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Category: Asia Pacific

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

    Source: New Zealand Transport Agency

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Italy

    Source: Australia Safe Travel Advisories

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

    MIL OSI News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: Productivity is often mistaken for wages. What does it really mean? How does it work?

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

    Alexey_Rezvykh/Shutterstock

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

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

    1. It’s about quantities, not costs

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

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

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

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

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

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

    2. Productivity is directed by management, not workers

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

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

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

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

    3. Measuring productivity is dodgier the more complex it gets

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    4. It is best measured over long periods

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

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

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



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

    5. Productivity is falling here and overseas

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

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

    Internationally, the picture is not much different.

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

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

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



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

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

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

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

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

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: Secretary-General of ASEAN participates in the 28th ASEAN Political-Security Community Council Meeting

    Source: ASEAN

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

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

    MIL OSI Economics –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Marine Pollution Incident Resilience workshop begins in Honiara

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    PacPlan Project Officer, Paul Irving said:

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

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

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

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

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

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    Updates to this page

    Published 8 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: Xalts onboards Polygon on its enterprise grade RWA tokenization platform for financial institutions

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Singapore, Oct. 08, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Xalts today announced a deeper collaboration to bring its enterprise-grade real world asset tokenization platform, RWA Cloud, to the Polygon blockchain network. RWA Cloud provides out-of-the-box solutions to enable financial services, governments, and other enterprise developers looking to build digital asset platforms for implementing blockchain, tokenization, and smart contract applications for different use cases.

    Xalts works with financial services and businesses to provide connectivity by leveraging a modern technology stack, including APIs, Blockchains, and Orchestration layers. Its product suite includes solutions such as the RWA Cloud platform, which enables large institutions such as financial services and governments to quickly build complex solutions on blockchains. 

    By integrating Polygon within Xalts’ RWA Cloud platform, enterprise application developers will be able to deploy and build blockchain applications quickly and at a very low cost using Polygon. Xalts will further partner with the Polygon Labs team on a host of institutional applications, including those around trade and supply chain finance, treasury management, and digital currency adoption.

    Xalts’ RWA Cloud addresses challenges enterprises and regulators face while implementing blockchain, such as retaining complex rules, workflows, processes, and user compliances mandated by internal or regulatory governance. Enterprises can manage process complexity associated with events like issuance, servicing, or transfers by leveraging RWA Cloud’s Smart Workflow Core, an orchestration layer that connects with smart contract libraries and multiple off-chain systems. 

    “We are very excited to onboard Polygon. Deeper collaboration and integrations with blockchain partners enables regulated financial institutions to build their enterprise use cases in a seamless way. We look forward to accelerating the adoption of RWA tokenization by enterprises.”, said Supreet Kaur, Chief Operating Officer, Xalts.

    This year has marked a significant step forward in the advancement of tokenization in real-world application within the financial sector with regulators such as Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) Project Ensemble for asset tokenization and Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) expanding the Project Guardian and Global Layer One (GL1) initiatives. 

    “Integrating Polygon with Xalts RWA Cloud will speed up the enterprise adoption of blockchain & RWA Tokenization use cases. We look forward to working closely with the Xalts team to enable financial institutions and fintechs with a plug and play solution”, said Colin Butler, Global Head of Institutional Capital at Polygon Labs.

    Ends

    About Xalts
    Xalts is a financial technology firm providing enterprise grade, real time connectivity between financial services & businesses by leveraging modern technology stack including APIs, Blockchains & Orchestration layers to automate complex workflows. Xalts is backed by Accel and Citi Ventures and has a presence in Singapore, Hong Kong, India, UAE and UK. To learn more about Xalts, visit https://xalts.io/ 

    The MIL Network –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Legal training office director named

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: 700 million plastic bottles: we worked out how much microplastic is in Queensland’s Moreton Bay

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

    M-Productions/Shutterstock

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Plastic buildup in Moreton Bay

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    The challenge of measuring microplastics

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

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

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

    What’s next?

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Helen Bostock receives funding from the Australian Research Council.

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

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

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: Australia will protect a vast swathe of the Southern Ocean, but squanders the chance to show global leadership

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

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

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

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

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

    A special place

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    The science is clear

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

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

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

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

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

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

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




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


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

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

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

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

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

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

    An opportunity missed

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

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

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

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

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: Clean Energy Technologies, Inc. Collaborates with True North Computing to Deliver Advanced Microgrid Solutions for Cryptocurrency Mining Operations

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Irvine, CA., Oct. 08, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Clean Energy Technologies, Inc. (“CETY”) (Nasdaq: CETY), a clean energy manufacturing and services company offering eco-friendly green energy solutions, clean energy fuels, and alternative electric power for small and mid-size projects in North America, Europe, and Asia, has signed a memorandum of understanding with True North Computation, Inc. (TNC), a premier bitcoin mining company, to deliver advanced microgrid solutions for their datacenters and cryptocurrency mining operations.

    TNC is a well-established leader in the cryptocurrency mining sector, recognized for its focus on efficiency and environmental sustainability. This collaboration will empower TNC to optimize its energy consumption and improve the environmental impact of its mining operations by integrating CETY’s advanced microgrid solutions. CETY’s technology will reduce TNC’s energy costs through fully integrated power generation, energy storage, heat recovery, and energy management systems, delivering long-term savings in a 20MW microgrid application within the U.S. CETY and its affiliates will provide comprehensive engineering, procurement, and management services for this project.

    CETY’s solutions offer the following key benefits to crypto mining operations:

    • Reduce emissions from mining activities.
    • Increase uptime and ensure continuous, reliable operations.
    • Utilize an advanced energy management system to boost efficiency and lower operational costs.
    • Lower overall maintenance costs, contributing to long-term operational savings.

    “We are thrilled to partner with True North Computing to provide tailored microgrid solutions that meet the unique demands of crypto mining,” said Kam Mahdi, CEO of Clean Energy Technologies, Inc. “This partnership reflects our commitment to delivering innovative and environmentally friendly energy solutions that support the growth and productivity of high-energy-demand industries like cryptocurrency mining.”

    Microgrids are transforming the way energy is managed, particularly for high-demand operations such as AI datacenters and Bitcoin mining. These innovative systems provide localized power generation that can operate independently or alongside the main grid, ensuring uninterrupted power and increased operational resilience. With CETY’s advanced microgrid technologies, TNC will benefit from tailored solutions that not only enhance energy efficiency and reliability but also reduce operational costs and environmental impact.

    “We are excited to collaborate with Clean Energy Technologies, Inc. to enhance the energy efficiency and sustainability of our mining operations,” said Bruno Lauducer, CEO of TNC. “CETY’s expertise in microgrid solutions will enable us to achieve greater operational efficiency and reduce our environmental impact.”

    About True North Computation Group

    True North Computation Group (TNC) is a leading cryptocurrency mining company dedicated to achieving operational excellence and sustainability. TNC leverages cutting-edge technology and innovative strategies to maintain its position at the forefront of the bitcoin mining industry.

    For more information, visit https://www.tncgroup.ca

    About Clean Energy Technologies, Inc. (CETY)

    Headquartered in Irvine, California, Clean Energy Technologies, Inc. (CETY) is a rising leader in the zero-emission revolution by offering eco-friendly green energy solutions, clean energy fuels and alternative electric power for small and mid-sized projects in North America, Europe, and Asia. We deliver power from heat and biomass with zero emission and low cost. The Company’s principal products are Waste Heat Recovery Solutions using our patented Clean CycleTM generator to create electricity. Waste to Energy Solutions convert waste products created in manufacturing, agriculture, wastewater treatment plants and other industries to electricity and BioChar. Engineering, Consulting and Project Management Solutions provide expertise and experience in developing clean energy projects for municipal and industrial customers and Engineering, Procurement and Construction (EPC) companies.

    CETY’s common stock is currently traded on the Nasdaq Capital Market under the symbol “CETY.” For more information, visit http://www.cetyinc.com.

    For more information, visit http://www.cetyinc.com.

    Follow CETY on our social media channels: Twitter | LinkedIn | Facebook

    This summary should be read in conjunction with the Company’s quarterly report on Form 10-Q for the quarterly period ended March 31, 2024 and other periodic filings made pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, which contain, among other matters, risk factors and financial footnotes as well as a discussions of our business, operations and financial matters located on the website of the Securities and Exchange Commission at http://www.sec.gov.

    Safe Harbor Statement

    This news release may include forward-looking statements within the meaning of section 27A of the United States Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the United States Securities and Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, with respect to achieving corporate objectives, developing additional project interests, the Company’s analysis of opportunities in the acquisition and development of various project interests and certain other matters. These statements are made under the “Safe Harbor” provisions of the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and involve risks and uncertainties which could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements contained herein. Forward-looking statements are neither historical facts nor assurances of future performance. Instead, they are based only on the Company’s current beliefs, expectations and assumptions regarding the future of CETY’s business, future plans and strategies, projections, anticipated events and trends, the economy and other future conditions. Because forward-looking statements relate to the future, they are subject to inherent uncertainties, risks and changes in circumstances that are difficult to predict and many of which are outside of the Company’s control. Therefore, you should not rely on any of these forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements can be identified by words such as: “anticipate,” “plan,” “expect,” “estimate,” “strategy,” “future,” “likely,” “may,” “should,” “will” and similar references to future periods. Any forward-looking statement made by the Company in this press release is based only on information currently available to us and speaks only as of the date on which it is made. The Company undertakes no obligation to publicly update any forward-looking statement, whether written or oral, that may be made from time to time, whether as a result of new information, future developments or otherwise.

    Clean Energy Technologies, Inc.

    Investor and Investment Media inquiries:

    949-273-4990

    ir@cetyinc.com

    Source: Clean Energy Technologies, Inc.

    The MIL Network –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Federal Court orders Qantas to pay $100m in penalties for misleading consumers

    Source: Australian Competition and Consumer Commission

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Qantas knew of the issues and benefited from misleading consumers

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

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

    How Qantas breached the Australian Consumer Law

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

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

    Qantas continued to sell tickets to cancelled flights

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

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

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

    Qantas delayed notifying ticketholders of flight cancellation

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

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

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

    Payments of around $20 million to certain affected consumers

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Qantas systems changed

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

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

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

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

    Background

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

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

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

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

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

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

    MIL OSI News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Defence News – RNZN divers assess sunken ship in Samoa

    Source: New Zealand Defence Force

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    BACKGROUND INFORMATION:

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

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: What is amortisation, and what does it have to do with Peter Dutton’s nuclear proposal?

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

    atk work/Shutterstock

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


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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    What is amortisation?

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

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

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

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

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

    Spreading costs over time

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

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

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

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

    Company trademarks are examples of intangible assets.
    rvlsoft/Shutterstock

    Finite or infinite

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

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

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

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

    How is it calculated?

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

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

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

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

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

    What’s depreciation then?

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

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

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

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

    Wait, how are nuclear reactors ‘intangible’?

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

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

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

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

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

    Careful with your calculations

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: ICG : Notification of Major Holdings

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    TR-1: Standard form for notification of major holdings

    1. Issuer Details
    ISIN
    GB00BYT1DJ19
    Issuer Name
    INTERMEDIATE CAPITAL GROUP PLC
    UK or Non-UK Issuer
    UK
    2. Reason for Notification
    An acquisition or disposal of voting rights; An acquisition or disposal of financial instruments
    3. Details of person subject to the notification obligation
    Name
    BlackRock, Inc.
    City of registered office (if applicable)
    Wilmington
    Country of registered office (if applicable)
    USA
    4. Details of the shareholder
    Full name of shareholder(s) if different from the person(s) subject to the notification obligation, above

    City of registered office (if applicable)

    Country of registered office (if applicable)

    5. Date on which the threshold was crossed or reached
    04-Oct-2024
    6. Date on which Issuer notified
    07-Oct-2024
    7. Total positions of person(s) subject to the notification obligation

    . % of voting rights attached to shares (total of 8.A) % of voting rights through financial instruments (total of 8.B 1 + 8.B 2) Total of both in % (8.A + 8.B) Total number of voting rights held in issuer
    Resulting situation on the date on which threshold was crossed or reached Below 5% Below 5% Below 5% Below 5%
    Position of previous notification (if applicable) 4.950000 0.260000 5.210000  

    8. Notified details of the resulting situation on the date on which the threshold was crossed or reached
    8A. Voting rights attached to shares

    Class/Type of shares ISIN code(if possible) Number of direct voting rights (DTR5.1) Number of indirect voting rights (DTR5.2.1) % of direct voting rights (DTR5.1) % of indirect voting rights (DTR5.2.1)
    GB00BYT1DJ19   Below 5%   Below 5%
    Sub Total 8.A Below 5% Below 5%

    8B1. Financial Instruments according to (DTR5.3.1R.(1) (a))

    Type of financial instrument Expiration date Exercise/conversion period Number of voting rights that may be acquired if the instrument is exercised/converted % of voting rights
    Securities Lending     Below 5% Below 5%
    Sub Total 8.B1   Below 5% Below 5%

    8B2. Financial Instruments with similar economic effect according to (DTR5.3.1R.(1) (b))

    Type of financial instrument Expiration date Exercise/conversion period Physical or cash settlement Number of voting rights % of voting rights
    CFD     Cash Below 5% Below 5%
    Sub Total 8.B2   Below 5% Below 5%

    9. Information in relation to the person subject to the notification obligation
    2. Full chain of controlled undertakings through which the voting rights and/or the financial instruments are effectively held starting with the ultimate controlling natural person or legal entities (please add additional rows as necessary)

    Ultimate controlling person Name of controlled undertaking % of voting rights if it equals or is higher than the notifiable threshold % of voting rights through financial instruments if it equals or is higher than the notifiable threshold Total of both if it equals or is higher than the notifiable threshold
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 1) BlackRock Finance, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 1) Trident Merger, LLC      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 1) BlackRock Investment Management, LLC      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 2) BlackRock Finance, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 2) BlackRock Holdco 2, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 2) BlackRock Financial Management, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 2) BlackRock International Holdings, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 2) BR Jersey International Holdings L.P.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 2) BlackRock Holdco 3, LLC      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 2) BlackRock Cayman 1 LP      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 2) BlackRock Cayman West Bay Finco Limited      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 2) BlackRock Cayman West Bay IV Limited      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 2) BlackRock Group Limited      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 2) BlackRock Finance Europe Limited      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 2) BlackRock Investment Management (UK) Limited      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 3) BlackRock Finance, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 3) BlackRock Holdco 2, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 3) BlackRock Financial Management, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 3) BlackRock International Holdings, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 3) BR Jersey International Holdings L.P.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 3) BlackRock Australia Holdco Pty. Ltd.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 3) BlackRock Investment Management (Australia) Limited      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 4) BlackRock Finance, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 4) BlackRock Holdco 2, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 4) BlackRock Financial Management, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 4) BlackRock Holdco 4, LLC      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 4) BlackRock Holdco 6, LLC      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 4) BlackRock Delaware Holdings Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 4) BlackRock Institutional Trust Company, National Association      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 5) BlackRock Finance, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 5) BlackRock Holdco 2, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 5) BlackRock Financial Management, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 5) BlackRock Holdco 4, LLC      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 5) BlackRock Holdco 6, LLC      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 5) BlackRock Delaware Holdings Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 5) BlackRock Fund Advisors      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 6) BlackRock Finance, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 6) BlackRock Holdco 2, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 6) BlackRock Financial Management, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 7) BlackRock Finance, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 7) BlackRock Holdco 2, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 7) BlackRock Financial Management, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 7) BlackRock International Holdings, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 7) BR Jersey International Holdings L.P.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 7) BlackRock (Singapore) Holdco Pte. Ltd.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 7) BlackRock HK Holdco Limited      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 7) BlackRock Asset Management North Asia Limited      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 8) BlackRock Finance, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 8) BlackRock Holdco 2, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 8) BlackRock Financial Management, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 8) BlackRock International Holdings, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 8) BR Jersey International Holdings L.P.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 8) BlackRock Holdco 3, LLC      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 8) BlackRock Cayman 1 LP      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 8) BlackRock Cayman West Bay Finco Limited      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 8) BlackRock Cayman West Bay IV Limited      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 8) BlackRock Group Limited      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 8) BlackRock Finance Europe Limited      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 8) BlackRock (Netherlands) B.V.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 8) BlackRock Asset Management Deutschland AG      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 9) BlackRock Finance, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 9) BlackRock Holdco 2, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 9) BlackRock Financial Management, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 9) BlackRock International Holdings, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 9) BlackRock Canada Holdings ULC      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 9) BlackRock Asset Management Canada Limited      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 10) BlackRock Finance, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 10) BlackRock Holdco 2, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 10) BlackRock Financial Management, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 10) BlackRock International Holdings, Inc.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 10) BR Jersey International Holdings L.P.      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 10) BlackRock Holdco 3, LLC      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 10) BlackRock Cayman 1 LP      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 10) BlackRock Cayman West Bay Finco Limited      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 10) BlackRock Cayman West Bay IV Limited      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 10) BlackRock Group Limited      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 10) BlackRock Finance Europe Limited      
    BlackRock, Inc. (Chain 10) BlackRock Advisors (UK) Limited      

    10. In case of proxy voting
    Name of the proxy holder

    The number and % of voting rights held

    The date until which the voting rights will be held

    11. Additional Information
    BlackRock Regulatory Threshold Reporting Team

    Jana Blumenstein

    020 7743 3650
    12. Date of Completion
    07th October 2024
    13. Place Of Completion
    12 Throgmorton Avenue, London, EC2N 2DL, U.K.

    The MIL Network –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: Secretary-General of ASEAN attends the 35th ASEAN Coordinating Council Meeting

    Source: ASEAN

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

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

    MIL OSI Economics –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Flamenco superstar Sara Baras to present Asian premiere of “Vuela” in Hong Kong in December (with photos)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    Flamenco superstar Sara Baras to present Asian premiere of “Vuela” in Hong Kong in December (with photos)
    Flamenco superstar Sara Baras to present Asian premiere of “Vuela” in Hong Kong in December (with photos)
    ******************************************************************************************

         The Leisure and Cultural Services Department has invited the world-renowned Spanish flamenco diva, Sara Baras, to visit Hong Kong and bring her company’s latest production “Vuela” for its Asian premiere in December, marking Baras’s first return to the city since 2015. The performance will, no doubt, deliver an unforgettable celebration of flamenco dance and music.           “Vuela” is a production created for celebrating the 25th anniversary of Baras’s own dance company, Ballet Flamenco Sara Baras. She took the occasion to pay tribute to the Spanish guitar virtuoso and composer Paco de Lucía (1947 to 2014), who left a revolutionary influence on flamenco music with his work. “Vuela” (which means “fly” in English) was conceived from the respect, passion and love both artists shared. Since its premiere early this year in Spain, “Vuela” has toured Europe to critical acclaim.           The choreographic journey of “Vuela” is composed of 15 unique pieces within four acts, where each of them revolves around a specific word, thus creating flamenco language in motion with a strong narrative: “madera” (wood) which reminds oneself of the strength of roots, the warmth of being; “mar” (sea) which invites oneself to navigate in passion and be like water; “muerte” (death) is a way to explore human emotions from the deepest depths; “volar” (to fly) is the only way to escape without running, simply letting oneself be carried away by celebration and joy, an opportunity that only music, dance, and feelings can offer oneself.           Celebrated for her lightning-fast footwork, intricate movements of choreography and captivating stage presence, Baras is the foremost exponent of flamenco dance and one of the most prestigious and recognised Spanish representatives in the performing arts international scene. She was hailed by the online music magazine “Bachtrack” as “a superstar who transcends genres”. Baras established Ballet Flamenco Sara Baras in 1998, and has since choreographed 17 productions. Over the years, she has won multiple awards and has been featured in an array of films.           “Vuela” by Ballet Flamenco Sara Baras will be held at 7.45pm on December 6 and 7 (Friday and Saturday) at the Grand Theatre of the Hong Kong Cultural Centre. Tickets priced at $260, $360, $460, $560 and $660 are now available at URBTIX (www.urbtix.hk). For telephone bookings, please call 3166 1288. For programme enquiries, please call 2268 7323 or visit http://www.lcsd.gov.hk/CE/CulturalService/Programme/en/dance/programs_1791.html.           A number of extension activities will be organised for this programme. A flamenco guitar recital will be held at 2.15pm on December 7 (Saturday) at the Lecture Hall of Sheung Wan Civic Centre. Keko Baldomero, music director and guitarist of the company, accompanied by May Fernández (vocal) and Rafael Moreno (percussion), will offer audiences a captivating journey of flamenco music. Tickets priced at $250 are now available at URBTIX. For details, please refer to the above-mentioned website.                The programme will also feature two flamenco dance workshops (conducted in Spanish with English interpretation) at the Podium Workshop of the Hong Kong Cultural Centre for beginners and advanced dancers respectively, where participants will experience a taste of the passion and rhythm of flamenco dance guided by a company dancer. The workshop for beginners (suitable for those aged 16 or above with some dance experience) will be held at 11am on December 7 (Saturday), while the one for advanced dancers (suitable for those aged 16 or above with flamenco dance training) will be held at 11am on December 8 (Sunday). Tickets priced at $200 are now available at URBTIX. For details, please refer to the above-mentioned website.           Discount schemes are available for the programme, including a group booking discount as well as package discounts for performance and guitar recital or dance workshops. An early-bird discount will be offered from now until November 7 (Thursday) for purchasing the tickets through any of the discount schemes. For enquiries about concessionary schemes, please call 2268 7323 or visit the above-mentioned website. This programme is one of the celebratory programmes of the 35th anniversary of the Hong Kong Cultural Centre.     

     
    Ends/Tuesday, October 8, 2024Issued at HKT 14:15

    NNNN

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Kugler, The Global Fight Against Inflation

    Source: US State of New York Federal Reserve

    Thank you, Isabel, and thank you for the opportunity to speak here at the ECB today.1 I am particularly pleased to be part of this year’s conference because the theme you have chosen has, for some time now, also been a theme of my career as an academic and public servant. Every day, of course, central bankers must bridge science and practice, drawing on the insights that research provides, specifically, because the economy and the world are continuously subject to new circumstances. We must do so, and put those insights into practice, because everyone in the United States, and in Europe, and around the world, depends on a healthy and growing economy, and depends on policymakers making the right decisions to help keep it that way.

    But well before I came to the Federal Reserve, I was also bridging science and practice. First, as a labor economist, when, for example, I was exploring how employment, productivity, and earnings are influenced not only by educational attainment and experience, but also by policies. Later, as chief economist at the Department of Labor, I brought science to bear in carrying out its mission of supporting workers. As the U.S. representative at the World Bank, economic science was likewise crucial in deciding how to best direct the institution’s resources to where they were needed the most. In each of these roles, I have learned a bit more about the need to balance rigorous scientific understanding of the problems that people face with the real-world experiences of those people, which sometimes do not fit so neatly into an economic theorem or principle.
    Most recently, my colleagues and I on the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) have been focused on the very practical task of reducing inflation while keeping employment at its maximum level. To understand the recent experience of high inflation in the United States, it is helpful to consider how inflation behaved around the world after the advent of the COVID-19 pandemic. In the remainder of my remarks, I will discuss the global dimensions of the recent bout of high inflation in different economies, both comparing similarities and contrasting differences, with a special emphasis on the factors that enabled the United States to achieve disinflation while having stronger economic activity relative to its peers. I will then conclude with some comments on the U.S. economic outlook and the implications for monetary policy.
    Starting with the similarities in our inflationary experiences, in early 2020, a worldwide pandemic disrupted the global economy and ultimately caused a surge of inflation around the world. Global goods production was hobbled, transportation and other aspects of supply chains became entangled, and there were significant labor shortages, all combining to cause a severe imbalance between supply and demand in much of the world. Sharp increases in commodity prices were exacerbated by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The result was a global escalation of inflation. As you can see by the black line on slide 2, a measure of world headline inflation in 26 economies accounting for 60 percent of global gross domestic product (GDP) rose to a degree that had not been experienced since the early 1980s.
    This worldwide increase of inflation was synchronized and widespread across advanced and emerging economies. To measure the synchronization and breadth of this inflationary period, Federal Reserve Board researchers have employed a dynamic factor model to estimate a common component of inflation across these 26 economies.2 As you can see by the blue line on slide 2, the estimated global component accounts for a large share of the variation of headline inflation among these economies after inflation began rising sharply in 2021. This evidence is consistent with the familiar story of widespread lockdowns, shutdowns of manufacturing plants in different parts of the world, disrupted logistic networks, increases in shipping costs, and longer delivery times. In the recovery, we also saw globally higher demand for commodities, intermediate inputs, and final goods and services, with demand exceeding a still-constrained supply.
    Indeed, one important contributor to the recent co-movement in inflation across the world has been food and energy prices. As you know, most of the time variations in inflation are heavily influenced by food and energy prices, which tend to be more volatile than the prices for other goods and services. Because many food and energy commodities are traded internationally, retail prices paid by consumers also tend to have some degree of global synchronization. Thus, as you would expect, the black line in the left chart on slide 3 shows that food and energy inflation faced by consumers around the world—here called noncore inflation—rose substantially in the recent inflationary episode. Moreover, world noncore inflation is largely accounted for by its global component in yellow, thus also showing a high degree of global synchronization.
    Another thing we can say about the recent worldwide escalation of inflation is how widely diffused it was across different price categories. Core inflation excludes food and energy prices, and it includes many categories more exposed to domestic conditions such as housing and medical services. Yet, as shown by the black and red lines in the right chart on slide 3, the recent rise in core inflation showed a high degree of global synchronization, with the global component accounting for a large share of the post-pandemic inflation. Looking back in history, this is the first time since the 1970s that we saw a rise in core inflation so widespread across such a large number of countries. Moreover, underlying this rise in core inflation in the United States and other advanced economies, research carried out by Federal Reserve Board economists shows that there was a widespread rise in prices across the whole range of categories within the core basket.3
    Academics and policymakers have debated about the possible reasons explaining the recent co-movement of inflation around the world. The COVID-19 pandemic was a global phenomenon and had effects on supply and demand that were similar in many countries. On the supply side, businesses closed, affecting goods production and the provision of services. There were labor shortages due to illness, social distancing, early retirements, and declines in immigration, with all of these factors making it harder to produce goods and services.4 Production disruptions and labor shortages propagated around the world due to long and intricate supply chains forged over several decades of growing globalization in trade. The imbalance between supply and demand widened as consumers switched their spending from services to goods, straining transportation capacity that further disrupted supply chains.5 This re-allocation of demand from services to goods also strained the ability of firms to produce, as they struggled to find qualified workers due to the needed re-allocation of workers across sectors.6 This demand was also likely fueled by the fiscal response to COVID-19 in 2020 and 2021. All of these factors drove up costs, and there were others. Russia’s war on Ukraine intensified the increases in energy and food commodity prices during the recovery from the pandemic. And the interaction of these different forces also likely played a role.7 For example, as Asia increased production to meet higher demand for goods in the U.S., this may have driven up wages and other input costs in Asia, increasing demand for imports from other places and, in turn, raising costs there, and so on. My assessment is that both supply and demand contributed to the recent global inflationary episode, including in the United States, with international trade of goods, including commodities, and services playing an important role in disseminating these forces around the world.
    One salient aspect of past inflationary episodes is the observation that core inflation typically falls more slowly than it increases. As we can see by the red lines on slide 4, world core inflation rose more quickly than it decreased in the three most recent episodes of significant inflation and disinflation—from a trough in 1972 to a new trough in 1978; from 1978 to a trough in 1986; and then the recent episode, from the end of 2020 through the first quarter of 2024. In these episodes, the escalation of four-quarter core inflation increased by an average of 7/10 percentage point per quarter to its peak, while it decreased by an average of only 3/10 percentage point per quarter to the trough.8
    Still, it is important that central bankers not only compare similarities across economies in the recent inflation fight, but also contrast the differences. Notably, another important feature of the last three inflation and disinflation periods is that though the share of core inflation explained by the common component increases when inflation rises, this share decreases when inflation falls, as can be seen by the black shaded areas of the three panels on slide 4. This suggests that while the reasons underlying the co-movement of inflation across the world—such as global supply disruptions and commodity price shocks—may have been important when prices were increasing, they have been less important when prices have decreased. This evidence indicates that factors that vary from economy to economy become more relevant in the disinflationary period.
    Economic researchers have raised several possible explanations for the different inflation trajectories experienced by different economies during this post-pandemic period. For example, some point to differences in the magnitudes of the demand and supply imbalances driven by the shutdown and reopening of each economy, with this imbalance possibly playing a larger role on inflation in the euro area relative to the United States.9 While noting that differences in the size of fiscal stimulus in different countries were likely important, the targeting of that stimulus also differed, in some cases with a greater emphasis on addressing supply disruptions.10 Global factors also affect various economies differently, with studies showing that the exposures to fluctuations in commodity prices are an important issue.11 For instance, Europe was heavily affected by natural gas shortages related to Russia’s war on Ukraine, while gas supplies in the United States were more plentiful during this period. Also, supply chains were untangled at different speeds in different parts of the world, with, for instance, low water levels in the Panama Canal and attacks in the Red Sea by Houthi rebels affecting different shipping routes differently around the world. And, last but not least, differences in labor market tightness very likely played a role, with evidence pointing to its importance in the United States in driving up nominal wage growth, a factor that likely helped keep employment and economic activity at healthy levels.12
    Researchers at the Board of Governors also find that differences in the pace of disinflation across countries have been largely driven by different trajectories of services price inflation.13 As shown on slide 5, they find that the dispersion of inflation across countries peaked in 2023 and has been declining since then for headline and core goods, but not so much for core services inflation, with housing developments helping to account for the differences in services inflation. Other cross-country research suggests that wage developments help explain services inflation dynamics.14 Indeed, services inflation from both the United States and the euro area have been elevated. Still, while U.S. housing services inflation has been running higher than the wage-driven nonhousing component, the reverse is true in the euro area.
    While the cross-country differences during the recent bout of high inflation have emerged more prominently during the disinflationary period, economic growth has been very heterogenous since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. Generally speaking, the U.S. has experienced a significantly stronger recovery than other advanced economies. As we can see in the left panel on slide 6, real GDP has grown substantially more in the United States since 2021. This is also the case with respect to the larger components of GDP, such as consumption and investment, shown in the right two panels.
    In explaining why the U.S. has managed to bring down inflation and experience strong economic activity, I believe that the combination of restrictive monetary policy together with convex supply curves can help explain these developments.15 In addition, there are three supply-related factors that have also made significant contributions to the combination of rapid disinflation together with continued and resilient growth.
    First, there are important factors that have affected total factor productivity differently across countries. For instance, the U.S. has seen greater business dynamism, as reflected in a higher rate of new business formation, shown in the left panel on slide 7. This is important because while most new firms fail, a small share of those that survive grow rapidly and make significant contributions to aggregate productivity.16 Moreover, the pandemic-era business creation surge has been particularly strong in high-tech sectors, such as computer systems design as well as research and development services.17 In fact, we have also seen greater growth in total factor productivity in the U.S. relative to other advanced economies, as shown in the right figure on slide 7. In addition, while the artificial intelligence (AI) technology is still in its nascency, U.S. businesses across different sectors of the economy are investing in and adopting AI. According to the Business Trends and Outlook Survey of the Census, more than 20 percent of companies in 15 sectors have adopted AI.18 It may be too early to tell, but additional productivity gains may be coming from tasks that are enhanced by AI through process improvements.19
    Second, we have seen a stronger rate of labor productivity growth in the United States as shown in the left panel on slide 8.20 The economic policy response to the pandemic in the U.S. was robust, but it was different from the response in many other advanced economies. In other economies, the emphasis was on maintaining employment, and specifically keeping workers employed in their existing firms when the pandemic arrived. This was the case, for example, in the euro area, and the middle panel indeed shows that the unemployment rate peaked several times higher in the United States. This approach minimized euro-area job losses, but it may have limited the flow of workers to more-productive sectors of the economy, which is supported by Federal Reserve Board research showing substantially more sectoral re-allocation of workers in the United States compared to the euro area, as seen in the right figure on slide 8.21
    Third, the U.S. labor supply has grown in the post-pandemic period. The labor force participation rate increased solidly, especially from the beginning of 2021 through the middle of 2023, and the U.S. population increased strongly because of high levels of immigration. While recent immigration flows into some European countries have been comparable in proportion to those into the U.S., as seen in the left figure on slide 9, new immigrants may have contributed relatively more to U.S. growth because they often integrate more quickly into the labor force, as seen in the right figure.22
    Finally, and turning our focus to monetary policy, this stronger economic performance, with falling inflation, has allowed the FOMC to be patient about the timing in reducing our policy rate. This performance gave us time to strongly focus on the inflation side of our mandate. And this, together with the bump in inflation early this year, helps explain why we began to ease monetary policy to less-restrictive levels only after other central banks of advanced economies had done so. But now, the combination of significant ongoing progress in reducing inflation and a cooling in the labor market means that the time has come to begin easing monetary policy, and I strongly supported the decision by the FOMC in our September meeting to cut the federal funds rate by 50 basis points.
    Looking ahead, while I believe the focus should remain on continuing to bring inflation to 2 percent, I support shifting attention to the maximum-employment side of the FOMC’s dual mandate as well. The labor market remains resilient, but I support a balanced approach to the FOMC’s dual mandate so we can continue making progress on inflation while avoiding an undesirable slowdown in employment growth and economic expansion. If progress on inflation continues as I expect, I will support additional cuts in the federal funds rate to move toward a more neutral policy stance over time.
    Still, my approach to any policy decision will continue to be data dependent and to rely on multiple and diverse sources of data to form my view of how the economy is evolving. For instance, I am closely monitoring the economic effects from Hurricane Helene and from geopolitical events in the Middle East, since these could affect the U.S. economic outlook. If downside risks to employment escalate, it may be appropriate to move policy more quickly to a neutral stance. Alternatively, if incoming data do not provide confidence that inflation is moving sustainably toward 2 percent, it may be appropriate to slow normalization in the policy rate.
    As I have described, the escalation of inflation unleashed by the pandemic was global in scope, and the fight to reduce inflation has also been global. Each of our economies faces its own unique mixture of challenges, but by comparing our similarities and contrasting our differences, I believe we can learn from each other’s experiences.
    In conclusion, let me thank those of you in this room who contribute to bridging science and practice. For those working on the policy side, thank you for the hard work you do each day to analyze the economic data that allows not only policymakers like me, but also consumers and businesses to gain a better understanding of ongoing developments in the global economy. On the academic side, thank you for your creativity and ingenuity in asking policy-relevant questions and pushing the boundaries of our understanding of an ever-changing economic landscape.

    1. The views expressed here are my own and are not necessarily those of my colleagues on the Federal Reserve Board or the Federal Open Market Committee. Return to text
    2. See Danilo Cascaldi-Garcia, Luca Guerrieri, Matteo Iacoviello, and Michele Modugno (2024), “Lessons from the Co-Movement of Inflation around the World,” FEDS Notes (Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, June 28). Return to text
    3. I refer to updated estimates from the following works: Hie Joo Ahn and Matteo Luciani (2020), “Common and Idiosyncratic Inflation,” Finance and Economics Discussion Series 2020-024 (Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, March; revised August 2024); and Eli Nir, Flora Haberkorn, and Danilo Cascaldi-Garcia (2021), “International Measures of Common Inflation,” FEDS Notes (Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, November 5). Return to text
    4. See Danilo Cascaldi-Garcia, Musa Orak, and Zina Saijid (2023), “Drivers of Post-Pandemic Inflation in Selected Advanced Economies and Implications for the Outlook,” FEDS Notes (Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, January 13). Return to text
    5. See Gianluca Benigno, Julian di Giovanni, Jan J.J. Groen, and Adam I. Noble (2022), “The GSCPI: A New Barometer of Global Supply Chain Pressures,” Staff Reports 1017 (New York: Federal Reserve Bank of New York, May). Return to text
    6. See Francesco Ferrante, Sebastian Graves, and Matteo Iacoviello (2023), “The Inflationary Effects of Sectoral Reallocation,” Journal of Monetary Economics, vol. 140, supplement (November), pp. S64–S81. Return to text
    7. See Paul Ho, Pierre-Daniel Sarte, and Felipe Schwartzman (2022), “Multilateral Comovement in a New Keynesian World: A Little Trade Goes a Long Way (PDF),” Working Paper Series 22-10 (Richmond: Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, November). Return to text
    8. For the 1972–78 period, we define the inflation ascent path as 1972:Q3 to 1974:Q4, while its descent path is 1975:Q1 to 1978:Q2. For the 1978–86 period, we define the inflation ascent path as 1978:Q3 to 1980:Q2, while its descent path is 1980:Q3 to 1986:Q2. For the 2020–24 period, we define the inflation ascent path as 2021:Q1 to 2022:Q4, while its descent path is 2023:Q1 to 2024:Q1 because it is the latest available data. Return to text
    9. See Domenico Giannone and Giorgio Primiceri (2024), “The Drivers of Post-Pandemic Inflation,” NBER Working Paper Series 32859 (Cambridge, Mass.: National Bureau of Economic Research, August). Return to text
    10. For the economic effects on the size of fiscal stimuli, see Oscar Jorda and Fernanda Nechio (2023), “Inflation and Wage Growth since the Pandemic,” European Economic Review, vol. 156, 104474. Return to text
    11. See Christiane Baumeister, Gert Peersman, and Ine Van Robays (2010), “The Economic Consequences of Oil Shocks: Differences across Countries and Time (PDF),” in Renee Fry, Callum Jones, and Christopher Kent, eds., Inflation in an Era of Relative Price Shocks (Sydney: Reserve Bank of Australia), pp. 91–128; and Andrea De Michelis, Thiago Ferreira, and Matteo Iacoviello (2020), “Oil Prices and Consumption across Countries and U.S. States,” International Journal of Central Banking, vol. 16 (March), pp. 3–43. Return to text
    12. For the effects of labor market tightness on price and wage inflation, see Olivier J. Blanchard and Ben S. Bernanke (2022), “What Caused the U.S. Pandemic-Era Inflation?” NBER Working Paper Series 31417 (Cambridge, Mass.: National Bureau of Economic Research, June); Olivier J. Blanchard and Ben S. Bernanke (2024), “An Analysis of Pandemic-Era Inflation in 11 Economies,” NBER Working Paper Series 32532 (Cambridge, Mass.: National Bureau of Economic Research, May). Return to text
    13. See Maria Aristizabal-Ramirez, Dylan Moore, and Eva Van Leemput (forthcoming), “What Goes Up Together Must Not Come Down Together: An Analysis of Services Disinflation,” Forthcoming as an International Finance Discussion Paper (Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System). Return to text
    14. See Pongpitch Amatyakul, Deniz Igan, and Marco Jacopo Lombardi (2024), “Sectoral Price Dynamics in the Last Mile of Post-COVID-19 Disinflation,” BIS Quarterly Review, March, pp. 45–57. Return to text
    15. See Adriana D. Kugler (2024), “Disinflation without a Rise in Unemployment? What Is Different This Time Around,” speech delivered at the 2024 Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research Economic Summit, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif., March 1. Return to text
    16. See Titan Alon, David Berger, Robert Dent, and Benjamin Pugsley (2018), “Older and Slower: The Startup Deficit’s Lasting Effects on Aggregate Productivity Growth,” Journal of Monetary Economics, vol. 93 (January), pp. 68–85; and Ryan Decker, John Haltiwanger, Ron Jarmin, and Javier Miranda (2014), “The Role of Entrepreneurship in U.S. Job Creation and Economic Dynamism,” Journal of Economic Perspectives, vol. 28 (Summer), pp. 3–24. Return to text
    17. See Ryan Decker and John Haltiwanger (2024), “High Tech Business Entry in the Pandemic Era,” FEDS Notes (Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, April 19). Return to text
    18. In data released September 23, 2024, the share of firms reporting the use of AI to perform tasks previously done by employees in producing goods or services was 27 percent. Return to text
    19. See Lisa D. Cook (2024), “Artificial Intelligence, Big Data, and the Path Ahead for Productivity,” speech delivered at “Technology-Enabled Disruption: Implications of AI, Big Data, and Remote Work,” a conference organized by the Federal Reserve Banks of Atlanta, Boston, and Richmond, Atlanta, October 1. Return to text
    20. See Francois de Soyres, Joaquin Garcia-Cabo Herrero, Nils Goernemann, Sharon Jeon, Grace Lofstrom, and Dylan Moore (2024), “Why Is the U.S. GDP Recovering Faster than Other Advanced Economies?” FEDS Notes (Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, May 17). Return to text
    21. See Joaquin García-Cabo, Anna Lipińska, and Gaston Navarro (2023), “Sectoral Shocks, Reallocation, and Labor Market Policies,” European Economic Review, vol. 156 (July), 104494. Return to text
    22. See Courtney Brell, Christian Dustmann, and Ian Preston (2020), “The Labor Market Integration of Refugee Migrants in High-Income Countries,” Journal of Economic Perspectives, vol. 34 (Winter), pp. 94–121. Return to text

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: 2024 Completed matters

    Source: Australian Department of Revenue

    [202415] GST product classification – self-review guide and checklist

    [202413] Additional tier 1 capital note issuances

    [202412] Supplementary annual GST returns for Top 100 and Top 1,000 public and multinational business taxpayers

    [202411] Advance pricing arrangement program review recommendations

    [202410] Statement of account usage and delivery preference

    [202409] Attribution of risk weighted assets for thin capitalisation (foreign banks)

    [202407] Delivering Better Financial Outcomes (Quality of Advice) – Recommendation 7

    [202406] Administration of deceased estates

    [202401] Multinational Tax Integrity – strengthening Australia’s interest limitation (thin capitalisation) rules

    [202415] GST product classification – self-review guide and checklist

    Consultation purpose

    To seek feedback on the new self-review guide and checklist for GST classification of products to ensure it meets the needs of taxpayers.

    Description

    The ATO has developed a self-review guide and checklist for GST classification of products. The self-review guide and checklist is designed to provide taxpayers with practical step-by-step guidance to:

    • undertake regular self-review of the GST classification of their supplies
    • assess the robustness of business system processes and controls that directly impact the decisions on GST classification of supplies.

    Feedback will ensure the self-review guide and checklist meets the needs of taxpayers and will help to identify any areas for improvement.

    Outcome of consultation

    Feedback provided some valuable insights which will be incorporated into the self-review guide and checklist for GST classification of products to improve the documents and ensure they meet the needs of taxpayers.

    Who we consulted

    • Industry representatives
    • Advisory firms
    • Members of the GST Stewardship Group

    Consultation lead

    Virginia Hernandez, Public Groups
    Virginia.Hernandez@ato.gov.au
    Phone 03 860 19383

    [202413] Additional tier 1 capital note issuances

    Consultation purpose

    To seek feedback to inform potential public advice and guidance on additional tier 1 (AT1) capital note issuances.

    Description

    AT1 capital is a key element of the capital structure for Australian financial institutions. The ATO receives numerous applications for binding advice through the rulings system on the tax consequences associated with AT1 capital notes for investors and issuers.

    There is currently a high level of maturity and consistency in AT1 capital note issuances, including their terms and features and their tax consequences.

    The current approach to providing guidance is on a case-by-case basis. The ATO is considering opportunities to streamline guidance on AT1 capital note issuances and is seeking feedback on whether a Taxation Ruling would eliminate or substantially reduce the incidence of class and private ruling requests.

    Who we consulted

    • Financial Institutions
    • Industry bodies
    • Tax agents and advisory firms

    Outcome of consultation

    The feedback received provided perspective on the key issues that stakeholders view as requiring consideration in respect of public advice and guidance in relation to AT1 capital note issuances.

    On 10 September 2024, the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) issued a Media Release announcing a proposal for banks to phase out the use of AT1 capital instruments. In light of this announcement, the ATO will place the project regarding potential public advice and guidance on AT1 capital note issuances on hold, pending the outcome of APRA’s proposal.

    Consultation lead

    Veronica Richards, Public Groups
    Veronica.Richards@ato.gov.au
    Phone 02 9374 2067

    [202412] Supplementary annual GST returns for Top 100 and Top 1,000 public and multinational business taxpayers

    Consultation purpose

    To understand what guidance is required to assist taxpayers with completion of the supplementary annual GST return.

    Description

    In 2024–25, the ATO is introducing a new supplementary annual reporting requirement for Top 100 and Top 1,000 taxpayers who have received a GST assurance rating through an earlier GST review.

    The introduction of the return will enable us to make informed decisions about future engagements with taxpayers and enhance our treatment strategies and ability to monitor GST risks that arise in the large market.

    Who we consulted

    Outcome of consultation

    Targeted consultation provided valuable feedback which is being considered and will be incorporated in the design and implementation of the supplementary annual GST return.

    Consultation lead

    Virginia Gogan, Public Groups
    Virginia.Gogan@ato.gov.au
    Phone 03 8632 4643

    [202411] Advance pricing arrangement program review recommendations

    Consultation purpose

    To seek feedback on the 8 recommendations made from the advance pricing arrangement (APA) program review and consider their appropriateness and if additional changes are required to the APA program.

    Description

    Targeted consultation is required to assess the current state of the advance pricing arrangement program to determine if additional changes need to be implemented following the report recommendations from the APA program review that was completed 30 June 2023.

    Who we consulted

    • Big 4 accounting firms
    • Law firm Minter Ellison

    Outcome of consultation

    Feedback received from the consultations was invaluable in providing the ATO with a better understanding of the market perceptions of the APA Program, including;

    • identifying key issues and areas for improvement from stakeholders in the APA Program, particularly following the implementation of the APA review recommendations
    • gathering suggested improvements for the APA Program
    • providing an indication of how well the ATO is communicating with taxpayers and tax professionals.

    The suggestions are being workshopped with internal stakeholders with a view to identifying which proposals can be implemented. Once internal decision-making is complete, these insights will be considered in the updates to the revised APA Practice Statement Law Advice.

    Consultation lead

    Gloria Cassimats, Public Groups
    gloria.cassimatis@ato.gov.au
    Phone 07 3213 5266

    [202410] Statement of account usage and delivery preference

    Consultation purpose

    To seek feedback on the frequency, usefulness, and preferred delivery channel of the ATO statement of account.

    Description

    The ATO issues statements of account for a variety of reasons using different correspondence channels (paper and electronic) and is reviewing options to reduce the frequency of automated statements of account.

    The ATO is consulting with taxpayers and their representatives to obtain feedback on:

    • the current frequency, usefulness, and delivery method of automated statements of account
    • proposed options to reduce the number of automated statements of account issued.

    Who we consulted

    • Individual taxpayers
    • Small business representatives
    • Tax agents
    • BAS agents

    Outcome of consultation

    Feedback confirmed a preference for:

    • a reduction in the frequency of statements of account
    • electronic delivery channels.

    These insights will be considered in the scoping and design of enhancements to the statement of account.

    Consultation lead

    Peter Moore, Strategy and Support
    Peter.Moore@ato.gov.au
    Phone 07 3121 7282

    [202409] Attribution of risk weighted assets for thin capitalisation (foreign banks)

    Consultation purpose

    To seek feedback on the ATO’s proposed view on the appropriate attribution of risk weighted assets to branches for the purposes of applying the thin capitalisation rules for inward investing entities (ADI).

    Description

    Foreign banks that conduct their banking business in Australia through branch(es) are subject to Australia’s thin capitalisation rules. The rules require a foreign bank to allocate a minimum amount of equity capital to its branch.

    Typically, foreign banks use the safe harbour rule to work out their minimum capital amount. The rule is based on ensuring there is sufficient equity capital funding that part of the risk-weighted assets of the bank that is attributable to its branch.

    The ATO does not currently have a published view on how to determine that part of the risk-weighted assets attributable to a branch. Feedback will assist in the development of an ATO view on the topic with the aim of providing certainty and a consistent industry approach.

    Who we consulted

    • Foreign banks with branch operations in Australia
    • Industry bodies
    • Australian Banking Association
    • Australian Financial Markets Association
    • Tax agents and advisory firms

    Outcome of consultation

    Feedback received on the Discussion paper – Thin capitalisation – attribution of risk weighted assets to Australian branches of foreign banks, which closed on 31 May 2024, is being considered for incorporation into the development of a draft practical compliance guidance.

    Consultation lead

    Johanna Tang, Public Groups
    Johanna.Tang@ato.gov.au
    Phone 02 9374 1689

    [202407] Delivering Better Financial Outcomes (Quality of Advice) – Recommendation 7

    Consultation purpose

    To seek feedback on public advice and guidance needs for the new measure addressing financial advice fees charged under section 99FA of the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993.

    Description

    The government has announced its response to the December 2022 Final Report of the Quality of Advice ReviewExternal Link by releasing an exposure draft: Delivering Better Financial Outcomes Package – reducing red tape and other measures.

    Relevantly, Recommendation 7 seeks to clarify the legal basis for superannuation trustees to charge individual members for financial advice from their superannuation account, as well as the associated tax consequences.

    Division 2 of the exposure draft makes amendments to the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 to ensure that financial advice fees charged under section 99FA of the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993 are:

    • tax-deductible for the fund
    • not treated as superannuation benefits of the member.

    Such fees are tax deductible to the fund to the extent that the amount charged to the member’s account was not incurred in relation to gaining or producing the fund’s exempt income or non-assessable non-exempt income. The measure is proposed to have retrospective effect.

    The ATO is seeking feedback on whether there are priority issues where public advice and guidance is needed to help superannuation industry stakeholders understand how the new law applies to their circumstances.

    Who we consulted

    • Professional associations
    • Superannuation industry representatives
    • Advisory firms

    Outcome of consultation

    Consultation provided valuable feedback which will be considered in the preparation of future public advice and guidance materials.

    Consultation lead

    Ernest Lui, Public Groups
    ernest.lui@ato.gov.au
    Phone 02 9374 2901

    [202406] Administration of deceased estates

    Consultation purpose

    To seek feedback on the ATO’s administrative arrangements for accessing a deceased person’s information, particularly where a grant of probate or letters of administration has not been obtained.

    Description

    In July 2020, the Inspector-General of Taxation published the report Death and Taxes – An investigation into ATO Systems and Processes for dealing with Deceased EstatesExternal Link.

    Recommendation 7(b) of the report recommends the ATO seek feedback on its administrative arrangements for accessing a deceased person’s information, particularly where executors or relatives have not obtained a grant of probate or letters of administration, to determine if the administrative arrangements are satisfactory to external stakeholders or if changes are required.

    Who we consulted

    • Industry representatives
    • Relevant government agencies
    • Members of

    Outcome of consultation

    The consultation process identified several proposals for improvements to the administration of deceased estates and the legal framework that supports it.

    The administration-related proposals are being workshopped with internal stakeholders with a view to identifying which proposed improvements can be implemented.

    The suggestions for improvements that have law implications are being analysed to determine which are suitable for escalating to Treasury for their consideration.

    Consultation lead

    Lloyd Williams, Individuals and Intermediaries
    lloyd.williams@ato.gov.au
    Phone 02 6216 1030

    [202401] Multinational Tax Integrity – strengthening Australia’s interest limitation (thin capitalisation) rules

    Consultation purpose

    Following stakeholder feedback on PAG topics, prioritisation and form for the new thin capitalisation measures, we will now be consulting on the high priority topics to develop specific PAG products.

    Description

    On 8 April 2024, the Treasury Laws Amendment (Making Multinationals Pay their Fair Share – Integrity and Transparency) Act 2024 received Royal Assent.

    The ATO is proposing to provide guidance setting out the Commissioner of Taxation’s views on, and approach to, key aspects of the proposed new thin capitalisation rules and debt deduction creation rules contained in Schedule 2 of the Act.

    Stakeholder feedback is sought on potential topics, prioritisation and the form of any potential public advice and guidance.

    It is intended that only the most important issues arising from the new law will be addressed through the preparation of early ATO public advice and guidance.

    Who we consulted

    Outcome of consultation

    Targeted consultation provided valuable feedback which has assisted to identify and develop high priority draft public advice and guidance products. You can keep up to date through the Advice under development program.

    Consultation lead

    Stephen Dodshon, Public Groups
    Stephen.Dodshon@ato.gov.au
    Phone 02 9374 8791

    MIL OSI News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Hiring new employees for the festive season?

    Source: Australian Department of Revenue

    As the festive season approaches, you may be thinking of hiring new employees to help with your business.

    Here are some key things to remember when it comes to your tax and super obligations.

    Withhold the right amount of tax

    As an employer, you’ll need to make sure you’re withholding the right amount of tax from payments you make to your employees and other payees.

    This helps them to meet their end-of-year tax liabilities.

    Your accounting or payroll software, our tax tables or our online tax withheld calculator will help you do this.

    Don’t forget to pay super guarantee (SG)

    You must pay SG to all eligible employees’ super funds in full and on time to avoid paying the super guarantee charge.

    The next SG payment is due on 28 October.

    Our Super guarantee contributions calculator can help you work out how much SG you need to pay.

    You can also use our SG checklist to make sure you’re meeting your SG obligations.

    Report through Single Touch Payroll (STP)

    If you’re still not reporting through STP and don’t have an approved exemption, deferral or concession in place, you should start reporting now.

    If you’ve just started a business or recently employed staff, you’ll need to report through STP from your first payday.

    Remember, if you report through STP you don’t need to send us your employee’s completed TFN declaration. We’ve already received this information through your STP reporting. You’ll still need to keep this information for your own records.

    More information

    Find out more on our website about how to meet your employer obligations.

    MIL OSI News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: Politics with Michelle Grattan: Danielle Wood on the keys to growing Australia’s weak productivity

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

    “Productivity” might sound a nerdy word to many, but improving it is vital for a more affluent life for Australians in coming years. At the moment it is languishing.

    Investigating ways in which our national productivity can be improved is at the heart of the work of the Productivity Commission, headed by Danielle Wood.

    Wood is an economist and former CEO of the Grattan Institute. Picked by Treasurer Jim Chalmers for the PC job, she has already acquired a reputation for being willing to express forthright views, even when they don’t suit the government. She joins us today to talk about the tasks ahead, the commission’s work and some of the current big issues.

    On Australia’s weak productivity numbers, Wood highlights what steps the government can and can’t take:

    There’s a lot in productivity that’s outside of government’s control. So we sometimes talk about it like it’s something that government does to the economy. There’s a lot around technology, the pace of change and diffusion of change that are critically important for productivity that’s largely outside of government’s hands.

    There’s no sort of single lever that you pull that makes all the difference. And, you know, if you looked at the Productivity Commission’s last big review of productivity released at the start of last year, you definitely get that sense.

    If I was to pick just a small number […] of what I think are critically important areas. Sensible, durable, long-term market-based approach to climate policy that’s going to allow us to make the huge transition, including the energy transition that we need in the lowest possible cost way. That’s hugely important for long-run productivity. Housing: fixing the housing challenge and that’s got to go to some pretty serious work being done on planning policy, which I think is really important.

    Then I would point to policies that support the rollout of new technologies. As I said before technological change is critical for productivity growth. So policies that build the right environment, particularly for big changes in technology like AI. So there you’re looking at the regulatory environment, your data policies, your IP policies. They all need to be working together.

    If I can sneak in one more, I would put the government’s announcement that it will revitalise national competition policy, and I think that’s a really exciting one. And if it’s done well, if they can actually get the states to come to the table and agree on areas where we can reduce regulatory and other barriers to competition across the country, that’s a really important lever for getting economic dynamism moving again.

    How has working from home has affected productivity?

    Look, it’s a very big change, and you don’t often get these kinds of really sharp structural shifts in behaviour and in labour markets, and we’re still learning about it.

    The research tends to suggest that hybrid work, so working at home sometimes and in the office sometimes, […] doesn’t seem to have negative productivity impacts If anything, slightly positive productivity benefits, and it has big benefits to individuals in terms of giving them flexibility, avoiding the commute and particularly for things like women’s workforce participation. I think it’s been really helpful and positively influential.

    On the other hand, fully remote work, which is rarer – there is some evidence if you’re not ever coming into the office, you miss out on some of the spill-over benefits of sharing ideas, the kind of water-cooler effects, training and development.

    I work from home one day a week, on Monday, and I do no meetings or calls on that day. And I do all my deep, deep work on Monday, and then the rest of the week I’m in the office and back to back.

    With housing policy front and centre and a debate about whether changes to negative gearing and the capital gains discount should be made, Wood hoses down how much difference that would make:

    It’s not a silver bullet on the house price front. There may be other reasons that you make those changes, particularly if you were doing a kind of broader base tax reform exercise. I would say that you’d want to have those on the table. But when it comes to housing challenges, there’s probably some bigger ones there. The ones […] around planning, around construction productivity, around workforce, are going to be more important in the long term to getting the housing challenge right.

    Wood was initially had concerns about the Future Made in Australia policy. Now she says she now is pleased with where the government has landed:

    Look, I’m certainly very pleased with the guardrails that the government have put in place. I think the publishing of the national interest framework, which puts a lot more economic rigour around the assessments of particular sectors looking for support, was a really important development.

    Certainly puts my mind at ease that there is a lot of rigour around who gets support. Because as you said there is always a risk with these types of policies that we end up wasting money for supporting industries that don’t have a good case for economic support from the taxpayer.

    — Transcript —

    Michelle Grattan: Danielle Wood is almost a year into her post as head of the Productivity Commission. A leading economist and formerly chief of the think tank the Grattan Institute, Wood has taken the Commission’s message out into the public arena. She’s been refreshingly forthright in her willingness to critique government policies, most notably the Future Made in Australia industry policy, for which legislation is due to pass Parliament soon. Languishing productivity is one of Australia’s major economic challenges. In this podcast, Danielle Wood joins us to discuss this and other issues.

    Danielle Wood in your relatively brief time as head of the Productivity Commission, you’ve been out and about and publicly vocal a good deal more, I think, than your predecessors, sometimes criticising government policies. Did you decide on this strategy when you accepted the job? And how important do you think it is for the head of key institutions like the Commission and indeed the Reserve Bank to be willing to use their voices even when that might make the Government squirm a bit?

    Danielle Wood: A very interesting question, Michelle. Look, I mean, I have been out and about a lot, and I certainly did make that a deliberate strategy. And that’s largely because I think organisations like the Productivity Commission have a really important role in informing and shaping debate and making the case for difficult policy reform. I think it’s true to say that any time I say something that might be seen as politically inconvenient for the government the media get excited. And there’s probably a lot more reporting on those comments than perhaps a lot of the other commentary I’ve been making. Making those sort of criticisms is definitely not something I do lightly. But I think there are circumstances where the PC has deep expertise and research in areas. And I think if the policy’s not as well designed as it could be that there can be a case for independent agencies like the PC to speak up. And in doing so I really hope that makes the debate stronger. I think it makes the policy responses stronger. And I think we’re fortunate to have a system with the degree of political maturity that allows that to happen. You know, there are actually not that many countries with an independent, broad ranging policy institution like the Productivity Commission. The fact that governments of various stripes have supported that role over several decades now – I think it makes it a really important and unique part of the policy landscape.

    Michelle Grattan: Now productivity in Australia is languishing. What are the reasons, do you think, for this? And what are the top performing countries when it comes to productivity and how are they performing better?

    Danielle Wood: This is a complicated one and I think it’s really important to differentiate, as I’ll do, Michelle, between what’s happened since COVID and the more business as usual world pre-COVID, because we’ve been on this crazy rollercoaster ride when it comes to productivity in the post-COVID period. It shot up very rapidly early on in COVID as we shut down parts of the economy because they were the lower productivity services sectors that mechanically made it go up. We then came down that hump as things reopened.

    On the other side of COVID we’ve also had a very strong labour market just because of the very fast increase in working hours we’ve seen as unemployment’s come down, as borders have reopened, as people are working more hours. Our capital stock hasn’t kept up and that’s kept productivity really subdued in the post-COVID period. So we’re running at only about half a percent in the year to June.

    In that period, most countries have been going through similar challenges. The US actually stands out as a very strong performer in this post-COVID period and we’re doing some work with the RBA at the moment looking at that and trying to understand that – it may be because of their COVID policies or because they’ve got a fairly substantial investment boom underway. It can be about differences in the labour market. But we’re looking at that question.

    The more substantive piece, given that a lot of that is about the macro environment, is really the question of what are we recovering to? You’ll recall that that decade sandwiched between COVID and the GFC leading up to 2020 saw really weak productivity growth. We were running about 1.1% a year on average – the lowest level in 60 years. That was not just an Australian phenomenon. At that point, if you looked around the industrialised world, we saw that same sluggish productivity growth basically everywhere.

    There’s a number of structural factors at play that we think contributed to that. One is the expansion of services sectors– they tend to be lower productivity. We’ve seen fewer gains from technological advancements – at least up to that point technology hadn’t played the same role in driving productivity improvements as it had in the past. A reduction in economic dynamism, so fewer new businesses being started, fewer people changing jobs. And just more generally lower levels of investment – it looked like businesses were scarred in a post-GFC world and were not investing in the way they had in the past. So there’s a lot of common factors across countries. The real question going forward is can we break free of some of those constraints and see productivity moving again?

    Michelle Grattan: So what would you say would be the three most productivity enhancing measures that Australia could take in the short term?

    Danielle Wood: You’re really going to try and pin my colours to the mast Michelle! So two things I think are really important to say at the outset of this conversation. First, there’s a lot in productivity that’s outside of government’s control. So we sometimes talk about it like it’s something that government does to the economy. There’s a lot around technology, the pace of change and diffusion of change that are critically important for productivity, largely outside of government’s hands.

    The other thing to say is it’s a game of inches. You actually need governments to move across a range of different policy fronts at once. There’s no single lever that you pull that makes all the difference. And if you look at the Productivity Commission’s last big review of productivity released at the start of last year, you definitely get that sense. There were 70 recommendations, five big areas for reform.

    But if I was to pick just a small number of critically important areas, and we will take some political constraints off the table here maybe for the purposes of this conversation… a sensible, durable, long-term market-based approach to climate policy that’s going to allow us to make the huge transition, including the energy transition that we need in the lowest possible cost way. That’s hugely important for long-run productivity.

    Housing. Fixing the housing challenge. And that’s got to go to some pretty serious work being done on planning policy, which I think is really important. But there are a lot of other barriers to housing supply around the regulatory environment and workforce. And that matters because if you can’t build houses where people live close to jobs, if people can’t get into housing, they have reduced capacity to start their own businesses and take risks in the economy. That is a big drag on productivity over time.

    Then I would point to policies that support the rollout of new technologies. As I said before, technological change is critical for productivity growth. So policies that build the right environment, particularly for big changes in technology like AI. There you’re looking at the regulatory environment, your data policies, your IP policies. They all need to be working together, of course we need to manage the risks associated with these new technologies, but we don’t want to be putting unnecessary impediments that would slow down technological change across the economy.

    So those are three big areas. Actually, if I can sneak in one more… the Government has announced that it will revitalise national competition policy, and I think that’s a really exciting one. And if it’s done well, if they can actually get the states to come to the table and agree on areas where we can reduce regulatory and other barriers to competition across the country, that’s a really important lever for getting economic dynamism moving again.

    Michelle Grattan: Just on housing, there’s been a lot of controversy lately, of course, around negative gearing and the discount. Do you think that it would be useful to change negative gearing arrangements and the capital gains discount? The Grattan Institute, where you came from, was a supporter of change. Do you agree with that?

    Danielle Wood: You know, it’s not something that the Productivity Commission has done work on so I can’t talk about it from a PC perspective.

    Michelle Grattan: But you are, beyond tax, you’re a tax expert.

    Danielle Wood: Yes, indeed. But look, what we said in that Grattan work, which I think is important, is it’s not a silver bullet on the house price front. There might be other reasons that you make those changes, particularly if you were doing a kind of broader base tax reform exercise I would see that you’d want to have those on the table. But when it comes to housing challenges, there’s probably some bigger ones there. You know, the ones I was talking about before around planning, around construction productivity, around workforce, that are going to be more important in the long term to getting the housing challenge right.

    Michelle Grattan: So you would say it is a second-order issue in terms of housing policy?

    Danielle Wood: In terms of housing affordability that’s right. But there may be other reasons that you would look at it if you were looking at the tax system more broadly.

    Michelle Grattan: Now, you mentioned services before, and they’re obviously an increasingly large part of our economy, and yet it’s hard to define productivity in this sector. For example, if you have a carer spending a longer time with a person in a nursing home, is that actually increasing productivity? Probably not, but it has other obvious benefits. So how do you deal with this non-market part of the economy?

    Danielle Wood: It’s an incredibly important question and it’s a very difficult one, and I think there are two parts to it. So the thing you’re picking up with your aged care example is essentially the challenge of trying to measure service quality. Across the national accounts when we work out productivity we try and adjust for quality, and I think the ABS does that really well in some areas like housing and technology, there are ways that they control for quality change over time, but that is very hard to do in services.

    The PC did some recent work where we looked at this question for health and we tried to control for improvements in health outcomes across a range of chronic diseases. And what we found is productivity is much higher than what would be measured using traditional techniques because we’ve seen these really big improvements in outcomes for treating chronic diseases that don’t get captured in the statistics. And that gets even harder, as you say, in areas like aged care. How do you measure the warmth of care or the quality of care? I think we just have to recognise that there will always be gaps in the statistics and they are not perfect when it comes to measuring quality of services.

    The other big challenge when it comes to services is that historically we haven’t seen the same productivity gains in services as we’ve seen in areas like manufacturing or agriculture. Going forward, I think we can look at new technologies like AI and see potential for gains in some areas of government-provided services like health and perhaps education. But there are going to be other sectors, particularly those care sectors, where it is irreducibly human. You know, I say labour is the product, that spending time with people is what you are providing. And that means it’s just going to be harder to get productivity gains in those sectors. So none of that is to say that we shouldn’t provide these services and continue to support them and expand them where there is a good economic or social policy case to do so. But we need to recognise that the productivity gains will not be there in those areas as they are in other parts of the economy.

    Michelle Grattan: Now you have a long-term interest in childcare and the Commission has just recommended a major expansion in government spending on early childhood education and care, but it does not envisage that this will in fact lift women’s participation in the workforce to any great degree. So is expanding childcare now mainly about educational equity rather than participation and productivity?

    Danielle Wood: Well, I think the first thing to say is that childcare has been transformative for women’s workforce participation. And even in the last few years, Michelle, as you would know, as it’s become more affordable, we have seen big gains in workforce participation. Women’s workforce participation is now at record levels.

    But it is true that you expect some of those gains to start to slow down as participation rises. And what we found in our report is not that there aren’t barriers to access and affordability that constrain women’s choices, but that childcare is a smaller part of that now. And things like the tax and transfer system, withdrawal of family tax benefits play a bigger role in the sort of workforce disincentives that we’ve been worried about for a long time. Critically, though, as you say, it’s the education benefits that really loom large here. And we found that kids that are going to get the most out of childcare in terms of their development and education are the ones that are accessing it least. So children from disadvantaged backgrounds tend to use care a lot less than other children. Helping those children get the benefits of care for development, for being school ready, is a critical social and economic opportunity.

    Michelle Grattan: The pandemic saw a big shift to many people working from home, and this has continued to a considerable degree. Workers want it and indeed, in some companies, are demanding it. What are the productivity implications of this shift?

    Danielle Wood: Yeah, look, it’s a very big change and you don’t often get these really sharp structural shifts in behaviour and in labour markets. And we’re still learning about it, you need to be modest about these things, but from the research and data we’ve seen to date, I’m much less concerned that it’s going to have a big negative impact as we might have been earlier on. And by that, I mean the research tends to suggest that hybrid work, so working at home sometimes and in the office sometimes, particularly well-managed hybrid work, doesn’t seem to have negative productivity impacts. If anything, it has slightly positive productivity benefits. And it has big benefits to individuals in terms of giving them flexibility, avoiding the commute. And particularly for things like women’s workforce participation I think it’s been really helpful and positively influential.

    On the other hand, fully remote work, which is rarer… there is some evidence, again, the data is mixed, but some studies suggest that it may negatively affect productivity. If you’re not ever coming into the office, you miss out on some of the spill-over benefits of sharing ideas, the kind of watercooler effects, training, development. So, if we were in a world where everyone was working fully remotely I think I would be more concerned. But I think broadly, when it comes to hybrid work, the best evidence we have suggests it’s unlikely to be a drag on productivity.

    Michelle Grattan: What about your own work? Do you work from home at all?

    Danielle Wood: I work from home one day a week on Monday, and I do no meetings or calls on that day. And I do all my deep work on Monday. Then the rest of the week I’m in the office and back-to-back.

    Michelle Grattan: Now, the government has made a number of important changes in the industrial relations area. It’s been a priority for it. How important are workplace arrangements to productivity and have the recent changes been positive or negative or mixed for our productivity challenge?

    Danielle Wood: Look, it’s definitely fair to say that workplace relations policies matter for productivity. This is not an area that the Commission has been asked to look into for some time. I think the last time we did a serious review into workplace relations was a decade or so ago, Michelle. And in that review, we really talked about the balancing act that exists – the need to balance the need for good standards in the workplace and protections for workers, against the benefits that come with flexibility and the advantages of that for business. And at that time, we had suggestions for improvements, but we found that the system was working relatively well. There have been a number of changes since then, including in recent years. But without reviewing those in any detail, it’s difficult for me to comment on the broader impact of those particular changes.

    Michelle Grattan: Treasurer Jim Chalmers indicated some time ago when he was talking about the reform of the PC that he wanted it to be active in the sphere of the energy transition. How have you responded to this?

    Danielle Wood: Something that I’ve done since taking on the role of Chair is to recognise the need to build expertise in some key policy areas that aren’t going away. So we’ve developed a number of research streams, energy and climate being one of those. We are really building up a team that will continue to work on those issues and put out research on those issues over time. We have a new Commissioner, Barry Sterland, who has deep expertise in climate policy, so that’s an important part of building that internal expertise. So you will see us putting out a whole series of pieces on energy and climate and I think we’re really well-placed to make a constructive contribution in that sphere. So watch this space.

    Michelle Grattan: Could you give us any detail of time or topic?

    Danielle Wood: I am not able to do that at the moment for various complicated reasons, but there will certainly be material coming out next year.

    Michelle Grattan: One thing that you made a media splash on was the Government’s Future Made in Australia program, its industry program aimed at supporting Australian industry in the transition to the green economy. You expressed some concern about it at the time. Are you now convinced that there are enough guardrails around this policy that it doesn’t become a waste of taxpayer money and that money won’t be going to rent seekers who don’t deserve or need it?

    Danielle Wood: Look, I’m certainly very pleased with the guardrails that the Government has put in place. I think the publishing of the National Interest Framework, which puts a lot more economic rigour around the assessments of particular sectors looking for support, was a really important development. We think that it’s really important that those sector assessments be done before the government offers support to new areas. And we’ve encouraged things like the sort of public release of those assessments, which I believe will occur. So, I think provided that process gets used, it certainly puts my mind at ease that there is a lot of rigour around who gets support. Because as you said, you know, there is always a risk with these types of policies that we end up wasting money supporting industries that don’t have a good case for economic support from the taxpayer.

    Michelle Grattan: So would the Commission be doing its own assessment of how this program is working after some time?

    Danielle Wood: We are putting in a submission to the Treasury consultation process on the frameworks that might underpin the national interest assessments and the legislation, if it passes, I think requires ongoing consultation with the Commissioners as Treasury does these assessments. So we will continue to play an active role in this process going forward.

    Michelle Grattan: Now, just finally, in a speech recently, you defended the role of economists in assessing government policies and programs. You were saying that they were able to tell, in your words, inconvenient truths, but you also had a go at your profession saying that many have been willfully blind to questions of distribution, arguing that it’s not their job to consider economic inequality. Can you just say what you’re getting at here and perhaps give some examples of this failing? And why do you think this blind spot is there?

    Danielle Wood: Well let me let me give the plug for economists, Michelle, before we talk about all our failures. As I was trying to say in that speech, economists bring something really important to the table in policy discussions, and that is, you know, rigorous frame frameworks for thinking about trade-offs. And that’s really important in the policy world because you’ve got a million good ideas out there, as you know, but you’ve got scarce resources. Scarce time, scarce money. You need to prioritise and you need to make trade-offs. So economists can and should play a really important role in policy for that reason.

    The blind spots I was talking about, as I said, there had been a sort of strain in the economics profession, I think, for a long time that basically said we’re focussed on questions of efficiency, we don’t do distribution. And I think that came from the fact that that was seen to involve value judgements that we don’t want to contend with. We’ve since learned a lot more about the way in which inequality can feed into growth, around the importance of issues like economic mobility. I think most economists would now understand that these are actually really important economic as well as social questions. In terms of where that played out – probably the place where it was most evident, and I think this is probably more squarely in the US and Australia, was around fallout to trade policy and trade liberalization. It was all about increasing the size of the pie, which it did very effectively. But it certainly never said that, you know, there wouldn’t be any losers from that. I think the learning was that you really have to care about the transition, that you have to work with the communities and workers that are affected if you’re doing a policy that’s broadly in the public good, but sees some people go backwards. I think we did that better in Australia than the US, but there are probably still some lessons to learn there.

    The other area I was pointing out where I think economists haven’t always covered themselves with glory, more in the Australian context, was around opening up human services markets to competition. I think there were a number of areas where we were too enamoured with the idea that competition and consumer choice would drive good outcomes, and we just didn’t give enough thought to questions of provider incentives, the regulatory frameworks we would need in place. I think employment services and vocational education and training are key examples of that, and probably some of the challenges we face with the NDIS at the moment as well. So I think they were areas where some economists were a bit naive and certainly I think the thinking and the profession has progressed a lot about how we could do better in those types of markets.

    Michelle Grattan: Danielle Wood, thank you so much for joining us today. We hope to hear continued bold words from you in the months and years ahead. That’s all for today’s Conversation Politics podcast. Thank you to my producer, Ben Roper. We’ll be back with another interview soon, but goodbye for now.

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

    – ref. Politics with Michelle Grattan: Danielle Wood on the keys to growing Australia’s weak productivity – https://theconversation.com/politics-with-michelle-grattan-danielle-wood-on-the-keys-to-growing-australias-weak-productivity-240793

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: Partisanship dominates as federal parliament fights over Middle East war

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

    Federal parliament has split on partisan lines over the Middle East crisis, just a day after the anniversary of the Hamas atrocities against Israelis.

    After discussions between Anthony Albanese and Peter Dutton failed to reach agreement, the government’s wide-ranging motion passed the House of Representatives with the Coalition voting against it.

    The Greens abstained from voting. Almost all the crossbench voted with the government, although “teal” MP Allegra Spender said “I wish that we as a parliament could come together and lead unitedly”.

    The division between Labor and Coalition over the escalating war has increasingly widened over recent months, with Dutton giving unqualified backing to Israel’s strategy and using the issue to paint the prime minister as a “weak” leader.

    The government, while backing Israel’s right to defend itself, has had a more qualified position, including supporting calls for a ceasefire.

    The long motion reiterated “unequivocal condemnation” of the Hamas’ terror attacks, and called for the immediate release of the remaining hostages.

    It condemned antisemitism “in all its forms and stands with Jewish Australians who have felt the cold shadows of antisemitism reaching into the present day”.

    It also recognised the number of Palestinian civilians killed in Gaza, and supported international efforts to provide humanitarian assistance in Gaza and Lebanon.

    It condemned Iran’s attacks on Israel and recognised Israel’s right to defend itself.

    Backing international efforts for a ceasefire in Gaza and in Lebanon, the motion reaffirmed “support for a two-state solution, a Palestinian State alongside Israel, so that Israelis and Palestinians can live securely within internationally recognised borders, as the only option to ensuring a just and enduring peace”.

    As well, the motion recognised the deep distress the Middle East situation was causing many in Australia.

    Albanese told parliament the government would continue to call for de-escalating the violence and conflict in the region. “Tragically, we are seeing the situation worsening.”

    “Further hostilities put civilians at risk. We cannot accept the callous arithmetic of so-called acceptable casualties.”

    Dutton said the motion was supposed to be about what had happened on October 7.

    “The prime minister is trying to speak out of both sides of his mouth.”

    “There has been a position of bipartisanship on these issues, and your predecessors would have had the decency to respect the Jewish community in a way that you have not done today. And for that, prime minister, you should stand condemned.”

    He accused Albanese of rejecting the opposition’s position “for his own political domestic advancement”.

    A later attempt by Dutton to move his alternative motion was shut down by the government.

    In the Senate Greens senators held up placards with the words “SANCTIONS NOW”. Some Greens wore keffiyehs.

    Crossbencher Lidia Thorpe accused Foreign Minister Penny Wong of being “complicit in genocide”.

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

    – ref. Partisanship dominates as federal parliament fights over Middle East war – https://theconversation.com/partisanship-dominates-as-federal-parliament-fights-over-middle-east-war-240791

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Import of poultry meat and products from Trzebnica District of DolnoÅ›lÄ…skie Region in Poland suspended

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

         The Centre for Food Safety (CFS) of the Food and Environmental Hygiene Department announced today (October 8) that in view of a notification from the World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH) about an outbreak of highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza in the Trzebnica District of DolnoÅ›lÄ…skie Region in Poland, the CFS has instructed the trade to suspend the import of poultry meat and products (including poultry eggs) from the area with immediate effect to protect public health in Hong Kong.

         A CFS spokesman said that according to the Census and Statistics Department, Hong Kong imported about 1 620 tonnes of frozen poultry meat from Poland in the first six months of this year.

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

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Release: National’s deficit stories don’t hold up

    Source: New Zealand Labour Party

    Te Whatu Ora’s finances have deteriorated under the National Government, turning a surplus into a deficit, and breaking promises made to New Zealanders to pay for it.

    “Te Whatu Ora’s books reveal how much the Government has been gaslighting New Zealanders,” Labour health spokesperson Ayesha Verrall said.

    “They spun stories about growth in back office staff and layers of management to justify cuts but these documents released today don’t back those claims.

    “It is clear the cause of Health New Zealand’s deficit is underfunding, not over spending.

    “It’s what we’ve been saying all along – increased costs for nurses account for much of Te Whatu Ora’s costs.

    “National campaigned on there being a workforce crisis, and inherited a successful international recruitment campaign from Labour.

    “Both the health minister Shane Reti and the finance minister Nicola Willis became aware of nursing costs exceeding budget in March, but decisions taken in May did not address these costs. The Government’s own choices caused Health New Zealand’s structural deficit.

    “More than $500 million of Te Whatu Ora’s deficit was caused by Cabinet deciding not to transfer funds put aside for pay equity for nurses, midwives and allied health staff.

    “It’s hard to see how the Minister can say there’s no hiring freeze of frontline staff when it’s clear as day in these documents. As early as April this year, a “recruitment pause” has been in place.

    “They’ve broken multiple promises to New Zealanders about cuts not affecting frontline services, and made up a fairytale to explain why.

    “They are supposed to be providing the best health system they can, instead they’re backing out of their commitments and pretending they aren’t. New Zealanders just want to know the health system is there for them when they need it.

    “They are now cutting services and penny-pinching, blaming back office staff who keep the health system functioning.

    “Reckless tax cuts mean National can’t fund the health system we all need and rely on. It’s an absolute mess,” Ayesha Verrall said.


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    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Project “AtomPro”: foreign students of SPbPU learned about advanced technologies of Rosatom

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University – Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University –

    Experts from the company “Rusatom – International Network” Polytechnic and held an expert meeting within the framework of the “AtomPro” project for foreign students of the Institute of Energy, dedicated to advanced technologies of water treatment, water purification and desalination.

    The meeting was attended by students from Afghanistan, Turkey, Egypt, Algeria, China, Nigeria, Cameroon, Kenya, Iraq, Madagascar, Zambia, Ghana, Pakistan, Sudan, Paraguay, Cambodia, Rwanda. The AtomPro project is aimed at popularizing knowledge about Russian nuclear technologies through a series of expert lectures by representatives of businesses of the Rosatom State Corporation with foreign students of flagship universities.

    The meeting discussed key areas of Rosatom’s activities in the field of water treatment, desalination and environmental safety.

    Anna Belyakova, Senior Manager of Product Development Management at Rusatom International Network, touched upon several areas of the corporation’s work in this area. Modern desalination systems can be integrated with nuclear power plants. This allows for the efficient use of their heat and electricity to obtain fresh water, making the process more economical. Autonomous desalination plants were also presented, which are especially important for remote regions where access to water is limited.

    Representatives of the private institution “RMS” shared their experience of implementing water purification technologies at international facilities, emphasizing the importance of reusing water in industry to reduce its consumption. These solutions not only save resources, but also help minimize the impact on the environment, reducing environmental risks.

    Particular attention was paid to hybrid desalination technologies that combine evaporation and membrane filtration methods, which increases the reliability and efficiency of the process. At the end of the meeting, an interactive business game was held for foreign students. The best team received memorable prizes.

    The expert meeting became part of the developing cooperation between the university and Rosatom, aimed at popularizing Russian scientific and engineering thought among foreign students. Such an alliance in the international arena helps not only to attract students, but also creates a comfortable environment for development and adaptation both in education and in a professional career.

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

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

    https://vvv.spbstu.ru/media/nevs/partnership/project-atompro-foreign-students-spbpo-learned-about-advanced-technologies-rosatom/

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Polytechnic University chess players held a large-scale tournament

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University – Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University –

    The Botvinnik Chess Club of SPbPU organized an open international interuniversity online chess tournament INTER SEP-24 as part of the Interuniversity Team Battles series. More than 1,000 people took part in the event.

    The chess players included representatives from Russia, Turkey, Bangladesh, Argentina, Kenya, Australia, Switzerland, Fiji, Brazil, India, Ghana, South Africa, Great Britain, Kazakhstan, Liberia and Mexico.

    The organization and conduct of the tournament was carried out by Polytech students Ruslan Barseghyan, Makari Yanchev, Alexey Arkhipovsky, Alexander Khvoshchev, Alena Makovkina, Alexey Aktyufeev, Daniil Agalakov, Lev Bystritsky, Artem Mkrtchyan, Elizaveta Khazagaeva, Anna Sukhova, Anastasia Kotova, Daniil Podreshetnikov, Bogdan Sivov, Angelina Velichko, Anastasia Bulyuk, Denis Zhdanov and Anastasia Kondratyeva.

    As a result, the AITU team from Astana took first place. The representatives of the Baikal State University from Irkutsk came in second. The third place was awarded to the TUSUR team from Tomsk.

    Once again, the largest inter-university tournament brought together representatives from 16 countries. We intend to develop and expand this event further to make it part of the international university culture, – shared the head of the SPbPU chess club Pavel Martynov.

    The final table of the international interuniversity chess tournament INTER SEP-24 can be seen atlink.

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

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

    https://vvv.spbstu.ru/media/nevs/sport/chess-players-Polytechnic-held-a-large-scale-tournament/

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: Himax Technologies, Inc. Schedules Third Quarter 2024 Financial Results Conference Call on Thursday, November 7 at 8:00 AM EST

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    TAINAN, Taiwan, Oct. 08, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Himax Technologies, Inc. (Nasdaq: HIMX) (“Himax” or “Company”), a leading supplier and fabless manufacturer of display drivers and other semiconductor products, today announced that it will hold a conference call with investors and analysts on Thursday, November 7 at 8:00 a.m. US Eastern Standard Time and 9:00 p.m. Taiwan Time to discuss the Company’s third quarter 2024 financial results.

    HIMAX TECHNOLOGIES THIRD QUARTER 2024 EARNINGS CONFERENCE CALL
    DATE: Thursday, November 7, 2024
    TIME: U.S. 8:00 a.m. EST  
      Taiwan 9:00 p.m.  
     
    Live Webcast (Video and Audio): http://www.zucast.com/webcast/naEJkyEo
    Toll Free Dial-in Number (Audio Only):
      Hong Kong 2112-1444
      Taiwan 0080-119-6666
      Australia 1-800-015-763
      Canada 1-877-252-8508
      China (1) 4008-423-888
      China (2) 4006-786-286
      Singapore 800-492-2072
      UK 0800-068-8186
      United States (1) 1-800-811-0860
      United States (2) 1-866-212-5567
    Dial-in Number (Audio Only):
      Taiwan Domestic Access 02-3396-1191
      International Access +886-2-3396-1191
         
    Participant PIN Code: 1407507 #
       

    If you choose to attend the call by dialing in via phone, please enter the Participant PIN Code 1407507 # after the call is connected. A replay of the webcast will be available beginning two hours after the call on http://www.himax.com.tw. This webcast can be accessed by clicking on this link or Himax’s website, where the webcast can be accessed through November 7, 2025.

    About Himax Technologies, Inc.

    Himax Technologies, Inc. (NASDAQ: HIMX) is a leading global fabless semiconductor solution provider dedicated to display imaging processing technologies. The Company’s display driver ICs and timing controllers have been adopted at scale across multiple industries worldwide including TVs, PC monitors, laptops, mobile phones, tablets, automotive, ePaper devices, industrial displays, among others. As the global market share leader in automotive display technology, the Company offers innovative and comprehensive automotive IC solutions, including traditional driver ICs, advanced in-cell Touch and Display Driver Integration (TDDI), local dimming timing controllers (Local Dimming Tcon), Large Touch and Display Driver Integration (LTDI) and OLED display technologies. Himax is also a pioneer in tinyML visual-AI and optical technology related fields. The Company’s industry-leading WiseEye™ Ultralow Power AI Sensing technology which incorporates Himax proprietary ultralow power AI processor, always-on CMOS image sensor, and CNN-based AI algorithm has been widely deployed in consumer electronics and AIoT related applications. Himax optics technologies, such as diffractive wafer level optics, LCoS microdisplays and 3D sensing solutions, are critical for facilitating emerging AR/VR/metaverse technologies. Additionally, Himax designs and provides touch controllers, OLED ICs, LED ICs, EPD ICs, power management ICs, and CMOS image sensors for diverse display application coverage. Founded in 2001 and headquartered in Tainan, Taiwan, Himax currently employs around 2,200 people from three Taiwan-based offices in Tainan, Hsinchu and Taipei and country offices in China, Korea, Japan, Germany, and the US. Himax has 2,683 patents granted and 390 patents pending approval worldwide as of September 30, 2024.

    http://www.himax.com.tw

    Forward Looking Statements

    Factors that could cause actual events or results to differ materially from those described in this conference call include, but are not limited to, the effect of the Covid-19 pandemic on the Company’s business; general business and economic conditions and the state of the semiconductor industry; market acceptance and competitiveness of the driver and non-driver products developed by the Company; demand for end-use applications products; reliance on a small group of principal customers; the uncertainty of continued success in technological innovations; our ability to develop and protect our intellectual property; pricing pressures including declines in average selling prices; changes in customer order patterns; changes in estimated full-year effective tax rate; shortage in supply of key components; changes in environmental laws and regulations; changes in export license regulated by Export Administration Regulations (EAR); exchange rate fluctuations; regulatory approvals for further investments in our subsidiaries; our ability to collect accounts receivable and manage inventory and other risks described from time to time in the Company’s SEC filings, including those risks identified in the section entitled “Risk Factors” in its Form 20-F for the year ended December 31, 2023 filed with the SEC, as may be amended.

    Company Contacts:

    Eric Li, Chief IR/PR Officer
    Himax Technologies, Inc.
    Tel: +886-6-505-0880
    Fax: +886-2-2314-0877
    Email: hx_ir@himax.com.tw
    http://www.himax.com.tw

    Karen Tiao, Investor Relations
    Himax Technologies, Inc.
    Tel: +886-2-2370-3999
    Fax: +886-2-2314-0877
    Email: hx_ir@himax.com.tw
    http://www.himax.com.tw

    Mark Schwalenberg, Director
    Investor Relations – US Representative
    MZ North America
    Tel: +1-312-261-6430
    Email: HIMX@mzgroup.us
    http://www.mzgroup.us

    The MIL Network –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: Result of the 3-day Variable Rate Reverse Repo (VRRR) auction held on October 08, 2024

    Source: Reserve Bank of India

    Tenor 3-day
    Notified Amount (in ₹ crore) 50,000
    Total amount of offers received (in ₹ crore) 9,398
    Amount accepted (in ₹ crore) 9,398
    Cut off Rate (%) 6.49
    Weighted Average Rate (%) 6.49
    Partial Acceptance Percentage of offers received at cut off rate NA

    Ajit Prasad          
    Deputy General Manager
    (Communications)    

    Press Release: 2024-2025/1246

    MIL OSI Economics –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: By Investing in Technical Training, a Brighter Future Beckons for the Youth of Bhutan

    Source: Asia Development Bank

    Photo Essay | 08 October 2024

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    The Asian Development Bank is ramping up investment in technical and vocational education and training in Bhutan, which is helping to train thousands of students in critical skills that can be applied toward a range of potential careers.

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    MIL OSI Economics –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: FACT SHEET: Biden-⁠ Harris Administration Announces Over 250 Organizations Made Voluntary Commitments to White  House Challenge to Save Lives from  Overdose

    US Senate News:

    Source: The White House
    Today, the Biden-Harris Administration is announcing that over 250 organizations, businesses, and stakeholders across the country have made voluntary commitments to the White House Challenge to Save Lives from Overdose.
    The Challenge, launched earlier this year, is a nationwide call-to-action to stakeholders across all sectors to increase training on, and access to, life-saving opioid overdose reversal medications like naloxone. The voluntary commitments highlighted today build on progress made under President Biden and Vice President Harris’s Unity Agenda, which calls on all Americans, in red states, blue states¸ and everywhere in between, to come together and help address the nation’s overdose epidemic.
    Under President Biden and Vice President Harris’s leadership, the Biden-Harris Administration has taken historic action and made unprecedented investments to reduce overdose deaths. The Administration removed decades-long barriers to treatment for substance use disorder and expanded access to life-saving overdose reversal medications like naloxone.  The Administration also acted to make naloxone available over-the-counter at groceries and pharmacies for the first time in history. Today, the nation is now seeing the largest decrease in overdose deaths on record.
    The White House received commitments to the Challenge from private and public entities, spanning entertainment and hospitality, professional sports leagues, health care providers, trade associations, schools and universities, technology companies, transportation partners, faith groups, private businesses, and more. A number of organizations and businesses made new voluntary commitments as part of the White House Challenge to Save Lives from Overdose, including:
    Amazon is equipping its North American operations facilities with naloxone and bolstering its emergency response procedures with comprehensive training for employees on how to recognize signs of an opioid overdose and properly administer naloxone. Amazon is rolling out its naloxone program in two phases, starting with its most densely populated fulfillment centers. By early 2025, the program will expand to all of Amazon’s operations sites in the U.S., covering over 500,000 employees at hundreds of sites nationwide.
    American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) commits to train its members and staff on proper use of opioid overdose reversal medications. They also commit to including opioid overdose medications in all first aid kits.
    The Association of Flight Attendants-CWA (AFA) is working with the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to implement naloxone on flights, including trainings. They previously worked with the FAA to require that Emergency Medical Kits (EMK) carried by passenger airlines include naloxone.
    Atlanta Public Schools (APS) is implementing a district-wide training available to all school staff to recognize and reverse overdose. Currently, 136 APS health and security personnel have completed naloxone training. APS stocks naloxone in every elementary, middle, and high school in the district, serving nearly 50,000 students and 8,000 employees, and has opioid educational posters and brochures to increase school community awareness.
    Butler University formed the Butler Overdose Action Team, comprised of faculty, staff, and student leaders, in response to the White House Challenge to Save Lives from Overdose. The team is leading campus-wide initiatives to increase awareness, training, and access to lifesaving opioid overdose reversal medication, and collaborating with local health organizations in Indianapolis to promote education on opioid use disorder on campus. Butler also recently placed naloxone in all 58 Emergency Kits across campus, and plans are underway for comprehensive naloxone training for students and employees.
    Charleston County School District (CCSD) commits to working with their community and local substance use agencies to provide educational programs on and promote the use of opioid overdose reversal medications (OORM). CCSD’s substance use program commits to educate students, staff, and parents/caregivers about the dangers of illicit fentanyl and how OORM can save lives. In addition, CCSD works closely with district nursing staff on the use and availability of OORM in CCSD’s 83 schools that serve approximately 49,000 students.
    The Dallas Area Rapid Transit Police Department commits to train and equip all of its Police Officers with naloxone. The Department supports a regional transit agency in the Dallas/Fort Worth metroplex, covering six counties and thirteen cities.
    Deloitte LLP will equip U.S.-based Deloitte Offices with naloxone by December 2024. Naloxone will be placed in Automated External Defibrillator (AED) cabinets at its offices across the U.S. Further, Deloitte will train select office personnel to recognize and help treat overdose.
    Keystone Contractors Association (KCA) is recommending to its members that every construction jobsite and contractor’s office have naloxone available on-site. This builds upon KCA’s work in prior years in launching the Pennsylvania Construction Opioid Awareness Week to get resources and training to construction employers to provide to their workers.
    Laborers International Union of North America (LIUNA) commits to reach its 500,000+ members, their families, and LIUNA affiliates with education on the importance of naloxone on jobsites, training on how to use the medication, and information on where and how to get it. This work is in addition to developing and promoting comprehensive safety and health information on opioid use.
    The National Hockey League (NHL) commits to working with its clubs and staff to make life-saving medication readily available across NHL offices and in arenas. NHL is helping clubs make naloxone available at home games with their first aid units, and ensuring on-site personnel are trained to administer it on game nights. NHL is also advising clubs to include naloxone in their travel medical kits, and encouraging its availability in the visiting team’s emergency bags.
    San Diego Metropolitan Transit System (SDMTS) now trains every newly hired Code Compliance Inspector (CCI) from the Transit Security and Passenger Safety Department in the recognition of opioid overdose and issues naloxone as required equipment for staff. In 2024, CCIs administered naloxone nearly 200 times, and the SDMTS Bus Division Road Supervisors also started carrying naloxone. SDMTS started training CCIs to carry and administer naloxone in July 2021 in response to the overdose crisis.
    Commitments from these entities build upon steps taken in recent years by other organizations that joined the White House Challenge to Save Lives from Overdose to address the overdose epidemic. Examples of these actions from organizations include:
    American Heart Association and Opioid Response Network are partnering on the EmPOWERED to End Opioid Misuse and Stimulant Use Disorder Initiative that aims to address opioid and stimulant usage within Black and Hispanic communities. They have partnered with Black and Hispanic churches to implement community trainings and disseminate educational tools to facilitate open and honest conversations with a wide range of people on the stigmatization of people experiencing opioid and substance use disorders.
    International Union of Painters & Allied Trades (IUPAT) District Council 35 prioritizes support for and awareness of mental health and substance use, and provides overdose education and training on naloxone to its members and apprentices. IUPAT also distributes naloxone to its members, apprentices, and jobsites. IUPAT is part of a broader effort by the Massachusetts Building Trades Recovery Council, which has distributed more than 11,000 doses of naloxone to 14 building trades unions across Massachusetts for distribution to their membership. The Recovery Council receives naloxone from Massachusetts’ Bureau of Substance Abuse Services’ Community Naloxone Program.
    The Jacksonville Transportation Authority (JTA) in Florida has developed overdose rescue training for operations, safety, and security staff, and implemented a ‘bus marshal’ program, where naloxone-equipped security officers ride strategically-targeted routes. This led to saving the life of a bus passenger who was experiencing overdose. JTA also launched ‘Safety on the Move’, delivering free overdose prevention and rescue training and naloxone kits to at-risk communities in partnership with Drug Free Duval, Community Coalition Alliance, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Foundation, and North Florida High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA) Overdose Response Strategy.
    The North Carolina Council of Churches (NCCC) hosts a Partners in Health and Wholeness initiative that works to bridge the issues of faith, health, and justice. This includes the Overdose Response program that offers opioid workshops to faith communities that seek to learn more about the opioid crisis and how they can help with response, and incorporates naloxone distribution upon request. They also received grant funding to provide local churches with resources for opioid-related initiatives for their members. 
    The Restaurant Association Metropolitan Washington (RAMW) has more than 1,400 businesses in its membership, including restaurants, food and hospitality vendors, and allied businesses that work within the food industry in DC, Northern Virginia, and Suburban Maryland. RAMW began partnering with the DC Department of Behavioral Health (DBH) to provide overdose education and naloxone distribution to restaurants in DC, including large trainings for business improvement districts. Restaurants can order a kit to receive by mail from RAMW’s website.
    The San Francisco Entertainment Commission is partnering with the San Francisco Department of Public Health to raise awareness about the presence of illicit fentanyl at and around nightlife spaces, and increase the entertainment industry’s access to life-saving naloxone. To date, they have led in-person trainings for staff at 18 nightlife businesses in San Francisco, distributed 300+ doses of naloxone at outreach events, and reached approximately 900 nightlife attendees through on-stage overdose prevention trainings before performances and other events.
    This Must Be the Place is a nonprofit providing free naloxone to attendees at music venues and festivals across the country. They committed to passing out over 60,000 free kits of naloxone at places like Lollapalooza, Bonnaroo, Austin City Limits, and Dreamville. Seventy percent of the population they reach are receiving naloxone for the first time.
    United Airlines equips each of its enhanced medical kits on every aircraft and station across the network with opioid overdose reversal medications. All of United’s 28,000+ flight attendants are annually trained in the proper use of these life-saving medications. Over the past five years, United has purchased nearly 1,200 units annually, ensuring greater safety for both passengers and crew, including flight attendants and pilots.
    The University of Rhode Island (URI), through its Cooperative Extension program, established the Community First Responder Program (CFRP). CFRP provides more than 50,000 kits annually. CFRP offers in-person and online educational trainings for the public at schools and town halls, and to healthcare providers, first responders, police, and more. They also distribute naloxone and safer-use kits at events in partnership with CVS Health and the U.S. Postal Service. CFRP has expanded services to rural regions of five other New England states through a grant from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). CFRP is expanding its regional rural overdose education via collaborations with New Hampshire Cooperative Extension, Husson University School of Pharmacy (Maine), University of Maine Cooperative Extension, Western New England University College of Pharmacy (Massachusetts), and University of Vermont Cooperative Extension. As naloxone is often inaccessible to New England’s rural regions, CFRP offers to mail no-cost naloxone to participants completing its online interactive module, “Become a Community First Responder.”
    Additional voluntary commitments can be found here.
    In support of President Biden and Vice President Harris’ whole-of-government approach to address the overdose epidemic, federal agencies are working to help expand access to life-saving opioid overdose reversal medications like naloxone and save even more lives. These efforts also align with updated Guidelines for Safety Station Programs in Federal Facilitiesreleased in December 2023:
    The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) has authorized first responders in its Office of Safety, Security and Personnel and throughout the U.S. Forest Service who are equipped and trained in the administration of opioid overdose reversal medications (OORM).  Additionally, USDA’s Center for Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships has provided OORM trainings to over 40 community partners across 15 states as part of its Rural and Farming Communities Mental Health and Suicide Prevention work. USDA remains committed to continuing and expanding the reach of these trainings.
    The Department of Commerce‘s Office of Export Enforcement (OEE) is training Special Agents in the use of opioid overdose reversal medications (OORM) in October 2024, allowing OEE Special Agents to safely and effectively deploy them. OEE will have OORM accessible during all preplanned enforcement operations by January 2025. 
    The Department of Defense (DoD) is committed to opioid safety and prevention of overdose. To strengthen DoD’s emergency response protocols, naloxone is available across installations in the Continental United States and training programs have been expanded, ensuring first responders are equipped and trained. The DoD remains committed to the safety and prevention of overdose by continuing its efforts to provide naloxone access to DoD first responders and investigators and to provide associated trainings beyond DoD first responders.
    The U.S. Department of Health & Human Services (HHS) is increasing training on and access to naloxone. The Indian Health Service (IHS) now mandates annual overdose response training for all IHS employees, contractors, students, and volunteers. Further, before 2025, naloxone training and a guide on procuring naloxone (i.e., using state standing orders, city and county public health departments, etc.) will be available to all U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps officers, and naloxone will be available in safety stations at all HHS regional offices. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), in partnership with the Program Support Center (PSC) and the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Health (OASH), will equip all AED stations in its headquarters with naloxone, and SAMHSA hosted an annual naloxone training for all staff as part of its International Overdose Awareness Day recognition. Additionally, naloxone training will be added to the HHS Learning Management System available to all HHS personnel, including volunteer Federal Civilian Responders.
    The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) issued, and recently updated, a policy regarding the Administration of Naloxone by Non-Healthcare Providers. This policy directs DHS agencies and offices to identify their workforce populations at higher risk of exposure and develop a program to equip them with both naloxone and the training to use it.  The DHS Office of Health Security (OHS) developed virtual and in-person training modules that DHS agencies and offices can use to train their non-healthcare providers or as the basis for developing their own workforce-specific training. DHS continues to work to operationalize formal programs that equip non-healthcare providers with Component-procured naloxone.
    The Department of the Interior (DOI) has issued guidance on the training, carrying, and use of naloxone by DOI employees who may come into contact with persons suspected of opioid overdose during their normal course of duties. The guidance allows critical first responders – including emergency medical responders and emergency medical technicians (EMR/EMT), firefighter EMTs, and law enforcement officers – to have access to opioid overdose reversal medications at various sites nationwide, including national parks and tribal lands. As DOI components continue to conduct risk assessments to identify high-risk areas and appropriate personnel to be trained, the Department is poised to implement vital resources efficiently to preserve life and protect the public.
    The Department of Justice (DOJ) has enacted policies so employees most likely to encounter overdose victims have access to opioid overdose reversal medications (OORM) and the training to safely and effectively deploy them. Pursuant to these policies, its law enforcement agencies – Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF), Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), and U.S. Marshals Service – will have OORM accessible during all preplanned enforcement operations; all Federal Bureau of Prisons staff at all sites will have access to OORM 24 hours a day; and all DOJ public-facing facilities and law enforcement facilities will have safety stations equipped with OORM.
    The United States Postal Service (USPS) has trained 59,000 employees in 1,318 facilities in U.S. counties facing high numbers of overdose deaths in response to the White House Challenge to Save Lives from Overdose. Also, USPS has procured and distributed naloxone to first aid kits in these facilities. As the USPS continues it communication activities on overdose prevention, it expects to reach over 500,000 employees, many of whom have public-facing roles as part of the Postal Service’s ubiquitous footprint across the United States. 
    The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is working to make training available to all employees by December 2024 and will develop and issue a policy statement to support naloxone implementation by March 2025. VA also pledges to ensure opioid overdose reversal medications are available in all high-risk Veterans Health Administration health care areas, including at VA Medical Centers and outpatient clinics, and in all Vet Centers by the end of 2025.
    Read more on the White House Challenge to Save Lives from Overdose HERE.
    Read more on the Biden-Harris Administration actions to address the overdose epidemic HERE.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: New 5000 ruble banknotes: signs of authenticity

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Bank “RUSSIA” Russia Bank –

    Press Releases and Events

    10/08/2024

    New 5000 ruble banknotes: signs of authenticity

    The Bank of Russia has launched modernized 5,000 ruble banknotes into circulation.

    The updated banknotes have a modern design and have an enhanced security system.

    The new banknote is dedicated to Yekaterinburg and the Ural Federal District. The main image on the front side is the “Europe-Asia” stele, while the back side features the “Tale of the Urals” monument in Chelyabinsk and the “66th Parallel” (Arctic Circle) stele in Salekhard.

    Banknotes of 5,000 rubles of the new type are legal tender in cash on the territory of the Russian Federation and are obligatory for acceptance at face value when paying for any types of goods and services without restrictions. The modernized banknotes will be gradually put into circulation and will circulate on par with the banknotes of the 1997 type.

    We invite you to familiarize yourself with the design and main signs of authenticity of the banknote in the infographics of the Bank of Russia.

    Back to list

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

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

    http://abr.ru/about/nevs/13710/

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
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