefits and preferences provided by Russian and foreign universities of the ESU for the development of student exchanges, summer schools, scientific and educational cooperation and dual degree programs.

    Subscribe to the TG channel “Our GUU” Date of publication: 02/20/2025

    II Евразийской олимпиаде – международной студенческой олимпиаде Евразийского сетевого университета….” data-yashareImage=”https://guu.ru/wp-content/uploads/7ioj804y4G4.jpg” data-yashareLink=”https://guu.ru/%d0%bf%d1%80%d0%b8%d0%bc%d0%b8-%d1%83%d1%87%d0%b0%d1%81%d1%82%d0%b8%d0%b5-%d0%b2-%d0%be%d0%bb%d0%b8%d0%bc%d0%bf%d0%b8%d0%b0%d0%b4%d0%b5-%d0%b5%d1%81%d1%83-%d0%b8-%d0%bf%d0%be%d1%81%d1%82%d1%83%d0%bf/”>

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

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI: Black Gold Announces Commencement of Drilling in the Illinois Basin

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    VANCOUVER, B.C., Feb. 20, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — BGX – Black Gold Exploration Corp. (the “Company” or “BGX) (CSE: BGX) (FRE: P30) is pleased to announce that drilling has commenced on the Fritz 2-30 oil and gas well (the “Well”) in Clay County, Indiana. Earlier this month, BGX acquired a 10% working interest in the Well and an option to participate in any offset developmental wells in a 210-acre area of mutual interest from the operator, Adler Energy, LLC (the “Operator”).

    This prospect offsets the Fritz 1 well, which was drilled approximately 17 years ago and discovered both oil and gas pay horizons, but never produced due to a variety of factors, including a drop in oil prices at the time. The Well is in a known productive oil zone known as the Terra Haute Reef Bank, in Southwestern Indiana.

    We believe that the drilling in this region is the Company’s most significant short-term milestone to date and we are delighted to have the opportunity to participate in the Well, which not only gives us the potential for early cash flow but is also aligned with our longer-term plan to expand our footprint in the Illinois Basin,” commented Francisco Gulisano, Chief Executive Officer of BGX.

    The Illinois Basin has a history of producing 10 to 12 million barrels of oil annually.1 The Operator has completed an 8 square mile 3D seismic evaluation of the area, including the Fritz 2-30, showing both shallow and deeper stacked pay horizons. The Well plans to test a minimum of ten potential oil pay zones. Deep seated fractures clearly visible on 3D seismic are demonstrating migratory pathways for oil into multiple zones with high porosity, including the Devonian, Trenton, St. Peter Sand, Black River and the Knox. These zones all show over 100 feet of closure, giving room for large reservoirs of oil.

    “Based on the 3D seismic and other data we have complied, our experienced technical team could not be more excited about the Fritz 2-30 well and we are very happy to be working with BGX in discovering what we believe is tremendous untapped value,” commented John Miller, President of Adler Energy.

    Given the history of the Fritz wells, we are looking to take advantage of overlooked opportunities to hopefully not only jump start our cash flows but also unlock value in one of the oldest and most productive oil basins in North American history,” concluded Mr. Gulisano.

    On behalf of the Company, 
    Francisco Gulisano
    236-266-5174
    Chief Executive Officer

    About BGX

    BGX – Black Gold Exploration Corp. (CSE: BGX) (FRE: P30) is an oil and gas exploration company dedicated to creating shareholder value through the acquisition, exploration and development of oil and gas projects. BGX currently has assets in Argentina and the United States of America. For more information visit https://www.bgxcorp.com.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    The information in this news release includes certain information and statements about management’s view of future events, expectations, plans, and prospects that constitute forward-looking statements. These statements are based upon assumptions that are subject to risks and uncertainties. Forward- looking statements in this news release include, but are not limited to statements respecting: (i) drilling of the Well and the purpose thereof; (ii) the potential for early cash flow; (iii) the Company’s plan to expand its footprint in the Illinois Basin and (iv) the Company’s hope to unlock value in one of the oldest and most productive oil basins in North American history. Although the Company believes that the expectations reflected in forward-looking statements are reasonable, it can give no assurances that the expectations of any forward-looking statement will prove to be correct. Except as required by law, the Company disclaims any intention and assumes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements to reflect actual results, whether as a result of new information, future events, changes in assumptions, changes in factors affecting such forward-looking statements, or otherwise. For a comprehensive overview of all risks that may impact the Company, please see the Company’s continuous disclosure documents filed on SEDAR+.

    1 https://www.usgs.gov/publications/new-albany-shale-illinois-emerging-play-or-prolific-source

    Neither the CSE nor the CSE’s Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the CSE) accept responsibility for the accuracy of this release.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Targa Resources Corp. Reports Record Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2024 Financial Results, Provides Growth Outlook for 2025 and Announces Refinancing of Badlands Preferred Equity

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    HOUSTON, Feb. 20, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Targa Resources Corp. (NYSE: TRGP) (“TRGP,” the “Company” or “Targa”) today reported fourth quarter and full year 2024 results.

    Fourth quarter 2024 net income attributable to Targa Resources Corp. was $351.0 million compared to $299.6 million for the fourth quarter of 2023. For the full year 2024, net income attributable to Targa Resources Corp. was $1,312.0 million compared to $1,345.9 million for 2023. The Company reported adjusted earnings before interest, income taxes, depreciation and amortization, and other non-cash items (“adjusted EBITDA”)(1) of $1,122.2 million for the fourth quarter of 2024 compared to $959.9 million for the fourth quarter of 2023. For the full year 2024, the Company reported adjusted EBITDA of $4,142.3 million compared to $3,530.0 million for 2023.

    Highlights

    • Record full year 2024 adjusted EBITDA of $4.1 billion, a 17% increase over 2023
    • Record full year 2024 Permian, NGL transportation, fractionation, and LPG export volumes
    • Record full year 2024 common share repurchases of $755 million
    • Record fourth quarter 2024 adjusted EBITDA of $1.1 billion
    • Record fourth quarter 2024 Permian, NGL transportation, fractionation, and LPG export volumes
    • Completed its new 275 million cubic feet per day (“MMcf/d”) Greenwood II plant in Permian Midland and its new 120 thousand barrels per day (“MBbl/d”) Train 10 fractionator in Mont Belvieu
    • Recently commenced operations of its new 275 MMcf/d Bull Moose plant and 800 MMcf/d front-end treater in Permian Delaware
    • Announced a new intra-Delaware Basin expansion of Targa’s Grand Prix NGL Pipeline (“Delaware Express”)
    • Announced a new 150 MBbl/d fractionator in Mont Belvieu (“Train 12”)
    • Announced a new expansion of LPG export capabilities at Targa’s Galena Park Marine Terminal (“GPMT LPG Export Expansion”) which will increase capacity to approximately 19 million barrels per month (“MMBbl/month”)
    • Estimates 2025 net growth capital expenditures of $2.6 billion to $2.8 billion
    • Announced the refinancing of preferred equity in Targa Badlands LLC for $1.8 billion
    • Estimates record full year 2025 adjusted EBITDA between $4.65 billion and $4.85 billion, a 15% increase over 2024(2)

    On January 16, 2025, the Company declared a quarterly cash dividend of $0.75 per common share, or $3.00 per common share on an annualized basis, for the fourth quarter of 2024. Total cash dividends of approximately $164 million were paid on February 14, 2025 on all outstanding shares of common stock to holders of record as of the close of business on January 31, 2025. Targa intends to recommend an annual common dividend of $4.00 per share for 2025 beginning with the first quarter payment in May of 2025.

    Targa repurchased 610,683 shares of its common stock during the fourth quarter of 2024 at a weighted average per share price of $176.86 for a total net cost of $108.0 million. For the year ended December 31, 2024, Targa repurchased 5,933,050 shares of its common stock at a weighted average price of $127.20 for a total net cost of $754.7 million. As of December 31, 2024, there was $1,015.4 million remaining under the Company’s Share Repurchase Programs.

    Fourth Quarter 2024 – Sequential Quarter over Quarter Commentary

    Targa reported fourth quarter adjusted EBITDA of $1,122.2 million, representing a 5 percent increase compared to the third quarter of 2024. The sequential increase in adjusted EBITDA was attributable to higher volumes across Targa’s Gathering and Processing (“G&P”) and Logistics and Transportation (“L&T”) systems. In the G&P segment, higher sequential adjusted operating margin was attributable to record Permian natural gas inlet volumes and higher fees, partially offset by the expiration of a lower margin high pressure gathering and processing agreement in the Delaware Basin. In the L&T segment, record NGL pipeline transportation, fractionation, and LPG export volumes drove the sequential increase in segment adjusted operating margin, partially offset by lower sequential marketing margin. Targa’s completion of its Daytona NGL Pipeline late in the third quarter and its 120 MBbl/d Train 10 fractionator in the fourth quarter supported higher sequential NGL pipeline transportation and fractionation volumes from increasing supply volumes from Targa’s Permian G&P systems. LPG export volumes benefited from improved market conditions. Lower sequential marketing margin was attributable to decreased optimization opportunities.

    Capitalization and Liquidity

    The Company’s total consolidated debt as of December 31, 2024 was $14,174.6 million, net of $89.0 million of debt issuance costs and $29.4 million of unamortized discount, with $12,534.4 million of outstanding senior unsecured notes, $1,130.5 million outstanding under the Commercial Paper Program, $330.0 million outstanding under the Securitization Facility, and $298.1 million of finance lease liabilities.

    Total consolidated liquidity as of December 31, 2024 was approximately $2.0 billion, including $1.6 billion available under the Existing TRGP Revolver (as defined below), $270.0 million under the Securitization Facility and $157.3 million of cash.

    Financing Update

    In February 2025, Targa entered into a new five-year revolving facility (the “New TRGP Revolver”) with aggregate capacity of $3.5 billion. The New TRGP Revolver replaces Targa’s $2.75 billion credit facility (“Existing TRGP Revolver”), scheduled to mature in February 2027. The additional capacity aligns with the Company’s increased scale and continued growth opportunities. Pro forma for the New TRGP Revolver, Targa’s liquidity as of December 31, 2024, was approximately $2.8 billion.

    Refinancing of Badlands Preferred Equity

    Targa announced today a definitive agreement to repurchase all of the outstanding preferred equity in Targa Badlands LLC (“Targa Badlands”) from funds managed by Blackstone for approximately $1.8 billion in cash (the “Repurchase”). The Repurchase represents a refinancing of higher cost preferred equity with Targa’s lower cost of debt capital, resulting in meaningful cash savings. Targa expects to close in the first quarter of 2025 with an effective date of January 1, 2025, and estimates its year-end 2025 debt to adjusted EBITDA leverage ratio will remain near the mid-point of the Company’s long-term target range.

    Growth Projects Update

    In Targa’s G&P segment, construction continues on its 275 MMcf/d Pembrook II, East Pembrook, and East Driver plants in Permian Midland and its 275 MMcf/d Bull Moose II and Falcon II plants in Permian Delaware. In Targa’s L&T segment, construction continues on its 150 MBbl/d Train 11 fractionator in Mont Belvieu. The Company remains on-track to complete these expansions as previously disclosed.

    In February 2025, in response to increasing production and to meet the infrastructure needs of its customers, Targa announced:

    • Delaware Express, a 100-mile, 30-inch diameter pipeline expansion of its Grand Prix NGL Pipeline in the Permian Delaware;
    • Train 12, a new 150 MBbl/d fractionator in Mont Belvieu, TX; and
    • GPMT LPG Export Expansion, an expansion of Targa’s LPG export capabilities at its Galena Park Marine Terminal to approximately 19 MMBbl per month.

    Delaware Express is expected to commence operations in the third quarter of 2026, Train 12 is expected to commence operations in the first quarter of 2027, and Targa’s GPMT LPG Export Expansion is expected to commence operations in the third quarter of 2027.

    2025 Outlook and Capital Return Expectations

    For 2025, Targa estimates full year adjusted EBITDA to be between $4.65 billion and $4.85 billion, with the midpoint of the range representing a 15 percent increase over full year 2024 adjusted EBITDA. Targa expects to continue to benefit from meaningful growth across its Permian G&P footprint, which is expected to drive record Permian, NGL pipeline transportation, fractionation, and LPG export volumes in 2025 relative to the records set in 2024.

    Targa’s 2025 operational and financial expectations assume Waha natural gas prices average $1.55 per million British Thermal Units (“MMbtu”), natural gas liquids (“NGL”) composite barrel prices average $0.65 per gallon, and crude oil prices average $70 per barrel.

    Targa’s estimate for 2025 net growth capital expenditures is between $2.6 billion to $2.8 billion and includes capital spending for the recently announced Delaware Express, Train 12, and GPMT LPG Export Expansion. Net maintenance capital expenditures for 2025 are estimated to be approximately $250 million.

    For the first quarter of 2025, Targa intends to recommend to its Board of Directors an increase to its quarterly common dividend to $1.00 per common share or $4.00 per common share annualized. The recommended 33 percent common dividend per share increase, if approved, would be effective for the first quarter of 2025 and payable in May 2025. Going forward, Targa expects to be in position to continue to meaningfully increase the capital returned to shareholders through increasing common dividends per share and opportunistic repurchases of its common stock.

    An earnings supplement presentation and updated investor presentation are available under Events and Presentations in the Investors section of the Company’s website at www.targaresources.com/investors/events.

    Conference Call

    The Company will host a conference call for the investment community at 11:00 a.m. Eastern time (10:00 a.m. Central time) on February 20, 2025 to discuss its fourth quarter results. The conference call can be accessed via webcast under Events and Presentations in the Investors section of the Company’s website at www.targaresources.com/investors/events, or by going directly to https://edge.media-server.com/mmc/p/qgzvcwi7. A webcast replay will be available at the link above approximately two hours after the conclusion of the event.

    (1)    Adjusted EBITDA is a non-GAAP financial measure and is discussed under “Non-GAAP Financial Measures.”
    (2)    Year over year increase based on midpoint of estimated 2025 adjusted EBITDA range of $4.65 billion to $4.85 billion.

    Targa Resources Corp. – Consolidated Financial Results of Operations

        Three Months Ended December 31,                 Year Ended December 31,              
        2024     2023     2024 vs. 2023     2024     2023     2024 vs. 2023  
        (In millions)  
    Revenues:                                                
    Sales of commodities   $ 3,765.5     $ 3,647.9     $ 117.6       3 %   $ 13,891.8     $ 13,962.1     $ (70.3 )     (1 %)
    Fees from midstream services     639.7       591.6       48.1       8 %     2,489.7       2,098.2       391.5       19 %
    Total revenues     4,405.2       4,239.5       165.7       4 %     16,381.5       16,060.3       321.2       2 %
    Product purchases and fuel     2,922.6       2,898.5       24.1       1 %     10,703.0       10,676.4       26.6        
    Operating expenses     305.8       269.5       36.3       13 %     1,175.6       1,077.9       97.7       9 %
    Depreciation and amortization expense     378.5       341.4       37.1       11 %     1,423.0       1,329.6       93.4       7 %
    General and administrative expense     97.5       95.3       2.2       2 %     384.9       348.7       36.2       10 %
    Other operating (income) expense     0.2       (0.5 )     0.7     NM       (0.4 )     1.5       (1.9 )   NM  
    Income (loss) from operations     700.6       635.3       65.3       10 %     2,695.4       2,626.2       69.2       3 %
    Interest expense, net     (177.7 )     (178.0 )     0.3             (767.2 )     (687.8 )     (79.4 )     12 %
    Equity earnings (loss)     1.5       2.8       (1.3 )     (46 %)     9.4       9.0       0.4       4 %
    Gain (loss) from financing activities           (2.1 )     2.1       100 %     (0.8 )     (2.1 )     1.3       62 %
    Other, net     0.1       2.1       (2.0 )   NM       1.2       (2.8 )     4.0     NM  
    Income tax (expense) benefit     (110.5 )     (102.5 )     (8.0 )     8 %     (384.5 )     (363.2 )     (21.3 )     6 %
    Net income (loss)     414.0       357.6       56.4       16 %     1,553.5       1,579.3       (25.8 )     (2 %)
    Less: Net income (loss) attributable to noncontrolling interests     63.0       58.0       5.0       9 %     241.5       233.4       8.1       3 %
    Net income (loss) attributable to Targa Resources Corp.     351.0       299.6       51.4       17 %     1,312.0       1,345.9       (33.9 )     (3 %)
    Premium on repurchase of noncontrolling interests, net of tax     32.9       19.4       13.5       70 %     32.9       510.1       (477.2 )     (94 %)
    Net income (loss) attributable to common shareholders   $ 318.1     $ 280.2     $ 37.9       14 %   $ 1,279.1     $ 835.8     $ 443.3       53 %
    Financial data:                                                
    Adjusted EBITDA (1)   $ 1,122.2     $ 959.9     $ 162.3       17 %   $ 4,142.3     $ 3,530.0     $ 612.3       17 %
    Adjusted cash flow from operations (1)     940.9       780.1       160.8       21 %     3,372.4       2,840.6       531.8       19 %
    Adjusted free cash flow (1)     56.2       73.7       (17.5 )     (24 %)     140.1       392.7       (252.6 )     (64 %)
    (1) Adjusted EBITDA, adjusted cash flow from operations and adjusted free cash flow are non-GAAP financial measures and are discussed under “Non-GAAP Financial Measures.”
    NM Due to a low denominator, the noted percentage change is disproportionately high and as a result, considered not meaningful.


    Three Months Ended December 31, 2024 Compared to Three Months Ended December 31, 2023

    The increase in commodity sales reflects higher NGL, natural gas and condensate volumes ($242.4) and higher NGL prices ($199.5 million), partially offset by lower natural gas and condensate prices ($197.0 million) and the unfavorable impact of hedges ($127.3 million).

    The increase in fees from midstream services is primarily due to higher gas gathering and processing fees, higher transportation and fractionation fees, and higher export volumes.

    Product purchases and fuel are relatively flat reflecting higher NGL and natural gas volumes, offset by lower natural gas prices.

    The increase in operating expenses is primarily due to higher maintenance and labor costs as a result of increased activity and system expansions, partially offset by lower taxes.

    See “—Review of Segment Performance” for additional information on a segment basis.

    The increase in depreciation and amortization expense is primarily due to the impact of system expansions on the Company’s asset base that have been placed in service during 2024.

    The increase in income tax expense is primarily due to an increase in pre-tax book income and the release of state valuation allowance in 2023 partially offset by the impact of statutory rate changes.

    The premium on repurchase of noncontrolling interests, net of tax is primarily due to the CBF Acquisition in 2024.

    Year Ended December 31, 2024 Compared to Year Ended December 31, 2023

    Commodity sales are relatively flat reflecting lower natural gas and condensate prices ($1,242.8 million) and the unfavorable impact of hedges ($686.5 million), offset by higher NGL, natural gas and condensate volumes ($1,607.2 million), and higher NGL prices ($251.6 million).

    The increase in fees from midstream services is primarily due to higher gas gathering and processing fees, higher transportation and fractionation fees, and higher export volumes.

    Product purchases and fuel are relatively flat reflecting higher NGL and natural gas volumes, offset by lower natural gas prices.

    The increase in operating expenses is primarily due to higher labor, maintenance, rental and chemical costs as a result of increased activity and system expansions, partially offset by lower taxes.

    See “—Review of Segment Performance” for additional information on a segment basis.

    The increase in depreciation and amortization expense is primarily due to the impact of system expansions on the Company’s asset base, partially offset by the shortening of depreciable lives of certain assets that were idled in 2023.

    The increase in general and administrative expense is primarily due to higher compensation and benefits and professional fees.

    The increase in interest expense, net, is due to recognition of cumulative interest on a 2024 legal ruling associated with the Splitter Agreement and higher borrowings, partially offset by higher capitalized interest. Higher capitalized interest is due to system expansions and higher interest rates.

    The increase in income tax expense is primarily due to the release of state valuation allowance in 2023.

    The premium on repurchase of noncontrolling interests, net of tax is primarily due to the CBF Acquisition in 2024 and the Grand Prix Transaction in 2023.

    Review of Segment Performance

    The following discussion of segment performance includes inter-segment activities. The Company views segment operating margin and adjusted operating margin as important performance measures of the core profitability of its operations. These measures are key components of internal financial reporting and are reviewed for consistency and trend analysis. For a discussion of adjusted operating margin, see “Non-GAAP Financial Measures ― Adjusted Operating Margin.” Segment operating financial results and operating statistics include the effects of intersegment transactions. These intersegment transactions have been eliminated from the consolidated presentation.

    The Company operates in two primary segments: (i) Gathering and Processing; and (ii) Logistics and Transportation.

    Gathering and Processing Segment

    The Gathering and Processing segment includes assets used in the gathering and/or purchase and sale of natural gas produced from oil and gas wells, removing impurities and processing this raw natural gas into merchantable natural gas by extracting NGLs; and assets used for the gathering and terminaling and/or purchase and sale of crude oil. The Gathering and Processing segment’s assets are located in the Permian Basin of West Texas and Southeast New Mexico (including the Midland, Central and Delaware Basins); the Eagle Ford Shale in South Texas; the Barnett Shale in North Texas; the Anadarko, Ardmore, and Arkoma Basins in Oklahoma (including the SCOOP and STACK) and South Central Kansas; the Williston Basin in North Dakota (including the Bakken and Three Forks plays); and the onshore and near offshore regions of the Louisiana Gulf Coast.

    The following table provides summary data regarding results of operations of this segment for the periods indicated:

        Three Months Ended December 31,                   Year Ended December 31,                
        2024     2023     2024 vs. 2023     2024     2023     2024 vs. 2023  
          (In millions, except operating statistics and price amounts)  
    Operating margin   $ 598.9     $ 536.3     $ 62.6       12 %   $ 2,312.4     $ 2,082.2     $ 230.2       11 %
    Operating expenses     217.5       185.7       31.8       17 %     814.6       746.6       68.0       9 %
    Adjusted operating margin   $ 816.4     $ 722.0     $ 94.4       13 %   $ 3,127.0     $ 2,828.8     $ 298.2       11 %
    Operating statistics (1):                                                            
    Plant natural gas inlet, MMcf/d (2) (3)                                                            
    Permian Midland (4)     3,072.8       2,716.5       356.3       13 %     2,933.1       2,535.2       397.9       16 %
    Permian Delaware     2,992.4       2,564.3       428.1       17 %     2,837.3       2,526.5       310.8       12 %
    Total Permian     6,065.2       5,280.8       784.4       15 %     5,770.4       5,061.7       708.7       14 %
                                                                 
    SouthTX     329.4       347.9       (18.5 )     (5 %)     325.9       367.4       (41.5 )     (11 %)
    North Texas     187.4       207.7       (20.3 )     (10 %)     186.9       205.9       (19.0 )     (9 %)
    SouthOK (5)     339.7       366.5       (26.8 )     (7 %)     351.7       385.0       (33.3 )     (9 %)
    WestOK     210.5       207.1       3.4       2 %     212.8       207.1       5.7       3 %
    Total Central     1,067.0       1,129.2       (62.2 )     (6 %)     1,077.3       1,165.4       (88.1 )     (8 %)
                                                                 
    Badlands (5) (6)     128.8       131.2       (2.4 )     (2 %)     136.3       130.0       6.3       5 %
    Total Field     7,261.0       6,541.2       719.8       11 %     6,984.0       6,357.1       626.9       10 %
                                                                 
    Coastal     405.7       567.0       (161.3 )     (28 %)     449.6       541.1       (91.5 )     (17 %)
                                                                 
    Total     7,666.7       7,108.2       558.5       8 %     7,433.6       6,898.2       535.4       8 %
    NGL production, MBbl/d (3)                                                            
    Permian Midland (4)     445.7       398.3       47.4       12 %     428.4       367.7       60.7       17 %
    Permian Delaware     390.2       310.6       79.6       26 %     359.9       321.6       38.3       12 %
    Total Permian     835.9       708.9       127.0       18 %     788.3       689.3       99.0       14 %
                                                                 
    SouthTX (5)     29.3       37.3       (8.0 )     (21 %)     32.8       40.9       (8.1 )     (20 %)
    North Texas     22.9       24.5       (1.6 )     (7 %)     22.6       24.0       (1.4 )     (6 %)
    SouthOK (5)     40.1       40.0       0.1             35.0       43.1       (8.1 )     (19 %)
    WestOK     16.3       12.1       4.2       35 %     15.1       12.5       2.6       21 %
    Total Central     108.6       113.9       (5.3 )     (5 %)     105.5       120.5       (15.0 )     (12 %)
                                                                 
    Badlands (5)     15.3       15.7       (0.4 )     (3 %)     16.6       15.5       1.1       7 %
    Total Field     959.8       838.5       121.3       14 %     910.4       825.3       85.1       10 %
                                                                 
    Coastal     36.0       43.2       (7.2 )     (17 %)     35.8       39.2       (3.4 )     (9 %)
                                                                 
    Total     995.8       881.7       114.1       13 %     946.2       864.5       81.7       9 %
    Crude oil, Badlands, MBbl/d     110.1       105.2       4.9       5 %     106.6       105.5       1.1       1 %
    Crude oil, Permian, MBbl/d     29.5       27.5       2.0       7 %     27.9       27.4       0.5       2 %
    Natural gas sales, BBtu/d (3)     2,784.3       2,737.3       47.0       2 %     2,780.5       2,685.8       94.7       4 %
    NGL sales, MBbl/d (3)     582.0       520.6       61.4       12 %     558.2       495.8       62.4       13 %
    Condensate sales, MBbl/d     19.8       17.8       2.0       11 %     19.3       18.5       0.8       4 %
    Average realized prices (7):                                                            
    Natural gas, $/MMBtu     1.04       1.83       (0.79 )     (43 %)     0.67       1.94       (1.27 )     (65 %)
    NGL, $/gal     0.49       0.43       0.06       14 %     0.46       0.46              
    Condensate, $/Bbl     66.83       74.79       (7.96 )     (11 %)     73.35       74.35       (1.00 )     (1 %)
    (1) Segment operating statistics include the effect of intersegment amounts, which have been eliminated from the consolidated presentation. For all volume statistics presented, the numerator is the total volume sold during the period and the denominator is the number of calendar days during the period.
    (2) Plant natural gas inlet represents the Company’s undivided interest in the volume of natural gas passing through the meter located at the inlet of a natural gas processing plant, other than Badlands.
    (3) Plant natural gas inlet volumes and gross NGL production volumes include producer take-in-kind volumes, while natural gas sales and NGL sales exclude producer take-in-kind volumes.
    (4) Permian Midland includes operations in WestTX, of which the Company owns a 72.8% undivided interest, and other plants that are owned 100% by the Company. Operating results for the WestTX undivided interest assets are presented on a pro-rata net basis in the Company’s reported financials.
    (5) Operations include facilities that are not wholly owned by the Company.
    (6) Badlands natural gas inlet represents the total wellhead volume and includes the Targa volumes processed at the Little Missouri 4 plant.
    (7) Average realized prices, net of fees, include the effect of realized commodity hedge gain/loss attributable to the Company’s equity volumes. The price is calculated using total commodity sales plus the hedge gain/loss as the numerator and total sales volume as the denominator, net of fees.

    The following table presents the realized commodity hedge gain (loss) attributable to the Company’s equity volumes that are included in the adjusted operating margin of the Gathering and Processing segment:

        Three Months Ended December 31, 2024     Three Months Ended December 31, 2023  
        (In millions, except volumetric data and price amounts)  
        Volume
    Settled
        Price
    Spread (1)
        Gain
    (Loss)
        Volume
    Settled
        Price
    Spread (1)
        Gain
    (Loss)
     
    Natural gas (BBtu)     8.1     $ 1.84     $ 14.9       13.2     $ 1.15     $ 15.2  
    NGL (MMgal)     101.0       0.01       0.9       165.3       0.09       15.5  
    Crude oil (MBbl)     0.7       5.00       3.5       0.6       (6.17 )     (3.7 )
                    $ 19.3                 $ 27.0  
        Year Ended December 31, 2024     Year Ended December 31, 2023  
        (In millions, except volumetric data and price amounts)  
        Volume
    Settled
        Price
    Spread (1)
        Gain
    (Loss)
        Volume
    Settled
        Price
    Spread (1)
        Gain
    (Loss)
     
    Natural gas (BBtu)     43.7     $ 1.92     $ 84.1       63.2     $ 1.22     $ 77.4  
    NGL (MMgal)     449.8       0.04       15.8       680.3       0.07       49.9  
    Crude oil (MBbl)     2.1       (2.05 )     (4.3 )     2.4       (6.92 )     (16.6 )
                    $ 95.6                 $ 110.7  
    (1) The price spread is the differential between the contracted derivative instrument pricing and the price of the corresponding settled commodity transaction.


    Three Months Ended December 31, 2024 Compared to Three Months Ended December 31, 2023

    The increase in adjusted operating margin was predominantly due to higher natural gas inlet volumes which drove higher fee-based income in the Permian, and higher NGL Prices, partially offset by lower natural gas and condensate prices. The increase in natural gas inlet volumes in the Permian was attributable to the addition of the Wildcat II plant during the fourth quarter of 2023, the Roadrunner II plant during the second quarter of 2024, the Greenwood II plant during the fourth quarter of 2024, and continued strong producer activity.

    The increase in operating expenses was primarily due to higher volumes in the Permian and multiple plant additions in the Permian, partially offset by lower taxes in the Central region.

    Year Ended December 31, 2024 Compared to Year Ended December 31, 2023

    The increase in adjusted operating margin was predominantly due to higher natural gas inlet volumes which drove higher fee-based income in the Permian, partially offset by lower natural gas and condensate prices. The increase in natural gas inlet volumes was attributable to the addition of the Legacy II plant during the first quarter of 2023, the Midway plant during the second quarter of 2023, the Greenwood I and Wildcat II plants during the fourth quarter of 2023, the Roadrunner II plant during the second quarter of 2024, the Greenwood II plant during the fourth quarter of 2024, and continued strong producer activity.

    The increase in operating expenses was primarily due to higher volumes and multiple plant additions in the Permian.

    Logistics and Transportation Segment

    The Logistics and Transportation segment includes the activities and assets necessary to convert mixed NGLs into NGL products and also includes other assets and value-added services such as transporting, storing, fractionating, terminaling, and marketing of NGLs and NGL products, including services to LPG exporters and certain natural gas supply and marketing activities in support of the Company’s other businesses. The Logistics and Transportation segment also includes Grand Prix NGL Pipeline, which connects the Company’s gathering and processing positions in the Permian Basin, Southern Oklahoma and North Texas with the Company’s Downstream facilities in Mont Belvieu, Texas. The Company’s Downstream facilities are located predominantly in Mont Belvieu and Galena Park, Texas, and in Lake Charles, Louisiana.

    The following table provides summary data regarding results of operations of this segment for the periods indicated:

        Three Months Ended December 31,                   Year Ended December 31,                
        2024     2023     2024 vs. 2023   2024     2023     2024 vs. 2023
        (In millions, except operating statistics)
    Operating margin   $ 656.2     $ 554.2     $ 102.0       18 %   $ 2,355.1     $ 1,948.7     $ 406.4       21 %
    Operating expenses     88.7       84.4       4.3       5 %     362.3       332.0       30.3       9 %
    Adjusted operating margin   $ 744.9     $ 638.6     $ 106.3       17 %   $ 2,717.4     $ 2,280.7     $ 436.7       19 %
    Operating statistics MBbl/d (1):                                                            
    NGL pipeline transportation volumes (2)     871.5       722.0       149.5       21 %     800.8       635.5       165.3       26 %
    Fractionation volumes     1,089.5       844.8       244.7       29 %     936.1       798.1       138.0       17 %
    Export volumes (3)     457.1       434.5       22.6       5 %     423.6       365.2       58.4       16 %
    NGL sales     1,227.5       1,125.8       101.7       9 %     1,159.1       1,019.8       139.3       14 %
    (1) Segment operating statistics include intersegment amounts, which have been eliminated from the consolidated presentation. For all volume statistics presented, the numerator is the total volume sold during the period and the denominator is the number of calendar days during the period.
    (2) Represents the total quantity of mixed NGLs that earn a transportation margin.
    (3) Export volumes represent the quantity of NGL products delivered to third-party customers at the Company’s Galena Park Marine Terminal that are destined for international markets.


    Three Months Ended December 31, 2024 Compared to Three Months Ended December 31, 2023

    The increase in adjusted operating margin was due to higher pipeline transportation and fractionation margin and higher marketing margin. LPG export margin was relatively flat. Pipeline transportation and fractionation volumes benefited from higher supply volumes primarily from the Company’s Permian Gathering and Processing systems, the in-service of the Daytona NGL Pipeline during the third quarter of 2024, the addition of Train 9 during the second quarter of 2024, and the addition of Train 10 during the fourth quarter of 2024. Marketing margin increased due to greater optimization opportunities.

    The increase in operating expenses was due to higher system volumes, higher taxes, higher compensation and benefits the in-service of the Daytona NGL Pipeline expansion during the third quarter of 2024, the addition of Train 9 during the second quarter of 2024, and the addition of Train 10 during the fourth quarter of 2024, partially offset by lower repairs and maintenance.

    Year Ended December 31, 2024 Compared to Year Ended December 31, 2023

    The increase in adjusted operating margin was due to higher pipeline transportation and fractionation margin, higher marketing margin, and higher LPG export margin. Pipeline transportation and fractionation volumes benefited from higher supply volumes primarily from the Company’s Permian Gathering and Processing systems, the addition of Train 9 during the second quarter of 2024, the in-service of the Daytona NGL Pipeline during the third quarter of 2024, and the addition of Train 10 during the fourth quarter of 2024. Marketing margin increased due to greater optimization opportunities. LPG export margin increased due to higher volumes as Targa benefited from the completion of the export expansion project during the third quarter of 2023 and the Houston Ship Channel allowing night-time vessel transits, partially offset by maintenance and required inspections.

    The increase in operating expenses was due to higher system volumes, higher compensation and benefits, higher taxes, higher repairs and maintenance and the addition of two trains during 2024.

    Other

        Three Months Ended December 31,           Year Ended December 31,        
        2024     2023     2024 vs. 2023     2024     2023     2024 vs. 2023  
        (In millions)  
    Operating margin   $ (78.3 )   $ (18.8 )   $ (59.5 )   $ (164.6 )   $ 275.5     $ (440.1 )
    Adjusted operating margin   $ (78.3 )   $ (18.8 )   $ (59.5 )   $ (164.6 )   $ 275.5     $ (440.1 )

    Other contains the results of commodity derivative activity mark-to-market gains/losses related to derivative contracts that were not designated as cash flow hedges. The Company has entered into derivative instruments to hedge the commodity price associated with a portion of the Company’s future commodity purchases and sales and natural gas transportation basis risk within the Company’s Logistics and Transportation segment.

    About Targa Resources Corp.

    Targa Resources Corp. is a leading provider of midstream services and is one of the largest independent infrastructure companies in North America. The Company owns, operates, acquires and develops a diversified portfolio of complementary domestic infrastructure assets and its operations are critical to the efficient, safe and reliable delivery of energy across the United States and increasingly to the world. The Company’s assets connect natural gas and NGLs to domestic and international markets with growing demand for cleaner fuels and feedstocks. The Company is primarily engaged in the business of: gathering, compressing, treating, processing, transporting, and purchasing and selling natural gas; transporting, storing, fractionating, treating, and purchasing and selling NGLs and NGL products, including services to LPG exporters; and gathering, storing, terminaling, and purchasing and selling crude oil.

    Targa is a FORTUNE 500 company and is included in the S&P 500.

    For more information, please visit the Company’s website at www.targaresources.com.

    Non-GAAP Financial Measures

    This press release includes the Company’s non-GAAP financial measures: adjusted EBITDA, adjusted cash flow from operations, adjusted free cash flow and adjusted operating margin (segment). The following tables provide reconciliations of these non-GAAP financial measures to their most directly comparable GAAP measures.

    The Company utilizes non-GAAP measures to analyze the Company’s performance. Adjusted EBITDA, adjusted cash flow from operations, adjusted free cash flow and adjusted operating margin (segment) are non-GAAP measures. The GAAP measures most directly comparable to these non-GAAP measures are income (loss) from operations, Net income (loss) attributable to Targa Resources Corp. and segment operating margin. These non-GAAP measures should not be considered as an alternative to GAAP measures and have important limitations as analytical tools. Investors should not consider these measures in isolation or as a substitute for analysis of the Company’s results as reported under GAAP. Additionally, because the Company’s non-GAAP measures exclude some, but not all, items that affect income and segment operating margin, and are defined differently by different companies within the Company’s industry, the Company’s definitions may not be comparable with similarly titled measures of other companies, thereby diminishing their utility. Management compensates for the limitations of the Company’s non-GAAP measures as analytical tools by reviewing the comparable GAAP measures, understanding the differences between the measures and incorporating these insights into the Company’s decision-making processes.

    Adjusted Operating Margin

    The Company defines adjusted operating margin for the Company’s segments as revenues less product purchases and fuel. It is impacted by volumes and commodity prices as well as by the Company’s contract mix and commodity hedging program.

    Gathering and Processing adjusted operating margin consists primarily of:

    • service fees related to natural gas and crude oil gathering, treating and processing; and
    • revenues from the sale of natural gas, condensate, crude oil and NGLs less producer settlements, fuel and transport and the Company’s equity volume hedge settlements.

    Logistics and Transportation adjusted operating margin consists primarily of:

    • service fees (including the pass-through of energy costs included in certain fee rates);
    • system product gains and losses; and
    • NGL and natural gas sales, less NGL and natural gas purchases, fuel, third-party transportation costs and the net inventory change.

    The adjusted operating margin impacts of mark-to-market hedge unrealized changes in fair value are reported in Other.

    Adjusted operating margin for the Company’s segments provides useful information to investors because it is used as a supplemental financial measure by management and by external users of the Company’s financial statements, including investors and commercial banks, to assess:

    • the financial performance of the Company’s assets without regard to financing methods, capital structure or historical cost basis;
    • the Company’s operating performance and return on capital as compared to other companies in the midstream energy sector, without regard to financing or capital structure; and
    • the viability of capital expenditure projects and acquisitions and the overall rates of return on alternative investment opportunities.

    Management reviews adjusted operating margin and operating margin for the Company’s segments monthly as a core internal management process. The Company believes that investors benefit from having access to the same financial measures that management uses in evaluating the Company’s operating results. The reconciliation of the Company’s adjusted operating margin to the most directly comparable GAAP measure is presented under “Review of Segment Performance.”

    Adjusted EBITDA

    The Company defines adjusted EBITDA as Net income (loss) attributable to Targa Resources Corp. before interest, income taxes, depreciation and amortization, and other items that the Company believes should be adjusted consistent with the Company’s core operating performance. The adjusting items are detailed in the adjusted EBITDA reconciliation table and its footnotes. Adjusted EBITDA is used as a supplemental financial measure by the Company and by external users of the Company’s financial statements such as investors, commercial banks and others to measure the ability of the Company’s assets to generate cash sufficient to pay interest costs, support the Company’s indebtedness and pay dividends to the Company’s investors.

    Adjusted Cash Flow from Operations and Adjusted Free Cash Flow

    The Company defines adjusted cash flow from operations as adjusted EBITDA less cash interest expense on debt obligations and cash taxes. The Company defines adjusted free cash flow as adjusted cash flow from operations less maintenance capital expenditures (net of any reimbursements of project costs) and growth capital expenditures, net of contributions from noncontrolling interest and contributions to investments in unconsolidated affiliates. Adjusted cash flow from operations and adjusted free cash flow are performance measures used by the Company and by external users of the Company’s financial statements, such as investors, commercial banks and research analysts, to assess the Company’s ability to generate cash earnings (after servicing the Company’s debt and funding capital expenditures) to be used for corporate purposes, such as payment of dividends, retirement of debt or redemption of other financing arrangements.

    The following table reconciles the non-GAAP financial measures used by management to the most directly comparable GAAP measures for the periods indicated:

        Three Months Ended December 31,     Year Ended December 31,  
        2024     2023     2024     2023  
        (In millions)  
    Reconciliation of Net income (loss) attributable to Targa Resources Corp. to Adjusted EBITDA, Adjusted Cash Flow from Operations and Adjusted Free Cash Flow                        
    Net income (loss) attributable to Targa Resources Corp.   $ 351.0     $ 299.6     $ 1,312.0     $ 1,345.9  
    Interest (income) expense, net     177.7       178.0       767.2       687.8  
    Income tax expense (benefit)     110.5       102.5       384.5       363.2  
    Depreciation and amortization expense     378.5       341.4       1,423.0       1,329.6  
    (Gain) loss on sale or disposition of assets     (0.4 )     (1.3 )     (3.1 )     (5.3 )
    Write-down of assets     2.2       0.8       6.2       6.9  
    (Gain) loss from financing activities           2.1       0.8       2.1  
    Equity (earnings) loss     (1.5 )     (2.8 )     (9.4 )     (9.0 )
    Distributions from unconsolidated affiliates     8.7       4.5       25.3       18.6  
    Compensation on equity grants     15.8       16.7       63.2       62.4  
    Risk management activities     78.2       18.8       164.6       (275.4 )
    Noncontrolling interests adjustments (1)     1.5       (0.4 )     3.9       (3.7 )
    Litigation expense (2)                 4.1       6.9  
    Adjusted EBITDA   $ 1,122.2     $ 959.9     $ 4,142.3     $ 3,530.0  
    Interest expense on debt obligations (3)     (173.8 )     (174.9 )     (752.4 )     (675.8 )
    Cash taxes     (7.5 )     (4.9 )     (17.5 )     (13.6 )
    Adjusted Cash Flow from Operations   $ 940.9     $ 780.1     $ 3,372.4     $ 2,840.6  
    Maintenance capital expenditures, net (4)     (65.0 )     (70.4 )     (231.9 )     (223.4 )
    Growth capital expenditures, net (4)     (819.7 )     (636.0 )     (3,000.4 )     (2,224.5 )
    Adjusted Free Cash Flow   $ 56.2     $ 73.7     $ 140.1     $ 392.7  
    (1) Represents adjustments related to the Company’s subsidiaries with noncontrolling interests, including depreciation and amortization expense as well as earnings for certain plants within Targa’s WestTX joint venture not subject to noncontrolling interest.
    (2) Litigation expense includes charges related to litigation resulting from the major winter storm in February 2021 that the Company considers outside the ordinary course of its business and/or not reflective of its ongoing core operations. The Company may incur such charges from time to time, and the Company believes it is useful to exclude such charges because it does not consider them reflective of its ongoing core operations and because of the generally singular nature of the claims underlying such litigation.
    (3) Excludes amortization of interest expense. The year ended December 31, 2024 includes $55.8 million of interest expense associated with the Splitter Agreement ruling.
    (4) Represents capital expenditures, net of contributions from noncontrolling interests and includes contributions to investments in unconsolidated affiliates.

    The following table presents a reconciliation of estimated net income of the Company to estimated adjusted EBITDA for 2025:

        2025E  
        (In millions)  
    Reconciliation of Estimated Net Income Attributable to Targa Resources Corp. to      
    Estimated Adjusted EBITDA      
    Net income attributable to Targa Resources Corp.   $ 1,765.0  
    Interest expense, net     875.0  
    Income tax expense     510.0  
    Depreciation and amortization expense     1,535.0  
    Equity earnings     (20.0 )
    Distributions from unconsolidated affiliates     25.0  
    Compensation on equity grants     65.0  
    Noncontrolling interests adjustments (1)     (5.0 )
    Estimated Adjusted EBITDA   $ 4,750.0  
    (1) Represents adjustments related to the Company’s subsidiaries with noncontrolling interests, including depreciation and amortization expense as well as earnings for certain plants within Targa’s WestTX joint venture not subject to noncontrolling interest.


    Regulation FD Disclosures

    The Company uses any of the following to comply with its disclosure obligations under Regulation FD: press releases, SEC filings, public conference calls, or our website. The Company routinely posts important information on its website at www.targaresources.com, including information that may be deemed to be material. The Company encourages investors and others interested in the company to monitor these distribution channels for material disclosures.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    Certain statements in this release are “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. All statements, other than statements of historical facts, included in this release that address activities, events or developments that the Company expects, believes or anticipates will or may occur in the future, are forward-looking statements, including statements regarding our projected financial performance, capital spending and payment of future dividends. These forward-looking statements rely on a number of assumptions concerning future events and are subject to a number of uncertainties, factors and risks, many of which are outside the Company’s control, which could cause results to differ materially from those expected by management of the Company. Such risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, actions by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (“OPEC”) and non-OPEC oil producing countries, weather, political, economic and market conditions, including a decline in the price and market demand for natural gas, natural gas liquids and crude oil, the timing and success of our completion of capital projects and business development efforts, the expected growth of volumes on our systems, the impact of significant public health crises, commodity price volatility due to ongoing or new global conflicts, the impact of disruptions in the bank and capital markets, including those resulting from lack of access to liquidity for banking and financial services firms, and other uncertainties. These and other applicable uncertainties, factors and risks are described more fully in the Company’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including its most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K, and any subsequently filed Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q and Current Reports on Form 8-K. The Company does not undertake an obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statement, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

    Targa Investor Relations
    InvestorRelations@targaresources.com
    (713) 584-1133

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Cenovus Announces Fourth-Quarter and Full-Year 2024 Results

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    CALGARY, Alberta, Feb. 20, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Cenovus Energy Inc. (TSX: CVE) (NYSE: CVE) today announced its fourth-quarter and full-year 2024 financial and operating results. In the quarter, the company generated over $2.0 billion in cash from operating activities, $1.6 billion of adjusted funds flow and $123 million of free funds flow. The Upstream business continued to deliver strong performance, with production of 816,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day (BOE/d)1 in the quarter, including a new quarterly Oil Sands production record of 628,500 BOE/d. In the Downstream, total crude throughput increased by almost 24,000 barrels per day (bbls/d) from the previous quarter to 666,700 bbls/d, representing an aggregate utilization rate of 93%.

    Highlights

    • Delivered quarterly Upstream production of 816,000 BOE/d, an increase of 6% relative to the previous quarter and 1% relative to the fourth quarter of 2023.
    • Highest-ever quarterly and annual Oil Sands production rates at 628,500 BOE/d and 610,700 BOE/d respectively, including record annual rates at both Foster Creek and the Lloydminster thermal assets.
    • Improving quarterly Downstream operating performance, with utilization of 97% in Canadian Refining and 92% in U.S. Refining. U.S. Refining operating expenses, excluding turnaround costs, of $10.89 per barrel were down 18% relative to the fourth quarter of 2023.
    • Achieved significant milestones on Cenovus’s major Upstream growth projects, including mechanical completion of the Narrows Lake pipeline, executing the SeaRose floating production, storage and offloading (FPSO) vessel life extension dry dock and reaching mechanical completion of both the concrete gravity structure (CGS) and topsides for the West White Rose project.
    • Returned $706 million to shareholders in the fourth quarter, including $108 million through share purchases, $348 million through common and preferred share dividends and $250 million through the redemption of Cenovus Series 3 preferred shares on December 31, 2024.

    “We delivered strong operating performance this quarter. Our industry leading Oil Sands assets set production records and our Downstream business continued to demonstrate improvements in reliability and unit costs,” said Jon McKenzie, Cenovus President & Chief Executive Officer. “In 2025, we will build on this momentum, focusing on operational execution while advancing our key growth projects to deliver long-term value for shareholders.”

    Financial summary

    ($ millions, except per share amounts) 2024 Q4 2024 Q3 2023 Q4 2024 FY 2023 FY
    Cash from (used in) operating activities 2,029 2,474 2,946 9,235 7,388
    Adjusted funds flow2 1,601 1,960 2,062 8,164 8,803
    Per share (diluted)2 0.87 1.05 1.08 4.38 4.54
    Capital investment 1,478 1,346 1,170 5,015 4,298
    Free funds flow2 123 614 892 3,149 4,505
    Excess free funds flow2 (416) 146 471 1,297 2,466
    Net earnings (loss) 146 820 743 3,142 4,109
    Per share (diluted) 0.07 0.42 0.32 1.67 2.09
    Long-term debt, including current portion 7,534 7,199 7,108 7,534 7,108
    Net debt 4,614 4,196 5,060 4,614 5,060
     

    Production and throughput

    (before royalties, net to Cenovus) 2024 Q4 2024 Q3 2023 Q4 2024 FY 2023 FY
    Oil and NGLs (bbls/d)1 670,600 630,500 662,600 653,800 640,000
    Conventional natural gas (MMcf/d) 873.3 844.6 876.3 860.2 832.6
    Total upstream production (BOE/d)1 816,000 771,300 808,600 797,200 778,700
    Total downstream throughput (bbls/d) 666,700 642,900 579,100 646,900 560,400
               

    1 See Advisory for production by product type.
    2 Non-GAAP financial measure or contains a non-GAAP financial measure. See Advisory.

    Fourth-quarter results

    Operating1

    Cenovus’s total revenues were $12.8 billion in the fourth quarter, down from $13.8 billion in the previous quarter, primarily due to lower commodity prices. Upstream revenues were $7.3 billion, flat from the third quarter, while Downstream revenues were $7.8 billion, down from $8.8 billion in the prior quarter.

    Total operating margin3 was $2.3 billion, compared with $2.4 billion in the previous quarter. Upstream operating margin4 was $2.7 billion, consistent with the third quarter and benefiting from higher production volumes relative to the prior quarter, offset by lower benchmark oil prices and timing differences between production and sales. The company had a Downstream operating margin4 shortfall of $396 million in the fourth quarter due to weak refining crack spreads and a narrow heavy oil price differential, compared with a shortfall of $323 million in the previous quarter. Operating margin in the U.S. Refining segment included $45 million of first in, first out (FIFO) losses and $128 million of turnaround expenses incurred during the Lima Refinery turnaround.

    Total Upstream production was 816,000 BOE/d in the fourth quarter, an increase of 44,700 BOE/d from the prior quarter, reflecting record quarterly production from the company’s Oil Sands segment of 628,500 BOE/d. Christina Lake production was 251,400 bbls/d, compared with 211,800 bbls/d in the third quarter, as a result of completing planned turnaround activity in September. Foster Creek production was 195,200 bbls/d compared with 198,000 bbls/d in the third quarter, while Sunrise production increased to 53,100 bbls/d from 50,400 bbls/d in the third quarter as production from new well pads continued to ramp up. Production from the Lloydminster thermal assets declined slightly to 108,900 bbls/d, while Lloydminster conventional heavy oil output increased to 18,000 bbls/d from 16,300 bbls/d in the prior quarter. Production in the Conventional segment was 117,800 BOE/d, a slight decrease from 118,100 BOE/d in the third quarter.

    In the Offshore segment, production was 69,700 BOE/d compared with 65,500 BOE/d in the third quarter. In Asia Pacific, production volumes were 62,200 BOE/d, higher than the previous quarter partially due to increased production at the MAC field in Indonesia and planned maintenance at Liwan in the third quarter. In the Atlantic, production was 7,500 bbls/d, a decrease from 9,000 bbls/d in the prior quarter due to unplanned downtime at the non-operated Terra Nova field. The SeaRose FPSO is on station and reconnected to the White Rose field, with production expected to resume by the end of February.

    Total refining throughput in the fourth quarter was 666,700 bbls/d, up from 642,900 bbls/d in the third quarter. Throughput in Canadian Refining was 104,400 bbls/d, representing a utilization rate of 97%, compared with 99,400 bbls/d in the previous quarter. The increase was primarily due to returning to full rates following completion of turnaround activity at the Lloydminster Upgrader early in the third quarter.

    In U.S. Refining, crude throughput was 562,300 bbls/d, representing a utilization rate of 92%, compared with 543,500 bbls/d in the third quarter. Throughput increased primarily due to improved reliability, partially offset by economic run cuts as market crack spreads weakened through the quarter. U.S. Refining revenues were $6.6 billion relative to $7.2 billion in the prior quarter due to lower refined product pricing. Market capture5 in the U.S. improved to 45% relative to 35% in the previous quarter primarily due to reduced inventory timing impacts (FIFO). Market capture in the fourth quarter was negatively impacted by the Lima Refinery turnaround, narrower heavy crude oil differentials, and a quarterly FIFO loss of $45 million.

    3 Non-GAAP financial measure. Total operating margin is the total of Upstream operating margin plus Downstream operating margin. See Advisory.
    4 Specified financial measure. See Advisory.
    5 Contains a non-GAAP financial measure. See Advisory.

    Financial

    Cash from operating activities in the fourth quarter, which includes changes in non-cash working capital, was $2.0 billion, compared with $2.5 billion in the third quarter. Adjusted funds flow was $1.6 billion, compared with $2.0 billion in the prior quarter and there was a shortfall of excess free funds flow (EFFF) of $416 million, compared with $146 million in the prior quarter. Net earnings in the fourth quarter were $146 million, compared with $820 million in the previous quarter. Fourth-quarter financial results were impacted by lower benchmark prices relative to the third quarter including seasonally weak refining market crack spreads in the Chicago market.

    Long-term debt, including the current portion, was $7.5 billion at December 31, 2024. Net debt increased from the prior quarter to $4.6 billion at December 31, 2024, primarily due to the shortfall in EFFF of $416 million and the redemption of $250 million of Cenovus Series 3 preferred shares on December 31, 2024, partially offset by a release of non-cash working capital. The company continues to steward toward net debt of $4.0 billion and returning 100% of EFFF to shareholders over time in accordance with its financial framework.

    Growth projects and capital investments

    In the Oil Sands segment, the Narrows Lake pipeline, which will connect the field to the Christina Lake processing facility, was mechanically completed in the fourth quarter. We plan to commence steam injection in the spring and the project remains on track for first oil mid-2025. At Sunrise, production continued to ramp up in the fourth quarter after the company brought two new well pads online in the third quarter. One additional well pad will be added in early 2025. The optimization project at Foster Creek is now 64% complete and remains on schedule for startup in 2026, with most modules and major pieces of equipment in place and pipe installation underway.

    In the fourth quarter, the West White Rose project achieved mechanical completion of both the CGS and topsides, and work to prepare the seabed for installation of the CGS at the field location was also completed. The focus of the project in 2025 will be on the installation and commissioning of the platform. The West White Rose project is now approximately 88% complete and progressing on-schedule towards first oil in 2026.

    Full-year results

    In 2024, Cenovus’s total Upstream production averaged 797,200 BOE/d, compared with 778,700 BOE/d in 2023, including record annual volumes from the Oil Sands assets and a 5% increase in Offshore volumes. Oil Sands production was 610,700 BOE/d, including approximately 196,000 bbls/d at Foster Creek, a new annual high for the asset, and 234,200 bbls/d at Christina Lake, which successfully completed a turnaround in the third quarter. Full-year production from the Lloydminster thermal assets was also an annual record at 111,500 bbls/d, compared with 104,100 bbls/d in 2023, reflecting a successful redevelopment program and well optimization. Sunrise production was 49,600 bbls/d compared with 48,900 bbls/d in 2023 and Lloydminster conventional heavy oil production increased to 17,600 bbls/d from 16,700 bbls/d in the previous year. Conventional production was 119,900 BOE/d, in line with 2023. Offshore total production was approximately 66,600 BOE/d, compared with 63,400 BOE/d in the prior year, with 2023 impacted by a temporary disconnection of a subsea umbilical in Liwan by a third-party vessel.

    Total Downstream throughput averaged 646,900 bbls/d in 2024, a 15% increase from 560,400 bbls/d in 2023. Canadian Refining crude oil throughput was 90,500 bbls/d, compared to 100,700 bbls/d in 2023, as the Lloydminster Upgrader completed the largest turnaround in the asset’s history early in the third quarter of 2024. U.S. Refining crude oil throughput increased to 556,400 bbls/d in 2024 compared with 459,700 bbls/d in 2023, reflecting the first full year of production from Superior and Toledo within the Cenovus portfolio.

    Total revenues were $54.3 billion in 2024 and total operating margin was $10.8 billion compared with revenues of $52.2 billion and total operating margin of $11.0 billion in 2023. The year-over-year increase in total revenues was largely due to higher production and narrowing heavy Canadian crude differentials following the startup of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project. Operating margin was slightly reduced due to narrower downstream crack spreads, higher turnaround costs and increased transportation and blending costs.

    Cash from operating activities was $9.2 billion for 2024 compared with $7.4 billion in 2023. Adjusted funds flow was $8.2 billion and free funds flow was $3.1 billion. Total capital investment for 2024 was $5.0 billion, primarily directed to sustaining production at the company’s Upstream assets, the construction of the major Upstream growth projects including West White Rose and refining reliability initiatives. Full-year net earnings for 2024 were $3.1 billion compared with $4.1 billion in 2023, primarily due to lower commodity prices, foreign exchange losses and higher depreciation, depletion, amortization and exploration expense.

    Organizational updates

    As part of Cenovus’s ongoing management succession plans, the company is announcing the following leadership changes effective March 1.

    Andrew Dahlin, currently Executive Vice-President (EVP), Natural Gas & Technical Services, will assume the role of EVP & Chief Operating Officer. Andrew has more than 30 years of industry experience, including 13 years with Cenovus and its predecessor companies.

    Eric Zimpfer, currently Senior Vice-President (SVP), U.S. Refining, will become Cenovus’s Head of Downstream, based in Dublin, Ohio and reporting directly to Jon McKenzie. Eric has more than 20 years of U.S. refining experience. He will play an integral role in continuing to improve the reliability and competitiveness of the Downstream business.

    John Soini, currently SVP, Major & Capital Projects, will become EVP, Upstream – Thermal & Atlantic Offshore. John has more than 25 years of experience in the energy and power industries.

    Susan Anderson, currently SVP, People Services, will become SVP, Legal, General Counsel & Corporate Secretary. Susan has more than 30 years of oil and gas industry experience, with 20 years at Husky Energy in various roles that included Vice-President, Legal.

    Reserves

    Cenovus’s proved and probable reserves are evaluated each year by independent qualified reserves evaluators. At the end of 2024, Cenovus’s total proved and total proved plus probable reserves were approximately 5.7 billion BOE and 8.5 billion BOE respectively, and total proved and total proved plus probable bitumen reserves were approximately 5.2 billion barrels and 7.7 billion barrels respectively. At year-end 2024, Cenovus had a proved reserves life index of approximately 19 years and a proved plus probable reserves life index of approximately 29 years.

    More details about Cenovus’s reserves and other oil and gas information are available in the Advisory and the Management’s Discussion and Analysis (MD&A), Annual Information Form (AIF) and Annual Report on Form 40-F for the year ended December 31, 2024, available on SEDAR+ at sedarplus.ca, EDGAR at sec.gov and Cenovus’s website at cenovus.com under Investors.

    Cenovus year-end disclosure documents

    Today, Cenovus is filing its interim and audited Consolidated Financial Statements, MD&A and AIF with Canadian securities regulatory authorities. The company is also filing its Annual Report on Form 40-F for the year ended December 31, 2024 with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Copies of these documents will be available on SEDAR+ at sedarplus.ca, EDGAR at sec.gov and the company’s website at cenovus.com under Investors. They can also be requested free of charge by emailing investor.relations@cenovus.com

    Dividend declarations and share purchases

    The Board of Directors has declared a quarterly base dividend of $0.180 per common share, payable on March 31, 2025 to shareholders of record as of March 14, 2025.

    In addition, the Board has declared a quarterly dividend on each of the Cumulative Redeemable First Preferred Shares – Series 1, Series 2, Series 5 and Series 7 – payable on March 31, 2025 to shareholders of record as of March 14, 2025 as follows:

    Preferred shares dividend summary

    Share series Rate (%) Amount ($/share)
    Series 1 2.577 0.16106
    Series 2 5.211 0.32123
    Series 5 4.591 0.28694
    Series 7 3.935 0.24594
         

    All dividends paid on Cenovus’s common and preferred shares will be designated as “eligible dividends” for Canadian federal income tax purposes. Declaration of dividends is at the sole discretion of the Board and will continue to be evaluated on a quarterly basis.

    In the fourth quarter, the company returned $706 million to shareholders, composed of $108 million from its purchase of 4.6 million shares through its normal course issuer bid (NCIB), $348 million through common and preferred share dividends and $250 million through the redemption of Cenovus Series 3 preferred shares. In 2024, Cenovus returned $3.2 billion to shareholders, including $1.4 billion of share purchases through its NCIB, $1.6 billion in common and preferred share dividends, and $250 million through the redemption of the Series 3 preferred shares.

    2025 planned maintenance

    The following table provides details on planned maintenance activities at Cenovus assets in 2025 and anticipated production or throughput impacts.

    Potential quarterly production/throughput impact (Mbbls/d or MBOE/d)

    (MBOE/d or Mbbls/d) Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Annualized impact
    Upstream
    Oil Sands 30 – 40 5 – 7 10 – 12
    Offshore 4 – 6 1 – 2
    Conventional
    Downstream
    Canadian Refining
    U.S. Refining 7 – 10 35 – 45 2 – 4 6 – 10 13 – 17
               

    Potential turnaround expenses

    ($ millions) Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Annualized impact
    Downstream
    Canadian Refining
    U.S. Refining 110 – 135 210 – 240 80 – 95 40 – 50 440 – 520
               

    Conference call today

    9 a.m. Mountain Time (11 a.m. Eastern Time)

    Cenovus will host a conference call today, February 20, 2025, starting at 9 a.m. MT (11 a.m. ET).

    To join the conference call, please dial 1-800-206-4400 (toll-free in North America) or 1-289-514-5005 to reach a live operator who will join you into the call. A live audio webcast will also be available and archived for approximately 30 days.

    Advisory

    Basis of Presentation

    Cenovus reports financial results in Canadian dollars and presents production volumes on a net to Cenovus before royalties basis, unless otherwise stated. Cenovus prepares its financial statements in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) Accounting Standards.

    Barrels of Oil Equivalent

    Natural gas volumes have been converted to barrels of oil equivalent (BOE) on the basis of six thousand cubic feet (Mcf) to one barrel (bbl). BOE may be misleading, particularly if used in isolation. A conversion ratio of one bbl to six Mcf is based on an energy equivalency conversion method primarily applicable at the burner tip and does not represent value equivalency at the wellhead. Given that the value ratio based on the current price of crude oil compared with natural gas is significantly different from the energy equivalency conversion ratio of 6:1, utilizing a conversion on a 6:1 basis is not an accurate reflection of value.

    Reserves Life Index

    Reserves life index is calculated based on reserves for the applicable reserves category divided by annual production.

    Product types

    Product type by operating segment Three months ended
    December 31, 2024
    Full year ended
    December 31, 2024
    Oil Sands
    Bitumen (Mbbls/d) 608.6 591.3
    Heavy crude oil (Mbbls/d) 18.0 17.6
    Conventional natural gas (MMcf/d) 11.8 11.1
    Total Oil Sands segment production (MBOE/d) 628.5 610.7
    Conventional
    Light crude oil (Mbbls/d) 4.8 4.9
    Natural gas liquids (Mbbls/d) 19.7 21.0
    Conventional natural gas (MMcf/d) 560.5 563.8
    Total Conventional segment production (MBOE/d) 117.8 119.9
    Offshore
    Light crude oil (Mbbls/d) 7.5 8.0
    Natural gas liquids (Mbbls/d) 12.0 11.0
    Conventional natural gas (MMcf/d) 301.0 285.3
    Total Offshore segment production (MBOE/d) 69.7 66.6
    Total Upstream production (MBOE/d) 816.0 797.2
         

    Forward‐looking Information

    This news release contains certain forward‐looking statements and forward‐looking information (collectively referred to as “forward‐looking information”) within the meaning of applicable securities legislation about Cenovus’s current expectations, estimates and projections about the future of the company, based on certain assumptions made in light of the company’s experiences and perceptions of historical trends. Although Cenovus believes that the expectations represented by such forward‐looking information are reasonable, there can be no assurance that such expectations will prove to be correct. Forward‐looking information in this document is identified by words such as “anticipate”, “continue”, “deliver”, “focus”, “plan”, “progress”, “steward”, “target” and “will” or similar expressions and includes suggestions of future outcomes, including, but not limited to, statements about: Net Debt; returning Excess Free Funds Flow to shareholders; growth plans and projects; delivering long-term shareholder value; production guidance; the optimization project at Foster Creek; steam injection and timing of production at Narrows Lake; production and timing of well pads at Sunrise; installation and commissioning of the Sea Rose FPSO and return of production at White Rose; the installation and commissioning of, and timing of first oil from, the West White Rose project; 2025 planned maintenance; and dividend payments.

    Developing forward‐looking information involves reliance on a number of assumptions and consideration of certain risks and uncertainties, some of which are specific to Cenovus and others that apply to the industry generally. The factors or assumptions on which the forward‐looking information in this news release are based include, but are not limited to: the allocation of free funds flow; commodity prices, inflation and supply chain constraints; Cenovus’s ability to produce on an unconstrained basis; Cenovus’s ability to access sufficient insurance coverage to pursue development plans; Cenovus’s ability to deliver safe and reliable operations and demonstrate strong governance; and the assumptions inherent in Cenovus’s 2025 corporate guidance available on cenovus.com.

    The risk factors and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from the forward‐looking information in this news release include, but are not limited to: the accuracy of estimates regarding commodity production and operating expenses, inflation, taxes, royalties, capital costs and currency and interest rates; risks inherent in the operation of Cenovus’s business; and risks associated with climate change and Cenovus’s assumptions relating thereto and other risks identified under “Risk Management and Risk Factors” and “Advisory” in Cenovus’s Management’s Discussion and Analysis (MD&A) for the year ended December 31, 2024.

    Except as required by applicable securities laws, Cenovus disclaims any intention or obligation to publicly update or revise any forward‐looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. Readers are cautioned that the foregoing lists are not exhaustive and are made as at the date hereof. Events or circumstances could cause actual results to differ materially from those estimated or projected and expressed in, or implied by, the forward‐looking information. For additional information regarding Cenovus’s material risk factors, the assumptions made, and risks and uncertainties which could cause actual results to differ from the anticipated results, refer to “Risk Management and Risk Factors” and “Advisory” in Cenovus’s MD&A for the periods ended December 31, 2024, and to the risk factors, assumptions and uncertainties described in other documents Cenovus files from time to time with securities regulatory authorities in Canada (available on SEDAR+ at sedarplus.ca, on EDGAR at sec.gov and Cenovus’s website at cenovus.com).

    Specified Financial Measures

    This news release contains references to certain specified financial measures that do not have standardized meanings prescribed by IFRS Accounting Standards. Readers should not consider these measures in isolation or as a substitute for analysis of the company’s results as reported under IFRS Accounting Standards. These measures are defined differently by different companies and, therefore, might not be comparable to similar measures presented by other issuers. For information on the composition of these measures, as well as an explanation of how the company uses these measures, refer to the Specified Financial Measures Advisory located in Cenovus’s MD&A for the period ended December 31, 2024 (available on SEDAR+ at sedarplus.ca, on EDGAR at sec.gov and on Cenovus’s website at cenovus.com) which is incorporated by reference into this news release.

    Upstream Operating Margin and Downstream Operating Margin

    Upstream Operating Margin and Downstream Operating Margin, and the individual components thereof, are included in Note 1 to the interim Consolidated Financial Statements.

    Total Operating Margin

    Total Operating Margin is the total of Upstream Operating Margin plus Downstream Operating Margin.

      Upstream (6) Downstream (6) Total
    ($ millions) Q4 2024 Q3 2024 Q4 2023 Q4 2024 Q3 2024 Q4 2023 Q4 2024 Q3 2024 Q4 2023
    Revenues
    Gross Sales 8,240 8,259 7,797 7,837 8,798 8,404 16,077 17,057 16,201
    Less: Royalties (914) (929) (902) (914) (929) (902)
      7,326 7,330 6,895 7,837 8,798 8,404 15,163 16,128 15,299
    Expenses
    Purchased Product 1,000 1,088 663 7,364 8,207 7,888 8,364 9,295 8,551
    Transportation and Blending 2,816 2,661 2,894 2,816 2,661 2,894
    Operating 842 860 864 866 918 826 1,708 1,778 1,690
    Realized (Gain) Loss on Risk Management (2) (10) 19 3 (4) (6) 1 (14) 13
    Operating Margin 2,670 2,731 2,455 (396) (323) (304) 2,274 2,408 2,151
                       

    6Found in the December 31, 2024, or the September 30, 2024, interim Consolidated Financial Statements. Revenues and purchased product for Q3 2024 Downstream operations were revised. See note 25 of our December 31, 2024, interim consolidated financial statements.

    ($ millions) Upstream (6) Downstream (6) Total
    Year ended December 31, 2024 2023 2024 2023 2024 2023
    Revenues
    Gross Sales      33,078        31,082        33,618        32,626      66,696        63,708  
    Less: Royalties      (3,449 )       (3,270 )              —                —      (3,449 )       (3,270 )
           29,629        27,812        33,618        32,626      63,247        60,438  
    Expenses
    Purchased Product        3,674          3,152        30,252        28,273      33,926        31,425  
    Transportation and Blending      11,331        11,088                —                —      11,331        11,088  
    Operating        3,489          3,690          3,670          3,201        7,159          6,891  
    Realized (Gain) Loss on Risk Management             14               12                 8                —             22               12  
    Operating Margin      11,121          9,870            (312 )        1,152      10,809        11,022  
                           

    Adjusted Funds Flow, Free Funds Flow and Excess Free Funds Flow

    The following table provides a reconciliation of cash from (used in) operating activities found in Cenovus’s Consolidated Financial Statements to Adjusted Funds Flow, Free Funds Flow and Excess Free Funds Flow. Adjusted Funds Flow per Share – Basic and Adjusted Funds Flow per Share – Diluted are calculated by dividing Adjusted Funds Flow by the respective basic or diluted weighted average number of common shares outstanding during the period and may be useful to evaluate a company’s ability to generate cash.

      Three Months Ended Twelve Months Ended
    ($ millions) December 31, 2024 September 30, 2024 December 31, 2023 December 31, 2024 December 31, 2023
    Cash From (Used in) Operating Activities (7) 2,029 2,474 2,946 9,235 7,388
    (Add) Deduct:          
    Settlement of Decommissioning Liabilities (64) (74) (65) (234) (222)
    Net Change in Non-Cash Working Capital 492 588 949 1,305 (1,193)
    Adjusted Funds Flow 1,601 1,960 2,062 8,164 8,803
    Capital Investment 1,478 1,346 1,170 5,015 4,298
    Free Funds Flow 123 614 892 3,149 4,505
    Add (Deduct):          
    Base Dividends Paid on Common Shares (330) (329) (261) (1,255) (990)
    Purchase of Common Shares under Employee Benefit Plan (43) (43)
    Dividends Paid on Preferred Shares (18) (9) (9) (45) (36)
    Settlement of Decommissioning Liabilities (64) (74) (65) (234) (222)
    Principal Repayment of Leases (80) (74) (72) (299) (288)
    Acquisitions, Net of Cash Acquired (3) (4) (14) (22) (515)
    Proceeds From Divestitures (1) 22 46 12
    Excess Free Funds Flow (416) 146 471 1,297 2,466
               

    7 Found in the December 31, 2024, or the September 30, 2024, interim Consolidated Financial Statements.

    Market Capture

    Market Capture contains a non-GAAP financial measure and is used in the company’s U.S. Refining segment to provide an indication of margin captured relative to what was available in the market based on widely-used benchmarks. We define Market Capture as Refining Margin divided by the weighted average 3-2-1 market benchmark crack, net of RINs, expressed as a percentage. The weighted average crack spread, net of RINs, is calculated on Cenovus’s operable capacity-weighted average of the Chicago and Group 3 3-2-1 benchmark market crack spreads, net of RINs.

    ($ millions) Three months ended
    December 31, 2024
    Three months ended
    September 30, 2024
    Revenues(8) 6,574 7,218
    Purchased Product(8) 6,296 6,854
    Gross Margin 278 364
    Total Processed Inputs (Mbbls/d) 588.4 568.0
    Refining Margin ($/bbl) 5.14 6.97
    Operable Capacity (Mbbls/d) 612.3 612.3
    Operable Capacity by Regional Benchmark (percent)
    Chicago 3-2-1 Crack Spread Weighting 81 81
    Group 3 3-2-1 Crack Spread Weighting 19 19
    Benchmark Prices and Exchange Rate
    Chicago 3-2-1 Crack Spread (US$/bbl) 12.12 18.62
    Group 3 3-2-1 Crack Spread (US$/bbl) 12.66 18.95
    RINs (US$/bbl) 4.02 3.89
    US$ per C$1 – Average 0.715 0.733
    Weighted Average Crack Spread, Net of RINs ($/bbl) 11.47 20.18
    Market Capture (percent) 45 35
         

    8 Found in Note 1 of the December 31, 2024, or the September 30, 2024, interim Consolidated Financial Statements. For the three months ended September 30, 2024, amounts reflect certain revisions. See Note 25 of our December 31, 2024, interim consolidated financial statements.

    Cenovus Energy Inc.

    Cenovus Energy Inc. is an integrated energy company with oil and natural gas production operations in Canada and the Asia Pacific region, and upgrading, refining and marketing operations in Canada and the United States. The company is focused on managing its assets in a safe, innovative and cost-efficient manner, integrating environmental, social and governance considerations into its business plans. Cenovus common shares and warrants are listed on the Toronto and New York stock exchanges, and the company’s preferred shares are listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange. For more information, visit cenovus.com.

    Find Cenovus on Facebook, LinkedIn, YouTube and Instagram.

    Cenovus contacts

    Investors
    Investor Relations general line
    403-766-7711

    Media
    Media Relations general line
    403-766-7751

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI USA: Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi Joins OSF HealthCare Leaders in Peoria to Discuss Strengthening Illinois’ Healthcare Workforce Pipeline

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi (8th District of Illinois)

    Peoria, IL – On Tuesday, Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi joined OSF HealthCare leadership, regional career and technical education leaders, and representatives from organized labor for a facility tour and roundtable discussion at the Jump Trading Simulation & Education Center, located on the campus of OSF Saint Francis Medical Center. A collaboration between the University of Illinois College of Medicine and OSF HealthCare, Jump Simulation is a leader in innovation and the preparation of Illinois’ healthcare workforce. During the roundtable, Congressman Krishnamoorthi and other participants discussed the state of Illinois’ healthcare workforce, how federal dollars can most effectively be leveraged to increase the utility of career and technical programs throughout the state, and the path forward to ensure a robust talent pipeline from our Illinois schools to critical sectors like healthcare.

    “The strength of our health care system depends on the skill of our medical workforce. I was grateful for the opportunity to meet with leaders from OSF Health Care and the Peoria Community, including Mayor Ali, to discuss the investments we need to make in our education and workforce development programs to prepare today’s students for the health care careers of tomorrow.”

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Congressman Krishnamoorthi And Colleagues Demand Answers on Trump Administration’s Massive Cuts To National Institutes of Health Research

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi (8th District of Illinois)

    WASHINGTON – Last week, Congressman joined a majority of his colleagues in the House Democratic Caucus in a letter to Acting Director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) that expresses alarm at the illegal decision by President Trump to reduce the reimbursement rate for indirect research costs to 15 percent across the board.

    “The dramatically lower indirect cost rate cap will have far-reaching consequences for institutions and researchers nationwide, reducing their capacity to conduct cutting-edge research,” said the lawmakers. “Slashing this funding means cutting financial support for the construction and maintenance of laboratories and high-tech facilities; energy and utility expenses; and the essential safety, security, and other support services researchers need to perform their work. Indirect costs make research possible. Without fair reimbursement for indirect costs, research institutions may be forced to close laboratories, lay off staff, stop clinical trials, and pause research programs. This will force Americans to go without lifesaving and life-extending treatments.”

    Read the full letter HERE

    BACKGROUND

    On February 7, 2025, the Trump administration announced a new policy that would slash the NIH reimbursement rate for indirect research costs to 15 percent. This illegal move would have far-reaching consequences for institutions and researchers nationwide, cutting off financial support for the construction and maintenance of laboratories and high-tech facilities; energy and utility expenses; and the essential safety, security, and other support services researchers need to perform their work. Simply put, indirect costs make research possible. 

    Without fair reimbursement for indirect costs, research institutions may be forced to close laboratories, lay off staff, stop clinical trials, pause research programs, and redirect resources from critical areas like financial aid. This will force Americans to go without lifesaving and life-extending treatments.

    On February 10, 2025, a federal judge in Boston issued a nationwide temporary restraining order on the effort in response to a federal lawsuit filed by hospitals and medicals schools affected by the substantial loss in potential research funds.

    Funding for NIH research enjoys support from both sides of the aisle. On May 1, 2024, a bipartisan group of nearly 200 lawmakers called for $51.3 billion in fiscal year 2025 funding for NIH. 

    READ THE FULL TEXT OF THE LETTER

     

    Dear Acting Director Memoli:

    The United States is a global leader in biomedical research and innovation due to National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding. That is why we are alarmed by NIH’s illegal decision to slash the reimbursement rate for indirect research costs to 15 percent across the board.[1]  
    Because of the NIH, grantee institutions, and a vibrant life sciences sector, the United States has made significant strides in medicine, improving and saving lives with each breakthrough. From 1991 to 2022, the cancer mortality rate in the United States decreased by 34 percent.[2] Annual HIV infections fell by two-thirds from the height of the HIV epidemic, and 65 percent of individuals diagnosed with HIV in 2022 achieved viral suppression.[3] The life expectancy of someone born with cystic fibrosis today is multiple decades longer than it was 30 years ago.[4]  Each of these achievements was driven by research conducted at or funded by NIH.
    The dramatically lower indirect cost rate cap will have far-reaching consequences for institutions and researchers nationwide, reducing their capacity to conduct cutting-edge research. Slashing this funding means cutting financial support for the construction and maintenance of laboratories and high-tech facilities; energy and utility expenses; and the essential safety, security, and other support services researchers need to perform their work. Indirect costs make research possible. Without fair reimbursement for indirect costs, research institutions may be forced to close laboratories, lay off staff, stop clinical trials, and pause research programs. This will force Americans to go without lifesaving and life-extending treatments. 
    The supplemental guidance for this misguided and detrimental announcement states that the “United States should have the best medical research in the world.[5]” Cutting vital funding for indirect costs accomplishes the exact opposite. Instead of supporting efforts to cure disease, this policy will severely compromise the United States’ ability to conduct lifesaving research. 
    A recent Washington Post article described how a researcher who studies how cells communicate faced a setback when the lab’s “cold room” broke down. This cold room is essential for conducting experiments critical to advancing our understanding of colon cancer and developing potential cures. The expenses associated with maintaining cold rooms represent the kind of funding that would be slashed under NIH’s policy, compromising the infrastructure that allows researchers to carry out their vital work.
    Research universities generate significant economic activity in communities throughout the country. In 2024, the NIH supported work at over 2,500 institutions in all 50 states, as well as in U.S. Territories and Commonwealths.[6] In Fiscal Year 2023, each dollar of NIH funding generated $2.46 in economic activity.[7] The economic pain caused by slashing NIH research funding will not be contained to university campuses. It will reverberate into communities throughout the country, hurting hardworking families already struggling to keep up with rising costs. 
    The Further Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2024 was passed by Congress on a bipartisan basis and contains a provision to prevent NIH from unilaterally making changes to how the agency pays for indirect costs. We are encouraged that a federal judge has issued a temporary order halting this controversial decision. However, the uncertainty and disruption caused by these irrational decisions highlight the need for the NIH to immediately rescind this guidance on indirect costs and refrain from taking unilateral action on payment for indirect costs in the future. With this in mind, we request answers to the following questions:

    1. What measures has the NIH taken to thoroughly assess the impact of capping indirect cost payments? 

    2. Were alternative solutions considered that would allow for budgetary savings without compromising research institutions’ ability to conduct research?

    3. How does the NIH plan to address concerns from research institutions about potential layoffs and halted studies caused by the new indirect cost rate?

    4. How will significantly reducing funds available to maintain critical laboratory infrastructure impact the overall quality and progress of biomedical research and innovation in the United States?

    Thank you for your prompt attention to this important matter.  We ask that you provide responses to these questions no later than February 28, 2025. 

     

    The letter was also signed by Representatives Gabe Amo (RI-01), Diana DeGette (CO-01), Linda Sánchez (CA-38), Lizzie Fletcher (TX-07), Chrissy Houlahan (PA-06), Alma Adams (NC-12), Becca Balint (VT-AL), Nanette Diaz Barragán (CA-44), Joyce Beatty (OH-03), Wesley Bell (MO-01), Ami Bera (CA-06), Donald Beyer (VA-08), Sanford Bishop (GA-02), Suzanne Bonamici (OR-01), Brendan Boyle (PA-02), Julia Brownley (CA-26), Shontel Brown (OH-11), Nikki Budzinski (IL-13), Salud Carbajal (CA-24), André Carson (IN-07), Troy Carter (LA-05), Ed Case (HI-01), Sean Casten (IL-06), Kathy Castor (FL-14), Joaquin Castro (TX-20), Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick (FL-20), Judy Chu (CA-28), Yvette Clarke (NY-09), Emanuel Cleaver (MO-05), Steve Cohen (TN-09), Herbert Conaway (NJ-03), Lou Correa (CA-46), Angie Craig (MN-02), Jasmine Crockett (TX-30), Jason Crow (CO-06), Danny K. Davis (IL-07), Suzan DelBene (WA-01), Christopher Deluzio (PA-17), Mark DeSaulnier (CA-10), Maxine Dexter (OR-03), Debbie Dingell (MI-06), Lloyd Doggett (TX-37), Sarah Elfreth (MD-03), Veronica Escobar (TX-16), Adriano Espaillat (NY-13), Dwight Evans (PA-03), Shomari Figures (AL-02), Bill Foster (IL-11), Valerie Foushee (NC-04), Laura Friedman (CA-30), John Garamendi (CA-08), Jesús G. “Chuy” García (IL-04), Robert Garcia (CA-42), Jimmy Gomez (CA-34), Vicente Gonzalez (TX-23), Maggie Goodlander (NH-02), Josh Gottheimer (NJ-05), Al Green (TX-09), Raul Grijalva (AZ-07), Jahana Hayes (CT-05), Pablo Hernández (PR), James A. Himes (CT-04), Val Hoyle (OR-04), Glenn Ivey (MD-04) Jonathan Jackson (IL-01), Sara Jacobs (CA-51), Pramila Jayapal (WA-07), Henry C. “Hank” Johnson Jr. (GA-04), Sydney Kamlager-Dove (CA-37), Marcy Kaptur (OH-09),William R. Keating (MA-09), Robin L. Kelly (IL-02), Ro Khanna (CA-17), , Greg Landsman (OH-01), John Larson (CT-01), George Latimer (NY-16), Summer Lee (PA-12), Teresa Leger Fernandez (NM-03), Ted Lieu (CA-36), Stephen F. Lynch (MA-08), Seth Magaziner (RI-02), Lucy McBath (GA-06), Sarah McBride (DL-AL), Jennifer L. McClellan (VA-04), Betty McCollum (MN-04), Kristen McDonald Rivet (MI-08), Morgan McGarvey (KY-03), James McGovern (MA-02), LaMonica McIver (NJ-10), Gregory Meeks (NY-05), Robert Menendez (NJ-08), Grace Meng (NY-06), Kweisi Mfume (MD-07), Dave Min (CA-47), Gwen Moore (WI-04), Seth Moulton (MA-06), Frank Mrvan (IN-01), Kevin Mullin (CA-15), Jerrold Nadler (NY-12), Eleanor Holmes Norton (DC), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (NY-14), Johnny Olszewski (MD-02), Jimmy Panetta (CA-19), Chris Pappas (NH-01), Brittany Pettersen (CA-07), Chellie Pingree (ME-01), Mark Pocan (WI-02), Nellie Pou (NJ-09), Ayanna Pressley (MA-07), Mike Quigley (IL-05), Delia Ramirez (IL-03), Jamie Raskin (MD-08), Josh Riley (NY-19), Luz M. Rivas (CA-29), Deborah Ross (NC-02), Raul Ruiz (CA-25), Andrea Salinas (OR-06), Mary Gay Scanlon (PA-05), Janice D. Schakowsky (IL-IL-09), Bradley Schneider (IL-10), Hillary J. Scholten (MI-03), Kim Schrier (WA-08), David Scott (GA-13), Robert C. “Bobby” Scott (VA-03), Terri A, Sewell (AL-07), Brad Sherman (CA-32), Mikie Sherrill (NJ-11), Lateefah Simon (CA-12), Eric Sorensen (IL-17), Darren Soto (FL-09), Melanie A. Stansbury (NM-01), Greg Stanton (AZ-04), Haley Stevens (MI-11), Suhas Subramanyam (VA-10), Emilia Sykes (OH-13), Mark Takano (CA-39), Shri Thanedar (MI-13), Bennie Thompson (MS-02), Mike Thompson (CA-04), Dina Titus (NV-01), Jill N. Tokuda (HI-02), Paul Tonko (NY-20), Ritchie Torres (NY-15), Lori Trahan (MA-03), Sylvester Turner (TX-18), Lauren Underwood (IL-14), Gabe Vasquez (NM-02), Marc Veasey (TX-33), Nydia Velázquez (NY-07), Eugene Vindman (VA-07), Debbie Wasserman Schultz (FL-25), and Bonnie Watson Coleman (NJ-12).

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: PHOTOS: Congressman Kustoff, Gov. Lee Visit Flooding in Rives

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative David Kustoff (TN-08)

    WASHINGTON, D.C. — Today, Congressman David Kustoff (R-TN) and Governor Bill Lee visited Rives in Obion County to survey the flooding and meet with local officials and members of the community. 

    “I have been closely monitoring the situation in Obion County and remain in constant communication with local and state officials,” said Congressman Kustoff. “Roberta and I will continue to keep the families affected by this devastating flooding in our thoughts and prayers. Thank you to the first responders and various law enforcement officers for working diligently to evacuate and secure the area. In the coming days, I encourage everyone to remain vigilant, follow local guidance, and stay safe. I am committed to doing all I can on the federal level to help our community rebuild and recover.”

    “While Tennesseans in Montgomery and Obion Counties face a long road to recovery after severe flooding, we are encouraged to see how the communities have come together to serve their neighbors in this time of need,” said Gov. Lee. “Maria and I continue to lift all those impacted up in prayer and thank state and local emergency officials, law enforcement, first responders and road crews for their quick response. Damage assessments are underway to determine the best path forward to support local recovery efforts.”

    Pictures from the day: 
     

    L to R: Director of the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency Patrick Sheehan, Governor Lee, Congressman Kustoff, Obion County Mayor Steve Carr, Rives Mayor Lester Burnes
     

    L to R: Congressman Kustoff, Rives Fire Chief Campbell Rice, Governor Lee

    Obion County Sheriff Karl Jackson and Congressman Kustoff
     

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Arrington Hosts Ag Forum in Lubbock

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Jodey Arrington (TX-19)

    Lubbock, Texas – Today, House Budget Chairman Jodey Arrington (TX-19) hosted West Texas ag producers and stakeholders for a forum focused on agriculture. The conversation, held at the FiberMax Center for Discovery in Lubbock, focused on Arrington’s critical work securing emergency disaster relief for farmers in the end-of-year funding bill, what to expect under the new leadership of USDA Secretary Brooke Rollins and President Donald Trump, and updates on Arrington’s efforts fighting for farmers and ranchers in Congress.

     

    “Great conversation today with producers from across West Texas discussing the big issues effecting agriculture and Rural America,” said Chairman Arrington. “West Texas is the backbone of this nation, feeding, clothing, and fueling America. However, the last 4 years of self-inflicted disasters have ravaged our producers with skyrocketing input costs and rock-bottom commodity prices. Fortunately, a new day has dawned in our country, and I am excited to continue serving alongside President Trump, Secretary Brooke Rollins, and our unified Republican Conference to Make Agriculture Great Again!”

    “Representative Arrington has been a strong advocate for agriculture, working to ensure that sorghum farmers have the resources they need to succeed.” said Tim Lust, National Sorghum Producers CEO. “We appreciate his leadership in supporting policies that strengthen rural communities and look forward to working with him to make an effective safety-net through a new Farm Bill a reality in 2025. With historic drought and record inflation challenging farmers across the country, it is critical that we prioritize certainty, accountability, and long-term viability to protect the future of American agriculture.”

    “The Texas Corn Producers Association commends Chairman Arrington for his leadership.” said David Gibson, Texas Corn Producers Association Executive Vice President. “We are hopeful for his advocacy for agriculture and work to address the severe economic challenges facing farmers in his district, state and across the nation, while safeguarding our food supply.”

    Additional Ag Resources:

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: DelBene Highlights Damage of Federal Research Cuts to Patients, Medical Research at Fred Hutch

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Suzan DelBene (1st District of Washington)

    Today, Congresswoman Suzan DelBene (WA-01) visited Fred Hutch Cancer Center to highlight the damage the Trump administration’s proposed cuts to medical research funding would have to Washington’s health care ecosystem and the harm it would have on patients.

    Immediately after taking office, President Trump froze federal grants pending an unspecified review process. These were funds approved by Congress in a bipartisan way and cannot be withheld solely by the White House. A federal court temporarily blocked the freeze, but many organizations receiving federal grants have experienced payment delays or are unclear when the funding will arrive. 

    The administration is also trying to drastically cut medical research funding at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the world’s leading medical research organization, by limiting the amount of a research grant that can go to laboratory upkeep and other administrative costs. These proposed cuts would create major budget gaps in federally funded projects at research institutions. This could force independent research institutions like Fred Hutch, academic medical centers, and universities to cut potentially groundbreaking discoveries and clinical trials, depriving patients across the country of access to hope and lifesaving care. This proposed cut was temporarily halted by a federal judge, but uncertainty still harms research efforts.

    “Washington conducts world-class medical research that saves lives every day. President Trump is putting that all at risk with these illegal cuts. As a former researcher, I know the devastating impacts losing funding or even the threat of it being cut off can have on research institutions and their patients,” said DelBene. “The president must stop this senseless attack on science and let researchers get back to developing the cures and treatments of tomorrow.”

    “Cuts to federal biomedical research funds will stifle foundational science, cancer research, clinical trial access for patients, and future innovation and cures,” said Fred Hutch President and Director Thomas J. Lynch Jr., MD. “NIH support enables Fred Hutch to translate research from our labs into care at patient bedsides and ensures we can continue to provide world-class therapies to over 40,000 patients each year. Cuts to federally funded research will harm the scientists who find the discoveries that fuel Fred Hutch’s innovation, support the Puget Sound Region’s biotech industry, and ensure the continued discovery of life-saving cures.”

    The biggest recipients of NIH funding in Washington include Fred Hutch, the University of Washington, Virginia Mason, and Seattle Children’s Hospital. In Fiscal Year 2024, Washington researchers were awarded nearly $1.3 billion in NIH grants and contracts that support 12,000 jobs in the state.

    Last week, DelBene urged the NIH to rescind these cuts and asked the administration to provide answers on how this decision was made, and what future threats might come to the United States’ long-standing dominance in science.

    Fred Hutch Cancer Center is an independent, nonprofit, unified adult cancer care and research center. Translating discoveries into cures, Fred Hutch’s groundbreaking research has saved hundreds of thousands of lives worldwide over our 50-year history. Innovative cancer research, clinical trial access, and future cures can only be achieved by continuing strong and stable federal investments in biomedical research. Federal investments in the NIH are critical to the future health of generations of Americans and will ensure that institutions like Fred Hutch can continue to cover the total cost of research.

    Fred Hutch’s mission relies on federal funding to eliminate cancer and related diseases, with approximately 70 percent of Fred Hutch’s current research funding coming from federal competitive grant awards.  Fred Hutch stands to lose $120 million of topline revenue annually with the recently announced NIH guidance on indirect costs.

    NIH awards grants to more than 300,000 researchers at more than 2,500 institutions. Every dollar in NIH grants spurs $2.09 in economic activity, and every $100 million in investment leads to 78 patents and $598 million in further research, according to N.I.H.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Rep. Gregory W. Meeks Statement Following Meeting with New York Governor Kathy Hochul

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Gregory W Meeks (5th District of New York)

    QUEENS, NY – Today, Congressman Gregory W. Meeks (NY-05) released the following statement on the meeting with Gov. Hochul: 

    “I had a great meeting with the Governor, and I am grateful for her steady leadership during these turbulent times for our beloved city.

    “At a time when our Democratic norms are under attack, it is more important than ever leaders demonstrate respect for the rule of law, the power of the people’s vote, and due process. As a result of the resignations of the four deputy mayors and federal prosecutors, I am deeply concerned about the future of our city’s leadership and hold hope our system of checks and balances will protect the interests of the people of New York City. 

    “Here’s the bottom line – no single elected person be it the president or the governor — should unilaterally decide the fate of our mayor or any duly elected individual. We must adhere to the process set forth by our laws in New York and let the judicial process play out at tomorrow’s hearing. My utmost priority as is the Governor’s is to ensure that all New Yorkers’ interests are respected and represented.”

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: ICYMI: On MSNBC.com, Reps. Chu, Moore raise alarm over DOGE’s rogue activities, access to personal information

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Judy Chu (CA2-27)

    We confronted Speaker Johnson over DOGE. His response is cause for concern,” they write

    WASHINGTON, D.C. — As reports continue surfacing regarding Elon Musk’s so-called Department on Government Efficiency (DOGE) accessing confidential and sensitive private information at the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), MSNBC.com published a joint opinion piece by Reps. Judy Chu (CA-28) and Gwen Moore (WI-04) on their recent, unscheduled meeting with Speaker Mike Johnson in his office regarding DOGE’s activities. This follows their letter to Speaker Johnson welcoming his commitment to House Committee on Ways & Means oversight of DOGE and Musk’s access to data and funding streams.

    They write: 

    Insults towards women in politics are nothing new, so we are wearing being called “rude,” “aggressive” and “unhinged” last week as a badge of honor. 

    This is not a time where business as usual can be our strategy. 

    After reports began surfacing about Elon Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency having access to the Department of Treasury payment systems, our constituents were understandably alarmed. They bombarded our phones rightly demanding answers to why an unelected and unvetted billionaire – and other unqualified individuals with troubling backgrounds – was granted access to sensitive Treasury payment systems and the confidential, personal information contained within. 

    Does no one outside of Musk and his team know how this data is being handled and used? Is it being manipulated? Are backdoors into the system being added? Where is any extracted data being maintained? 

    We sought answers to these questions and more from the source: Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who had given Musk and DOGE that access. So, after learning that Bessent had a scheduled meeting last Wednesday with Speaker Mike Johnson and House Ways and Means Chairman Jason Smith to discuss passing more tax cuts for the wealthy, we marched to the Speaker’s Office to get those answers. 

    The DOGE team’s attack at Treasury began with Musk’s allies reportedly pressured the department’s highest ranking career official to gain access to the department’s payment systems. That official, who had worked under 11 different Treasury secretaries of both parties, ultimately resigned rather than follow an unlawful order. He was right to be concerned: The Treasury systems dispense 95 percent of federal payments every year. They ensure that seniors, government employees, and taxpayers receive their Social Security checks, paychecks, and tax refunds, among other things. Protecting the systems’ integrity is a matter of national security, economic security, and personal privacy. 

    Management of payment systems has historically been done by career civil servants who have been thoroughly vetted and granted proper security clearances, through carefully designed procedures. In fact, Section 6103 of the Internal Revenue Code states that unauthorized disclosure of confidential taxpayer information is a felony. There is no room for error. A technical glitch of the payment systems in 1979 that delayed checks to a small number of bond holders caused a spike in treasury yields. A more systemic issue in the payment’s issuances, or intentional political tampering with payments could trigger dire economic consequences for our nation and the global economic order. 

    These responsibilities are far too serious for Musk and his unqualified team. But President Trump operates with minimal ethical restraints and no concern about whether those who work for him are qualified. His Republican allies in Congress have so far provided no check on his lawless actions or dangerous nominees to Cabinet positions. And after Musk contributed $277 million to President Trump and other Republicans in the 2024 campaign, the richest man in the world has been granted this unprecedented level of extra-executive powers to undermine the federal government and adversely affect the lives of tens of millions of Americans.

    We know that Democrats and other concerned citizens will need to be creative and, in the words of the late Congressman John Lewis, make good trouble. Most of our constituents don’t have proximity to the halls of power and won’t get the chance to meet congressional leadership and Cabinet secretaries to voice their concerns. But we are their elected representatives, endowed with the responsibility to be their voice in Washington D.C., and they expect us to do what we can in these unprecedented times. 

    Even though we were denied the chance to meet with the Treasury Secretary, we did secure a meeting with Speaker Johnson. An anonymous witness, who was clearly friendly toward the Speaker, told media outlets that we were “incredibly rude, extremely aggressive and frankly unhinged.” This was utterly false: We engaged in a polite, respectful conversation. But alarmingly, Speaker Johnson revealed that he didn’t know DOGE’s intentions. He couldn’t answer our questions with any degree of specificity, which speaks to how rogue DOGE’s operation is. And even though he committed to oversight to help answer our constituents’ questions, we’ve not yet received a response from him regarding that commitment. 

    It gives us no comfort that the Trump Administration appears to be seeking to mollify the uproar from the American people by claiming to have granted DOGE read-only access to these payment systems. The reality is they were forced to limit access by a federal court, and DOGE officials could already have our sensitive information. The Trump Administration and DOGE’s actions – ignoring Congress’ authority over previously approved hundreds of millions of funds and threatening to ignore rulings by the courts – have pushed our country to the brink of a constitutional crisis.   

    As members of the House Ways and Means Committee, which is responsible for oversight of the Treasury Department, we are calling for our Republican colleagues to work with us to investigate. And the Department of Justice must put aside Trump’s political retribution agenda and prosecute any crimes that are found to have taken place. 

    Checks and balances are a constitutional responsibility to restrain an overzealous branch of government. We refuse to stand by while Trump and Musk test the limits of our democracy. 

    While the judicial branch process lawsuits challenging Musk and DOGE’s actions and access at Treasury, we will fight to keep Americans’ sensitive data private, and protect the payment systems that Americans depend on. 

    House Democrats only need three Republican members to join us in supporting our Taxpayer Data Protection Act to force a vote on the House Floor. So far, none have.  But we will keep fighting to pursue accountability, get answers, and aggressively push for transparency. And we may get into some good trouble to win those fights.

    Click here for the full opinion piece.

    Click here for Reps. Chu, Moore’s letter to Speaker Johnson on Ways & Means oversight of DOGE.

    Click here for a read-out of the initial meeting between Reps. Chu, Moore and the Speaker.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Rep. Mike Levin, Medical Providers & Patients Demand No Cuts to Medicaid Funding

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Sander Levin (9th District of Michigan)

    February 18, 2025

    Congressional Republicans’ Budget Proposal Would Slash Trillions from Medicaid for Tax Cuts to the Wealthiest Americans

    Vista, CA– Today, Rep. Mike Levin (CA-49), medical providers, and patients with Medi-Cal demanded that Congressional Republicans and the Trump Administration halt proposals to cut Medicaid funding and endanger health care services for millions of Americans.

    Congressional Republicans’ recent budget proposal, which is slated to be voted on by the full House of Representatives in the coming weeks, would slash trillions of dollars from Medicaid in order to give tax cuts to the wealthiest Americans. This budget proposal would threaten health care coverage for 80 million adults and children across the country, force community health centers to cut services or close, and leave hospitals to struggle to take care of patients. In the 49th Congressional District, 82,062 people on Medicaid are at risk of losing their health care under Congressional Republicans’ budget plans. This includes 32,896 children under the age of 19 and 9,892 seniors over 65 in the district.

    “We don’t have to guess what happens when Medicaid funding is slashed. We’ve seen it before. These proposed cuts would hit Vista Community Clinic and health centers like it the hardest. Clinics could be forced to lay off staff, cut programs, and reduce the number of patients they can treat. Patients could lose access to preventative care, end up in emergency rooms, and face skyrocketing medical bills,” said Rep. Levin. “Congressional Republicans want to cut Medicaid to pay for massive tax breaks to the ultrawealthy and giant corporations. They are telling working families, seniors, and people with disabilities that it is OK for them to get sicker so that billionaires like Elon Musk can get even richer.”

    Rep. Levin highlighted several dangerous parts of Congressional Republicans’ plans to attack Medicaid and health care that would directly impact California.

    One of the most dangerous parts is the attack on the Federal Medical Assistance Percentage, or FMAP. FMAP is the formula that determines how much federal funding California gets for Medicaid. Currently, the federal government covers 50% of California’s Medicaid costs, meaning for every dollar the state spends, the federal government matches it with another dollar. This allows California to provide health care for millions of residents, including the one in three Californians who rely on Medi-Cal. Congressional Republicans want to slash FMAP funding and force the state either to fill the funding gap or cut health care services.

    Congressional Republicans are also pushing per capita caps on Medicaid, which would limit federal funding without consideration for need for care or population growth. This would place an arbitrary limit on California, forcing the state to cut services.

    Rep. Levin also raised alarms about the so-called “Department of Government Efficiency,” or DOGE, potentially interfering with sensitive Medicare and Medicaid data. This raises concern that our country’s health care system could be dismantled by the unelected Elon Musk.

    As a member of the powerful House Appropriations Committee, Rep. Levin is fighting to ensure Medicaid is fully funded, community health centers have the resources they need to treat patients, and that the Trump Administration is held accountable for any attempts to strip away health care.

    “Today’s press conference was a powerful reminder of what’s at stake for millions of Californians who rely on Medi-Cal. We heard firsthand how essential this program is in ensuring access to healthcare for individuals and families who might otherwise go without. Cutting Medi-Cal and MediCare funding isn’t just a policy decision, it’s a decision that impacts real people, their health, and their futures. We are grateful to Congressman Levin for standing with us in the fight to protect Medi-Cal, and we urge all policymakers to prioritize the well-being of our communities by keeping this vital program fully funded,” said Fernando Sañudo, Chief Executive Officer of Vista Community Clinic

    “Protect Our Care is so thankful for health care champions like Representative Levin who are standing up to defend Medi-Cal from GOP cuts. Trump and Elon Musk want tax cuts for the richest Americans paid for by cutting health care for millions of Americans. We can’t let them win.,” said Nicole Serrano, Political Director, Protect Our Care California.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Timmons Announces Hearing on Trump Administration’s Plans to Restore U.S. Global Leadership

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman William Timmons (SC-04)

    Subcommittee on Military and Foreign Affairs Chairman William Timmons (R-S.C.) announced the subcommittee will hold its first hearing on “Emerging Global Threats: Putting America’s National Security First.” This hearing will examine how the Trump Administration is rebuilding the American military and foreign policy establishment to restore American security, safety, and prosperity at home and facilitate peace and stability abroad.

    “For four years we watched as the Biden Administration fumbled foreign diplomacy and instituted policy after policy which eroded America’s leadership on the world stage. It is imperative for the safety of Americans at home and abroad that the United States achieves peace through strength and re-centers our foreign policy on the advancement of U.S. interests. Under the leadership of President Trump, we are already witnessing the resurgence of America’s leadership globally. This hearing is a great opportunity to learn from experts what the U.S. can do to fully restore America’s ability to combat threats from the CCP and return trust to the American people that our foreign policy will keep them safe,” said Subcommittee Chairman Timmons.

    WHAT: Hearing titled “Emerging Global Threats: Putting America’s National Security First”

    DATE: Tuesday, February 25, 2025

    TIME: 10:00 a.m. ET

    LOCATION: 2247 Rayburn House Office Building

    WITNESSES:

    Dr. Meaghan Mobbs, Director, Center for the American Safety and Security, Independent Women’s Forum

    Mr. Brent Sadler, Senior Research Fellow, Naval Warfare and Advanced Technology, The Heritage Foundation

    Dr. Jacob Olidort, Senior Policy Advisory, Center for American Security, America First Policy Institute

    The hearing will be open to the public and press and will be livestreamed online at https://oversight.house.gov/.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Speaker Johnson Delivers Keynote Address to Alliance for Responsible Citizenship Conference

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Mike Johnson (LA-04)

    WASHINGTON — Yesterday, Speaker Johnson delivered the keynote address at the 2025 Alliance for Responsible Citizenship (ARC) global conference in London, England. Appearing remotely to the more than 4,000-person audience, Speaker Johnson warned against the threat of “soft despotism,” and encouraged leaders to “be prepared to steer their aims towards policies and mediating institutions that reduce government dominion over our lives and advance prosperity.”

    “The only way to reverse this trend into further technocratic tyranny is to recommit to our foundational principles and live them out. What made the West, and what made our nations great, must now guide us once again,” Speaker Johnson said.

    Watch Speaker Johnson’s full address here.

    Below are excerpts from the address:

    “Here in America, as you are all seeing, we’re in the midst of a great change. In our national election a few months ago, our people delivered truly a mandate to make our country great again and to restore common sense in our public policy. Here and elsewhere, the radical big government progressives pushed that pendulum too far and too aggressively to the left, and the people rose up and said, enough. And now that pendulum is beginning to swing back to the center, and we’ve been given a once-in-a-generation opportunity to demonstrate now to our nation and the new demographics of voters who have come into our Republican Party for the first time, that it really is our conservative policies that lead to human flourishing, because they’re better for individuals and families and communities, individual states, and our nation as a whole,” Speaker Johnson said

    “In America, we still believe in peace through strength, and we still understand our role in the world. A strong America is good for free people everywhere because it helps to keep the terrorists and the tyrants at bay. But to maintain our strength and leadership, our foreign policy must be centered on our own national interest. It’s a matter of common sense for each of our countries to acknowledge that we must each take care of our own houses before we help take care of the neighborhood,” Speaker Johnson said. “As we seek to make America safer, stronger, and more prosperous, we will encourage all our friends and allies to do the same in and for their own countries. The survival of the West will depend upon that. And this is how we will turn the tides, by refocusing and marshalling our many shared interests toward our own national interest.”

    “This trend is reflected in political apathy and the growing tendency of people to simply submit to governments whose laws have become so offensively intrusive and whose centers of power feel distant and inaccessible. If there is nothing to fight for, then why fight at all, Speaker Johnson said. ”This is the vision of the left, for the people to feel so powerless that they give in and just accept their fate as mindless vassals under the safe protection of the state. And the only way to reverse this trend into further technocratic tyranny is to recommit to our foundational principles and live them out. What made the West and what made our nations great must now guide us once again.

    Below is the full transcript of Speaker Johnson’s address as delivered: 

    Thank you, my dear friend, the Baroness. Good morning. I wish I could be there with all of you in person, and I am truly sorry that I’ve been prevented from making the trip now for the second year in a row. I was unexpectedly elected Speaker of the House just days before the inaugural ARC Conference in October 2023, and I had to send my last-minute regrets. And now, just days before this second conference that I had so much been looking forward to, I found myself once again with late breaking developments in Congress, this time involving our budget and government funding that simply doesn’t allow me to leave the country. But there’s no place I’d rather be than there with you this week as we had long planned, but I’m glad to at least have this opportunity to join you remotely. 

    We find ourselves in a very unique and consequential moment in history here in America and throughout the West. And I believe the timing of the ARC Conference is truly providential. I joined the ARC Advisory Board two years ago because I was so intrigued by the idea of bringing together so many thought leaders and change makers from around the world to, as we determined, ‘shape a hope-filled vision for the future.’ My friends, there really is great reason for our hope. 

    Here in America, as you are all seeing, we’re in the midst of a great change. In our national election a few months ago, our people delivered truly a mandate to make our country great again and to restore common sense in our public policy. Here and elsewhere, the radical big government progressives pushed that pendulum too far and too aggressively to the left, and the people rose up and said, enough. And now that pendulum is beginning to swing back to the center, and we’ve been given a once-in-a-generation opportunity to demonstrate now to our nation and the new demographics of voters who have come into our Republican Party for the first time, that it really is our conservative policies that lead to human flourishing, because they’re better for individuals and families and communities, individual states, and our nation as a whole.

    In recent decades, our government had become too large, too inefficient, and too powerful. And in too many cases, it had also been weaponized and corrupted. That is precisely what the framers of our Constitution feared and what political philosophers and historians over the centuries have warned against. Almost two centuries ago, Alexei de Tocqueville wrote of big government: “After having thus successfully taken each member of the community in its powerful grasp and fashioned him at will, the supreme power then extends its arm over the whole community. It covers the surface of society with a network of small, complicated rules, minute and uniform, which the most original minds and the most energetic characters cannot penetrate to rise above the crowd.”

    De Tocqueville noted that “such a power does not tyrannize, but it compresses, extinguishes, and stupefies a people till each nation is reduced to nothing better than a flock of timid and industrious animals of which the government is the shepherd.” Tocqueville called it soft despotism, a condition in which citizens voluntarily and gradually just surrender their rights and independence to the government, lured by the promise of security and stability. This kind of despotism doesn’t arrive through violence or open tyranny. Instead, it comes quietly, insidiously, through comfort and convenience. 

    Tocqueville warned of a future where citizens would become passive spectators in their own democracy, willful stewards of their carefully managed decline. Soft despots don’t break down your door and confiscate your weapons, they don’t arrest you in public for criticizing the government, and they don’t station soldiers on street corners to ensure your compliance. Soft despots ensure your compliance through normal democratic channels. 

    Regulations? Oh, they keep you safe. 

    Censorship? That’s to protect you from misinformation. 

    Surveillance? That’s necessary for your security, see.

    Dependence? It offers you stability. 

    And we see these forces at work in our society today. The architects of this soft despotism have taken shape too often as government bureaucrats and big tech and corporate elites, international institutions, media gatekeepers, and the welfare state. And their benevolent rule has given us nations without borders, grossly inefficient bureaucracies, a culture of surveillance, and a citizenry that is apathetic, distracted, and dependent. The dynamics are the same around the world. Whether you’re in Detroit or Manchester, Lyon or Berlin, the supreme power of big government has extended its arm over all of us. And the casualties of the soft despotism that’s taken hold have been the loss of our heritage, our national identities, our patriotism, and our prosperity. 

    In this civilizational moment, as our friend Oz Guinness describes it, will we choose renewal, replacement, or decline? In the U.S., we have just embarked on a new path of renewal. We are determined to bring about a new golden age in America, as President Trump says, and we are convinced that we can, if we return to the timeless foundational principles which lead to human flourishing. 

    The challenge we have today is ensuring that the current generations of our countrymen recognize and recommit to those principles. And what are they? In less than 17 months, the U.S. will celebrate the 250th anniversary of our Declaration of Independence. As G.K. Chesterton observed, “America was founded on a creed that is set forth with dogmatic and even theological lucidity,” he said. From. the second paragraph of the Declaration, “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, that to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.”

    Of the 56 men who signed the Declaration, almost all of them professed to be Christians, and at least half of them had received formal religious training in their education. Having studied the Bible, they recognize that we are not simply born equal, but rather created equal and that it is our Creator who endows us with our rights and not the state. They also recognize that all of us are made in the image of our Creator and thus every single person has an inestimable dignity and value. And that value is not related in any way to the color of our skin or where we live or what our talents are or anything else. Our value is inherent because it is given to us by God. 

    The founders of our country also understood that man has a fallen nature and that fallen men with power and no accountability can become a serious problem. Because power corrupts and as Lord Acton observed, “absolute power corrupts absolutely.” So, our system of government was meticulously designed with careful safeguards, like the separation of powers and checks and balances. And our founders emphasized that a government of the people, by the people, and for the people, could not long survive without a vibrant practice of religious faith, because they understood that is a necessary element to foster personal responsibility and to keep a general moral consensus among the people. A healthy, self-governing society relies on the moral character of its citizens. 

    It’s ironic, but on this day in America, we’re observing one of our 11 federal holidays, and this one’s known as President’s Day, which originally began as an annual celebration of George Washington’s birthday. In his farewell address, the father of our country noted this. He said, “Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensable supports.” Our second president, John Adams, reminded his countrymen that the American Constitution was, “made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.” The founders emphasized the importance of balancing individual liberty with personal responsibility. And our fourth president, James Madison, argued that every citizen should put the nation above their own self-interest. 

    The timeless virtues that are rooted in the Judeo-Christian tradition served as the foundation of America and of all Western civilization. But in recent decades, changes have happened rapidly, and left-wing social movements have advanced very aggressively. Many world leaders, convinced that national borders were obstacles to unity and social progress, sought to dismantle them in favor of global integration. 

    But a key downside to the new global order is that it ultimately led to a devaluing of local communities and a weakening of national identity, which was replaced instead by a divisive new racial, sexual, and gender-based identity. If Americans aren’t American anymore, and Brits aren’t British anymore, and Germans aren’t German anymore, then naturally something else will fill the void. If everyone is a citizen of the world, then no one is really accountable any longer to their own nation or to their own local community. 

    Unfortunately, these ideas have taken hold. We have heard a little bit about polls this morning. Here’s a few more. 50% of Germans under the age of 30 say they feel more European now than German. Only 40% of Americans say they are extremely proud to be American. Only one in five British adults consider themselves to be very patriotic. This trend is reflected in political apathy and the growing tendency of people to simply submit to governments whose laws have become so offensively intrusive and whose centers of power feel distant and inaccessible. If there is nothing to fight for, then why fight at all? 

    This is the vision of the left, for the people to feel so powerless that they give in and just accept their fate as mindless vassals under the safe protection of the state. And the only way to reverse this trend into further technocratic tyranny is to recommit to our foundational principles and live them out. What made the West and what made our nations great must now guide us once again. 

    During his trip through America, Tocqueville marveled at what he said was, “The extreme skill with which the inhabitants of the United States succeed in proposing a common object for the exertions of a great many men and in inducing them voluntarily to pursue it.” Those neighbors and local volunteers joined together to found seminaries, hospitals, prisons, libraries, and schools. They built society together with their own hands. 

    In all of our shared history in the West, it has remained true that strong communities have formed a bulwark against tyranny. Strong mediating institutions ground us in the needs of our community and the outgrowth of these institutions formed the basis for a healthy, engaged citizenry. Edmund Burke called them “little platoons.” He was referring to the families and churches and civic organizations and community groups which began at the smallest, most local level. Burke argued this bottom-up voluntary approach to society would deepen our sense of duty and shared responsibility to one another and also act as an important safeguard against a distant state authority. 

    While the spirit of voluntary association is currently on life support throughout the West, it is not dead. We see it in America every time there is a natural disaster. I’ve participated in this as a local citizen, and I’ve witnessed it often as an elected official.

    This past September, Hurricane Helene made landfall in the United States. It was an historic storm. For five straight days, torrential rains and 100-mile-per-hour winds swept across the Atlantic, devastating homes and communities and businesses. It hit western North Carolina the hardest. As the Speaker of the House, tasked with ultimately passing the relief efforts through Congress, I wanted to take a trip to ground zero to witness the scope of this destruction and meet with the individuals whose aid our aid would eventually impact. 

    One of our first visits in the state was to the First Baptist Church in Swannanoa, North Carolina. When we arrived, we were met with what looked like a military-grade aid station. It was so impressive. There were doctors and nurses and carpenters and chefs and scores of volunteers. The storm knocked out almost all of their cell and internet service throughout the entire region. So, I asked the pastor’s wife at that church, how did all this come together? 

    She informed me that an elderly woman in the community, who had recently purchased an entire cow to store in her deep freezer for the winter months, had lost her home in the storm, but somehow the deep freezer had survived. She was worried that the hundreds of pounds of meat in her freezer would spoil without electricity, so she loaded it into a vehicle and dropped it off somewhere she knew it would go to good use, and that was the local church. 

    Neither the pastor nor his wife were trained butchers, but they knew they had hungry mouths in the community, so they turned their sanctuary into a makeshift butcher shop and started cooking for the surrounding people. As the smell of grilled beef wafted above the small town, citizens showed up. And they continued to show up. And from that point forward, the church became the central hub for disaster relief, organized not by the state or the federal government, but by local neighbors, the community. It filled in where the bureaucracy could not. 

    In times of disaster, local organizations are often the first to respond, well before the broken and bureaucratic federal agencies ever arrive. And they often have a much higher mission success rate, by the way. In my home state of Louisiana, organizations like the Cajun Navy, an interconnected group of volunteers with boats and trucks, have saved thousands of Louisianians during storms like Hurricane Katrina. 

    I tell these stories because they serve as evidence that strong communities, built on the spirit of voluntary association and shared responsibility are still very much alive. But it is a shame that it takes a natural disaster for us to recognize their value. This level of civic engagement should be the rule and not the exception, because the same principles that drive effective local action in times of crisis can also inform national policy and global leadership. 

    In the last line of the Declaration of Independence, our founders wrote the following, “For the support of this declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of divine providence, we mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor.” America’s founders were willing to die for the cause of liberty, and this acknowledgment in our nation’s birth certificate signaled a commitment that America would place our national interest over our individual interests, and those of foreign nations. 

    While we have gradually lost sight of this concept, the new American government is proof positive that we can rekindle that spirit once again. On this national holiday of ours, I’ll quote the president that I most fondly remember from my youth, and that’s Ronald Reagan. He reminded us of this famous admonition. He said, “We cannot escape our destiny, nor should we try to do so. The leadership of the free world was thrust upon us two centuries ago in that little hall in Philadelphia. In the days following World War II, when the economic strength and power of America was all that stood between the world and the return of the Dark Ages, Pope Pius XII said, the American people have a great genius for splendid and unselfish actions. 

    Into the hands of America, God has placed the destinies of an afflicted mankind.” American leadership clearly did help bring about decades of peace and economic growth and prosperity for the Western democracies. 

    In America, we still believe in peace through strength, and we still understand our role in the world. A strong America is good for free people everywhere because it helps to keep the terrorists and the tyrants at bay. But to maintain our strength and leadership, our foreign policy must be centered on our own national interest. It’s a matter of common sense for each of our countries to acknowledge that we must each take care of our own houses before we help take care of the neighborhood. As we seek to make America safer, stronger, and more prosperous, we will encourage all our friends and allies to do the same in and for their own countries. The survival of the West will depend upon that. And this is how we will turn the tides, by refocusing and marshalling our many shared interests toward our own national interest. 

    Recent elections in places France, Italy, like Netherlands and Germany signal that millions of freedom-loving people around the world share our concerns about unchecked power and the erosion of national sovereignty. As leaders in government, academia, media, and the arts, we must be prepared to steer their aims toward policies and mediating institutions that reduce government dominion over our lives and advance prosperity. In short, we must not let this civilizational moment pass us by. 

    So how do we do it? As leaders, we should be working at every level to shift control away from established power centers and back to the people. The local school board will not be nearly as powerful if there is a thriving parent-teacher association holding them accountable. The county commission’s grip on zoning laws is weakened when neighborhoods take control of development initiatives. And organizations like the World Economic Forum lose their dominance when organizations like our ARC seek to challenge their hegemony. 

    History has proven that centralized governments thrive when their subjects are powerless and indifferent. If we want to protect our rights from tyranny, we have to focus, work, and build closest to home. And we must hold our elected leaders accountable. 

    President Reagan reminded us of another thing. He said, “Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn’t pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on so that they will know the same liberty, opportunity, and security that we have too often taken for granted.”

    This is our civilizational moment. The West is finally awakening once again. We have to seize this opportunity, and by God’s grace, we will. I hope you all enjoy this historic conference, and I thank you again for the opportunity to share with you this morning, and I so wish I was there in person. God bless you.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Trahan, Carey, Neguse, Duckworth, Curtis, Moreno Reintroduce Youth Poisoning Protection Act to Ban Commercial Sale of Lethal Chemicals

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Lori Trahan (D-MA-03)

    LOWELL, MA – Yesterday, Congresswoman Lori Trahan (D-MA-03) partnered with Congressmen Mike Carey (R-OH-15) and Joe Neguse (D-CO-02) as well as Senators Tammy Duckworth (D-IL), John Curtis (R-UT), and Bernie Moreno (R-OH) to reintroduce the Youth Poisoning Protection Act, bipartisan legislation that would ban the consumer sale of products containing high concentrations of sodium nitrite, a meat-curing chemical that can be lethal when ingested.

    “As a mom of two young girls, I’m committed to doing everything in my power to stop the devastating rise of youth suicide, one of the leading causes of death among teenagers in our country,” said Congresswoman Trahan. “The Youth Poisoning Protection Act takes direct, decisive action to stop the online sale of sodium nitrite, a lethal chemical that is being marketed to vulnerable individuals as a means to end their own lives. This is a commonsense, lifesaving measure, and Congress must act now to protect our young people and prevent further tragedies.”

    “Protecting our nation’s youth is crucial. The easy access of this harmful substance has resulted in senseless tragedies and has worsened the mental health crisis among America’s youth,” said Congressman Carey. “I am proud to work alongside Reps. Trahan and Neguse, and Sens. Duckworth, Curtis, and Moreno on this bipartisan, bicameral legislation to keep these deadly poisons out of the hands of our children.”

    A 2021 New York Times investigation into an online suicide forum found that sodium nitrite was being popularized and encouraged as an easily accessible method to die by suicide. The forum, which is disguised as a safe place to discuss suicidal ideation, hosts threads where anonymous users provide detailed instructions and real-time guidance on how to die by suicide using sodium nitrite. A 2021 toxicology publication based on data from the National Poison Data System (NPDS), one of the data sources used by the CDC, points to a rise in self-poisonings using sodium nitrite in the United States since 2017.

    There is no known recreational use for highly concentrated amounts of sodium nitrite, but at the time of the Times’ investigation, highly concentrated amounts of the poison were widely available on multiple e-commerce platforms, including with free two-day shipping on Amazon. Following outcry from lawmakers and victims’ families, Amazon and a number of other online marketplaces began removing sodium nitrite listings. In May 2023, a Canadian citizen was arrested and charged for shipping packages containing lethal amounts of sodium nitrite to over 40 countries, including 272 sales to individuals in the United Kingdom, of whom at least 88 people died.

    The Youth Poisoning Protection Act bans the sale of consumer products with a concentration of sodium nitrite greater than 10 percent.

    During her time in Congress, Trahan has consistently championed initiatives to address the mental health and youth suicide crisis. In 2022, she secured passage of the Garrett Lee Smith Memorial Act into law to support and strengthen youth suicide prevention efforts in schools across the country. This January, she reintroduced the Mentoring to Succeed Act, bicameral legislation that aims to provide a strong, sustainable support system through mentorship to ensure that children can successfully transition to high school, college, and the workforce. The same month, she was recognized as a congressional leader in the fight against the youth mental health crisis through her appointment as Co-Chair of the Bipartisan Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Task Force, a bipartisan group of members of Congress focused on ending the addiction crisis.

    If you or someone you know is having suicidal thoughts, feeling at risk of suicide, or experiencing a state of distress, it is crucial to find help immediately. There are many resources available, including the 988 Suicide & Crisis Hotline which provides free, confidential support 24/7, and the Crisis Text Line which offers free crisis counseling 24/7. Dial 988 or text HOME to 741741 to connect with these services.

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Dingell Requests Information From Ann Arbor, Detroit VA Medical Centers About Impact of Trump Administration VA Firings

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Debbie Dingell (12th District of Michigan)

    Congresswoman Debbie Dingell (MI-06) today sent a letter to Ginny Creasman, Director of the Charles S. Kettles VA Medical Center in Ann Arbor, and Chris Cauley, Director of the John D. Dingell VA Medical Center in Detroit, requesting updates about the impact of the Trump Administration’s dismissal of more than 1,000 Veterans Affairs employees.

    Dingell visited both VAs today as a part of her annual Valentines for Veterans tradition, and heard concerns and fears from many VA employees, both for their own job security, and for the health and safety of their patients.

    “As part of my annual “Valentines for Veterans” program, I visited John D. Dingell VA Medical Center in Detroit and the Charles S. Kettles VA Medical Center in Ann Arbor to deliver Valentine’s Day cards to veterans and thank them for their service. Today, as I have not seen before, the anxiety, stress, and tension among employees was clear,” Dingell wrote. “Employees expressed their thoughts quietly, very afraid of what would happen if they said something publicly. Those who confided in me expressed great worry and fear. While they’re concerned about the security of their own jobs, they’re even more concerned about the impact a reduction of staff would have on the veterans they serve. They worry about the adverse effects it would have ranging from the daily operation of the medical centers to patient health and safety.”

    “Employees are also deeply alarmed by the impacts of the administration’s decisions on research. The ongoing federal hiring freeze, coupled with the VA’s decision to dismiss employees, is resulting in terminations of VA researchers across the country,” Dingell continued. “Not only will this significantly curtail our understanding of how to treat mental health and substance abuse, illnesses relating to toxic exposure, and other afflictions veterans face higher risks of developing, but also stunt our progress on prosthetics and other innovative devices and technologies. Researchers across the VA have been improving the lives of veterans for decades, and any staffing reduction will mean veterans no longer gain the benefits of the VA’s research that is supposed to work on their behalf. 

    “Supporting the men and women who have served our nation should be a number one priority, and the quiet fears I heard today are deeply disturbing. This decision will have far-reaching consequences that harm veteran services and benefits and negatively impact critical research,” Dingell concluded. “We should be helping the VA recruit and retain a qualified workforce–not dismantling it, discouraging it, or causing low morale. Equally troubling, there seems to be no clear transition plan on how this announcement will be implemented.”

    Specifically, Dingell requested answers to the following questions:

    1. How many employees at your medical centers are being affected by the VA’s employee dismissal?
    2. Have any research projects at your medical centers been halted or canceled due to recent orders or directives? If so, how many, and please provide a description of each project. 
    3. How many staff members at your medical centers have accepted the federal buyout package? 
    4. Our understanding is some of the positions affected by the dismissal and federal buyout program were management positions at the VA. Their job responsibilities cannot go unfilled. What is your plan to replace these employees or ensure their job responsibilities are being distributed to others? 
    5. What is your timeline to resume deployment of the Oracle EHR? What funds are allocated for this deployment? How many staff members are working on this deployment, and do you require additional personnel to carry it out? 

    View the full text of the letter here.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Amodei Reintroduces the PROTECT Act

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Mark Amodei (NV-02)

    Washington, D.C. – Representatives Mark Amodei (NV-02) and Susie Lee (NV-03) reintroduced H.R. 1400, the Presumption for Radiation or Toxin Exposure Coverage for Troops Act (PROTECT Act). 

    This legislation would ensure comprehensive medical care to veterans exposed to radiation and other toxins at the Nevada Test and Training Range (NTTR) by establishing a presumption of exposure to radiation and toxins at NTTR between the years of 1972 and 2005.

    “Veterans, who made such selfless sacrifices for our nation, should not have to move mountains to prove they are suffering as a result of their service,” said Rep. Mark Amodei. “Yet, hundreds of veterans who were stationed at the NTTR during that time frame have been denied the benefits they rightfully earned because exposure to toxic chemicals is microscopic, often referred to as the invisible enemy. I will continue to amplify the indisputable access to care our veterans deserve throughout their post-service lives.”

    “Our men and women in uniform make countless sacrifices to keep our nation safe, so it’s our duty to ensure that we take care of them and protect them from invisible enemies like toxic radiation exposure,” said Congresswoman Susie Lee. “I helped pass the bipartisan PACT Act to do just that, and I’m continuing that work to get these veterans the long overdue care they deserve. This legislation will help save lives and bring justice to thousands of veterans who proudly served in Nevada.”

    I am very excited to see this next step in The Invisible Enemy’s fight to bring the benefits to an amazing group of veterans and DoD employees and contractors,” said Dave Crete, Chairman of The Invisible Enemy Non-profit. “We are grateful for Congressman Amodei’s willingness to be our champion in Congress to right a wrong that has been ignored far too long.”

    Read the bill text here.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Rep. LaMalfa Annouces the

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Doug LaMalfa 1st District of California

    (Washington, D.C.) – Today, Congressman Doug LaMalfa (R-Richvale) announced that the 2025 Congressional Art Competition is now open to all high school students in the 1st District. This year’s theme is “California Gold”. Competition guidelines and additional information can be found on the Congressman’s website. The deadline to apply is Friday, April 25th.

    The overall winning artwork will be displayed for one year in the U.S. Capitol along with other contest winners from all the other Congressional districts nation-wide.

    “I’m pleased to announce that this year’s Congressional Art Competition is now open, with the theme ‘California Gold.’ This competition gives talented young artists a chance to showcase their work on a national stage and brings a piece of Northern California to the halls of the U.S. Capitol. I look forward to seeing all the incredible submissions,” said Rep. LaMalfa.

    Congressman Doug LaMalfa is Chairman of the Congressional Western Caucus and a lifelong farmer representing California’s First Congressional District, including Butte, Colusa, Glenn, Lassen, Modoc, Shasta, Siskiyou, Sutter, Tehama and Yuba Counties.

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Pallone Warns of Devastating Health Care Cuts in Republicans’ Scheme to Fund Billionaire Tax Breaks

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Frank Pallone (6th District of New Jersey)

    Energy & Commerce Committee’s Top Democrat Visits Central Jersey Medical Center, Highlights Risks to Medicaid Patients and Community Health Centers

    PERTH AMBOY, NJ – Congressman Frank Pallone, Jr. (NJ-06), the Ranking Member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, visited Central Jersey Medical Center today to sound the alarm on President Trump’s and House Republicans’ plan to slash Medicaid funding—jeopardizing the health care of 1.7 million New Jerseyans and Community Health Centers (CHCs), hospitals, and nursing homes across New Jersey in order to bankroll massive tax cuts for billionaires and big corporations.

    “I saw up close today how Central Jersey Medical Center provides essential care—whether it’s preventive services, dental care, or managing chronic conditions—and I know what’s at stake if these cuts go through,” Pallone said. “House Republicans want to gut Medicaid to hand billionaires and corporations another tax break, and the consequences will be devastating. This isn’t about ‘fiscal responsibility’—it’s about ripping health care away from seniors in nursing homes, children, and people with disabilities. Slashing Medicaid would shut down health centers like this one, gut hospitals, and overwhelm emergency rooms. It’s immoral, and I’ll fight it every step of the way. New Jerseyans deserve better—I won’t let them rip away your health care just so Elon Musk can buy another rocket.”

    Last week, the House Budget Committee approved a budget resolution including at least $880 billion in Medicaid cuts over the next ten years.  These cuts would gut health care coverage for millions while handing giveaways to the ultra-rich. They would also cripple facilities like Central Jersey Medical Center, which provides essential primary, dental, and preventive care to thousands of working-class and low-income people in Perth Amboy and surrounding communities.  

    House Republicans are hoping to bring the budget resolution up for a vote of the full House as early as next week.  

    What’s at Stake for New Jersey?

    New Jersey’s 24 Community Health Centers provide care at 136 locations statewide, ensuring that nearly two million residents—including Medicaid patients, the uninsured, and underserved communities—have access to doctors, nurses, and preventive care. Medicaid currently covers 1.7 million New Jerseyans, including children, pregnant women, seniors in long-term care, and individuals with disabilities.

    Republicans’ proposed Medicaid cuts would destabilize New Jersey’s health care system, pushing more patients into already-strained emergency rooms, increasing uncompensated care costs, and driving up insurance premiums for everyone. Republican proposals, such as so-called “per capita caps” would shift costs onto states – forcing New Jersey to slash services, limit eligibility, and cut provider payments.    

    The drastic cuts to CHC funding would threaten the viability of health centers like Central Jersey Medical Center, which could be forced to close or severely limit services.  

    Pallone’s visit to Central Jersey Medical Center was attended by doctors, patients, and local leaders, all of whom echoed Pallone’s concerns about the devastating impact of the new Republicans’ tax scheme.

    “The Arc of New Jersey is grateful for Congressman Pallone’s unwavering commitment to protecting the Medicaid program. And that is exactly what we need from all members of Congress. Medicaid is the lifeline program for thousands of individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) living in New Jersey. Any cuts to funding or changes to benefits will absolutely mean a reduction in services, longer wait times for support and a diminished quality of life for those with IDD. We cannot allow a dismantling of Medicaid as it will have a devastating and crushing impact on the state’s most vulnerable,” Sharon Levine, Senior Director, The Arc of NJ 

    “Advocates for Children of New Jersey has been a longtime advocate for NJ FamilyCare, which now covers nearly 20% of all residents living in the Garden State. This includes more than 820,000 children, ages from birth to 18-years-old and covers about a third of all births annually. Children from poor and low-income families, youth aging out of foster care, and individuals with complex and long-term medical needs rely on this critical health insurance. Any cuts or changes to federal Medicaid funding will have a substantial impact on their health and well-being,” Mary Coogan, President and CEO, Advocates for Children of NJ 

    “CJMC delivers evidence-based, high-quality care to all New Jersey residents, regardless of their insurance status or their ability to pay. By providing high quality primary care and behavioral health services, CJMC will improve health outcomes and reduced healthcare costs,” Dr. Cynthia Vuittonet.

    “Too many New Jerseyans are already struggling to pay for groceries, housing, and medical bills,” said Maura Collinsgru, Director of Policy and Advocacy for New Jersey Citizen Action. “Gutting Medicaid funding will cut essential health services for millions, including pregnant women, people with disabilities, low-income families with children, and seniors in nursing homes. It’s inhumane to consider making these cuts so that billionaires and huge corporations can get another tax break. We urge all our Representatives to stand with Congressman Pallone against any efforts to defund Medicaid.”

    Pallone’s Role in Defending Health Care

    As Ranking Member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which oversees Medicaid and CHC funding, Pallone is a critical last line of defense against Republican attacks on health care access. He has led efforts to protect Medicaid funding, defend Americans’ health care coverage, and expand support for Community Health Centers.

    The House Energy and Commerce Committee is expected to soon take up elements of the Republican reconciliation plan, including deep Medicaid cuts. Pallone has vowed to lead the fight against these attacks.  He is committed to protecting the 70 million Americans on Medicaid and ensuring that Community Health Centers and hospitals are not sacrificed for tax breaks for Trump’s billionaire friends.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Congressman Rogers Calls on FEMA & Army Corps for Speedy Flood Response

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Harold Hal Rogers (KY-05)

    PIKEVILLE, Ky. — U.S. Rep. Harold “Hal” Rogers (KY-05), Dean of the House, called on federal officials for a speedy and thorough response to Eastern Kentucky counties impacted by recent deadly flooding, mudslides and high winds. Congressman Rogers personally spoke to leaders with the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Louisville and Huntington Districts to discuss improvements that are needed for federal flood relief and flood control efforts. He also spoke to local leaders about their specific needs in Eastern Kentucky as flood recovery begins once again. 

    “It has been less than three years since the last catastrophic flood ravaged our region in July 2022, causing widespread damage and multiple fatalities. We learned some key lessons from the last two disasters that we must improve for Eastern Kentuckians. Bureaucratic red tape and burdensome regulations have led to far too many delays in previous relief efforts and flood control projects, so I discussed more efficient operations with FEMA and the Army Corps,” said Congressman Rogers. 

    As Dean of the House and the Kentucky Federal Delegation, Congressman Rogers led a joint letter to President Trump in support of Governor Andy Beshear’s request for an expedited Major Disaster Declaration. President Trump swiftly approved the Governor’s request for an Emergency Disaster Declaration on Sunday, and this request for an expanded Major Disaster Declaration will provide widespread federal relief in counties that meet the threshold for public and individual assistance. 

    “I specifically requested mobile centers for FEMA to reach more people as quickly as possible. We also discussed previous offsets that prevented some flood survivors from accessing multiple sources of funding for home repairs, replacing appliances and other needs. We need to ensure Eastern Kentuckians have access to all available funds that can help them get back on their feet.”

    Congressman Rogers has secured more than $800 million in federal funding for  U.S. Army Corps of Engineers flood control projects in southern and eastern Kentucky during his service to the region. 

    “We’ve seen the life-saving value of effective Army Corps projects along the Cumberland River, the Big Sandy and Tug Fork,” said Congressman Rogers. “We must work faster and more efficiently to remove dangerous debris and sediment in our waterways. We must also complete the flood control projects that are already underway in Coal Run, Town of Martin, Paintsville, Beattyville, and along the Kentucky River. These investments are crucial, but project delays have proven to be detrimental with three back-to-back flooding events in the last five years.”

    For more information about Congressman Rogers’ work in Washington and at home in Kentucky, visit halrogers.house.gov and follow him on FacebookX and Instagram

    MIL OSI USA News