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Category: Asia Pacific

  • MIL-Evening Report: We calculated how much Dutton’s excise cut would save you on fuel – and few will save as much as promised

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By John Hawkins, Senior Lecturer, Canberra School of Politics, Economics and Society, University of Canberra

    Daria Nipot/Shutterstock

    The opposition has unveiled its response to Labor’s A$17 billion “top-up” tax cuts outlined in Tuesday night’s federal budget: cheaper fuel for Australians.

    Opposition Leader Peter Dutton will take to the election a policy to halve the fuel excise for 12 months. It would drop from 50.8 cents a litre to 25.4 cents, costing the government $6 billion.

    It is a revival of the six-month reduction by the Morrison government ahead of the 2022 election.

    So, how much might people save at the fuel pump? Shadow Treasurer Angus Taylor is touting savings of around $1,500 over 12 months for families who fill up (not just top up) two cars every week.

    But few households consume anywhere near this much petrol. Households with electric cars – or no car at all – will get no direct benefit.

    Lowering petrol and diesel prices also shows a lack of commitment to climate action. It reduces the incentive for people to switch to electric cars, use public transport or drive less.




    Read more:
    Peter Dutton promises $6 billion 12-month halving of petrol and diesel excise


    Not everyone benefits from cheaper fuel

    Cutting petrol prices is not a well-targeted way of helping those people doing it tough. On average, high-income households spend more on petrol than low-income households. There’s also significant variation by area.

    By updating modelling we did at the time of the Morrison government fuel excise cuts, we find that under Dutton’s proposal, the average inner-city household in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane and Adelaide will save around $270 over 12 months. The average outer suburban household in these cities will save $450.

    Inner-city dwellers drive less as they have more ability to use public transport, or even walk or ride to work. It is people on the urban fringe, and some inner regional areas, who typically face long commutes.

    Across inner regional Australia, areas relatively close to major cities, the average household saves $410. For outer regional, remote and very remote areas, total savings fall in the range between $370 and $410.




    Effects on inflation

    If the cut to the excise of about 25 cents is fully passed on, the retail petrol price should drop from around $1.80 to $1.55, around 15%. As petrol has a weight of 3.7% in the consumer price index, the direct impact would be to reduce the CPI by around 0.5% when it is introduced and increase it by 0.5% a year later.

    There will be some, likely much smaller, indirect effects. Retailers may pass on some of the reduced cost of having goods delivered to them. Tradies may pass on some of their reduced cost of driving. As a very visible price, there may be some impact on inflationary expectations.

    On the other hand, the increased purchasing power – and therefore spending – by some households may push up other prices.

    As the impact is temporary, and will not be reflected in the trimmed mean measure of underlying inflation, it is unlikely to have much effect on interest rate decisions by the Reserve Bank.

    What will be the effect on the federal budget?

    Dutton claims his policy will cost the budget around $6 billion.

    But this assumes the cut remains temporary. It is unlikely that households will feel cost-of-living pressures have gone away by mid-2026. A Dutton government would be under pressure to extend the cut in the May 2026 budget to avoid petrol prices going back up.

    History shows governments find it hard to reverse cuts once implemented. In 2001, for example, the Howard government was panicked by poor opinion polls into suspending indexation of the petrol excise when prices reached $1 a litre.

    Indexation was not restored for 14 years, at an estimated cost of more than $40 billion in forgone tax revenue.

    What are the political impacts?

    With this policy, it would appear Dutton is giving up on trying to regain the former Liberal seats lost to the Teals. Voters in these inner city seats drive less than the average and are more concerned about climate change.

    He seems instead to be concentrating his campaign on outer suburban seats and what were termed in the Abbott era “Tony’s tradies”.

    So, is it a good idea?

    In 2022, the Economic Society of Australia asked 46 leading economists whether they thought cutting the fuel excise would be good economic policy. Not a single one thought it was a good idea. It’s unlikely that sentiment has changed.

    John Hawkins was formerly a senior economist with Treasury and the Reserve Bank.

    Yogi Vidyattama has previously received funding from The Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development, Communications and the Arts to do research related to fuel excise and road pricing in 2016-2017.

    – ref. We calculated how much Dutton’s excise cut would save you on fuel – and few will save as much as promised – https://theconversation.com/we-calculated-how-much-duttons-excise-cut-would-save-you-on-fuel-and-few-will-save-as-much-as-promised-253214

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI China: Humanoid robots to shine at 5th China International Consumer Products Expo

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

    BEIJING, March 27 — The fifth China International Consumer Products Expo (CICPE), scheduled for April 13 to 18 in Haikou, capital of south China’s Hainan Province, will showcase the latest humanoid robots from leading domestic and international companies, the event’s organizers announced on Thursday.

    The expo, a key platform for global trade and consumption trends, has drawn the participation of over 4,100 brands from 71 countries and regions, Vice Commerce Minister Sheng Qiuping told a press conference.

    Co-hosted by China’s Ministry of Commerce and the Hainan provincial government, this year’s expo will highlight emerging consumption trends, including artificial intelligence (AI) and low-altitude aviation, debuting innovations from global companies, Sheng said.

    The event will introduce a dedicated consumption tech zone to display cutting-edge technologies and products, with humanoid robots being a bright spot at the expo.

    Major tech innovators such as Huawei, Tesla, Unitree and Rokid will present their latest AI-integrated consumer products, ranging from humanoid robots to AR glasses.

    The CICPE is China’s only national-level exhibition featuring consumer products and is the largest consumer expo in the Asia-Pacific region.

    MIL OSI China News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Global: Modern spacesuits have a compatibility problem. Astronauts’ lives depend on fixing it

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Berna Akcali Gur, Lecturer in Outer Space Law, Queen Mary University of London

    Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore, the Nasa astronauts who were stuck on the International Space Station (ISS) for nine months, have finally returned to Earth.

    Spacesuits were an important consideration that Nasa had to factor into its plans to bring the astronauts back home. Wilmore and Williams had travelled to the ISS in Boeing’s experimental Starliner spacecraft, so they arrived wearing Boeing “Blue” spacesuits.

    Following helium leaks and thruster (engine) issues with Starliner, Nasa decided it was safer not to send them back to Earth on that vehicle. The astronauts had to wait to return on one of the other spacecraft that ferry crew members to the ISS, the SpaceX Crew Dragon.

    This meant they needed a different type of spacesuit, made by SpaceX for use in its vehicle only. Boeing’s suits cannot be used in Crew Dragon in part because the umbilicals (the flexible “pipes” that supply air and cooling to the suit) have connections and standards that don’t work with the ports inside a Crew Dragon.

    This highlights a general problem for the growing number of space agencies and companies sending people into orbit, and for planned missions to the Moon and beyond. Ensuring that different spacesuits are compatible, or “interoperable”, with spacecraft they weren’t designed to be used in is vital if we are to protect astronauts’ lives during an emergency in space, especially in joint missions.

    The spacesuits worn during a return from space are called “launch, entry and abort” (LEA) suits. These are airtight and provide life support to the astronauts in case there is a decompression, when air is lost from the cabin.

    Unfortunately, a decompression has already caused loss of life in space. During the Soyuz 11 mission in 1971, three Soviet cosmonauts visited the world’s first space station, Salyut 1. But during preparations for re-entry, the crew cabin lost its air, killing cosmonauts Georgy Dobrovolsky, Vladislav Volkov and Viktor Patsayev, who were not wearing LEA suits. All cosmonauts wore them after this incident.

    As well as the connections for life support, the Boeing and SpaceX suits also have restraints and connections for communications that are specific to each vehicle. For their return home from the ISS in a SpaceX capsule, Williams was able into use a spare SpaceX suit that was already aboard the space station and the company sent up an additional suit on a cargo delivery for Wilmore to wear.

    Two spacecraft are usually docked at the ISS as “lifeboats” to evacuate the astronauts in the event of an emergency. These are generally a SpaceX Crew Dragon and a Russian Soyuz capsule.

    If an emergency evacuation were to occur and there weren’t enough of the right spacesuits available – for either the Crew Dragon or Soyuz – it could endanger astronauts during the fiery re-entry through Earth’s atmosphere. Interoperability between spacesuits has therefore become a matter of survival.

    The Outer Space Treaty, which provides the basic framework for international space law, recognises astronauts as “envoys of humankind” and grants them specific legal protections. These were expanded on in subsequent UN treaties – notably the Rescue Agreement, which imposes a range of duties on states to render assistance to each others’ astronauts in cases of emergency, accident or distress.

    For the ISS, a collaborative space programme with international flight crews, protocols include terms that set forth how this obligation is to be met. However, these protocols do not contain terms relating to spacesuit interoperability.

    Risks to astronauts in space

    A major potential cause of an emergency evacuation is space debris. The ISS has regularly had to manoeuvre to avoid collisions with debris – including entire defunct satellites.

    In his memoir, Endurance, Nasa astronaut Scott Kelly describes being commanded to enter the Soyuz vehicle with two other crew members and prepare to detach from the ISS because of a close approach by a large defunct satellite. Luckily, the spacecraft passed by harmlessly.

    As orbits become increasingly congested, with an exponential increase in the number of space objects being launched, the risk of collisions will also increase.

    Ever more companies and governments are entering the human spaceflight arena. The Tiangong space station, China’s orbiting laboratory, has been fully operational since 2022, and there are plans to open it to space tourism, just like the ISS.

    India is planning to join the community of nations with the capability to launch humans into space, under a programme called Gaganyaan. And while most space travellers remain government-funded astronauts, the number of private space-farers is increasing.

    Billionaire Jared Isaacman (who is President Trump’s nominee to run Nasa) has commanded two private missions into orbit using Crew Dragon. On the second of these, he participated in the first spacewalk by privately funded astronauts. The ISS is set to be retired in 2030 – but one company, Houston-based Axiom Space, is already building a private space station.

    Against this complex and part-unregulated backdrop, ensuring the interoperability of different spacecraft systems, including spacesuits, will increase levels of safety in this inherently risky activity.

    While the safety and practicality of spacesuits has always been the top priority, compatibility between different suits and vehicles should also be high on the list. This requires space agencies and private spaceflight companies to engage with each other in a process to agree on standard interfaces and connections for life support and communications, across all their suits and space vehicles.

    Amid this period of increased commercialisation and competition between the organisations and companies involved in orbital spaceflight, a move toward greater collaboration can only be a good thing.

    Berna Akcali Gur 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. Modern spacesuits have a compatibility problem. Astronauts’ lives depend on fixing it – https://theconversation.com/modern-spacesuits-have-a-compatibility-problem-astronauts-lives-depend-on-fixing-it-252935

    MIL OSI – Global Reports –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Creative workshop on environmental pollution underway in Auki, Malaita

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    World news story

    Creative workshop on environmental pollution underway in Auki, Malaita

    The workshop encourages creativity to deal with environmental issues like plastic waste, biodiversity, and climate change through art workshop and exhibition.

    Student participants at the workshop.

    A 3-day workshop aiming to empower 30 young students from Auki’s surrounding communities to creatively engage with environmental issues is underway from 26 to 28 March at the Malaita provincial capital.

    Facilitated by Dreamcast Theatre Solomon Islands, it encourages creativity to deal with environmental issues such as plastic waste, biodiversity, and climate change through a hands-on art workshop and exhibition.

    By fostering artistic expression and storytelling, the project seeks to raise awareness and inspire community-wide action towards environmental sustainability.

    British High Commissioner to Solomon Islands and Nauru, His Excellency Paul Turner said:

    This is a great initiative, engaging young people in caring and taking responsibility for their local environment. I am delighted that the British High Commission is associated with such a project. We will look to build on our partnership with Dreamcast.

    Leveraging from the success in Gizo, Western Province, the Malaita Trash Art Project will be an impactful endeavour. Engaging 30 students, ages 9 to 13, from three communities in Auki, the workshop drew on the success from a similar workshop held in Gizo, Western Province by conducting the three-day session where the first will focus on storytelling, art as a medium, and identifying students’ art interests through interactive activities and games.

    The second day will be dedicated to creating art and learning the basics of art exhibition curation and setup. The third day will be exhibition time where all participants will have the opportunity to exhibit their artwork invited guests and members of the community around them.

    Prior to the workshop, Dreamcast Theatre had formalised partnerships with local art and youth networks, identify students, and tailor session plans. Invitations were sent to encourage gender parity and inclusive participation. Community leaders, schools, and parents have been notified two weeks prior to the event to ensure broad support.

    Participants will receive certificates, and their artwork will be showcased in schools or public spaces within the community. This initiative builds on last year’s Honiara Dreamcast plastic workshop, expanding its reach to provincial areas to raise awareness about plastic waste, biodiversity, and climate issues.

    The students will work in their chosen medium, such as photography, film, theatre and puppetry, or design guided by skilled Dreamcast Theatre facilitators.

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    Published 27 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: Trident Announces $1,000,000 Share Repurchase Program

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SINGAPORE, March 27, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Trident Digital Tech Holdings Ltd (“Trident” or the “Company,” NASDAQ: TDTH), a leading catalyst for digital transformation in technology optimization services and Web 3.0 activation based in Singapore, today announced that its board of directors has authorized a share repurchase program (the “2025 Share Repurchase Program”) under which the Company may repurchase up to US$1,000,000 million of its Class B ordinary shares in the form of American depositary shares over the 12 months starting from April 27, 2025, subject to the relevant rules under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”), and the Company’s insider trading policy.

    The Company’s share repurchases, if any, under the 2025 Share Repurchase Program may be made from time to time on the open market at prevailing market prices, in open-market transactions or block trades, and/or through other legally permissible means, depending on market conditions and in accordance with the applicable rules and regulations. The timing and conditions of the share repurchases will be subject to various factors including the requirements under Rule 10b-18 and Rule 10b5-1 of the Exchange Act.

    The 2025 Share Repurchase Program does not obligate the Company to acquire any particular number of American depositary shares. The Company’s board of directors will review the 2025 Share Repurchase Program periodically and may authorize adjustments to its terms and size or suspend or discontinue the program. The Company expects to utilize its existing funds to fund repurchases made under this program. By gradually executing the share repurchase program, Trident seeks to generate greater long-term returns for its shareholders.

    About Trident

    Trident is a leading catalyst for digital transformation in digital optimization, technology services, and Web 3.0 activation worldwide, based in Singapore. The Company offers commercial and technological digital solutions designed to optimize its clients’ experience with their end-users by promoting digital adoption and self-service.

    Tridentity, the Company’s flagship product, is an innovative and highly secure blockchain-based identity solution designed to provide secure single sign-on authentication capabilities to integrated third-party systems across various industries. Tridentity aims to offer unparalleled security features, ensuring the protection of sensitive information and preventing potential threats, thus promising a new secure era in the global digital landscape in general, and in South Asia etc.

    Beyond Tridentity, the Company’s mission is to become the global leader in Web 3.0 activation, notably connecting businesses to a reliable and secure technological platform, with tailored and optimized customer experiences.

    Safe Harbor Statement

    This announcement contains statements that may constitute “forward-looking” statements pursuant to the “safe harbor” provisions of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements can be identified by terminology such as “will,” “expects,” “anticipates,” “aims,” “future,” “intends,” “plans,” “believes,” “estimates,” “likely to,” and similar statements. The Company may also make written or oral forward-looking statements in its periodic reports to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”), in its annual report to shareholders, in announcements and other written materials, and in oral statements made by its officers, directors, or employees to third parties. Statements that are not historical facts, including statements about the Company’s beliefs, plans, and expectations, are forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements involve inherent risks and uncertainties. A number of factors could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in any forward-looking statement, including but not limited to the following: the Company’s strategies, future business development, and financial condition and results of operations; the expected growth of the digital solutions market; the political, economic, social and legal developments in the jurisdictions that the Company operates in or in which the Company intends to expand its business and operations; the Company’s ability to maintain and enhance its brand. Further information regarding these and other risks is included in the Company’s filings with the SEC. All information provided in this announcement is as of the date of this announcement, and the Company does not undertake any obligation to update any forward-looking statement, except as required under applicable law.

    For Investor/Media Enquiries

    Investor Relations
    Robin Yang, Partner
    ICR, LLC
    Email: investor@tridentity.me
    Phone: +1 (212) 321-0602

    The MIL Network –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: $89 million renewed commitment to ending gender-based violence in Victoria

    Source: Assistant Minister for Industry, Innovation and Science

    27 March 2025

    The Albanese Labor Government and Allen Labor Government are working together to deliver more frontline critical family, domestic and sexual violence services in Victoria.

    Both governments have demonstrated their commitment to ending gender-based violence by renewing the five-year National Partnership Agreement on Family, Domestic and Sexual Violence Responses.

    The Victorian Government will receive an additional $89.7 million in Commonwealth funding as part of the renewed National Partnership, bringing the total Commonwealth investment to $163.9 million since 2022.   

    The funding is matched by the Victorian Government to support frontline family, domestic and sexual violence services, including specialist services for women and children, and men’s behaviour change programs.

    Minister for Social Services, Amanda Rishworth, said that real, transparent and productive partnerships between governments are required to achieve change.

    “Through the FDSV National Partnership, we are demonstrating the commitment of governments to work together to fund frontline services, strengthen supports and ultimately end gender-based violence in Australia,” Minister Rishworth said.

    “This renewed partnership will provide longer term funding certainty to family, domestic and sexual violence frontline services and help impacted Victorians access the support they need.”

    “The signing of this agreement marks an important milestone of delivery with all states and territories now having signed renewed partnership agreements with the Commonwealth.”

    The renewed FDSV National Partnership will deliver over $700 million across all jurisdictions in new, matched investments from the Commonwealth and states and territories, supporting frontline FDSV services, including specialist services for women and children impacted by FDSV, and men’s behaviour change programs.

    An additional $1 million will also be used for an independent evaluation of the renewed FDSV National Partnership.

    More information on the FDSV National Partnership Agreement is available on the Federal Financial Relations website.

    If you or someone you know is experiencing, or at risk of experiencing domestic, family and sexual violence, you can call 1800RESPECT on 1800 737 732, text 0458 737 732 or visit www.1800respect.org.au for online chat and video call services:

    • Available 24/7: Call, text or online chat
    • Mon-Fri, 9am – midnight AEST (except national public holidays): Video call (no appointment needed) 

    If you are concerned about your behaviour or use of violence, you can contact the Men’s Referral Service on 1300 766 491 or visit www.ntv.org.au

    Feeling worried or no good? Connect with 13YARN Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Crisis Supporters on 13 92 76, available 24/7 from any mobile or pay phone, or visit www.13yarn.org.au No shame, no judgement, safe place to yarn.

    MIL OSI News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI China: Boao Forum for Asia Annual Conference 2025 opens in Hainan

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

    This photo shows the opening ceremony of the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province, March 27, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]

    BOAO, Hainan, March 27 — The Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 opened on Thursday in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province.

    Chinese Vice Premier Ding Xuexiang, also a member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, attended the opening ceremony.

    Founded in 2001, the BFA is a non-governmental and non-profit international organization committed to promoting regional economic integration and bringing Asian countries closer to their development goals. Running from March 25 to 28, this year’s conference is themed “Asia in the Changing World: Towards a Shared Future.”

    Addressing the opening ceremony, Ding said that significant progress has been made in building an Asian community with a shared future over the past decade.

    China and ASEAN have established a comprehensive strategic partnership, and the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership has come into effect, the vice premier said.

    He added that regional economic integration has been strengthened, and Asia’s share in the global economy is steadily rising.

    Ding also noted the rising instability and uncertainties confronting the world, calling for joint efforts to address global challenges, build the Asian community and create a better future for Asia and beyond.

    This photo shows the opening ceremony of the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province, March 27, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]

    MIL OSI China News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: CEEC Expands Renewable Energy Investments Globally

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    BEIJING, March 27, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Experts and industry insiders attended a panel discussion on energy transition at the Boao Forum for Asia Annual Conference in Hainan province on Wednesday.

    China Energy Engineering Corp Ltd is planning for a bigger role in global energy transition and infrastructure development through its latest efforts to expand green hydrogen and artificial intelligence, its chairman said.

    CEEC is advancing integrated renewable energy, hydrogen, and storage solutions, and its latest green hydrogen projects are expected to play a key role in decarbonizing industrial sectors, Song Hailiang, Party secretary and chairman of CEEC, said at the ongoing Boao Forum for Asia Annual Conference on Tuesday.

    “A major milestone will be reached in September, when the world’s largest integrated green hydrogen-ammonia-methanol project in Songyuan, Jilin province, is set to begin operations,” Song said.

    Green hydrogen-ammonia-methanol is a sustainable energy solution that combines the generation of green hydrogen with the synthesis of green ammonia and green methanol, and aims to create a cohesive system for producing essential chemicals and fuels with minimal environmental impact.

    Song said: “As the scale of renewable energy continues to grow, building a secure, systematic, efficient and intelligent new energy system has become a global challenge.

    “The company will bet big on renewable energy supply, consumption, infrastructure planning, technology, and policy mechanisms to address these issues.”

    According to Song, CEEC has signed major investment agreements exceeding 110 billion yuan ($15.3 billion) domestically and $11.8 billion abroad, with major energy projects spanning China, Egypt, Morocco, and Central Asia.

    The company’s domestic green hydrogen and ammonia aviation oil capacity has surpassed 1.35 million metric tons, while its green hydrogen and ammonia production capacity has reached 2.6 million tons overseas.

    In addition, Song said that CEEC is also pushing for a deep integration of AI and energy systems. “To develop AI, the ultimate bottleneck is electricity,” he said.

    In 2024, China’s data centers and 5G base stations are expected to consume 250 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity, close to triple the annual output of the Three Gorges Dam.

    “With data processing and computing power needs surging, the company sees renewable energy and storage solutions as critical for sustaining AI-driven industries,” he emphasized.

    As part of its strategy, CEEC is developing digital-energy integrated infrastructure. Its east-data-west-computing project combines computing power, enabling better coordination between data centers and power grids.

    Further, Song said that the company will accelerate its international operations, expanding renewable energy projects and infrastructure investments across markets involved in the Belt and Road Initiative.

    The company, which operates in over 140 countries and regions, said that its overseas renewable energy contracts now account for nearly half of its total signed agreements.

    Song said the company remains committed to high-quality energy cooperation under the BRI, bringing Chinese technology, equipment and expertise to global markets.

    “Our goal is to move from simply ‘going global’ to deeply integrating into local markets,” he said, adding that CEEC will focus on long-term partnerships and sustainable infrastructure projects.

    China Energy Engineering Group Co., Ltd.(ENERGY CHINA)
    Chu Xinyan
    xychu2489@ceec.net.cn
    http://en.ceec.net.cn/
    186 1109 6653
    Beijing

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/d34f767f-170b-42d9-8f2d-67801c924fab

    The MIL Network –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: VDNKh and Moskino Cinema Park Enter Top Requests in Capital Tourist Information Centers

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    The capital’s tourist information centres were visited by about 178 thousand people over the winter. Among them were guests from different regions of Russia and other countries, including China, Morocco, the United Arab Emirates and Vietnam. This was reported by Natalia Sergunina, Deputy Mayor of Moscow.

    “The list of the most popular queries included Red Square, VDNKh, Moskino Cinema Park and Gorky Park. Travelers were also attracted by festivals and fairs, bus and river excursions, unusual master classes and skating rinks,” noted Natalia Sergunina.

    Visitors were often interested in events dedicated to Maslenitsa and Chinese New Year. They were told where they could buy handmade souvenirs, try delicious tea and pancakes with meat, fish and sweet fillings, watch a drum show and other street performances.

    Adults and children were invited to take part in creative activities and old games, attend film screenings and costumed performances.

    Information centre staff share useful tips, introduce Moscow’s sights and help plan your own walking route. Travellers are also offered the opportunity to use convenient digital services such as Rosspas, where there is useful information about all the events in the city.

    There are several tourist information centres in the capital, including on Tverskaya Square and on the territory of the Dream Island amusement park, in the buildings of the Northern and Southern river terminals.

    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 access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect

    https: //vv.mos.ru/nevs/ite/151827073/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Australians to benefit from streamlined travel arrangements to the US

    Source: Australia’s climate in 2024: 2nd warmest and 8th wettest year on record

    The Albanese Labor Government has passed legislation that will allow eligible Australians to apply for easier passage through US airports.

    The United States’ Global Entry Program provides an avenue for eligible citizens of trusted partner countries to access expedited clearance processes on arrival in the US.

    This is a mark of the closeness of the relationship and trust between Australia and the US and will be welcomed by Australian tourists, business leaders and corporate travellers who will be able to join faster entry lanes when they arrive in the US.

    This program is voluntary, and only available for pre-approved, low-risk travellers who meet the strict eligibility criteria as set out by the US. Both Australia and the US will conduct background checks on Australian applicants.

    The Global Entry Program membership also opens up eligibility to TSA Pre-Check program, making travel within the US a much simpler process.

    A limited number of Australian citizens have been able to apply for Global Entry Program from January this year under phase one, which is now closed. The passage of this Bill will pave the way for the expansion of the program to all eligible Australians with phase two expected to commence in the second half of the year.

    Quotes attributable to the Minister for Home Affairs, Tony Burke MP

    “The Albanese Government has done the work to ensure Australia’s entry into the United States’ Global Entry Program. It was first promised when Peter Dutton was Home Affairs Minister but was never delivered by the former government.

    “This means shorter queues for Australian business travellers so they can spend their time working and building business links rather than waiting in line.”

    Quotes attributable to the Minister for Foreign Affairs, Senator the Hon Penny Wong

    “Expansion of the Global Entry Program is a testament to the closeness and friendship between our people.

    “I pay tribute to Ambassador Rudd who has been the driving force behind Australia’s entry into this program, six years after it was first announced by the former Government.

    “This will make travel easier for eligible Australians and will continue to grow the strong commercial ties between Australia and the United States.”

    MIL OSI News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: East coast gas supply outlook worsens July to September 2025, but forward longer-term prices ease

    Source: Australian Ministers for Regional Development

    The ACCC is predicting gas supply in the east coast gas market could fall short by 9 petajoules (PJ) in the period July to September 2025, if LNG producers export all their uncontracted gas, according to its updated assessment.

    This period, which includes winter months, usually sees the highest demand domestically for gas due to colder temperatures.

    The ACCC’s short-term update indicates the supply-demand forecast has dropped by 22 PJ since the December 2024 quarter report, due to a fall in production and increased exports.

    In the southern states, the supply shortfall is projected to reach a historic high of 40 PJ for the quarter.

    The revised outlook coupled with market risks, such as higher demand for gas in case of unexpected weather events or outages of coal-fired power plants, increases the risk of a shortfall across the east coast without access to the LNG producers’ surplus gas.

    “This changed outlook reflects the susceptibility of the supply/demand balance to short-term reductions in gas production and changes in LNG producers’ intended exports and swaps,” ACCC Commissioner Anna Brakey said.

    “The east coast supply and demand balance is projected to worsen further over the next few years, which will increase the impact of LNG producers’ decisions on the market. It remains crucial that LNG producers have regard to the domestic outlook before making any significant variations to export volumes or schedules.”

    “To ensure that the east coast gas market has enough gas this winter, including through any significant demand or supply shocks, we recommend that the Australian Government work with LNG producers to secure additional gas, which is currently uncommitted, for the domestic market,” Ms Brakey said.

    Chart 2: Quarterly supply demand outlook for quarter 3, 2025 (PJ)

    Source: ACCC analysis of data obtained from gas producers in January 2025 and of the domestic demand forecast (Step Change scenario) from AEMO, Gas Statement of Opportunities (GSOO), March 2025.

      Note:     Totals may not sum due to rounding.

    Shortfall of gas supply in the southern states doubles

    The predicted 40 PJ shortfall of gas in the southern states for the third quarter of 2025 is twice that of the same time in 2024.

    This is mainly due to declining production from the Gippsland, Otway and Cooper basins, and higher forecast demand for gas-powered electricity generation.

    The ACCC projects that the 40 PJ gap will be able to be met by transporting surplus gas from Queensland (about 30 PJ) and drawing on southern state gas stores (about 10 PJ).

    “Pleasingly, we expect that there will be adequate gas and sufficient pipeline and storage capacity to meet the shortfall in the south. But, without access to the LNG producers’ surplus gas, the current outlook provides very little buffer for unexpected events, including extreme weather, higher than allowed-for demand, or higher than usual outages in coal-fired power stations,” Ms Brakey said.

    “Actual supply and demand for the third quarter of the year could surprise on the up or down sides. But with not enough new supply coming online to offset declining production in the southern states and higher, more volatile, demand for gas-powered generation, there needs to be a bigger buffer for downside risks.”

    The report highlights the importance of sufficient storage in the southern states in averting a shortfall.

    “Iona underground storage is essential to meet winter demand,” Ms Brakey said.

    Chart 2: Southern states outlook for quarter 3, 2025

    Source: ACCC analysis of data obtained from gas producers in January 2025 and of the domestic demand forecast (Step Change scenario) from AEMO, Gas Statement of Opportunities (GSOO), March 2025.

      Note:     Totals may not sum due to rounding.

    Government response to ACCC report

    The ACCC report recommended that the Australian Government work with LNG producers to secure additional gas, which is currently uncommitted, for the domestic market, to ensure that the east coast gas market has enough gas this winter.  

    The ACCC recognises the commitments made by the LNG producers to the government and welcomes the progress this represents. It is important that LNG producers ensure that the needs of the domestic market are met before they export gas that is currently uncontracted.

    “It is an important step for the LNG producers to fulfil the commitments they have made to the government in order to reduce the risk of a shortfall eventuating over the July to September period if all uncontracted gas was exported,” Ms Brakey said.

    “Our March report identified that, between them, the three LNG producers have sufficient uncontracted gas to supply the domestic market if they make it available.”

    “We will continue to report quarterly on the supply and demand balance in the market.”

    Long-term gas contract update shows prices have eased

    In another update to the market released today, ACCC analysis of contracts for supply over 2025 and 2026 shows that prices eased, and agreed volumes for supply increased, over the six months to December 2024 compared to the preceding six months.

    The average price for gas in producer contracts for supply in 2025 fell by about 10 per cent (to $13.58 per gigajoule) in the second half of 2024 compared to the previous six months. Prices in retailer gas supply contracts dropped slightly in the same period, to an average of $14.51 per gigajoule (GJ).

    Average producer prices for 2026 supply fell by 2 per cent to $13.94 per GJ compared to the first half of 2024. Retailer prices averaged $13.55 per GJ. “This report shows encouraging signs on gas supply, but there is still a way to go,” Ms Brakey said.

    “While the increase in contracted gas and the reduction in prices are positive developments, the total volumes for 2025 and 2026 remain significantly below those contracted before the energy crisis for 2021 and 2022.”

    Background

    In 2017, the Australian Government directed the ACCC to conduct a wide-ranging inquiry into the supply of and demand for natural gas in Australia, and to publish regular information on the supply and pricing of gas. The ACCC will conduct the inquiry until 2030.

    The Interim update on east coast gas supply-demand outlook provides an updated picture on the gas supply-demand balance for the east coast gas market for quarter 3 of 2025. The ACCC reports quarterly on the gas supply outlook which provides information that assists Government decision making, including in relation to the ADGSM.

    The Interim update on long-term contract prices for July – December 2024 provides updated pricing and other information on contracts agreed for long-term supply of gas (for terms of 12 months or more) on the east coast market during the period July to December 2024. This report is in response to a request from the Minister for Climate Change and Energy on 14 November 2024 to increase the frequency of reporting on gas supply agreements as an interim means of improving the transparency of gas prices.

    MIL OSI News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI China: High-level dialogues held during Boao Forum for Asia

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

    High-level dialogues held during Boao Forum for Asia

    Updated: March 27, 2025 13:45 Xinhua
    A high-level dialogue themed on “Building Trust in the Shifting Global Landscape” is held during the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province, March 26, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    Jeffrey D. Sachs, professor of Columbia University, speaks at a high-level dialogue themed on “Building Trust in the Shifting Global Landscape” during the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province, March 26, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    Portugal’s Minister of State and Foreign Affairs Paulo Rangel speaks at a high-level dialogue themed on “Building Trust in the Shifting Global Landscape” during the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province, March 26, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    Ban Ki-moon, chairman of Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) and former secretary-general of the United Nations, speaks at a high-level dialogue themed on “Global Governance after the UN Summit of the Future” during the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province, March 26, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    Maurizio Massari, permanent representative of Italy to the United Nations, speaks at a high-level dialogue themed on “Global Governance after the UN Summit of the Future” during the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province, March 26, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    A high-level dialogue themed on “Global Governance after the UN Summit of the Future” is held during the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province, March 26, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    A high-level dialogue themed on “Global Governance after the UN Summit of the Future” is held during the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province, March 26, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    Volkan Bozkir, president of the 75th session of the United Nations General Assembly, speaks at a high-level dialogue themed on “Global Governance after the UN Summit of the Future” during the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province, March 26, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Chen Xiaodong speaks at a high-level dialogue themed on “Global Governance after the UN Summit of the Future” during the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province, March 26, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    Danilo Turk, former Slovenian president and president of the World Leadership Alliance Club de Madrid, speaks at a high-level dialogue themed on “Global Governance after the UN Summit of the Future” during the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province, March 26, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    Wang Huiyao, founder and president of Center for China and Globalization (CCG), speaks at a high-level dialogue themed on “Global Governance after the UN Summit of the Future” during the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province, March 26, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    Munir Akram, permanent representative of Pakistan to the United Nations, speaks at a high-level dialogue themed on “Global Governance after the UN Summit of the Future” during the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province, March 26, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    Liu Zhenmin, China’s special envoy for climate change, speaks at a high-level dialogue themed on “Achieving Sustainable Development in a Transforming World” during the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province, March 26, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    Andrew Forrest, executive chairman and founder of Fortescue Metals Group, speaks at a high-level dialogue themed on “Achieving Sustainable Development in a Transforming World” during the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province, March 26, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    CEO of Astra Zeneca Pascal Soriot speaks at a high-level dialogue themed on “Achieving Sustainable Development in a Transforming World” during the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province, March 26, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    A high-level dialogue themed on “Achieving Sustainable Development in a Transforming World” is held during the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province, March 26, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]

    MIL OSI China News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: National Press Club address Q&A, Canberra

    Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

    Tom Connell:

    You mentioned the voters at the kitchen table and that’s what the Budget is really about. Before the last election they were told by Labor power bills would be lowered by $275 by the end of the term.

    This time around I’m wondering what you can assure them. So excluding any rebates and even setting the bar much lower, can you assure them that any increase in power prices won’t totally eat up the income tax cut you announced last night?

    Jim Chalmers:

    Well, I will assure people that we are doing everything we can to put downward pressure on electricity prices, and that takes a number of forms. In the near term extending energy bill relief is about taking some of the sting out of those electricity bills.

    That’s an important part of the cost‑of‑living help that was in the Budget last night and we know from the first 2 rounds of energy bill relief that that has been helpful, that has been meaningful, it’s been effective in limiting increases to power bills. In fact, better than that, in the official CPI last year – the year to December 2024 – electricity prices came down about 25 per cent largely but not entirely because of our rebates. And so in the near term, rebates have got an important role to play.

    But in the medium term and in the longer term, we are adding more cleaner and cheaper, more reliable sources of energy to the grid and over time that will put downward pressure on prices as well. We know from AEMO and from the experts that one of the reasons why we’ve had this upward pressure is not the new parts of the system, not the cleaner, cheaper, more reliable energy that we’re adding to the system but the legacy parts of the system which are becoming less reliable over time and so we’re doing those 2 things at once.

    We know that electricity bills are part of the cost‑of‑living pressure that people have felt over the last 4 or 5 years. There’s good reason for that – international reasons in particular, but we’re doing what we can in the near term and in the longer term simultaneously.

    Connell:

    First question from the floor – David Speers from ABC.

    David Speers:

    Thank you Mr President and thank you Treasurer for the address today. I just wanted to go to the migration figures that came out the other day. They showed net overseas migration had come down to 380,000.

    Your Budget says next financial year that will fall to 260,000 and then after that down to 225,000 for the next few years beyond that. How will that drop be achieved? And given Peter Dutton is suggesting that he’ll go further, is that possible or even desirable from your point of view?

    Chalmers:

    Well, first of all, it’s not clear to me what Peter Dutton is saying. He’s made an announcement, walked it back and then denied that he walked it back and so let’s see what he says about that tomorrow night.

    More substantially what you’re seeing in those migration numbers which you refer to is we are expecting the continuation of what has been now a very clear trend. We had the post‑COVID spike in migration as those numbers recovered and we have been managing that down over time to the levels that you rightly identify from the Budget last night.

    The forecast for net overseas migration in the Budget last night were largely what they were in the mid‑year update. One year had 5000 more, the next year had 5000 less or vice versa, so broadly the status quo. That is a combination of 2 things – it’s part of the normalising of the scheme after we had that big post‑COVID spike and it’s also partly because of the efforts that we have put in to managing those levels.

    Now, what I’ve tried to do – I think I’ve done it in this room in front of all of you before but on every occasion yourself, David, and others have asked me – we want to make sure that we manage down net overseas migration and do that in a considered and methodical way which recognises that there are genuine economic needs for migration as well. You won’t solve, for example, the housing shortage without sufficient workers, mostly by training the workers but also there’s a role for migration.

    And so we’re managing that down to more normal levels. We’re doing it in a considered and methodical way. There’s a role for migration in our economy, and I think the best way to set migration policy is not to really try and dial up the division like our political opponents try and do.

    Connell:

    Michelle Grattan from The Conversation.

    Michelle Grattan:

    Michelle Grattan, The Conversation. Treasurer, you’ve emphasised in your speech a number of times global shocks and disruption that we are seeing, and we may see another round of that disruption next week when President Trump presents his new tariff policy.

    Given those rapidly changing circumstances, would you be willing later in the year to have an economic statement, a major economic statement, to take account of new circumstances so that this Budget is not a set‑and‑forget document?

    Chalmers:

    Well, there are a couple of important points in your question, Michelle – one of them takes the outcome of the election for granted, and you won’t hear me doing that. We’ve got a relatively major event between now and then –

    Grattan:

    Assuming that.

    Chalmers:

    – where the people get to decide who governs them in the second half of the year.

    But your broader point, I think, is well understood, and your broader point is this: the big story of the budget, the big story of the global economy and our own economy is this dark shadow which is being cast by escalating trade tensions, which are very concerning to us, but also a slow‑down in China, a war in Eastern Europe, the collapsing ceasefire in the Middle East, political uncertainty in other parts of the developed world.

    And so all of that does create an element of heightened uncertainty in the global economy and the Budget is really designed to provision for that, to allow for that, to anticipate that and to make sure that we are well prepared and well placed to deal with this economic uncertainty which is coming at us.

    And the best insurance policy for Australia are the 2 essential elements of the Budget last night, which is to rebuild incomes and living standards at the household level, make sure that household budgets are more resilient – and we’re making very substantial progress there. The tax cuts are a part of that story.

    But, secondly, to make our economy more resilient overall, more competitive but also to make sure it’s more resilient because the big story of the Budget is dealing with those 2 pressures at once – cost of living and global economic uncertainty. And the combination of measures, the calibration of those measures in the Budget are really about responding to that.

    You asked me if there’ll be an economic statement later in the year. Again, I don’t take the outcome of the election for granted, but what we have shown is a willingness to be nimble with our economic policy, to play the cards that we’re dealt and try and make sure that Australians are beneficiaries, not victims, of all of that churn and change.

    Connell:

    Mark Riley from Network Seven.

    Mark Riley:

    Treasurer, thanks for your address. Today and in your interviews yesterday many times you said that this Budget is about building up Medicare and the election campaign will be about protecting Medicare and there is a lot of money in there for Medicare and bulk billing and urgent care clinics and also the price of medicines.

    But I want to ask you about the biggest omission in Medicare since its inception that’s still an omission – and that’s dental care. That can be absolutely life changing for people who cannot afford to go and see a dentist – low‑paid Australians, elderly Australians. It can literally keep them alive. I’m wondering if Labor will at least start a conversation to have some level of care covered by Medicare so Australians can get their teeth fixed?

    Chalmers:

    Thanks, Mark. I think this is a crucial question – how do we continue to strengthen Medicare to make sure that it’s responsible and it’s affordable and sustainable but also make sure that it’s delivering the kind of care that people need.

    And obviously, very good people, including people in the room today I can see around this hall have suggested to us and lobbied for us and advocated for us to do that and the answer to that question is the same answer to the question about a lot of things that we would love to do – we’ve got to make sure that we can afford it and make sure that there’s room for it in the budget.

    In this Budget, the big priority is incentivising more bulk billing and women’s health. But that’s not to say that in some future budget under a government of either political persuasion that we might be able to find room for this. I know from my own community that dental health has a direct link to health more broadly in the same way that mental health does and any good government from budget to budget will try and work out if they can do more.

    Connell:

    Next question, Phil Coorey from the AFR.

    Phil Coorey:

    Thank you, Tom. Hi Treasurer. Can I just sort of question you on your view about the budget bottom line improving since you were elected. And you often go back to the anchor point which is the Treasury assessment known as PEFO released during the campaign.

    So if we go back to the 21–22 campaign where Labor was elected, Treasury probably a little bit spooked by events in Ukraine and COVID forecast a deficit that year of $79.8 billion. The actual deficit that year turned out to only be $31.9 which was 1.4 per cent of GDP. Last night you forecast a deficit for next year of 42 per cent – sorry $42 billion which is 1.5 per cent of GDP. Isn’t the case that from then to now the bottom line is worsening?

    Chalmers:

    It’s the case that on the 7 years that we’ve been responsible for, there’s been the biggest ever nominal improvement in the budget we’ve ever seen – $207 billion and that’s partly because we turned 2 of those big deficits into 2 surpluses and we shrunk the deficit this year and we’ve shown in all 4 of our Budgets an element of restraint when it comes to real spending growth in banking upward revisions to revenue, in finding $95 billion worth of savings.

    Obviously, I read what you wrote the other day about the anchor point that we’ve chosen. I don’t think that there is a different, more rational anchor point to choose than the assessment of the books when we came to office put together by non‑political professional forecasters in the Treasury and in the Finance Department.

    And I know that there’s an appetite – I’m not accusing you of this, Phil, but certainly our political opponents – there’s an appetite to try and rewrite that time. They try and pretend away the fact that spending as a share of the economy was up near a third of the economy, we got it down closer to a quarter of the economy – that’s progress.

    And I know that all of these questions come from a good place and the good place that all of these questions come from is recognition that Katy and I share and our whole Cabinet, our Expenditure Review Committee, an understanding that even with all of the progress we’ve made cleaning up the mess that we found in the budget, we do acknowledge that there’s more work to do.

    In every Budget there’s been savings, in every Budget there’s been an element of restraint. It goes back to Mark’s question – every minister in this room has come to us with more good ideas than we can fund but we’ve tried to be as responsible as we can and as a consequence of that, we’ve made more progress in a single parliamentary term improving the budget than any government ever has.

    Connell:

    Next question, Clare Armstrong from News Corp.

    Clare Armstrong:

    Thanks Treasurer for your speech. You’ve often said since becoming Treasurer that you believe Australians understand the need to have tough, adult conversations about the economy. You said yesterday that it was economics, not politics front of mind when you were putting this Budget together.

    If those things are the case, why not use the opportunity to go further to address the structural deficit issues in the Budget, take it to an election within weeks and get a mandate? Or is it the case that because of the cost‑of‑living crisis, Australians are just not ready for that adult conversation?

    Chalmers:

    I think one of the defining characteristics of the way that Katy and Anthony and I have spoken to Australians about the economy over the course of the last 3 years is to err on the side of frankness. And even in the last little bit of my speech today, what I tried to say to people was to say that we understand that even with this progress we’re making in the aggregate numbers, we know that there’s still pressures there and we’re trying to help deal with them.

    And where that relates to the specific part of your question about budget repair, in every Budget – 4 of these now and the budget updates – you have to strike the best balance you can between budget repair, helping with the cost of living and investing in the future and that’s what we’ve tried to do, to strike that most effective balance we can.

    We get a lot of free advice from budget to budget. There have been people including people in this room who’ve told us we have to burn the budget to the ground and that would be the best economic policy – that would have sent us into recession, we know that now, that’s actually a fact. And so how that relates to the structural position of the budget is we’ve actually made more structural progress in the budget than most people recognise.

    I pay tribute here to Bill Shorten who’s left the Parliament but to Amanda Rishworth as well. The progress that we’re making on the NDIS, making sure that we’re providing a standard of care that people need and deserve in a way that is more sustainable. One of the big features of the Budget last night on the spending side was actually that we’re making better progress on the NDIS than we anticipated. That’s a structural fix.

    Aged care – and I’m not sure if Anika Wells is here and Mark Butler – but the work that they did on aged care is transformational in terms of the budget position, the structural position. And what we’ve done with interest costs as well.

    So those 3 changes are making a big structural difference to the budget. But, again, to your question, Clare and Phil’s before you, we don’t pretend that even with all this progress on budget repair, we don’t pretend that the job is finished. One of the reasons we’re asking Australians respectfully for another term in government is because we know that there’s more work to do.

    Connell:

    Next question, Andrew Clennell from Sky News.

    Andrew Clennell:

    It’s another question, not from a good place, Treasurer. I just wanted to read you a couple of quotes and see if you can identify who said this: ‘That deficit of vision has reduced the Budget to $100 billion missed opportunity, a Budget that borrows big and spends big but thinks small, a Budget that delivers generational debt without the generational dividend. A trillion dollars in debt and growing, deficits as far as the eye can see but barely anything else designed to survive beyond the election.’

    Then there was this: ‘These guys wouldn’t know the fiscal levers from a selfie stick,’ That’s a good one, ‘always the phoney photo op with these guys, always about them, and you can exist like that in politics and maybe for a period of time you can succeed, and that’s the biggest risk in this Budget. Instead of laying out an economic vision the government focuses on managing political perception.’

    Both of those were said by Jim Chalmers in May 2021. You’ve just delivered a Budget which forecasts a decade of deficits, a trillion dollars debt, the next 4 deficits of $179 billion. My question Treasurer is, do you feel like a hypocrite today?

    Chalmers:

    No, of course not because central to the Budget last night was an economic vision for the long term – building Australia’s future was a key element of the Budget. Building a Future Made in Australia, investing in every single stage of education which will pay intergenerational dividends long after any of us are still here. So the Budget is long on vision.

    It’s also long on recognising that people are under pressure and we’ve got responsibilities to them. And when you mention the fiscal position, the fiscal position this year – you mentioned the trillion dollars of debt which we inherited from our predecessors – we are at $940 this year, that’s a lot of debt but it was supposed to be $177 billion higher without our efforts and that’s saving Australians on interest costs.

    I appreciate the opportunity that you have given us to remember and reflect on what we inherited when we came to office and we have deliberately and decisively taken a very different approach to our predecessors. Their Budget was weighed down by waste and rorts and missed opportunities and what we’ve done is we’ve invested in the future of this country, building more homes, investing in lifelong learning, strengthening Medicare and these are legacy items that we will leave behind whenever we finish up in this place.

    Connell:

    If you think back to where you were in 2022 and now with no surpluses for the decade, was that the plan?

    Chalmers:

    Well, you’ve deliberately ignored there, Tom, 2 surpluses that we delivered. When we came to office, there were no surpluses, there were only deficits and we turned 2 of them into surpluses. I do think – you’d expect me to say this, maybe Katy will agree with me – we do think that is too easily dismissed and too easily diminished.

    We wouldn’t have had those 2 surpluses if we’d not taken the responsible approach to banking and saving and spending restraint that we have shown. And so let’s not lightly dismiss those 2 surpluses. They’re hard to get. We haven’t seen back‑to‑back surpluses in this country for almost 2 decades.

    So let’s not try and whitewash that from the history, that’s part of our record and we’re proud of it and it’s meant that there’s a structural benefit too because those 2 surpluses and the smaller deficit this year is paying dividends for us in the form of lower interest repayments.

    Connell:

    David Crowe from the SMH and The Age.

    David Crowe:

    Thank you, Tom. Thanks Treasurer, for your speech and for the Q&A. On the top up tax cuts, once they’re fully in place, they cost $7.4 billion a year each and every year because it goes to so many workers. But there’s no saving of $7.4 billion a year in that year when they start at that scale, so they’re unfunded. Why is that? Did you think you didn’t need to fund them by finding savings to offset the tax revenue foregone?

    Chalmers:

    First of all, as we’ve said on a number of occasions, we found $95 billion in savings over the course of our 4 Budgets. I’d say again – and I hope I’m not labouring this point – it’s pretty unusual for there to be billions of savings in a Budget which everybody knows is on the eve of an election. That’s unusual. There weren’t any savings in the March 22 Budget. So we are continuing to find savings.

    And as Katy said more eloquently than I do, the best way to think about budget repair is not in any one specific moment in time but the progress that we’ve made over 4 Budgets. And that $207 billion improvement in the budget is about making room for these sorts of things, which are tax cuts, cost‑of‑living relief and investments in Medicare.

    Crowe:

    But isn’t that double counting because – sure, yes – you’ve made previous savings over this term of parliament, but that doesn’t necessarily give you a new saving to fund a new initiative, and here you’ve lost tax revenue. You’ve foregone the tax revenue without any additional saving to cover that cost.

    Chalmers:

    The $207 billion improvement in the budget is net of those investments that we’re making in the tax cuts. It’s in addition to the tax cuts that we are providing.

    Now, we think it’s a very important, very worthy objective to return bracket creep where you can and do it in the most responsible, cost‑effective, efficient way that you can and that’s what the tax cuts represent.

    They are modest in isolation but substantial in combination with the rest of the tax cuts and the rest of the cost‑of‑living help and they come in conjunction with – at the same time as – we’re making this history‑making improvement in the budget more broadly. They are net of that. They are in addition to that.

    Connell:

    Next question, Anna Henderson from SBS.

    Anna Henderson:

    Thank you, Treasurer. In terms of what’s been announced so far in the lead up to this election, we’ve seen many billions in spending measures and not so much on the savings side. Will you commit that before the election you’ll reveal any additional savings that Labor would plan to make if returned to government, it won’t be something people find out from a budget document if you’re re‑elected?

    Chalmers:

    Well, what we’ve made clear last night in our Budget is that’s our economic plan and if there are additional savings to be made, we’ll detail them at the appropriate time.

    Henderson:

    Before the election?

    Chalmers:

    Well, if we’ve decided them before the election, we’ll reveal them before the election but let’s not forget, the Budget is not 20‑hours‑old yet. The best sense of what we plan to do in the economy is what’s in the Budget. A couple of billion dollars of savings already. It’s normal in the course of an election campaign for there to be subsequent announcements and subsequent decisions taken and we’ll outline them in the usual way.

    Connell:

    Next question comes from Matthew Cranston for The Australian.

    Chalmers:

    Welcome back, Matt.

    Matthew Cranston:

    Thanks, Treasurer.

    Chalmers:

    I usually see Matthew in the foyer of the IMF building in Washington DC. It’s nice to have you home.

    Cranston:

    Thanks for the free cup of coffee. But I think the public are probably a little bit more concerned about how much tax they’re going to be paying when they’re 55. So I went back through some of the budgets, to your first Budget, and added up all the extra tax upgrades, tax revenue upgrades you’ve got from the first Budget to this one. It comes to about $392 billion.

    So in that first Budget you also predicted that fiscal ‘26 deficit would be $42 billion. Last night, $42 billion. So that means that over those 4 years you’ve had this extra unexpected $400 billion worth of tax revenue and yet you haven’t been able to reduce that fiscal year deficit.

    So I don’t – I mean, the public – the general voting public wouldn’t know those figures. So my question to you is: why are you exploiting the lack of awareness from the voting public about where and how all that extra tax revenue you’ve got is being spent, not saved?

    Chalmers:

    Okay. Well, there are a few elements to that. Let me pull out the most important ones. What matters when you get these revenue upgrades in the budget – and they were more substantial at the start of our term than they were in the Budget last night – there was quite a small revenue change in the Budget we put out last night – what matters is what you do with those upgrades.

    And very, very unusual in historical terms – you want to make comparisons with the past – we’ve banked most of those upward revisions to revenue. Our predecessors used to spend most of them. In fact, we’ve banked, I think, $7 in every $10 over the course of our government and that’s because we recognise that one way we can get the budget in better shape and one way we have been getting the budget in better shape is to bank those upward revisions to revenue. So I think if you are going to quote that big number that you’ve quoted, that the Liberal Party uses as well, you need to recognise –

    Cranston:

    No, that’s my number.

    Chalmers:

    Understood, I’m not saying you got it from them, I’m saying it’s similar. You have to recognise that we’ve banked $7 in every $10 of those dollars and that’s because we understand the important role that that plays in budget repair.

    Cranston:

    All right, but I suppose the question just then is you’ve still got 30 per cent that the public don’t realise that, you know, that’s being spent, not saved.

    Chalmers:

    In every budget you make a series of decisions about revenue and about investments in the future and cost‑of‑living help and, in this case, tax cuts. It is historically unusual for a government to bank 70 per cent almost of these upward revisions to revenue.

    As I said, our predecessors – not just our immediate predecessors but the Howard government as well – they used to spend almost all of it. We’ve saved the vast majority of it – almost three‑quarters of it.

    Connell:

    Next question, Andrew Probyn from the Nine Network.

    Andrew Probyn:

    Treasurer, I want to ask you about tobacco excise. Over the past 5 years, Treasury thought that you’d raise something like $77 billion, and it’s now under $50 billion. Somewhat of a public policy disaster given that smoking hasn’t really shifted in rates in recent years.

    And you’ve got a bit of a triple disaster in a bottom line falling out of tobacco, which was once the fourth biggest revenue source, health outcomes not shifting and the creation of a multibillion‑dollar industry for organised crime. So my question is: what consideration has been given to reducing tobacco excise to attack the financial incentive that’s so attractive to crime gangs?

    Chalmers:

    We’d rather give tax relief to every Australian taxpayer than to provide tax relief for smoking. We don’t think that’s the best way to go about this problem that we acknowledge. There is a very big, very substantial problem in the budget when it comes to tobacco excise. I’ve been very upfront about that.

    There are 2 ways that tobacco excise comes down – one’s a very good way, and one’s a very bad way. The very good way is more people give up the darts, we want that. The bad way is that more people avoid the tax, and we are seeing in organised crime and in other ways there has been an increase in that kind of often violent tax evasion.

    And so what we’ve done in the Budget, recognising and acknowledging that problem, there is a very serious problem in the budget when it comes to that revenue line, is we invested another $157 million in enforcement and compliance. We think that’s a better way to collect more revenue in recognition and in acknowledgement of that problem. There was also $188 million in resourcing for compliance and enforcement, I think, in January of 2024.

    So we know we’ve got a problem there. We know we’ve got to do something about it. We’re not convinced that by cutting taxes for smoking that we’ll get the objective that we want. We think the better way is to invest in enforcement, and that’s what we’re doing.

    Connell:

    Laura Tingle from the ABC.

    Laura Tingle:

    Thanks, Tom. Treasurer, you said one of the priorities in the Budget is about lifting the productive capacity of the economy and you’ve also talked about the importance of small business. That’s something that the Coalition is clearly focused on.

    I just wondered if you could clarify for us the status of the instant asset write‑off. As I understand it, if legislation that’s already before the parliament isn’t extended by the time we leave here this week, it will – the write‑off level will revert to $10,00 for smaller businesses. What’s your plan for that, and what’s your plan for the future with the instant asset write‑off?

    Chalmers:

    Thanks, Laura. The extension for the instant asset write‑off that we’ve already budgeted for has been held up in the parliament. I think that’s, frankly, shameful that that’s been held up. It’s been held hostage to some Senate shenanigans.

    And so we want to see that passed. We’re talking with the crossbench about that right now, and I don’t want to drop them in it, but I’ve had a conversation with a crossbencher this morning about it. We know that it’s an issue and in case we run out of parliamentary runway, we want to see that extended.

    That’s been our goal all along. We’ve tried to pass it through the parliament. Katy will have a better sense of the Senate mechanics. She speaks fluent Senate, I don’t. But that’s been held up. So we want to see that passed. And as the Prime Minister indicated earlier today, we’ll have more to say about the future of the instant asset write‑off in addition to that.

    But we want to do the right thing by Australia’s small businesses. We think it’s a great thing that something like 25,000 new businesses are being created on average every month in the life of our government, which is a record.

    We’re doing what we can to support them – energy bill relief, this instant asset write‑off, supporting the hospitality sector with a tax break, extending the unfair trading practice protections for small business, strengthening the ACCC to level the playing field, what we’re doing in mergers and acquisitions. That’s all about supporting small business, and we’d like to pass the instant asset write‑off as part of that, too.

    Connell:

    Next question, Ben Westcott from Bloomberg.

    Ben Westcott:

    Thanks, Tom, and thanks for your speech, Treasurer. In just over a week from today it’s Liberation Day in the US when US President Donald Trump will announce his new tariff regime. I just wanted to check, in advance of that – sorry, and just now Donald Trump has said there will be very limited exemptions to the tariffs that are due to come into place.

    In advance of that day, have you had any conversations with your counterpart? Has the government had any conversations with the Trump administration to try and secure one of those exemptions? And have you been given any guarantees?

    Chalmers:

    No is the answer to the last part of your question. We take no outcome or no option for granted. But we are engaging, as you would expect us to. Wherever we can we’re engaging. And we’re speaking up for and standing up for Australia’s interests.

    There are 2 kinds of concern associated with these escalating trade tensions for us – the direct impact on our industries and workers and businesses. Obviously, a big concern, we want to make sure that we don’t trade away or give away the sorts of things that we cherish – the PBS is obviously a good example of that. But more broadly as well, these escalating trade tensions are a very substantial concern.

    Trade tensions, as you know and as your news organisation knows, risk higher inflation and slower growth at a time when the world is just coming to the good end of these inflationary pressures. And we’ve had a period and we expect a period of slow growth. And so growth has not been thick on the ground, and inflation has been a challenge, and so we don’t want to see these escalating trade tensions make things worse.

    We’ll continue to engage where we can. We’ll continue to speak up and stand up for Australia’s interests, and I’m sure that the outcome of President Trump’s deliberations will be known before long.

    Connell:

    Katina Curtis from The West Australian.

    Katina Curtis:

    Thanks, Tom. Thanks, Treasurer.

    Chalmers:

    I don’t know about that front page today, Katina, with me as the Nirvana cover –

    Curtis:

    What have you got against Nirvana?

    Chalmers:

    – it was a bit confronting, so.

    Curtis:

    I think it’s fair to say there’s been an increasing drumbeat of calls for broader tax reform. The tax cuts, top‑up tax cuts haven’t met the mark for most people in terms of that. And probably picking up on your earlier comments about reforms that Clare referenced, do you think that in order to bed down proper big reforms for the Australian economy, we need 4‑year terms in parliament? And would you put that to the people?

    Chalmers:

    First of all, I’ve always – for as long as I can remember – I’ve thought 4‑year fixed terms would be better than 3‑year variable terms. That sounds like something Anthony and Westpac would say, but I’ve always been a believer in 4‑year fixed terms.

    I can’t imagine that we would put that to a referendum ahead of some of the other referenda options that are available to us. And so I don’t want to say where that belongs in the queue. That would be better for long‑term economic decision‑making. I don’t think anybody seriously contests that.

    What I would contest, respectfully, Katina, is this idea that 3‑year terms prevents economic reform. I said before that it’s unusual in a pre‑election Budget to have billions of dollars of savings. It’s also unusual in a pre‑election Budget to have proper, genuine, serious economic reform.

    And here I shout out my colleague and my mate over here, Andrew Leigh, because we’ve been working on this non‑competes clause for a while now. I salute him and his work, his commitment. I see Danielle over there. We’ve been working with the PC on some of these other economic reforms like occupational licensing in the electrical trades. These are ways that we can keep the reform wheels turning even in the context of 3‑year parliamentary terms.

    Connell:

    Did you like any of the front pages?

    Chalmers:

    Next question.

    Connell:

    Final question – that might get a better answer – Jacob Shteyman AAP.

    Jacob Shteyman:

    Thanks, Treasurer, for your address. Jacob Shteyman from AAP. Your extra tax cuts in this Budget essentially just give back 2 years’ worth of bracket creep to income earners. As spending increases, income earners will face an increasing large share of the tax burden as a result of bracket creep. Why not just index the tax brackets to save having to do this every 2 years?

    Chalmers:

    Well, because we’ve got to make the budget add up and most countries in the OECD, they don’t index the tax brackets. I know it’s a suggestion put forward by good people. Good, well‑motivated people say that we should do that. We’re not considering that.

    There are good reasons to index parts of our economic armoury – social security and the like. But we’ve found a different, I think better way to return bracket creep now 3 times. We’re cutting taxes for every Australian taxpayer 3 times – last year, next year and the year after. And one of our big motivations there is returning bracket creep, but also doing it in a way where we get the most economic bang for buck.

    Now, you can see the Treasury analysis in the Budget papers last night really about the participation impacts in terms of labour hours, in terms of women’s workforce participation. We think we’re going to get a lot of economic bang for buck for those tax cuts, as modest as they are. And so that’s our preferred approach. We know that there are other approaches out there but we’ve got to make it all add up. We’ve got to make it all balance out with all of these other considerations that we have.

    Connell:

    We’ve got our own budget bottom line at the Press Club. Would you agree to a debate with the Shadow Treasurer; it will be packed out, I’m sure

    Chalmers:

    I would like to do that. Josh Frydenberg did that in the last election. Josh deserves the credit for agreeing to that. I thought it was a useful opportunity. He enjoyed it, I enjoyed it, and we got a lot out of it. And so I would have thought Angus Taylor could front up to the Press Club and have a debate. I’ve actually written to Angus with all of the requests that we’ve received for debates. I think there’s probably 10 different requests for debates.

    I would happily debate him at least weekly during the election campaign. I mean that seriously. I think that would be a good thing. And a lot of you have put forward suggestions about the best forum for that. If there’s a neutral forum, an appropriate forum, we should do it.

    I made myself available for Q&A on Monday night to do an economic debate. Unfortunately, he declined that opportunity, and that’s for him to explain why he did that. But I would certainly be very, very happy to fulfil what I think should be an obligation on a Treasurer, to front up to the National Press Club and to do an economic debate. And I hope he agrees to your kind invitation.

    Connell:

    I’m sure he’s watching. So there we go. We thank you for your time today. Try to contain your excitement as you get another Press Club membership. Ladies and gentlemen, please thank Jim Chalmers.

    MIL OSI News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Interview with Tom Connell, Andrew Clennell, Kieran Gilbert and Angira Bharadwaj, Politics Now, Sky News

    Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

    Tom Connell:

    Well one of the inclusions in Labor’s Budget was non‑compete clauses. They claim this will be a big increase for people’s wages. Joining the panel now for more budget reaction on that, Assistant Minister for Competition, Charities and Treasury Andrew Leigh. In his own words, he’s been banging on about this for a while. Welcome to the panel. Yes, everything you say off air is on air too in this show.

    So, non‑compete clauses – a lot of people will sort of go, alright, has that got anything to do with me? What’s a specific example that you’ve picked up because you’ve been very focused on this. You don’t have to put names in there, of a non‑compete that just had to go in your view?

    Andrew Leigh:

    So, we heard the story of a 17 year‑old dance instructor who was being harassed by her workplace. She moved to a competing dance studio and then got a letter from the former employer saying that she’d breached a clause that said she couldn’t work in another dance studio within 15 kilometres for 18 months. These clauses were originally applied only to executives, but are now being applied right across the economy, not just in the boardroom, but also in the mailroom.

    Connell:

    Can you see exceptions where people could take clients from a business with them? Is that an area where non‑competes actually protect a small business trying to make it in the world?

    Leigh:

    Well, employers still have a significant number of ways they can protect their intellectual property. Of course, they’ve got copyright and patent laws, they’ve got section 183 of the Corporations Act which makes it illegal to take information out of the business for your own benefit. And then they’ve got non‑disclosure clauses. They’re using non‑competes as the bluntest tool in the shed, but it’s curtailing labour mobility, which is one of the great sources of wage growth and productivity gain.

    Connell:

    But if you have, say someone at a law firm taking clients with them, there’s no IP there. They just, they’ve done that by building a relationship, or someone at a hair salon. Is that an area where there still needs to be some protection for a small business?

    Leigh:

    We will of course consult on this. It doesn’t come in until 2027.

    Connell:

    But, those things are on the table. You’re open to areas where these will still be applied?

    Leigh:

    Well at this stage, Tom, we’re not looking at these non‑solicitation clauses, which is what you’re talking about, except where they might be used to have the same effect as a non‑compete.

    Connell:

    Okay.

    Andrew Clennell:

    Why is it in the Budget?

    Leigh:

    Because we’re about productivity. So, the Budget needs to be about boosting growth. Ultimately, we’re pro‑growth progressives and the competition agenda of this government has been as ambitious as any government in the past generation.

    Clennell:

    How long have you been trying to get it past the Treasurer and Prime Minister to try and get this thing up?

    Leigh:

    The Treasurer and Prime Minister are very enthusiastic about this.

    Clennell:

    Yeah, but how long have you been trying to get it on the agenda?

    Leigh:

    We set up the Competition Taskforce in 2023. Jim and I announced that Competition Taskforce to drive things like the merger reforms, the National Competition Policy work with the states and territories, and then also the work on non‑competes. Our issues paper went out last year. We’ve got a range of thoughtful responses back on that. We’re moving at the same time Andrew, as a whole range of other countries are moving. Austria, Spain, Finland, the UK, the US all looking at the problem of non‑competes reducing job mobility.

    Kieran Gilbert:

    Why did you cap it at $175 grand a year?

    Leigh:

    We see the most egregious impact on wages Kieran, as being among low wage workers. And the Fair Work Act has that high income earner threshold which is a natural one to use, cutting in currently at $175,000.

    Gilbert:

    If you had your way, would you like it across the board – just get rid of it?

    Leigh:

    Well, this covers the vast majority of workers and therefore deals with the vast majority of the problem that we’re tackling in non‑competes. We know that firms have other ways of dealing with keeping their intellectual property and we know that non‑competes for workers that have them can drive down wages by around 4 per cent. So, we’re talking for an affected worker about a potential wage gain of $50 a week.

    Angira Bharadwaj:

    You said this is in the Budget because it’s a productivity measure. Do you think there were enough overall productivity measures in the Budget? What are some of the other things the government’s doing to boost that?

    Leigh:

    Yeah, look, the government’s really ambitious on productivity. Obviously, the education measures, the 3 day childcare guarantee, getting that schools funding agreement and the free TAFE places. The infrastructure investments are critical, as are the energy investments. All of those are about increasing the speed limit of the economy.

    And the competition reforms proudly sit alongside that. We’ve had a decline in the competitiveness and the dynamism of the Australian economy over the last couple of decades and that’s really what’s led us to take such a strong forward leaning approach on competition.

    Clennell:

    Are you anticipating Peter Dutton to go bigger on tax cuts as a response to the government’s policy?

    Leigh:

    Well, today he went a lot smaller. We went into the parliament voting for lower taxes for Australians and the Liberals and the Nationals voted for higher taxes. Now, if Robert Menzies was still around, he’d be starting an Opposition party.

    Clennell:

    Well, hang on. I mean, he’s got a little bit of time now.

    Leigh:

    He had a chance, right? Today Andrew – he had a chance.

    Clennell:

    So, that’s it? You don’t think he’ll do it?

    Leigh:

    I have no idea what he’s going to do. He’s a bit of a loose unit.

    Gilbert:

    Does he consult you?

    Leigh:

    It appears not. But you know, this bloke will say one thing on Monday and do something else on Tuesday.

    Connell:

    But he gets to mull it over. Jim Chalmers was asked about giving a bigger tax cut. He said this was the most, basically that could be afforded. So, if Peter Dutton goes further, you can’t then match it, can you? If the Treasurer said this is the most the budget can afford?

    Leigh:

    Well, what we’ve done is ensure that every taxpayer got a tax cut. And if you put together – the tax cuts from last year and the tax cuts that we’ve now announced, that will amount to some $50 per week.

    Connell:

    But, this is your final offer?

    Leigh:

    This is what we’ve got in the Budget, and $50 a week is pretty substantial. That sits alongside measures such as cheaper medicines, cheaper childcare, the energy bill rebates – so much of it opposed by the Liberals and Nationals who seem not to care at all about the cost‑of‑living pressures that Australians are under.

    Connell:

    Alright, really appreciate your time today. Thank you.

    Leigh:

    Thanks so much.

    MIL OSI News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Address to the Canberra Business Chamber and Institute of Public Accountants online budget breakfast

    Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

    It’s terrific to be with you and I’m sorry we’re not meeting in person in the Great Hall today. I acknowledge that I’m on Ngunnawal land today, and acknowledge all First Nations people joining us.

    Thank you to the Canberra Business Chamber and the Institute of Public Accountants for again putting on this event, which is really a fixture in the budget calendar. I’ve done your event many times. I enjoy it more in person than virtually, but it is a real pleasure to be able to engage with the Canberra business community.

    Let me start off with where we are in a global context, then go to a couple of the key measures in the Budget and finally finish up by asking the question: ‘What does the Budget mean for Canberra?’

    If we look around the world, uncertainty is up. We’ve always lived in an uncertain world, but policy uncertainty is combining with geopolitical uncertainty. At this moment, we’ve seen a range of our counterpart economies go into recession as they’ve sought to battle inflation. The UK and New Zealand have suffered recessions, and many other economies around the world have experienced quarters of negative growth as they sought to tame the global cost‑of‑living challenge. Australia, uniquely in our history, has managed to bring inflation down into the Reserve Bank’s target band without a significant rise in unemployment. We should be collectively extraordinarily proud of this. It’s not the story of the 70s, the 80s or the 90s, where taming inflation meant increasing unemployment.

    In Australia, we’ve managed to maintain full employment while getting prices back under control. And that in itself is a remarkable achievement. More than a million jobs created, interest rates now coming down, inflation back within the band, a strong labour market. So, while you look around the world and see a lot of uncertainty, there’s not many places you’d rather be than Australia.

    The Treasurer last night talked about 5 big themes. I don’t have half an hour, so let me focus on 2: cost of living and productivity. In terms of cost of living, our biggest measure is continuing the tax cuts that we began last year. Last year as you remember, we adjusted the tax cuts so every taxpayer got a tax cut. Now we’re announcing that from 2026–27, we’ll be delivering a tax cut worth $268 for everyone earning over $45,000 per year, and the same again the year after that. That will be worth about $10 a week for the average worker, and it adds to the previous tax cut worth about $40 a week for the average worker to around $50 a week. That sits alongside the energy bill relief which will be extended for another half year, reflecting the pressure many households are under.

    And then there’s the systemic changes: cheaper medicines, cheaper childcare. The work we’re doing in supermarket competition has a cost‑of‑living lens as well. We’ve commissioned the biggest review of the supermarkets in 17 years, and that review continues to make recommendations which build on the government’s work to tackle shrinkflation and ensure that Australian shoppers get a better deal at the checkout. You’ll soon be seeing the next iteration of CHOICE’s quarterly gross price grocery price monitoring, which is another measure that Labor has put in place to ensure that shoppers get a better deal.

    Now, Emma [Alberici] talked about productivity and about a couple of the productivity boosting measures we have in place. I want to focus on those because it is really important that we as progressives, are focused on not only boosting demand, but also on the supply side, on ensuring that we’re unlocking the growth potential of the Australian economy. Emma rightly talked about the work that we’ve done on early learning, providing that 3 day guarantee, following the experts and getting rid of the activity test in order to unlock the productivity potential of the Australian workforce. We’re investing in skills, finally completing that Gonski project of ensuring that every school gets its appropriate level of funding, and that final agreement with the Queensland Premier that was announced this week is the last piece of the puzzle in those Gonski reforms. It’s not just money, it’s about reforms. It’s about more targeted teaching, more intensive literacy and numeracy education to tackle that challenge that we’ve seen in the OECD PISA tests, where Australian students since the beginning of the millennium have slipped back about a year of achievement. We need to do better, and this money will allow us to do that.

    The boost in Free TAFE places is vital in ensuring that we have more skills for the jobs in the modern economy, particularly in construction. We understand that we need to increase uptake and we need to encourage apprentices to stay in on the tools. We recognise that by boosting investment in modular methods of construction, we can also unlock productivity in the housing sector. Housing sector productivity has gone down in Australia, as it has in many other advanced countries, and a recent Productivity Commission report talked about some of the challenges. They’re not bagging unions – far from it. They’re talking about the challenges of scale and about the way in which modular construction has sometimes struggled, about some of the regulatory challenges that housing construction faces, and our government is very focused on unlocking housing sector productivity.

    Now, Emma also talked about one of our key productivity boosting measures in this Budget, which is around the competition reforms relating to non‑competes. When I first started looking at this about 5 years ago, people said ‘Oh, it’s just an American thing. Sure, one in 5 American workers have non‑competes but you won’t find the same in Australia.’ So, we worked with e61 and with the ABS in order to do surveys that revealed, lo and behold, that one in 5 Australian workers were subject to a non‑compete clause – a clause that stopped them from moving to a better job. And then the argument came ‘It’s just executives being put on gardening leave’. But it turned out in the surveys that it’s gardeners, it’s early childhood workers, security guards, a whole range of workers in low‑wage professions that have been caught by standard form employment agreements which are preventing them from moving to a better job.

    Our reform will then unlock a productivity boost, because if you want to start a firm on a full‑employment economy, you need to hire workers from other firms. It’ll apply to workers earning under $175,000 – the Fair Work Act high‑income threshold. Our estimate, the estimates we have from the experts on this suggests that it will boost wages by around $2,500 per year. That means for those affected workers, those one in 5 – that’s a boost of around $50 a week, commensurate with the tax cut gains that I talked about.

    Getting rid of non‑compete laws for low wage workers shouldn’t trouble businesses, because you can still put in place non‑disclosure agreements that ensure that your secrets can’t walk out. And in fact, what’s going on at the moment is that many of these non‑compete clauses are not legally enforceable. We’re tying up workers and firms in a thicket of legal regulations. By getting rid of non‑competes and encouraging firms to instead use targeted non‑disclosure agreements, we will unlock productivity.

    Finally, for Canberra this Budget builds on the investments of past budgets. On our record investment in the national cultural institutions. Investment in the War Memorial and the National Security precinct. This Albanese Labor government hasn’t neglected Canberra’s infrastructure spend, as the previous government did in their final budget, when Canberra received just one‑fifth of our fair share of infrastructure investment from the Coalition. Instead, this Albanese government has invested in bike paths, roads, and light rail for the nation’s capital.

    We’ve got a public service which is right sized for the needs of the nation, and the Coalition’s proposals for a public service cut would devastate the ACT. On one hand, they’re saying that they’re going to cut one in 5 public servants which suggests that frontline services such as people processing veterans’ claims or parental leave benefits would suffer. But then they try and say, ‘well we won’t hurt frontline services – we’ll only cut the Canberra public service’. If they rip 41,000 public service jobs out, and only in Canberra – that’s half the public service in Canberra. That would also devastate the nation’s capacity to deal with future pandemics, with national security risks, and with biosecurity challenges. The Coalition can’t have it both ways. Either their public service cuts are a threat to frontline services, or they will devastate the nation’s policy infrastructure, including our national security.

    So, thanks for the chance to talk about Budget 2025. Jim Chalmers and Katy Gallagher have put together a fantastic Budget which invests in productivity, tackles the cost of living, and delivers for Australia.

    MIL OSI News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Interview with Georgia Stynes, Canberra Drive, ABC Radio

    Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

    Georgia Stynes:

    Our guest is the Labor Member for Fenner, Dr Andrew Leigh, who has been listening into this previous conversation and joins us. Good afternoon.

    Andrew Leigh:

    Good afternoon Georgia, great to be with you.

    Stynes:

    Yeah, nice to be with you too. Do you acknowledge that there were some forgotten people in this Budget that a lot of the measures seem to be aimed towards, well, either people who are paying tax or business?

    Leigh:

    Well in our previous Budgets, we’ve raised the JobSeeker rate, we’ve increased Commonwealth Rent Assistance by over 40 per cent. We have prioritised those who are doing it tough by supporting increases to the minimum wage and supporting increases to aged care workers and early childhood workers.

    Our tax cuts are directed towards everyone. So, everyone earning over $45,000 receives that same benefit over the 2 tax cuts. Somewhere around $10 a week in conjunction with our previous tax cut totals around $50 a week or $2,500 a year. So, we’ve looked to deliver egalitarian reforms at the same time as focusing on the long run productivity challenge that our predecessors left us with.

    Stynes:

    To be fair, that that would buy you a democracy sausage though at election day, which is partly what’s being said is that this looked like an election budget. There weren’t lots of big things, big picture things.

    Leigh:

    Look, I think $50 a week is pretty significant. And you put that alongside the energy bill rebates, that $75 off each of your next 2 quarterly bills. The work we’ve done around cheaper medicines, cheaper childcare and housing affordability through our work with the ACT Government and other state and territory governments, historic investment in housing, all of that is focused on making us a more productive economy and at the same time helping to keep our lid on prices.

    Leigh:

    You live in Canberra, you’ve lived in Canberra for a long time and I know you spend a lot of time out in the community ACTCOSS, Vinnies, lots of agencies – Marymead Catholic Care are telling us that they’re seeing people come through their doors that have never come through their doors before. People that used to donate to them are now queuing up for food banks. Things have changed.

    Don’t you think this was an opportunity? The Budget was an opportunity to help those people struggling with the cost of living?

    Leigh:

    Last week the ACT Labor team was out at Marymead in Lyneham around an announcement that we’d made of investing in housing for women and children fleeing domestic and family violence. We pioritise those social spends and social supports in this Budget, as we have the productivity boosting reforms. We’re aiming to be an inclusive government that makes these investments for everyone.

    And I don’t think there has been an Australian Government, certainly in my lifetime, that has given so much of a priority to Canberra. Through the investments in the national cultural institutions, the National Security Precinct, the work in the War Memorial, prioritising the public service over outsourced consultants and contractors and giving the ACT our fair share of infrastructure spending, which you see strongly reflected in this Budget with the investments in the Monaro Highway, Gundaroo Drive and the like.

    Stynes:

    Do you acknowledge that Canberra has changed? That we are seeing more people on the streets and there are people struggling, that we are in a cost‑of‑living crisis?

    Leigh:

    Look, I think there’s certainly cost‑of‑living challenges. Inflation is now back within the Reserve Bank’s target band and we’ve done that for the first time in Australian history without smashing the labour market. Previously, we had a big surge in joblessness as Australia sought to bring down prices. We haven’t done that this time. We’ve got inflation under control while maintaining a historically low rate of unemployment – the lowest average rate of unemployment of any government in 50 years.

    The UK has gone into recession, New Zealand has gone into recession. Other countries have suffered quarters of negative growth as they’ve sought to tame inflation. Australia has tamed inflation while maintaining full employment. And that is so important to the social equity goals that you’re talking about there Georgia.

    Stynes:

    Dr Andrew Leigh is our guest. He’s the Labor Member for Fenner. Just on the text line, one listener says ‘What about a Newstart hike? Why didn’t that happen? Another listener has said ‘Yeah, the people currently living in tents in and around Canberra will get cold comfort from this Budget’. Another listener has said ‘long‑term unemployment really needed more analysis. They need to be looking at why this is happening. There’s a huge resource there if the government could help them do courses lead to degrees, we could get them into aged care or others that need employees.’

    I just want to, I know you’re very busy – just before we run out of time. One of the things that you’re quite passionate about is this non‑compete clause. Can you just explain to people how this will work? The changes?

    Leigh:

    One in 5 workers are subject to a non‑compete which makes it hard for them to move to a better job. People like the 17‑year‑old dance instructor who found herself harassed at work and then when she moved to a competing dance studio, found herself being threatened for breach of contract by her former employer. These non‑compete clauses are dampening down wages and decreasing productivity.

    And so we’re going to be getting rid of non‑compete clauses for workers earning under $175,000. That’s going to be great for wages. Those affected workers will see on average a 4 per cent wage boost and it’ll be great for productivity. It’ll make it easier to start a business because in a full employment economy you need to hire workers from other firms if you’re going to get a new business off the ground.

    Stynes:

    How many people does that actually affect in Canberra? Is that dancer an example here in Canberra or is that a federal example?

    Leigh:

    That’s an example from interstate, but certainly in the ACT I would expect that it would be around one in 5 workers affected as well. You know, these aren’t just high paid executives who are being affected. These are gardeners, cleaners, security guards, early childhood workers who are signing up to standard form employment agreements Georgia, which contain non‑compete clauses making it harder for them to move to a better job.

    Job mobility is a really important part of a productive economy. It’s a really important part of an economy in which wages grow. Labor wants people to earn more and keep more of what they earn.

    Stynes:

    Just to clarify though, this is also working, you know, when you’ve got people you would know too, people who work in say banking or in other areas or a lawyer and they, they resign and then they’re sort of between another job, they can’t go and work for another law firm between that period. Is that what you’re talking about or are you talking about other things?

    Leigh:

    If they earn less than $175,000 yes, they’ll be caught. And I should be clear Georgia, for any of your listeners who are running small businesses, those small businesses still have the protection of intellectual property laws, of non‑disclosure agreements. So they can hold their secrets but they can’t bind their staff to the desk.

    Stynes:

    When we talk about – because just back on that for a minute. That happens in the public service, obviously that happens in corporate jobs. But you’re saying the cap is how much they earn, is that right?

    Leigh:

    That’s right. And so, this is about getting wage growth going. We’ve seen a decline in job mobility under the former government and that may well be one of the reasons why we saw such lousy wage outcomes, why real wages were falling so sharply when we took office.

    Allowing people to move to a better job is really fundamental. It’s a question of freedom and opportunity and it’s also a way of ensuring that people get the wage gains they deserve.

    Stynes:

    There’s quite a few texts coming through just before you go too. One person says, ‘But the point is we have historically high rates of homelessness in this country’. Another listener has said ‘These tax cuts are a huge waste of money’.

    Spreading across Australia reduces its impact per person. Wouldn’t it have been better for this huge amount to go into one or 2 areas – say health, say education, say homelessness. Do you think that might have been a better look if that money had actually gone there?

    Leigh:

    Well, health, education, homelessness are all big priorities for us. In education, you’ve got the 3 day childcare guarantee and the national schools funding agreement that we’ve now signed up to with all states and territories. With health, we’ve been moving to get cheaper medicines. Reforms in this Budget will bring down the cost of PBS medicines from $31 to $25.

    In housing, we’ve been making bigger investments in social housing than any previous Australian Government through the Housing Australia Future Fund and our work with the states and territories on dealing with planning and zoning. So, all of those areas are big priorities for the government and were front and centre in the Budget last night.

    Stynes:

    There is criticism that this was a cobbled together Budget. The idea that this is fit for an election, but it wasn’t expected to be delivered. Is that true? Was this cobbled together?

    Leigh:

    Not at all. This is a Budget that delivers tax cuts which the Liberals and Nationals today voted against, and which focuses on long‑term reform such as getting competition policy going again. It’s got reforms which will allow electricians to work across state and territory borders. Really important for a sparkie in Queanbeyan to be able to do a job in O’Connor.

    And it’s got reforms which are focused on investing for the long run. Increasing the funding to the Clean Energy Finance Corporation, so it can do more innovative work in tackling climate change and that decarbonisation challenge.

    Stynes:

    We’ll have to leave it there I’m sorry but thank you so much for your time, I appreciate it.

    Leigh:

    Thank you, Georgia.

    Stynes:

    Thank you. That’s Dr Leigh there, Labor Member for Fenner.

    MIL OSI News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI China: Hainan Free Trade Port boosts China’s high-level opening up

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    A panel on “Global Free Trade Port Development” is held during the 2025 Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference in Boao, south China’s Hainan province, March 25, 2025. [Photo/China.org.cn]

    Hainan Free Trade Port (FTP) has expanded its global reach by forming partnerships with 38 free trade zones (FTZs) across Asia, Africa, Europe and Latin America, establishing a robust international network since its 2018 launch.

    This milestone was highlighted during a panel on “Global Free Trade Port Development” at the 2025 Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference in Boao, south China’s Hainan province, on Tuesday.

    Chinese Vice Premier Ding Xuexiang, also a member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, emphasized the need for solid efforts to advance the development of Hainan FTP during his inspection tour from March 24 to 25, stressing its role as a gateway for China’s opening up in the new era.

    China’s government work report this year reaffirmed its commitment to accelerating the implementation of key policies related to Hainan FTP, emphasizing the need to improve the quality and performance of pilot FTZs and give them more authority to implement reforms.

    Ban Ki-moon, former U.N. secretary-general and now BFA chairman, highlighted the pivotal role of FTPs in global commerce.

    “With the highest level of trade opening up, FTPs come closest to achieving the ultimate goal of trade and investment liberalization,” he said. “They serve as incubators, pioneers and testing grounds.”

    BFA Vice Chairman Zhou Xiaochuan reviewed the growth of China’s FTZs, noting that since 2013, China has created 22 FTZs, each adapted to meet local economic needs.

    Zhou emphasized that Hainan’s strengths include its rich ecological resources and strategic location near ASEAN countries, positioning it as a crucial player in the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) and potentially in the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP).

    Hainan’s economic performance reflects its rising role in global trade. Statistics from Hainan’s “two sessions,” the annual meetings of provincial-level lawmakers and political advisors, showed that the province’s total foreign trade reached 277.65 billion yuan ($38.22 billion) in 2024, a 20% year-on-year increase. Exports surpassed 100 billion yuan for the first time, reaching 106.22 billion yuan, a 43.5% surge. Trade in goods grew by 20%, while services trade increased by 23.9%.

    Hainan Governor Liu Xiaoming confirmed that preparations for Hainan FTP to handle its own customs operations are proceeding as planned, with completion expected by the end of the year.

    “Once implemented, Hainan’s opening up will be significantly elevated, with stronger policy support, wider economic reach, an improved business environment, enhanced vitality for enterprises and greater benefits for people,” Liu said.

    Former Chairman of the Cabinet of Ministers of the Kyrgyz Republic Akylbek Zhaparov stressed the importance of open borders, efficient logistics and seamless trade flows. “Free trade ports are crucial in creating these conditions,” he said.

    Gerry Grimstone, former minister for investment of U.K., emphasized the economic benefits of global trade. He argued that free trade encourages multilateralism by allowing nations to leverage their competitive advantages.

    He emphasized that while some countries have retreated from global trade to protect their own interests, it is crucial to continue promoting global trade to secure mutual benefits for all.

    Long Yongtu, China’s former chief negotiator for entry into the World Trade Organization and former vice minister of Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation, warned that tariffs imposed by some countries are harming trade stability and fairness, even if they don’t reflect mainstream trade policies. 

    “When any major economy engages in trade wars, retaliatory measures from other countries disrupt global trade stability,” Long cautioned.

    Arancha Gonzalez, former Spanish foreign minister, highlighted FTZs and FTPs as essential tools for overcoming global trade barriers. He explained that they strengthen resilience by facilitating targeted responses to global shocks. Furthermore, they act as testing grounds for innovative business models, offering solutions to reduce costs, improve efficiency and optimize operations.

    MIL OSI China News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: ASEAN and UK Reaffirm Commitment to Strengthening Partnership

    Source: ASEAN

    The Fourth ASEAN-UK Joint Cooperation Committee (JCC) Meeting was convened today at the ASEAN Headquarters/ASEAN Secretariat. Both sides reviewed progress under the ASEAN-UK Dialogue Partnership and reaffirmed their commitment to deepening cooperation ahead of the fifth anniversary of the partnership in 2026.

    MIL OSI Economics –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Support for Aussie tourism businesses

    Source: Australian Attorney General’s Agencies

    To help Australian tourism operators tap into the rapidly growing Filipino and Thai visitor markets, the Albanese Government is launching two new training programs.

    Delivered in partnership with the Australian Tourism Export Council, the Philippines Host and Thailand Host programs will equip Australian tourism businesses with the knowledge, cultural insights, and skills needed to deliver an unforgettable experience for inbound travellers.

    Travel from these markets has rebounded post-pandemic, with visitors from the Philippines reaching 171,900, and visitors from Thailand reaching 95,100 in 2024.

    But there is great potential to grow both markets further, with Tourism Research Australia forecasting that by 2029, annual visitors from the Philippines will increase by 42% and annual visitors from Thailand to increase by 47%.

    Airlines are expanding routes to meet this increasing demand, with Qantas adding Brisbane-Manila flights (100,000+ seats annually), Cebu Pacific increasing Sydney and Melbourne services, and Jetstar boosting Australia-Thailand routes to 22 weekly flights, including new Brisbane and Perth connections.

    The Albanese Government is helping tourism operators tap into new markets, recognising the opportunity it presents as highlighted in our Invested: Australia’s Southeast Asia Economic Strategy to 2040.

    The Host programs will be delivered by the Australian Tourism Export Council (ATEC), which also delivers the Tourism Training Hub, and the recently released Vietnam Host program.

    Australian tourism operators can register for the Philippines and Thailand Host Programs via the ATEC Tourism Training Hub.

    Quotes attributable to Minister for Trade and Tourism, Senator the Hon Don Farrell:

    “These new Programs will help deepen Australia’s engagement in Southeast Asia by preparing our tourism industry to attract and service visitors, and drive growth from the Philippines and Thailand.

    “New aviation services are helping increase travel between Australia and the Philippines and Thailand, which presents a wealth of opportunities for Australian businesses.

    “We want to ensure that our fantastic tourism operators are ready to take advantage of these opportunities, growing their businesses and creating jobs.”

    Quotes attributable to Mr Peter Shelley, Managing Director, Australian Tourism Export Council:

    “With the Philippines and Thailand emerging as key growth markets, now is the time for operators to invest in market readiness.

    “These new Host programs equip businesses with the knowledge and cultural insights to create meaningful visitor experiences and capitalise on these expanding opportunities.

    “Developed in collaboration with industry experts and Austrade, these Host programs provide tourism businesses with market-specific understanding that translates into the real-world.”

    Quotes attributable to Australian tourism industry representative, Tina Chaisuwan-Baker, Sales Manager – South East Asia, SeaLink Marine & Tourism: 

    “Undertaking ATEC’s Vietnam Host online course gave me key insights into the cultural preferences and service expectations of Vietnamese tourists coming into Australia. 

    “This knowledge has been essential in enhancing my approach to selling and tailoring our products, ensuring we meet the unique needs of the Vietnamese market.”

    MIL OSI News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: Not just the stadium: what Brisbane Olympic organisers are planning for

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By H. Björn Galjaardt, PhD Candidate, The University of Queensland

    Brisbane was awarded the Olympics and Paralympics more than 1,300 days ago, and much has happened in between.

    On Tuesday, upbeat Queensland premier David Crisafulli revealed the 2032 Brisbane Olympic and Paralympic Games plan.

    This came after a 100-day review by the Games Independent Infrastructure and Coordination Authority (GIICA).

    More than 5,000 submissions were received from the general public. The review included topics such as precincts and transport systems, while evaluating topics such as demand and affordability.

    So, what’s going to be happening in Queensland before, during and after the games?

    The main event: venues

    Get ready for the likes of Taylor Swift, Pink, Coldplay and others to finally come to Brisbane with the announcement of a new world-class 63,000 seat Olympic Stadium to be built in Victoria Park in Brisbane.

    All indications are major codes, such as the Australian Football League (AFL) and cricket, are also very pleased, as they will have a new home replacing the outdated Gabba.

    Other venues, both in South East Queensland and in regional areas such as the Gold Coast, Sunshine Coast, Cairns and Townsville, were also outlined.

    One of these is a new 25,000-seat swimming complex at Spring Hill, making it one of the world’s best facilities.

    As Australia is a swimming powerhouse with major medal hauls expected in 2032, this news was well received.

    However, a few of the GIICA recommendations were not accepted. The government has announced rowing will take place in Rockhampton – and not interstate – in an existing flat water venue.

    Why the delays?

    There had been plenty of criticism of the decision-making delays on facilities and their locations. But the Queensland government’s 2032 Games Delivery Plan indicates there is no need to panic.

    Previously, the International Olympic Committee chose a host city seven years out, but under new protocols, Los Angeles in 2028 and Brisbane in 2032 have been given 11 years to finalise planning.

    Previous Australian games (Melbourne in 1956 and Sydney in 2000) only had seven years to organise their events.

    In the case of Melbourne, several controversies erupted due to the costs of building a new stadium at proposed sites such as the Royal Showgrounds or Princes Park.

    Eventually, politics and economics intervened, and a refurbished Melbourne Cricket Ground within an impressive Olympic Park precinct was agreed on.

    In the case of Sydney, the original idea back in the 1960s was to host either the Commonwealth Games or the Olympic Games at Moore Park, an inner-city region home to the Sydney Cricket Ground, a golf course and parklands.

    But many local residents were vehemently opposed to that suggestion, so other sites were sought.

    Eventually, the uninhabited Homebush site was chosen in 1973. This was an unexpected decision because it was the most polluted environment in Australia and its remediation, however noble, would be an enormous challenge.

    And so it proved.

    When Sydney was awarded the games in 1993, timeline pressures prompted organisers to bulldoze toxic waste into mounds on site, where they were covered with clay and landscaped.

    Meanwhile, the promised remediation of toxic waterways in Homebush Bay never proceeded.

    All that said, the Sydney games provided tangible legacies. The Olympic Village is now the suburb of Newington, there are parklands and cycle paths for visitors, and from a sport perspective several facilities remain in use today. In 2024, more than 10 million people visited the Sydney Olympic Park precinct, attending sport, concerts, or participating in social activities.

    Opportunities and hurdles

    The initial hiccups associated with the Brisbane games have resulted in some interesting and healthy debate, but this major project now has a positive vibe.

    There is more than enough time to build the new facilities (including the athletes’ villages), upgrade existing ones, build the necessary transport infrastructure, and ensure community engagement.

    The “Queensland way” seems not only to be referring to a better games, but also the legacy that comes with it.

    Generational infrastructure (for example, the upgrade of transport connectivity), housing (such as the conversion of the RNA Showgrounds and a multimillion dollar investment into grassroots clubs can enable the next generations of Queenslanders to compete.

    Tourism and regionalisation of the games through a 20-year plan should ensure the impact of the games goes far beyond 2032.

    Some fine-tuning is expected the next few years though, and there may be unforeseen issues that arise – here are some.

    1. Beyond the 31 core sports that must feature, will new sports necessitate changes or additions to proposed venues? Host cities are now allowed to have 4-5 sports added to the program which could cause increases to the budget.

    2. Will the federal government fund the games on the currently agreed 50-50 basis with the Queensland government? This currently sits at around $7 billion split two ways, but it is likely to rise based on cost over-runs on virtually all major builds across Australia.

    3. Will there be some tweaking of chosen venues due to local issues, lobbying by Olympic sports, political decisions and other factors?

    4. Will a global health issue (such as COVID during the Tokyo 2021 games) or a major world problem (such as the current Gaza or Ukraine conflicts) impact the games in some way?

    The Brisbane games are following the footsteps of Melbourne 1956 (affectionately referred to as the “friendly games”) and Sydney 2000 (the “best games ever”).

    The eventual Brisbane label has yet to be determined. But the Brisbane games will no doubt add to the Olympic folklore of Australia in their own unique way.

    Björn is a PhD Candidate in Olympic Coaches’ Learning at the University of Queensland and a casual academic in Sports Coaching subjects.

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

    – ref. Not just the stadium: what Brisbane Olympic organisers are planning for – https://theconversation.com/not-just-the-stadium-what-brisbane-olympic-organisers-are-planning-for-251247

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: Keith Rankin Analysis – Learning the correct lessons from World War Two in Europe

    Analysis by Keith Rankin.

    Keith Rankin, trained as an economic historian, is a retired lecturer in Economics and Statistics. He lives in Auckland, New Zealand.

    While World War Two (WW2) always was a set of intersecting conflicts – with Japan fighting a war of imperialism in East Asia and the Western Pacific – the war in Europe has been cast as the ultimate battle of ‘Good’ versus ‘Evil’. Hence the narrative of the Good War. Further, it has been personalised, with Adolf Hitler becoming the personalisation of Evil and Winston Churchill the personalisation of Good.

    It always was nonsense. Wars are fought over territories and hegemony, between various peoples (nationalities), empires, religions, ideologies etc.; in the vast majority of cases between Bad and Bad, albeit various shades of bad (although the Hitler’s Nazis and Joseph Stalin’s Communists were close to having been equally Bad). The Bad versus Good narrative remains compelling to the human mind, however. Once you can find a compelling Evil – without or within, over there or over here – then our brains want to tell us that whoever opposes that ‘bad’ must be ‘good’. (In the old days, the ‘good’ said: ‘God was on our side’. Typically, their opponents thought something similar.)

    Winston Churchill was neither a Good leader nor a competent leader. He didn’t start WW2, though there is an argument that the United Kingdom did. Nevertheless, Churchill, as a charismatic rhetorician and narcissist, had some sway over political discourse in Britain for half a century. (His important career began in 1904, when he became a party-hopping backbencher. He resigned from his second stint as Prime Minister in 1955; he was an MP for 61 years, and PM for 9 years.) That’s why there are so many more cited quotations from him than from any other British back-bench MP in the late 1930s.

    Churchill, as a war-leader, was an ultra-imperialist who fought imperialist wars under the cover of World Wars One and Two. He was responsible for numerous atrocities, including appeasements of Stalin that were more problematic than Neville Chamberlain’s appeasement of Hitler in 1938. In his speeches in 1938 and 1939, Churchill may have been alluding to Eastern Europe, but he was thinking about Italy and its threat to British ‘assets’ in and around the Mediterranean Sea.

    WW2: Germany versus Soviet Russia, with the United Kingdom as stoker and as kingmaker

    World War Two was round two of the Germany versus Russia conflict; this time as ‘Nazi’ Germany against ‘Communist’ Russia, the Third Reich versus the Soviet Union. The centrality of the Germany versus Russia conflict – indeed a conflict between them for the territories of Ukraine and the oilfields to the southeast of Ukraine – becomes more apparent when WW1 and WW2 are seen as one. World War One clearly started as a conflict between Germany and Russia; albeit triggered as a conflict between proxies, Austria and Serbia. And World War Two ended with the defeat of Germany by Soviet Russia; and after the entry of Russia into the Pacific War (which henceforth became the Cold War between Soviet Russia and the United States of America).

    Technically, WW2 became a world war (rather than a regional war) when the United Kingdom and France (and their empires) ‘declared war’ on Germany on 1 Sep 1939. The trigger issue was the possibility of Germany invading Poland. But what mischief was the United Kingdom upto with distant Poland? Why did a British ghost-war go horribly wrong? And why did open warfare between the two principal belligerents in Europe – Berlin and Moscow – not commence until June 1941?

    My reading of British and French ‘diplomacy’ between March and August 1939 is that these notional allies, United Kingdom in particular, wanted there to be a major regional showdown between Berlin and Moscow; both powers would be substantially weakened as a result, thereby enhancing British and French control of the Mediterranean and the ‘Middle East’.

    The British and the French ‘tried’ to do a deal with Stalin, in March 1939, with respect to protecting Poland from German aggression. (On 15 March 1939, Germany annexed the Czech part of Czechoslovakia.) They revealed their military weakness (especially Britain’s), or at least the paucity of the military contribution they were willing to make towards the security of Poland.

    Britain and France subsequently went on to sign a treaty guarantee with Poland; a guarantee that both would declare war against Germany if Poland was attacked by Germany. Stalin already knew that the United Kingdom would not back-up such a declaration with any action to defend Poland.

    The reason for the guarantee appears to have been to deter Poland from negotiating a peace deal with Germany. Further, Britain was maintaining diplomatic communication with Germany until August 1939. The inference would appear to be that Britain was trying to start a ‘nothing-war’ between itself and Germany, while stoking a ‘something war’ between Germany and Soviet Russia. Britain had no intention of doing anything in Poland, and was expecting that France would provide a substantial defensive barrier between Germany and Great Britain; this was all in the context that Britain and France would be helping their own security by nudging Germany into ‘pushing’ East (as was always Germany’s apparent plan) rather than ‘West’.

    However, Britain and France were nonplussed by the non-aggression pact – the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact – signed between Moscow and Berlin in the last week of August 1939. Further, there was a secret sub-pact. Moscow and Berlin would carve up Poland, and which effectively – and subsequently – meant the Soviet annexation of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia. Germany invaded Poland on 1 September 1939, activating that secret deal. Despite having nineteenth-century precedents for a pragmatic backing out from a signed-up deal, the United Kingdom and France – at least notionally – honoured their guarantee and declared war on Germany.

    For France, this meant further shoring-up of its border with Germany, and – virtue signalling –making a small and brief incursion into Germany (the Saar Offensive). For Britain it meant further rearmament, but really to build up its navy to shore up its imperial interests, and building up its Air Force to defend itself from possible German attack. And it sent an army into France, as a show of support for France, more to be seen to be doing something than to actually be doing anything.

    But the clear sense is that Britain still expected Germany to negotiate peace with Britain while consolidating its annexations of the Czech lands and Poland. The ‘phoney war’ proceeded, though it was far from phoney to the people of Poland and other Eastern European countries. The United Kingdom was launched into war proper in May 1940, with the lightning conquest of France by Germany, a conquest made possible by Germany’s temporary truce with the Soviet Union. (Though that was preceded, by a month, by Germany’s invasion of Norway; a matter for Britain’s navy rather than army.)

    Adolf Hitler abandoned the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact in June 1941, embarking Nazi Germany on a full-scale invasion of the Soviet Union, his main plan all along. He had secured his western border in 1940; though his plans were somewhat scuppered by a need to attend to the military failings of Mussolini’s Italian forces in the Eastern Mediterranean, hence the war in Greece which involved New Zealand.

    The Bloodlands and their toll of political murder: 1932-1945

    The atrocities of the Nazis took place during a world war; those of Stalin were mostly during peace-time. Timothy Snyder, in his 2010 book Bloodlands, “conservatively” estimates that fourteen million civilians and prisoners-of-war were politically murdered in a set of contiguous territories – between Germany and Russia-proper – by either the Moscow-based Soviet Communist regime or the Berlin-based National Socialist regime. This includes ‘The Holocaust’, or at least most of it.

    As real estate, Snyder defines the Bloodlands as the pre-WW2 territories of Ukraine and Belarus (within the Soviet Union), Poland, the Baltic States (Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia), and the part of Russia close to Leningrad (now St Petersburg). The murders included in his tally were inflicted by deliberate starvation, guns, and gas. The cases of starvation were not due to famine in the conventional sense of that term. In the Ukrainian ‘famine’ of 1932/33, the food grown on Ukrainian farms – among the most productive lands in Europe – was confiscated and exported to Russian cities and to other countries in return for foreign currency. In the Siege of Leningrad – 1941 to 1944 – the German military prevented food from entering the city.

    The worst-affected areas of the Bloodlands are today in western Ukraine and western Belarus. This land was in Eastern Poland before World War Two, and therefore in the Soviet-annexed territories of pre-war Poland. These lands were annexed or occupied by the Soviet Union in 1939, Germany in 1941, and the Soviet Union again in 1944. Each annexation saw its own round of political mass murder.

    The murders of citizens of Poland and the Soviet Union took place on a vastly larger scale than any comparable atrocities committed on West Europeans; including the Holocaust, for which the vast majority of victims were Jews resident in Eastern Europe (not Germany; not the West). Snyder summarises the Bloodlands murder toll as:

    • 3.3 million deliberately starved mostly in Ukraine in the 1932/33 Holodomor
    • 0.7 million murdered in the Great Terror of 1937/38
    • 0.2 million murdered in occupied Poland in 1939-1941 (disproportionately highly educated people; many killed by the notorious Einsatzgruppen, Nazi loyalists with PhD degrees)
    • 4.2 million Soviet citizens starved by German occupiers in 1941-1944
    • 5.4 million Jews (mostly Polish or Soviet citizens) shot or gassed by Germans in 1941-1944
    • 0.7 million citizens (mostly Belarussians or Poles) shot by Germans in reprisals in 1941-1944

    To what extent would have these (or equivalent numbers of) deaths have happened anyway, regardless of how the war actually started in Poland? Stalin’s victims, mostly already dead, represented about 40 percent of these fourteen million. The majority of Stalin’s victims were killed in the Ukrainian Holodomor which peaked in 1932 and 1933; or in the Great Terror of 1937 and 1938, which targeted the ‘kulak’ class of peasants and former peasants, ethnic Poles, and Russia’s political class (including many Bolshevik allies of the paranoid Stalin; communists who had come to be seen as potential threats to him).

    Before September 1939, Hitler’s attempts at political murder were puny at best, when compared to Stalin’s ‘peace-time’ terror campaigns. Stalin murdered Soviet citizens. So, to a large extent did Hitler; Hitler killed comparatively few Germans, before or during the war.

    Those who died in the Bloodlands after August 1939 might have experienced different fates had the war not been started then and there. Certainly, in 1940, a group of Hitler’s scientists – led by a leading agronomist – devised the ‘Hunger Plan’, which, if implemented in full, would have led to the murder of thirty of forty million Soviet citizens, to be replaced by German Aryan settlers. (While Hitler used ‘capitalist’ and ‘communist’ Jews as convenient scapegoats, Nazi racism should be understood as pro-Aryan rather than specifically anti-Jewish.) This was probably a racist and supremacist Nazi fantasy, unlikely to be able to be realised in full, and which was not prevented by the declaration of war by the United Kingdom against Germany in 1939.

    It’s hard to see that the eventual victory of the Soviet Union over Germany in 1945 made the world a better, freer or more democratic place than it otherwise would have been; with fewer deaths and sufferings after 1939 than there actually were. Would a German victory over the Soviet Union have led to a less inhumane outcome for many millions of people, in the Bloodlands and elsewhere? We’ll never know, but it’s possible. It seems unlikely that the extremes of German National Socialism could have lasted for as long as the extremes of Soviet and Maoist Communism. And we know that most oppressive regimes do come to an end eventually; just as Hitler thought the Third Reich was forever (or for 1,000 years), so did Stalin and his successors believe of the Soviet Union.

    World War Two morphed into the Cold War

    Mostly, the Cold War – between the United States and the Soviet Union, and their proxies and alleged proxies – was ‘fought’ between the First World and the Second World; but its many victims were mostly in the ‘Third World’, now called the ‘Global South’. The way the Pacific War morphed into the Cold War is glaringly obvious, with the nuclear attack on Japan by the United States representing the end of the one war and the beginning of the next. (And note The bombing of Hamburg foreshadowed the horrors of Hiroshima.)

    The Cold War began in Europe too, when the ‘victorious’ western ‘powers’, most particularly the United States, ‘suggested’ that the Russian ‘liberators’ of Eastern Europe were planning to overrun Western Europe as well (and turn the conquered into ‘communists’). The result was a tensely divided Europe until 1990, unnecessarily so; many European lives were blighted by politico-military suppression for 45 years. Further, that east-west divide has reappeared; just look at the results of the recent general election in Germany.

    Finally, the costs ain’t over yet

    Just as the World War came in two episodes, so too is the Cold War now in its second episode. (In the case of the World War, the second episode was explicitly ideological; communism versus fascism. In the Cold War, it was the first episode that was explicitly ideological; communism versus liberal capitalism.) Further, with signs that the United States might be withdrawing early, the second Cold War (CW2?) is looking like becoming, at its core, the Fourth Reich (aka the European Union) versus Russia (the new Russian Empire?), and with the territories of contention once again being Ukraine and the Black Sea.

    The World War could have ended in 1918 or 1919 after the Great War (later known as World War One) – understood then to be the ‘War to End All Wars’ – if the ‘great powers’ had learned the appropriate lessons. Sadly, the ‘powers-that-were’ and the ‘powers-that-would-be’ learned, if anything, the wrong lessons. World War Two was not a Good War; it was grubbier and crueller than probably all its predecessors, and all sides – including the Anglo-side – contributed to that grubbiness and cruelty.

    Imperialism was very much the problem, not the solution. The ‘rules-based-world-order’, devised in 1919 by the then-victorious powers – shonky new-nation national-borders and all – proved to be just another variation of great-power imperialism. We live in a world today of powers (some more ‘super’ than others), their proxies, and nations in the Global South saddled with borders which ensure forever conflicts.

    We live in a world in which the Global West sees itself as morally and culturally superior, even though manifestly it isn’t. And we live in a world in which the Global East – in its various ethnic and cultural shades – rejects the supremacist assumptions and liberal presumptions of the West. And we live in a world in which those powers gamble with global war, just as the British gambled in 1939. And we live in a world in which the militaries contribute vastly to very real climate change, partly from military emissions of greenhouse gasses, partly because the immediate (eg 2020s) security concerns of the world outweigh concerns about the climate future (eg 2040s) concerns, and partly because we behave as if the goals to prevent or adapt to global warming are unwinnable.

    There is a lot happening in the world at the moment, including tensions within Europe that would lead few people to be confident that – in 2050 – the present political architecture of Europe would still exist. Germany coveted Ukraine in the first half of the twentieth century. Indeed, Germany occupied Ukraine in 1918 and in the middle years of World War Two. Will the second quarter of the twenty-first century once again see German control of Ukraine? I wouldn’t bet against it. I see a stronger belligerence today in Germany towards having influence in Ukraine than I see in any other western country.

    The biggest threat to peace is war; not Russia, not China, not Germany, not the United States of America, not Iran, not the hapless United Kingdom. Wars are a problem, not a solution.

    The worst things happen during wars, or as a result of wars. There is one important exception. As we have seen, the Soviet Union – a Marxian ‘scientific utopia’ – destroyed many of its own people in the 1930s, in ‘peacetime’, and while the liberal world was looking the other way. Something similar, maybe worse, happened in China in the 1960s.

    The lessons to learn are: avoid war, and the drum-beating that precedes it. And avoid technocratic utopian groupthink; avoid ideologies masquerading as science. The Nazi Hunger Plan was devised by an agronomist, Herbert Backe. War leads to such ideologies; and such ideologies lead to war.

    *******

    Keith Rankin (keith at rankin dot nz), trained as an economic historian, is a retired lecturer in Economics and Statistics. He lives in Auckland, New Zealand.

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: Alone Australia is back. An expert explains what happens to your body and mind when you’re starving

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Therese O’Sullivan, Associate Professor in Nutrition and Dietetics, Edith Cowan University

    SBS Publicity

    Alone Australia is back this week for a third season on SBS. And its ten contestants are learning what it means to be really hungry.

    They’ve been dropped alone into separate areas of the Tasmanian wilderness to film their experiences of the elements, isolation and hunger. The person who lasts the longest wins the A$250,000 prize.

    The contestants are trying various methods to find food. But not everyone’s had success in fishing, trapping and foraging. And the effects on their bodies and minds are already evident.

    Here’s what happens when hunger and starvation kick in.

    Shelter, water, food

    After shelter and water, food is a main concern for long-term survival – not just for Alone Australia contestants.

    Many of us are familiar with the feeling of hunger – discomfort caused by a lack of food. Hunger is a complex process that involves regulation of blood glucose levels and release of hormones that control appetite and how full you feel. For instance, when we are hungry, the stomach produces the hormone ghrelin, telling us it’s time to eat.

    Starvation is a much more serious state. It’s a long period without enough food that results in severe disruption to how the body normally works.

    A healthy person may be able to survive without food for around one to two months. However, the length of time is likely to be affected by many factors including age, sex, fitness, health, sleep and access to clean drinking water.

    Last year’s winner of Alone Australia made it to 64 days, much of it without enough food.

    But even successful survivalists can struggle to find and eat enough food to meet their requirements. One previous contestant lost as much as 11 kilograms over eight days.

    Hunger is already an issue for contestants, most of whom are struggling to find food.

    What happens if you don’t have enough food?

    A lack of food doesn’t just affect your body size. It also affects the way your body functions. People can experience extreme tiredness, have trouble remembering recent events, and feel colder due to a drop in body temperature.

    Prolonged starvation can also have psychological impacts and affect the way you think, reason and make decisions.

    We have some clues from a study that would be unethical to reproduce today.

    The Minnesota Starvation Experiment started in 1944 to examine the effects of starvation on the body. The idea was to replicate the degree of starvation experienced in areas of Europe during world war two.

    Thirty-six healthy young men who were conscientious objectors to war service volunteered to undergo a six-month semi-starvation phase where their calorie intake was halved, followed by a three-month rehabilitation.

    Data showed they lost an average of one-quarter of their body weight (including a reduced heart mass).

    But other impacts included depression, fatigue and irritability. One participant said:

    little things that wouldn’t bother me before or after would really make me upset.

    Participants had difficulty concentrating, and their attitudes towards food changed dramatically. They had constant thoughts about food, hoarded food and even started collecting cookbooks. Many of these attitudes and behaviours lasted even after rehabilitation back to a normal diet.

    Yes, feeling ‘hangry’ is real

    Most Australians will be fortunate to never experience the same levels of starvation as in the Minnesota experiment or in Alone Australia.

    But even skipping a meal can have an impact on our wellbeing. We become
    “hangry” – when hunger leads us to be irritable or angry.

    A study of 64 participants from Europe tracked their hunger and emotions over 21 days. The more hungry the participants were, the more hangry they felt and the more unpleasant feelings they reported (for example, feeling depressed or stressed versus feeling relaxed or excited).

    When people are hungry, they are also more likely to have intrusive, mind-wandering thoughts.

    In a complex reading and comprehension task, the minds of people who hadn’t eaten for five hours wandered more than the minds of people who had eaten recently. Those who were hungry also performed worse on the task.

    So in Alone Australia, it’s easy to see how hunger can lead people to lose focus on what they’re doing, and their minds wandering. Rather than focusing on the best spot to go fishing, contestants’ minds can wander to feelings of self-doubt.

    Muzza from Victoria caught some fish early on. But will his success continue?
    Credit Narelle Portanier/SBS

    Hunger also affects decision making

    Feeling hungry also affects how you make rational decisions, but there’s conflicting evidence.

    Hungry people are more likely to make impulsive decisions about food. In Alone Australia, this might result in a decision to eat fish raw rather than cooking it first, a more hazardous choice due to an increased risk of infection from parasites.

    However, hungry people can show better judgement when making complex decisions with uncertain outcomes – like a gambling task. So being mildly hungry (in this study, overnight fasting) might sharpen your survival instincts. In Alone Australia, hungrier contestants may make better decisions around where to place hunting traps.

    But hunger’s effect on decision making is likely to depend on the context. It may make people more impulsive in some situations, but more strategic and willing to take risks in others.

    For the contestants in Alone Australia, some risk taking will be required to secure an ongoing food supply. This will be crucial to successfully surviving in the Tasmanian wilderness.

    Therese O’Sullivan 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. Alone Australia is back. An expert explains what happens to your body and mind when you’re starving – https://theconversation.com/alone-australia-is-back-an-expert-explains-what-happens-to-your-body-and-mind-when-youre-starving-249937

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Australia – CommBank establishes Seattle Tech Hub to further accelerate its AI capability – CBA

    Source: Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA)

    Recognising the role of technology and innovation in delivering excellent customer experiences.

    CommBank is establishing a dedicated Tech Hub in Seattle, Washington (USA), to advance the bank’s technology leadership and delivery of outstanding customer experiences by equipping teams with the cutting-edge skills needed to stay ahead.

    CommBank Chief Executive Officer, Matt Comyn said, “As the rate of global innovation continues to accelerate, we increasingly believe that the bank’s technology leadership will continue to provide a strong foundation to CommBank’s strategic performance and competitive advantage. Technology delivers superior customer experiences to our 16 million customers, which is at the core of our strategy to be tomorrow’s bank today.”

    Global opportunity for CommBank’s tech teams

    The first cohort of CommBank technologists currently at the Seattle Tech Hub are focused on learning to fast-track adoption of Agentic AI and Gen AI powered solutions to help small business banking customers manage their finances and run their businesses. The current cohort will also explore modernising testing to respond to customer feedback faster.

    CommBank’s Group Executive Technology Gavin Munroe says the Tech Hub will give the bank’s technologists a leading global advantage and enable the delivery of world-class digital experiences for customers at a safer and faster pace.

    “A Tech Hub based in Seattle – an area that is home to leading global technology companies – will connect our technologists with our partners to accelerate how we deliver new banking solutions for customers. Our teams will bring new ideas back to Australia to enhance how we work, while boosting the knowledge and expertise in Australia’s tech ecosystem.

    “The Seattle Tech Hub is part of our focus on fast-tracking how we’re using new technologies like Agentic AI, while creating an environment where technologists can continue to grow, learn and develop their career,” says Mr Munroe.

    Through the Tech Hub, which opened this month, CBA technology teams will have the opportunity to take part in a three-week exchange within the Seattle tech precinct, where they will participate in collaborative learning opportunities together with global technology leaders such as Amazon Web Services, Anthropic, H2O and Microsoft to deliver technology-led customer experiences.

    The Tech Hub will serve as a strategic gateway for the bank to collaborate with global technology leaders, foster innovation exchange, broaden employee learning to harness cutting-edge solutions. This presence in one of the world’s leading tech ecosystems will accelerate our transformation while enabling us to attract top talent and develop breakthrough capabilities for our customers.

    AWS Vice President of Agentic AI Swami Sivasubramanian said: “As CommBank’s preferred cloud provider, we’re excited about the learning opportunities that their new Seattle Tech Hub will offer. I’m confident this move will not only give them access to the best industry talent, but also bring our teams closer as we continue to scale AI innovations globally. We have entered an even more transformative phase with generative AI and the emergence of agentic AI applications represents a fundamental shift in its evolution. I look forward to our teams collaborating closely and achieving productivity and scale gains that will reshape banking experiences for customers.”

    Microsoft Business and Industry Copilot Corporate Vice President Charles Lamanna said: “CommBank’s Seattle Technology Hub exemplifies its leadership in banking innovation. By placing its people at the center of the global tech ecosystem, CommBank is ensuring it stays ahead of emerging trends and technologies. Microsoft is proud to support the bank’s vision by providing tools and access to expertise that will empower its team, enhance their learning, and push the boundaries of what is possible for their 16 million customers.”

    MIL OSI – Submitted News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Tech and Security – Latest privacy breach at Health NZ should be a wake-up call to reverse IT cuts – PSA

    Source: PSA

    The Government must urgently reverse the proposed deep cuts at Health NZ’s IT workforce in the wake of the latest privacy breach at the organisation.
    Health NZ today confirmed an IT security incident in October 2024 that resulted in unauthorised access to some staff information from 2020 to 2024 at Capital, Coast & Hutt Valley, and Wairarapa districts.
    “This is just more proof that the damaging cuts to Data and Digital must be reversed, or more sensitive patient and staff information will be put at risk,” said Fleur Fitzsimons, National Secretary for the Public Service Association for Te Pūkenga Here Tikanga Mahi.
    Health NZ Te Whatu Ora announced in December plans to cut 47% of roles in the Data and Digital Directorate, resulting in the loss of 1120 roles (including vacancies), all to save $100m.
    “This is another wake-up call, one nobody should need, that the IT systems protecting sensitive information are already fragile – we urge the Minister of Health to do the right thing and tell his Ministry to reverse these cuts before it’s too late.
    “Data & Digital staff warned Health NZ last year about the rising risks if the cuts went ahead but these fell on deaf ears.
    “It’s why we asked the Privacy Commissioner to investigate because of the huge gamble with patient privacy and safety we believe Health NZ is taking with these poorly thought through cuts.
    “New Zealanders rightly expect that their private information as patients is held securely, but how can anyone have confidence that the proposed cuts won’t make the situation worse?
    “Health NZ has important obligations under the Health Information Privacy Code and the Privacy Act, but we don’t believe the risks of breaching these obligations have been properly analysed in the rush to save money.
    “The Data & Digital workforce is already under incredible pressure keeping legacy systems going and introducing new modern state of the art systems for our centralised health organisation.
    “Enough is enough. The latest breach should be ringing alarm bells in the Beehive. We urge the Minister to stop the cuts and reassure New Zealanders their information will be safe and secure.”
    The Public Service Association Te Pūkenga Here Tikanga Mahi is Aotearoa New Zealand’s largest trade union, representing and supporting more than 95,000 workers across central government, state-owned enterprises, local councils, health boards and community groups.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Rural News – Primary sector leader becomes OSPRI chair

    Source: OSPRI New Zealand

    OSPRI New Zealand’s board has appointed Southland farmer and director Tony Cleland as its new chair.
    Mr Cleland takes over the role this month from long-standing board member and interim chair Fenton Wilson.
    Mr Wilson steps down from the board after 10 years of service, which has seen him most recently hold the role of interim chair after the resignation of Dr Paul Reynolds last year.
    OSPRI chief executive Sam McIvor says the organisation has been fortunate to have had the benefit of Mr Wilson’s knowledge and experience, while transitioning to a new board chair.
    “I speak for all farmers and the funders of OSPRI when I say we owe a significant debt of gratitude to Fenton.
    “He has made a substantial contribution to the development of the work of OSPRI for more than a decade.
    “He’s been fiercely committed to the value of TB freedom for New Zealand and brought a unique knowledge set as a farmer but also as a Regional Council Chair.”
    Tony Cleland is a well-known figure in New Zealand’s primary sector, as he and his wife have farming and wine industry businesses. Amongst his governance experience, Tony was a board member of FMG Insurance for 16 years and chair for six years.
    “We’re really pleased to have someone with the industry knowledge and respect that Tony has, as our new chair,” Sam says.
    “He brings grassroots farmer knowledge and significant governance experience, both critical for OSPRI’s success.”

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Weather News – Rain clears for an eventful weekend – MetService

    Source: MetService

    Covering period of Thursday 27th – Sunday 30th March – A band of rain sweeps across New Zealand to end the working week, but MetService is forecasting a sunny weekend for most.  

    Today (Thursday), gloomy skies and wet weather move up the South Island as the North Island holds on to dry and settled conditions. The rain is expected to clear south of Christchurch this evening.

    Tomorrow (Friday), the clouds will gradually part to fine spells over the South Island as the rain band moves on to the North Island. The brief rain will weaken as it moves north, unfortunately, bringing no respite for the driest areas.

    With so many events scheduled this weekend, people will be eagerly checking their local MetService weather forecasts. Sunshine is expected for the last day of the Maadi Regatta on Saturday, without too much more disruption from fog. Blue skies over Wellington’s CubaDupa and Christchurch’s Round the Bays will hopefully encourage a bustling turnout.

    Meanwhile, the classic cars at Whangamata’s Beach Hop should be prepared for a sprinkling of showers on Saturday, so keep that in mind if you’re taking the convertible. The same goes for Auckland’s Synthony festival, as northeasterly winds drag in moist air with a shower or two.

    MetService Meteorologist Michael Pawley says, “For those without weekend plans, the mild temperatures and clear skies will provide prime dog walking and bike riding weather, and you could even take your Nana for a coffee”.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Chief Ombudsman releases final report

    Source: Office of the Ombudsman

    Chief Ombudsman Peter Boshier has released his final report to Parliament before he leaves Office tomorrow (28 March).
    It is customary for the Chief Ombudsman to release a final report before they leave Office.
    ‘The Way I See It, Report by the Chief Ombudsman Peter Boshier, December 2015 – March 2025, on leaving Office’ contains his personal thoughts on the jurisdiction and constitutional position of the Ombudsman in New Zealand. 
    Read the report here: https://www.ombudsman.parliament.nz/resources/way-i-see-it

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Government Cuts – Cuts will ramp up pressure on Corrections staff – PSA

    Source: PSA

    Proposed job cuts at the Department of Corrections in response to the Government’s programme of cutting public services will see a reduction in vital roles that support Corrections Officers, Probation Officers, Case Managers and managers do their jobs well.
    Corrections’ latest change proposal would result in a net reduction of 49 roles in its already stretched People and Capability, said Public Service Association Te Pūkenga Here Tikanga Mahi National Secretary Fleur Fitzsimons.
    “The proposed cuts will reduce the organisation’s ability to ensure its staff, who often work in risky environments, are trained and developed and have the right levels of health and safety and other support,” Fitzsimons said.
    The roles that are going include positions in Health and Safety and Learning and Development and capability building.
    “All these workers have important roles to play in ensuring Corrections supports and retains its staff.
    “The chain of cause and effect is clear: these cuts will degrade the quality of support to front-line staff. If front-line staff aren’t getting the support they need, their jobs will be harder and they’re more likely to leave. It’s going to impact the services that Corrections staff can deliver now and in the future. The impact of these cuts will be felt for years to come.
    “In the Government’s pursuit of cost savings to fund tax relief for landlords there has been little regard for how these proposed changes will negatively impact frontline services, let alone ensuring New Zealand has an effective Justice system.
    “More, not less funding is required to ensure that public services such as Corrections can keep delivering for New Zealanders.
    “One hand of the Government doesn’t know what the other is doing. It passes new sentencing laws to put people in prison for longer, but it’s also happy to kneecap those helping keep front-line staff safe and help them to do their job. This is yet another example of the senselessness of this programme of cuts,” Fitzsimons said.
    The Public Service Association Te Pūkenga Here Tikanga Mahi is Aotearoa New Zealand’s largest trade union, representing and supporting more than 95,000 workers across central government, state-owned enterprises, local councils, health boards and community groups.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Marine Environment – New deep sea mining study shows ecosystem recovery from mining could take centuries – Greenpeace

    Source: Greenpeace

    A new study shows that the damage from deep sea mining would be so severe that any recovery from mining could take hundreds of years. (ref. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-08921-3 )
    Responding to the study by the UK’s National Oceanography Centre in the scientific journal, Nature, David Santillo, Senior Scientist at Greenpeace Research Laboratories says: “This very study shows clear and tangible impacts to the seabed four decades on and also highlights that there is a reduced abundance and diversity of species in the area that was mined. The study warns that ecological recovery would likely take centuries or longer, adding to the multitude of existing warnings from scientists that deep sea mining could have severe and long-lasting impacts on the deep.
    Removing the nodules removes part of the ecosystem on which life in these areas depends.”
    Louisa Casson, Greenpeace International campaigner, who is attending this week’s International Seabed Authority meeting says: “The deep sea mining industry is trying to spin this study in their favour – but the reality and broader scientific consensus is clear; deep sea mining causes long term trauma to the seabed and deep sea ecosystem.
    “We’ve seen promising progress towards a moratorium at this week’s ISA meeting and this latest evidence makes it even more clear why governments must act now to stop deep sea mining before it ever starts.”
    Greenpeace Aotearoa seabed mining campaigner Juressa Lee adds: “This study confirms that deep sea mining would have an adverse impact on the health of the ocean and the Pacific way of life that depends on it. Vulnerable coastal communities will pay the highest price if deep sea mining takes place, harming the fish populations that provide food and livelihoods for many Indigenous Pacific communities.”

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Northland News – Whangaroa Ngaiotonga Trust celebrates successes with public field day

    Source: Northland Regional Council

    Northland’s Whangaroa Ngaiotonga Trust – a finalist in an upcoming national award celebrating excellence in Māori farming and horticulture – is to hold a public field day to showcase the work it has been doing and share its journey and farming practices.
    The trust is one of just two finalists for the near century-old Ahuwhenua Trophy, which was inaugurated by Māori leader Sir Apirana Ngata and the Governor General at the time, Lord Bledisloe, in 1933. This year, the competition is for Sheep and Beef farmers.
    News of the trust’s success has been welcomed by the Northland Regional Council (NRC) which has worked closely with the trust across multiple environmental initiatives and is supporting its planned Thursday 03 April field day at Ngaiotonga Marae – 1561 Rawhiti Road, Whangaruru.
    The trust has been administering 1100 hectares of the Ngaiotonga A3 Block on behalf of 1284 beneficial owners. The coastal hill country stretches along North Whangaruru and consists of 360ha of effective farmland, 297ha of forestry, and 443ha of native forest and wetlands. (The trust also leases 40ha of a neighbouring block from the Department of Conservation, giving it a total of 400ha effective farming area.)
    The trust has worked actively with various departments within the NRC. To protect the health of the whenua and moana, the trust has been integral to eradicating sika deer in its area, helping mitigate flood risks, working to help enforce marine protection areas, and many more.
    Since regaining its farm in 2020, the trust has embarked on a major investment programme to fence off all of its native bush and wetland areas in partnership with NRC and other agencies to protect rare species including the critically endangered Matuku (Bittern) and Pāteke (Brown Teal duck).
    Council Chair Geoff Crawford says from rivers to the forest, to the coastline, to the farmlands the trust has always been proactive with working in the environmental area, collaborating with multiple council departments.
    “Council is thrilled that the trust’s work in the agricultural space is being recognised.”
    Trust Co Chair Huhana Lyndon says anyone is welcome to attend the public field day.
    “We have decided to host this day to celebrate this achievement and to give people an inside look at the work we’ve been carrying out.”
    The day is expected to have more than 250 attendees, including government ministers, local government, Northland farmers, local residents, whānau, hapū and iwi.
    A pōwhiri will begin at 9am and the farm tour will be with 4WD vehicles only.
    More information is available at: https://www.facebook.com/share/12GYMkCmdXW/
    Meanwhile, the trust’s finalist status for the Ahuwhenua Trophy is not its only success of late. It recently celebrated two wins at the Northland Ballance Farm Environment Awards in the Climate Change Resiliency and Agri Business Management categories.
    The winners of the Ahuwhenua Trophy will be announced on Friday June 06 in Papaioea, Palmerston North. 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    March 27, 2025
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