Category: Canada

  • MIL-OSI: LeddarTech Reports Annual Shareholder Meeting Results

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    QUEBEC CITY, Canada, March 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — LeddarTech® Holdings Inc. (“LeddarTech” or the “Corporation”) (Nasdaq: LDTC), an automotive software company that provides patented disruptive AI-powered low-level sensor fusion and perception software technology, LeddarVision™, announces the voting results of its annual general and special meeting of shareholders held on March 26, 2025 (the “Meeting”). Shareholders voted on various proposals and elected directors to the board.

    Key Highlights of the Meeting

    1. Election of Directors: The full slate of six directors was elected to serve until the next annual meeting of shareholders or until a successor is elected or appointed.

    Nominee Votes For % of Voted Votes Against % of Voted
    Frantz Saintellemy 22,429,293 99.69% 68,631 0.31%
    Charles Boulanger 22,392,108 99.53% 105,816 0.47%
    Derek Aberle 22,470,109 99.88% 27,815 0.12%
    Yann Delabrière 22,475,831 99.90% 22,093 0.10%
    Sylvie Veilleux 22,471,696 99.88% 26,228 0.12%
    Lizabeth Ardisana 22,474,890 99.90% 23,034 0.10%

    As previously disclosed, Nick Stone and Michelle Sterling, who were members of the Board up to the Meeting, have decided not to stand for reelection.

    2. Approval of Auditor: The appointment of Richter LLP as auditors of the Corporation was approved, and the board of directors of the Corporation was authorized to fix the auditors’ remuneration.

    Votes For % of Voted Votes Withheld % of Voted
    25,480,228 99.81% 49,275 0.19%


    3. Other

    3.1 The amendment to the Corporation’s omnibus equity-based incentive plan to increase the number of common shares available for issuance thereunder was approved and ratified.

    Votes For % of Voted Votes Against % of Voted Votes Abstain % of Voted
    22,187,011 98.62% 199,079 0.88% 111,834 0.50%

    3.2 A second and separate amendment to the Corporation’s omnibus equity-based incentive plan for the adoption of an evergreen provision to the omnibus equity-based incentive plan, providing for an automatic annual increase in the common shares available for issuance thereunder over the next five years, was approved and ratified.

    Votes For % of Voted Votes Against % of Voted Votes Abstain % of Voted
    15,862,324 70.51% 6,630,055 29.47% 5,545 0.02%

    For further details on each of these matters, please refer to the Corporation’s management information circular dated February 7, 2025, available on SEDAR+ at www.sedarplus.ca and EDGAR at www.sec.gov. Final voting results on all matters voted on at the Meeting will be posted on the Investor Relations section of LeddarTech.com and filed on SEDAR+ at www.sedarplus.ca and EDGAR at www.sec.gov.

    About LeddarTech

    A global software company founded in 2007 and headquartered in Quebec City with additional R&D centers in Montreal and Tel Aviv, Israel, LeddarTech develops and provides comprehensive AI-based low-level sensor fusion and perception software solutions that enable the deployment of ADAS, autonomous driving (AD) and parking applications. LeddarTech’s automotive-grade software applies advanced AI and computer vision algorithms to generate accurate 3D models of the environment to achieve better decision making and safer navigation. This high-performance, scalable, cost-effective technology is available to OEMs and Tier 1-2 suppliers to efficiently implement automotive and off-road vehicle ADAS solutions.

    LeddarTech is responsible for several remote-sensing innovations, with over 170 patent applications (87 granted) that enhance ADAS, AD and parking capabilities. Better awareness around the vehicle is critical in making global mobility safer, more efficient, sustainable and affordable: this is what drives LeddarTech to seek to become the most widely adopted sensor fusion and perception software solution.

    Additional information about LeddarTech is accessible at www.leddartech.com and on LinkedIn, Twitter (X), Facebook and YouTube.

    Contact:
    Chris Stewart, Chief Financial Officer, LeddarTech Holdings Inc.
    Tel.: + 1-514-427-0858, chris.stewart@leddartech.com

    Leddar, LeddarTech, LeddarVision, LeddarSP, VAYADrive, VayaVision and related logos are trademarks or registered trademarks of LeddarTech Holdings Inc. and its subsidiaries. All other brands, product names and marks are or may be trademarks or registered trademarks used to identify products or services of their respective owners.

    LeddarTech Holdings Inc. is a public company listed on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol “LDTC.”

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Highway 99 closed overnight at Duffey Lake Road due to avalanche

    Highway 99 remains closed at Duffey Lake Road just north of Pemberton on Wednesday, March 26, 2025, as the Ministry of Transportation and Transit staff and contractors work to clear avalanche debris from the road.

    A partial avalanche occurred over the highway on Path 51. With a high risk for additional avalanche activity, ministry contractors performed a heli-bombing operation to trigger the release of the remaining material. The ministry’s maintenance contractor is working to remove the debris from the road.

    With warmer temperatures and precipitation in the overnight forecast, there is a possibility of more avalanche activity. To ensure the safety of the travelling public, Highway 99 will remain closed at the location overnight and will be reassessed at first light to determine if conditions permit the safe reopening of the highway. 

    Drivers are asked to avoid the area and reminded to obey signage. People who choose to travel should prepare for delays and ensure their vehicles are properly equipped with extra supplies, including food, water and blankets.

    For up-to-date information about road conditions, travellers should continue to monitor DriveBC: https://www.drivebc.ca/

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI: CalAmp Announces Headquarters Relocation to Carlsbad, CA to Streamline Operations and Strengthen Technical Hub

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    CARLSBAD, Calif., March 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — CalAmp, a global technology solutions innovator, today announced the relocation of its corporate headquarters from Irvine, CA, to Carlsbad, CA. This strategic move is designed to streamline operations and further align the company’s focus on its core technical hub, where much of its engineering, product development, and hardware expertise reside.

    “Our move to Carlsbad is a natural evolution in our journey to optimize efficiency and reinforce our commitment to innovation,” said Chris Adams, President and CEO of CalAmp. “Carlsbad has long been home to our talented engineering and product teams, making it the ideal location to centralize our operations and drive technological advancements that improve our customers’ lives.”

    CalAmp’s new headquarters will be housed in its existing Carlsbad office, a well-established center for the company’s research and development initiatives. The relocation underscores CalAmp’s commitment to fostering innovation and enhancing collaboration among its technical teams.

    While the headquarters moves to Carlsbad, CalAmp will maintain its additional offices worldwide, including locations in Eden Prairie, MN; Brooklyn, NY; London, UK; Milan, Italy; Paris, France; Barcelona, Spain; and Mexico City, Mexico. These offices will continue to support CalAmp’s global customers and partners with the high-quality service and solutions they expect.

    “This transition allows us to better leverage our strengths and position ourselves for future growth,” Adams added. “By consolidating our leadership and technical expertise in Carlsbad, we are creating an environment where innovation thrives and where we can better serve our customers.”

    For more information about CalAmp and its technology-driven solutions, visit www.calamp.com.

    About CalAmp

    CalAmp provides flexible solutions to help organizations worldwide monitor, track, and protect their vital assets. Our unique device-enabled software and cloud platform enables commercial and government organizations worldwide to improve efficiency, safety, visibility, and compliance while accommodating the unique ways they do business. With over 10 million active edge devices and 220+ approved or pending patents, CalAmp is the telematics leader organizations turn to for innovation and dependability. For more information, visit calamp.com, or LinkedInTwitterYouTube or CalAmp Blog.

    CalAmp, LoJack, TRACKER, Here Comes The Bus, Bus Guardian, CalAmp Vision, CrashBoxx and associated logos are among the trademarks of CalAmp and/or its affiliates in the United States, certain other countries and/or the EU. Spireon acquired the LoJack® U.S. Stolen Vehicle Recovery (SVR) business from CalAmp and holds an exclusive license to the LoJack mark in the United States and Canada. Any other trademarks or trade names mentioned are the property of their respective owners.

    CalAmp Investor  Contact: CalAmp Media Contact:
    Jikun Kim Mark Gaydos
    SVP & CFO Chief Marketing Officer
    ir@calamp.com Mgaydos@calamp.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI USA: Henkel Capital S.A. de C.V. Recalls Tec Italy Totale Shampoo Due to Potential Health Risk

    Source: US Department of Health and Human Services – 3

    Summary

    Company Announcement Date:
    March 25, 2025
    FDA Publish Date:
    March 26, 2025
    Product Type:
    CosmeticsHair Products
    Reason for Announcement:

    Recall Reason Description
    Potential to be contaminated with the bacteria, Klebsiella oxytoca

    Company Name:
    Henkel Capital S.A. de C.V
    Brand Name:

    Brand Name(s)
    Tec Italy

    Product Description:

    Product Description
    Shampoo

    Company Announcement
    Rocky Hill, Connecticut
    Henkel Capital S.A. de C.V. (“Henkel”) of Mexico is voluntarily recalling 1,068 units of its Tec Italy Shampoo Totale, as the product has the potential to be contaminated with Klebsiella oxytoca. Exposure to these bacteria can cause infections in humans, including infection in the eyes, nose and skin, with additional reactions for consumers with immune-compromised conditions.
    The shampoo was distributed in the United States through distributors in New York and California. The shampoo may have been further distributed to other states. It was also sold to consumers at the retail level.
    The recalled Tec Italy brand Totale Shampoo is packaged in a 33.81 fl. oz./1 L, green plastic bottle marked with Lot # 1G27542266 on the side of the bottle. The UPC code is 7501438375850.
    The potential for product contamination was noted after microbiological analyses performed by the company revealed the presence of these bacteria in some of its 33.81 fl. oz./ 1 L bottles of Tec Italy Shampoo Totale.
    To date, there have been no reports of user harm or injury related to these products. Consumers who experience symptoms, or have any medical questions associated with this recall, should consult a physician immediately.
    Consumers who have purchased the applicable 33.81 fl. oz./1 L bottles of Tec Italy Shampoo Totale should stop using the product and return the products to their place of purchase for a full refund.
    Tec Italy seeks to minimize all inconvenience this may cause consumers and are committed to their complete satisfaction. Questions may be directed to Tec Italy’s dedicated customer specialists at sacli@henkel.com.
    Henkel is conducting this recall with the knowledge of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Pictures of the recalled product are below.
    About Henkel in North AmericaHenkel’s portfolio of well-known brands in North America includes Schwarzkopf® hair care, Dial® soaps, Persil®, Purex®, and all® laundry detergents, Snuggle® fabric softeners as well as Loctite®, Technomelt® and Bonderite® adhesives. With sales close to 6.5 billion US dollars (6 billion euros) in 2024, North America accounts for 28 percent of the company’s global sales. Henkel employs around 8,000 people across the U.S., Canada and Puerto Rico. For more information, please visit www.henkel-northamerica.com and on Twitter @Henkel_NA.
    About HenkelWith its brands, innovations and technologies, Henkel holds leading market positions worldwide in the industrial and consumer businesses. The business unit Adhesive Technologies is the global leader in the market for adhesives, sealants and functional coatings. With Consumer Brands, the company holds leading positions especially in laundry & home care and hair in many markets and categories around the world. The company’s three strongest brands are Loctite, Persil and Schwarzkopf. In fiscal 2024, Henkel reported sales of more than 21.6 billion euros and adjusted operating profit of around 3.1 billion euros. Henkel’s preferred shares are listed in the German stock index DAX. Sustainability has a long tradition at Henkel, and the company has a clear sustainability strategy with specific targets. Henkel was founded in 1876 and today employs a diverse team of about 47,000 people worldwide – united by a strong corporate culture, shared values and a common purpose: “Pioneers at heart for the good of generations.” More information at www.henkel.com.
    Photo material is available at www.henkel-northamerica.com/press
    Media Contact:Jennifer SchiavoneJennifer.schiavone@henkel.com+1-475-299-9192

    Company Contact Information

    Product Photos

    Content current as of:
    03/26/2025

    Regulated Product(s)

    Follow FDA

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: SPC Mar 26, 2025 1930 UTC Day 3 Severe Thunderstorm Outlook

    Source: US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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    Mar 26, 2025 1930 UTC Day 3 Severe Thunderstorm Outlook

    Updated: Wed Mar 26 19:25:12 UTC 2025 (Print Version |   |  )

    Probabilistic to Categorical Outlook Conversion Table

     Forecast Discussion

    SPC AC 261925

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0225 PM CDT Wed Mar 26 2025

    Valid 281200Z – 291200Z

    …THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF THE
    CENTRAL STATES…

    …SUMMARY…
    Isolated severe thunderstorms are possible across the western Gulf
    Coast States on Friday into Friday night, and from Nebraska into
    parts of the Upper Midwest on Friday evening/night.

    …East/south TX and LA…
    A below-average confidence forecast is apparent with extensive
    preceding convection late D1 through D2 ahead of a low-amplitude
    shortwave trough drifting east-northeast across south TX.
    Moist-adiabatic thermodynamic profiles should be prevalent ahead of
    this trough on Friday. Surface-based destabilization will probably
    remain weak but occur within a rich western Gulf airmass. Moderate
    low-level shear may be adequate for brief tornado and localized
    damaging wind threats through the period. These should be focused in
    the first half of the period along the TX coastal plain before
    shifting more into LA on Friday afternoon and lingering along the LA
    coast through Friday night.

    …NE to WI…
    Very steep mid-level lapse rates around 8.5-9 C/km will be prevalent
    within a stout EML atop a pronounced baroclinic zone from the Upper
    Midwest into the central High Plains. With potential for multiple,
    low-amplitude shortwave impulses migrating through the zonal flow
    regime along the international border and moving northeast across
    the central/southern Rockies, isolated to scattered convective
    development is anticipated by Friday evening/night. Most of this
    activity should tend to be elevated or become undercut as the
    baroclinic zone shifts southeast with a building surface ridge from
    the Canadian Prairies. Faster mid-level westerlies should occur
    across the southern MN to WI corridor, with stronger low-level mass
    response in NE. Setup should support an isolated large hail threat.

    ..Grams.. 03/26/2025

    CLICK TO GET WUUS03 PTSDY3 PRODUCT

    NOTE: THE NEXT DAY 3 OUTLOOK IS SCHEDULED BY 0730Z

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Fact Sheet: President Donald J. Trump Adjusts Imports of Automobiles and Automobile Parts into the United States

    US Senate News:

    Source: The White House
    COUNTERING TRADE PRACTICES THAT THREATEN TO IMPAIR U.S. NATIONAL SECURITY: Today, President Donald J. Trump signed a proclamation invoking Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 to impose a 25% tariff on imports of automobiles and certain automobile parts, addressing a critical threat to U.S. national security.
    President Trump is taking action to protect America’s automobile industry, which is vital to national security and has been undermined by excessive imports threatening America’s domestic industrial base and supply chains.
    The 25% tariff will be applied to imported passenger vehicles (sedans, SUVs, crossovers, minivans, cargo vans) and light trucks, as well as key automobile parts (engines, transmissions, powertrain parts, and electrical components), with processes to expand tariffs on additional parts if necessary.
    Importers of automobiles under the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement will be given the opportunity to certify their U.S. content and systems will be implemented such that the 25% tariff will only apply to the value of their non-U.S. content.
    USMCA-compliant automobile parts will remain tariff-free until the Secretary of Commerce, in consultation with U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), establishes a process to apply tariffs to their non-U.S. content.

    The President is exercising his authority under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 to adjust imports to protect our national security.
    This statute provides the President with authority to adjust imports being brought into the United States in quantities or under circumstances that threaten to impair national security.

    MAINTAINING A RESILIENT DOMESTIC INDUSTRIAL BASE: President Trump is taking action to end unfair trade practices that jeopardize U.S. national security.
    The COVID-19 pandemic exposed critical vulnerabilities and choke points in global supply chains, undermining our ability to maintain a resilient domestic industrial base.
    Legislation, pre-existing trade agreements like the USMCA, revisions to the U.S.-Korea Free Trade Agreement, and subsequent negotiations have not sufficiently mitigated the threat to national security posed by imports of automobiles and certain automobile parts.
    These new tariffs aim to ensure the U.S. can sustain its domestic industrial base and meet national security needs. 
    STRENGTHENING AMERICA’S MANUFACTURING INDUSTRY: President Trump’s decision to implement tariffs on imports of automobiles and automobile parts will protect and strengthen the U.S. automotive sector.
    Foreign automobile industries, bolstered by unfair subsidies and aggressive industrial policies, have expanded, while U.S. production has stagnated.
    In 1985, American-owned facilities in the United States manufactured 11.0 million automobiles, representing 97% of overall domestic (American- and foreign-owned) production of automobiles.
    In 2024, Americans bought approximately 16 million cars, SUVs, and light trucks, and 50% of these vehicles were imports (8 million).
    Of the other 8 million vehicles assembled in America and not imported, the average domestic content is conservatively estimated at only 50% and is likely closer to 40%.
    Therefore, of the 16 million cars bought by Americans, only 25% of the vehicle content can be categorized as Made in America.

    The United States trade deficit in automobile parts reached $93.5 billion in 2024.
    Currently, the U.S. automobile and automobile parts industry (American-owned and foreign-owned firms) employs approximately one million U.S. workers.
    Employment in automotive parts manufacturing totaled approximately 553,300 jobs in 2024, a decline of 286,000 jobs or 34% since 2000.
    In 2023, Research and Development (R&D) by American-owned automobile manufacturers amounted to only 16% of global R&D spending. R&D by American-owned firms lagged behind the EU, which controlled 53% of global R&D.
    TARIFFS WORK: Studies have repeatedly shown that tariffs can be an effective tool for reducing or eliminating threats to impair U.S. national security and achieving economic and strategic objectives.
    A 2024 study on the effects of President Trump’s tariffs in his first term found that they “strengthened the U.S. economy” and “led to significant reshoring” in industries like manufacturing and steel production.
    A 2023 report by the U.S. International Trade Commission that analyzed the effects of Section 232 and 301 tariffs on more than $300 billion of U.S. imports found that the tariffs reduced imports from China and effectively stimulated more U.S. production of the tariffed goods, with very minor effects on prices.
    According to the Economic Policy Institute, the tariffs implemented by President Trump during his first term “clearly show[ed] no correlation with inflation” and only had a temporary effect on overall price levels.
    An analysis from the Atlantic Council found that “tariffs would create new incentives for US consumers to buy US-made products.”
    Former Biden Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen affirmed last year that tariffs do not raise prices: “I don’t believe that American consumers will see any meaningful increase in the prices that they face.”
    A 2024 economic analysis found that a global tariff of 10% would grow the economy by $728 billion, create 2.8 million jobs, and increase real household incomes by 5.7%.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Adjusting Imports of Automobiles and Autombile Parts Into the United States

    US Senate News:

    Source: The White House
    class=”has-text-align-center”>BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
    A PROCLAMATION
    1.  On February 17, 2019, the Secretary of Commerce (Secretary) transmitted to me a report on his investigation into the effects of imports of passenger vehicles (sedans, sport utility vehicles, crossover utility vehicles, minivans, and cargo vans) and light trucks (collectively, automobiles) and certain automobile parts (engines and engine parts, transmissions and powertrain parts, and electrical components) (collectively, automobile parts) on the national security of the United States under section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, as amended (19 U.S.C. 1862) (section 232).  Based on the facts considered in that investigation, the Secretary found and advised me of his opinion that automobiles and certain automobile parts are being imported into the United States in such quantities and under such circumstances as to threaten to impair the national security of the United States. 
    2.  In Proclamation 9888 of May 17, 2019 (Adjusting Imports of Automobiles and Automobile Parts Into the United States), I concurred with the Secretary’s finding in the February 17, 2019, report that automobiles and certain automobile parts are being imported into the United States in such quantities and under such circumstances as to threaten to impair the national security of the United States.  I also directed the United States Trade Representative (Trade Representative), in consultation with other executive branch officials, to pursue negotiation of agreements to address the threatened impairment of the national security of the United States with respect to imported automobiles and certain automobile parts from the European Union, Japan, and any other country the Trade Representative deems appropriate.
    3.  The Trade Representative’s negotiations did not lead to any agreements of the type contemplated by section 232.
    4.  In Proclamation 9888, I also directed the Secretary to monitor imports of automobiles and certain automobile parts and inform me of any circumstances that, in the Secretary’s opinion, might indicate the need for further action under section 232 with respect to such imports.
    5. The Secretary has informed me that, since the February 17, 2019, report, the national security concerns remain and have escalated.  The COVID-19 pandemic exposed critical vulnerabilities and choke points in global supply chains, undermining our ability to maintain a resilient domestic industrial base.  In recent years, American-owned automotive manufacturers have experienced numerous supply chain challenges, including material and parts input shortages, labor shortages and strikes, and electrical-component shortages.  Meanwhile, foreign automotive industries, propelled by unfair subsidies and aggressive industrial policies, have grown substantially.  Today, only about half of the vehicles sold in the United States are manufactured domestically, a decline that jeopardizes our domestic industrial base and national security, and the United States’ share of worldwide automobile production has remained stagnant since the February 17, 2019, report.  The number of employees in the domestic automotive industry has also not improved since the February 17, 2019, report. 
    6.  I am also advised that agreements entered into before the issuance of Proclamation 9888, such as the revisions to the United States-Korea Free Trade Agreement and the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), have not yielded sufficient positive outcomes.  The threat to national security posed by imports of automobiles and certain automobile parts remains and has increased.  Investments resulting from other efforts, such as legislation, have also not yielded sufficient positive outcomes to eliminate the threat to national security from such imports.
    7.  After considering the current information newly provided by the Secretary, among other things, I find that imports of automobiles and certain automobile parts continue to threaten to impair the national security of the United States and deem it necessary and appropriate to impose tariffs, as defined below, to adjust imports of automobiles and certain automobile parts so that such imports will not threaten to impair national security.
    8.  To ensure that the imposition of tariffs on automobiles and certain automobile parts in this proclamation are not circumvented and that the purpose of this action to eliminate the threat to the national security of the United States by imports of automobiles and certain automobile parts is not undermined, I also deem it necessary and appropriate to establish processes to identify and impose tariffs on additional automobile parts, as further described below.
    9.  Section 232 provides that, in this situation, the President shall take such other actions as the President deems necessary to adjust the imports of the relevant article so that such imports will not threaten to impair national security.  
    10.  Section 604 of the Trade Act of 1974, as amended (19 U.S.C. 2483), authorizes the President to embody in the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTSUS) the substance of statutes affecting import treatment, and actions thereunder, including the removal, modification, continuance, or imposition of any rate of duty or other import restriction.
    NOW, THEREFORE, I, DONALD J. TRUMP, President of the United States of America, by the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, including section 301 of title 3, United States Code; section 604 of the Trade Act of 1974, as amended; and section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, as amended, do hereby proclaim as follows:(1)  Except as otherwise provided in this proclamation, all imports of articles specified in Annex I to this proclamation or in any subsequent annex to this proclamation, as set out in a subsequent notice in the Federal Register, shall be subject to a 25 percent tariff with respect to goods entered for consumption or withdrawn from warehouse for consumption, on or after 12:01 a.m. eastern daylight time on April 3, 2025, for automobiles, and on the date specified in the Federal Register for automobile parts, but no later than May 3, 2025, and shall continue in effect, unless such actions are expressly reduced, modified, or terminated.  The above ad valorem tariff is in addition to any other duties, fees, exactions, and charges applicable to such imported automobiles and certain automobile parts articles.(2)  For automobiles that qualify for preferential tariff treatment under the USMCA, importers of such automobiles may submit documentation to the Secretary identifying the amount of U.S. content in each model imported into the United States.  “U.S. content” refers to the value of the automobile attributable to parts wholly obtained, produced entirely, or substantially transformed in the United States.  Thereafter, the Secretary may approve imports of such automobiles to be eligible to apply the ad valorem tariff of 25 percent in clause (1) of this proclamation exclusively to the value of the non-U.S. content of the automobile.  The non-U.S. content of the automobile shall be calculated by subtracting the value of the U.S. content in an automobile from the total value of the automobile.(3)  If U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) determines that the declared value of non-U.S. content of an automobile, as described in clause (2) of this proclamation, is inaccurate due to an overstatement of U.S. content, the 25 percent tariff shall apply to the full value of the automobile, regardless of the actual U.S. content of the automobile.  In addition, the 25 percent tariff shall be applied retroactively (from April 3, 2025, to the date of the inaccurate overstatement) and prospectively (from the date of the inaccurate overstatement to the date the importer corrects the overstatement, as verified by CBP) to the full value of all automobiles of the same model imported by the same importer.  This clause does not apply to or otherwise affect any other applicable fees or penalties.(4)  The ad valorem tariff of 25 percent described in clause (1) of this proclamation shall not apply to automobile parts that qualify for preferential treatment under the USMCA until such time that the Secretary, in consultation with CBP, establishes a process to apply the tariff exclusively to the value of the non-U.S. content of such automobile parts and publishes notice in the Federal Register.(5)  For avoidance of doubt, clause (4) of this proclamation does not apply to automobile knock-down kits or parts compilations.  Clause (4) of this proclamation applies only to individual automobile parts as defined by Annex I to this proclamation that otherwise meet the requirements of clause (4) of this proclamation.(6)  The Secretary, in consultation with the United States International Trade Commission and CBP, shall determine the modifications necessary to the HTSUS to effectuate this proclamation and shall make such modifications to the HTSUS through notice in the Federal Register.  (7)  Within 90 days of the date of this proclamation, the Secretary shall establish a process for including additional automobile parts articles within the scope of the tariffs described in clause (1) of this proclamation. In addition to inclusions made by the Secretary, this process shall provide for including additional automobile parts articles at the request of a domestic producer of an automobile or automobile parts article, or an industry association representing one or more such producers, where the request establishes that imports of additional automobile parts articles have increased in a manner that threatens to impair the national security or otherwise undermines the objectives set forth in any proclamation issued on the basis of the Secretary’s February 17, 2019, report or any additional information submitted to the President under clause (3) of Proclamation 9888 or clause (9) of this proclamation. When the Secretary receives such a request from a domestic producer or industry association, the Secretary, after consultation with the United States International Trade Commission and CBP, shall issue a determination regarding whether to include the articles within 60 days of receiving the request.  Any additional automobile parts articles that the Secretary has determined to be included within the scope of the tariffs described in clause (1) of this proclamation shall be so included on or after 12:01 a.m. eastern daylight time the day after a notice in the Federal Register describing the determination of the Secretary.  The notice in the Federal Register shall be made as soon as practicable but no later than 14 days after the Secretary’s determination.(8) Any automobile or automobile part, except those eligible for admission under “domestic status” as defined in 19 CFR 146.43, that is subject to the duty imposed by this proclamation and that is admitted into a United States foreign trade zone on or after the effective date of this proclamation, in accordance with clause (1) of this proclamation, must be admitted as “privileged foreign status” as defined in 19 CFR 146.41, and will be subject upon entry for consumption to any ad valorem rates of duty related to the classification under the applicable HTSUS subheading.(9)  The Secretary shall continue to monitor imports of automobiles and automobile parts.  The Secretary also shall, from time to time, in consultation with any senior executive branch officials the Secretary deems appropriate, review the status of such imports with respect to national security.  The Secretary shall inform the President of any circumstances that, in the Secretary’s opinion, might indicate the need for further action by the President under section 232.  The Secretary shall also inform the President of any circumstance that, in the Secretary’s opinion, might indicate that the increase in duty rate provided for in this proclamation is no longer necessary.(10)  No drawback shall be available with respect to the duties imposed pursuant to this proclamation.(11)  The Secretary may issue regulations and guidance consistent with this proclamation, including to address operational necessity.(12)  CBP may take any necessary or appropriate measures to administer the tariffs imposed by this proclamation.(13)  Any provision of previous proclamations and Executive Orders that is inconsistent with the actions taken in this proclamation is superseded to the extent of such inconsistency.IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this twenty-sixth day of March, in the year of our Lord two thousand twenty-five, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and forty-ninth.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Speech: Navigating the New World (Dis)order in Turbulent Times

    Source: New Zealand Labour Party

    Special thanks to Diplosphere for helping organise this event.

    Tena kotou katoa.

    Mexican poet Homero Aridjis wrote “There are centuries in which nothing happens and years in which centuries pass”. It sure feels like this now.

    Large swathes of the 80-year-old rules-based world order developed after World War 2 are in tatters.

    The dramatic withdrawal of the United States of America from the Paris agreement, the World Health Organisation, and the halting of most USAID programmes are, to say the least, significant. The ineffective and stalled OECD work on the minimum taxation of multinational corporations. The whirl wind of tariffs and counter tariffs, which change almost daily.

    The war of words between neighbours in North America is unprecedented.

    The speed of the recent withdrawal of US support for institutions the US was itself pivotal in creating has shocked many.

    Europe, already reeling from the war in Ukraine and wider instability, is now deeply unsettled by recent statements and positions from the new USA administration.

    The withdrawal of the US security guarantee changed not just Europe but geopolitics everywhere including Asia and the Pacific.

    Tectonic shifts are rocking the world, which is markedly different from a decade ago.

    Multilateral institutions have diminished in authority and effect. The slide of the United Nations, and other important institutions like the World Trade Organisation, is obvious.

    The overuse of the UN Security council veto and inconsistent application of international law has undermined the United Nations. UN ineffectiveness feeds a cynicism and emboldens disregard for international laws, treaties and institutions. The UN Secretary General was declared persona non grata in Israel.

    Many countries we identify with – like Canadian and European democracies – which relied on security alliances with one great power are obviously rethinking their strategy.

    In stark contrast, the New Zealand government has spent the last 18 months seeking closer alignment to the US, increasingly positioning New Zealand as being in opposition to China. We did not consider this a wise approach, but in any case the shifting global landscape has rendered it unsound.

    The world is in a transition to a multipolar world, with heightened rivalry between the great powers.  

    We could be in for a rough ride. What would what a Labour government do if we held the reins?

    How should New Zealand navigate the new order?

    When should we speak out?

    When should we stay silent so as not to provoke a response?

    I’ll set out my thoughts on New Zealand’s foreign affairs, trade and defence responses. How Labour would steer New Zealand’s independent foreign policy efforts, both transactionally and more holistically.

    You will have seen that we share common views with the government about the likes of the Cook Islands, the militarisation of the Pacific, and on Ukraine, but that we differ strongly on AUKUS and Gaza.

    This should not surprise given Labour’s record, which we are proud to stand by.

    The Labour-led government stayed out of the illegal invasion of Iraq after the UN inspector Hans Blix found no evidence of weapons of mass destruction. National  said New Zealand should have joined that war, which made the Middle East less secure, and undermined the rules-based order.

    An earlier Labour government established New Zealand’s nuclear free status, which National also opposed.

    Labour sent peacekeeping and reconstruction forces to Timor-Leste and Afghanistan. We provided money for arms to Ukraine via the NATO fund, humanitarian aid, air transport in Europe, and New Zealand personnel to help train Ukrainian soldiers in the UK.

    These are examples of the New Zealand Labour Party in government applying our independent foreign policy, making decisions according to our assessment of New Zealand’s long-term national interest.

    New Zealand is not non-aligned and works most closely with like-minded countries which share our values.

    Australia is by far our most important relationship.

    We are internationalists, not isolationists, and a reliable supporter of international institutions.

    We understand communication between nations on sensitive issues benefits from diplomacy, whether via the United Nations, other multilateral fora, or bilaterally.

    We must be able to talk about differences between our country and others. Hegemony is taken too far if we cannot.

    Not all statements can be in public, but some should be.

    Sometimes, as now, there is a desire not to offend for fear of retaliation. At times of sensitivity, the wisdom of former Prime Ministers on both sides of the Tasman can be helpful. They can say what needs to be said.

    Paul Keating is well known for his pithy comments. He recently described the fairer  attributes of Australian society compared with US societal settings. He listed cradle to the grave healthcare for everyone, sustainable retirement savings and superannuation, an Australian economy which delivers substantial income increases for working people, high rates of Australian participation in education, and effective gun control.

    Keating’s purpose was to emphasise that we shouldn’t be subservient, nor cede moral authority, to others including the US when choosing our approach to the world.

    Malcolm Turnbull has spoken out against US tariffs noting their random use against Australia is not justified by a trade imbalance.

    John Key has quietly but importantly emphasised that we should be careful not to ruin our relationship with China.

    Helen Clark described the pitfalls of AUKUS pillar 2 and has been critical of loose language resurrecting the defunct ANZUS pact or using the Five Eyes intelligence network as a foreign affairs construct.

    She put it succinctly and well – “New Zealand needs a clear-eyed vision for courteous relations with the US and China, close dialogue with the Pacific Rim, Pacific Island and European friends”.

    Just because great-power politics have shifted does not mean Aotearoa should drop our long-standing commitment to human rights, open trade, multilateral institutions and the rights of small states.

    Obviously we understand diplomacy is required, but that should not silence our ability to speak up and advocate for what we believe in.

    We raise concerns about freedom of expression and the treatment of minorities in China, and about foreign interference. Some of this is said behind closed doors. Some is very public.

    When the Chinese government via its NZ embassy criticised New Zealand media for reports alleging foreign interference, in Labour we quickly and publicly stood up for the rights of New Zealand media and criticised the Chinese intervention.

    The New Zealand Labour Party’s view is that if we don’t stand up for what we believe in, we undermine our ability to do so in the future. We also undermine our reputation for fairness in foreign affairs, built up over decades, which in turn undermines our influence.

    The same principle applies to our relationship with the US.

    We have acknowledged the current government’s desire not to unnecessarily provoke a response from the US when things are so volatile.

    But the government’s seeming unwillingness to criticise anything pertaining to the US concerns us, even when the US went so far as to sanction others for participating in international institutions we support.

    For example, New Zealand is a member of the International Criminal Court. The US is not. That is their right, but for the US to sanction those assisting the ICC is wrong. Yet the current New Zealand government chose not to stand with 69 other countries including Switzerland, France, Canada, UK, Germany, Sweden – countries we share values with. This was an unfortunate break with NZs proud tradition of independently standing for what we believe in.

    If we want countries to support the international rule of law, we should apply it consistently. Many countries think the west is inconsistent in its application of international law in the middle east.

    The sympathy most New Zealanders felt for Israel and those who settled there following the holocaust has severely eroded. We condemned the killings and hostage taking by Hamas on 17 October 2023. But 70 years after the 1967 war, the blatant lack of rights of Palestinian people, the endless death and carnage in Gaza, and lack of progress towards a two State solution, or a single state alternative, is intolerable.

    This is why we have said New Zealand should be assisting the International Court of Justice when considering whether the state of Israel is acting illegally, as we did in respect of Rwanda and Ukraine. And be clear that individuals in breach of international law should face consequences in the International Criminal Court, and via a New Zealand sanctions regime.

    We have limited power and can’t always get our way. We try to use our values and reputation to influence better outcomes.

    We get the realpolitik of superpower.

    We are long term observers of superpower behaviour.  We are not surprised that China has become more assertive as it has becomes a superpower. The UK used to be, so were France, and Spain, and Italy back in the day.

    The USA has long used its power in central America, and beyond, to influence outcomes, and is currently pressuring Panama to limit Chinese influence.

    Russia’s Mr Putin has a history of invading and destabilising other countries. He is unlikely to stop, in part because his internal political position – including his life and retention of his billions – may rely upon his continued international aggression. This is why we support consideration by the New Zealand government of support for multinational peacekeeping efforts in the Ukraine.

     

    AUKUS pillar 2.

    The New Zealand Labour Party does not support joining AUKUS pillar 2, which the prior US administration described as a China containment strategy. There was a change of language from the New Zealand government after the 2023 election. New Zealand was described as a “force multiplier” for the US. The government said there were strong reasons in favour of pillar 2. Long redundant ANZUS language was resurrected. It appeared to us in Labour that the public were being softened up to join.

    We engaged the public in a debate. This included well-attended public meetings. Voices for and against AUKUS pillar 2 were active. The media delved into the issue.

    Neither interoperability nor access to technology rely upon AUKUS – two of the arguments put in its favour. Cooperation with other countries in Asia like Japan, Indonesia, Singapore, South Korea does not rely upon AUKUS and could be hindered if these countries do not like the anti-China AUKUS positioning.

    We concluded that AUKUS pillar 2 is not in New Zealand’s interests. Our decision was not influenced by the election of the new US administration, although for some this will be relevant.

    It is pleasing that senior former National and Act politicians have voiced their opposition too.

    Interestingly, the rhetoric from the government has toned down on AUKUS. That said, language in India last week, instead of emphasising the need to navigate a multi-polar world, clumsily positioned New Zealand as making binary choices between India and China.

    Being unsurprised that a rising China is more assertive in its nearby region does not mean we are comfortable with all steps in the Pacific.

    Being situated at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean distant from neighbours has trade and other disadvantages. But that physical isolation and low levels of militarisation in the vast Pacific are our greatest defensive attributes. Changes to that status quo concern us.

    We are perturbed by the recent agreements signed between the Cook Islands and China, labelled as a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership. The agreement commits the Cook Islands to supporting China in multilateral forums and to support candidates during elections of various boards and committees.

    We agree with the current New Zealand government that the process which preceded these commitments, and their substance, breach the arrangements under which the Cook Islands operate, which are referenced in the Joint Centenary Declaration of 2001.

    The Cook Islands are part of the realm of New Zealand. Cook Islanders carry New Zealand passports. The advantages this carries are the primary reason Cook Islands per capita GDP is a remarkable four times that of Fiji and five times that of Tonga and Samoa. Advantages include the ability to work in New Zealand and Australia, access to New Zealand health care and education, and superannuation portability.

    Consultation obligations are not some perfunctory commitment of little importance. They are to ensure the Cook Islands government neither deliberately nor unwittingly takes foreign affairs steps deleterious to the Cook Islands, or to New Zealand, and to our relationship.

    It is of course open to Cook Islanders to change their relationship with New Zealand and give up their New Zealand Passports. I doubt this will occur as Cook Islanders know their standard of living would slump if they did so. Security issues for the Cook Islands could deteriorate over time too.

    In terms of seabed mining, it is within the sovereign power of the Cook Islands to pursue this if their government desires. New Zealand’s experience with hundreds of millions of dollars of clean-up costs left behind by overseas oil companies makes us very wary. Nevertheless, if the Cook Islands so wish, New Zealand should assist them to manage the opportunities and risks, including with international participants.

    The prosperity and peacefulness of the Pacific Islands is of fundamental importance to New Zealand. The withdrawal of USAID does not help.

    New Zealand, with partners like Australia, must step up. We need to do more to help Pacific countries with affordable banking services, digital telecommunications, renewable electricity, sustainable resource utilisation (especially helping to maximise value from EEZ fisheries), and climate adaptation.  Better educational, health and civil society outcomes are good for us all. Labour mobility can also help, although care is needed given sensitivities for some concerned about depopulation,

    New Zealand can help Pacific populations displaced by sea levels rise.

    Reciprocity is key to prosperity and the desired avoidance of militarisation in our region. What would we do next?

    Labour would like to discuss a Pacific Peace Zone with other Pacific Island countries, and surrounding superpowers. Hon. Phil Twyford will detail how this meshes with our historic commitments to denuclearisation and peace on another day.

    We are continuing to work on our Pacific priorities within Labour, but one thing is already clear. The decline in New Zealand government spending on soft and hard power must be reversed.

    The split between hard power expenditure on military personnel and hardware, and soft power spending in development assistance and diplomacy will need to be worked through. But in our view increases to both are needed. A good principle to start with would be that every extra dollar spent on our military will be matched with an equivalent lift in our aid to the Pacific.

    Today is not the day to detail a defence procurement plan, but some high-level statements are appropriate. I make three points:

    1. In coalition with others, Labour recently replaced the Orions with P8s and replaced the Hercules. An earlier Labour government bought the current frigates, which are now nearing end of life. While we will never be a substantial military power, we need naval vessels to respond to disasters in the Pacific, and it is reasonable for our partners to expect they will have military capabilities. Rt Hon Chris Hipkins has acknowledged this requires cooperation across governments and election cycles.

    2. Our most effective fighting force is our SAS. They should be well paid and well equipped. They like to deploy to polish their renowned skills. Consideration should be given to their deployment in Ukraine in support of peace.

    3. The war in Ukraine has proven quantities of small drones are important. Ukrainian drones have effectively controlled the Black Sea against an invading nuclear power. They are affordable. We are home to Rocket Lab, Hamilton Jet, and drone companies delivering leading edge services to our world leading agricultural sector. 

    Australia has drone capabilities and is ahead of us in some areas. To use Sam Roggevin’s analogy in his book the Echidna Strategy, in defence we want to be a prickly adversary. New Zealand should prioritise working with Australia on defensive marine and air drones and commit significant resources to the task. Our defence spokesperson Hon. Peene Henare is engaged in these issues.

    Now I turn to trade. A lack of cooperation and compromise has blocked progress at the WTO for many years.

    This is not a dig at the US.  Many US complaints about trade imbalances caused by existing tariffs, non-trade barriers, state subsidised overcapacity and dumping are valid.

    That said, other distortions and unfairness caused by tax arbitrage substantially benefit the USA, especially in services like e-commerce. So does the US dollar reserve currency status, which in effect outsources much of the cost of US government deficits and debt. 

    Clearly these are complex issues.

    As Trade Minister during the last Trump administration, I had frequent dealings with then US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer. He criticised private equity purchasers of US manufacturing outsourcing manufacturing to low cost-labour countries to shave off the last few percent of labour costs. Those owners banked increases in capital values at the cost of the US workers. He wrote about this in his book.

    He understood that the standard of living of working middle class citizens were essential underpinnings of both the long-term health of the US economy and democracy. Without a strong middle class working, producing, saving and consuming, the economy and society weakens.  

    There are ironies.

    The system has worked for the US in terms of its GDP per capita, which is amongst the highest in the world. The factors referred to by Paul Keating, together with the parallel concentration of wealth at the very top, are not primarily caused by other countries, but rather by the USA’s internal settings.

    Unfairnesses in trade settings are not new for New Zealand.

    New Zealand and Australia both play much fairer in global trade than most other countries but are still caught up in the maelstrom. 

    Sitting as we do at the bottom of the Pacific, New Zealand responded to protectionist measures in Europe and the Americas by building trade and foreign affairs relationships in Asia. Some of those strategies have been phenomenally successful for a little country – the China FTA, AANZFATA, CPTPP – which includes Japan, Canada, Mexico and Chile. Then we circled back to the UK and Europe. The current government has closed the Gulf deal and is pursuing India. Labour’s record in trade is second to none.

    How do we protect our trade interests now?

    We are as well placed as any distant small country can be. Our diversity of sales channels will help us minimise the first-round effects of the trade war. Risks to compliance with trade agreements and the second-round effects in terms of the risks of an international economic slowdown are impossible to model.  I certainly do not recommend tit for tat tariffs.

    Where might a new order emerge?  I will mention one new idea Damien O’Connor and I have discussed. It is at least possible that some of the barriers to trade between Europe and the US will soon be reduced for both security and economic reasons. What happens then? Maybe CPTPP could then be a sensible choice for Europe. The UK is already in it. If this happened, CPTPP – which is has overtaken the stagnant WTO – could become the de facto international standard. This possibility should be pursued by our excellent trade officials.

    I want to end by lifting our thoughts to the underlying drivers of the polarisation afflicting the world.

    Polarisation has increased between and within countries. There are many causes. Some are geopolitical, some economic, and some technological – like the role social media plays in carrying lies, misinformation, violence and death threats without consequence for those lying or those profiting from them.

    People feel less secure. Whatever the causes, this has political, economic, social and security implications.

    Many foreign affairs responses are transactional. But the big shifts post-World War 2 were holistic.

    There was broad acceptance that the extremes of fascism, revolution and wars had been caused by depressions and inequality, in turn partly caused by unaffordable reparations.

    The new world order after WW2 was intended to enable countries to succeed by encouraging international trade, access to resources, better health, and international cooperation.

    The decades that followed saw enormous progress in most parts of the world, with complimentary progressive measures within countries assisting to lift outcomes for billions of people.

    Now the underlying consensus has frayed to the point of disfunction.

    I believe the current turmoil will need a holistic response, and for that to be agreed a substantial subset of the international community will need to find common ground about the main underlying causes of the current worrisome trends.

    I’ve reached the stage of career that I know what I believe to be important. 

    For me there are two main themes.

    The first I have already touched on is gross wealth inequality, especially when this becomes intergenerational and sections of the population stagnate. This drives instability. I won’t say more about that in this speech, but history shows time and again that gross inequality ends in tears.

    The second is the breakdown in trust which happens when lies and misinformation prevail over facts. A cornerstone of the emergence of the nation state and the spread of liberal democracy was the enlightenment. There are rational facts. There are truths and untruths.

    The scourge of irresponsible social media, megalomaniacal tax avoiding tech barons, and irresponsible internet service providers is on my list of the important. 

    I have a view that we in the west have made a fundamental error in providing what is in effect an exclusion of liability for third party content.

    We have wrongly taken upon the shoulders of government the burden of regulating against what is harmful. I doubt this will ever work in practice. It also puts the burden on the harmed citizen (or government agencies) to respond after harm is caused. 

    The exclusion of liability was conferred when providers were more akin to the postal service, which has no liability for the content of a letter. Those providers morphed into publishers yet are protected from the legal remedies which apply to the traditional media they undermine. This mistake is the core of the problem.

    I am convinced it is better to remove the exclusion of liability, exposing those selling a harmful product to liability to the ordinary people that their product harms. 

    And it is a harmful product.

    Be it damage to young people, foreign interference, defamation, theft of other people’s content, the enabling of small but extreme groups of evildoers who find each other on-line, online sexual abuse, online streaming of terrorism, or the regular unpunished threats of death and injury. Lies and misinformation abound.

    A senior banker recently complained to me that internet investment scams are more common than legitimate products, and that the internet companies refuse to control them. Worse, they take money for the advertising service they provide to the fraudsters.

    Much of this is harm is from anonymous sources, with some deliberately aimed at undermining our democratic way of life and freedoms.

    Enabling private remedies for our citizens against those profiting from selling these harmful products, including through low-cost fora such as disputes tribunals or small claims courts, seems to me to be proper. Leave it to the Courts to work out the balance between freedom of expression and the duty not to sell a harmful product.

    There are ways to introduce safeguards, such as liability limits or safe harbours for media content or maybe for platforms that take active steps to prevent scams. But allowing the current situation to continue – where the burden falls almost entirely on individuals while social media giants profit – is untenable.

    The suggested approach does not make the government a censor and better avoids the risk of state suppression of freedom of speech. 

    Left unchecked, current ills will be made worse by those malevolently using AI to make the harms they are already causing worse. 

    Left unchecked the oligarch owners of these platforms will increasingly use them for the own political ends, as we already see with some platforms. 

    Fixing this would not ruin the internet. Point to point communications would still be protected like the mail. E-commerce would endure. Massive quantities of information will remain.

    I fear that if this is not addressed, polarisation and demagoguery will prevail.

    I am by nature an optimist. Opportunities arise from adversity. Digital services taxes sprouted at the end of the last Trump presidency, and I predict pressure for change will continue to mount.

    Many people in the world are fed up with these selfish tech giants. We should work with other countries to fix this.

    The holistic changes after World War 2 had the betterment of people at their heart.

    New Zealand under Labour Prime Minister Peter Fraser helped ensure the United Nations applied a human rights approach, for the benefit of people in countries large and small.

    New Zealand needs a clear-eyed vision for courteous relations with the US and China, close dialogue with the Pacific Rim, Pacific Island and European friends. 

    Everyone in this room has a role to play. It has never been more important to stand up for New Zealand’s independent foreign policy. And we all should.


    Media: Check against delivery

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Driver sentenced for serious crash

    Source: New Zealand Police (National News)

    Attribute to Senior Sergeant Fane Troy, Taupo Police:

    A Canadian woman has been sentenced for her role in a serious two-vehicle crash near Taupō on Sunday.

    Renee Kelly Vanry, 57, of West Vancouver in Canada, appeared in the Tauranga District Court today, where she was sentenced on four charges of careless driving causing injury – relating to the serious injuries four of her passengers sustained – and another charge of careless driving – relating to the overtaking manoeuvre that caused the crash.

    Police were alerted to the two-vehicle collision on State Highway 5 in Rangitaiki, about 10.30am on Sunday 23 March. Ms Vanry was the driver of a van and had been attempting to overtake a slower vehicle near a left-hand bend, with less than 100 metres visibility. The van was still on the opposite side of the road when a Jeep rounded the corner and collided with it.

    The force of the impact caused the van to become airborne, landing backwards in a ditch across the road. Neither driver was injured, but four passengers in the van suffered a range of serious injuries and another seven were assessed and discharged that day.

    Of the four, one has flown back to Canada, with another due to return home this week, while two remain in hospital in New Zealand. All face many months of recovery.

    Ms Vanry has taken responsibility for her actions, which has allowed the judicial process to be expedited. Her misjudgement has had a profound effect on the lives of her passengers, the other driver, and her own.

    The crash, although serious, could have been so much worse if it were not for the seatbelts that everyone involved was wearing.

    At sentencing, Ms Vanry was disqualified from driving for six months and ordered to pay $1000 for emotional harm to each of the four victims, and $1500 for emotional harm to the other driver.

    Six other charges were withdrawn.

    ENDS

    Issued by the Police Media Centre

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Beverly Hills Man Sentenced to 25 Years in Prison for Cannabis and Bottling Company Cons That Caused Nearly $18 Million in Losses

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    LOS ANGELES – A Beverly Hills man was sentenced today to 300 months in federal prison for obtaining nearly $18 million from investors for sham businesses supposedly operating in hemp related industries – all while he was completing a sentence in a prior criminal case.

    Mark Roy Anderson, 70, was sentenced by United States District Judge Fernando L. Aenlle-Rocha, who scheduled a restitution hearing for June 4.

    At today’s hearing, Judge Aenlle-Rocha said, “The magnitude of the fraud is breathtaking…the [victims’ statements reflect] the depth of the harm. Many have lost their life savings reflecting decades of hard work.” Judge Aenlle-Rocha also described Anderson as “an accomplished and incorrigible con man” and stated that “the public must be protected from him for as long as possible.”

    Anderson pleaded guilty in April 2024 to two counts of wire fraud. He has been in federal custody since May 2023.

    Anderson engaged in two separate but related schemes that swindled victims, which he committed shortly after his release from federal prison but while serving out the rest of his prison term on home confinement and, later, while on supervised release for a previous fraud conviction.

    “The defendant stole more than $18 million from dozens of investors by promising quick returns on their investments into hemp farms and other exotic investments,” said Acting United States Attorney Joseph McNally. “Today’s 25-year sentence takes him off the street so that he cannot harm other victims.”

               Harvest Farm Group

    In the first scheme, from June 2020 to April 2021, Anderson tricked investors into providing funding for his company, called Harvest Farm Group, to harvest hemp supposedly being grown on his farm and then process that hemp into medical-grade cannabidiol (CBD) isolate – a chemical found in marijuana – to be sold for a substantial profit.

    Anderson convinced investors to invest in Harvest Farm Group by falsely representing that, through the company, he owned and operated a hemp farm in Kern County. He also lied that had already completed successful and profitable harvests of hemp from the farm. He also falsely said he was using his own machinery and equipment to convert the hemp into CBD isolate and Delta 8, a psychoactive substance that, like CBD isolate, could be used in consumer products ranging from olive oil to body cream.

    Anderson attempted to maintain a veneer of trustworthiness by taking steps to assure investors Harvest Farm Group was legitimate and he was not the “Mark Roy Anderson” with multiple prior fraud convictions. Anderson concealed that he had been convicted of multiple federal and state felony crimes, including mail fraud, wire fraud, grand theft, forgery, preparing false evidence, and money laundering. He also concealed that he was still serving a criminal sentence and was on supervised release at the time he was soliciting investments.

    To stall victim investors from making collection efforts and reporting him to law enforcement, Anderson falsely promised victims he would pay them money from purported sales of products made to Canadian companies, that sales of products had been delayed because of the COVID-19 pandemic, and that he would otherwise return their money.

               Bio Pharma and Verta Bottling

    In the second scheme, which ran from April 2021 to May 2023, Anderson deceived investors by soliciting money for Bio Pharma and Verta Bottling, two of his sham companies, by claiming that these businesses successfully manufactured, bottled, and packaged commercial products.

    Specifically, Anderson falsely told investors Bio Pharma purportedly manufactured and sold products infused with CBD, including products such as CBD-infused avocado oil, olive oil, pain cream, gummies, tequila, and chili oil. Anderson also claimed that Verta Bottling manufactured and sold beverages and a variety of food products.

    Anderson falsely stated that his bottling companies owned and possessed millions of dollars’ worth of assets, including – in Bio Pharma’s case – hemp biomass, CBD isolate, CBD oil, and – in Verta Bottling’s case – manufacturing equipment and an assignable lease for a warehouse to manufacture and sell its products.

    Anderson’s other lies to investors included false claims that his bottling companies had at least $10 million in purchase-order contracts from suppliers. He drafted fake legal and business documents, which included fabricated purchase order contracts purporting to show agreements with third party companies to purchase tens of millions of dollars’ worth of products manufactured by the Anderson bottling companies. Anderson also provided victims samples of products purportedly manufactured by his purported bottling companies.

    Instead of investing victim funds as he promised, Anderson instead used their money on personal expenses. He has agreed to forfeit his ill-gotten gains from these schemes, including 15 cars – one of them a Ferrari – and real estate in Ojai.

    In total, Anderson solicited more than $18.8 million from 45 victims for both schemes, causing victims to lose approximately $17,745,150.

    The FBI investigated this matter.

    Assistant United States Attorney Kerry L. Quinn of the Major Frauds Section prosecuted this case.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Free Trade Bill Leads Canada; Session Lays Groundwork for a Stronger, More Resilient Nova Scotia

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    The government laid the groundwork for a stronger, more resilient and self-reliant Nova Scotia during the latest session of the House of Assembly, which ended today, March 26.

    “Last fall, we asked Nova Scotians for a stronger mandate to govern and they gave us just that,” said Premier Tim Houston. “When we campaigned, we were not in the middle of a tariff war and no one knew about the threats of annexation that were coming.”

    Nova Scotia is leading the country with game-changing legislation that will remove borders on inter-provincial trade.

    “We’re one country. It doesn’t make sense that goods and skills can’t flow easily from one province to another,” said Premier Houston. “Canadian provinces have high standards and we need to trust that what our neighbours have to offer is also good enough for Nova Scotia.

    “Our bill on free trade within Canada has received national attention and Nova Scotia is leading the way – we should be proud about that.”

    The Premier said Trump’s tariff threats reinforce the need for greater economic and energy security.

    “A strong Nova Scotia is an economically self-sustaining Nova Scotia,” said Premier Houston. “We cannot let the future of our province be determined by those outside our province – Nova Scotians must control Nova Scotia’s destiny.”

    Premier Houston pointed to bills on internal trade and resource development as foundational elements of a stronger and more independent province: “We have resource wealth and new markets that we could not tap into because of bad legislation and too much red tape. We have laid the foundation to unlock our resource wealth and find new markets for our products.”

    He said lifting bans on hydraulic fracturing and uranium mining is central to improving our economic and energy security.

    “All of the natural gas used in Nova Scotia flows through the United States,” said Premier Houston. “That leaves us exposed to the whims of President Trump. But there’s enough natural gas here in Nova Scotia to power the province for nearly 200 years.”

    The Premier said everyone has a role to play in building a more resilient and independent Nova Scotia: “We will stand up for the interests of Nova Scotians and defend the province from the influence of special interest groups. These groups are trying to stop development here to the benefit of the United States.”

    This year’s budget contains historic tax cuts that will save the average Nova Scotian family about $1,000 per year. It also includes the largest capital plan in the Province’s history, with $2.3 billion in funding that will help stimulate the economy. These investments are in addition to additional funds for healthcare and housing.

    “The bills passed during this session will help create more economic opportunities for Nova Scotians while helping secure our energy future,” said Premier Houston.

    Legislation passed this session includes:

    • Government Organization and Administration Act
    • Agriculture, Energy and Natural Resources Act
    • Free Trade and Mobility within Canada Act
    • Administrative Efficiency and Accountability in Healthcare Act
    • Advanced Education and Research Act
    • Justice Administration Amendment (2025) Act
    • Financial Measures (2025) Act
    • amendments to the House of Assembly Act to enable the appointment of a special electoral boundaries commission
    • amendments to the Temporary Access to Land Act and Joint Regional Transportation Agency Act

    Additional Resources:

    Bills tabled in the legislature are available at: https://nslegislature.ca/legislative-business/bills-statutes/bills/assembly-65-session-1


    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Kennedy explains how Canada could fend off new American tariffs: “Reduce your tariffs to zero”

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator John Kennedy (Louisiana)

    Watch Kennedy’s comments here.

    WASHINGTON – Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) argued that Canada should consider dropping its tariffs against the U.S. to zero if it would like to avoid the reciprocal tariffs that the Trump administration is using to level the playing field for American producers in a speech on the Senate floor.

    Key excerpts of the speech are below:

    “I want to say this unequivocally: Canada is one of my favorite countries in the world. The American people and the people of Canada are friends, and I would like our economies to be friends—and I mean that. But lately, we have been having a gentle disagreement—some would say not so gentle—in terms of tariffs and trade and our economy.”

    . . . 

    “When you have got your neighboring country and good friend that is eight times smaller than you are [economically] and, in terms of population, is 10 times smaller than you are, and your neighbor is selling $63 billion more in goods to you than you are selling to them, that seems kind of unfair. And the president, as we all know, has made that point very vociferously.

    “In response, the Canadian government, the new Prime Minister [Mark] Carney, he has pretty much bowed up. When Pres. Trump said: ‘Well, the tariffs are uneven, so I am going to raise American tariffs.’ Carney has bowed up and said: ‘Well, Pres. Trump, you don’t believe in free trade. You are not a free trader. If you raise your tariffs, then I am going to raise mine even more.’ And that is how you get into a trade war.” 

    . . .

    “Let’s avoid a trade war. Let’s let those good Canadian companies compete with good American companies in selling goods into the U.S., and let’s let those good American companies compete with those good Canadian companies in terms of selling goods into Canada, and may the best, cheapest product win.

    “That is my respectful challenge to P.M. Carney tonight. If you think Pres. Trump is being unfair and is not a free trader, then reduce your tariffs to zero, and ask Pres. Trump to reduce our tariffs to zero on Canada, and let’s go back to being friends again.”

    Background:

    • On April 2, 2025, Pres. Trump plans to announce a new round of tariffs on American trade partners. The Trump administration is planning to implement reciprocal tariffs, meaning that the U.S. will levy the same tariff that other nations levy against American products.
    • Treasury Sec. Scott Bessent said he is optimistic that the U.S. will not have to implement some of these tariffs because other countries, including Canada, will see the reciprocal nature of the tariffs and negotiate them down.  

    Watch Kennedy’s full speech here.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Bet safely, bet with confidence

    [. These proposed changes would ensure that Albertans can safely gamble online in a regulated market.

    Currently, unregulated online gambling is widely available across the province. Albertans can sign up and place a bet in minutes with providers that have limited or no player protection or social responsibility measures in place.

    “Our goal is not to create new gamblers, but to make existing online gambling safer. As the gaming industry continues to evolve globally and in Alberta, it is important that we modernize Alberta’s approach to gaming to protect the health and safety of Albertans, particularly our youth. The legislation we are introducing, if approved, would take the first steps towards this.”

    Dale Nally, Minister of Service Alberta and Red Tape Reduction

    The iGaming Alberta Act is the first step toward providing Albertans with a broader regulated market that will include consumer protection safeguards and social responsibility tools, which will be established in regulation before it is operational. This includes Albertans having access to a centralized self-exclusion system, allowing them to restrict their ability to gamble across all venues and online platforms. Further measures will clarify that the minimum age to participate in online gambling will be 18.

    “We commend Premier Smith, Minister Nally and their teams on all their efforts to bring an open and competitive regulated online gaming marketplace to Alberta. We are fully supportive of a model that has proven to generate new revenue, protect consumers and shift wagering activity to the regulated market, and we’re confident that these benefits will be realized in Alberta. We look forward to supporting the process ahead and ultimately having an opportunity to introduce theScore Bet to Albertans.”

    Adam Kates, vice-president of compliance, theScore 

    Additionally, with the introduction of a regulated market, Alberta’s government will be able to capture gambling revenues currently being lost to unregulated operators and reinvest them in the province. Alberta’s government will also continue to promote safe, responsible gaming behaviours with existing programs such as GameSense.

    Quick facts

    • Establishing the Alberta iGaming Corporation to oversee the operation of a private regulated market provides a clear separation of responsibilities with respect to its operational functions and the regulatory functions performed by Alberta Gaming, Liquor and Cannabis (AGLC).
    • The proposed bill will designate AGLC as the regulator to ensure market integrity and compliance.
    • AGLC has a strong history of being responsible for regulating and protecting the integrity of Alberta’s gaming activities.
    • Currently, PlayAlberta is the province’s only legal, regulated iGaming site, which is overseen by AGLC.

    Related information

    • Bill 48: iGaming Alberta Act

    Multimedia

    • Watch the news conference
    • Listen to the news conference

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI: TransAlta Corporation Enters into Automatic Share Purchase Plan

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    CALGARY, Alberta, March 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — TransAlta Corporation (“TransAlta” or the “Company) (TSX: TA) (NYSE: TAC) announced today that it has entered into an automatic share purchase plan (“ASPP”) with its broker in order to facilitate repurchases of TransAlta’s common shares (“Common Shares”) under the Company’s previously announced normal course issuer bid (“NCIB”).

    The Company previously announced that it had received approval from the Toronto Stock Exchange (“TSX”) to purchase up to 14,000,000 of its Common Shares during the 12-month period that commenced May 31, 2024, and terminates May 30, 2025. Purchases under the NCIB may be made through open market transactions on the TSX and any alternative Canadian trading systems on which the Common Shares are traded, based on the prevailing market price. Since the beginning of the current NCIB on May 31, 2024, the Company has purchased 6,102,300 at a weighted average price per Common Share of $11.89 for an aggregate value of approximately $72.5 million.

    The Company believes that the prevailing price for the Common Shares may not, from time to time, reflect the underlying value of the Common Shares and that the purchase of Common Shares pursuant to the NCIB may be an attractive and appropriate use of available funds relative to other alternatives. The ASPP will facilitate purchases under the NCIB as it will allow for purchases of Common Shares to be made at times when the Company would ordinarily not be permitted to make purchases, whether due to regulatory restriction or customary self-imposed blackout periods. TransAlta is committed to enhancing shareholder returns through appropriate capital allocation such as a share buyback and its quarterly dividend, which are underpinned by the Company’s strong free cash flow position.

    Under the ASPP, the Company’s broker may purchase Common Shares from the effective date of the ASPP until the end of the NCIB. The ASPP will facilitate purchases of Common Shares under the NCIB by authorizing the Company’s broker to make purchases at its sole discretion based on parameters set by the Company in accordance with TSX rules, applicable law and the terms of the ASPP. Outside of periods that the Company is restricted from purchasing Common Shares pursuant to insider trading rules or its own internal trading blackout policies, Common Shares may also be purchased based on management’s discretion, in compliance with TSX rules and applicable law.

    All purchases of Common Shares made under the ASPP will be included in determining the number of Common Shares purchased under the NCIB. Any Common Shares purchased by the Company pursuant to the NCIB will be cancelled. The Company is not currently in possession of any material undisclosed information in relation to the Company.  The ASPP has been pre-cleared by the TSX and will be effective on April 1, 2025.   

    The ASPP will terminate on the earliest of the date on which: (a) the maximum purchase limits under the ASPP are reached; (b) May 8, 2025; or (c) the Company terminates the ASPP in accordance with its terms.

    About TransAlta Corporation:

    TransAlta owns, operates and develops a diverse fleet of electrical power generation assets in Canada, the United States and Australia with a focus on long-term shareholder value. TransAlta provides municipalities, medium and large industries, businesses and utility customers with affordable, energy efficient and reliable power. Today, TransAlta is one of Canada’s largest producers of wind power and Alberta’s largest producer of thermal generation and hydro-electric power. For over 113 years, TransAlta has been a responsible operator and a proud member of the communities where we operate and where our employees work and live. TransAlta aligns its corporate goals with the UN Sustainable Development Goals and the Future-Fit Business Benchmark, which also defines sustainable goals for businesses. Our reporting on climate change management has been guided by the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) S2 Climate-related Disclosures Standard and the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) recommendations. TransAlta has achieved a 66 per cent reduction in GHG emissions or 21.3 million tonnes CO2e since 2015 and received an upgraded MSCI ESG rating of AA.

    For more information about TransAlta, visit its website at transalta.com.

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

    For more information:

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

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Motsoaledi urges global action to address health funding gaps

    Source: South Africa News Agency

    Health Minister Dr Aaron Motsoaledi has reiterated the importance of nations reallocating resources towards health, strengthening global health partnerships, and exploring innovative financing mechanisms to address funding gaps.

    The Minister was delivering the keynote address at the second meeting of the G20 Health Working Group today in Ballito, KwaZulu-Natal.

    The Minister used the platform to highlight South Africa’s commitment to universal health coverage (UHC) through the National Health Insurance (NHI) system, which aims to provide financial protection and efficient resource utilisation.

    “In South Africa, we are actively pursuing transformation to achieve universal health coverage through our NHI system.

    “The NHI is designed to provide financial protection for all, ensuring that access to quality healthcare is not dependent on one’s ability to pay [for] it, and it will also assist in the efficient utilisation of our resources by pulling funds and strategically purchasing services.”

    Motsoaledi cited data from the World Health Organisation (WHO), which indicate that the number of people shielded from catastrophic health spending had been steadily increasing before the COVID-19 pandemic. However, since then, about 100 million people have fallen back into financial hardship due to health-related expenses.

    Motsoaledi believes that the NHI is a concrete demonstration of government’s commitment to leaving no one behind, and fostering and strengthening the resilience of the health system.

    The Minister quoted the late Harvard Department of Anthropology’s Professor Paul Farmer on the value of all lives and urged G20 members to increase public financing of health systems as a fundamental investment.

    “I want to quote the idea that ‘some lives matter less’ is the root of all that is wrong with the world.

    “We implore all G20 members to champion increased public financing of health systems.

    “This is not merely a budgetary issue; it’s a fundamental investment in our collective future.”

    Motsoaledi urged attendees to prioritise public health over competing interests, ensuring that adequate resources are allocated to meet the health needs of the nation’s populations.

    “Furthermore, we must all align our efforts beyond financing. We must address the persistent health inequities that plague our world.”

    Non-communicable diseases

    Motsoaledi highlighted the importance of addressing health inequities, particularly in low and middle-income countries, and the need for multilateral approaches to prevent and control non-communicable diseases (NCDs).

    He said the upcoming United Nations High-Level Meeting on NCDs is seen as a crucial opportunity to galvanise global action against chronic conditions like heart disease, cancer, diabetes and chronic respiratory diseases.

    “We must alleviate the financial burden, restrict unhealthy food marketing, finance emergency health services, and accelerate cervical cancer elimination, the only cancer which is preventable.”

    The theme of the three-day meeting is: “Accelerating Health Equity, Solidarity, and Universal Coverage”.

    Along with this meeting, a co-sponsored event focused on eliminating cervical cancer, is also taking place.

    “We must move beyond dialogue and commit to concrete steps. South Africa is committed to collaborating with all the G20 members to achieve our shared goals. 

    “Let us work together to ensure that health remains a priority, not a commodity, especially during these unstable economic times,” Motsoaledi added.

    South Africa, which assumed the G20 Presidency in December, is currently hosting various working groups and ministerial meetings throughout the country. 

    These meetings are focused on key topics such as health, employment, trade, tourism, and the digital economy — all in preparation for the G20 Leaders’ Summit scheduled for November this year.

    The G20 comprises 19 countries including Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Korea, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Türkiye, United Kingdom, and the United States. It also includes two regional bodies – the European Union (EU) and the African Union (AU). – SAnews.gov.za

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Standing up for Alberta: Premier Smith

    Source: Government of Canada regional news (2)

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI: NamSys Announces Normal Course Issuer Bid

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    TORONTO, ON, March 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — NamSys Inc. (the “Company”) (CTZ – TSX-V), a leading provider of technology for cash processing and transportation, today announces its intention to commence a normal course issuer bid through the facilities of the TSX Venture Exchange (the “TSXV“) and/or alternative authorized Canadian trading systems to repurchase, for cancellation, up to 1,343,186 common shares of the Company, representing less than 5% of the Company’s presently issued and outstanding common shares (the “NCIB“). The NCIB remains subject to the final approval of the TSXV.

    The NCIB will commence on March 27, 2025 and will terminate upon the earliest of (i) the Company purchasing 1,343,186 common shares, (ii) the Company providing notice of termination of the NCIB, and (iii) March 26, 2026. Under the NCIB, the Company may not acquire more than 2% of its issued and outstanding common shares in any 30-day period.

    The Company believes that, from time to time, the market price of its common shares does not adequately reflect the Company’s underlying value and prospects and that, at such times, the purchase of the Company’s common shares represents an appropriate use of the Company’s financial resources and will enhance shareholder value.

    The Company has engaged Canaccord Genuity Corp. to act as its broker for the NCIB (the “Broker“). The NCIB will be made through the facilities of the TSXV and/or alternative authorized Canadian trading systems, and the purchase and payment for the common shares will be made from the Company’s existing working capital at the market price of the applicable securities at the time of acquisition, plus brokerage fees, if any, charged by the Broker. All common shares purchased by the Company under the NCIB will be cancelled.

    In connection with the NCIB, the Company has entered into an automatic purchase plan (“APP“) with the Broker as the designated broker. The APP provides a set of standard instructions to the Broker to make purchases under the NCIB in accordance with the limits and other terms set out in the APP. The Broker will determine the timing of these purchases in its sole discretion based on purchasing parameters set by the Company and subject to the policies of the TSXV, applicable securities laws and the terms of the APP.

    To the Company’s knowledge, none of the directors, senior officers or insiders of the Company, or any associate of such person, or any associate or affiliate of the Company, has any present intention to sell any securities to the Company during the course of the NCIB. The Company completed a normal course issuer bid on August 30, 2024, under which the Company purchased 422,600 common shares at an average price of $0.94 per share, for an aggregate purchase price of $397,244.
    A copy of the Form 5G – Notice of Intention to make a Normal Course Issuer Bid filed by the Company with the TSXV in respect of the NCIB can be obtained from the Company upon request without charge.

    NamSys Inc. products are designed to bring efficiency to the processing of currency and other value instruments in retailers, financial institutions, and cash-in-transit providers. NamSys’ proprietary systems for this market are sold as software-as-a-service subscriptions and operate in the public cloud service providers.

    For further information, please contact:
    Mr. Jason Siemens, President & CEO
    ‪(289) 748-3685‬; mailto:ir@namsys.com

    Neither TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release. This Media Release may contain forward-looking statements, which reflect the Corporation’s current expectations regarding future events. The forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties. Actual events could differ from those projected herein and depend on a number of factors including the success of the Corporation’s sales strategies.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Saskatchewan Commercial Innovation Incentive Extended to 2027

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    Released on March 26, 2025

    Incentive Improvements Expand Eligibility Ensuring Saskatchewan Businesses Succeed

    Today, the Government of Saskatchewan introduced legislation that will extend the Saskatchewan Commercial Innovation Incentive (SCII). 

    “By extending the SCII, we are reaffirming Saskatchewan’s commitment to innovation and ensuring our province remains one of the best places in Canada to invest and do business,” Trade and Export Development Minister Warren Kaeding said. “All of this means more opportunities, jobs and services the people of Saskatchewan need and deserve.”

    The SCII is a growth-focused tax incentive designed to support businesses commercializing innovation by reducing the provincial Corporate Income Tax (CIT) rate to 6 per cent for a period of 10 consecutive years. Eligible companies can extend the CIT benefit period to 15 years, if 50 per cent or greater of the related research and development has been conducted in Saskatchewan.

    Last year, the Government of Saskatchewan began an external review aimed at improving the program’s eligibility requirements and simplifying the application process. Based on this review, the SCII will be eliminating the economic eligibility criteria to further improve eligibility. These improvements will encourage commercialization and innovation in the province.

    The new sunset date for SCII is June 30, 2027.

    The SCII is also highlighted in Securing the Next Decade of Growth: Saskatchewan’s Investment Attraction Strategy, reinforcing the province’s dedication to fostering a thriving business environment.

    Investment in the province continues to rise. Private capital investment in Saskatchewan increased last year by 17.3 per cent to $14.7 billion, ranking first among provinces for growth. Private capital investment is projected to reach $16.2 billion in 2025, an increase of 10.1 per cent over 2024. This is the second highest anticipated percentage increase among the provinces.

    For more information on the SCII, please visit: saskatchewan.ca. 

    -30-

    For more information, contact:

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI: Plains Announces Retirement of President Harry Pefanis and Assignment Updates to Board of Directors

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    HOUSTON, March 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Plains All American Pipeline, L.P. (Nasdaq: PAA) and Plains GP Holdings (Nasdaq: PAGP) announced today that Harry Pefanis will retire as President of Plains effective June 1, 2025. Willie Chiang, Chairman of the Board and CEO, will assume the role of President effective upon the retirement of Mr. Pefanis. In addition, Plains announced updates to the lead director position and certain committee assignments for its Board of Directors that will also be effective June 1, 2025.

    In line with Plains’ long-term succession plan, Mr. Pefanis will retire as President after 27+ years of service to the company he co-founded. Including his time with Plains prior to its initial public offering in 1998, Mr. Pefanis has been with the organization for over four decades. Mr. Pefanis will continue to serve on the Board of Directors and as a Senior Advisor to Plains.

    “Harry is a world class energy executive who played a key role in the founding of the Company almost three decades ago, and who has been instrumental to the growth of Plains into the modern energy transportation company it is today. His time at Plains has been marked by a relentless focus on customer service, developing lasting relationships, operational excellence, and financial strength, together with an unwavering commitment to integrity, accountability and teamwork,” said Willie Chiang. “Harry lives our core values every day and has been an exceptional role model for our employees and an outstanding representative for our company and our industry. I want to thank him for his many contributions and I am very pleased that we will continue to benefit from his knowledge, experience and insights through his continued service as a Director and his new role as a Senior Advisor.”

    “It has been an incredible experience to be part of Plains during such a dynamic period. I have had the privilege of working with exceptionally talented teammates that have always been committed to developing lasting relationships, delivering value, driving results, and meeting the needs of our customers and stakeholders. I strongly believe that we will continue to see growth in crude oil production and that Plains is better positioned than ever to capitalize on the growing demand for our integrated asset base,” said Harry Pefanis.

    As part of the Board’s ongoing succession planning process, Plains also announced the following changes to its Board of Directors effective June 1, 2025. Bobby Shackouls will be succeeded in his roles as Lead Director and Chair of the Governance Committee by John Raymond. Mr. Shackouls will succeed Mr. Raymond as Chair of the Compensation Committee. In order to ensure continuity and a smooth transition, Mr. Raymond will remain a member of the Compensation Committee and Mr. Shackouls will remain a member of the Governance Committee.  

    About Plains
    PAA is a publicly traded master limited partnership that owns and operates midstream energy infrastructure and provides logistics services for crude oil and natural gas liquids (NGL). PAA owns an extensive network of pipeline gathering and transportation systems, in addition to terminalling, storage, processing, fractionation and other infrastructure assets serving key producing basins, transportation corridors and major market hubs and export outlets in the United States and Canada. On average, PAA handles approximately eight million barrels per day of crude oil and NGL. 

    PAGP is a publicly traded entity that owns an indirect, non-economic controlling general partner interest in PAA and an indirect limited partner interest in PAA, one of the largest energy infrastructure and logistics companies in North America. 

    PAA and PAGP are headquartered in Houston, Texas. More information is available at www.plains.com.

    Investor Relations Contacts:

    Blake Fernandez
    Michael Gladstein
    PlainsIR@plains.com
    (866) 809-1291

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Security: Mexican National Pleads Guilty to Making False Statements

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    Felipe De Jesus Zavala Medel falsely represented that his name was Johny Joe Olivo & that he was born in Texas

    BANGOR, Maine: A Mexican national pleaded guilty today in U.S. District Court in Bangor to making a false statement to a U.S. Customs and Border Protection agent.

    According to court records, in January 2025, Felipe De Jesus Zavala Medel, 64, approached the Coburn Gore port of entry in a vehicle from the Canadian side of the international border and presented a North Dakota driver’s license in the name of “Johny Joe Olivo” along with identifying documents to the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agent. Zavala Medel falsely told the agent he was born in Texas. He also completed and signed a Customs Declaration form containing the false information. During questioning, he admitted that he did not have any documents that allowed him to legally enter, reside, or work in the U.S.

    Zavala Medel faces a maximum prison term of five years and a fine up to $250,000. He will be sentenced after the completion of a presentence investigative report by the U.S. Probation Office. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

    CBP and Homeland Security Investigations investigated the case.

    ###

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI: QCI’s Andrew Cardno to Speak on “The Next Era of Tribal Gaming: The 7 Forces Shaping Its Future” at the Indian Gaming Association Trade Show

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SAN DIEGO, March 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Quick Custom Intelligence (QCI) is pleased to announce that Andrew Cardno, Chief Technology Officer of QCI, will be delivering a featured session at the 2025 Indian Gaming Trade Show & Convention in San Diego, CA. The session, titled “The Seven Forces Transforming Our Industry (Whether We Like It or Not),” will take place on April 1, 2025, from 3:00 pm to 4:00 pm.

    Tribal gaming stands at the forefront of an unprecedented era of transformation. Both internal dynamics and external pressures are driving change at a pace never seen before. In this timely session, Mr. Cardno will provide an in-depth exploration of seven powerful forces reshaping the future of tribal gaming. From the rapid rise of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and robotics to shifting consumer expectations and evolving market forces, attendees will gain valuable insights into the technologies and trends defining the next era of the industry.

    “Tribal gaming has always been a leader in innovation, but the convergence of AI, robotics, and rapid technological advancement presents new challenges and exciting opportunities,” said Andrew Cardno, CTO of QCI. “This session is about equipping tribal operators with the knowledge and tools to embrace these changes while protecting the core traditions that make tribal gaming unique. By understanding these forces, we can ensure that team members are empowered, operations are optimized, and tribal enterprises continue to thrive.”

    Victor Rocha, Conference Chairman of the Indian Gaming Trade Show & Convention, added, “We are excited to feature Andrew Cardno in this important session. Tribal gaming is facing a critical moment, and understanding these seven forces is essential for our industry’s future. This conversation goes beyond technology — it’s about how we protect our sovereignty, strengthen our communities, and continue leading the gaming industry into the future.”

    Attendees will leave with practical strategies to integrate emerging technologies in ways that reinforce the unique strengths of tribal gaming enterprises. The session will focus on how these tools can enhance operational efficiency, improve customer experiences, and create new opportunities for team member growth — all while honoring the cultural and economic significance of tribal gaming.

    ABOUT The 2025 Indian Gaming Tradeshow and Convention
    As the premier events for the tribal gaming community, the Indian Gaming Tradeshow & Convention and Mid-Year Conference & Expo deliver the insight and strategies you need to rise to the top of the competitive gaming industry landscape. There’s no better opportunity to meet industry leaders, access cutting-edge trends and celebrate a proud tradition of success. For more information visit: www.indiangamingtradeshow.com.

    ABOUT QCI
    Quick Custom Intelligence (QCI) has pioneered the revolutionary QCI Enterprise Platform, an artificial intelligence platform that seamlessly integrates player development, marketing, and gaming operations with powerful, real-time tools designed specifically for the gaming and hospitality industries. Our advanced, highly configurable software is deployed in over 250 casino resorts across North America, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Latin America, and Europe. The QCI AGI Platform, which manages more than $35 billion in annual gross gaming revenue, stands as a best-in-class solution, whether on-premises, hybrid, or cloud-based, enabling fully coordinated activities across all aspects of gaming or hospitality operations. QCI’s data-driven, AI-powered software propels swift, informed decision-making vital in the ever-changing casino industry, assisting casinos in optimizing resources and profits, crafting effective marketing campaigns, and enhancing customer loyalty. QCI was co-founded by Dr. Ralph Thomas and Mr. Andrew Cardno and is based in San Diego, with additional offices in Las Vegas, St. Louis, Dallas, and Tulsa. Main phone number: (858) 299.5715. Visit us at www.quickcustomintelligence.com.

    ABOUT Andrew Cardno
    Andrew Cardno is a distinguished figure in the realm of artificial intelligence and data plumbing. With over two decades spearheading private Ph.D. and master’s level research teams, his expertise has made significant waves in data tooling. Andrew’s innate ability to innovate has led him to devise numerous pioneering visualization methods. Of these, the most notable is the deep zoom image format, a groundbreaking innovation that has since become a cornerstone in the majority of today’s mapping tools. His leadership acumen has earned him two coveted Smithsonian Laureates, and teams under his mentorship have clinched 40 industry awards, including three pivotal gaming industry transformation awards. Together with Dr. Ralph Thomas, the duo co-founded Quick Custom Intelligence, amplifying their collaborative innovative capacities. A testament to his inventive prowess, Andrew boasts over 150 patent applications. Across various industries—be it telecommunications with Telstra Australia, retail with giants like Walmart and Best Buy, or the medical sector with esteemed institutions like City Of Hope and UCSD—Andrew’s impact is deeply felt. He has enriched the literature with insights, co-authoring eight influential books with Dr. Thomas and contributing to over 100 industry publications. An advocate for community and diversity, Andrew’s work has touched over 100 Native American Tribal Resorts, underscoring his expansive and inclusive professional endeavors.

    ABOUT Victor Rocha
    Victor Rocha holds the distinguished position of Conference Chairman for the Indian Gaming Association, while also leading Victor-Strategies as its president. As the owner and publisher of Pechanga.net, he has been deeply engaged in the political landscape of U.S. tribal gaming since 1998. Rocha’s outstanding contributions to the industry have been recognized through numerous accolades, such as AGEM’s 2023 Peter Mead Memorial Award Honoring Excellence in Gaming Media & Communication, the National Center for American Indian Enterprise Development’s 2015 Tribal Gaming Visionary Award, the American Gaming Association’s 2013 Lifetime Achievement Award for Gaming Communications, Raving’s 2012 Casino Marketing Lifetime Achievement Award, the National Indian Gaming Association’s 2002 Outstanding Contribution to Indian Country, VCAT’s 2001 Catalyst Award, and Global Gaming Business Magazine’s 2000 “40 Under 40” list.

    Contact:
    Laurel Kay, Quick Custom Intelligence
    Phone: 858-349-8354

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Investing in Alberta just got easier

    When it comes to setting up shop, any good business owner knows the key to success is location, location, location. Alberta offers thousands of acres of prime real estate in top locations, providing unmatched opportunities for prosperity for businesses and entrepreneurs.

    In the face of a changing geopolitical landscape, Alberta’s government remains committed to maintaining a strong business environment that attracts investment, while supporting economic growth and prosperity for Albertans. Alberta’s government is investing in cutting-edge tools and technology to help businesses thrive and attract large-scale investments to the province.

    Alberta’s Site Selector Tool is a free online service that helps connect businesses and investors to the best locations in Alberta. It combines real-time property listings with key data on infrastructure and socio-economic insights on communities, making it easy to choose where to expand or invest. With almost 7,000 available properties already featured on the tool, Alberta’s business community is empowered with access to free, easy-to-use data and a platform to pinpoint local opportunities.

    “When it comes to innovative solutions for investment attraction, the Alberta Site Selector Tool is best in class and has the potential to help us attract high-quality jobs and billions of dollars in investment.”

    Matt Jones, Minister of Jobs, Economy and Trade

    With the launch of new features on the tool, Alberta’s government is helping investors take their research to the next level and make their data-driven business decisions even more seamless with enhanced access to information supporting a range of sectors including agriculture, energy, data centres, manufacturing and more.

    “Time is money – and Alberta’s improved Site Selector Tool gives businesses the gift of both. By using technology to simplify investment decisions, we’re making Alberta the most attractive and straightforward place to do business in Canada.”

    Nate Glubish, Minister of Technology and Innovation

    Investors can now activate new layers of data that capture a property’s proximity to infrastructure such as high-load corridors, mainline railways and international airports as well as high-capacity powerlines, substations, power generation, natural gas service areas and fibre internet. Investors can also access regional statistics on labour force availability, including labour force by occupation and industry, unemployment rates and graduate rates by degree program.

    The tool also boasts new functionality that saves investors and regional economic developers time, including the ability to:

    • Drop a pin on a map to generate location-specific data.
    • Save a custom view of the site that captures preferred filters and data layers.
    • Share and add properties to a list of favourites that can be downloaded to a spreadsheet or PDF to view later.

    This suite of enhancements was rolled out based on ongoing feedback from users, including municipalities and economic development organizations.

    “As the investment attraction agency for the Edmonton Metro Region, Edmonton Global uses the site selector tool regularly to answer questions from prospective investors, partners and team members. This information, along with insights from other data tools, helps us guide investors to make well-informed decisions for their businesses.”

    Jeff Bell, director of research & business intelligence, Edmonton Global 

    Since its launch in April 2024, the Alberta Site Selector Tool has been providing innovative ways for investors to find opportunities in Alberta while enabling economic development partners to promote their communities as a destination of choice to potential investors.

    Alberta remains the best place in Canada to invest due to its low tax environment, red tape reduction efforts and business-friendly policies. The Alberta government’s policies are attracting record investment, creating thousands of jobs and further diversifying the economy. Through investments like the Site Selector Tool, Alberta is building on its reputation as a province with unlimited opportunity.

    Related information

    • Alberta Regional Dashboard & Site Selector

    Related news

    • New tool making investing even easier in Alberta (April 2, 2024)

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI USA: NASA’s Webb Sees Galaxy Mysteriously Clearing Fog of Early Universe

    Source: NASA

    Using the unique infrared sensitivity of NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope, researchers can examine ancient galaxies to probe secrets of the early universe. Now, an international team of astronomers has identified bright hydrogen emission from a galaxy in an unexpectedly early time in the universe’s history. The surprise finding is challenging researchers to explain how this light could have pierced the thick fog of neutral hydrogen that filled space at that time.
    The Webb telescope discovered the incredibly distant galaxy JADES-GS-z13-1, observed to exist just 330 million years after the big bang, in images taken by Webb’s NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera) as part of the James Webb Space Telescope Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey (JADES). Researchers used the galaxy’s brightness in different infrared filters to estimate its redshift, which measures a galaxy’s distance from Earth based on how its light has been stretched out during its journey through expanding space.

    The NIRCam imaging yielded an initial redshift estimate of 12.9. Seeking to confirm its extreme redshift, an international team lead by Joris Witstok of the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom, as well as the Cosmic Dawn Center and the University of Copenhagen in Denmark, then observed the galaxy using Webb’s Near-Infrared Spectrograph instrument.
    In the resulting spectrum, the redshift was confirmed to be 13.0. This equates to a galaxy seen just 330 million years after the big bang, a small fraction of the universe’s present age of 13.8 billion years old. But an unexpected feature stood out as well: one specific, distinctly bright wavelength of light, known as Lyman-alpha emission, radiated by hydrogen atoms. This emission was far stronger than astronomers thought possible at this early stage in the universe’s development.
    “The early universe was bathed in a thick fog of neutral hydrogen,” explained Roberto Maiolino, a team member from the University of Cambridge and University College London. “Most of this haze was lifted in a process called reionization, which was completed about one billion years after the big bang. GS-z13-1 is seen when the universe was only 330 million years old, yet it shows a surprisingly clear, telltale signature of Lyman-alpha emission that can only be seen once the surrounding fog has fully lifted. This result was totally unexpected by theories of early galaxy formation and has caught astronomers by surprise.”

    Before and during the era of reionization, the immense amounts of neutral hydrogen fog surrounding galaxies blocked any energetic ultraviolet light they emitted, much like the filtering effect of colored glass. Until enough stars had formed and were able to ionize the hydrogen gas, no such light — including Lyman-alpha emission — could escape from these fledgling galaxies to reach Earth. The confirmation of Lyman-alpha radiation from this galaxy, therefore, has great implications for our understanding of the early universe.
    “We really shouldn’t have found a galaxy like this, given our understanding of the way the universe has evolved,” said Kevin Hainline, a team member from the University of Arizona. “We could think of the early universe as shrouded with a thick fog that would make it exceedingly difficult to find even powerful lighthouses peeking through, yet here we see the beam of light from this galaxy piercing the veil. This fascinating emission line has huge ramifications for how and when the universe reionized.”
    The source of the Lyman-alpha radiation from this galaxy is not yet known, but it may include the first light from the earliest generation of stars to form in the universe.
    “The large bubble of ionized hydrogen surrounding this galaxy might have been created by a peculiar population of stars — much more massive, hotter, and more luminous than stars formed at later epochs, and possibly representative of the first generation of stars,” said Witstok. A powerful active galactic nucleus, driven by one of the first supermassive black holes, is another possibility identified by the team.
    This research was published Wednesday in the journal Nature.
    The James Webb Space Telescope is the world’s premier space science observatory. Webb is solving mysteries in our solar system, looking beyond to distant worlds around other stars, and probing the mysterious structures and origins of our universe and our place in it. Webb is an international program led by NASA with its partners, ESA (European Space Agency) and CSA (Canadian Space Agency).
    Downloads
    Click any image to open a larger version.
    View/Download all image products at all resolutions for this article from the Space Telescope Science Institute.
    View/Download the research results from the journal Nature.

    Laura Betz – laura.e.betz@nasa.govNASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
    Bethany Downer – Bethany.Downer@esawebb.orgESA/Webb, Baltimore, Md.
    Christine Pulliam – cpulliam@stsci.eduSpace Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Md.

    Read more about cosmic history, the early universe, and cosmic reionization.
    Article: Learn about what Webb has revealed about galaxies through time.
    Video: How Webb reveals the first galaxies
    More Webb News
    More Webb Images
    Webb Science Themes
    Webb Mission Page

    What Is a Galaxy?
    What is the Webb Telescope?
    SpacePlace for Kids
    En Español
    ¿Qué es una galaxia?
    Ciencia de la NASA
    NASA en español 
    Space Place para niños

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: Precision Drilling Corporation 2025 First Quarter Results Conference Call and Webcast

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    CALGARY, Alberta, March 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Precision Drilling Corporation (Precision) intends to release its 2025 first quarter results after the market closes on Wednesday, April 23, 2025, and has scheduled a conference call to begin at 11:00 a.m. MT (1:00 p.m. ET) on the next day, Thursday, April 24, 2025.

    To participate in the conference call please register at the URL link below. Once registered, you will receive a dial-in number and a unique PIN, which will allow you to ask questions.

    https://register-conf.media-server.com/register/BIfac587dca2994a30be564b41d99b43ac

    The call will also be webcast and can be accessed through the link below. A replay of the webcast call will be available on Precision’s website for 12 months.

    https://edge.media-server.com/mmc/p/gifawh57

    About Precision

    Precision is a leading provider of safe and environmentally responsible High Performance, High Value services to the energy industry, offering customers access to an extensive fleet of Super Series drilling rigs. Precision has commercialized an industry-leading digital technology portfolio known as Alpha™ that utilizes advanced automation software and analytics to generate efficient, predictable, and repeatable results for energy customers. Our drilling services are enhanced by our EverGreen™ suite of environmental solutions, which bolsters our commitment to reducing the environmental impact of our operations. Additionally, Precision offers well service rigs, camps and rental equipment all backed by a comprehensive mix of technical support services and skilled, experienced personnel.

    Precision is headquartered in Calgary, Alberta, Canada and is listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange under the trading symbol “PD” and on the New York Stock Exchange under the trading symbol “PDS”.

    Additional Information

    For more information about Precision, please visit our website at www.precisiondrilling.com or contact:

    Lavonne Zdunich, CPA, CA
    Vice President, Investor Relations
    403.716.4500

    800, 525 – 8th Avenue S.W.
    Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2P 1G1
    Website: www.precisiondrilling.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Agriculture Committee adopts two decisions to enhance transparency, notifications

    Source: WTO

    Headline: Agriculture Committee adopts two decisions to enhance transparency, notifications

    Tariff-Rate Quotas (TRQs) allow a specified quantity of a product to be imported at a lower tariff rate, while any quantity exceeding that limit is subject to higher tariffs.
    Triennial reviews of Nairobi and Bali decisions
    The Chair announced that members successfully concluded the third triennial review of the Nairobi Decision on Export Competition in December 2024 through a written procedure. The outcome package includes the Review Report (G/AG/39 ) and a decision on a comprehensive export competition notification requirements and formats (G/AG/2/Add.2 ). This streamlines the relevant notification requirements adopted in 1995 (G/AG/2 ) and integrates the export competition questionnaire (ECQ) from the Nairobi Decision. She thanked members for their constructive engagement in reaching consensus.
    Members also adopted a key document on enhanced transparency of TRQ administration notifications (RD/AG/134/Rev.2)  in order to implement the Bali Decision on Tariff Rate Quota administration. Members hailed the successful adoption of the decision on TRQ notifications (G/AG/2/Add.3), recognizing it as the culmination of months of hard work and productive dialogue.
    Members also launched discussions on the second triennial review of the operation of the Bali Decision and shared their expectations of the review.
    Updates on agricultural market developments, food security
    Members heard updated reports from the World Food Programme(WFP), the International Grains Council (IGC) and the World Bank on the latest developments in food security and agriculture. The organizations were invited to the Committee to share information and experiences as a follow-up to  the report and recommendations of the work programme undertaken pursuant to the MC12 declaration on food insecurity.
    The WFP warned that the world is entering a period of high uncertainty, marked by a worsening global food security crisis and humanitarian funding cuts. It estimated that 343 million people suffered from acute food insecurity across 74 countries in 2024 — nearly 200 million more than pre-pandemic levels.
    The WFP stressed that conflict remains the primary driver of food insecurity in war zones, including Sudan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Gaza and Somalia. Other factors, such as climate change, economic instability, rising food prices and currency depreciation, continue to affect food supply in developing economies.
    The WFP urged governments to find political solutions to end conflicts, strengthen food systems and enhance support for local economies. It also called for governments to secure funding to protect vulnerable populations and build community food resilience.
    The IGC projected record grain production and a global rebound in grain trade in 2025–26, driven by strong demand from Asia and Africa, as well as other positive market trends. The IGC also outlined its ongoing efforts to improve and standardize trade statistics for rice through better classification of rice types in global trade. It has also developed a dashboard for net food-importing countries to track market changes and refine food security strategies.
    The World Bank echoed concerns raised by the WFP and IGC, stating that acute food insecurity remains at record levels, with an estimated 713–757 million people undernourished. It introduced its Global Challenge Program on Food and Nutrition Security, which includes early warning systems, cross-sectoral approaches to nutrition, and improved access to climate finance for smallholders.
    The World Bank reaffirmed its commitment to nutrition security, emphasizing its alignment with global efforts such as the Nutrition for Growth Summit in Paris and its integration of nutrition objectives across health, agriculture and social protection investments.
    Members thanked the international organizations for their updates. Some highlighted concerns over food insecurity in least developed countries (LDCs) and net food-importing developing countries (NFIDCs), citing conflict, climate change and high import dependency as key challenges. Others emphasized the need for greater financial support for food and climate resilience while urging the WTO to address the root causes of food insecurity through further agricultural reforms.
    Members also discussed follow-up to Food Security Work Programme recommendations (G/AG/38) from the 12th Ministerial Conference. The Chair commended members’ efforts in implementing some of these recommendations within the Committee and the Working Group on Trade, Debt and Finance. Some members stressed the need to turn recommendations into concrete actions, including informal dedicated workshops to share experiences.
    Review of the NFIDC list 
    Divergences remain on the annual review of the NFIDCs list, which is undertaken annually in the Committee’s March meeting. Some members favoured a data-based review exercise requiring NFIDCs to present updated statistics, whereas some others saw no basis to submit such data by NFIDCs beyond their inclusion in the list.
    The discussion concluded without a common understanding of whether the annual review had been accomplished. Some members called for continued discussions in subsequent meetings, while others opposed extending talks beyond the annual March meeting. At the same time, members agreed that the current list (G/AG/5/Rev.12) remains valid unless consensus dictates otherwise.
    Review of agricultural policies
    A total of 208 questions were raised by members concerning individual notifications and specific implementation matters during the meeting. This peer review process allows members to address issues related to the implementation of commitments outlined in the Agreement on Agriculture. Of these, 31 issues were raised for the first time, while 15 were recurring matters from previous Committee meetings.
    The 31 new items covered a range of topics, including Australia’s food and fibre program, Brazil’s rural initiative, Canada’s multiple farm and dairy support programs, and the European Union’s tariffs on Russian agri-food imports. Other topics included India’s sugar support and tariff changes on Bourbon whiskey, Indonesia’s various farm support policies, and Japan’s support for CO₂ reduction and fertilizer procurement. Members also reviewed Paraguay’s financial assistance to farmers, Switzerland’s farm payments, Thailand’s debt relief measures and rice support, Türkiye’s tax and pricing systems, the United Kingdom’s productivity-boosting scheme, and the United States’ applied tariffs and multiple farm support programs.
    Since the previous meeting in November 2024, a total of 110 individual notifications have been submitted to the Committee, covering market access, domestic support, export competition and notifications in the context of the NFIDC Decision. The majority of these notifications — 45 in total — pertain to export competition.
    The Chair urged members to submit timely and complete notifications and to respond to overdue questions, stressing the critical importance of enhanced transparency.
    All questions submitted for the meeting are available in G/AG/W/252. All questions and replies received are available in the WTO’s Agriculture Information Management System (AG IMS).
    Technology transfer
    The Chair reported productive discussions at an informal meeting on 13 February regarding guidance on how to pursue further discussions on technology transfer in 2025.
    Some members expressed interest in shifting discussions from experience-sharing to the WTO framework of rules and its role in promoting agricultural innovations and technologies. While they acknowledged that the Agreement on Agriculture provides a clear policy and legal basis for agricultural technology transfer — essential for improving food security and rural development — barriers remain in accessing these technologies, highlighting the need for affordable innovations. To address these challenges, these members suggested future seminars to discuss both policy considerations under the Agreement on Agriculture and practical country case studies.
    Some members also emphasized the need for the Committee to further explore sustainable agriculture, with a focus on practical, expert-led discussions. One suggestion was to highlight the importance of capacity building in developing economies, supported by strengthened collaboration with regional research centres.
    The Chair noted the need to continue discussions on this agenda item at the next meeting, which will help the incoming Chair plan future work.
    Other business
    The Chair said that the election of the new Chair will be considered at the June meeting, as the consultation process is still ongoing.
    The Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture (IICA) briefly introduced its 2025 work plan (G/AG/GEN/248). In close cooperation with the WTO, the IICA will organize a seminar in Paraguay in the second half of the year to train government officials from the region on improving their notification capacity and negotiation skills.
    Next meeting
    The next meeting of the Committee on Agriculture is scheduled for 23-24 June 2025.

    Share

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI NGOs: Global: Leaders must unite to resist all who undermine the international legal order, in Ukraine and beyond

    Source: Amnesty International –

    Speaking ahead of Thursday’s summit in Paris, where a coalition of states bringing together leaders across Europe, Australia, Canada, Japan, New Zealand, South Korea and Türkiye will discuss support for Ukraine and defense against Russian aggression, Amnesty International’s Secretary General Agnès Callamard said:

    “As European and other leaders come together to affirm their determination to defend Ukraine against Russia’s war of aggression, Amnesty International calls on them to prioritize justice for Ukraine and center their proposals on human rights protection for all.  

    “Russia has perpetrated all manner of war crimes and violations of international humanitarian law in Ukraine, including deadly deliberate airstrikes on civilians and civilian infrastructure, the torture and enforced disappearance of Ukrainian civilian detainees and prisoners of war, and executions and killings of individuals in Russian captivity. It has also overseen the forcible transfer of children to Russia, the suppression of non-Russian identities and a campaign of harassment and intimidation to ensure compliance with Russian authorities in Crimea and other Russian-occupied territories.

    “We urge leaders at the summit to do all within their power and authority to put a stop to these heinous crimes, protect the people of Ukraine and uphold their rights to justice, accountability, and reparation. We call on the leaders to ensure that those most impacted by Russia’s war of aggression have their voices heard and their needs met.

    By failing to enforce international law anywhere, Europe’s leaders help weaken it everywhere.

    Agnès Callamard, Amnesty International’s Secretary General

    “As the people of Ukraine and many others caught up in the world’s conflicts demonstrate daily, justice and freedom from oppression are secured though resistance that upholds human rights, shared values and a clear-minded vision for a better, more just future.

    “The coalition of European and other states must recognize that their stand for Ukraine is grounded on a broader vision: a vision for the freedom and human security of Ukrainians and all people the world over; a vision grounded in the promise of the UN Charter and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Today’s leaders must defend those standards steadfastly, without fear or favour.

    “In this instance, it is the Russian authorities and Vladimir Putin that are the aggressors. But many world leaders, from Benjamin Netanyahu and Donald Trump to Xi Jinping and Nayib Bukele, are actively undermining the international rule of law. We watch with alarm as increasingly authoritarian leaders are rising to power across the globe – and many of them finding comfort in Presidents Putin and Trump’s shared disdain for international law and willingness to sacrifice justice and victims’ rights.

    “European Leaders in particular must be alert to this ominous trend. They must reject the double standards that have become the hallmark of European international policy, painfully evident in its failure to protect the people of Gaza from Israel’s genocide. By failing to enforce international law anywhere, Europe’s leaders help weaken it everywhere.

    “Instead, Europe must build a different, broader and much stronger international coalition – one capable of withstanding not only Russia’s belligerent ambitions, but also of protecting human rights, and the multilateral and international legal order. Supporting Ukraine demands that they hold all governments to the same standards they apply to Russia. It demands too that they enforce the arms embargo to Sudan and rectify all instances of double standards. Persisting with a selective, inconsistent approach to international law will deprive the European leaders’ position of any international credibility.”

    MIL OSI NGO

  • MIL-OSI NGOs: Global: Leaders at Paris summit urged to defend international rule of law ‘without fear or favour’

    Source: Amnesty International –

    Leaders from Europe, Australia, Canada, Japan, New Zealand, South Korea and Türkiye to meet tomorrow in Paris

    The coalition will discuss support for Ukraine and defense against Russian aggression

    Persisting with a selective, inconsistent approach to international law will deprive European leaders’ position of any international credibility

    ‘We watch with alarm as increasingly authoritarian leaders are rising to power across the globe’ – Agnès Callamard

    Speaking ahead of Thursday’s summit in Paris, where a coalition of states bringing together global leaders to discuss support for Ukraine and defense against Russian aggression, Agnès Callamard, Amnesty International’s Secretary General, said:

    “As European and other leaders come together to affirm their determination to defend Ukraine against Russia’s war of aggression, Amnesty International calls on them to prioritise justice for Ukraine and center their proposals on human rights protection for all.  

    “Russia has perpetrated all manner of war crimes and violations of international humanitarian law in Ukraine, including deadly deliberate airstrikes on civilians and civilian infrastructure, the torture and enforced disappearance of Ukrainian civilian detainees and prisoners of war, and executions and killings of individuals in Russian captivity. It has also overseen the forcible transfer of children to Russia, the suppression of non-Russian identities and a campaign of harassment and intimidation to ensure compliance with Russian authorities in Crimea and other Russian-occupied territories.

    “We urge leaders at the summit to do all within their power and authority to put a stop to these heinous crimes, protect the people of Ukraine and uphold their rights to justice, accountability, and reparation. We call on the leaders to ensure that those most impacted by Russia’s war of aggression have their voices heard and their needs met.

    “The coalition of European and other states must recognise that their stand for Ukraine is grounded on a broader vision: a vision for the freedom and human security of Ukrainians and all people the world over; a vision grounded in the promise of the UN Charter and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Today’s leaders must defend those standards steadfastly, without fear or favour.

    “In this instance, it is the Russian authorities and Vladimir Putin that are the aggressors. But many world leaders, from Benjamin Netanyahu and Donald Trump to Xi Jinping and Nayib Bukele, are actively undermining the international rule of law. We watch with alarm as increasingly authoritarian leaders are rising to power across the globe – and many of them finding comfort in Presidents Putin and Trump’s shared disdain for international law and willingness to sacrifice justice and victims’ rights.

    “European Leaders must reject the double standards that have become the hallmark of European international policy, painfully evident in its failure to protect the people of Gaza from Israel’s genocide. By failing to enforce international law anywhere, Europe’s leaders help weaken it everywhere.

    “Europe must build a different, broader and much stronger international coalition – one capable of withstanding not only Russia’s belligerent ambitions, but also of protecting human rights, and the multilateral and international legal order. Supporting Ukraine demands that they hold all governments to the same standards they apply to Russia. It demands too that they enforce the arms embargo to Sudan and rectify all instances of double standards. Persisting with a selective, inconsistent approach to international law will deprive the European leaders’ position of any international credibility.”

    MIL OSI NGO

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Speaking to Americans about the value of Alberta ties

    Source: Government of Canada regional news (2)

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-Evening Report: Tiny robot tools powered by magnets could one day do brain surgery without cutting open the skull

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Changyan He, Lecturer, School of Engineering, University of Newcastle

    Photo supplied.

    Most brain surgery requires doctors to remove part of the skull to access hard-to-reach areas or tumours. It’s invasive, risky, and it takes a long time for the patient to recover.

    We have developed new, tiny robotic surgical tools that may let surgeons perform “keyhole surgery” on the brain. Despite their small size, our tools can mimic the full range of motion of a surgeon’s wrist, creating new possibilities for less-invasive brain surgery.

    Tiny tools for brain surgery

    Robotic surgical tools (around 8 millimetres in diameter) have been used for decades in keyhole surgery for other parts of the body. The challenge has been making a tool small enough (3mm in diameter) for neurosurgery.

    In a project led by the University of Toronto, where I was a postdoctoral fellow, we collaborated with The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) in Canada to develop a set of very small neurosurgery tools.

    The tools are only about 3mm in diameter. In a paper published in Science Robotics, we demonstrated these tools could grip, pull and cut tissue.

    Their extremely small size is possible as they are powered not by motors but by external magnetic fields.

    Three magnetic tools: a cutter, a gripper and forceps.
    Changyan He

    Current robotic surgical tools are typically driven by cables connected to electric motors. They work in much the same way as human fingers, which are manipulated by tendons in the hand connected to muscles in the wrist.

    However, pulleys smaller than several millimetres wide to control the instruments are weak and prone to friction, stretch and fracture. This creates challenges in scaling down the instruments, because of difficulties in making the parts of the system, assembling the mechanisms and managing friction in the cables.

    Magnetic controls

    The new robotic system consists of two parts. The first is the tiny tools themselves: a gripper, a scalpel and a set of forceps. The second part is what we call a “coil table”, which is a surgical table with several electromagnetic coils embedded inside.

    In this design, the patient would be positioned with their head on top of the embedded coils, and the robotic tools would be inserted into the brain via a small incision.

    Patients would lie on a ‘coil table’ containing magnets which are used to control the surgical tools.
    Changyan He

    By altering the amount of electricity flowing into the coils, we can manipulate the magnetic fields, causing the tools to grip, pull or cut tissue as desired.

    In open brain surgery, the surgeon relies on their own dexterous wrist to pivot the tools and tilt their tips to access hard-to-reach areas, such as removing a tumour inside the central cavity of the brain. Unlike other tools, our robotic neurosurgical tools can mimic this with “wristed” movements.

    Surprising precision

    We tested the tools in pre-clinical trials where we simulated the mechanical properties of the brain tissue they would need to work with. In some tests, we used pieces of tofu and raspberry placed inside a model of the brain.

    We compared the performance of these magnetically operated tools with that of standard tools handled by trained surgeons.

    We found the cuts made with the magnetic scalpel were consistent and narrow, with an average width of 0.3–0.4mm. That was even more precise than those from traditional hand tools, which ranged from 0.6 to 2.1mm.

    The magnetic scalpel, shown slicing some tofu inside a model of the brain, can make cuts more precise than those done with traditional tools.
    Changyan He

    As for the grippers, they could pick up the target 76% of the time.

    The magnetic grippers (shown here picking up some raspberry) were successful 76% of the time.
    Changyan He

    From the lab to the operating room

    We were surprised by how well the robotic tools performed. However, there is still a long way to go until this technology could help patients. It can take years, even decades, to develop medical devices, especially surgical robots.

    This study is part of a broader project based on years of work led by Eric Diller from the University of Toronto, an expert on magnet-driven micro-robots.

    Now, the team wants to make sure the robotic arm and magnetic system can fit comfortably in a hospital operating room. The team also wants to make it compatible with imaging systems such as fluoroscopy, which uses x-rays.
    After that, the tools may be ready for clinical trials.

    We’re excited about the potential for a new era of minimally invasive neurosurgical tools.

    Changyan He 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. Tiny robot tools powered by magnets could one day do brain surgery without cutting open the skull – https://theconversation.com/tiny-robot-tools-powered-by-magnets-could-one-day-do-brain-surgery-without-cutting-open-the-skull-253042

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI: MRF 2025 Resource Limited Partnership Final Closing April 29, 2025

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    TORONTO, March 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Middlefield, on behalf of MRF 2025 Resource Limited Partnership (“MRF 2025” or the “Partnership”), is pleased to announce that it has completed the second closing of the initial public offering of MRF 2025 Class A and Class F units for total gross proceeds of $5.0 million. The maximum offering size is $50 million. The offering is being made in each of the provinces of Canada. The Partnership intends to have a third and final closing on April 29, 2025.

    The objectives of the Partnership are to provide investors with capital appreciation and significant tax benefits to enhance after-tax returns to limited partners, including the deductibility of 100% of their original investment. The Partnership intends to achieve these objectives by investing in an actively managed, diversified portfolio comprised primarily of equity securities of Canadian companies involved in the resource sector.

    Middlefield is a leading provider of flow-through share funds in Canada and has a strong track record of delivering positive after-tax returns. Since 1983, Middlefield has sponsored 70 public and private flow-through funds and has acted as agent or manager for over $2.5 billion of resource investments.

    The syndicate of agents for the offering is being co-led by CIBC Capital Markets and RBC Capital Markets and includes BMO Nesbitt Burns Inc., National Bank Financial Inc., Scotia Capital Inc., TD Securities Inc., Richardson Wealth Limited, Manulife Securities Incorporated, iA Private Wealth Inc., Canaccord Genuity Corp., Raymond James Ltd. and Wellington-Altus Private Wealth Inc.

    For further information, please visit our website at www.middlefield.com or contact Nancy Tham in our Sales and Marketing Department at 1.888.890.1868.

    This offering is only made by prospectus. The prospectus contains important detailed information about the securities being offered. Copies of the prospectus may be obtained from your CIRO registered financial advisor using the contact information for such advisor. Investors should read the prospectus before making an investment decision.

    The MIL Network