Category: Asia Pacific

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Telstra found to have misled nearly 9,000 Belong customers over broadband speed claims

    Source: Australian Competition and Consumer Commission

    The Federal Court has today found that Telstra made false or misleading representations relating to the upload speed of residential broadband internet services supplied to nearly 9,000 of its Belong customers, following court action by the ACCC.

    In October and November 2020, Telstra migrated 8,897 customers who were on a Belong NBN plan with a maximum download speed of 100 megabits per second (Mbps) and a maximum upload speed of 40Mbps, to a service with a maximum upload speed of 20Mbps.

    Telstra did not notify customers of the reduction in the maximum upload speed in their service. “Telstra’s failure to inform customers that their broadband service had been altered denied them the opportunity to decide whether the changed service was suitable for their needs,” ACCC Commissioner Liza Carver said.

    “There was no reduction to the price Telstra charged its customers even though the cost charged by NBN Co to Telstra was $7 a month less for the new, lower speed service.”

    Telstra admitted that it had represented to 2,785 of the Belong customers, who acquired the 40 Mbps plan between 1 May 2017 and 19 September 2018, that they were receiving a Belong NBN Broadband service with a maximum upload speed of 40Mbps, when they were not.  

    Telstra continued to make these representations by failing to update customers once the unilateral migration had occurred. Telstra acknowledged its failure in 2021 and provided a one-off $90 credit to these consumers.

    The Court also found that Telstra had made false or misleading representations to a further 6,112 Belong customers who had acquired the 40mbps plan between 20 September 2018 and October 2020.

    While Telstra never stated the maximum upload speed to these customers, the Court found that these consumers would have reasonably construed the service to which they were bound was the same in all material aspects, including upload speed, as it had always been.

    “It is simply unacceptable for a supplier of essential services to mislead consumers when reducing the quality of the services it is providing to its customers,” Ms Carver said.

    “We expect better from the country’s largest retail broadband internet service provider and believe these customers, who ultimately received a service they did not agree to, should be compensated.”

    The ACCC is seeking declarations, penalties, consumer redress, costs and other orders.

    The Court will determine the penalty and any consumer redress after a hearing on a date to be fixed.

    Background

    Telstra is Australia’s largest telecommunications supplier, supplying the largest number of retail broadband internet services and owning the largest mobile network over which it supplies both retail and wholesale services. It is a publicly listed company, incorporated in Australia.

    Belong was launched by Telstra in 2013 as a low-cost mobile and internet service provider, operating semi-independently in a number of areas, including products, marketing, service, billing and parts of IT.

    Upload speed refers to the speed at which an internet connection can allow data to be sent from personal devices to the internet, such as sending files, presentations or media content when working or studying from home or sharing photos and videos.

    In May 2020, NBN Co launched new wholesale consumer speed tiers, including a new 100/20Mbps wholesale speed tier, which costs retail service providers $7 less per month than the 100/40Mbps plan on a wholesale level.   

    The ACCC instituted these Federal Court proceedings against Telstra in December 2022.

    The ACCC has previously instituted proceedings against Telstra on several occasions, including in August 2021 for making alleged false or misleading representations in their promotions of some 50Mbps and 100Mbps NBN plans. Telstra was subsequently ordered to pay $15 million in penalties in that case.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: (WIP) Big batteries in 2025: the market evolution continues

    Source: Allens Insights

    Another big year for BESS 12 min read

    Utility-scale batteries reached new heights in 2024, achieving several industry firsts. Milestones include the first project-financed virtual offtake agreement and long-term energy service agreement (LTESA), coupled with inventive approaches to revenue stack structuring. As investor interest intensifies, the future of battery storage looks promising.

    This latest Insight on the Australian big battery market delves into the recent trends, the potential opportunities and hurdles for this rapidly evolving industry.

    Key takeaways

    • Project financing of battery energy storage system (BESS) projects is on the rise, with an increasingly sophisticated market, a widening pool of sponsors and diverse range of investment structures.
    • Virtual offtake agreements are dominating the offtake market, giving developers greater flexibility in their revenue stack and opportunities for equity upside through market arbitrage.
    • Interest in the Capacity Investment Scheme and LTESAs is increasing and contributing to projects reaching financial close.
    • Equity investors continue to be attracted to standalone and co-located BESS projects, as well as investment in the hardware and software of a battery.

    What we are seeing in the market

    A growing number of battery projects achieved financial close across the past year and project finance has continued to be the dominant approach. We have seen significant greenfield and operational battery projects financed on a standalone basis and as part of hybrid projects, as well as portfolio-based financings. 

    Key examples of this trend are the renewables portfolio financings for Global Power Generation, FRV and Neoen, all of which included battery projects as part of the technology mix. Akaysha Energy’s standalone financing of its Orana Battery Energy Storage System marked a financing for the largest four-hour BESS in Australia’s National Energy Market (NEM), and one of the largest in the world. 

    The continued support in the project finance market for battery storage projects has been driven by a range of factors, including:

    • a widening pool of sponsors—and, in some cases, extremely strong sponsors—who are investing in the technology;
    • a diverse range of investment structures and rationales, which have seen developers and sponsors raise debt financing for batteries on a standalone and portfolio basis, or as part of co-located or hybrid projects. In some cases, this has been motivated by a business pivot or expansion in response to an increasing need to couple projects with intermittent generation sources with a firming energy source or, more generally, net zero and decarbonisation objectives; and
    • increasing sophistication and experience of developers, contractors and other stakeholders in relation to procurement and contracting strategy, trading strategy, management of interface and gap risk in the context of split contracting, and innovation in revenue structures.

    These trends have been accompanied by—and, in some ways, conducive to—an expanding range of financiers (including mainstream commercial banks, government lenders and other non-bank lenders) participating in financings for battery projects; a greater understanding from lenders of technology and degradation risk; and a greater market acceptance of split contracting structures and non-traditional revenue structures as bankable.

    Throughout 2024 we observed a marked increase in the development and adoption of virtual offtake agreements as a preferred offtake structure. Notable examples are Neoen’s Western Downs BESS and Victorian Big Battery, and, as mentioned earlier, Akaysha’s Orana BESS. 

    A virtual offtake agreement decouples the financial offtake from the physical project. The project company may therefore choose not to follow the instructions of the offtaker and instead operate the BESS according to its own internal trading strategy, but it must still settle the financial swap on pre-agreed terms, regardless of battery capacity and how much the battery is charged or discharged. 

    From the project company’s perspective, unlike a traditional physical toll, it retains control of the physical battery. This increases the opportunities for equity upside through trading arbitrage. The structure also facilitates greater flexibility for a single project to procure offtake agreements with multiple offtakers. It may also be compatible with hybrid or co-located projects in need of multiple offtakers for different components of the project.

    Virtual offtakes are not, however, for everyone. Both the owner and the offtaker need sophisticated trading teams to allow them to make the most of the virtual arrangements and to reduce the risk of making losses. Similarly, developers who want to sell out of a project prior to financial close may want to consider whether a virtual offtake agreement could limit the potential buyer pool to those that have the technical capability to trade the asset.

    In considering this type of structure from a financing perspective, lenders will be focused on mitigating the potential downside exposure in circumstances where physical trading by the project company underperforms against the virtual nominations, eroding actual base case revenue against revenue assumptions against which debt is sized.  

    Providing lenders with appropriate oversight and protections (including, if required, agreed trading protocols), while providing sufficient room for equity to seek upside opportunities, will be the key to building broader market acceptance of the bankability of non-traditional revenue structures such as virtual offtake agreements.

    Last year saw the Federal Government launch the first five tenders in its Capacity Investment Scheme, which wrapped in a tender for the NSW Government’s LTESAs.

    Each tender round has been oversubscribed, indicating a strong appetite from project developers to secure a government underwriting contract such as a Capacity Investment Scheme Agreement (CISA) or an LTESA

    While these underwriting contracts have typically been viewed by project financiers as welcome enhancements, they have traditionally been seen as a ‘nice-to-have’ feature, with the primary focus of lenders being on whether the project has the benefit of a traditional tolling or offtake agreement. At most, we saw sponsors and borrowers proposing to recognise CISAs and LTESAs acting as a floor against any potential market risk (either due to the residual life of the BESS past the offtake tenor or for partially contracted assets). 

    More recently, we are seeing lenders develop a greater understanding of how such agreements can underpin forecast project cashflows in a way that enables higher weighting to be placed on them as a certain and bankable revenue line in the base case financial model. This approach is often supported by tailored protections that are agreed in the debt documents, such as:

    • undertakings around how the project activates and manages its rights to receive support payments;
    • information undertakings, to provide lenders with appropriate visibility over the operation of the underwriting agreement during the facility term; and
    • cash reserving requirements, to facilitate the project maximising the benefit of underwriting agreements, while providing for a buffer should there be a need to meet any payment obligations back to the counterparty (eg reconciliation payments or rebates).

    As more government underwriting agreements are awarded under the LTESA and CISA schemes, there will be an increasing number of projects in the market where such agreements are a feature of the revenue profile. We expect that market acceptance of this approach will continue to broaden over time.

    Split contracting has established itself as the market standard for BESS projects, with sponsors and financiers becoming significantly more comfortable with managing and banking the interface risks between battery supply and balance of plant (BOP) scope.

    Commissioning, handover, defects, security, liability caps and liquidated damages coverage continue to be key areas of focus in negotiations, gaps analysis and bankability assessments. However, the issues, and the related mitigation strategies and contingencies, are now well understood.

    As the BESS split contracting structure has matured, we have also begun to see sponsors with a portfolio of upcoming BESS and other renewables projects seek to partner informally with preferred battery suppliers and/or BOP contractors across that pipeline—the goal being to expedite procurement timeframes, secure production slots and standardise terms across their portfolio.

    With BESS projects increasingly being co-developed with related solar/wind projects (either greenfield or expansions), we also expect to see an increase in a common BOP contractor delivering both the battery and solar/wind BOP scope. At this stage, the BOP scope usually remains ringfenced between assets (eg there is a BESS BOP contract and a solar BOP contract). However, we expect to see sponsors push towards a single hybrid project BOP contract covering both assets, to seek to streamline contracting terms and construction programs on hybrid projects.

    In order to ensure that the structure is bankable, project financiers require a rigorous gaps analysis process underpinning the contract negotiations, along with confidence in the capability and experience of the contractors themselves. The need for a robust gaps analysis does mean more substantial engagement with financiers, and sponsors and developers have had to factor this into the overall transaction timetable. However, the continued rise in standard terms contracts from certain contractors in the market may facilitate efficiencies in the due diligence process, especially on portfolio-based financings.

    Investors continue to be attracted to BESS assets. Unsurprisingly, the reasons for their increasing investment appeal are similar to why we are seeing more and more BESS projects reach financial close.

    These factors enable BESS owners to diversify and maximise revenue output from their renewable energy portfolios. Coupled with favourable investment characteristics for BESS assets, such as lower capex costs and shorter development timelines (particularly when compared with other renewable asset types), we expect to see investment appetite for BESS assets continue to grow.

    In the Australian M&A market, this investor appetite has manifested primarily in the form of co-location ‘add-ons’—where vendors looking to sell a solar or wind project have added a BESS development opportunity to the project. If the BESS can be developed on the project’s existing land footprint, the ‘add-on’ process is relatively simple (other than for the connection process, which continues to cause headaches for developers), and the project up for sale can be rebranded as a co-located wind/solar and BESS project, unlocking for the buyer the various new revenue streams. For the vendor, those additional revenue streams mean a higher purchase price.

    What’s on the horizon

    Recognition of sub-investment grade offtakers?

    The offtaker’s credit quality will continue to be a focus for lenders when assessing BESS projects. However, as a greater range of offtakers enter the market, we can expect more frequent proposals for financiers to consider counterparties that may not have the credit ratings that would typically be required for a bankable project.

    We are seeing this area incrementally develop. This is particularly so in renewables portfolio financings, where certain sub-investment grade offtakers may be recognised and given greater weighting (and, in some cases, equivalent to an investment grade offtaker) as part of debt sizing cashflows, subject to appropriate percentage caps and other criteria being met.

    Opportunities for fully merchant BESS projects

    A further example of the evolving market for BESS financings may be found in the recent Amp Energy project financing of a fully merchant BESS project by commercial bank lenders and Export Development Canada. While we have certainly seen project financings for BESS projects with merchant exposure, those projects have typically included at least some contracted revenue component (whether through a tolling agreement, virtual power purchase agreement, LTESA or revenue risk-sharing agreement). 

    This makes the Amp transaction an interesting market development. Depending on the project and the sponsor, the debt model on the Amp transaction may not be feasible for all sponsors and developers, given that a fully merchant BESS compared with a contracted BESS would necessarily mean more conservative debt sizing, at least in the short term. However, for certain sponsors with strong equity backing, where a high percentage of equity is available to be contributed to individual projects, and where there are challenges or other commercial reasons for not procuring an offtake, a fully merchant-based project financing may still be attractive. 

    Whether this means we will see a growing number of merchant BESS project financings is unclear. The Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO) forecasts energy storage capacity in the NEM will increase from approximately 2GW at the end of 2024 to nearly 7GW by the end of 2025.1 As more BESS projects come online over time, there may be fewer arbitrage and other similar revenue opportunities. 

    At least in the short term, we expect this may lead to certain sponsors and developers more closely exploring opportunities to raise debt against BESS projects that are fully merchant or that have substantial merchant exposure.

    Investment in BESS platforms and core components

    A growing trend is the investment in BESS-specific investment platforms. While only a limited number have come to market in Australia so far (including the recent ZEBRE BESS platform announced by ZEN Energy and HDRE), we have worked with a number of investors who are looking at opportunities in this space. Investors are drawn to the benefits of BESS projects described above and the potential to accelerate the growth of those benefits when they are aggregated on a portfolio basis.

    We have also seen increased investment interest in core BESS components, including:

    • the hardware—as rival technologies, focused on cost efficiency and safety, are emerging to challenge lithium-based batteries; and
    • the software—focusing in particular on storage and discharge optimisation.

    While the current focus from investors in these core BESS components appears to be on systems designed for the residential and commercial and industrial markets, the ambition for a number of these technologies is to scale up to the utility-scale BESS market.

    Commencement of the GO Scheme

    The Guarantee of Origin Scheme (the GO Scheme) is set to commence in 2025, bringing with it new tradeable certificates in the form of Renewable Energy Guarantee of Origin (REGO) certificates. Unlike large-scale generation certificates, REGOs will be able to be created by energy storage systems (such as batteries) where there is a ‘direct supply relationship’ with an eligible renewable energy facility.

    In addition, REGOs will be time-stamped, meaning they will record the hour of the day in which they were generated. This will allow temporal matching of electricity generation and consumption, and will likely drive a price differentiation between eg REGO certificates generated at 1pm when there is excess solar generation and 1am when renewable energy supply is scarce.

    The introduction of REGO certificates presents an interesting opportunity, and a potential new revenue source, for BESS projects.

    More information on the GO Scheme can be found in our previous Insight.

    Revenue implications from AEMO’s market interventions

    Under the National Electricity Rules, AEMO has powers to issue mandatory ‘directions’ to registered participants in the NEM in relation to the operation of their facilities. This is not uncommon, and is primarily used by the market operator to manage periods of volatility in the market and maintain the reliability standard. Participants are subsequently reimbursed for their compliance via a well-established compensation framework administered by AEMO.

    AEMO has indicated that it intends to use its directions power on battery operators to address the increasingly commonplace minimum system load issues— eg by directing an operator to fully discharge batteries early in the morning and to hold the batteries at minimum charge during the morning, with the direction lifted in the early afternoon.

    However, there are growing concerns that this directions compensation model is not fit for purpose for standalone batteries and other energy storage technologies. The financial model for a standalone BESS is particularly reliant on taking advantage of exactly these periods of financial volatility in the market, and AEMO’s directions compensation framework may not be appropriate in providing adequate financial redress for the opportunity cost that is lost by virtue of being required to comply with an AEMO direction.

    Following the AEMC’s ‘Review into electricity compensation frameworks’, the final report for which was published in December 2024 and can be found here, we expect there to be continued discussions on this issue, to ensure that BESS operators are fairly compensated for AEMO’s market interventions.

    Vanadium flow as an emerging alternative to lithium-ion?

    As the BESS market expands, we expect to see competing technologies emerge as alternatives to lithium-ion batteries. The WA Government recently announced $150 million of funding to develop a 50MW / 500MWh vanadium flow battery (VFB) in Kalgoorlie, which would be Australia’s largest VFB. While VFBs have been mooted for a number of years as a potential utility-scale alternative to lithium-ion batteries, the first (and largest) ‘commercial’ VFB in Australia (a 2MW / 8MWh battery) was only commissioned in mid-2023, as part of the Spencer Energy Project.

    The key roadblocks to the widespread adoption of utility-scale VFBs seem to be higher upfront costs compared with lithium-ion batteries (vanadium is heavily used in steel refining, which creates price and supply chain volatility), and lower roundtrip efficiency of around 70–85% (compared with 90–95% for lithium-ion batteries).

    Despite this, VFBs seemingly provide a number of commercial benefits compared with lithium-ion batteries. In particular, VFBs offer longer storage duration (between 8–12 hours), and the theoretical ability to discharge completely and for an unlimited number of times without significant degradation (providing a much longer and consistent asset life). Further, VFBs are said to be safer (and fire resistant), and storage capacity can be easily increased by adding more electrolyte. At scale and over time, these benefits could help drive a significantly lower LCOE. The WA Government’s funding may be the catalyst to cut upfront costs and kickstart VFBs as a leading alternative to lithium-ion batteries.

    The continuing evolution

    As we look ahead, it is clear that 2025 promises to be another exciting year for the BESS sector. We expect to see more diverse, and growing, opportunities for battery projects, including across construction contracting, revenue structures, project and portfolio-based financing, and M&A. 

    If you would like to hear more about what we’re seeing in the market, please contact any of the team members below.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: NSW Government funds expanded support services in response to spike in antisemitic incidents

    Source: New South Wales Government 2

    Headline: NSW Government funds expanded support services in response to spike in antisemitic incidents

    Published: 21 February 2025

    Released by: Prime Minister of Australia, Minister for Multiculturalism


    In response to a recent surge in antisemitic incidents targeting Jewish neighbourhoods and synagogues, the NSW Government is committing $200,000 to Jewish House to expand their vital community support services.

    This funding will contribute to essential crisis intervention, mental health support, and community assistance in response to the rise of antisemitism in NSW.

    For more than 40 years, Jewish House has been a leader in crisis care, providing help to vulnerable members of the Jewish community when they need it most.

    Since the recent outbreak of antisemitic attacks across our state, Jewish House has seen a significant increase in requests for support and assistance from across the state.

    This funding further reinforces the NSW Government’s commitment to combating antisemitism and racism by ensuring those affected receive the care and assistance they need while holding those responsible for these heinous acts accountable.

    This follows reforms that the NSW Government introduced to parliament this sitting fortnight that confront hate speech and antisemitism by establishing a new criminal offence for intentionally inciting racial hatred, while also protecting places of worship and further criminalising Nazi symbols.

    NSW Premier Chris Minns said:

    “The recent attacks on the Jewish community have no place in our society. These acts are deeply distressing and we’re working around the clock to make sure those responsible face the full force of the law while supporting the community with essential services like these.

    “This funding will see Jewish House expand its support services, providing guidance, practical advice and emotional care to the community.”

    Minister for Multiculturalism Steve Kamper said:

    “No community should be made to feel fearful in NSW. When any part of our society is threatened, it is a challenge for us all, but the Government remains committed to safeguarding social cohesion against hate and division.”

    “This announcement today will help a community organisation that is empowering the Jewish community to look after each other and create a more compassionate and understanding community. “

    Jewish House Chief Executive Rabbi Mendel Kastel OAM said:

    “The recent rise in antisemitic incidents have caused fear and hurt throughout our community. As a result, we’re seeing a significant increase in requests for help.”

    “At Jewish House we can provide resources, guidance and tools to stand tall in the face of adversity.

    “The funding will allow us to expand our vital services and continue to provide the essential support that is very much needed right now.”

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Grassley, Klobuchar Seek to Increase Access to Affordable Prescription Drugs

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Iowa Chuck Grassley

    WASHINGTON – Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), a senior member and former chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, joined Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) in reintroducing the Safe and Affordable Drugs from Canada Act. The bipartisan bill would allow Americans to safely import prescription drugs from Canada – lowering costs, increasing access and strengthening competition in the pharmaceutical market. 

    “Congress must take an all-of-the-above approach to lowering the price of prescription drugs. Our commonsense, bipartisan bill would provide Americans increased access to safe, affordable prescription drugs available in Canada, while boosting much-needed competition in the pharmaceutical industry,” Grassley said

    “Americans pay the highest prices in the world for prescription drugs,” Klobuchar said. “Our bipartisan legislation would save Americans money by allowing them to import their medications from pharmacies in Canada. Brand-name prescription drugs that we invent here in America cost more than twice as much in the United States as in Canada. Americans deserve better. Building on my legislation to allow Medicare to negotiate lower prescription drug costs, I will continue to work to increase competition in the pharmaceutical market so Americans no longer get ripped off by Big Pharma.” 

    Find bill text HERE. 

    Background:

    Lowering the cost of prescription drugs and increasing transparency in the pharmaceutical industry are among Grassley’s top priorities. This Congress, he introduced two bipartisan bills to shine light on the shady practices of pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs), as well as legislation to boost price transparency in prescription drug advertisements.  

    In 2017, Grassley urged the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to use its statutory authority under the Medicare Prescription Drug Improvement and Modernization Act of 2003 to fast-track the importation of prescription drugs from Canada under certain circumstances. In 2020, the first Trump administration finalized regulations and issued guidance allowing states and Indian Tribes to import prescription drugs from Canada under certain circumstances and with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s approval. Additionally, Grassley in 2021 sent a bipartisan letter to HHS highlighting his commitment to securing the importation of certain prescription drugs from Canada. 

    -30-

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Democratic Republic of Congo: MSF staff member critically injured in Masisi town after shots hit MSF base

    Source: Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF)

    Kinshasa/Goma/Brussels, 20 February 2025 – A staff member from international medical organisation Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF) has been critically injured after shots hit the MSF base in Masisi town, in Democratic Republic of Congo’s North Kivu province, on the morning of 20 February. A child who had sought refuge with his family in the MSF compound was also wounded by gunfire. MSF strongly condemns the shootings, which seriously undermine the principle of protecting aid workers and humanitarian facilities in times of conflict.

    “This morning, one of our colleagues on duty at the MSF base in Masisi was seriously injured by a bullet – one of many bullets to hit our premises over recent weeks,” says MSF head of programmes Stephan Goetghebuer. “Unfortunately his life is in danger. During the shootings, a child who had taken refuge at our base was also slightly injured by a bullet. We strongly condemn this latest episode of violence, which has directly impacted a humanitarian facility that should be protected from gunfire.”

    Since early January, the area in and around Masisi town in southern North Kivu province has been fought over almost daily by VDP/Wazalendo fighters (allied with the Congolese army) and the M23/Alliance Fleuve Congo (AFC). The clashes have led to an influx of wounded – most of them civilians – at Masisi general referral hospital, which is supported by MSF, while thousands of people have sought refuge at the MSF base and the hospital compound.

    “On Thursday, intense fighting, including the use of heavy weapons, took place in the town itself, which has been controlled by the M23/AFC since mid-January,” says Goetghebuer. “Notably, fighting took place between the MSF base and the market in front of the hospital, where thousands of people have been sheltering for days.”

    Since early January, Masisi hospital, the MSF base and the immediate surroundings have been the scene of numerous serious incidents.

    On 16 January, two civilians were shot in front of Masisi hospital; one was killed. On 19 January, the hospital and MSF base came under fire and two MSF staff were injured when a rocket hit MSF’s garage next to the hospital. On 28 January, a woman was shot dead during clashes that took place between the MSF base and nearby MSF office. On 16 February, a Ministry of Health staff member was wounded by a stray bullet that entered the hospital.

    “These violent, recurring incidents are unacceptable,” says Goetghebuer. “Despite our repeated appeals to the warring parties to protect humanitarian and health facilities, the safety of patients and medical and humanitarian staff is clearly not being taken into account. Humanitarian law is being flouted. This must stop.”

    Masisi hospital, supported by MSF since 2007, has received dozens of war-wounded in recent days.

    In view of the repeated violent incidents affecting MSF’s work in Masisi town, MSF is currently considering how to adapt its activities in the region, where people’s medical and humanitarian needs are massive.

    MSF is an international, medical, humanitarian organisation that delivers medical care to people in need, regardless of their origin, religion, or political affiliation. MSF has been working in Haiti for over 30 years, offering general healthcare, trauma care, burn wound care, maternity care, and care for survivors of sexual violence. MSF Australia was established in 1995 and is one of 24 international MSF sections committed to delivering medical humanitarian assistance to people in crisis. In 2022, more than 120 project staff from Australia and New Zealand worked with MSF on assignment overseas. MSF delivers medical care based on need alone and operates independently of government, religion or economic influence and irrespective of race, religion or gender. For more information visit msf.org.au  

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Wyden Blasts Musk and Trump for Hurting Tribal Communities by Cutting Health Staff

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Ron Wyden (D-Ore)

    February 20, 2025

    Washington, D.C. U.S. Senator Ron Wyden said today he has joined Senate colleagues in condemning Elon Musk and Donald Trump’s efforts to lay off Indian Health Service staff at a time when a significant health care workforce shortage already exists for Tribal communities in Oregon and nationwide. 

    “Tribal Nations have a legal and political relationship with the United States, and the federal government has a fundamental obligation to fulfill its treaty and trust responsibilities to Tribal Nations – an obligation that includes providing services such as health care to Native communities,” wrote Wyden along with nine other senators. 

    Recent reports show more than 850 IHS employees, who provide critical medical care for Tribal communities, are at risk of being immediately laid off.

    “Not only will this lead to worse health outcomes, but overall costs will also rise. With less health care services at existing IHS facilities, there will be increased Purchased Referred Care referrals. This will increase costs for the Federal government and require increased travel, accommodations, and expenses, creating increased hardships and barriers for patients and families seeking care far from where they live on Tribal lands.,” the senators continued. 

    The letter was led by U.S. Senator Ben Ray Luján D-N.M. In addition to Wyden, the letter was signed by U.S. Senators Alex Padilla, D-Calif., Tina Smith, D-Minn., Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., Martin Heinrich, D-N.M., Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., Mark Kelly, D-Ariz., and Catherine Cortez Masto, D-Nev.

    Full text of the letter is here.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI China: 200 fraud suspects repatriated from Myanmar to China

    Source: China State Council Information Office 2

    A group of 200 Chinese citizens suspected of involvement in fraud returned to China under the escort of Chinese police on Thursday after being repatriated from Myawaddy in Myanmar. [Photo/Xinhua]
    A group of 200 Chinese citizens suspected of involvement in fraud returned to China under the escort of Chinese police on Thursday after being repatriated from Myawaddy in Myanmar.
    The suspects were first sent to Thailand’s Mae Sot, which shares a border with Myawaddy, on Thursday, before being flown back to China on several chartered flights. They arrived at an airport in Nanjing, the capital of eastern Jiangsu Province.
    The 200 Chinese citizens are the first group of telecom fraud suspects repatriated from Myanmar to China, according to the Ministry of Public Security (MPS).
    It added that more than 800 other Chinese fraud suspects are expected to be repatriated in the coming period.
    The repatriation of these suspects marks a significant achievement of law enforcement cooperation between China, Myanmar and Thailand against telecom fraud, the ministry said.
    According to the ministry, law enforcement authorities from the three countries recently launched a joint operation against telecom fraud in Myawaddy.
    In coordination with this effort, Thailand has cut off electricity, internet and fuel supplies to Myawaddy, and strengthened patrols to prevent illegal border crossings by individuals involved in fraud.
    Myanmar has deployed forces to raid telecom fraud compounds in Myawaddy, arrested fraud suspects, and rescued Chinese nationals trapped in scam operations.
    An official with the ministry said the three countries would institutionalize joint operations to combat telecom fraud and other transnational crimes on a regular basis. The ministry also vowed to continue to dismantle telecom fraud compounds and effectively safeguard the lives and property of Chinese citizens.
    Over recent years, Chinese authorities have made coordinated efforts to fight these rampant crimes.
    Last month, law enforcement authorities of China, Myanmar and Thailand reached a consensus to further strengthen trilateral law enforcement cooperation, establish a joint anti-crime mechanism, and jointly tackling wire and cyber fraud, human trafficking and other cross-border crimes.
    “Fighting online gambling and telecom fraud is a must choice to safeguard the common interests of China and other regional countries, and is what people of all countries want,” said Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun at a daily news briefing on Thursday.
    Resolutely cracking down on crimes of online gambling and telecom fraud also demonstrates the countries’ commitment to the people-centered development philosophy, said Guo.
    Earlier this month, a Chinese court in Zhejiang Province tried 23 defendants including key members of several major telecom fraud groups based in northern Myanmar. They were charged with 11 counts of criminal offences including fraud, intentional homicide, intentional injury, illegal detention, operating casinos, drug trafficking, and organizing prostitution.
    A prior official statement emphasized that the handling of the case reflects China’s dedication to protecting the legitimate rights and interests of the nation and its citizens.
    According to the Supreme People’s Procuratorate, between January and November 2024, China’s procuratorial authorities nationwide charged over 67,000 individuals with telecom and online fraud, up 58.5 percent year-on-year.
    Since the launch of a special campaign in July 2023, police have apprehended over 53,000 Chinese suspects involved in telecom and internet fraud operating from northern Myanmar.
    In an exclusive interview with Xinhua, Benedikt Hofmann, acting regional representative of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) for Southeast Asia and the Pacific, noted that telecom fraud has expanded rapidly in terms of the number of victims, geographical reach, and financial losses. The UNODC estimates that annual economic losses from such scams in East and Southeast Asia range between 20 billion and 40 billion U.S. dollars.
    Noting the recent cooperation between China and members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), including Thailand and Myanmar, Hofmann said this has created “a significant sense of momentum” for international efforts to tackle the issue.
    China has provided crucial support to other countries in combating both drug-related crimes and telecom fraud schemes, Hofmann said, suggesting that China’s approach to tackling telecom fraud, including active prevention measures, could provide invaluable experience for other countries. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: China releases first standards for mangrove restoration

    Source: China State Council Information Office 2

    China’s first technical group standards for the precise ecological restoration of mangroves have been released and implemented, according to the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ South China Sea Institute of Oceanology.
    The standards, led by the institute, are the country’s first technical guidelines in the field, addressing the lack of standardized procedures for precise mangrove restoration and evaluation. They are expected to promote the protection and sustainable development of mangroves further in China.
    Mangrove ecosystems, located at the dynamic interface between land and sea in intertidal zones periodically submerged by seawater, are unique coastal ecosystems with high ecological, social and economic value. They play a critical role in supporting offshore fisheries, purifying the environment, and enhancing carbon sequestration.
    However, challenges resulting from global climate change and human activities, such as rising sea levels, abnormal temperatures and increasing pollution, have led to significant environmental changes that threaten these vital ecosystems.
    According to the State of the World’s Mangroves 2024 report released by the Global Mangrove Alliance, the world’s total mangrove area currently stands at approximately 14.7 million hectares, a decrease of 2.3 million hectares compared to the 17 million reported by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization in 2005. Alarmingly, 50 percent of the world’s mangroves are at risk of collapse.
    As a result, accelerating the restoration of damaged mangrove ecosystems has become an urgent priority for international marine science, making mangrove ecological restoration and protection a key focus in global marine research.
    China has 27,100 hectares of mangroves. To better protect these ecosystems, the Chinese government launched the Mangrove Protection and Restoration Action Plan (2020-2025) in 2020, aiming to expand the country’s mangrove area to 36,000 hectares by 2025, thereby supporting the national “dual carbon” strategy.
    At that time, there was no standardized technical protocol for the precise ecological restoration of mangroves, either domestically or internationally.
    The development of such guidelines is crucial to standardizing restoration and evaluation techniques across different habitats, to guiding practical applications, and to promoting the sustainable development of mangrove ecosystems and biological resources in China, South Asia and Southeast Asia.
    The new standards establish principles and technical processes for the precise ecological restoration of mangroves in various habitats, including species selection, screening and configuration, and microbial community configuration. They also provide methods for evaluating the efficacy of mangrove restoration.
    The technical specifications proposed in the standards are designed to be practical, easy to implement, and compliant with relevant national laws and regulations.
    By filling the gap in this field, the standards ensure that mangrove restoration and assessment efforts are guided by clear criteria, enhancing the ecological health and functions of mangroves, and promoting the development of precise restoration and evaluation practices. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Auckland overnight motorway closures 21 to 28 February 2025

    Source: New Zealand Transport Agency

    NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi advises of the following closures for motorway improvements. Work delayed by bad weather will be completed at the next available date, prior to Friday, 28 February 2025.

    Please note this traffic bulletin is updated every Friday.

    Daily updated closure information(external link)

    Unless otherwise stated, closures start at 9pm and finish at 5am. Traffic management may be in place before the advertised closure times for the mainline.

    NORTHERN MOTORWAY (SH1)

    • Southbound lanes between Tristram Avenue off-ramp and Northcote Road on-ramp, 23-27 February (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)
      • Tristram Avenue southbound on-ramp, 23-27 February
    • Northbound lanes between Northcote Road off-ramp and Tristram Avenue on-ramp, 25-26 February (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)
      • Northcote Road northbound on-ramp, 25-26 February (approx. 9:30pm to 5:00am)
    • Stafford Road northbound off-ramp, 23-27 February
    • Curran Street northbound on-ramp, 23-27 February
    • Shelly Beach Road southbound off-ramp, (approx. 9:00pm 22 February to 12:00pm 23 February)

    CENTRAL MOTORWAY JUNCTION (CMJ)

    • SH1 northbound to SH16 (Port) eastbound link, 24-27 February (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)
    • SH1 northbound to SH16 westbound link, 24-27 February (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)
    • Westbound lanes between Quay Street/Tamaki Drive and Parnell Rise, (approx. 9:00pm 21 February to 5:00am 24 February (24/7)

    SOUTHERN MOTORWAY (SH1)

    • Northbound lanes between Ellerslie-Panmure Highway off-ramp and Wellesley Street East on-ramp, 24 & 26-27 February (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)
      • Gillies Avenue northbound on-ramp, 24 & 26-27 February (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)
      • Greenlane northbound on-ramp, 24 & 26-27 February (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)
      • Ellerslie-Panmure Highway northbound on-ramp, 24 & 26-27 February (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)
    • Northbound lanes between Ellerslie-Panmure Highway off-ramp and Gillies Avenue on-ramp, 25 February (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)
      • Greenlane northbound on-ramp, 25 February (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)
      • Ellerslie-Panmure Highway northbound on-ramp, 25 February (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)
    • Southbound lanes between Greenlane off-ramp and Greenlane on-ramp, 24 February (approx. 10:30pm to 5:00am)
    • Northbound lanes between Manukau off-ramp and East Tamaki Road on-ramp, 25 February (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)
      • Te Irirangi Drive northbound on-ramp, 25 February
      • Redoubt Road northbound on-ramp, 25 February
    • Northbound lanes between Papakura off-ramp and Redoubt Road on-ramp, 26-27 February (approx. 9:30pm to 5:00am)
      • SH1 northbound to SH20 northbound link, 26-27 February (approx. 9:30pm to 5:00am)
      • Hill Road northbound on-ramp, 26-27 February
        • Takanini northbound on-ramp, 26-27 February
      • Papakura (Diamond) northbound on-ramp, 26-27 February Papakura (Loop) northbound on-ramp, 26-27 February
    • Papakura southbound off-ramp, 23-25 February
    • Papakura (Loop) southbound on-ramp, 23-25 February
    • Papakura (Diamond) southbound on-ramp, 25 February
    • Papakura northbound off-ramp, 23-24 February
    • Northbound lanes between Drury/SH22 off-ramp and Papakura on-ramp, 23-24 February
      • Drury/SH22 northbound on-ramp, 23-24 February
    • Drury/SH22 northbound on-ramp, 26-27 February
    • Bombay southbound off-ramp, 23-27 February
    • Bombay northbound on-ramp, 23-27 February
    • Bombay northbound off-ramp, 23-27 February

    NORTHWESTERN MOTORWAY (SH16)

    • Southbound lanes between Waimauku roundabout and Trigg Rd, 25-26 February (approx. 8:00pm to 5:00am)
    • Northbound lanes between Trigg Rd and Waimauku roundabout, 25-26 February (approx. 8:00pm to 5:00am)
    • Southbound lanes between Access Road and Taupaki Road roundabout, 24 February
    • Northbound lanes between Taupaki Road roundabout and Access Road, 24 February

    UPPER HARBOUR MOTORWAY (SH18)

    • Eastbound lanes between Tauhinu Road off-ramp and Albany Highway on-ramp, 23 & 27 February
      • Greenhithe Road eastbound on-ramp, 23 & 27 February

    SOUTHWESTERN MOTORWAY (SH20)

    • Southbound lanes between Lambie Drive off-ramp and SH1 links, 25 February (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)
      • Lambie Drive southbound on-ramp, 25 February
      • SH20 southbound to SH1 northbound link, 25 February (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)
      • SH20 southbound to SH1 southbound link, 25 February (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)

    GEORGE BOLT MEMORIAL DRIVE (SH20A)

    • None planned

    PUHINUI ROAD (SH20B)

    • None planned

    STATE HIGHWAY 22 (SH22)

    • None planned

    STATE HIGHWAY 2 (SH2)

    • None planned

    Please follow the signposted detours. NZ Transport Agency thanks you for your co-operation during these essential improvements and maintenance.

    Current overnight closure information(external link)  

    Auckland roads and public transport(external link)

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Dargaville offenders located

    Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

    Dargaville Police have identified offenders involved in a string of burglaries earlier this week.

    Enquiries have been underway since three businesses were targeted in the early hours of 18 February.

    Whangārei – Kaipara Area Commander, Inspector Maria Nordstrom, says local staff have been investigating.

    Burglaries had occurred at a retail store, dairy and petrol station.

    “We are treating these three burglaries as linked, and have identified three young people allegedly involved,” Inspector Nordstrom says.

    “All three, who are aged between 11 and 15 are being referred to Youth Aid.”

    Police are not currently seeking any further offenders over these incidents.

    “I’d like to acknowledge our staff who worked quickly to identify those responsible in these cases,” Inspector Nordstrom says.

    “Your local Police are continuing to work closely with the local community groups around addressing any concerns and ways to keep yourself safe.”

    ENDS.

    Jarred Williamson/NZ Police

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI: Hundreds of Customers LLC Launches Habanero Social Platform, Revolutionizing AI-Powered Google Business Profile Management

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    OVERLAND PARK, Kan., Feb. 20, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Hundreds of Customers LLC is excited to announce the launch of HabaneroSocial.com, a state-of-the-art platform designed to transform the management of Google Business Profiles (GBP). Powered by artificial intelligence (AI) and the innovative AI assistant “Samwise,” Habanero Social offers businesses an automated solution to optimize their GBP, improve local SEO, and streamline reputation management—allowing them to focus on growth while boosting their online presence.

    Habanero Social AI-Driven Google Business Profile Automation Platform from Hundreds of Customers LLC

    In today’s digital-first world, businesses must maintain an optimized Google Business Profile to stay competitive. Traditional methods of managing a GBP can be time-consuming and inefficient. Habanero Social solves this problem by automating crucial tasks like content publishing, review management, and local SEO optimization, using Samwise to keep businesses ahead of the competition.

    In addition to Habanero Social, Hundreds of Customers LLC also offers Rank With News, a guaranteed SEO service designed to improve website rankings through strategic media placements. By combining Rank With News with Habanero Social, businesses now have a complete, integrated solution to enhance both their local search visibility and global online authority.

    Key Features of the Habanero Social Platform:

    • Automated Google Business Profile Optimization: Samwise, the platform’s AI assistant, updates and optimizes business descriptions, services, and attributes for better search engine visibility and local rankings.
    • AI-Driven Reputation Management: Automate review requests, responses, and reputation monitoring to maintain a strong, professional online presence.
    • Content Automation: Schedule and automate posts, images, and videos to keep your Google Business Profile fresh and engaging, without manual effort.
    • Enhanced Local SEO: Samwise ensures your Google Business Profile is optimized for local search terms, geotagging images and videos for maximum visibility.
    • Seamless Integration: Integrate with platforms like Zapier and CompanyCam to automate review requests, image management, and more.

    “Habanero Social is the perfect solution for businesses that want to improve their Google Business Profile and boost their local SEO without the hassle,” said Justin West, founder of Hundreds of Customers LLC. “With the added power of our Rank With News SEO service, businesses can not only dominate local search results but also enhance their brand authority through guaranteed media placements.”

    “As a business owner, you understand the importance of being visible to potential customers on platforms like Google My Business and Google Maps. With the right SEO strategy in place, your SEO efforts can help your business stand out, but managing everything manually can be overwhelming. Fortunately, using advanced SEO tools like Habanero Social allows you to automate business listings, optimize Google My Business profiles, and stay on top of important business updates—all while reducing repetitive tasks that can drain your time. Whether you’re managing multi-location businesses or working to improve customer satisfaction, our platform provides actionable insights to enhance SEO performance and boost your online visibility.

    “By automating social media posts and gathering positive reviews,” West continued, “you can improve your online reputation and drive organic traffic to your site. The platform offers real-time rank tracking, allowing you to monitor your SEO rankings and search performance as it evolves. From keyword optimization to content writers creating SEO- optimized content, you’ll gain valuable insights into your keyword rankings and see improvements in organic search results. Stay ahead of the curve with real-time updates on your social media platforms and search engine optimization, all while tracking your organic traffic and ensuring your customer interactions are optimized for success.”

    The Habanero Social platform offers businesses a comprehensive understanding of their Google Business Profile and optimizes it through AI-driven optimizations. By automating the post creation process and providing AI-generated Google Business posts, businesses can ensure relevant, high-quality content is consistently published, addressing content gaps that may hinder their visibility. The AI-powered platform streamlines data-heavy, repetitive tasks, allowing businesses to focus on growth while AI-driven summaries and data-driven insights guide their SEO efforts. 1-click publishing enables quick and easy updates, ensuring regular updates to the Google Business Profile, even for businesses with a physical location. Additionally, businesses can use this automation tool to address SEO obstacles, such as responding to negative reviews and consistently publishing high-quality content across their profiles, all without needing an SEO agency.

    With the growing importance of maintaining an active and optimized Google My Business Management profile, businesses are turning to AI-powered solutions for efficient and streamlined operations. Effective content creation, including the publishing of relevant content and regular updates, is crucial to keeping a Google Business Profile engaging and up- to-date. By automating the process of posting fresh content, businesses can ensure their profiles remain active, improving search engine rankings and increasing visibility on Google Search and Maps. These systems also help businesses monitor their customer reviews and facilitate timely review replies, which are key for fostering customer engagement and driving foot traffic. Additionally, AI tools provide comprehensive insights into search volume and customer feedback, enabling businesses to target relevant keywords that improve their visibility in local search results.

    A complete digital footprint includes not only optimized content but also accurate business details and business citations across trusted platforms. With proprietary citation management tools, businesses can easily ensure that their essential details—such as location, contact information, and services—are consistent across the web, further boosting their SEO efforts. The use of an AI-powered content editor can help businesses create content tailored to effective keywords, making it easier to address SEO obstacles and stay competitive. As businesses see progress over time through increased search visibility, these platforms provide valuable data on performance, including tracking key metrics like customer engagement and search engine rankings. By utilizing these tools, businesses can gain deeper insights into their online presence and leverage the data to optimize their approach to local SEO and increase relevant content output consistently.

    Rank With News offers businesses a guaranteed SEO solution that places them on the first page of Google through high-quality media coverage. These media placements drive traffic to their websites, strengthen their online authority, and improve search rankings, creating the perfect complement to Habanero Social’s automated GBP management and local SEO capabilities.

    Hundreds of Customers LLC on Google Maps

    Habanero Social AI-Driven Google Business Profile Automation Platform from Hundreds of Customers LLC

    About Hundreds of Customers LLC

    Hundreds of Customers LLC is a digital marketing firm focused on providing innovative solutions for businesses looking to grow their online presence. With the launch of Habanero Social, the company continues to lead the way in AI-powered marketing, offering businesses powerful tools for optimizing their Google Business Profiles. Additionally, through its Rank With News service, Hundreds of Customers LLC helps businesses achieve guaranteed SEO results through media placements that enhance their authority and search rankings.

    Press Inquiries

    Hundreds of Customers LLC / Rank With News
    https://rankwith.news
    Justin West
    justin@rankwith.news
    913 203 4252
    9200 Indian Creek Pkwy
    STE #047b
    Overland Park, KS 66210

    Photos accompanying this announcement are available at
    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/db9f5012-89f3-4c07-bd8a-59eef0d95118
    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/a655bea2-9f69-4f8b-abbc-cc921d39c72c
    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/551959bd-9f31-4ed7-8c8a-c0ea74b232d5

    A video accompanying this announcement is available at
    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/b12912c9-9328-4de4-a8ea-20f110e7e8ed

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Have fun, but stay safe at Electric Avenue this weekend

    Source: New Zealand Police (National News)

    Attributable to Detective Senior Sergeant Karen Simmons

    Police want everybody attending Electric Avenue to have a good time, but ensure they are safe too.

    There will be a Police and Security Team presence at the event to keep you safe. Please talk to us if you have any concerns about your own or someone else’s safety or wellbeing.

    Look after your mates. Make sure you have an agreed meeting point in case anyone gets lost, and a fully charged mobile phone.

    If you are drinking alcohol, eat before you attend the event and have a glass of water in between alcoholic drinks. Never leave your drink unattended and make sure to never take a drink you have not personally seen poured.

    Know Your Stuff will be at the event, however Police advice remains to avoid taking any drugs.

    Have a plan to get home safely after the event, and if you are observing anything where you or somebody else is in danger, call 111 immediately.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Tech and Security – New Zealand’s digital wellbeing ranking declines with the biggest setback in internet affordability

    Source: SurfShark

    The Digital Quality of Life Index is an annual study that ranks 121 countries by their digital wellbeing based on 5 core pillars: internet quality, internet affordability, e-security, e-infrastructure, and e-government                                

    Surfshark’s Digital Quality of Life Index (DQL) 2024 ranks New Zealand 32nd in the world. The study indicates how well the country is performing in terms of overall digital wellbeing compared to other nations. New Zealand dropped by five places from last year, which suggests the commitment to develop the digital landscape and position the country as a leader in leveraging technological advancements to improve citizens’ quality of life has slowed down. (ref. https://surfshark.com/research/dql )

    “In an election year like 2024, where the digital realm shaped political discourse and societal values, prioritizing digital quality of life proved to be more important than ever. It helps to ensure informed citizens, protects democratic processes, and fosters innovation. Our annual project helps to better understand where each county stands in terms of digital divide, highlighting where a nation’s digital quality of life excels and where further focus is required,” says x, Surfshark’s spokesperson.

    Out of the Index’s five pillars, New Zealand performed best in e-infrastructure, claiming 19th place, but faced challenges in e-security, ranking 36th. The nation ranks 23rd in e-government, 30th in internet affordability, and 35th in internet quality. In the overall Index, New Zealand surpasses Australia (37th) but lags behind the UK (9th). In Oceania, New Zealand takes 1st place and leads the region.    

    New Zealand ranks higher in e-government than 81% of the countries analyzed, with 98 countries falling below it.       

    E-government determines how advanced and digitized a country’s government services are. A well-developed e-government helps minimize bureaucracy, reduce corruption, and increase transparency within the public sector. This pillar also shows the level of Artificial Intelligence (AI) readiness a country demonstrates. Countries with the highest readiness to adopt AI technology are also ready to counter national cyberthreats. New Zealand ranks 23rd in the world in e-government — nine places lower than last year.

    New Zealand is 36th in the world in e-security — same as last year.  

    The e-security pillar measures how well a country is prepared to counter cybercrime and how advanced a country’s data protection laws are. New Zealand outperforms Australia, which ranks 42nd, but lags behind the UK, which takes 23rd place in the e-security pillar. New Zealand is prepared to fight against cybercrime; the country has good data protection laws.     

    “New Zealand has robust data protection laws, with its Privacy Acts sharing key similarities with the GDPR — one of the world’s strictest data protection frameworks. Both regulate data collection, usage, and transfers; however, unlike the GDPR, New Zealand’s Privacy Acts do not emphasize consent or address rights such as data erasure, objection, portability, or DPIAs. On the other hand, they provide more detailed guidelines for information sharing with public agencies. Despite strong data protection laws, improving New Zealand’s ability to combat cybercrime remains an important area for growth. A 2024 study by telecommunications company Kordia highlighted vulnerabilities affecting businesses, including third-party vendor failures, cloud misconfigurations, and security lapses. Strengthening e-security will be key to enhancing New Zealand’s digital quality of life in the future,” says x, Surfshark’s representative.

    New Zealand’s internet quality is 17% higher than the global average.                                              

    New Zealand’s fixed internet averages 240Mbps. To put that into perspective, the world’s fastest fixed internet — Singapore’s — is 347Mbps. Meanwhile, the slowest fixed internet in the world — Tunisia’s — is 14Mbps.

    New Zealand’s mobile internet averages 152Mbps. The fastest mobile internet — the UAE’s — is 430Mbps, while the world’s slowest mobile internet — Yemen’s — is 12Mbps.

    Compared to Australia, New Zealand’s mobile internet is 5% slower, while fixed broadband is 115% faster. Since last year, mobile internet speed in New Zealand has improved by 19%, while fixed broadband speed has grown by 9%.  

    Despite the setback, the internet is affordable in New Zealand compared to other countries.        

    New Zealanders have to work 1 hour 15 minutes a month to afford fixed broadband internet. While this is less than average, it is 5 times more than in Bulgaria, which has the world’s most affordable fixed internet (Bulgarians have to work 14 minutes a month to afford it). 

     
    New Zealanders have to work 51 minutes 19 seconds a month to afford mobile internet. This is 4 times more than in Angola, which has the world’s most affordable mobile internet (Angolans have to work 9 minutes a month to afford it).              

    “This year’s Digital Quality of Life (DQL) ranking revealed a decline in New Zealand’s internet affordability. And DQL is not the only research that highlights this — recent research from Cable.co.uk placed New Zealand 128th globally for broadband affordability. The average monthly broadband cost in New Zealand was reported at NZD 82 — a staggering twenty times higher than Sudan, which topped the list as the most affordable. An expert from Cable.co.uk also noted that the high cost of broadband in developed nations like New Zealand is not necessarily due to the expense of deploying advanced infrastructure but is often influenced by higher earnings and market conditions. To improve its overall digital quality of life, New Zealand may need to look deeper into enhancing its internet affordability,” says x, Surfshark’s representative.

    New Zealand is 19th in e-infrastructure.  

    Advanced e-infrastructure makes it easy for people to use the internet for various daily activities, such as working, studying, shopping, etc. This pillar evaluates how high internet penetration is in a given country, as well as its network readiness (readiness to take advantage of Information and Communication Technologies). New Zealand’s internet penetration is high (96% — 14th in the world), and the country ranks 23rd in network readiness.

    On a global scale, investing in e-government and e-infrastructure improves digital wellbeing the most.                                      

    Among the five pillars, e-government has the strongest correlation with the DQL Index (0.92), followed by e-infrastructure (0.91); internet affordability shows the weakest correlation at 0.65.        

    METHODOLOGY

    The DQL Index 2024 examines 121 nations based on five core pillars that consist of 14 indicators. The study is based on the United Nations’ open-source information, the World Bank, and other sources. New Zealand’s full profile in the 2024 Digital Quality of Life report and an interactive country comparison tool can be found here: https://surfshark.com/research/dql/country/NZ

    NOTES

    Surfshark is a cybersecurity company focused on developing humanized privacy and security solutions. The Surfshark One suite includes one of the very few VPNs audited by independent security experts, an officially certified antivirus, a private search tool, and a data leak alert system. Surfshark is recognized as the Tech Advisor’s Editor’s Choice for 2024. For more research projects, visit our research hub at: surfshark.com/research

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-Evening Report: Fiji’s diplomatic move to Jerusalem sparks controversy with Palestine

    RNZ Pacific

    Fijian Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka’s announcement this week that the island nation will open a diplomatic mission in Jerusalem has been labelled “an act of aggression” by Palestine.

    On Tuesday, the Fiji government revealed that Cabinet had decided to locate its consulate in Jerusalem, which remains at the centre of the Palestine-Israel decades-long conflict.

    According to an overwhelming United Nations General Assembly Resolution ES‑10/19 on 21 December 2017 (128-9), Israel’s claim to Jerusalem as capital of Israel is “null and void”.

    Previous UN Security Council resolutions demarcated Jerusalem as the capital of the future state of Palestine.

    The Fijian government said in a statement: “Necessary risk assessments will be undertaken by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry of Defence, in consultation with relevant agencies, prior to and during the establishment process.”

    Fiji and Israel established diplomatic relations in 1970 and have partnerships in security and peacekeeping, agriculture, and climate change.

    In a Facebook post on Wednesday, Rabuka said he “received a phone call from my friend Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, expressing his gratitude for Fiji’s decision to open a diplomatic mission in Jerusalem.”

    “Even though very brief, we reaffirmed our commitment to strengthening Fiji-Israel ties,” he said.

    “I also took the opportunity to express my deepest condolences for the tragic events of October 7, 2023, when Hamas attacked innocent lives in Israel.

    Palestine’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs condemned Rabuka’s decision and is demanding the Fijian government “immediately reverse this provocative decision.”

    ‘Violating international law’
    “With this decision, Fiji becomes the seventh country to violate international law and UN resolutions regarding the city’s legal and political status and the rights of the Palestinian people,” it said in a statement.

    The seven countries include Papua New Guinea.

    “This decision is an act of aggression against the Palestinian people and their rights.

    “It places Fiji on the wrong side of history, harms the chances of achieving peace based on the two-state solution, and represents unacceptable support for the occupation and its crimes.”

    The statement added that Fiji’s move “blatantly defies UN resolutions at a time when the occupying power is escalating its attacks against Palestinians across all of the Palestinian Territory, attempting to displace them from their homeland.”

    The ministry said that it would continue to take political, diplomatic, and legal action against countries that opened or moved their embassies to Jerusalem.

    “It will work to hold them accountable for their unjustified actions against the Palestinian people and their rights.”

    In September 2024, Fiji was one of seven Pacific Island nations that voted against a United Nations resolution to end Israel’s occupation of Palestine.

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: OPEC Fund and Indonesian AID strengthen development cooperation

    Source: OPEC Fund

    February 19, 2025: The OPEC Fund for International Development (OPEC Fund) and the Indonesian Agency for International Development (Indonesian AID) have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) that provides the basis for enhanced collaboration in key development areas such as climate action, food security, renewable energy, health and technical capacity building.

    The OPEC Fund and Indonesian AID will join forces on project co-financing as well as the identification and preparation of infrastructure, health and sustainable development projects, particularly in least developed countries and Small Island Developing States.

    The MoU was signed in Jakarta by OPEC Fund Vice President of Strategy Musab Alomar, on behalf of OPEC Fund President Abdulhamid Alkhalifa, and Indonesian AID Chief Executive Officer Tormarbulang Lumbantobing.

    OPEC Fund President Abdulhamid Alkhalifa said: “Indonesia is a founding member of the OPEC Fund and a dedicated supporter of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. Strengthening ties with OPEC Fund member country development agencies enhances our ability to deliver impactful solutions in food security, renewable energy and health in partner countries. Through our shared goals and collaboration we will increase impact and improve livelihoods, while driving progress toward the delivery of the Sustainable Development Goals.”

    Indonesian AID Chief Executive Officer, Tormarbulang Lumbantobing said: “As a newly developing organization, we are very pleased to collaborate with the OPEC Fund. We can learn a lot from the best practices of the OPEC Fund, especially in terms of project management. Collaboration in certain projects with the OPEC Fund will also further enhance the role of Indonesia AID in development in OPEC Fund partner countries.”

    The partnership builds on the OPEC Fund’s commitment to international cooperation and Indonesian AID’s dedication to global development.

    About the OPEC Fund

    The OPEC Fund for International Development (the OPEC Fund) is the only globally mandated development institution that provides financing from member countries to non-member countries exclusively. The organization works in cooperation with developing country partners and the international development community to stimulate economic growth and social progress in low- and middle-income countries around the world. The OPEC Fund was established in 1976 with a distinct purpose: to drive development, strengthen communities and empower people. Our work is people-centered, focusing on financing projects that meet essential needs, such as food, energy, infrastructure, employment (particularly relating to MSMEs), clean water and sanitation, healthcare and education. To date, the OPEC Fund has committed more than US$29 billion to development projects in over 125 countries with an estimated total project cost of more than US$200 billion. The OPEC Fund is rated AA+/Outlook Stable by Fitch and AA+, Outlook Stable by S&P. Our vision is a world where sustainable development is a reality for all.

    About Indonesian AID

    The Indonesian Agency for International Development (Indonesian AID) is committed to strengthening global alliances and delivering impactful development programs that address critical challenges and promote sustainable solutions. As an institution dedicated to international cooperation, Indonesian AID plays a crucial role in advancing the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Africa – Arab Fund and United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (UN-ESCWA) Join Forces to Upgrade Data Portal for Sustainable Development in the Arab Region

    SOURCE: Islamic Development Bank Group (IsDB Group)

    The three-year partnership will include hands-on workshops, the creation of knowledge sharing resources, and the development of innovative strategies to improve development indicators

    KUWAIT CITY, Kuwait, February 20, 2025/ — The Arab Fund for Economic and Social Development and the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (UN-ESCWA) signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to enhance the Arab Development Portal (https://apo-opa.co/4h645gR), a key online data resource for Arab countries. This collaboration aims to speed up Arab countries’ progress towards achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

    The portal is a regional knowledge and data platform providing access to reliable development data from various credible sources. The upgraded version will include tools powered by artificial intelligence tools, user-friendly dashboards and predictive analytics, offering valuable insights into economic trends, global benchmarks, and SDG indicators.

    “This collaboration with the Arab Fund, representing ACG institutions, marks a pivotal step in strengthening data-driven, evidence-based decision-making across the Arab region. By enhancing data dissemination and accessibility, we empower policymakers and researchers with the insights needed to address critical challenges in economic development, public health, unemployment, climate resilience, and other key areas aligned with the Sustainable Development Goals,” said Rola Dashti, Under-Secretary-General and Executive Secretary of UN-ESCWA.

    The Arab Development Portal (https://apo-opa.co/4h645gR) was established by the Arab Coordination Group (ACG) (https://apo-opa.co/41ouIJ4), an alliance of 10 Arab development institutions including the Arab Fund.

    “Partnership is at the core of our new strategy to maximize our impact on social and economic development across member countries,” said Bader Alsaad, Arab Fund’s Director General and Chairman of the Board of Directors. “Together with UN-ESCWA we will use our expertise and resources to create a data-driven approach that helps policymakers make informed decisions.”

    The three-year partnership will include hands-on workshops, the creation of knowledge sharing resources, and the development of innovative strategies to improve development indicators. It will also strengthen connection between the portal and its sources and will offer specialized training on AI tools to boost skills in data management and analysis.

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Information sought following Kaikohe aggravated robbery

    Source: New Zealand Police (National News)

    Police are appealing for information following an aggravated robbery at a commercial premises in Kaikohe earlier this week.

    At about 11.20pm on Tuesday 18 February, Police received reports of four males entering a store on Broadway armed with a hammer and tyre iron.

    The group has allegedly jumped the counter and taken a number of items including cigarettes and cash.

    The staff member who was present at the time has run to the back of the shop and locked themselves inside.

    There were no injuries reported, however the staff member was understandably shaken by the incident.

    Police would like to speak with anyone who may have witnessed the aggravated robbery, or who recognise the vehicle pictured.

    The vehicle used in the offending remains outstanding and is described as a white Toyota Aqua with registration PSR418.

    Anyone who may have information that can assist Police in their investigation is urged to contact us online at 105.police.govt.nz, clicking “Update Report” or call 105.

    Information can also be provided through Crime Stoppers on 0800 555 111.

    Please use the reference number 250219/8356.

    ENDS.

    Holly McKay/NZ Police

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Closure of the Ava Bridge Walkway postponed

    Source: New Zealand Government

    The closure of the Ava Bridge walkway will be delayed so Hutt City Council have more time to develop options for a new footbridge, says Transport Minister Chris Bishop and Mayor of Lower Hutt, Campbell Barry.

    “The Hutt River paths are one of the Hutt’s most beloved features. Hutt locals and visitors alike enjoy walking, running and cycling along the paths – they’re a favourite route for dog walkers, for runners, for parents with prams or kids on bikes, and for people getting some fresh air on their lunch break. 

    “The Ava Bridge walkway is one of only three routes for people using the paths to get across the Hutt River. The next closest bridge is about 1km away, at either the Waione Street bridge to the south or the Ewen Bridge to the north,” Mr Bishop says. 

    “Late last year KiwiRail advised the Council and Hutt residents that new government investment in the Wellington metro rail network would allow them to upgrade the nearly 100 year-old bridge. Their intentions were to close the bridge temporarily from February to undertake the maintenance but that the walkway next to the tracks would have to be permanently removed.

    “The situation has been complicated by the fact that the bridge is owned by KiwiRail but the walkway attached to the bridge is owned by the Council.” 

    “Hutt City Council knows the importance of this pedestrian access for locals. KiwiRail’s intended start date for the bridge closure – this Sunday, 23 Feb – is too soon for the council to have worked through replacement options.

    “This week I’ve had productive conversations with KiwiRail executives and Mayor Barry about the issue. I’m pleased to see that KiwiRail has chosen to delay the bridge closure to give Hutt City Council more time to look at options for replacing the walkway.

    “KiwiRail has commissioned a study looking at options and expects to provide it to Hutt City Council in the coming weeks. This study will give the Council solid information on what a replacement walkway across the river at Ava could look like.  

    “The existing walkway will still close towards the end of this year, ahead of the rail work, but by then the community should have a clear path forward.

    “This is a sensible outcome, and I thank KiwiRail and Metlink, who operate the trains, for their understanding.”

    “Lower Hutt Mayor Campbell Barry says that people rely on this bridge as an important route across the river. 

    “It’s great that we are now all working together to find a solution,” Mayor Barry says.

    “This approach ensures we have time to consider how pedestrian access could be aligned with KiwiRail’s planned maintenance at Christmas.

    “We thank everyone who took the time to share their concerns about the closure with us.”

    The replacement work will now be carried out during the Christmas 2025 temporary network closure in Wellington. The walkway is expected to close a month or two earlier to allow preparation for the rail work.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Energy – CCUS announcements move New Zealand toward a lower emission future

    Source: Energy Resources Aotearoa

    Energy Resources Aotearoa welcomes the Government’s announcement on a Carbon Capture, Utilisation, and Storage (CCUS) framework that will enable businesses to benefit from storing carbon underground.
    CCUS projects are an essential technology for meeting our emissions goals. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has previously stated that CCUS is “unavoidable” for countries aiming to achieve net emission reduction targets.
    Energy Resources Aotearoa Chief Executive John Carnegie says that CCUS has considerable potential for reducing our emissions as New Zealand’s energy mix evolves and is encouraged to see the Government aiming to eliminate unnecessary duplication and overlap of regulatory requirements.
    “A clear, risk-based framework is essential to give firms interested in potential CCUS projects confidence in predictable regulatory settings. Having a framework now opens the door to the possibility that projects will get off the drawing board”
    “Many jurisdictions we look to for effective policy examples have already implemented supportive regulatory frameworks to manage CCUS. While we’re still navigating the learning curve, this technology provides substantial emissions reduction and economic growth potential.”
    Carnegie says that moves to enable a CCUS framework go hand-in-hand with government aspirations to secure our future gas supply.
    “These two things can’t be seen in isolation – without a strong supply of gas, New Zealand won’t be able to maximise the benefits of this technology or achieve secure and abundant energy for households and businesses.”
    Carnegie says that while the framework provides clarity for investors, a standalone permitting regime to govern CCUS would give them confidence investing in these long-term projects.
    CCUS will play a vital role in our journey toward net-zero emissions, and Carnegie says Energy Resources Aotearoa is committed to collaborating with the Government to help it thrive.
    “The Government’s second emissions reduction plan clearly outlines CCUS as a vital action required to meet the second and third emissions budgets. We look forward to collaborating with them to cut through red tape, get projects underway and secure our affordable energy future.”

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: STATEMENT FROM BUREAU OF METEOROLOGY – BUREAU OF METEOROLOGY CEO AND DIRECTOR OF METEOROLOGY

    Source: Weather Warnings – Australia

    20/02/2025

    Issued: Thursday 20 February

    The CEO of the Bureau of Meteorology and Director of Meteorology, Dr Andrew Johnson PSM has today advised of his intention to conclude his term in early September 2025.

    Dr Johnson joined the Bureau in September 2016 and over the last 9 years has led its transition to a fully integrated national weather service providing trusted and critical services to the Australian community every day.

    Under Dr Johnson’s leadership, the Bureau has implemented new and upgraded weather, water, marine and space services, expanded its observing capabilities, and improved the accuracy and timeliness of its forecasts and warnings, while ensuring more secure, stable and resilient operations. International relationships have also strengthened, especially in the Pacific where the Bureau has played a leading role in supporting Pacific Islands nations to prepare for and respond to the impacts of severe weather in a changing climate.

    This work has ensured that the Bureau remains one of the world’s most respected meteorological agencies.

    Statement from The Hon Tanya Plibersek: Statement: Bureau of Meteorology CEO and Director of Meteorology | Ministers

    Quotes attributable to Bureau CEO Dr Andrew Johnson PSM:

    “I have a deep sense of gratitude for having had the opportunity to contribute to the safety, security and prosperity of our nation.”

    “I am immensely proud of what our organisation has achieved during my time at the Bureau. We have delivered a significant expansion and uplift in the vital services we provide every day to the Australian community.”

    “Most importantly, we have delivered during successive fire, flood and tropical cyclone emergencies when our nation has needed us most.”

    “I feel fortunate to have worked with the many talented, dedicated and professional people at the Bureau, and I thank my colleagues for their tireless work.”

    ENDS

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Media advisory: Police Media Centre closing at 3pm, Saturday 22 February

    Source: New Zealand Police (National News)

    The Police Media Centre will close at 3pm on Saturday 22 February due to staffing constraints.

    After 3pm, information on any significant public safety issues will be released proactively.

    The centre will reopen at the usual time of 7am on Sunday 23 February.

    We appreciate our media colleagues’ patience and understanding.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Removal of level crossings a win for Aucklanders

    Source: New Zealand Government

    The Government will invest funding to remove the level crossings in Takanini and Glen Innes and replace them with grade-separated crossings, to maximise the City Rail Link’s ability to speed up journey times by rail and road and boost Auckland’s productivity, Transport Minister Chris Bishop and Auckland Minister Simeon Brown say.

    “The City Rail Link (CRL) project is on track to open next year. It will transform travel across much of Auckland with shorter travel times and reductions in traffic congestion among the significant benefits Aucklanders can look forward to. 

    “Aucklanders will experience the CRL’s full benefits of faster, easier journeys with the removal of level crossings, allowing more frequent trains to travel along these lines. 

    “Level crossings, where roads and train lines intersect, are universally loathed by drivers. Most of us know the sinking feeling of seeing the lights start flashing and the boom gates lowering to signal an approaching train and mentally calculating the delay you’ll have to manage – after all, for truckies, tradies, couriers and many others on the roads, time is money and delays cost.

    “These traffic delays mean level crossings require a direct trade-off between road-user efficiency and rail-user efficiency. One of CRL’s huge benefits for Aucklanders will be more frequent trains, giving people a viable alternative to car travel.

    “Level crossings are also a safety concern. At Auckland’s level crossings in the decade between 2013 and 2023, Auckland saw almost 70 crashes, plus over 250 pedestrian near-misses and 100 vehicle near misses. That’s almost one incident a week. 

    “Today we are pleased to announce that the Government will allocate up to $200 million for its share of funding to accelerate removal of the level crossings in Takanini and Glen Innes, which will include building three new grade-separated road bridges at Manuia Road, Taka Street, and Walters Road; constructing new station access bridges at Glen Innes, Te Mahia and Takanini Stations, and closing two unsafe crossings at Spartan Road and Manuroa Road.”

    “This is great news for Auckland and will unlock congestion across the city, and enable better flow of traffic,” Mr Brown says.

    “Once open next year, CRL will double Auckland’s rail capacity and reduce congestion across the city, enabling Aucklanders to get to where they want to go faster.

    “Auckland Council has indicated that it is willing to fund its share of the cost, so this announcement will provide Aucklanders with much-needed confidence that this programme of work will go ahead.

    “The Government is committed to unlocking Auckland’s traffic chokepoints, and one of the key ways we will do this is by removing level crossings.”

    Mayor Wayne Brown welcomed the government announcement.

    “I’ve always been focused on getting Auckland moving. I made sure council’s share of the funding was included in the Long-Term Plan, so it’s great to see the government get on board and match the funding,” says Mayor Brown. 

    “Level crossings was another problem left to me by the previous administration so it’s fantastic the government and council can partner to get the work done and improve safety. This is about getting a good deal for Aucklanders and we’re on track to do just that.”

    Note to editor:

    The allocation of funding is subject to approval by the NZTA board, which is expected at the beginning of April.

    The seven priority level crossings for removal are at Spartan Road, Manuroa road, Taka Street, Walters Road, Takaanini Station, Te Mahia Station, Glen Innes Station. 

    The intention is that enabling works for these level crossing removals will be completed around the time CRL opens.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Speech to Committee for Auckland

    Source: New Zealand Government

    Good afternoon. Can I acknowledge Ngāti Whātua for their warm welcome, Simpson Grierson for hosting us here today, and of course the Committee for Auckland for putting on today’s event.
    I suspect some of you are sitting there wondering what a boy from the Hutt would know about Auckland, our largest city.
    Well, let me reassure you that I know and love this city. I lived here for two years, many of my friends live here, and I am here almost every week.
    Auckland is critical to New Zealand’s future and today I want to talk about how we create that future, with central government working alongside the Auckland Council and Auckland communities.
    Growth 
    Let me start with the economic picture.
    We are in challenging economic times. The government came to office with New Zealand in the midst of a prolonged cost of living crisis, with high inflation, high interest rates, and after years of profligate debt-fuelled government spending.
    Turning that around is not going to be easy and it is not going to happen immediately.
    We have made good progress. Budget 2024 started the repair job. Business and consumer confidence is returning. The OCR was cut by another 50 basis points on Wednesday, meaning mortgage rate relief for households. The latest Federated Farmers Farm Confidence Survey shows confidence surging by 68 points since July 2024 – the largest one-off improvement in sentiment since the question was introduced.
    But there is a lot to do, and we need to be honest with ourselves. We have been slipping for years. 
    Our challenge as a country isn’t just about the last few years, or even the last decade.
    We have low productivity growth, low capital intensity in our firms, low levels of competition in many sectors, challenges in attracting and retaining skills and talent, low uptake of innovation, unaffordable housing and a growing tail of New Zealanders leaving school without basic skills. 
    But stagnation and mediocrity is not our destiny.
    Not if we make the right choices and not if we have courage.
    Going for economic growth means saying “yes” to things when we’ve said “no” in the past.
    It means taking on some tough political debates that we’ve previously shied away from. I’m going to talk about one today.
    It means bold decisions which may look difficult at the time but which in hindsight will be regarded incontrovertibly as the right thing to do.
    Managed decline is only inevitable if we let it be.
    Auckland Growth 
    So today I want to talk to you about Auckland and how important it is to our plans.
    Auckland is New Zealand’s capital city of growth. It is home to one third of New Zealand’s population and contributes nearly 40% to our national GDP. It has higher labour productivity than the rest of New Zealand, and is home to some of New Zealand’s most exciting growth-industries, with 116 of our country’s top 200 tech firms calling Auckland home. 
    We are not going to be successful in growing our economy if we don’t think carefully about how we enable Auckland, as our largest and most important city, to thrive. 
    I have the enormous privilege of being the Minister of Housing, Infrastructure, RMA Reform and now Transport.
    I am determined to help build an Auckland that is a world-class, international city.
    I make no apologies for being an urbanist. Well-functioning urban environments with abundant housing, transport that gets people where they need to go quickly and efficiently, and functional infrastructure, will do more to create a brighter future for Kiwis than just about anything else government can do. 
    Next year is shaping up as an exciting one. The first trains will run on the City Rail Link and the NZ International Convention Centre will finally open its doors.
    The government is investing heavily into transport in Auckland, through new Roads of National Significance, new busways, and commuter rail.
    These investments build on the significant progress made in recent years, particularly by National-led governments – think of Waterview, the Victoria Park Tunnel, and the starting of the City Rail Link.
    A couple of weeks ago it was my pleasure to mark the start of the extension of the Auckland commuter network to Pukekohe, with the completion of the electrification of the line from Papakura to Pukekohe.
    Later this year the Third Main line rail project will conclude, helping ease congestion and enabling faster train journeys. 
    The growth of the Auckland commuter rail network since the early 2000s has been remarkable and the government is keen to encourage that growth.
    Because the reality is that congestion is choking Auckland.
    The average Auckland commuter spends over 5 days in traffic each year. In fact, in 2024 the Auckland metro area had the highest congestion levels in Oceania. This means Auckland is less productive, less accessible, and less liveable that it should be. 
    Congestion stifles economic growth in Auckland, with studies showing that it costs between $900 million to $1.3 billion per year.
    Congestion is essentially a tax on time, productivity, and growth. And like most taxes, I’m keen to reduce it.
    The government will be progressing legislation this year to allow the introduction of Time of Use pricing on our roads.
    We will send that Bill off to a select committee before the end of March and the public will be able to have their say on it.
    There has been study after study into time of use pricing in New Zealand. It’s time to get on with it.
    The framework we have agreed to will enable local councils to propose time of use schemes on their networks.
    All schemes will be focused on increasing productivity and improving the efficiency of traffic flow in cities. Local councils will propose schemes in their region, with NZTA leading the design of the schemes in partnership with councils to provide strong oversight and to ensure motorists benefit from these schemes. 
    All schemes will require approval from the Government.
    Any money collected through time of use charging will be required to be invested back into transport infrastructure that benefits Kiwis and businesses living and working in the region where the money was raised. Councils will not be able to spend this money on other priorities.
    The Government will prioritise working with Auckland Council on designing a Time of Use pricing scheme that increases productivity and reduces congestion.
    Modelling has shown that successful congestion charging could reduce congestion by up to 8 to 12 percent at peak times, improving travel times and efficiency significantly.
    Auckland Housing 
    That brings me to housing. 
    One of the things I’ve been trying to emphasise since I became a Minister is that housing has a critical role to play in addressing our economic woes.
    There is now a mountain of economic evidence that cities are unparalleled engines of productivity, and the evidence shows bigger is better.
    New Zealand can raise our productivity simply by allowing our towns and cities to grow up and out. We need bigger cities and, to facilitate that, we need more houses. As our biggest city, Auckland has to be a leader in this mission.
    As Housing Minister I am focused on getting the fundamentals of the housing market sorted. 
    The Government’s Going for Housing Growth agenda involves freeing up land for development and removing unnecessary planning barriers, improving infrastructure funding and financing, and providing incentives for communities and councils to support growth.
    Report after report and inquiry after inquiry has found that our planning system, particularly restrictions on the supply of urban land, are at the heart of our housing affordability challenge.
    We are not a small country by land mass, but our planning system has made it difficult for our cities to grow. As a result, we have excessively high land prices driven by market expectations of an ongoing shortage of developable urban land to meet demand. 
    Last year Cabinet agreed to a number of specific actions it would take to free up land for development, which we’ve called Pillar One of our Going for Housing Growth Plan.
    These include new housing growth targets for the country’s largest councils, new rules to make it easier for cities to expand outwards at the urban fringe, such as the abolishment of the rural-urban boundary in Auckland, a strengthening of the intensification provisions in the National Policy Statement on Urban Development including requiring more mixed-use zoning, the abolishment of minimum floor areas and balcony requirements, and making the MDRS optional for councils. 
    These changes build on the existing Auckland Unitary Plan, which evidence shows has made a real difference in Auckland. 
    It also builds on the National Policy Statement on Urban Development brought in by the last government, which we support.
    I am focusing on the fundamentals because ultimately that is what drives price.
    Very soon I will announce Cabinet decisions around better infrastructure funding and financing tools, so growth can be properly funded.
    And I’ll also soon announce decisions on how we will replace the Resource Management Act, the giant millstone on the neck of the New Zealand economy. 
    City Rail Link 
    Speaking of infrastructure, let’s talk about the City Rail Link.
    Without a doubt, the most transformative and ambitious project in recent memory in Auckland is the City Rail Link. 
    Under the feet of Auckland for the better part of a decade has been the most ambitious, and one of the most expensive, projects in the city’s history. Thousands of workers building 3.5 kms of tunnel to bring Auckland’s transportation system into the 21st century.
    When I was made Transport Minister by the Prime Minister earlier this year, I said to my team that I wanted my first visit to be to see City Rail Link. To me, this project epitomises the opportunities in New Zealand’s transport future.    
    Once open next year, CRL will double Auckland’s rail capacity and reduce congestion across the city, enabling Aucklanders to get to where they want to go faster.
    This will be huge for the city. The privilege of not having to worry about missing a train because another one is only minutes away is something, up until now, Aucklanders have only been able to experience in cities like London or Tokyo. But now it’s almost Auckland’s turn.
    I’ve been down to the new stations. Aucklanders are going to be blown away. My prediction is that people will say what they always do once a big new project eventually finishes: why didn’t we do this decades ago?
    It is critical for the city’s future that we take advantage of CRL and ensure that the maximum benefits are felt by Aucklanders. That’s why today I am pleased to announce a number of steps the Government is taking to fully harness the true benefits of City Rail Link.
    Level Crossings
    The first step is removing level crossings. 
    CRL will only achieve its true potential capacity by the removal of level crossings – locations where roads and rail tracks intersect.
    Frankly, every motorist under the sun hates them, me included. They require the direct trading-off between road-user efficiency and rail-user efficiency. 
    Separating our train and roading systems by grade-separating level crossings greatly reduces traffic delays for motorists, while at the same time enables more frequent and reliable trains. It means that, in future, we can run many more trains on the Auckland network, without having to worry about disrupting the road network.
    Crucially, it will also make our railways safer. In the decade between 2013 and 2023, Auckland saw almost 70 crashes – some of these serious, as well as more than 250 pedestrian near-misses and 100 vehicle near misses at level crossings across the city. That’s almost one incident a week. 
    Investment in Auckland’s level crossings delivers a faster, safer, and more reliable transport system. It’s a win, win, win.
    Sorting level crossings in Auckland will take many years and cost a lot – but it is imperative we crack on with the job of doing the most important ones first.
    I am announcing today that, subject to final approval by the NZTA board, the Government will be allocating funding for its share of the cost of accelerating the grade-separation of 7 level crossings in Takāanini and Glen Innes. 
    The work will involve building three new grade-separated road bridges at Manuia Road, Taka Street, and Walters Road; constructing new station access bridges at Glen Innes, Te Mahia and Takāanini Stations, and closing two unsafe crossings at Spartan Road and Manuroa Road.
    Auckland Council has previously indicated that it is willing to fund its share of the cost, so this announcement will provide Aucklanders with confidence that the work will go ahead.
    Removing these level crossings now also enables us to take advantage of already planned network closures and will hopefully avoid the need for disruptions to the rail network in the future to make these much-needed changes.
    We are committed to the most efficient transport system in Auckland for everyone – no matter how you get around. For us, it’s never only about trains, or only about cars, or only about buses, or only about bikes. It must be all of the above – which is exactly why we are prioritising the removal of these level crossings 
    Transit oriented development
    As I’ve said, there are a number of actions being taken across the Auckland Rail network with a focus on transforming connectivity throughout the city. City Rail Link is just one part of it.
    This ambitious programme of work will open up job opportunities, new investment opportunities, and new places to live and work.
    It should also, in theory, result in a significant increase in development density in and around Auckland’s railway stations, especially those benefiting from City Rail Link.
    We have to ask ourselves: are we doing all we can to fully take advantage of this multi-billion-dollar transport investment? 
    I believe that in order to properly unlock economic growth in Auckland, we must embrace the concept of transit-oriented development adopted by the world’s best and most liveable cities.
    This approach promotes compact, mixed-use, pedestrian friendly cities, with development clustered around, and integrated with, mass transit. The idea is to have as many jobs, houses, services and amenities as possible around public transport stations. 
    This is not an untested theory: transit-oriented development has been adopted across the world in cities like Stockholm, Copenhagen, Hong Kong, Tokyo, and Singapore.
    Cities that embrace this approach consistently outperform those that don’t across multiple metrics: they experience increases in productivity, lower unemployment, higher population growth, increased availability of homes, and more stable rents.
    A floor filled with smart people working next to each other, in a building filled with floors of smart people working next to each other, unsurprisingly, enables greater economic opportunities for productive growth. Proximity encourages collaboration and innovation.
    Transit-oriented development creates exactly these kinds of possible agglomeration effects – for example, it has been shown that doubling job density increases productivity by 5 – 10%. 
    The evidence speaks for itself. 
    Let’s look at Stockholm, where development has generally followed the city’s main public transport corridors. There, the gross value added per capita grew 41% between 1993 and 2010. In fact, both Stockholm and Copenhagen rank as among the world’s top cities in terms of per capita GDP.  
    Across the ditch in Sydney, they have just opened their brand-new Sydney Metro development, which has been widely recognised for its successful integration of high-density housing and mixed-use developments. This project is expected to contribute around AUD $5 billion annually to the New South Wales economy.
    To answer the question: are we doing all we can to fully take advantage of City Rail Link? The answer is clearly no.
    So, today I am announcing that the Government will be kicking off a work programme to properly take advantage of the opportunities that transit-oriented development could have on Auckland, and what actions we can take in the short-term to better enable development clusters around City Rail Link stations.
    Right now, Auckland Council is only required to zone 6 stories around rapid transit stops. We are going to need to go much, much higher than that around the CRL stations if we truly want to feel the benefits of transit-oriented development.  
    My aspiration is that in 10-20 years’ time, we have 10-20 storey apartment blocks dotting the rail line as far west as Swanson and Ranui. But for right now, we need to look at how to increase development opportunities around the inner core of stations.
    Take Kingsland, for example.
    Once CRL open Kingslanders will have a 20 minute travel time saving to Aotea station from the project. But Kingsland’s population actually declined by 4.7% between 2019 and 2023; and while Auckland averaged 15,375 annual new builds over the last 5 years, Kingsland built just 22.
    Compare that to Paramatta in Sydney. It too benefits by circa 20 minute time savings from the Sydney Metro project and has upzoned from a few stories to more than 60 in some cases.
    Kingsland is still predominantly made up of single story dwelling zones.
    How about if our aim is to make the special character of suburbs be that they are thriving, liveable, affordable communities with access to regular and reliable public transport?
    For many families, the dream of home ownership looks a little different today. Many young families are now choosing to swap the station wagon for the train station, and the corner dairy for the cafe.
    There will always be a place in New Zealand for the quarter-acre section and the large family home. But we have to be honest with ourselves: that place isn’t within a stones-throw of a transformational piece of transport infrastructure with the ability to shuttle tens of thousands of passengers each day. 
    We must allow Kiwis to make the choice that’s best for them. Permitting more development close to train stations and rapid bus routes supports those who want to live nearer to their work and their friends, just like the significant investment the Government is making in new highways and roads support those who want to live in our world-class towns and suburbs. 
    Change is inevitable. My job as a Minister it to make sure that change is shaped by the lives Kiwis want to live and the homes they want to live in.
    Viewshafts 
    One barrier to proper high-density in Auckland, including around City Rail Link stations, is undoubtedly the current settings of the 73 viewshafts that have restricted the height of the city since the early 1970s. 
    In 2016, the Independent Hearing Panel for the Auckland Unitary Plan recommended further work on the viewshafts, including refining them to improve their efficiency and reduce opportunity costs. In the almost-decade since, this work has not been progressed.
    Some of these viewshafts don’t make a lot of sense. The Unitary Plan protects the view from the tolling booths on the North Shore, so that those people sitting in their cars getting ready to pay their toll for the Harbour Bridge have a nice view of Mt Eden. Of course there hasn’t been tolling booths on the North Shore since the mid-1980s. 
    Forty years later, we are still protecting a view that would be considered dangerous-driving to admire. A study done in 2018, looking at this one view shaft – the E10 – showed that its cost was roughly $1.4 billion in lost development opportunities. This is just the impact of one of the 73 viewshafts. 
    It is worth stressing that the cost is almost certainly much greater than $1.4 billion. It only includes costs to the city centre, and about half the land under E10 falls outside the city centre. So add that on.
    It doesn’t look at the positive externalities of intensification, such as agglomeration and other wider economic benefits. So add that on too.
    It doesn’t look at public land, just private. Add that on. 
    And it’s based on 2014 land values.
    And this is just one viewshaft.
    I hope you’ll agree with me that the cost is immense.
    Aucklanders and local mana whenua have always had a special relationship with the Māunga and Volcanic cones that their city is nestled between. It is right that we acknowledge and protect this special relationship. 
    But even just minor tweaks to existing viewshafts could materially lift development opportunities. The 2018 study showed that rotating the E10 viewshaft just 4.5 degrees to the left maintains the view of Mt Eden for a similar amount of time, whilst saving the city 43% of the lost development opportunity cost.
    Today I can tell you that Mayor Brown and I have had discussions on this issue, and he said he is open to a fresh look at Auckland’s viewshaft settings in its Unitary Plan. We agree that the time is right to start the conversation. This is particularly relevant where the viewshafts impact the CBD and major transit corridors.
    We are committed to trying to find a way though – alongside mana whenua – to get the balance right between economic growth, and the special role these Māunga play in the unique identity of Auckland. 
    We are not proposing to remove these viewshafts. Rather, we are recognising that as the city changes, and there will be areas where the viewshafts should change with it.
    The tollgate viewshaft example above proves that it is possible to eat our cake and have it too. We can both preserve views and enable more development. That is the kind of change that a dynamic city requires to be the best for all its people.
    Conclusion
    Auckland has a bright future. 
    You have the country’s premier convention centre opening early next year. 
    You have City Rail Link opening later next year. 
    You have what are essentially new cities being built to your west, and to your south.
    New roads are opening.
    Congestion pricing is on the way.
    And more housing is being built. 
    Whenever I come here, I get a palpable sense of opportunity knocking.
    This city isn’t waiting: it’s getting on with the mission of growth. 
    It is bursting at the seams with opportunities – now, it is the responsibility of all of us to help make it happen. 
    Thank you.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Thailand: 2024 Article IV Consultation-Press Release; Staff Report; and Statement by the Executive Director for Thailand

    Source: International Monetary Fund

    Summary

    Thailand’s cyclical recovery is underway, though it has yet to become broad-based. Growth is projected to accelerate moderately, reaching 2.7 percent in 2024 and 2.9 percent in 2025, supported by the rebound of tourism-related activities and fiscal stimulus. The slow recovery, weaker than in ASEAN peers, is rooted in Thailand’s longstanding structural weaknesses and emerging headwinds that also contribute to a muted inflation trajectory. Significant uncertainty in the external environment and downside risks cloud the outlook.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: IMF Executive Board Concludes 2024 Article IV Consultation with Thailand

    Source: International Monetary Fund

    February 20, 2025

    Washington, DC: On February 11, The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) concluded the Article IV consultation[1] with Thailand and endorsed the staff appraisal without a meeting on a lapse-of-time basis.

    Thailand’s economy is gradually recovering, but at a slower pace than peers. Economic activity expanded modestly by 1.9 percent in 2023 and 2.3 percent in the first three quarters of 2024, driven by private consumption growth and a rebound in tourism. Inflation remained subdued, averaging 0.4 percent (y/y) annually in 2024, well below the Bank of Thailand’s target range of 1 to 3 percent. External factors such as the decline in global energy and food prices, lower import prices have played a role, but domestic factors such as energy subsidies, price controls, and the unwinding of pandemic-related fiscal support have also contributed to the lower inflation. The current account balance strengthened to 1.4 percent of GDP in 2023, from -3.5 percent of GDP in 2022, and continues to register a moderate surplus as of November 2024, supported by the continued recovery in tourism and higher exports.

    A gradual cyclical recovery is expected to continue. Real GDP is projected to grow by 2.7 percent in 2024 and to increase to 2.9 percent in 2025. This is underpinned by the expansionary fiscal stance envisaged under the 2025 budget, which includes additional cash transfers of 1.0 percent of GDP and a rebound in public investment. Tourism-related sectors are expected to continue to support growth, as well as private consumption that will be further boosted by the authorities’ cash transfers. As growth continues to firm up, inflation is expected to pick up but remain in the bottom half of the target range in 2025. The current account balance is expected to improve further in 2024 and 2025, driven by the ongoing recovery in tourist arrivals.

    Risks to Thailand’s economic outlook are tilted to the downside. On the external front, an escalation of global trade tensions or deepening geoeconomic fragmentation could disrupt Thailand’s export recovery and dampen FDI inflows, while increased commodity price volatility could affect growth and lead to inflation spikes, and potentially tighter-for-longer global financial conditions. The intensification of regional conflicts could disrupt trade and travel flows while more frequent extreme climate events would adversely impact growth prospects. On the domestic front, the private sector debt overhang could impair financial institutions’ balance sheets and further decrease credit supply, negatively affecting growth. Renewed political uncertainty could hinder policy implementation and undermine confidence.

    Executive Board Assessment[2]

    In concluding the 2024 Article IV consultation with Thailand, Executive Directors endorsed the staff’s appraisal, as follows:

    Thailand’s economic recovery is ongoing, but it has been relatively slow and uneven. Economic activity expanded modestly in 2024, driven by private consumption and a rebound in tourism-related activities, while delayed budget implementation slowed the pace of public investment. The slow recovery, compared to ASEAN peers, is also rooted in Thailand’s longstanding structural weaknesses, while emerging external and domestic headwinds have also contributed to subdued inflation. The outlook remains highly uncertain with significant downside risks.

    As economic slack narrows, the focus should shift to rebuilding fiscal space. A less expansionary fiscal stance than envisaged under the FY25 budget would still provide impulse to support the recovery while helping to preserve policy space. Alternatively, reallocating part of the planned cash transfers toward productivity-enhancing investments or social protection would enable stronger inclusive growth and help reduce the public debt-to-GDP ratio. Starting in FY26, a revenue-based medium-term fiscal consolidation is needed to bring down public debt and rebuild buffers.

    Thailand’s fiscal framework can be further strengthened. This would require strengthening fiscal rules to better support the debt anchor by introducing a risk-based rules approach. Costs associated with quasi-fiscal operations such as energy price caps should be adequately accounted for, and fiscal risks closely monitored. Improving data provision for government finance statistics and SOEs is important.

    Staff welcomes the BOT’s decision to cut the policy rate in October and recommends a further reduction in the policy rate to support inflation and also translate into improvements in borrowers’ debt-servicing capacity with limited risk of additional leverage amid tight lending. Given remaining high uncertainty in the outlook, the authorities should stand ready to adjust their monetary policy stance in a data and outlook-dependent manner. Central bank independence with clear communication of policy moves is key to maintaining the credibility and effectiveness of monetary policy in anchoring inflation expectations.

    Effective coordination across policy tools, underpinned by adequate buffers, is essential for managing adverse scenarios. While the flexible exchange rate should continue to act as a shock absorber, the complementary use of FXI might alleviate policy trade-offs by smoothing destabilizing premia when large non-fundamental shocks render the FX market dysfunctional. Further liberalization of the FX ecosystem and phasing out of remaining capital flow management measures would help deepen the FX market and limit the need for FXI over time.

    A comprehensive package of prudential and legal measures needs to be deployed to facilitate an orderly private deleveraging. Staff welcomes the measures already implemented to address both the existing household debt stock and the buildup of new leverage. However, simultaneous and forceful implementation of personal debt workouts via more effective bankruptcy proceedings is essential to lower the existing household debt stock.

    The external position in 2024 was moderately stronger than warranted by fundamentals and desirable policy settings. Policies aimed at promoting investment, enhancing social safety nets, liberalizing the services sector, and minimizing tax incentives and subsidies that distort competition would facilitate external rebalancing.

    Resolute structural reforms are needed to boost productivity and competitiveness. Reform priorities include facilitating competition and openness, upgrading physical and ICT infrastructure, upskilling/reskilling the labor force, increasing export sophistication by leveraging digitalization, and strengthening governance. Providing an adequate social protection floor to vulnerable households could help enhance their resilience to shocks and address structural drivers of household debt accumulation.

    Table 1. Thailand: Selected Economic Indicators, 2019–30

    Per capita GDP (2023): US$7,338

    Exchange Rate (2023): 34.8 Baht/USD

    Unemployment rate (2023): 1 percent

    Poverty headcount ratio at national poverty line (2021): 6.3 percent

    Net FDI (2023): US$ -7.16 billion

    Population (2023): 70.18 million

                       

    Actual

    Projections

    2019

    2020

    2021

    2022

    2023

    2024

    2025

    2026

    2027

    2028

    2029

    2030

    Real GDP growth (y/y percent change) 1/

    2.1

    -6.1

    1.6

    2.5

    1.9

    2.7

    2.9

    2.6

    2.7

    2.7

    2.7

    2.7

    Consumption

    3.4

    -0.3

    1.3

    4.8

    4.6

    4.3

    4.0

    2.9

    2.1

    2.3

    2.6

    2.6

    Gross fixed investment

    2.0

    -4.8

    3.1

    2.3

    1.2

    0.1

    4.1

    2.1

    1.8

    2.3

    2.4

    2.5

    Inflation (y/y percent change)

                           

    Headline CPI (end of period)

    0.9

    -0.3

    2.2

    5.9

    -0.8

    1.2

    1.3

    1.5

    1.5

    1.7

    1.7

    1.8

    Headline CPI (period average)

    0.7

    -0.8

    1.2

    6.1

    1.2

    0.4

    1.0

    1.3

    1.5

    1.6

    1.7

    1.8

    Core CPI (end of period)

    0.5

    0.2

    0.3

    3.2

    0.6

    0.8

    1.3

    1.0

    1.2

    1.4

    1.4

    1.6

    Core CPI (period average)

    0.5

    0.3

    0.2

    2.5

    1.3

    0.6

    1.1

    1.2

    1.1

    1.3

    1.4

    1.5

    Saving and investment (percent of GDP)

                           

    Gross domestic investment

    23.8

    23.8

    28.6

    27.8

    22.5

    20.8

    21.9

    22.2

    22.0

    21.8

    21.8

    21.6

    Private

    16.9

    16.8

    16.9

    17.3

    17.3

    16.7

    16.6

    16.4

    16.3

    16.1

    16.1

    16.0

    Public

    5.7

    6.4

    6.5

    6.1

    5.6

    5.6

    5.9

    5.8

    5.7

    5.7

    5.7

    5.7

    Change in stocks

    1.2

    0.5

    5.1

    4.5

    -0.4

    -1.5

    -0.6

    0.0

    0.0

    0.0

    0.0

    0.0

    Gross national saving

    30.8

    27.9

    26.5

    24.4

    24.0

    22.6

    24.0

    24.5

    24.4

    24.4

    24.5

    24.4

    Private, including statistical discrepancy

    25.8

    26.2

    26.8

    22.6

    21.0

    19.8

    21.8

    21.9

    21.7

    21.7

    21.8

    21.6

    Public

    5.0

    1.8

    -0.3

    1.7

    3.0

    2.8

    2.2

    2.5

    2.7

    2.7

    2.7

    2.8

    Foreign saving

    -7.0

    -4.2

    2.1

    3.5

    -1.4

    -1.8

    -2.2

    -2.3

    -2.4

    -2.6

    -2.7

    -2.8

    Fiscal accounts (percent of GDP) 2/

                           

    General government balance 3/

    0.4

    -4.5

    -6.7

    -4.5

    -2.0

    -2.2

    -3.6

    -3.2

    -2.9

    -2.8

    -2.8

    -2.8

      SOEs balance

    0.4

    0.6

    -0.3

    -0.6

    -0.7

    -0.1

    -0.2

    -0.1

    -0.1

    -0.1

    -0.1

    0.0

    Public sector balance 4/

    0.8

    -3.9

    -7.1

    -5.1

    -2.7

    -2.3

    -3.8

    -3.3

    -3.0

    -2.9

    -2.9

    -2.8

    Public sector debt (end of period) 4/

    41.1

    49.4

    58.3

    60.5

    62.4

    63.3

    64.7

    65.4

    66.0

    66.1

    66.4

    66.4

    Monetary accounts (end of period, y/y percent change)

               

    Broad money growth

    3.6

    10.2

    4.8

    3.9

    1.9

    2.3

    3.7

    3.5

    3.2

    3.8

    3.2

    3.7

    Narrow money growth

    5.7

    14.2

    14.0

    3.1

    4.2

    5.9

    3.2

    4.7

    4.2

    5.1

    4.3

    4.9

    Credit to the private sector (by other depository corporations)

    2.4

    4.5

    4.5

    2.5

    1.5

    0.1

    1.0

    1.6

    1.8

    2.1

    2.3

    2.5

    Balance of payments (billions of U.S. dollars)

                           

    Current account balance

    38.3

    20.9

    -10.7

    -17.2

    7.4

    9.5

    11.9

    13.2

    14.6

    16.5

    18.2

    19.4

    (In percent of GDP)

    7.0

    4.2

    -2.1

    -3.5

    1.4

    1.8

    2.2

    2.3

    2.4

    2.6

    2.7

    2.8

    Exports of goods, f.o.b.

    242.7

    227.0

    270.6

    285.2

    280.7

    293.6

    301.8

    312.5

    327.2

    343.1

    359.0

    375.5

    Growth rate (dollar terms)

    -3.3

    -6.5

    19.2

    5.4

    -1.5

    4.6

    2.8

    3.6

    4.7

    4.9

    4.6

    4.6

            Growth rate (volume terms)

    -3.7

    -5.8

    15.4

    1.2

    -2.7

    2.1

    1.9

    2.7

    3.5

    3.6

    3.2

    3.2

    Imports of goods, f.o.b.

    216.0

    186.6

    238.6

    271.6

    261.4

    274.9

    284.6

    295.1

    309.1

    324.1

    339.1

    354.9

    Growth rate (dollar terms)

    -5.6

    -13.6

    27.9

    13.8

    -3.8

    5.2

    3.5

    3.7

    4.7

    4.9

    4.6

    4.7

            Growth rate (volume terms)

    -5.8

    -10.4

    18.0

    1.0

    -4.1

    3.7

    3.5

    3.3

    3.4

    3.3

    3.3

    3.3

    Capital and financial account balance 5/

    -24.7

    -2.6

    3.6

    6.9

    -4.9

    -9.5

    -11.9

    -13.2

    -14.6

    -16.5

    -18.2

    -19.4

    Overall balance

    13.6

    18.4

    -7.1

    -10.2

    2.6

    0.0

    0.0

    0.0

    0.0

    0.0

    0.0

    0.0

    Gross official reserves (including net forward position, end of period) (billions of U.S. dollars)

    259.0

    286.5

    279.2

    245.8

    254.6

    262.5

    262.5

    262.5

    262.5

    262.5

    262.5

    262.5

    (Months of following year’s imports)

    16.7

    14.4

    12.3

    11.3

    11.1

    11.1

    10.7

    10.2

    9.7

    9.3

    8.9

    8.5

    (Percent of short-term debt) 6/

    338.0

    315.3

    291.2

    236.3

    242.7

    239.6

    231.7

    222.5

    213.7

    206.2

    199.6

    252.3

    (Percent of ARA metric)

    252.5

    278.3

    263.3

    222.3

    233.2

    231.8

    226.4

    219.2

    212.3

    205.4

    199.3

    200.0

    Exchange rate (baht/U.S. dollar)

    31.0

    31.3

    32.0

    35.1

    34.8

    35.3

    NEER appreciation (annual average)

    7.2

    -0.3

    -4.5

    -1.8

    3.9

    REER appreciation (annual average)

    5.8

    -2.6

    -5.7

    -1.1

    1.2

    External debt

                           

    (In percent of GDP)

    31.7

    38.0

    38.9

    40.6

    38.2

    38.4

    38.5

    38.6

    38.7

    38.7

    38.8

    38.8

    (In billions of U.S. dollars)

    172.7

    190.1

    196.9

    201.4

    196.5

    202.4

    213.1

    223.8

    233.8

    245.9

    257.0

    270.0

    Public sector 7/

    38.0

    37.2

    41.5

    41.2

    35.8

    38.4

    40.8

    43.3

    45.6

    48.1

    50.8

    53.7

    Private sector

    134.0

    152.9

    155.4

    160.3

    160.7

    164.5

    172.9

    181.1

    188.8

    198.3

    206.8

    217.0

    Medium- and long-term

    74.6

    79.4

    82.3

    82.3

    80.3

    80.7

    86.5

    91.1

    95.3

    101.5

    107.1

    114.0

    Short-term (including portfolio flows)

    59.4

    73.5

    73.1

    78.0

    80.4

    83.8

    86.4

    90.0

    93.5

    96.8

    99.7

    103.0

    Debt service ratio 8/

    7.8

    7.5

    6.3

    7.3

    7.9

    7.8

    7.8

    7.3

    8.3

    9.3

    10.3

    10.3

    Memorandum items:

                           

    Nominal GDP (billions of baht)

    16889.2

    15661.3

    16188.6

    17378.0

    17922.0

    18603.0

    19371.2

    20282.2

    21143.0

    22211.7

    23164.5

    24307.8

    (In billions of U.S. dollars)

    544.0

    500.5

    506.3

    495.6

    515.0

    527.1

    553.9

    580.2

    604.8

    635.4

    662.7

    695.4

    Output Gap (in percent of potential output)

    0.2

    -4.2

    -4.1

    -2.0

    -1.5

    -0.7

    0.0

    0.1

    0.0

    0.0

    0.0

    0.0

    Sources: Thai authorities; CEIC Data Co. Ltd.; and IMF staff estimates and projections.

    1/ This series reflects the new GDP data based on the chain volume measure methodology, introduced by the Thai authorities in May 2015.

    2/ On a fiscal year basis. The fiscal year ends on September 30.

    3/ Includes budgetary central government, extrabudgetary funds, and local governments.

    4/ Includes general government and SOEs.

    5/ Includes errors and omissions.

    6/ With remaining maturity of one year or less.

    7/ Excludes debt of state enterprises.

    8/ Percent of exports of goods and services.

                                                             

    [1] Under Article IV of the IMF’s Articles of Agreement, the IMF holds bilateral discussions with members, usually every year. A staff team visits the country, collects economic and financial information, and discusses with officials the country’s economic developments and policies. On return to headquarters, the staff prepares a report, which forms the basis for discussion by the Executive Board.

    [2] The Executive Board takes decisions under its lapse-of-time procedure when the Board agrees that a proposal can be considered without convening formal discussions.

    IMF Communications Department
    MEDIA RELATIONS

    PRESS OFFICER: Pavis Devahasadin

    Phone: +1 202 623-7100Email: MEDIA@IMF.org

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-Evening Report: Deepfakes can ruin lives and livelihoods – would owning the ‘rights’ to our own faces and voices help?

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Graeme Austin, Chair of Private Law, Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington

    Getty Images

    Not that long ago, the term “deepfake” wasn’t in most people’s vocabularies. Now, it is not only commonplace, but is also the focus of intense legal scrutiny around the world.

    Known in legal documents as “digital replicas”, deepfakes are created by artificial intelligence (AI) to simulate the visual and vocal appearance of real people, living or dead.

    Unregulated, they can do a lot of damage, including financial fraud (already a problem in New Zealand), political disinformation, fake news, and the creation and dissemination of AI-generated pornography and child sexual abuse material.

    For professional performers and entertainers, the proliferation and increasing sophistication of deepfake technology could demolish their ability to control and derive income from their images and voices.

    And deepfakes might soon take away jobs: why employ a professional actor when a digital replica will do?

    One possible solution to this involves giving individuals the ability to enforce intellectual property (IP) rights to their own image and voice. The United States is currently debating such a move, and New Zealand lawmakers should be watching closely.

    Owning your own likeness

    Remedies already being discussed in New Zealand include extending prohibitions in the Harmful Digital Communications Act to cover digital replicas that do not depict a victim’s actual body.

    Using (or amending) the Crimes Act, the Fair Trading Act and the Electoral Act would also be helpful.

    At the same time, there will be political pressure to ensure regulation does not stymie investment in AI technologies – a concern raised in a 2024 cabinet paper.

    Legislation introduced to the US Congress last year – the Nurture Originals, Foster Art, and Keep Entertainment Safe Bill – proposes a new federal intellectual property right that individual victims can use against creators and disseminators of deepfakes.

    Known informally as the “No Fakes Bill”, the legislation has bipartisan and industry support, including from leading entertainment worker unions. The US Copyright Office examined the current state of US law and concluded that enforceable rights were “urgently needed”.

    From the New Zealand perspective, the No Fakes Bill contains both helpful ideas and possible pitfalls. As we discuss in a forthcoming paper, its innovations include expanding IP protections to “everyday” individuals – not just celebrities.

    All individuals would have the right to seek damages and injunctions against unlicensed digital replicas, whether they’re in video games, pornographic videos, TikTok posts or remakes of movies and television shows.

    But these protections may prove illusory because the threshold for protection is so high. The digital replica must be “readily identifiable as the voice or visual likeness of an individual”, but it’s not clear how identifiable the individual victim of a deepfake needs to be.

    Well known New Zealand actors such as Anna Paquin and Cliff Curtis would certainly qualify. But would a New Zealand version of the bill protect an everyday person, “readily identifiable” only to family, friends and workmates?

    Can you license a digital replica?

    Under the US bill, the new IP rights can be licensed. The bill does not ban deepfakes altogether, but gives individuals more control over the use of their likenesses. An actor could, for example, license an advertising company to make a digital replica to appear in a television commercial.

    Licences must be in writing and signed, and the permitted uses must be specified. For living individuals, this can last only ten years.

    So far, so good. But New Zealand policy analysts should look carefully at the scope of any licensing provisions. The proposed IP right is “licensable in whole or in part”. Depending on courts’ interpretation of “in whole”, individuals could unknowingly sign away all uses of their images and voice.

    The No Fakes Bill is also silent on the reputational interests of individuals who license others to use their digital replicas.

    Suppose a performing artist licensed their digital replica for use in AI-generated musical performances. They should not, for example, have to put up with being depicted singing a white supremacist anthem, or other unsanctioned uses that would impugn their dignity and standing.

    Protectng parody and satire

    On the other side of the ledger, the No Fakes Bill contains freedom of expression safeguards for good faith commentary, criticism, scholarship, satire and parody.

    The bill also protects internet service providers (ISPs) from liability if they quickly remove “all instances” of infringing material once notified about it.

    This is useful language that might be adopted in any New Zealand legislation. Also, the parody and satire defence would be an advance on New Zealand’s copyright law, which currently contains no equivalent exception.

    But the US bill contains no measures empowering victims to require ISPs to block local subscribers’ access to online locations that peddle in deepfakes. Known as “site-blocking orders”, these injunctions are available in at least 50 countries, including Australia. But New Zealand and the US remain holdouts.

    For individual victims of deepfakes circulating on foreign websites that are accessible in New Zealand, site-blocking orders could offer the only practical relief.

    The No Fakes Bill is by no means a perfect or comprehensive solution to the deepfakes problem. Many different weapons will be needed in the legal and policy armoury – including obligations to disclose when digital replicas are used.

    Even so, creating an IP right could be a useful addition to a suite of measures aimed at reducing the economic, reputational and emotional harms deepfakes can inflict.

    The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. Deepfakes can ruin lives and livelihoods – would owning the ‘rights’ to our own faces and voices help? – https://theconversation.com/deepfakes-can-ruin-lives-and-livelihoods-would-owning-the-rights-to-our-own-faces-and-voices-help-249929

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI China: China’s central bank to promote cross-border RMB use

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

    BEIJING, Feb. 20 — The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) will promote the use of renminbi (RMB) in cross-border payments, pricing, investment and financing, with an aim to facilitate international trade, investment and financing, according to a statement published Thursday.

    The central bank said it would develop the offshore RMB market, leverage the roles of currency swaps and RMB clearing banks, and pledged to accelerate the construction of Shanghai’s status as an international financial center and enhancing Hong Kong’s status as an international financial center.

    By the end of 2024, the RMB’s share in global payments ranked fourth, while its share in global trade financing stood at third, indicating a steady rise in the internationalization of the RMB, according to data released at a conference held by the central bank from Monday to Tuesday.

    In 2025, efforts will be made to expand the functions of the central bank in macro-prudential management and financial stability, improve the macro-prudential policy framework, and innovate relevant tools, the PBOC said during the meeting.

    The PBOC will also improve financial management in the real estate sector to help reverse the market downturn and stabilize the sector.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Greenpeace – NZ position at fisheries forum “reckless”

    Source: Greenpeace

    Greenpeace is calling the stance taken by New Zealand at an international fisheries forum “short-sighted and reckless”, saying more ocean protection is needed, not further erosion of existing measures in the name of profit.
    The annual meeting of the inter-governmental body that governs fishing in the South Pacific high seas (SPRFMO) is meeting in Chile this week.
    It’s been revealed that New Zealand is pushing to get Australia’s quota for orange roughy, a deep sea fish with a declining population, while also trying to increase the amount of deep sea coral that can be pulled up by bottom trawling nets.
    Greenpeace oceans campaigner Juan Parada says this puts New Zealand at odds with other SPRFMO members, including Australia and the US, who are backing measures to protect vulnerable marine areas.
    “New Zealand’s stance at SPRFMO once again shows the desperate, short-term drive for profit, pushed by this Luxon-led government, which is siding with its fishing industry mates and promoting their interests over ocean protection.
    “Orange roughy is a slow-growing fish whose populations are under pressure, and just a few months ago, a New Zealand trawler was caught hauling up 37kg of coral in the South Pacific – proving they were fishing in areas of high biodiversity.
    “That incident led to the temporary closure of the area to fishing, but now the New Zealand government is calling for these coral ‘trigger’ limits to be lifted so the fishing industry can keep trawling for longer, even if it means destroying deep sea coral reefs.
    Note:Currently, under SPRFMO rules, if a trawler pulls up more than 15kg of coral in its nets it triggers an automatic temporary suspension of fishing in the area. 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Agriculture export growth narrows goods trade deficit – Stats NZ media and information release: Overseas merchandise trade: January 2025

    Source: Statistics New Zealand

    Agriculture export growth narrows goods trade deficit 21 February 2025 – The trade balance for the January 2025 month was a deficit of $486 million, according to figures released by Stats NZ today.

    In the January 2024 month, the deficit was $1.1 billion.

    Total exports were valued at $6.2 billion in January 2025, an increase of $1.4 billion when compared with January 2024. Imports were valued at $6.7 billion, an increase of $787 million over the same period.

    The narrowing of the deficit in January 2025, compared with the same month last year, was driven by agricultural commodity exports.

    Files:

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Greenpeace – NZ position at fisheries forum “reckless”

    Source: Greenpeace

    Greenpeace is calling the stance taken by New Zealand at an international fisheries forum “short-sighted and reckless”, saying more ocean protection is needed, not further erosion of existing measures in the name of profit.
    The annual meeting of the inter-governmental body that governs fishing in the South Pacific high seas (SPRFMO) is meeting in Chile this week.
    It’s been revealed that New Zealand is pushing to get Australia’s quota for orange roughy, a deep sea fish with a declining population, while also trying to increase the amount of deep sea coral that can be pulled up by bottom trawling nets.
    Greenpeace oceans campaigner Juan Parada says this puts New Zealand at odds with other SPRFMO members, including Australia and the US, who are backing measures to protect vulnerable marine areas.
    “New Zealand’s stance at SPRFMO once again shows the desperate, short-term drive for profit, pushed by this Luxon-led government, which is siding with its fishing industry mates and promoting their interests over ocean protection.
    “Orange roughy is a slow-growing fish whose populations are under pressure, and just a few months ago, a New Zealand trawler was caught hauling up 37kg of coral in the South Pacific – proving they were fishing in areas of high biodiversity.
    “That incident led to the temporary closure of the area to fishing, but now the New Zealand government is calling for these coral ‘trigger’ limits to be lifted so the fishing industry can keep trawling for longer, even if it means destroying deep sea coral reefs.
    Note:Currently, under SPRFMO rules, if a trawler pulls up more than 15kg of coral in its nets it triggers an automatic temporary suspension of fishing in the area. 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News