Category: Commerce

  • MIL-OSI Analysis: Japan and South Korea can show governments how to compete with China and US

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Robyn Klingler-Vidra, Vice Dean, Global Engagement | Associate Professor in Political Economy and Entrepreneurship, King’s College London

    Governments around the world are hustling. European policymakers, for example, are eager to boost the region’s industrial relevance in a world where the US and China dominate cutting-edge technologies. They want to move beyond the adage that “the US innovates, China replicates and the EU regulates”.

    As part of this, policymakers worldwide are striving to foster their own versions of Silicon Valley. They have invested to create ecosystems abundant with ambitious startups backed by venture capital investors. Their ultimate aim is to see these firms develop into what are known as scale-ups and compete in global markets.

    But if governments – from Berlin and Brussels to Ho Chi Minh City – are to find their edge, I argue they should follow a model closer to Seoul or Tokyo’s playbook than that of Silicon Valley.

    South Korean and Japanese policymakers have long understood that the proliferation of startup activity should not be an isolated aim. In our 2025 book, Startup Capitalism, my colleague Ramon Pacheco Pardo and I revealed that the approach of these countries sees national champion firms like Samsung and Toyota use startups as resources to help them compete internationally.

    As the head of a government-backed startup centre in Seoul told me, a key aim of South Korean government policy for startups is to “inject innovative DNA” into the country’s large firms. Policies attempt to embed startups into the fabric of lead firms, and do not try to disrupt their competitive positions.

    The ‘traitorous eight’ group of employees.
    Wayne Miller / Magnum Photos

    For this objective, the Silicon Valley playbook is sub-optimal. US government policy has enabled venture capital investment through regulatory changes and has ensured that talented people are free to challenge their former employers. Classic examples include the so-called “traitorous eight” who left Shockley Semiconductor Laboratory in 1957 to found Fairchild Semiconductor.

    A more recent example is Anthony Levandowski, who left Google’s self-driving car project to start his own company, Otto, in 2016. The competition was so close that Google sued Uber – as it had acquired Otto – in 2019 over the trade secrets Levandowski allegedly used to develop his self-driving truck company. Uber eventually paid Google a “substantial portion” of the US$179 million (£134 million) it was awarded initially in arbitration.

    Injecting innovative DNA

    The Japanese and Korean formula is distinct. South Korea’s 17 Centres for the Creative Economy and Innovation, established about ten years ago to drive innovation and entrepreneurship, each have one of the country’s large firms (chaebol) as an anchor partner. The chaebol’s industrial focus – whether it’s shipbuilding, electronics or heavy machinery – is reflected in the focus of the startups engaging with that centre.

    The startups work on issues “that keep the large firm up at night” and, in return, the startups have unparalleled access to distribution channels, marketing and proof-of-concept testing. While the centres have not produced volumes of globally competitive scale-ups, they have delivered on the aim of injecting innovative ideas and talent into large companies like Hyundai, LG Electronics and SK Group.

    In Japan, tax incentives encourage big businesses to acquire startups. The “open innovation tax incentive” allows a 25% deduction from the price of the acquisition. The aim here is to encourage Japan’s national champion firms to integrate startups into their core businesses. In 2024, for example, Toyota integrated high-tech wheelchair startup, Whill, into its mobility services offering.

    Various government initiatives also aim to provide coaching and mentoring for startups around raising venture capital funding and sharpening a pitch for demo day. In Japan and Korea, these initiatives embed big business throughout.

    In J-Startup, an initiative aimed at creating a cohort of so-called unicorns (startups valued at over US$1 billion), the Japanese government involves industrial leaders as judges that help select applicants for the programme. These people then act as coaches and mentors to the startups. Japan’s lead firms are, in return, exposed to innovative technologies and startup culture.

    In a similar way, Korea’s K-Startup Grand Challenge connects participating foreign startups with the country’s chaebol for proof-of-concept development. The Korean government cites partnership and licensing agreements between the parties as an important outcome of the programme. Through these connections, Korea’s big businesses have another mechanism for accessing innovative ideas and talent from abroad.

    Samsung Electronics is the largest chaebol in South Korea.
    Sybillla / Shutterstock

    Governments that want to compete with China or the US cannot continue on their existing path. They need to do something different, and Japan and South Korea’s approach offers an alternative.

    These approaches are not without downsides. There is, of course, the risk of well-resourced corporations operating “kill zones” around their business lines. This might involve early low-value mergers and acquisitions, or even copying their products in a bid to eliminate them.

    The central position of large firms to the economy also means that the innovation agenda of startups is set by incumbent firms. This fosters complementary products, and not those that disrupt – and ultimately improve – domestic firms or technologies. There’s also the worry of perceived corruption.

    But I argue that pursuing a half-committed strategy is riskier. If governments maintain a wall between big business and startups, believing this is essential to minimise corruption and that large firms will innovate just as startups will scale-up into larger firms, they risk underwhelming outcomes on all levels.

    We may see flailing productivity in the sectors in which countries have excelled. And scale-ups will fail to materialise while populations of “zombie startups”, that simply stagnate while propped up on state largesse, increase.

    Startups should be considered as resources to boost nationwide industrial capabilities, not efforts aimed at seeding a country’s answer to Silicon Valley’s Google or OpenAI.

    Robyn Klingler-Vidra 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. Japan and South Korea can show governments how to compete with China and US – https://theconversation.com/japan-and-south-korea-can-show-governments-how-to-compete-with-china-and-us-260623

    MIL OSI Analysis

  • MIL-OSI: CORRECTION – Ad Age lists Advantage Solutions among 2025 Largest Agencies

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    ST. LOUIS, July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — In a release issued under the same headline on July 2 by Advantage Solutions Inc. (NASDAQ: ADV), please note that Advantage’s domestic ranking should have been listed as “12th in the United States” instead of “9th in North America.” It has been removed from the subhead. The corrected release follows:

    Advantage Solutions (NASDAQ: ADV) ranks as the 12th largest agency company in the United States and No. 18 worldwide, according to the Ad Age Agency Report 2025. With revenue of $1.2 billion in 2024, Advantage was one of only two Midwest-based agencies in the top 25 list, which is based on worldwide revenue.

    “Our agency work is one of the many ways we’re shaping how people shop and building momentum in the marketplace. We continue to deliver for our clients and customers, infusing high-tech, high-touch, high-value solutions with the creativity and artistry to bring campaigns to life,” says Advantage CEO Dave Peacock.

    The Ad Age Agency Report, which evaluates the state of the agency market and includes listings and analysis, cited three major trends emerging in 2025: AI reshaping creativity, evolving client expectations, and agencies being asked to do more with greater precision and agility.

    “We’re staying sharp — solving the challenges our clients face today while anticipating what’s next. Our ability to unify sales and marketing delivers an award-winning shopper experience while redefining what’s possible across omnicommerce,” says executive vice president of agency at Advantage and head of AUC and AMP Christi Geary.

    Sitting at the intersection of CPGs, retailers and eCommerce, Advantage leads from the center of commerce by connecting people with experiences and products that enrich their lives. The company continues to grow its relationship with the world’s largest retailer, Amazon, and was honored with Amazon’s inaugural Gold Tier award, which recognizes excellence in providing on-time, accurate delivery. Advantage offers a full suite of omnichannel services across the path to purchase including branding; retail media and promotion; creative services; media; marketing technology; events and conferences; packaging design; as well as sampling and demonstration.

    About Advantage Solutions
    Advantage Solutions is the leading omnichannel retail solutions agency in North America, uniquely positioned at the intersection of consumer-packaged goods (CPG) brands and retailers. With its data- and technology-powered services, Advantage leverages its unparalleled insights, expertise and scale to help brands and retailers of all sizes generate demand and get products into the hands of consumers, wherever they shop. Whether it’s creating meaningful moments and experiences in-store and online, optimizing assortment and merchandising, or accelerating e-commerce and digital capabilities, Advantage is the trusted partner that keeps commerce and life moving. Advantage has offices throughout North America and strategic investments and owned operations in select international markets. For more information, please visit YourADV.com.

    Follow Advantage Solutions on social media

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/advantagesolutionsinc/

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/advantage_solutions/

    Media Contact:
    Jeffrey Levine
    jeff.levine@youradv.com

    The MIL Network

  • Piyush Goyal engages with Indian Missions abroad to boost global trade

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Union Minister of Commerce and Industry Piyush Goyal held a virtual meeting on July 16, with Heads of Commercial Wings in 74 Indian Missions across 61 countries to strengthen India’s global trade and commercial engagement strategy. The interaction, conducted via video conference, focused on reviewing trade promotion activities and addressing market access challenges.

    During the meeting, key Indian Missions presented detailed insights into their trade promotion efforts, sectoral developments, and challenges related to market access. Shri Goyal acknowledged the Missions as critical pillars of India’s economic diplomacy, emphasizing their role as the first point of contact for promoting Indian exports and fostering stronger ties with host countries.

    The Minister urged the Missions to proactively gather trade intelligence, including updates on market trends, regulatory frameworks, and sectoral developments. He highlighted the importance of sharing innovative strategies and best practices that have successfully boosted trade and attracted investment to India. Shri Goyal stressed the need to focus on four key performance indicators—Investment, Trade, Tourism, and Technology—as outlined by Prime Minister Narendra Modi as pillars of India’s growth.

    The discussion also covered the importance of regular trade advisories to identify demand-supply gaps and opportunities for Indian exporters. The Minister called for strategic interventions to address market access barriers, such as non-tariff barriers, sanitary and phytosanitary measures, and technical barriers to trade. He emphasized enhanced alignment between the Missions and the Department of Commerce through data-driven planning and effective use of digital platforms like the DGFT Trade Connect Portal.

    Goyal also urged collaborative efforts to support India’s objectives in multilateral forums like the World Trade Organization, particularly in areas such as agriculture, public stockholding for food security, and fisheries subsidies. The meeting addressed operational challenges, including the need for adequate resources, efficient posting of commercial officers, and improved coordination to support initiatives like Make in India and Production Linked Incentive schemes.

  • MIL-OSI: Coface SA: Coface agrees to acquire Novertur International SA (business-monitor.ch), enhancing its Business Information offer in Switzerland

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Coface agrees to acquire Novertur International SA (business-monitor.ch), enhancing its Business Information offer in Switzerland

    Paris, 17 July 2025 – 18.30

    Coface announces the signing of an agreement to acquire 100% of Novertur International SA.

    Novertur International SA, a Swiss startup based in Lausanne, has developed strong digital expertise in managing data on Swiss companies, which it distributes through its platform business-monitor.ch. Launched in 2016, the platform has become a key tool for SMEs and large companies in Switzerland for risk management and B2B prospecting. It offers simple, fast and reliable access to up-to-date information on more than 730,000 active Swiss businesses.

    The technological innovations developed by Novertur International SA – particularly in data structuring and user experience – combined with Coface’s expertise in credit risk, will significantly strengthen Coface’s Business Information offering in Switzerland.

    This acquisition strengthens the Group’s data, technical capabilities and expertise, in full alignment with its strategic plan Power the Core, which aims to enhance its high value-added services while strengthening its local presence.

    Florent Schlaeppi, CEO and Founder of business-monitor.ch, commented:

    From day one, we designed business-monitor.ch to be intuitive, fast, and useful for anyone analyzing companies. Joining Coface is a tremendous opportunity to take our mission to the next level by putting our technology at the service of a global player in business risk.

    Christian Moins, Country Manager Coface Switzerland, commented:

    We are particularly excited to welcome the Business Monitor team to Coface. The acquisition of Business Monitor demonstrates Coface’s ambition to establish itself as a key player in Business Information. This transaction significantly strengthens our position in the Swiss market, making Coface an even more attractive partner for its clients. “

    The completion of the acquisition remains subject to the usual closing conditions.

    CONTACTS

    ANALYSTS / INVESTORS
    Thomas JACQUET: +33 1 49 02 12 58 – thomas.jacquet@coface.com
    Rina ANDRIAMIADANTSOA: +33 1 49 02 15 85 – rina.andriamiadantsoa@coface.com

    MEDIA RELATIONS
    Saphia GAOUAOUI: +33 1 49 02 14 91 – saphia.gaouaoui@coface.com
    Adrien BILLET: +33 1 49 02 23 63 – adrien.billet@coface.com

    FINANCIAL CALENDAR 2025
    (subject to change)
    H1-2025 results: 31 July 2025 (after market close)
    9M-2025 results: 3 November 2025 (after market close)

    FINANCIAL INFORMATION
    This press release, as well as COFACE SA’s integral regulatory information, can be found on the Group’s website: http://www.coface.com/Investors

    For regulated information on Alternative Performance Measures (APM), please refer to our Interim Financial Report for H1-2024 and our 2024 Universal Registration Document (see part 3.7 “Key financial performance indicators”).

    Regulated documents posted by COFACE SA have been secured and authenticated with the blockchain technology by Wiztrust.
    You can check the authenticity on the website www.wiztrust.com.
     

    COFACE: FOR TRADE
    As a global leading player in trade credit risk management for more than 75 years, Coface helps companies grow and navigate in an uncertain and volatile environment.
    Whatever their size, location or sector, Coface provides 100,000 clients across some 200 markets with a full range of solutions: Trade Credit Insurance, Business Information, Debt Collection, Single Risk insurance, Surety Bonds, Factoring.
    Every day, Coface leverages its unique expertise and cutting-edge technology to make trade happen, in both domestic and export markets.
    In 2024, Coface employed ~5,236 people and registered a turnover of €1.84 billion.

    www.coface.com

    COFACE SA is quoted in Compartment A of Euronext Paris
    Code ISIN: FR0010667147 / Ticker: COFA

    DISCLAIMER – Certain declarations featured in this press release may contain forecasts that notably relate to future events, trends, projects or targets. By nature, these forecasts include identified or unidentified risks and uncertainties, and may be affected by many factors likely to give rise to a significant discrepancy between the real results and those stated in these declarations. Please refer to chapter 5 “Main risk factors and their management within the Group” of the Coface Group’s 2024 Universal Registration Document filed with AMF on 3 April 2025 under the number D.25-0227 in order to obtain a description of certain major factors, risks and uncertainties likely to influence the Coface Group’s businesses. The Coface Group disclaims any intention or obligation to publish an update of these forecasts, or provide new information on future events or any other circumstance.

    Attachment

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Engines of AI primed to accelerate new breakthroughs, economic growth, and transform the UK into an AI maker

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    Press release

    Engines of AI primed to accelerate new breakthroughs, economic growth, and transform the UK into an AI maker

    The government’s new Compute Roadmap will harness AI to deliver on the UK’s national priorities under the Plan for Change.

    New Compute Roadmap to boost AI breakthroughs.

    • UK to develop new medical cures and tools to cut emissions by delivering the processing power needed to fuel AI on British shores.  
    • Projects supporting the government’s Plan for Change – particularly on economic growth and building a better NHS will be prioritised access, with the UK’s most powerful supercomputer coming online from today. 
    • Edinburgh also set to become the first National Supercomputing Centre, while Scotland and Wales are poised for billions in private investment and thousands of new jobs as future sites of AI Growth Zones. 

    Artificial Intelligence will be used to deliver the UK’s national priorities under  the government’s Plan for Change and position the country as an AI maker rather than an AI taker – accelerating economic growth and transforming public services, as a new strategy looks to bolster the country’s compute capacity to power new breakthroughs in AI.  

    Businesses and researchers use compute – essentially the computer chips that process huge amounts of data – to train and build AI models or process prompts and questions through AI to discover everything from new drugs which treat and beat diseases to new tools to tackle climate change. Demand for cutting-edge compute power is already expected to surge by 5.7x between now and 2035, with the government taking vital steps to ensure the UK can stay ahead of the curve as the technology develops.  

    Published today (Thursday 17 July), the Compute Roadmap will deliver on the £1 billion set aside in the Spending Review to increase the UK’s compute infrastructure – allowing us to drive forward AI development on our own terms to ensure the technology can deliver for the British people. This will mean reducing our reliance on foreign computing power to deliver the transformations which will improve public services and help to fix the foundations of the economy. The Roadmap also builds on the ambition of the 10-year infrastructure strategy and the Modern Industrial Strategy to put the government’s vision into action – increasing investment and growing the industries of the future.

    Compute is the raw processing power that drives AI’s development. Without enough power, we cannot deliver the breakthroughs to treat and beat diseases, make industries cleaner and greener, or find new ways to fight climate change. To help deliver on these shared national priorities, we will expand the UK’s AI Research Resource (AIRR) twenty-fold over the next 5 years. The system, delivered in partnership with UK Research and Innovation (UKRI), Nvidia, HPE,  Dell Technologies and Intel, brings together the country’s most powerful supercomputers – Isambard-AI based in Bristol and Dawn in Cambridge.  

    The Technology Secretary flicked the switch on the Isambard supercomputer at its formal launch in Bristol today, meaning the AI Research Resource (AIRR) is now fully up and running - transforming the UK’s public compute capacity by being able to process in one second what it would take then entire global population 80 years to achieve. When the AIRR’s planned expansion is complete in the coming years, it will be vastly more powerful than the world’s current leading supercomputers. 

    University College London researchers are already using Isambard to line up pioneering AI tools which could revolutionise NHS cancer screening. Using prostate cancer as its initial test case, they are harnessing the system to develop one of the first scalable AI models dedicated to medical imaging – using AI to analyse MRI scans and identify patients in need of treatment sooner.  

    Secretary of State for Science, Innovation, and Technology Peter Kyle said:  

    Britain has top of the class talent in AI and our plan will put a rocket under our brilliant researchers, scientists, and engineers – giving them the tools they need to make Britain the best place to do their work.

    This will mean we can harness the technology in Britain to transform our public services, drive growth, and unlock new opportunities for every community in the country.

    Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rachel Reeves, said:

    We are harnessing the power of AI to transform our public services, drive innovation and fuel economic growth that puts money in people’s pockets.

    As technology advances, our Plan for Change is ensuring we are ahead of the curve, expanding our sovereign AI capabilities so we can make scientific breakthroughs, equip businesses with new tools for growth, and create new jobs across the country.

    The AIRR will see the UK’s compute capacity increase to 420 AI exaFLOP by 2030 – the equivalent of one billion people spending 13,316 years doing what the full AIRR will do in one second. That means all one billion people would have needed to start calculating more than 8,000 years before Stonehenge was built, without taking a break. Projects that matter most to the UK and align with national priorities will be prioritised access to the AIRR to help deliver the Plan for Change - as well as those which will have a real-world impact and deliver breakthroughs that change lives and grow the economy. 

    Researchers at the University of Liverpool meanwhile have been using Isambard to develop their EIMCRYSTAL system. Their model harnesses AI to speed up the discovery of new chemical reactions for use in industry, sifting through 68 million chemical combinations to find new solutions which will decarbonise British industry to make it greener, cleaner, and more sustainable. Isambard is already supporting other areas of highly ambitious AI research. The Sovereign AI Unit has launched an early pilot supporting academic researchers in AI for biosciences, foundational AI research, and advanced materials. These will be some of the most compute-intensive training runs that academics have carried out on UK infrastructure. 

    Working alongside the AI Research Resource, a network of National Supercomputing Centres will also be set up across the country – with the first based in Edinburgh, the future home of the UK’s most powerful research supercomputer. These will work as dedicated centres of expertise, connecting users not only with access to cutting-edge processing power, but catalysing greater collaboration between industry, academia, and researchers. They will help to build stronger links with existing talent in their regions – giving all areas of the country a supporting role in the UK’s ability to be an AI maker.  

    To further support the UK’s AI sovereignty ambitions, the Sovereign AI Unit has been established in the Department for Science, Innovation, and Technology, backed with £500 million of funding. Strengthening the UK’s domestic AI capabilities, including by developing the UK’s compute ecosystem, will be a key focus for the unit. 

    The strategy set out today and the work of the Sovereign AI Unit will ensure the UK can roll out the next generation of champions in compute technology – sparking the creating of leaders in a range of fields to put British innovation and expertise on the map. 

    Today’s Compute Roadmap also puts Scotland and Wales in the frame to benefit from billions in private investment and thousands of new jobs as future homes to AI Growth Zones. These dedicated AI hotbeds offer accelerated planning permissions to speed up the roll-out of data centres, which will be powered by responsible and cutting-edge energy sources like small modular reactors (SMRs). 

    AI Growth Zones will not only deliver the infrastructure we need but also support the technology’s evolution in a range of other areas. These will include R&D and Innovation Platforms, Adoption Testbeds and taking on a role as skills and talent hubs which will give people the tools they need to develop, use, and work with the technology. Further details of where these Growth Zones will be based in Wales and Scotland will be confirmed in due course.   

    Capitalising on the ambition of today’s announcements, the Technology Secretary is also launching a dedicated AI for Science strategy. This will set out the clear steps the government will take forward to cement the UK’s position as a global leader in AI-enabled science breakthroughs, explore ways to boost adoption of the technology across the science sector and spark new commercial opportunities created by AI for science. 

    An expert group of senior academics, industry leaders and representatives of science institutions will advise on the strategy:

    • Alison Noble CBE FRS, Vice-President of the Royal Society and Professor of Biomedical Engineering at the University of Oxford.
    • Antony Rowstron, Chief Technical Officer at the Advanced Research and Invention Agency.
    • Charlotte Deane, Executive Chair of the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council and Professor of Structural Bioinformatics at the University of Oxford.
    • Chris Bishop, FRS FREng FRSE and Technical Fellow, Microsoft Research AI for Science.
    • Pushmeet Kohli, VP, Science and Strategic Initiatives, Google DeepMind.

    Published in the Autumn, the strategy will help to accelerate the pace of scientific discovery through AI, maximising its potential to drive innovation and growth.  

    The roadmap set out today lays the groundwork for a golden age for British AI – supporting innovation, growth, and new opportunities in all sectors of the economy. It is a plan which delivers certainty to researchers, industry, and investors alike, cementing the UK’s position as a world leader in artificial intelligence.  

    Reaction to today’s announcements

    On the Compute Roadmap

    Josh Payne, CEO, Nscale said:

    Nscale strongly welcomes the UK Government’s compute roadmap.

    As the only full stack sovereign AI infrastructure provider in the UK, we are delighted that the Government recognises the importance of sovereign capability in this area.

    We look forward to working with the Government and our partners to deliver this ambitious agenda.

    Professor Sir Peter Mathieson, Principal and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Edinburgh said:

    To be named the UK’s first national supercomputing centre is a significant recognition of the University of Edinburgh’s longstanding leadership in advanced computing. For more than thirty years, we have hosted the UK’s national supercomputer and further developed our globally respected expertise in computer science and artificial intelligence.         The new designation as the first national supercomputing centre will provide new opportunities for research and innovation across the UK, attracting further investment and talent. We look forward to working alongside the UK government and partners to bring this ambitious plan to life.

    Carolyn Dawson OBE, CEO of Founders Forum Group and Tech Nation:  

    We know the UK’s AI ecosystem is brimming with talent and ambition, but to lead globally, we must anchor this ambition in cutting-edge, sovereign compute infrastructure.

    Bold investment in compute power is exactly what’s required to accelerate innovation and secure a leading role for Britain in the global AI race. By bringing together world-class supercomputers in partnership with industry leaders like Nvidia and Intel, and expanding access through National Supercomputing Centres and AI Growth Zones in Scotland and Wales, this roadmap demonstrates the UK’s ambition to shape the future of AI.

    Julian David OBE, CEO of techUK, said: 

    This ambitious roadmap, underpinned by actions with dates for delivery, shows that the UK Government is serious in its ambition to deliver innovative and real-world impact through transformative AI, compute and cloud technologies.

    We are particularly encouraged to see alignment between compute recommendations and AI Growth Zones – a vital move to better connect expertise, support UK innovators, and maximise the value of UK research and innovation. 

    While there are still certain aspects to be explored, such as how these Growth Zones will develop the testbeds and platforms to help the most innovative emerging tech businesses grow and scale, techUK remains committed to working with government and our members to build on this ambition to power the next generation of AI.

    Walter Goodwin, founder and CEO of Fractile, said: 

     >I wholeheartedly welcome the Compute Roadmap. The Roadmap is a joined up strategy that will both drive an immediate expansion of AI compute capacity in the UK, but further will ultimately see pull-through of breakthrough AI compute platforms being built by UK semiconductor companies, like Fractile’s AI accelerators, into widespread commercial deployment. > > This will close the loop on sustainable sovereign compute capacity and ensure the UK will be an AI compute maker, not just a taker.

    On the AI for Science Strategy

    Dr Antony Rowstron, CTO of ARIA, said:

    I’ve built my career at the intersection of computing and science, and seen firsthand how the right technological leap can redefine what’s possible. AI represents just such a leap – a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to transform the speed of research and invention.

    I’m looking forward to bringing that experience, and my perspective from ARIA, to help put the UK at the forefront of this revolution.

    Chris Bishop, FRS FREng FRSE and Technical Fellow, Microsoft Research AI for Science said: 

    I personally believe that scientific discovery represents the most important and promising opportunity for AI in our generation. The consequences are far-reaching, from the discovery of life-saving drugs to the efficient design of sustainable materials.

    I am therefore delighted to participate, alongside other leading experts, in the new government strategic advisory panel on AI for Science. Together, I know that we will ensure that the UK remains at the forefront of AI development, in an area that is key to the future success of our society.

    Pushmeet Kohli, VP, Science and Strategic Initiatives, Google DeepMind said:  

    Science can help us address some of humanity’s greatest challenges, from climate change to disease.

    I’m excited to collaborate with the UK government and other industry leaders, experts and academics to help the nation leverage AI to accelerate scientific progress, and build upon the UK’s strong history of scientific leadership.

    Professor Alison Noble, Vice-President of the Royal Society, said:  

    The Royal Society welcomes the government’s commitments to growing the UK’s computing power and AI research resources. Today’s launch of the government’s AI for Science Strategy is an important step to advance the responsible use of AI across scientific disciplines. 

    From drug discovery to robot-assisted laboratories, AI is already reshaping how science is done and enabling new discoveries that were previously out of reach. To fully realise its benefits, we must ensure that advances in speed and scale do not come at the expense of rigour, transparency, or trust.

    By embedding principles of openness, reproducibility, and collaboration, this strategy could help ensure AI-based science has a strong foundation.

    Charlotte Deane, Executive Chair of the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council and Professor of Structural Bioinformatics at the University of Oxford said: 

    AI will completely change the way research is done, from the way we ask questions to the questions we can ask. It has the power to transform so many areas across science and innovation, and we need to ensure that the UK is at the forefront of this change.

    It is an exciting time to be involved in driving the potential of AI in science and for me an honour to be part of trying to make this change happen.

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    Email press@dsit.gov.uk

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    Updates to this page

    Published 17 July 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: Congressman Castro Introduces Sunshine on Solar Lending Act to Provide Transparency and Lower Costs for Consumers

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Joaquin Castro (20th District of Texas)

    July 17, 2025

    WASHINGTON, D.C. — Today, Congressman Joaquin Castro (TX-20) and Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton (DC-AL) introduced the Sunshine on Solar Lending Act, legislation that protects consumers from loopholes lenders use in solar financing arrangements, resulting in inflated costs, deceptive practices, and financial harm to families seeking to go solar.

    The introduction comes after reports of lenders in the residential solar financing industry hiding substantial “dealer fees” that increase the cost of credit to unsuspecting homeowners. Investigations in Texas revealed that solar lenders add 10 to 30 percent in these fees to the loan balance, without clearly informing consumers. 

    “As more folks consider going solar, a consistent and safe system is needed to eliminate deceptive practices,” said Congressman Castro. “The Sunshine on Solar Lending Act fills current gaps and protects those considering purchasing a solar system and signing a loan. This legislation will empower consumers and protect them from hidden charges that lead to financial harm.”  

    “Solar panels help consumers reduce their carbon footprints and save money on energy bills, but deceptive lending practices will inevitably lead to fewer Americans embracing this green technology,” Congresswoman Norton said. “Consumers deserve transparency in solar lending practices, and the reforms in the Sunshine on Solar Lending Act will help ensure that Americans interested in purchasing solar systems can do so without being taken advantage of by deceptive lending practices.”

    “Solar power is an important tool for energy independence, decreasing greenhouse gas pollution, and mitigating climate financial risk,” said Jessica Garcia, senior policy analyst at Americans for Financial Reform. “Representative Castro’s bill is responsive to the need for more transparent and fair financial contracts for households seeking solar panels.”

    “As homeowners turn to solar panels and other home improvements to embrace potential energy savings, unscrupulous lending practices and shady sales tactics increasingly have hijacked their experience,” said Christine Hines, senior policy director at the National Association of Consumer Advocates. “Rep. Castro’s timely legislation will expose hidden fees and finance charges in solar financing and ensure that ripped-off consumers are empowered to hold violators accountable.” 

    “Homeowners purchasing rooftop solar face fraudulent and abusive sales,” said Alys Cohen, director of Federal Housing Advocacy at the National Consumer Law Center. “This bill will help families understand the solar deals they are getting and protect them from hidden fees and surprise costs. It will also ensure they have help when they face problems with their solar purchase.” 

    The Sunshine on Solar Lending Act

    1. Closes a loophole that allows lenders to hide substantial “dealer fees” in solar financing arrangements.
    2. Ensures that all costs including dealer fees are clearly disclosed to consumers before they commit to purchasing a solar system and signing a loan.
    3. Allows harmed consumers to seek justice in court by prohibiting forced arbitration clauses in solar finance contracts.
    4. Mandates clear, written disclosures including paper copies for in-person sales.
    5. Empowers consumers to make informed decisions by comparing loan-financed costs with cash prices.

    The bill is endorsed by the Americans for Financial Reform (AFR), the National Association of Consumer Advocates (NACA), and the National Consumer Law Center (NCLC) on behalf of its low-income clients. 

    The full text of the Sunshine on Solar Lending Act can be found here.

    Congressman Castro is committed to protecting consumers who purchase solar panels. San Antonio residents who are facing issues with the solar financing industry are encouraged to get in touch with his District Office by calling 210-348-8216.


    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Record £14.5 billion of export financing supports 70,000 jobs

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Record £14.5 billion of export financing supports 70,000 jobs

    UK economy and workers have benefited from the export credit agency’s highest level of business ever

    • UK Export Finance provided a record £14.5 billion in new financing last year, helping over 667 UK companies to export and grow 

    • Up to 70,000 jobs and £5.4 billion to national GDP supported by UKEF financing, delivering on the government’s Plan for Change 

    • Detailed in UKEF’s annual report for 2024-25, support for UK businesses helps turbocharge the economy and deliver growth opportunities across the country 

    UK Export Finance (UKEF) provided £14.5 billion in loans, guarantees and insurance over the last year and supported tens of thousands of jobs in key industrial sectors around the country, according to its latest accounts published today. 

    UKEF is the UK’s export credit agency and a government department, working alongside the Department for Business and Trade. Established in 1919, it exists to ensure that no viable UK export fails for lack of finance or insurance from the private market, while operating at no net cost to the taxpayer. 

    UKEF provided the highest level of support in its 106-year history in 2024-25 to help 667 UK firms break into international markets and grow as exporters. 

    Businesses benefitting include Yorkshire-based Angloco and Ayrshire-headquartered Emergency One which won contracts to supply 62 fire engines to Iraq after UKEF provided a loan to its Ministry of Finance, and Northern Ireland pressure washer manufacturer Maxflow is entering new markets overseas after it gained access to capital with help of a guarantee provided through UKEF’s General Export Facility. 

    UKEF’s efforts to champion UK exporters supported up to 70,000 jobs including in key industrial sectors like clean energy industries, advanced manufacturing, life sciences and automotive which are central to the government’s Modern Industrial Strategy.  

    Overall, UKEF’s financing in the year backed the contribution of up to £5.4 billion (GDP) to the economy – helping to drive productivity and raise living standards as part of the government’s Plan for Change. 

    Sustainability and helping sectors transition to the low-carbon economy are key priorities for UKEF as part of its 2024-2029 Business Plan, strengthening the government’s efforts to make the UK a clean energy superpower.  

    The department provided £2.3 billion of strategic clean growth financing supporting ventures like the expansion of AESC’s new gigafactory in Teesside – announced by Chancellor Rachel Reeves – producing batteries that will power up to 100,000 electric vehicles a year, and to recycled paper manufacturer Shotton Mill in North Wales that is to become the largest of its kind in the UK and reducing net carbon emissions.  

    Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rachel Reeves, said: 

    Our number one mission is delivering growth to put more money in people’s pockets.  

    That’s why we increased UKEF’s lending capacity by billions and have given more flexibility to invest in priority sectors like defence, building on its record levels of support for businesses to export and grow, and the tens of thousands of jobs it has secured.

    Smaller firms remain central to UKEF’s mission to boost exports. The department supported 496 small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in 2024/25, of which 83% are based outside of London.  

    Business and Trade Secretary, Jonathan Reynolds, said:

    Our Plan for Change is backing British business to take advantage of export opportunities abroad to create jobs and growth at home. 

    Through record support, UKEF is playing a key role in achieving this, providing financial backing to exporters across the UK looking to grow and compete overseas. 

    UK Export Finance CEO, Tim Reid, added:

    I’m proud of our record-breaking year in which we’ve achieved real impact by forging new strategic global partnerships, boosting hundreds of exporters and supporting tens of thousands of jobs. 

    With customers at the heart of everything we do, we’re committed through our ambitious business plan to helping more British exporters firms succeed globally.  

    We’ve strengthened our products and supported more small businesses too – spreading the benefits of trade across the entire UK. 

    As we continue in our mission, we’re eager to play a key role in supporting the Industrial and Trade Strategies to drive sustainable economic growth.

    Marco Forgione, Director General at Chartered Institute of Export & International Trade, said:

    The record year for UK Export Finance is hugely welcome, and has helped small businesses up and down the country take that first step on their export journey.  

    Finance is often the missing piece in the jigsaw when looking to new markets. Access to the right tools at the right time can turn local ambition into international growth.  

    We now need to keep the momentum going, and help even more small businesses feel confident about exporting their fantastic goods and services around the world.

    Contact

    Media enquiries:

    Notes to editors: 

    1. Under the Direct Lending Facility, UK Export Finance (UKEF) provides loans within an overall limit of £13 billion to overseas buyers, allowing them to finance the purchase of capital goods and/or services from UK exporters. Of that limit, £3 billion has been allocated to support the defence sector. 

    The loans we provide for each transaction can be made in up to 8 currencies, with a value limit of £200 million (although more flexibility may be offered in limited circumstances). 

    1. UKEF’s General Export Facility (GEF) provides partial guarantees to banks to support UK exporters’ overall business growth, rather than being tied to specific export contracts. Eligible firms can use GEF to secure working capital, scale up their operations and position their business for international opportunities.

    Updates to this page

    Published 17 July 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Flexible workplace experience options highlighted in call to businesses

    Source: City of Wolverhampton

    City of Wolverhampton Council, West Midlands Combined Authority’s Careers Hub and The Careers & Enterprise Company yesterday (Wednesday) hosted an event at Molineux Stadium to highlight how businesses can get involved.

    Flexible workplace experiences make it easier than ever for businesses, especially small to medium enterprises, to get involved and make a real difference.

    Options include offering project experience for a day, hosting a young person one day a week, or inviting a class in just for a few hours so they can see what goes on in a business.

    The council’s Cabinet Member for City Development, Jobs and Skills, Councillor Chris Burden, said: “Too many young people in the West Midlands are missing out on workplace experiences because there aren’t enough being offered.

    “This week’s event was about highlighting to city businesses – no matter how big or small – the flexible ways they can support young people in this space.

    “Whatever works for businesses, works for us – and the young people of Wolverhampton.”

    Erica Chamberlain, Head of Strategic Business Partnerships at The Careers & Enterprise Company, said: “Workplace experiences are one of the most powerful ways young people can explore career options, develop employability skills and build confidence.

    “Small businesses are the backbone of the West Midlands economy, and they play a vital role in shaping the future talent pipeline, but we know that time and capacity can be a challenge. That’s why we’re championing flexible approaches that make it easier than ever for SMEs to get involved, whether it’s a few hours, a day, or something more regular.

    “The benefits for business are real too, from fresh perspectives and energy to early access to emerging local talent. This is about creating simple, meaningful opportunities that work for employers and inspire the next generation.”

    Any businesses interested in offering workplace experiences or want more information should contact the council’s Gemma Lisseman, Open Door Work Experience Co-ordinator, on 01902 552690 or 07773 190497, or email gemma.lisseman@wolverhampton.gov.uk

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Security: Charleston Woman Pleads Guilty to Aiding and Abetting Money Laundering in Relation to a COVID-19 Fraud Scheme

    Source: US FBI

    CHARLESTON, W.Va. – Shamiese Wright, 32, of Charleston, pleaded guilty to aiding and abetting monetary laundering.

    According to court documents and statements made in court, Wright received $15,625 in proceeds from a criminally derived Paycheck Protection Plan (PPP) loan, guaranteed by the Small Business Administration (SBA) under the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act). On April 19, 2021, co-defendant Kisha Sutton submitted a PPP loan application on Wright’s behalf, listing Wright as a self-employed individual who received $75,000 in gross income in 2020. The application was filed with an Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Form 1040, Schedule C Profit or Loss from Business, reflecting that Wright had earned $75,000 in 2020.

    As part of her guilty plea, Wright admitted that she was not self-employed, that she never earned $75,000 in any year, and that the IRS Form 1040 submitted with her application was fraudulent and created solely to obtain the PPP loan.

    A PPP lender in Florida approved Wright’s loan application, and $15,625 in fraudulent loan proceeds were electronically deposited in Wright’s personal bank account in Charleston on or about May 7, 2021. As part of her guilty plea, Wright admitted that she transferred $3,000 to Sutton from the fraudulent PPP loan proceeds using a digital wallet application between May 7, and May 21, 2021. Wright further admitted that the transfers were compensation for facilitating the submission of Wright’s fraudulent loan as they had agreed, and that she staggered her payments to Sutton and provided misleading transfer descriptions for them to conceal and disguise the nature and the source of the money. Wright spent the remainder of the fraudulent loan proceeds on personal expenses.

    The CARES Act made forgivable PPP loans available to qualifying sole proprietors, independent contractors and self-employed individuals adversely impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, to replace their normal income and for certain other eligible expenses. Applicants were required to certify that they were in operation on February 15, 2020, and provide documentation showing their prior gross income from either 2019 or 2020.

    Wright is scheduled to be sentenced on October 29, 2025, and faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison, up to three years of supervised release, and a $500,000 fine. Wright also owes up to $18,736.73 in restitution.

    Wright and Sutton, 44, of Jersey City, New Jersey, are among several individuals indicted by a federal grand jury on charges alleging they and others conspired, as well as aided and abetted one another, to obtain fraudulent PPP loans totaling $140,625. Co-defendants William Powell and Damisha Brown each pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit bank fraud. Powell, 35, of Huntington, is scheduled to be sentenced on August 14, 2025 and Brown, 32, of Charleston, is scheduled to be sentenced on October 2, 2025. Co-defendant Jasmine Spencer, 32, of Charleston, pleaded guilty on March 25, 2025, to aiding and abetting bank fraud and is scheduled to be sentenced on August 21, 2025.

    Acting United States Attorney Lisa G. Johnston made the announcement and commended the investigative work of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the West Virginia State Police – Bureau of Criminal Investigation (BCI), and the West Virginia State Auditor’s Office (WVSAO) Public Integrity and Fraud Unit (PIFU).

    United States District Judge Irene C. Berger presided over the hearing. Assistant United States Attorneys Jonathan T. Storage and Jennifer D. Gordon and former Assistant United States Attorney Holly Wilson have prosecuted the case.

    Individuals with information about allegations of fraud involving COVID-19 are encouraged to report it by calling the Department of Justice’s National Center for Disaster Fraud Hotline at 866-720-5721, or via the NCDF Web Complaint Form at: https://www.justice.gov/disaster-fraud/ncdf-disaster-complaint-form.

    A copy of this press release is located on the website of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of West Virginia. Related court documents and information can be found on PACER by searching for Case No. 2:24-cr-192.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Federal Jury Convicts New Jersey Woman for Crimes Related to COVID-19 Fraud Scheme

    Source: US FBI

    CHARLESTON, W.Va. – After two days of trial, a federal jury convicted Kisha Sutton, 44, of Jersey City, New Jersey, of aiding and abetting bank fraud (Count one) and aiding and abetting laundering of monetary instruments (Count two).

    Evidence at trial proved that Sutton and co-defendant Shamiese Wright aided and abetted one another to obtain a fraudulent $15,625 Paycheck Protection Plan (PPP) loan on behalf of Wright, guaranteed by the Small Business Administration (SBA) under the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act). Sutton received $3,000 in fraudulent PPP loan proceeds from Wright as part of their scheme.

    On April 19, 2021, Sutton submitted the PPP loan application on Wright’s behalf, listing Wright as a self-employed individual who received $75,000 in gross income in 2020. The application was filed with an Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Form 1040, Schedule C Profit or Loss from Business, reflecting that Wright had earned $75,000 in 2020. Evidence at trial showed that Wright was not self-employed, had never earned $75,000 in any year, had received unemployment benefits in 2020, and that the IRS Form 1040 submitted with Wright’s application was fraudulent and created solely to obtain the PPP loan.

    A PPP lender in Florida approved Wright’s loan application, and $15,625 in fraudulent loan proceeds were electronically deposited in Wright’s personal bank account in Charleston on or about May 7, 2021. Wright transferred the $3,000 to Sutton from the fraudulent PPP loan proceeds using a digital wallet application between May 7, and May 21, 2021. Wright staggered her payments to Sutton and provided misleading transfer descriptions for them to conceal and disguise the nature and the source of the money.

    The CARES Act made forgivable PPP loans available to qualifying sole proprietors, independent contractors and self-employed individuals adversely impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, to replace their normal income and for certain other eligible expenses. Applicants were required to certify that they were in operation on February 15, 2020, and provide documentation showing their prior gross income from either 2019 or 2020.

    Sutton is scheduled to be sentenced on November 13, 2025, and faces a maximum penalty of 50 years in prison. Sutton owes restitution in an amount to be determined by the Court.

    “The CARES Act offered emergency assistance to struggling small businesses that were impacted by the pandemic. The defendant chose to exploit that lifeline for personal enrichment,” said Acting United States Attorney Lisa G. Johnston. “The United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of West Virginia is glad to have played a significant role teaming with our law enforcement partners to hold the defendant accountable.”

    Johnston commended the excellent investigative work of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the West Virginia State Police – Bureau of Criminal Investigation (BCI), and the West Virginia State Auditor’s Office (WVSAO) Public Integrity and Fraud Unit (PIFU).

    Sutton and Wright and are among several individuals indicted by a federal grand jury on charges alleging they and others conspired, as well as aided and abetted one another, to obtain fraudulent PPP loans totaling $140,625. Wright, 32, of Charleston, pleaded guilty on July 14, 2025, to aiding and abetting the laundering of monetary instruments and is scheduled to be sentenced on October 29, 2025. William Powell and Damisha Brown each pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit bank fraud. Powell, 35, of Huntington, is scheduled to be sentenced on August 14, 2025 and Brown, 32, of Charleston, is scheduled to be sentenced on October 2, 2025. Jasmine Spencer, 32, of Charleston, pleaded guilty on March 25, 2025, to aiding and abetting bank fraud and is scheduled to be sentenced on August 21, 2025.

    United States District Judge Irene C. Berger presided over the jury trial. Assistant United States Attorneys Jonathan T. Storage and Jennifer D. Gordon and former Assistant United States Attorney Holly Wilson have prosecuted the case.

    Individuals with information about allegations of fraud involving COVID-19 are encouraged to report it by calling the Department of Justice’s National Center for Disaster Fraud Hotline at 866-720-5721, or via the NCDF Web Complaint Form at: https://www.justice.gov/disaster-fraud/ncdf-disaster-complaint-form.

    A copy of this press release is located on the website of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of West Virginia. Related court documents and information can be found on PACER by searching for Case No. 2:24-cr-192.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI: What Higher Rates Haven’t Changed: The Role of Smart Credit – and Smarter Relationships

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    CHICAGO, July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — In a high-rate environment, business lending has become more selective, but not impossible. For banks and borrowers who focus on fundamentals, communication, and long- term planning, financing is still getting done. To help make sense of what’s changing (and what still works), we spoke with Brian R. Monson, Senior Vice President and Deputy Chief Credit Officer at First American Bank.

    With more than two decades of experience in commercial credit and underwriting, Brian offers timely insights into borrower behavior, what banks are really looking for right now, and why strong relationships still make the biggest difference.

    Q: How has the rise in interest rates changed the lending landscape?

    Brian: When rates spiked, many business owners did what you’d expect: they paused and reassessed. Loan payments were suddenly much higher. Deals that made sense a year ago didn’t pencil out the same way. So, sponsors started bringing in more equity, valuations came down, and people got more cautious.

    We saw a slowdown in loan demand across the board. Businesses crave certainty, and when that’s in short supply, they tend to wait.

    Q: Are you still seeing strong lending activity in certain cases?

    Brian: Absolutely. While the volume of deals has slowed, the fundamentals haven’t changed. We’re still making loans every day to companies that are well-managed, financially sound, and planning ahead. What’s different now is that credit decisions require more context. Numbers matter, but the story behind those numbers matters more.

    Q: What kind of factors do you look at beyond the financials?

    Brian: We take a holistic view. Are receivables being collected on time? Are vendors getting paid within terms? Is the business managing liquidity effectively? These are the kinds of operational details that tell us how a company is run. And in a tighter environment, they’re more important than ever.

    Some sectors, like logistics, are under more pressure. It’s a capital-intensive industry, and with softer freight volumes and equipment devaluations, many operators are struggling. But being in a high-risk industry doesn’t automatically make a borrower risky. It just means we have to structure the deal the right way and really understand what’s going on behind the scenes.

    Q: What kinds of financing does First American Bank typically provide?

    Brian: We finance two things: capital goods and time gaps. That means if you’re buying long-term assets like equipment, or if you need working capital to bridge the gap between inventory purchases and customer payments – we can help.

    What we don’t finance are losses, non-operating activities, or distributions that lack reasonably foreseeable resolution. That’s something we’re upfront about. Being clear on how the financing will be used protects both the bank and the borrower.

    Q: What support do you offer for businesses that don’t have deep internal finance teams?

    Brian: A lot of our clients are owner-led or family-run businesses. They might not have a CFO or a formal advisory team. So, they rely on us for guidance, not just capital. That’s where we really differentiate ourselves. Our bankers know their industries. They’ve seen similar situations before, and they can help clients navigate decisions beyond just the loan itself.

    We don’t make 30,000-foot credit decisions. And we don’t walk away from borrowers just because they don’t fit a rigid profile.

    Q: Can you give an example of how a relationship made a difference for a client?

    Brian: I worked with a company in the automotive manufacturing space who was doing great: profitable, growing, well-run. But their national bank cut ties with them overnight because they didn’t like the sector. No conversation. Just a blanket exit strategy.

    We took the time to understand their business. We saw their long-term performance. We stepped in. That client is still with us today.

    Those are the moments where a real banking relationship matters. And it becomes even more important when something goes wrong, whether that’s a lost customer, a delayed receivable, or a temporary cash crunch. We want to be the first call our clients make, not the last.

    Q: What does risk-based lending look like in practice right now?

    Brian: It’s about being thoughtful and intentional. We ask the right questions, get clarity on the borrower’s business model, and structure loans to support long-term health. It’s not just about getting to “yes” or “no,” it’s about understanding how the credit will perform over time and making sure we’re aligned with the client’s goals.

    Interest rates will continue to fluctuate. The economy will shift. But strong fundamentals, transparent conversations, and long-term thinking – that’s what always works.

    Looking for a banking partner who understands your business?

    Our relationship-first approach to lending is built for long-term growth. Connect with a business banker to learn more today.

    Disclaimers: This information is for educational purposes only. It is not legal or tax advice. For legal or tax advice, you should consult your own legal, tax, and investment advisors.   

    First American Bank is a Member FDIC.

    About First American Bank
    First American Bank is the largest privately held bank in Illinois, with over $7 billion in assets and 61 locations across Illinois, Wisconsin, and Florida. Family-owned and operated since the 1960s, the bank offers a full range of financial services, including personal banking, business lending, and trust and wealth management. Known for combining community bank service with large-scale capabilities, First American Bank is committed to long-term relationships, financial stability, and delivering tailored solutions that help customers thrive.

    Media Contact: 
    Teresa Lee 
    305-631-6400 
    tlee@firstambank.com 

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Westamerica Bancorporation Reports Second Quarter 2025 Financial Results

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SAN RAFAEL, Calif., July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Westamerica Bancorporation (Nasdaq: WABC), parent company of Westamerica Bank, generated net income for the second quarter 2025 of $29.1 million and diluted earnings per common share (“EPS”) of $1.12. Second quarter 2025 results compare to first quarter 2025 net income of $31.0 million and EPS of $1.16.

    “Westamerica’s second quarter 2025 results benefited from the Company’s low-cost operating principles. The annualized cost of funding interest-earning loans, bonds and cash was 0.22 percent for the second quarter 2025. The Company recognized no provision for credit losses in the second quarter 2025. At June 30, 2025, nonperforming assets were $5.0 million and the allowance for credit losses on loans was $13.8 million. Westamerica operated efficiently, spending 39 percent of its revenue on operating costs in the second quarter 2025”, said Chairman, President and CEO David Payne. “Second quarter 2025 results generated an annualized 11.2 percent return on average common equity. Westamerica paid a $0.46 per common share dividend during the second quarter 2025, and retired 773 thousand common shares using its share repurchase plan. Westamerica’s capital ratios remain at historically high levels exceeding the highest regulatory guidelines,” concluded Payne.

    Net interest income on a fully-taxable equivalent (FTE) basis was $54.6 million for the second quarter 2025, compared to $56.4 million for the first quarter 2025. The annualized yield earned on loans, bonds and cash for the second quarter 2025 was 4.07 percent, compared to 4.14 percent for the first quarter 2025. The annualized cost of funding interest-earning loans, bonds and cash was 0.22 percent for the second quarter 2025, compared to 0.24 percent for the first quarter 2025.

    The Company provided no provision for credit losses in the second quarter 2025 compared to a $550 thousand reversal of provision for credit losses in the first quarter of 2025. The allowance for credit losses on loans was $13.8 million at June 30, 2025 compared to $13.9 million at March 31, 2025.

    Noninterest income for the second quarter 2025 totaled $10.3 million compared to $10.3 million for the first quarter 2025.

    Noninterest expenses were $25.5 million for the second quarter 2025 and $25.1 million for the first quarter 2025. The increase in noninterest expense is primarily due to higher salaries and benefits expense due to more business days in the second quarter 2025 compared to the first quarter 2025 and higher occupancy and equipment expense.

    The income tax provision (FTE) for the second quarter 2025 was $10.3 million compared to $11.1 million for the first quarter 2025.

    Westamerica Bancorporation’s wholly owned subsidiary Westamerica Bank, operates commercial banking and trust offices throughout Northern and Central California.

    Westamerica Bancorporation Web Address: www.westamerica.com

    For additional information contact:
    Westamerica Bancorporation
    1108 Fifth Avenue, San Rafael, CA 94901
    Robert A. Thorson – Investor Relations Contact
    707-863-6090
    investments@westamerica.com 

    FORWARD-LOOKING INFORMATION:

    The following appears in accordance with the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995:

    This press release may contain forward-looking statements about the Company, including descriptions of plans or objectives of its management for future operations, products or services, and forecasts of its revenues, earnings or other measures of economic performance. Forward-looking statements can be identified by the fact that they do not relate strictly to historical or current facts. They often include the words “believe,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “intend,” “plan,” “estimate,” or words of similar meaning, or future or conditional verbs such as “will,” “would,” “should,” “could,” or “may.”

    Forward-looking statements, by their nature, are subject to risks and uncertainties. A number of factors — many of which are beyond the Company’s control — could cause actual conditions, events or results to differ significantly from those described in the forward-looking statements. The Company’s most recent reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including the annual report for the year ended December 31, 2024 filed on Form 10-K and quarterly report for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 filed on Form 10-Q, describe some of these factors, including certain credit, interest rate, operational, liquidity and market risks associated with the Company’s business and operations. Other factors described in these reports include changes in business and economic conditions, competition, fiscal and monetary policies, disintermediation, cyber security risks, legislation including the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999, and mergers and acquisitions.

    Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date they are made. The Company does not undertake to update forward-looking statements to reflect circumstances or events that occur after the date forward looking statements are made.

        Public Information July 17, 2025  
    WESTAMERICA BANCORPORATION        
    FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS        
    June 30, 2025        
               
    1. Net Income Summary.        
        (in thousands except per-share amounts)
            %  
        Q2’2025 Q2’2024 Change Q1’2025
      Net Interest and Loan Fee        
      Income (FTE) $ 54,562   $ 64,100   -14.9 % $ 56,390  
      Reversal of Provision        
      for Credit Losses         n/m   (550 )
      Noninterest Income   10,315     10,500   -1.8 %   10,321  
      Noninterest Expense   25,529     26,130   -2.3 %   25,127  
      Income Before Taxes (FTE)   39,348     48,470   -18.8 %   42,134  
      Income Tax Provision (FTE)   10,282     13,008   -21.0 %   11,097  
      Net Income $ 29,066   $ 35,462   -18.0 % $ 31,037  
               
      Average Common Shares        
      Outstanding   25,889     26,680   -3.0 %   26,642  
      Diluted Average Common        
      Shares Outstanding   25,889     26,681   -3.0 %   26,642  
               
      Operating Ratios:        
      Basic Earnings Per Common        
      Share $ 1.12   $ 1.33   -15.8 % $ 1.16  
      Diluted Earnings Per        
      Common Share   1.12     1.33   -15.8 %   1.16  
      Return On Assets (a)   1.93 %   2.18 %     2.03 %
      Return On Common        
      Equity (a)   11.2 %   14.4 %     11.9 %
      Net Interest Margin (FTE) (a)   3.85 %   4.15 %     3.90 %
      Efficiency Ratio (FTE)   39.3 %   35.0 %     37.7 %
               
      Dividends Paid Per Common        
      Share $ 0.46   $ 0.44   4.5 % $ 0.44  
      Common Dividend Payout        
      Ratio   41 %   33 %     38 %
               
            %  
        6/30’25YTD 6/30’24YTD Change  
      Net Interest and Loan Fee        
      Income (FTE) $ 110,952   $ 130,194   -14.8 %  
      (Reversal of) Provision        
      for Credit Losses   (550 )   300   n/m  
      Noninterest Income   20,636     20,597   0.2 %  
      Noninterest Expense   50,656     52,229   -3.0 %  
      Income Before Taxes (FTE)   81,482     98,262   -17.1 %  
      Income Tax Provision (FTE)   21,379     26,383   -19.0 %  
      Net Income $ 60,103   $ 71,879   -16.4 %  
               
      Average Common Shares        
      Outstanding   26,263     26,677   -1.6 %  
      Diluted Average Common        
      Shares Outstanding   26,263     26,678   -1.6 %  
               
      Operating Ratios:        
      Basic Earnings Per Common        
      Share $ 2.29   $ 2.69   -14.9 %  
      Diluted Earnings Per        
      Common Share   2.29     2.69   -14.9 %  
      Return On Assets (a)   1.98 %   2.21 %    
      Return On Common        
      Equity (a)   11.6 %   14.8 %    
      Net Interest Margin (FTE) (a)   3.87 %   4.23 %    
      Efficiency Ratio (FTE)   38.5 %   34.6 %    
               
      Dividends Paid Per Common        
      Share $ 0.90   $ 0.88   2.3 %  
      Common Dividend Payout        
      Ratio   39 %   33 %    
               
    2. Net Interest Income.        
        (dollars in thousands)
            %  
        Q2’2025 Q2’2024 Change Q1’2025
      Interest and Loan Fee        
      Income (FTE) $ 57,751   $ 69,407   -16.8 % $ 59,786  
      Interest Expense   3,189     5,307   -39.9 %   3,396  
      Net Interest and Loan Fee        
      Income (FTE) $ 54,562   $ 64,100   -14.9 % $ 56,390  
               
      Average Earning Assets $ 5,652,443   $ 6,145,626   -8.0 % $ 5,794,836  
      Average Interest-Bearing        
      Liabilities   2,693,505     3,001,786   -10.3 %   2,770,099  
               
      Yield on Earning Assets        
      (FTE) (a)   4.07 %   4.50 %     4.14 %
      Cost of Funds (a)   0.22 %   0.35 %     0.24 %
      Net Interest Margin (FTE) (a)   3.85 %   4.15 %     3.90 %
      Interest Expense /        
      Interest-Bearing        
      Liabilities (a)   0.48 %   0.71 %     0.50 %
      Net Interest Spread (FTE) (a)   3.59 %   3.79 %     3.64 %
               
            %  
        6/30’25YTD 6/30’24YTD Change  
      Interest and Loan Fee        
      Income (FTE) $ 117,537   $ 138,502   -15.1 %  
      Interest Expense   6,585     8,308   -20.7 %  
      Net Interest and Loan Fee        
      Income (FTE) $ 110,952   $ 130,194   -14.8 %  
               
      Average Earning Assets $ 5,723,246   $ 6,132,497   -6.7 %  
      Average Interest-Bearing        
      Liabilities   2,731,590     2,978,676   -8.3 %  
               
      Yield on Earning Assets        
      (FTE) (a)   4.11 %   4.50 %    
      Cost of Funds (a)   0.24 %   0.27 %    
      Net Interest Margin (FTE) (a)   3.87 %   4.23 %    
      Interest Expense /        
      Interest-Bearing        
      Liabilities (a)   0.49 %   0.56 %    
      Net Interest Spread (FTE) (a)   3.62 %   3.94 %    
               
    3. Loans & Other Earning Assets.        
        (average volume, dollars in thousands)
            %  
        Q2’2025 Q2’2024 Change Q1’2025
               
      Total Assets $ 6,042,100   $ 6,549,203   -7.7 % $ 6,187,321  
      Total Earning Assets   5,652,443     6,145,626   -8.0 %   5,794,836  
      Total Loans   762,216     838,016   -9.0 %   789,935  
      Commercial Loans   115,943     133,605   -13.2 %   120,189  
      Commercial Real Estate        
      Loans   488,960     487,209   0.4 %   497,379  
      Consumer Loans   157,313     217,202   -27.6 %   172,367  
      Total Investment Securities   4,236,303     4,944,191   -14.3 %   4,395,565  
      Debt Securities Available for        
      Sale   3,400,199     4,079,896   -16.7 %   3,553,755  
      Debt Securities Held to        
      Maturity   836,104     864,295   -3.3 %   841,810  
      Total Interest-Bearing Cash   653,924     363,419   79.9 %   609,336  
               
      Loans / Deposits   15.7 %   16.1 %     15.9 %
               
            %  
        6/30’25YTD 6/30’24YTD Change  
               
      Total Assets $ 6,114,310   $ 6,537,562   -6.5 %  
      Total Earning Assets   5,723,246     6,132,497   -6.7 %  
      Total Loans   775,999     845,785   -8.3 %  
      Commercial Loans   118,054     133,514   -11.6 %  
      Commercial Real Estate        
      Loans   493,146     488,099   1.0 %  
      Consumer Loans   164,799     224,172   -26.5 %  
      Total Investment Securities   4,315,494     5,021,365   -14.1 %  
      Debt Securities Available for        
      Sale   3,476,553     4,152,185   -16.3 %  
      Debt Securities Held to        
      Maturity   838,941     869,180   -3.5 %  
      Total Interest-Bearing Cash   631,753     265,347   138.1 %  
               
      Loans / Deposits   15.8 %   16.0 %    
               
    4. Deposits, Other Interest-Bearing Liabilities & Equity.    
        (average volume, dollars in thousands)
            %  
        Q2’2025 Q2’2024 Change Q1’2025
               
      Total Deposits $ 4,841,803   $ 5,202,620   -6.9 % $ 4,958,554  
      Noninterest Demand   2,245,077     2,485,023   -9.7 %   2,293,059  
      Interest-Bearing Transaction   908,367     981,703   -7.5 %   935,054  
      Savings   1,611,845     1,642,806   -1.9 %   1,649,631  
      Time greater than $100K   27,306     34,721   -21.4 %   29,460  
      Time less than $100K   49,208     58,367   -15.7 %   51,350  
      Total Short-Term Borrowings   96,779     284,189   -65.9 %   104,604  
      Bank Term Funding Program        
      Borrowings       200,000   n/m    
      Securities Sold under        
      Repurchase Agreements   96,779     84,189   15.0 %   104,604  
      Shareholders’ Equity   1,037,185     990,927   4.7 %   1,055,925  
               
      Demand Deposits /        
      Total Deposits   46.4 %   47.8 %     46.2 %
      Transaction & Savings        
      Deposits / Total Deposits   98.4 %   98.2 %     98.4 %
               
            %  
        6/30’25YTD 6/30’24YTD Change  
               
      Total Deposits $ 4,899,856   $ 5,290,840   -7.4 %  
      Noninterest Demand   2,268,936     2,508,702   -9.6 %  
      Interest-Bearing Transaction   921,637     1,019,998   -9.6 %  
      Savings   1,630,633     1,667,261   -2.2 %  
      Time greater than $100K   28,377     35,427   -19.9 %  
      Time less than $100K   50,273     59,452   -15.4 %  
      Total Short-Term Borrowings   100,670     196,538   -48.8 %  
      Bank Term Funding Program        
      Borrowings       131,291   n/m  
      Securities Sold under        
      Repurchase Agreements   100,670     65,247   54.3 %  
      Shareholders’ Equity   1,046,504     978,384   7.0 %  
               
      Demand Deposits /        
      Total Deposits   46.3 %   47.4 %    
      Transaction & Savings        
      Deposits / Total Deposits   98.4 %   98.2 %    
               
    5. Interest Yields Earned & Rates Paid.        
        (dollars in thousands)  
        Q2’2025  
        Average Income/ Yield (a) /  
        Volume Expense Rate (a)  
               
      Interest & Loan Fee Income Earned:        
      Total Earning Assets (FTE) $ 5,652,443   $ 57,751   4.07 %  
      Total Loans (FTE)   762,216     10,591   5.57 %  
      Commercial Loans (FTE)   115,943     1,833   6.34 %  
      Commercial Real Estate        
      Loans   488,960     6,452   5.29 %  
      Consumer Loans   157,313     2,306   5.88 %  
      Total Investments (FTE)   4,236,303     39,887   3.75 %  
      Total Debt Securities        
      Available for Sale (FTE)   3,400,199     31,354   3.67 %  
      Corporate Securities   1,945,959     12,898   2.65 %  
      Collateralized Loan        
      Obligations   792,914     12,405   6.19 %  
      Agency Mortgage Backed        
      Securities   273,083     2,334   3.42 %  
      Securities of U.S.        
      Government Sponsored        
      Entities   311,923     2,777   3.56 %  
      Obligations of States and        
      Political Subdivisions        
      (FTE)   62,093     506   3.26 %  
      Other Debt Securities        
      Available for Sale (FTE)   14,227     434   12.21 %  
      Total Debt Securities Held to        
      Maturity (FTE)   836,104     8,533   4.08 %  
      Agency Mortgage Backed        
      Securities   51,839     304   2.35 %  
      Corporate Securities   737,787     7,816   4.24 %  
      Obligations of States and        
      Political Subdivisions        
      (FTE)   46,478     413   3.56 %  
      Total Interest-Bearing Cash   653,924     7,273   4.40 %  
               
      Interest Expense Paid:        
      Total Earning Assets   5,652,443     3,189   0.22 %  
      Total Interest-Bearing        
      Liabilities   2,693,505     3,189   0.48 %  
      Total Interest-Bearing        
      Deposits   2,596,726     3,045   0.47 %  
      Interest-Bearing Transaction   908,367     44   0.02 %  
      Savings   1,611,845     2,950   0.73 %  
      Time less than $100K   49,208     37   0.30 %  
      Time greater than $100K   27,306     14   0.21 %  
      Total Short-Term Borrowings   96,779     144   0.60 %  
      Securities Sold under        
      Repurchase Agreements   96,779     144   0.60 %  
               
      Net Interest Income and        
      Margin (FTE)   $ 54,562   3.85 %  
               
        Q2’2024  
        Average Income/ Yield (a) /  
        Volume Expense Rate (a)  
      Interest & Loan Fee Income Earned:        
      Total Earning Assets (FTE) $ 6,145,626   $ 69,407   4.50 %  
      Total Loans (FTE)   838,016     11,441   5.49 %  
      Commercial Loans (FTE)   133,605     2,418   7.28 %  
      Commercial Real Estate        
      Loans   487,209     6,014   4.96 %  
      Consumer Loans   217,202     3,009   5.57 %  
      Total Investments (FTE)   4,944,191     53,005   4.27 %  
      Total Debt Securities        
      Available for Sale (FTE)   4,079,896     44,236   4.31 %  
      Corporate Securities   2,090,829     14,366   2.75 %  
      Collateralized Loan        
      Obligations   1,347,475     24,620   7.23 %  
      Agency Mortgage Backed        
      Securities   241,391     1,465   2.43 %  
      Securities of U.S.        
      Government sponsored        
      entities   309,395     2,777   3.59 %  
      Obligations of States and        
      Political Subdivisions        
      (FTE)   72,319     543   3.01 %  
      U.S. Treasury Securities   4,260     54   5.08 %  
      Other Debt Securities        
      Available for Sale (FTE)   14,227     411   11.55 %  
      Total Debt Securities Held to        
      Maturity (FTE)   864,295     8,769   4.06 %  
      Agency Mortgage Backed        
      Securities   70,804     401   2.27 %  
      Corporate Securities   730,978     7,815   4.28 %  
      Obligations of States and        
      Political Subdivisions        
      (FTE)   62,513     553   3.54 %  
      Total Interest-Bearing Cash   363,419     4,961   5.40 %  
               
      Interest Expense Paid:        
      Total Earning Assets   6,145,626     5,307   0.35 %  
      Total Interest-Bearing        
      Liabilities   3,001,786     5,307   0.71 %  
      Total Interest-Bearing        
      Deposits   2,717,597     2,460   0.36 %  
      Interest-Bearing Transaction   981,703     69   0.03 %  
      Savings   1,642,806     2,322   0.57 %  
      Time less than $100K   58,367     49   0.34 %  
      Time greater than $100K   34,721     20   0.23 %  
      Total Short-Term Borrowings   284,189     2,847   4.02 %  
      Bank Term Funding Program        
      Borrowings   200,000     2,692   5.40 %  
      Securities Sold under        
      Repurchase Agreements   84,189     155   0.74 %  
               
      Net Interest Income and        
      Margin (FTE)   $ 64,100   4.15 %  
               
    6. Noninterest Income.        
        (dollars in thousands except per-share amounts)
            %  
        Q2’2025 Q2’2024 Change Q1’2025
      Service Charges on Deposit        
      Accounts $ 3,368   $ 3,469   -2.9 % $ 3,381  
      Merchant Processing        
      Services   2,687     2,733   -1.7 %   2,733  
      Debit Card Fees   1,664     1,706   -2.5 %   1,581  
      Trust Fees   867     811   6.9 %   899  
      ATM Processing Fees   482     540   -10.7 %   463  
      Other Service Fees   450     450   0.0 %   429  
      Life Insurance Gains   106       n/m   102  
      Other Noninterest Income   691     791   -12.6 %   733  
      Total Noninterest Income $ 10,315   $ 10,500   -1.8 % $ 10,321  
               
      Operating Ratios:        
      Total Revenue (FTE) $ 64,877   $ 74,600   -13.0 % $ 66,711  
      Noninterest Income /        
      Revenue (FTE)   15.9 %   14.1 %     15.5 %
      Service Charges /        
      Avg. Deposits (a)   0.28 %   0.27 %     0.28 %
      Total Revenue (FTE) Per        
      Avg. Common Share (a) $ 10.05   $ 11.25   -10.6 % $ 10.16  
               
            %  
        6/30’25YTD 6/30’24YTD Change  
      Service Charges on Deposit        
      Accounts $ 6,749   $ 6,939   -2.7 %  
      Merchant Processing        
      Services   5,420     5,240   3.4 %  
      Debit Card Fees   3,245     3,249   -0.1 %  
      Trust Fees   1,766     1,605   10.0 %  
      ATM Processing Fees   945     1,131   -16.4 %  
      Other Service Fees   879     888   -1.0 %  
      Life Insurance Gains   208       n/m  
      Other Noninterest Income   1,424     1,545   -7.8 %  
      Total Noninterest Income $ 20,636   $ 20,597   0.2 %  
               
      Operating Ratios:        
      Total Revenue (FTE) $ 131,588   $ 150,791   -12.7 %  
      Noninterest Income /        
      Revenue (FTE)   15.7 %   13.7 %    
      Service Charges /        
      Avg. Deposits (a)   0.28 %   0.26 %    
      Total Revenue (FTE) Per        
      Avg. Common Share (a) $ 10.10   $ 11.37   -11.1 %  
               
    7. Noninterest Expense.        
        (dollars in thousands)
            %  
        Q2’2025 Q2’2024 Change Q1’2025
               
      Salaries and Related Benefits $ 12,303   $ 12,483   -1.4 % $ 12,126  
      Occupancy and Equipment   5,154     5,158   -0.1 %   5,038  
      Outsourced Data Processing   2,709     2,511   7.9 %   2,697  
      Limited Partnership        
      Operating Losses   915     1,440   -36.5 %   915  
      Professional Fees   386     362   6.6 %   395  
      Courier Service   687     686   0.1 %   688  
      Other Noninterest Expense   3,375     3,490   -3.3 %   3,268  
      Total Noninterest Expense $ 25,529   $ 26,130   -2.3 % $ 25,127  
               
      Operating Ratios:        
      Noninterest Expense /        
      Avg. Earning Assets (a)   1.81 %   1.71 %     1.76 %
      Noninterest Expense /        
      Revenues (FTE)   39.3 %   35.0 %     37.7 %
               
            %  
        6/30’25YTD 6/30’24YTD Change  
               
      Salaries and Related Benefits $ 24,429   $ 25,069   -2.6 %  
      Occupancy and Equipment   10,192     10,198   -0.1 %  
      Outsourced Data Processing   5,406     5,047   7.1 %  
      Limited Partnership        
      Operating Losses   1,830     2,880   -36.5 %  
      Professional Fees   781     764   2.2 %  
      Courier Service   1,375     1,335   3.0 %  
      Other Noninterest Expense   6,643     6,936   -4.2 %  
      Total Noninterest Expense $ 50,656   $ 52,229   -3.0 %  
               
      Operating Ratios:        
      Noninterest Expense /        
      Avg. Earning Assets (a)   1.78 %   1.71 %    
      Noninterest Expense /        
      Revenues (FTE)   38.5 %   34.6 %    
               
    8. Allowance for Credit Losses.        
        (dollars in thousands)
            %  
        Q2’2025 Q2’2024 Change Q1’2025
               
      Average Total Loans $ 762,216   $ 838,016   -9.0 % $ 789,935  
               
      Beginning of Period        
      Allowance for Credit        
      Losses on Loans (ACLL) $ 13,914   $ 15,879   -12.4 % $ 14,780  
      Reversal of Provision for        
      Credit Losses         n/m   (550 )
      Net ACLL (Losses)        
      Recoveries   (127 )   73   n/m   (316 )
      End of Period ACLL $ 13,787   $ 15,952   -13.6 % $ 13,914  
               
      Gross ACLL Recoveries /        
      Gross ACLL Losses   87 %   105 %     82 %
      Net ACLL (Losses)        
      Recoveries/        
      Avg. Total Loans (a)   -0.07 %   0.04 %     -0.16 %
               
            %  
        6/30’25YTD 6/30’24YTD Change  
               
      Average Total Loans $ 775,999   $ 845,785   -8.3 %  
               
      Beginning of Period ACLL $ 14,780   $ 16,867   -12.4 %  
      (Reversal of) Provision for        
      Credit Losses   (550 )   300   n/m  
      Net ACLL Losses   (443 )   (1,215 ) -63.5 %  
      End of Period ACLL $ 13,787   $ 15,952   -13.6 %  
               
      Gross ACLL Recoveries /        
      Gross ACLL Losses   83 %   66 %    
      Net ACLL Losses /        
      Avg. Total Loans (a)   -0.12 %   -0.29 %    
               
        (dollars in thousands)
            %  
        6/30/25 6/30/24 Change 3/31/25
      Allowance for Credit Losses        
      on Loans $ 13,787   $ 15,952   -13.6 % $ 13,914  
      Allowance for Credit Losses        
      on Held to Maturity        
      Securities   1     1   0.0 %   1  
      Total Allowance for Credit        
      Losses $ 13,788   $ 15,953   -13.6 % $ 13,915  
               
      Allowance for Unfunded        
      Credit Commitments $ 201   $ 201   0.0 % $ 201  
               
    9. Credit Quality.        
        (dollars in thousands)
            %  
        6/30/25 6/30/24 Change 3/31/25
      Nonperforming Loans:        
      Nonperforming Nonaccrual        
      Loans $   $ 971   n/m $  
      Performing Nonaccrual        
      Loans   4,553       n/m    
      Total Nonaccrual Loans   4,553     971   368.9 %    
      Accruing Loans 90+ Days        
      Past Due   411     580   -29.1 %   277  
      Total Nonperforming Loans $ 4,964   $ 1,551   220.1 % $ 277  
               
      Total Loans Outstanding $ 748,264   $ 831,842   -10.0 % $ 771,030  
               
      Total Assets   5,825,069     6,312,145   -7.7 %   5,966,624  
               
      Loans:        
      Allowance for Credit Losses        
      on Loans $ 13,787   $ 15,952   -13.6 % $ 13,914  
      Allowance for Credit Losses        
      on Loans / Loans   1.84 %   1.92 %     1.80 %
      Nonperforming Loans /        
      Total Loans   0.66 %   0.19 %     0.04 %
               
    10. Liquidity.        
               
      At June 30, 2025, the Company had $626,437 thousand in cash balances. During the twelve months ending June 30, 2026, the Company expects to receive $288,000 thousand in principal payments from its debt securities. If additional operational liquidity is required, the Company can pledge debt securities as collateral for borrowing purposes; at June 30, 2025, the Company’s debt securities which qualify as collateral for borrowing totaled $3,522,823 thousand. In the ordinary course of business, the Company pledges debt securities as collateral for certain depository customers; at June 30, 2025, the Company had pledged $715,788 thousand in debt securities for depository customers. In the ordinary course of business, the Company pledges debt securities as collateral for borrowing from the Federal Reserve Bank; at June 30, 2025, the Company had pledged $703,398 thousand in debt securities at the Federal Reserve Bank. During the six months ended June 30, 2025, the Company’s average borrowings from the Federal Reserve Bank and correspondent banks were $-0- thousand and $-0- thousand, respectively, and at June 30, 2025, the Company had no borrowings from the Federal Reserve Bank or other correspondent banks. At June 30, 2025, the Company had access to borrowing from the Federal Reserve up to $703,398 thousand based on collateral pledged at June 30, 2025. At June 30, 2025, the Company’s estimated unpledged collateral qualifying debt securities totaled $1,683,788 thousand. Debt securities eligible as collateral are shown at market value.
               
              (in thousands)
              6/30/25
      Debt Securities Eligible as        
      Collateral:        
      Corporate Securities       $ 2,517,133  
      Collateralized Loan        
      Obligations rated AAA         257,649  
      Obligations of States and        
      Political Subdivisions         106,428  
      Agency Mortgage Backed        
      Securities         339,710  
      Securities of U.S. Government        
      Sponsored Entities         301,903  
      Total Debt Securities Eligible        
      as Collateral       $ 3,522,823  
               
      Debt Securities Pledged        
      as Collateral:        
      Debt Securities Pledged        
      at the Federal Reserve Bank       ($ 703,398 )
      Deposits by Public Entities         (715,788 )
      Securities Sold under        
      Repurchase Agreements         (412,956 )
      Other         (6,893 )
      Total Debt Securities Pledged        
      as Collateral       ($ 1,839,035 )
               
      Estimated Debt Securities        
      Available to Pledge       $ 1,683,788  
               
    11. Capital.        
        (in thousands, except per-share amounts)
            %  
        6/30/25 6/30/24 Change 3/31/25
               
      Shareholders’ Equity $ 921,783   $ 815,600   13.0 % $ 923,138  
      Total Assets   5,825,069     6,312,145   -7.7 %   5,966,624  
      Shareholders’ Equity/        
      Total Assets   15.82 %   12.92 %     15.47 %
      Shareholders’ Equity/        
      Total Loans   123.19 %   98.05 %     119.73 %
      Tangible Common Equity        
      Ratio   14.03 %   11.21 %     13.71 %
      Common Shares Outstanding   25,587     26,683   -4.1 %   26,360  
      Common Equity Per Share $ 36.03   $ 30.57   17.9 % $ 35.02  
      Market Value Per Common        
      Share   48.44     48.53   -0.2 %   50.63  
               
        (shares in thousands)
            %  
        Q2’2025 Q2’2024 Change Q1’2025
      Share Retirements (Issuances):        
      Total Shares Retired   773       n/m   361  
      Average Retirement Price $ 49.61   $   n/m $ 50.96  
      Net Shares Retired (Issued)   773     (5 ) n/m   348  
               
            %  
        6/30’25YTD 6/30’24YTD Change  
               
      Total Shares Retired   1,134     4   n/m  
      Average Retirement Price $ 49.88   $ 45.58   n/m  
      Net Shares Retired (Issued)   1,121     (12 ) n/m  
             
    12. Period-End Balance Sheets.        
        (unaudited, dollars in thousands)
            %  
        6/30/25 6/30/24 Change 3/31/25
      Assets:        
      Cash and Due from Banks $ 626,437   $ 486,124   28.9 % $ 727,336  
               
      Debt Securities Available for        
      Sale:        
      Corporate Securities   1,792,021     1,855,618   -3.4 %   1,802,791  
      Collateralized Loan        
      Obligations   780,147     1,255,110   -37.8 %   822,111  
      Agency Mortgage Backed        
      Securities   291,543     222,806   30.9 %   250,844  
      Securities of U.S.        
      Government Sponsored        
      Entities   301,903     291,206   3.7 %   299,722  
      Obligations of States and        
      Political Subdivisions   60,835     69,758   -12.8 %   60,581  
      U.S. Treasury Securities       4,820   n/m    
      Total Debt Securities        
      Available for Sale   3,226,449     3,699,318   -12.8 %   3,236,049  
               
      Debt Securities Held to        
      Maturity:        
      Agency Mortgage Backed        
      Securities   49,878     67,777   -26.4 %   53,528  
      Corporate Securities   738,846     732,049   0.9 %   737,146  
      Obligations of States and        
      Political Subdivisions (1)   45,715     61,042   -25.1 %   48,674  
      Total Debt Securities        
      Held to Maturity (1)   834,439     860,868   -3.1 %   839,348  
               
      Loans   748,264     831,842   -10.0 %   771,030  
      Allowance For Credit Losses        
      on Loans   (13,787 )   (15,952 ) -13.6 %   (13,914 )
      Total Loans, net   734,477     815,890   -10.0 %   757,116  
               
      Premises and Equipment, net   25,850     26,275   -1.6 %   25,722  
      Identifiable Intangibles, net   19     234   -91.9 %   72  
      Goodwill   121,673     121,673   0.0 %   121,673  
      Other Assets   255,725     301,763   -15.3 %   259,308  
               
      Total Assets $ 5,825,069   $ 6,312,145   -7.7 % $ 5,966,624  
               
      Liabilities and Shareholders’        
      Equity:        
      Deposits:        
      Noninterest-Bearing $ 2,175,841   $ 2,459,467   -11.5 % $ 2,241,802  
      Interest-Bearing Transaction   894,774     936,186   -4.4 %   920,461  
      Savings   1,603,974     1,646,781   -2.6 %   1,633,445  
      Time   72,946     89,006   -18.0 %   78,387  
      Total Deposits   4,747,535     5,131,440   -7.5 %   4,874,095  
               
      Bank Term Funding        
      Program Borrowings       200,000   n/m    
      Securities Sold under        
      Repurchase Agreements   101,210     100,167   1.0 %   113,219  
      Total Short-Term        
      Borrowed Funds   101,210     300,167   -66.3 %   113,219  
               
      Other Liabilities   54,541     64,938   -16.0 %   56,172  
      Total Liabilities   4,903,286     5,496,545   -10.8 %   5,043,486  
               
      Shareholders’ Equity:        
      Common Equity:        
      Paid-In Capital   456,964     474,618   -3.7 %   470,844  
      Accumulated Other        
      Comprehensive Loss   (116,747 )   (197,300 ) -40.8 %   (136,768 )
      Retained Earnings   581,566     538,282   8.0 %   589,062  
      Total Shareholders’ Equity   921,783     815,600   13.0 %   923,138  
               
      Total Liabilities and        
      Shareholders’ Equity $ 5,825,069   $ 6,312,145   -7.7 % $ 5,966,624  
               
    13. Income Statements.        
        (unaudited, in thousands except per-share amounts)
            %  
        Q2’2025 Q2’2024 Change Q1’2025
      Interest and Loan Fee Income:        
      Loans $ 10,523   $ 11,354   -7.3 % $ 10,669  
      Equity Securities   195     175   11.4 %   195  
      Debt Securities Available        
      for Sale   31,028     43,927   -29.4 %   33,430  
      Debt Securities Held to        
      Maturity   8,448     8,655   -2.4 %   8,494  
      Interest-Bearing Cash   7,273     4,961   46.6 %   6,703  
      Total Interest and Loan        
      Fee Income   57,467     69,072   -16.8 %   59,491  
               
      Interest Expense:        
      Transaction Deposits   44     69   -36.2 %   46  
      Savings Deposits   2,950     2,322   27.0 %   3,128  
      Time Deposits   51     69   -26.1 %   55  
      Bank Term Funding Program        
      Borrowings       2,692   n/m    
      Securities Sold under        
      Repurchase Agreements   144     155   -6.7 %   167  
      Total Interest Expense   3,189     5,307   -39.9 %   3,396  
               
      Net Interest and Loan        
      Fee Income   54,278     63,765   -14.9 %   56,095  
               
      Reversal of Provision for        
      Credit Losses         n/m   (550 )
               
      Noninterest Income:        
      Service Charges on Deposit        
      Accounts   3,368     3,469   -2.9 %   3,381  
      Merchant Processing        
      Services   2,687     2,733   -1.7 %   2,733  
      Debit Card Fees   1,664     1,706   -2.5 %   1,581  
      Trust Fees   867     811   6.9 %   899  
      ATM Processing Fees   482     540   -10.7 %   463  
      Other Service Fees   450     450   0.0 %   429  
      Life Insurance Gains   106       n/m   102  
      Other Noninterest Income   691     791   -12.6 %   733  
      Total Noninterest Income   10,315     10,500   -1.8 %   10,321  
               
      Noninterest Expense:        
      Salaries and Related Benefits   12,303     12,483   -1.4 %   12,126  
      Occupancy and Equipment   5,154     5,158   -0.1 %   5,038  
      Outsourced Data Processing   2,709     2,511   7.9 %   2,697  
      Limited Partnership        
      Operating Losses   915     1,440   -36.5 %   915  
      Professional Fees   386     362   6.6 %   395  
      Courier Service   687     686   0.1 %   688  
      Other Noninterest Expense   3,375     3,490   -3.3 %   3,268  
      Total Noninterest Expense   25,529     26,130   -2.3 %   25,127  
               
      Income Before Income Taxes   39,064     48,135   -18.8 %   41,839  
      Income Tax Provision   9,998     12,673   -21.1 %   10,802  
      Net Income $ 29,066   $ 35,462   -18.0 % $ 31,037  
               
      Average Common Shares        
      Outstanding   25,889     26,680   -3.0 %   26,642  
      Diluted Average Common        
      Shares Outstanding   25,889     26,681   -3.0 %   26,642  
               
      Per Common Share Data:        
      Basic Earnings $ 1.12   $ 1.33   -15.8 % $ 1.16  
      Diluted Earnings   1.12     1.33   -15.8 %   1.16  
      Dividends Paid   0.46     0.44   4.5 %   0.44  
               
            %  
        6/30’25YTD 6/30’24YTD Change  
      Interest and Loan Fee Income:        
      Loans $ 21,192   $ 22,678   -6.6 %  
      Equity Securities   390     349   11.7 %  
      Debt Securities Available        
      for Sale   64,458     90,170   -28.5 %  
      Debt Securities Held to        
      Maturity   16,942     17,377   -2.5 %  
      Interest-Bearing Cash   13,976     7,244   92.9 %  
      Total Interest and Loan        
      Fee Income   116,958     137,818   -15.1 %  
               
      Interest Expense:        
      Transaction Deposits   90     188   -52.1 %  
      Savings Deposits   6,078     4,239   43.4 %  
      Time Deposits   106     139   -23.7 %  
      Bank Term Funding Program        
      Borrowings       3,535   n/m  
      Securities Sold under        
      Repurchase Agreements   311     207   50.2 %  
      Total Interest Expense   6,585     8,308   -20.7 %  
               
      Net Interest and Loan        
      Fee Income   110,373     129,510   -14.8 %  
               
      (Reversal of) Provision        
      for Credit Losses   (550 )   300   n/m  
               
      Noninterest Income:        
      Service Charges on Deposit   6,749     6,939   -2.7 %  
      Accounts        
      Merchant Processing        
      Services   5,420     5,240   3.4 %  
      Debit Card Fees   3,245     3,249   -0.1 %  
      Trust Fees   1,766     1,605   10.0 %  
      ATM Processing Fees   945     1,131   -16.4 %  
      Other Service Fees   879     888   -1.0 %  
      Life Insurance Gains   208       n/m  
      Other Noninterest Income   1,424     1,545   -7.8 %  
      Total Noninterest Income   20,636     20,597   0.2 %  
               
      Noninterest Expense:        
      Salaries and Related Benefits   24,429     25,069   -2.6 %  
      Occupancy and Equipment   10,192     10,198   -0.1 %  
      Outsourced Data Processing   5,406     5,047   7.1 %  
      Limited Partnership        
      Operating Losses   1,830     2,880   -36.5 %  
      Professional Fees   781     764   2.2 %  
      Courier Service   1,375     1,335   3.0 %  
      Other Noninterest Expense   6,643     6,936   -4.2 %  
      Total Noninterest Expense   50,656     52,229   -3.0 %  
               
      Income Before Income Taxes   80,903     97,578   -17.1 %  
      Income Tax Provision   20,800     25,699   -19.1 %  
      Net Income $ 60,103   $ 71,879   -16.4 %  
               
      Average Common Shares        
      Outstanding   26,263     26,677   -1.6 %  
      Diluted Average Common        
      Shares Outstanding   26,263     26,678   -1.6 %  
               
      Per Common Share Data:        
      Basic Earnings $ 2.29   $ 2.69   -14.9 %  
      Diluted Earnings   2.29     2.69   -14.9 %  
      Dividends Paid   0.90     0.88   2.3 %  
               
      Footnotes and Abbreviations:        
      (1) Debt Securities Held To Maturity and Obligations of States and Political Subdivisions are net of related reserve for expected credit losses of $1 thousand at June 30, 2025, March 31, 2025 and June 30, 2024.
               
      (FTE) Fully Taxable Equivalent. The Company presents its net interest margin and net interest income on a FTE basis using the current statutory federal tax rate. Management believes the FTE basis is valuable to the reader because the Company’s loan and investment securities portfolios contain a portion of municipal loans and securities that are federally tax exempt. The Company’s tax exempt loans and securities composition may not be similar to that of other banks, therefore in order to reflect the impact of the federally tax exempt loans and securities on the net interest margin and net interest income for comparability with other banks, the Company presents its net interest margin and net interest income on a FTE basis.
               
      (a) Annualized        
               

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Mauritius: African Development Bank Urges Bold Reforms to Unlock Capital and Accelerate Sustainable Growth in 2025 Report

    Source: APO

    The African Development Bank (www.AfDB.org) has urged Mauritius to accelerate structural reforms to unlock its vast capital potential and advance long-term, sustainable growth. The Bank made the call during the launch of its 2025 Country Focus Report for Mauritius, titled “Making Mauritius’ Capital Work Better for its Development.”

    The report notes that while Mauritius continues to post strong economic performance—recording real GDP growth of 4.9% in 2024, slightly down from 5% in 2023—structural constraints and external shocks continue to undermine the country’s growth trajectory. Key growth drivers in 2024 included construction, financial services, trade, and tourism, with arrivals reaching 1.38 million, representing 97% of pre-pandemic levels. On the demand side, consumption and investment were the primary drivers of growth.

    Despite the persistent challenges, the report underscores Mauritius’ significant untapped potential. In 2020, the island nation’s total national wealth was estimated at over $96 billion—more than six times its GDP—comprising human, financial, natural, and produced capital. In addition, Mauritius’ vast ocean economy resources, within its 2.3 million km² Exclusive Economic Zone, offer immense opportunities for developing a sustainable blue economy.

    Speaking at the launch event, Mahess Rawoteea, Deputy Financial Secretary at the Ministry of Finance, welcomed the recommendations in the report. “We are confident that the structural reforms outlined in the 2025–2026 Budget Speech will unlock significant investments, particularly in renewable energy, and contribute to higher GDP growth,” he said.

    Rawoteea emphasized the central role of human capital in Mauritius’ development, while acknowledging persistent challenges such as education quality, skills mismatches, low female labor participation, demographic shifts, and youth emigration. He announced the establishment of a Climate Finance Unit within the Ministry of Finance to help bridge the country’s climate financing gap.

    “Mauritius is undertaking institutional reforms to better mobilize domestic and foreign capital and promote sustainable development,” he added. “We are streamlining processes, enhancing transparency, and improving the ease of doing business. Environmental protection, including addressing beach erosion, is also a key priority.”

    Rawoteea expressed appreciation for the African Development Bank’s support, particularly in mobilizing investments in renewable energy and the ocean economy—two sectors identified as future growth pillars.

    In his keynote remarks, Prof. Kevin Urama, the Bank Group’s Chief Economist and Vice President for Economic Governance and Knowledge Management, emphasized Africa’s broader potential for transformation. “If Africa commits to investing in its own development and managing its assets efficiently, it can reduce external dependency and harness its enormous capital for transformative growth,” he said.

    Urama cited weak tax administration and inefficiencies in revenue collection as major constraints to development, urging a fundamental rethink of public financial management across the continent.

    Wolassa Kumo, the Bank’s Principal Country Economist for Mauritius presented an overview of the report. The launch event attracted senior government officials, development partners, private sector leaders, and civil society representatives.

    Among those in attendance were Hervé Lohoues, the Bank’s Division Manager for the Country Economics Department covering Nigeria, East Africa and Southern Africa, and Nontle Kabanyane, the Bank’s Principal Country Programme Officer, who moderated a panel discussion.

    The panel explored strategies for mobilizing domestic capital more effectively by strengthening institutions, improving regulatory frameworks, increasing transparency and accountability, and deepening regional trade integration. Panelists included:

    • Dr. Zyaad Boodoo, Ministry of Environment, Solid Waste Management and Climate Change (natural capital), Mauritius?
    • Mr. Sanjev Bhonoo, Principal Statistician, Statistics Mauritius (natural capital)
    • Mr. Ricaud M. Auckbur, Chief Technical Officer, Ministry of Education and Human Resources (human capital), Mauritius?
    • Ms. Zaahira Ebramjee, Head of National Economic Collaboration, Business Mauritius (business capital)
    • Mr. Vikram Ramful, Head of Listing, Stock Exchange of Mauritius (financial capital)

    Click here (https://apo-opa.co/46KmHkM) to download the report.

    Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Development Bank Group (AfDB).

    Media Contact:
    Emeka Anuforo
    Communication and External Relations Department
    media@afdb.org

    About the African Development Bank Group:
    The African Development Bank Group is Africa’s leading development finance institution. It comprises three distinct entities: the African Development Bank (AfDB), the African Development Fund (ADF) and the Nigeria Trust Fund (NTF). Represented in 41 African countries, with an external office in Japan, the Bank contributes to the economic development and social progress of its 54 regional member countries. For more information: www.AfDB.org

    Media files

    .

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: PM remarks at press conference with Chancellor Merz: 17 July 2025

    Source: United Kingdom – Prime Minister’s Office 10 Downing Street

    Speech

    PM remarks at press conference with Chancellor Merz: 17 July 2025

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s remarks at a press conference with Chancellor Merz.

    Good afternoon.

    It’s a real pleasure to welcome Chancellor Merz. 

    And it’s great to be here at Airbus today. I’m always amazed at this place when I come to visit, it’s not my first visit. 

    Thank you for showing us the amazing work you do here. 

    This is one the most cutting-edge facilities in Europe.

    Home to the Exo-Mars Rover, designed with German expertise and built right here in Stevenage.

    You are driving innovation in defence and space technology, making us all safer – leading us into the future.

    And this is at the heart of what brings Friedrich and I together.

    We see the scale of the challenges our continent faces today and we intend meet them head on. But we also see the scale of the opportunities. So, we have a shared resolve to shape this new era with new leadership.

    The UK and Germany side by side, delivering growth and security and delivering for working people.

    And that’s why, earlier today we did something genuinely unprecedented. Building on our new agreement with the EU, together, we signed the Kensington Treaty, the first ever major bilateral treaty between the United Kingdom and Germany. 

    Two great, modern European nations. It is an expression of our shared aims and values.

    But more than that – it is a practical workplan, setting out 17 major projects where we will come together to deliver real results which will improve people’s lives.

    So a historic treaty and statement of intent and ambition. And we intend to do, amongst other things, as leading NATO powers in Europe, committing not only to our mutual defence but also to maximise the benefits of our defence spending, in the shape of more jobs, more growth and more security.

    Under this treaty we will bring our industries together to boost defence exports by billions of pounds and we’ll speed up our collaboration on high tech weapons and equipment, strengthening NATO – and keeping our people safe. 

    Our economic links already support half a million British jobs.

    So under this treaty we’ll go further, with eGate access for frequent business travellers. I know that’s something very popular here. 

    A direct rail link, and a new UK-Germany Business Forum to boost investment, starting today with new investments into the UK worth over £200 million. 

    We’re also deepening collaboration on science and innovation, supporting great jobs, like those here at Airbus. 

    And we’re delivering new infrastructure projects, including in the North Sea Energy to produce power that is cheaper, greener and more secure.

    Crucially – we’re also working together on illegal migration. I want to thank Friedrich for his leadership on this.

    Pledging decisive action to strengthen German law this year so that small boats being stored or transported in Germany can be seized, disrupting the route to the UK and it’s a clear sign that we mean business. We are coming after the criminal gangs in every way we can. 

    We also discussed the appalling situation in Gaza. We are both working to support efforts towards a ceasefire and also to demand the immediate, unconditional release of the remaining hostages and the immediate, unconditional humanitarian access that is so desperately needed to deliver aid at volume and at speed.

    Finally, we discussed the situation Ukraine. Just a few days after Friedrich took office in May earlier this year we were both in Kyiv shoulder-to-shoulder with President Zelenskyy during one of the toughest moments in this horrendous war.

    Now we’re leading the work to get the best kit to Ukraine as fast as possible. We’ll keep pushing this forward – together with the US and other allies because ultimately our security starts in Ukraine. 

    So this is a partnership with a purpose. And I think it illustrates what our work on the international stage is all about. It’s about building the foundations of stability across our continent that make us safer, boost our economy and deliver change across for our people. It’s about delivering results and that’s what we’re working towards.  

    And, in a dangerous world, we do this together. 

    So thank you Friedrich –  for your partnership and your friendship.

    Now, over to you.

    Updates to this page

    Published 17 July 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: HS2 6-monthly report to Parliament: July 2025

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    Written statement to Parliament

    HS2 6-monthly report to Parliament: July 2025

    Review of High Speed Two (HS2) including programme governance, delivery update, benefits, community impacts, land and property.

    Overview

    Today (17 July 2025) I am publishing this government’s second update to Parliament on the progress of High Speed Two (HS2).

    In my previous report, I set out the difficult position that we inherited. HS2 has suffered from repeated cost increases and delays for too long. Although there have been external factors outside of the programme’s control, it has also been mismanaged. It is now clear that cost estimates were overly optimistic and the programme moved to construction too quickly when designs were still immature. Delivery of the programme has not been sufficiently controlled, with a poorly performing supply chain that was insufficiently incentivised. There have been repeated changes in policy, scope and funding and excessive costs incurred in achieving environmental and planning compliance. This means delayed benefits and cost increases incurred on HS2 have diverted billions of pounds from other vital transport priorities.

    This is unacceptable, the cycle of cost increases and delays must be broken and I am determined to achieve this. The project is now under new leadership, and I have tasked HS2 Ltd’s new CEO, Mark Wild, with leading a comprehensive reset of the programme. He is making progress, but this is a huge task, and we need to ensure he has a robust plan for delivering the programme to completion in a controlled way and at the lowest reasonable cost. To this end, the department will work with him and HS2 Ltd over the coming months to advise me on the decisions needed to reset HS2, with the aim of providing an updated delivery baseline and funding envelope in 2026. Until this work is completed, this government is not in a position to say with confidence how much HS2 will cost or when it will be delivered. That is a deeply unsatisfactory position, but it is necessary to complete the hard work we have embarked upon.

    Effective ministerial oversight will be at the heart of this reset. The Rail Minister and I meet regularly with Mark Wild to assess progress and in March, I chaired a meeting of the Ministerial Task Force with the Chief Secretary to the Treasury, focusing on completing the programme in a controlled way. In June, I appointed Mike Brown as the new Chair of the HS2 Ltd Board to help us drive effective oversight and accountability on the programme. Both Mark Wild and Mike Brown have experience in major project recovery from Crossrail, which will be invaluable to this task. Mike’s immediate priorities will include supporting Mark and strengthening the challenge that the Board provides to HS2 Ltd, to complement ministerial oversight.

    The reset needs to be guided by the lessons learned from HS2’s delivery to date. In June, I published the major transport projects governance and assurance review, led by James Stewart. This report set out recommendations and actions that we are taking to avoid repeating the mistakes of the past, helping to bring HS2 under control and to improve the delivery of future infrastructure projects.

    The government’s determination to now see this programme delivered as efficiently as possible is underpinned by the allocation of £25.3 billion (nominal prices) of funding over 4 years in the Spending Review, as set out in the financial annex.

    Despite the evident challenges, HS2 Ltd, its suppliers and over 33,000 workers have maintained steady progress on construction, achieving major delivery milestones since my last report.

    HS2 will foster economic growth in support of this government’s mission. Research commissioned by HS2 Ltd has found that the prospective arrival of HS2 is already leading to redevelopment around new HS2 stations, demonstrating the early potential of this scheme to act as a catalyst for investment in businesses, new jobs and homes. The research estimates that the programme will deliver economic uplifts of £10 billion in the West Midlands and £10 billion around Old Oak Common station in west London over the next 10 years. 

    Delivering an HS2 station at Euston remains a priority to realise the programme’s benefits. Following our commitment to funding the tunnelling required to bring HS2 to central London, we continue to work with key partners to develop affordable, integrated plans for the Euston station campus alongside significant levels of local development, including housing and life sciences institutions. In parallel, we recently announced that a Euston Delivery Company will be established to oversee the development of the whole Euston campus, which will comprise the new HS2 station, an upgraded Network Rail station and enhancements to the London Underground station and local transport facilities, along with a significant level of development. We welcome the joint venture that The Crown Estate has announced with Lendlease, our development partner at Euston. As set out in the 10-Year Infrastructure Strategy, we are exploring the use of private capital to design, build, finance and maintain the HS2 station.

    Finally, beyond individual rail schemes, the rail network must be viewed as a whole. HS2 will play a key part in our ambition to improve rail for passengers, with its services and benefits extending far beyond London and Birmingham, including the capacity it releases for other regional and London services.

    Delivery update

    Schedule and cost

    As I set out in the House of Commons on 18 June, based on Mark Wild’s initial advice, I see no route by which trains can be running by 2033 as previously planned. Mark has committed to establishing and delivering to a new baseline in 2026. Once this work is complete, we will have an agreed estimate of how much the project will cost and when it will be delivered.

    Whilst the reset is ongoing, the department is managing HS2 Ltd through strengthened in-year controls, including challenging targets and metrics to deliver within annual budgets. To drive in-year delivery performance, an enhanced level of governance and assurance has also been implemented, reflecting the recommendations of James Stewart’s review.

    This year, HS2 Ltd has rescheduled some work to ensure it operates within its annual financial settlement.

    Expenditure

    To the end of April 2025, £40.5 billion (nominal prices) had been spent on the HS2 programme. This is provided in more detail in the financial annex, based on data provided by HS2 Ltd.

    Spend to date information covers the period up to the end of April 2025. Unless stated otherwise, all figures are presented in nominal prices.

    Following the recent conclusion of the Spending Review, the department has reached a settlement with HM Treasury to fund the delivery of HS2, with £25.3 billion (nominal prices) covering financial years 2026 to 2027 to 2029 to 2030.

    This funding will enable the reset of the HS2 programme under the leadership of Mark Wild, addressing longstanding delivery challenges. It will enable HS2 to move forward with a more secure delivery plan and will support progress at the lowest reasonable cost.

    This settlement will support the continued delivery of Phase 1, providing funding for works from Old Oak Common to Birmingham Curzon Street and Handsacre Junction, Euston Tunnels and Approaches and Euston Station enabling works.

    The HS2 programme is currently in a period of high spend, with much of it in active construction. The department expects HS2 Ltd’s expenditure to become noticeably lower over the next Spending Review period as delivery of the programme progresses.

    The department has updated its reporting of historic programme expenditure from 2019 prices to nominal prices. Once the programme reset is complete and a new baseline agreed, HS2 Ltd will also uplift the price base for programme reporting and for the revised cost estimate. The department will consider how often the price base should be uplifted until the end of the programme.

    Construction progress

    Over 70% of HS2’s 32 miles of bored and mined tunnels between London and Birmingham have now been completed.

    Construction is progressing across the route, with active works underway on 44 viaducts, 126 bridges, 75 embankments and 60 cuttings.

    The Northolt Tunnels, which will link Old Oak Common Station to West Ruislip, were recently completed. Constructed in 2 phases – East and West – the tunnels were excavated using 4 tunnel boring machines (TBMs). TBMs Sushila and Caroline completed mining the western section in April 2025, while mining on the eastern section, led by TBMs Emily and Anne, was completed at the end of June 2025.

    In May, the first Bromford Tunnel broke through, connecting Warwickshire to Birmingham, marking the completion of the first section of the 3.5-mile tunnel.

    In April, a 14,500-tonne box structure that will carry the high-speed line was successfully installed under the A46. The installation utilised innovative civil and structural engineering techniques, which involved constructing the box on land before pushing it across a guiding raft over 64 metres into place.

    Over 8.5 million cubic metres of soil have been excavated, representing 73% of the total planned earthworks.

    In February, the first viaduct in the Delta Junction in North Warwickshire was completed, marking both a significant milestone in the construction of HS2 in the region and the first use of an innovative giant cantilever system in the UK.

    At Interchange Station in Solihull, enabling works have commenced on site, including surveys and ground investigations to inform the detailed design.

    The ‘systems and service’ tender was launched in February 2025 for the Automated People Mover (APM), which will provide connectivity between Interchange Station, the National Exhibition Centre, Birmingham International Station and Birmingham Airport.

    At Curzon Street Station in central Birmingham, piling works continue to progress with only the western section remaining. For this financial year, the focus will be on completing the design before construction starts next year. The updated Schedule 17 planning consents for the revised station designs were approved by Birmingham City Council on 8 May 2025. Schedule 17 of the High Speed Rail (London – West Midlands) Act 2017 establishes a process for the approval of matters related to the design and construction of the railway. It requires HS2 Ltd to seek approval from the appropriate planning authority, in this case, Birmingham City Council. This approval shall allow HS2 Ltd to construct the station with improvements to the visuals of the station and refinements to the long-term maintenance requirements. 

    At Old Oak Common Station in west London, the tunnel boring machines are being assembled with preparations currently underway to enable their launch towards Euston in spring 2026.

    In November 2024, we reached a key milestone with the award of the rail systems contracts worth around £3 billion in current prices. The contracts commenced in February 2025, but work on site will not start until main works civils are largely complete. Procurement of the Washwood Heath Depot and the National Integrated Control Centre continues.

    Lessons from the contracting failures of HS2’s main works programme have been firmly embedded in the systems contracts. The design of rail systems is more advanced at this stage than it was for main works civils, giving better cost certainty. HS2 Ltd has established an alliance with stronger incentives to ensure suppliers share risk, allowing us to manage costs better and drive performance. The contracts require fewer consents to be granted as well.

    Mobilisation on the rail systems contract has started and timelines are being developed in line with the wider programme challenges noted elsewhere in this report. There will be a formal review at the end of the design stage to make sure all parties are ready to start work on site, again learning from main works civils.

    Euston

    The department continues to work with key partners to develop affordable, integrated plans for the Euston station campus. In parallel, enabling works are continuing to ready the HS2 station site for the main construction programme.

    In terms of the delivery model, the government announced in its 10-Year Infrastructure Strategy that a Euston Delivery Company will be established to oversee the development of the whole Euston campus. The new delivery model will involve a changed role for HS2 Ltd but will go much broader than that to address historical challenges at the site. HS2 Ltd will remain a key partner, continuing to carry out important work at Euston.

    The department also continues to work with partners to examine available delivery and private finance options that will realise the great regeneration potential of the Euston area alongside the improvement of transport links.

    Specifically, the department is exploring options for various elements of the programme to be funded through a combination of private finance, development receipts, and potential local contributions such as tax increment financing, with a degree of residual public funding. The department has been engaging closely with HM Treasury and the National Infrastructure and Service Transformation Authority as it continues to develop its plans, and has appointed specialist advisors to ensure it has access to expert support.

    As we progress our plans to reinitiate delivery, we are embedding the recommendations of James Stewart’s review through the new delivery model and working closely with partners to manage risks sensibly and collectively. We will continue to work with key partners with the aim of restarting design later this year. No final decisions have been made regarding the preferred mechanisms to securing funding and finance, including private finance options; further details will be shared in due course.

    The delivery of HS2 has continued during this period to be the subject of both legal and planning challenges, which have added significant cost, uncertainty and potential for delay. It is right that there are checks and balances embedded in our legal and planning systems to ensure local interests are considered when national projects are implemented. There is, however, the risk that these rights are used to frustrate the delivery of consented projects, with legal challenges and planning powers used in a way that drives up costs to both local and national taxpayers, rather than protecting local interests. 

    The HS2 planning and environmental regime set out in the High Speed Rail (London – West Midlands) Act 2017 has been subject to multiple attempts at legal challenge from other public bodies, most recently in relation to the extension of the Bromford tunnel in North Warwickshire – with a judgment delivered in the project’s favour.  Since Royal Assent for the act, there have been 9 legal challenges brought by other public bodies. In almost all of these cases, the courts have ultimately found in the project’s favour, but not in time to avoid significant uncertainty, costly delays, or additional legal costs for both parties – the majority of which has unfortunately had to be borne by local taxpayers.

    In the same time period, there have also been 25 costly and time-consuming appeals relating to the HS2 planning regime. Almost all of these appeals have ultimately been determined in HS2’s favour. The government continues to monitor this issue closely and will consider further interventions where appropriate, alongside its wider work on planning reform.

    Fraud investigation

    We are aware of the claims made in relation to a labour supplier on part of the route. The allegations concern inflated invoices and improper PAYE charges, potentially defrauding taxpayers. HS2 Ltd treats all whistleblower allegations seriously and an investigation was launched earlier this year into these allegations. Furthermore, HS2 Ltd has formally reported the allegations to HMRC and HS2 Ltd’s contractor Balfour Beatty VINCI has implemented additional monitoring and controls.

    Benefits

    Housing

    Despite all the challenges, HS2 represents a significant plank of the government’s Plan for Change, our growth and housing missions, and our ambition to deliver infrastructure that works for the whole country. 

    HS2 provides an unparalleled opportunity to build new homes, create jobs and attract investment. The redevelopment of land around the new HS2 stations will enable the ideal conditions for business, new jobs and homes and will act as a catalyst for further investment and wider growth.

    In the West Midlands, HS2 is estimated to support directly 4,000 new homes around Curzon Street Station and 3,000 new homes around Interchange Station as part of the Arden Cross development in Solihull. Additionally, research from a February 2024 report suggests that HS2 will add £10 billion to the West Midlands economy over the next 10 years and help generate over 41,000 additional homes.

    In west London, local partners estimate that HS2 will, in the long term, support the delivery of up to 25,500 new homes around Old Oak Common station, including 9,000 new homes as part of the first phase of development at Old Oak West. Separate research from March 2025 estimates that HS2 will add £10 billion to the west London economy over the next 10 years and support 22,000 additional homes. Around Euston in central London, HS2 will support the delivery of thousands of new homes and the development of a new ‘knowledge quarter’.

    There could also be new housing opportunities along the West Coast Mainline between London and the West Midlands, at places that gain improved local services as a result of network capacity released by HS2. Decisions have not yet been made by the government on where these additional services will run.

    Jobs and skills

    In addition to long-term ambitions, HS2 is contributing to economic growth now. The programme is currently supporting over 33,000 jobs and over 3,400 UK businesses in the supply chain across the country, including over 2,500 small and medium-sized enterprises.

    HS2 is also helping to break down barriers to opportunity and training a skilled workforce for the UK’s wider rail and construction industries. The programme is attracting new and diverse people to the industry. Having created over 1,800 apprenticeships and supported over 5,000 previously unemployed people back into work on the project since 2017, the programme is helping to bridge the skills gap and tackle unemployment along the HS2 construction corridor. By drawing on and developing world-class skills, HS2 will leave a positive skills legacy that will develop and strengthen the country’s construction workforce for the years to come.

    Environment

    Updated designs for ecological mitigation over the past six months have seen further progress made on the target to achieve ‘no net loss’ to biodiversity by the end of the construction programme. At the end of 2024 to 2025, the position for area-based habitats has improved while designs for hedgerows and watercourse habitats remained on track to deliver a net gain in biodiversity.

    HS2 Ltd is also seeking to reduce the whole-life carbon emissions associated with construction of HS2 by 50%, aiming to maximise productivity and cost-saving measures to achieve this goal. At the end of 2024 to 2025, the programme had so far achieved a 33.8% reduction in carbon against that 50% target.

    Community impacts, land and property

    Appointment of a new independent commissioner

    I am pleased to announce the appointment of Robert Herga as the independent High Speed Rail Residents’ and Construction Commissioner, following an open competition.

    The commissioner is responsible for holding HS2 Ltd and the government accountable to their commitments to treat those people directly affected by the HS2 scheme with sensitivity and respect. The commissioner also makes themselves available to intervene in unresolved land and property disputes, as an objective and independent voice, focussing on timely settlement to save costs on both sides. This new role combines the previous roles of HS2 Construction Commissioner and HS2 Residents’ Commissioner.

    Community engagement performance

    HS2 Ltd received 1209 complaints during 2024 to 2025, an increase of 102 when compared to the previous year. At this stage of the programme, the vast majority of complaints are construction-related, with over half about traffic and transport impacts and about one-third related to noise and vibration impacts. Where communities have complaints, HS2 Ltd seeks to resolve issues quickly. Over the last financial year, HS2 Ltd resolved 100% of urgent complaints within 2 working days and resolved 96% of all other complaints within 20 working days or less.

    Local funds

    The HS2 project is mitigating some of the impacts of construction on local places through the Community and Environment Fund and the Business and Local Economy Fund.

    As at June 2025, over £19 million has been channelled through these funds towards 353 local community projects.

    Land and property on the former Phase 2b Eastern Leg

    I am today formally lifting the safeguarding directions for the former Phase 2b Eastern Leg (between the West Midlands and Leeds), removing the uncertainty that has affected many people along the former route. Safeguarding along the former Phase 2b Western Leg (between Crewe and Manchester) is not being changed as part of this, and an update on future plans for safeguarding on this section will be provided in due course alongside broader plans for Northern Powerhouse Rail.

    One small area to the south of the existing station in central Leeds, previously required for the new HS2 station, will remain safeguarded to allow for potential enhancements to the existing station, including for onward travel.

    I have also today closed the Rural Support Zone, Express Purchase, Rent Back, and the Need to Sell property schemes along the former Phase 2b Eastern Leg. Existing applications will be reviewed on a case-by-case basis.

    Removing safeguarding along the majority of the former HS2 Phase 2b Eastern Leg means we are now able to initiate a programme to dispose of over 550 properties on the former Eastern Leg that are no longer required. We expect disposals on the open market to begin in 2026. Before then, former owners whose property was acquired under statutory blight will have the opportunity to reacquire their former property at the current market value.

    We will dispose of land and property in a sensible and sensitive way, ensuring value for money for the taxpayer and avoiding disruption to local property markets.

    I have deposited the safeguarding directions and relevant documents in the House libraries.

    Programme governance

    Programme reset

    Following Mark Wild’s arrival as the new HS2 Ltd CEO in December 2024, I commissioned him to set out a plan to deliver the remaining HS2 infrastructure in a safe, controlled and efficient manner and bring the new railway into operational use, for the lowest reasonable cost to the taxpayer. Mark gave me his initial diagnosis at the end of March and I expect him to advise me further over the coming months.

    His initial assessment summarises the currently uncontrolled state of the programme and the significant challenge of achieving a programme reset that minimises delays and stops further cost increases. He also confirmed his view that, based on the current scope and delivery strategy, it is not possible to deliver HS2’s opening stage between Old Oak Common and Birmingham Curzon Street within the stated range of 2029 to 2033, and that the funding envelope set by the previous government will not be sufficient. If interventions are not enacted, costs will rise and delivery will be further delayed.

    As such, it is now the work of Mark and his team to put in place measures to bring the railway into service as quickly and cost effectively as possible, with government support and constructive challenge. As part of his work, Mark will advise me on updated estimates to give the government and taxpayers certainty over HS2’s costs and schedule – breaking the cycle of cost increases and overruns.

    The HS2 reset will involve:

    • setting a new realistic cost and schedule baseline within which we can complete the programme
    • resetting the commercial relationship with HS2’s principal civil works suppliers to drive increased productivity and control cost
    • making sure HS2 Ltd has the right skills and capabilities to deliver the remaining work, including improvements to setup, operating model, leadership, culture, effectiveness and capabilities
    • improving how the department and wider government sponsors the delivery of HS2, drawing on the findings and recommendations from James Stewart’s independent review and the department’s own work on lessons

    The scale and complexity of resetting the programme is a major challenge. Mark Wild carried out a similar process as the CEO of Crossrail, putting the project back on track and delivering a successful opening of the Elizabeth line in 2022. It is important we take this opportunity to get it right, which is why the reset will take time and involve close working between HS2 Ltd, DfT and the rest of the government. The ambition is for an updated and assured full baseline to measure performance in 2026.

    In parallel, the department plans to publish an updated programme business case in 2026, once agreed cost and schedule estimates are available.

    Oversight

    On 18 March 2025, I chaired a meeting of the reconvened Ministerial Task Force for HS2. I was joined by the Rail Minister, the Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Mark Wild and other senior leaders from HS2 Ltd and across the government to scrutinise initial plans on resetting the programme and delivering HS2 at the lowest reasonable cost.

    On 31 March 2025, Sir Jon Thompson stepped down as HS2 Ltd Chair. On 18 June, I was pleased to announce Mike Brown as the new Chair of HS2 Ltd. Mike Brown brings decades of experience in delivering major transport projects as former TfL Commissioner, and member of the team that turned Crossrail into the Elizabeth Line. He will lead the Board and work with Mark Wild on the urgent priority to reset the project.

    It is clear from Mark Wild’s assessment that HS2 Ltd currently falls far short of having the capability and culture needed to deliver the programme effectively. Mike Brown has been tasked with strengthening the HS2 Ltd Board to more effectively support and challenge Mark Wild in conducting the reset of HS2 and the safe delivery of Phase 1 at the lowest reasonable cost. To support strengthened board oversight, a recruitment exercise has been launched to appoint new non-executive directors to bolster board capability and capacity.

    I would like to thank Elaine Holt for leading the Board in her capacity as Deputy Chair over the period from 1 April to 13 July.

    We have also enacted temporary arrangements which establish additional control measures and monitoring to ensure the programme is managed properly. This will bridge the period leading to the formal reset of the programme.

    Capturing, applying and sharing lessons

    Following my last report, the major transport projects governance and assurance review, led by James Stewart, has concluded. It has provided important lessons that can be applied to HS2, the department’s other capital projects and infrastructure schemes across the government.

    Most major programmes experience difficulties in their delivery. However, the failures seen on HS2 are extreme, with costs increasing continuously over many years and very rapidly since the start of construction. There is no single explanation for these failings – they span across its lifecycle from conception through to delivery and from governmental sponsorship, through planning and consenting, to how the government has orchestrated its delivery between HS2 Ltd and the construction supply chain.  

    We have worked closely with HM Treasury and the National Infrastructure and Service Transformation Authority (NISTA) to identify lessons from the HS2 programme.

    The department is applying the lessons from James Stewart’s and other reviews, including embedding the lessons into the HS2 programme reset plan and in developing and delivering other transport and wider infrastructure projects.

    High ambition at inception

    Early decisions resulted in an exceptionally high-specification and high-speed railway, which drove higher costs and meant that tried and tested approaches could not be relied upon. In future programmes, opportunities for reducing cost based on the minimum acceptable design should be explored and use of bespoke or cutting-edge specifications should be avoided unless absolutely necessary.

    Scope changes

    Since HS2’s inception, the scope of the programme has been progressively reduced. Scope reductions have been in part a result of cost increases, but have added to delivery challenges and left the residual scheme over-specified in relation to the benefits it will deliver. 

    To address both of these lessons, the department has contributed to the Office for Value for Money’s study into the governance and budgeting arrangements for ‘mega projects’ to make sure that lessons from HS2 are applied to the wider government’s approach to infrastructure delivery.

    Governance

    Governance has evolved through the lifetime of the project and in the light of pressures; however, it has not been sufficiently effective in identifying and managing the scale of challenges, including in relation to cost management and capability. We have implemented a series of changes in the governance of the programme to respond to James Stewart’s recommendations. We held the first shareholder board on 28 May, which provided strategic-level oversight of the programme from the Permanent Secretary, Mark Wild, HS2 Ltd special directors, the senior responsible officer, interim HS2 Ltd chair and senior DfT and HMT Officials. A renewed programme and performance board now meets monthly to focus on the effective delivery of Phase 1 (including Euston) against agreed schedule, cost and scope.

    Cost estimation

    Since the inception of the project, internal and external experts have comprehensively scrutinised cost estimates. However, despite this, estimates have consistently proven to be wrong.

    Last year, HS2 Ltd and departmental officials jointly concluded a comprehensive external review of the current approach to cost estimation and programme control. HS2 Ltd has been implementing an action plan to strengthen these vital areas of project control. A priority of the HS2 reset is setting a new, realistic and assured baseline of cost and schedule within which we can complete the programme. In addition, our progress to date means that evidence based on past experience, rather than forecast estimates, can be utilised to inform current and future delivery of the programme, including ongoing progress on civils delivery and the recent letting of the systems contracts.

    To validate this new estimate, there is also work underway to verify the civil work delivered to date and its cost. This will allow the programme to validate true delivery costs against the original estimates. This information, combined with continued investment in collating benchmarking data from international comparators, will give us a more reliable ‘should cost’ model for the remainder of the programme. This ‘should cost’ model will enable a more accurate assessment of the reasonableness of assumptions in the cost estimate.

    We have learnt that realistic ranges, rather than single target costs, should be set at the early stage of projects. Ranges should only narrow when there is sufficient certainty from external data, such as contract prices. We will adopt an approach that uses robustly verified or benchmarked cost data, with ranges and sensitivity analysis, when taking future programme investment decisions. HS2 will lead the way in ensuring that cost analysis is rigorously incorporated into the design of later procurements and decisions. In parallel, the government has made significant improvements in the analysis of investment benefits in recent years.

    Challenges of building large-scale infrastructure

    Meeting environmental standards and planning requirements has presented a significant challenge to the delivery of the project and has added to cost. It is now clear that the early stages of HS2 scheme development underestimated the planning and regulatory challenges of designing and building a new high-speed railway whilst meeting the expectations of local planning and highway authorities, and complying with the latest safety, security and environmental standards. The granting of consents has been subject to routine challenge, and the need for expensive mitigations to meet legal obligations (such as the bat mitigation structure at Sheephouse Wood in Buckinghamshire) has increased the cost of delivering the railway. 

    The government is already implementing far-reaching reforms to ensure economic infrastructure can be delivered more efficiently. To strike a better balance between avoiding costs and delays on agreed schemes whilst allowing local scrutiny, Ministers will be able to intervene more actively in the process within the existing planning framework, utilising the reforms in the Planning and Infrastructure Bill once enacted, as well as considering whether further alterations to the HS2 planning framework could bring benefits for efficient infrastructure delivery and to taxpayers more generally.

    Capability challenges

    Costs have increased in part due to insufficient capability in HS2 Ltd and the supply chain in delivering a project of this scale. There has been insufficient focus on the client relationship, too many of HS2’s resources were allocated to the wrong place and contract management and project control were not effective. This led to uncontrolled costs and extremely poor productivity and performance from the supply chain. We will be working with Mark Wild and the Board of HS2 Ltd to address the areas where challenges have been identified, such as the need for Mark Wild to put in place a high-calibre and enduring leadership team and to reshape the organisation to deliver efficiently. This will be a priority in the programme reset.

    Ineffective incentives

    HS2 Ltd’s current commercial contracting strategy has not proved effective at controlling costs and fairly attributing responsibility for risks. The contract incentives have focused on providing positive incentives against target costs; however, as costs escalated and changes arose, the incentivised cost targets were exceeded, leading to no positive incentive to deliver at lower cost. Some risks which should have been borne by suppliers have also been transferred to taxpayers. In the future we need incentives and risk allocation that deliver for taxpayers as well as supplier shareholders. This work is being embedded through our engagement across the government, to ensure major infrastructure projects are based on effective commercial contracts and incentives going forward.

    Financial annex

    The information on HS2’s overall spend to date and budget is now being provided in nominal (cash) terms following a commitment made by the department to the Public Accounts Committee to express the costs of the programme in a more up-to-date price base and better capture the inflation incurred since 2019. The government will provide further details on the 2025 to 2026 position in cash terms as part of the standard main estimates report to Parliament.

    Historic and forecast expenditure

    Nominal prices, including land and property.

    Phase Overall spend to date (£ billion) 2025 to 2026 budget (£ billion) 2025 to 2026 forecast (£ billion) 2025 to 2026 variance (£ billion)
    Phase 1 total 37.9 7.1 7.1 0.0
    Civils 26.4 5.4 5.4 0.0
    Stations 2.3 0.6 0.6 0.0
    Systems 2.0 0.3 0.3 0.0
    Phase 1 indirects 3.5 0.4 0.4 0.0
    Land and property Phase 1 3.6 0.3 0.3 0.0
    Former Phase 2 2.6 0.1 0.1 0.0
    Overall total 40.5 7.2 7.2 0.0

    Notes for the table:

    [1] The figures set out in the table have been rounded to aid legibility. Due to this, they do not always tally.

    [2] Spend to date for Phase 1 includes a £0.6 billion liability (provision) representing the department’s obligation to purchase land and property.

    [3] To enable comparison with the figures presented in the December 2024 Parliamentary Report which were in 2019 prices, the equivalent total overall spends to date on Phase 1 and on Former Phase 2 in 2019 prices are £33.11 billion and £2.5 billion respectively and the 2025 to 2026 budgets for Phase 1 and for Former Phase 2 in 2019 prices are £5.4 billion and £0.1 billion respectively.

    HS2 spending review settlement

    Settlement for total spending review period (2026 to 2030): £25.3 billion (nominal prices).

    Updates to this page

    Published 17 July 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: Congressman David Scott Leads Georgia Delegation Demanding Trump Admin Reverse Termination of Digital Equity Grants

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman David Scott (GA-13)

    WASHINGTON D.C. – Today, Congressman David Scott (GA-13) led members of the Georgia Delegation in sending a letter to Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Acting Administrator of the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), Adam Cassady, opposing the abrupt and illegal termination of State Digital Equity Capacity Grants and Digital Equity Competitive Grants. The letter also demands the immediate disbursement of grant awards and approval of all pending grant applications.

    “The decision to unilaterally terminate funding for broadband services is both illegal and morally wrong,” said Congressman David Scott. “Communities across Georgia count on the Digital Equity Grant Program to gain affordable internet, gain access basic digital tools for telehealth services, education, and job opportunities. Characterization of this vital lifeline as a “woke handout based on race” only proves that the administration has failed to comprehend the goal of the programs or who benefits from its funding. In reality, termination of this grant program will disproportionately harm working-class families, veterans, the elderly, and rural Georgians. The Trump Administration has no right to ignore the law by recklessly and indiscriminately canceling funding opportunities for our communities.”

    Digital equity grants were originally included in the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA). The law allocated $2.75 billion to help underserved communities access affordable high-speed internet. The funding was designed to close the digital divide for veterans, seniors, rural communities, low-income families, incarcerated individuals, people with disabilities, and others.

    Despite being funded by Congress, the Trump Admin unilaterally halted the program in May, falsely labeling it as “unconstitutional” and a “woke handout.” This is a continuation of President Trump’s repeated efforts to illegally terminate funding passed by Congress. It effectively froze already approved grants and ended the review of hundreds of competitive applications, including a $9.9 million application from Clayton County’s Department of Information Technology.

    In the letter, Rep. David Scott led Georgia’s Democratic House lawmakers in urging Secretary Lutnick and Acting Administrator Cassady:

    • Restore digital equity grant funding already awarded
    • Resume Reviewing applications for the Digital Equity Competitive Grant Program
    • Recognize the immense benefits these investments provide, including job readiness training, access to online healthcare, digital literacy programs, and educational resources.

    View a copy of the letter HERE.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: Device-as-a-Service (DaaS) Market Set to Soar with 26.90% CAGR, Projected to Reach US$ 233.2 Billion by 2032 Amid Growing Demand for Scalable and Cost-Effective IT Solutions: AnalystView Market Insights

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    San Francisco, USA, July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The Device-as-a-Service (DaaS) market was valued at USD 34,680.33 million in 2024 and is projected to grow at a CAGR of 26.90% from 2025 to 2032. DaaS transforms the conventional IT ownership model by offering a subscription-based solution that integrates hardware, software, and managed services into a single, streamlined package.

    DaaS model is transforming how businesses equip their workforce, especially in the era of hybrid and remote work. Rather than purchasing devices outright, companies lease them as part of a service contract that includes setup, maintenance, security, and replacement. This approach simplifies IT asset management, reduces upfront costs, and ensures that devices are consistently updated and secure. For instance, the General Services Administration (GSA) has adopted the DaaS model through its Federal Acquisition Service (FAS). The GSA offers IT hardware and managed services bundles under long-term contracts, helping federal agencies streamline procurement and reduce capital expenditures.

    Access Your Free Sample Report PDF Now @ https://www.analystviewmarketinsights.com/request_sample/AV3807

    Global Device-As-A-Service Market Key Players- Detailed Competitive Insights

    • Accenture PLC
    • Amazon Web Services
    • Apple Inc.
    • Box Inc.
    • Cisco Systems, Inc.
    • Dell Technologies
    • Fujitsu Limited
    • Google LLC
    • HP Inc.
    • IBM Corporation
    • Lenovo Group
    • Microsoft Corporation
    • Oracle Corporation
    • Panasonic Corporation
    • Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.
    • Xerox Corporation
    • Others

    DaaS Market Insights:

    By 2023, a growing number of medium to large organizations across North America had embraced the Device-as-a-Service (DaaS) model to enhance device provisioning and minimize operational downtime. Government initiatives such as the U.S. GSA’s managed IT services contracts and the UK Crown Commercial Service’s tech leasing frameworks have played a key role in accelerating DaaS adoption. With the ability to scale device fleets rapidly and maintain centralized monitoring and lifecycle management, DaaS is increasingly favored across sectors like finance, education, healthcare, and public administration. 

    In addition to cost and operational benefits, sustainability is becoming a key motivator behind DaaS adoption. Companies increasingly seek ways to reduce electronic waste and improve environmental accountability. DaaS aligns with Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) goals by promoting device reuse, refurbishment, and proper recycling. Global tech leaders, such as HP, report that a significant number of Fortune 100 companies are exploring DaaS to meet both IT needs and environmental targets.

    Government agencies are also recognizing DaaS’s potential. A 2023 procurement update from the U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) highlighted growing interest in DaaS as a strategic solution for federal departments to manage IT assets while meeting sustainability objectives.

    However, the shift to DaaS is not without its challenges. Businesses must evaluate concerns related to data privacy, dependency on vendors, service-level agreement (SLA) reliability, and compatibility with legacy systems. Despite these barriers, the model’s scalability, financial flexibility, and security features are encouraging widespread adoption, especially among small and medium enterprises (SMEs) in emerging markets that benefit from low upfront investment and simplified IT operations.

    North America DaaS Market:
    North America dominated the Device-as-a-Service (DaaS) market in 2024, accounting for over 38% of global revenue. The region benefits from widespread hybrid work adoption and government-driven IT modernization programs. The U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) actively promotes DaaS contracts across federal agencies, boosting efficiency and reducing upfront costs for public sector IT infrastructure.

    Asia Pacific DaaS Market:
    Asia Pacific is witnessing the fastest DaaS market growth, projected to expand at a CAGR exceeding 29% through 2032. Growth is fueled by rapid digital transformation across India, China, and Southeast Asia. Government programs like India’s Digital India initiative and Smart Cities Mission are increasingly leveraging DaaS for secure, cost-effective device deployment in education, public service, and local governance.

    TABLE OF CONTENT:

    1. Device-as-a-Service Market Overview
    1.1. Study Scope
    1.2. Market Estimation Years
    2. Executive Summary
    2.1. Market Snippet
    2.1.1. Device-as-a-Service Market Snippet by Device Type
    2.1.2. Device-as-a-Service Market Snippet by Service Model
    2.1.3. Device-as-a-Service Market Snippet by Deployment Mode
    2.1.4. Device-as-a-Service Market Snippet by End-User
    2.1.5. Device-as-a-Service Market Snippet by Country
    2.1.6. Device-as-a-Service Market Snippet by Region
    2.2. Competitive Insights
    3. Device-as-a-Service Key Market Trends
    3.1. Device-as-a-Service Market Drivers
    3.1.1. Impact Analysis of Market Drivers
    3.2. Device-as-a-Service Market Restraints
    3.2.1. Impact Analysis of Market Restraints
    3.3. Device-as-a-Service Market Opportunities
    3.4. Device-as-a-Service Market Future Trends
    4. Device-as-a-Service Industry Study
    4.1. PEST Analysis
    4.2. Porter’s Five Forces Analysis
    4.3. Growth Prospect Mapping
    4.4. Regulatory Framework Analysis…..

    DaaS Market Competitive Insights:

    The Device-as-a-Service (DaaS) market is highly competitive, driven by global players offering integrated hardware, software, and support services. Accenture PLC leads with strong consulting and managed service capabilities. Amazon Web Services supports cloud-based DaaS platforms. Apple Inc. leverages its hardware ecosystem for enterprise DaaS solutions. Box Inc. enhances DaaS with secure content management. Cisco Systems integrates networking and security features, while Dell Technologies offers comprehensive end-to-end DaaS packages. These companies focus on innovation, scalability, and strategic partnerships to maintain a strong market presence and cater to diverse enterprise and government needs in the evolving digital workplace landscape.

    Map the full market terrain with regional insights, segmented views, consumer intelligence, and competitor studies@

    https://www.analystviewmarketinsights.com/reports/report-highlight-device-as-a-service-market

    Market Segementaion:

    GLOBAL DEVICE-AS-A-SERVICE MARKET, BY DEVICE TYPE- MARKET ANALYSIS, 2019 – 2032

    • Smartphones
    • Laptops
    • Desktops
    • Tablets
    • Wearables

    GLOBAL DEVICE-AS-A-SERVICE MARKET, BY SERVICE MODEL- MARKET ANALYSIS, 2019 – 2032

    • Leasing
    • Subscription
    • Full-service

    GLOBAL DEVICE-AS-A-SERVICE MARKET, BY DEPLOYMENT MODE- MARKET ANALYSIS, 2019 – 2032

    • Cloud-based
    • On-premises

    GLOBAL DEVICE-AS-A-SERVICE MARKET, BY END-USER- MARKET ANALYSIS, 2019 – 2032

    • Enterprises
    • SMBs
    • Individual Consumers

    Reasons to Invest in the Device-as-a-Service (DaaS) Market:

    1. Rising Demand for Scalable IT Infrastructure
    Businesses increasingly require flexible IT solutions to support hybrid and remote work models. DaaS enables organizations to scale device fleets up or down on demand, reducing capital expenditures while maintaining operational agility.

    2. Government Push for Digital Transformation
    Public sector initiatives such as the U.S. GSA’s DaaS contracts and India’s Digital India program are accelerating adoption. These efforts create stable demand and long-term contract opportunities for vendors in the DaaS space.

    3. Built-in Security and Lifecycle Management
    DaaS integrates device provisioning, security updates, and end-of-life recycling into one service. This reduces IT burden and strengthens cybersecurity across enterprises, making it a preferred choice for regulated industries.

    Browse more Report:

    EMS Products Market

    Vehicle Intelligence Systems Market

    Over-The-Air Updates Market

    Vehicle Diagnostics Market

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    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: NRS celebrates socio-economic investment

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    NRS celebrates socio-economic investment

    Almost £20 million funding was invested to help NRS communities grow and thrive in 2024/25.

    NRS has supported 149 projects to bring positive social change to benefit people living in communities across the UK – from Caithness to the tip of North Wales, down to the Bristol and English Channels.

    Every £1 of the £2,287,696 NRS has invested unlocked another £8.23 in match funding, elevating the community support to over £18.8m. The Nuclear Decommissioning Authority also directly supported four transformational projects with a share of over £900,000 – taking the total to almost £20m.

    David Calder, head of sustainability and socio-economics for NRS Dounreay, said:

    Our UK wide footprint enables us to play a key role in working in partnership with other public sector and increasingly private sector organisations with community benefit obligations in addressing a variety of social and economic challenges and opportunities.

    This partnership investment approach enables us to align with regional and national priorities while creating meaningful impact where it matters most – in our communities.

    Alan Krailing, head of sustainability for NRS Sites, added:

    Our mission goes beyond decommissioning and site restoration – we want to shape the future for generations to come.

    The first step to building a sustainable legacy is investing in our communities to create shared value and resilient and thriving economies that meet local needs. Our socio-economic programmes are bringing this legacy to life by creating a ripple effect of social impact across the UK.

    NRS funding helped 215 new or growing businesses, awarded 70 start-up grants and created 142 jobs to develop thriving and resilient economies in remote, rural communities. Six graduates were placed or retained in employment, as well as projects supporting over 10,000 training opportunities, 15 apprenticeships, 900 employment opportunities and 160 work experience placements, improving access to sustainable incomes.

    With over 9,000 voluntary hours and more than 33,000 individual health and well-being interventions, people of all ages have been empowered to work toward long-term solutions to social challenges. These efforts have not only improved outcomes but also fostered stronger, more resilient communities.

    Some examples of the projects supported include:

    Caithness Business Fund: A £50,000 contribution to the £150,000 Future Skills apprenticeship grant scheme has tackled skills shortages and driven investment in new opportunities for SMEs and young people in the North Highlands – a region on the cusp of becoming a renewable powerhouse for the UK and beyond.

    During its first year in operation the scheme has supported seven apprentices and stimulated business growth.

    Prysor Angling Association: £65,000 funding has revitalised a café, community hub and created four jobs on the banks of Trawsfynydd Lake in the heart of Eryri National Park, North Wales. School children are learning about conservation and biodiversity in the lakeside classroom and gaining essential life skills whilst they cast off on the Fishing for Schools programme.

    A new bird hide and three accessible fishing platforms have improved the leisure offer to all. Three EV Chargers and a 50 KW solar array are generating income to offset running costs and help support the organisation becoming self-reliant, sustainable and carbon neutral.  

    Tumbledown Farm: £85,000 funding helped to create a carbon neutral forest school at a 27-acre former farm owned by Weymouth Town Council. The new building provides community led learning, employment and well-being opportunities for local schools, families and people with additional needs in an inclusive, nurturing greenspace.

    We are incredibly proud of being a good neighbour to the schools, clubs, community groups nearest NRS sites where funding has helped to meet the local needs of 82 grass roots organisations.

    Watch the video below to find out much more.

    NRS socio-economic impact 2024-2025

    Updates to this page

    Published 17 July 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Boost for British business as new partnership breaks down barriers to infrastructure delivery in South Africa

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Boost for British business as new partnership breaks down barriers to infrastructure delivery in South Africa

    Chancellor launches new Infrastructure Partnership with South Africa, opening up significant investment and export opportunities for UK firms.

    • Best-in-class British expertise will speed up delivery of major projects in the country, helping to deliver growth and good jobs as part of our Plan for Change.
    • Builds further on the first-of-its-kind UK Growth & Investment Partnership launched globally with the nation at the end of 2024.

    British businesses will have more opportunities to expand, invest and export to South Africa through a flagship partnership launched today, 17 July.

    At an event in Durban, Chancellor Rachel Reeves hailed the agreement as having the potential to be transformative for the best and brightest British firms doing business in the country who had long been looking for government support in unlocking commercial opportunities in areas like architectural design, engineering, and professional and business services.

    The UK is the biggest international investor in South Africa, but businesses have faced challenges such as project delays due to blockers on infrastructure delivery. British expertise will be brought in to unblock these barriers on building, speeding up a pipeline of projects which British firms are well-placed to win tenders for. This will help growth and development in South Africa, and also help Britain get better return on its investments in the country.

    This model of Government-to-Government (G2G) Infrastructure Partnership has previously delivered strong growth and jobs in countries such as Peru, with companies such as Arup and Turner & Townsend building a track-record of international delivery and bringing economic growth to the UK.

    The Chancellor saw first-hand how those two businesses have already been showcasing British expertise in designing, planning and building infrastructure in South Africa during her visit in February to the V&A Waterfront in Cape Town – a site expansion project which Arup and Turner & Townsend won the contracts for.

    Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rachel Reeves said:

    This is exactly what our Plan for Change is all about – backing British businesses who have been held back for too long to compete and win on the global stage.  By unlocking these opportunities, we’re opening doors for British expertise in engineering, design and project management, creating a pipeline of work in South Africa to support good jobs paying decent wages.

    When British businesses thrive abroad, it strengthens our economy at home – delivering security for working people and putting more money in their pockets. That’s the foundation of sustainable growth that our Plan for Change is designed to deliver.

    South Africa’s Minister of Public Works & Infrastructure, Dean Macpherson, said:

    This landmark partnership with the UK reflects our vision to ensure that public assets deliver real value for our people and to turn South Africa into a construction site which will help grow our economy and create jobs. By injecting technical expertise and delivery support into stalled projects within the Department of Public Works & Infrastructure, we are turning neglected buildings and land into opportunities for job creation, economic growth, and restored dignity.

    This agreement is about far more than bricks and mortar; it’s about ensuring every rand spent on public assets advances the public good, accelerates infrastructure delivery, and grows our economy.

    Funded with a mix of UK ODA and non-ODA, the G2G Partnership will formalise UK support via technical assistance for new initiatives to improve South Africa’s management of public assets, accelerate project delivery in selected local municipalities, and launch an initiative to bring in external consultants to drive major projects and override longstanding inefficiencies.

    The G2G Partnership enhances the thriving collaboration between the UK’s Department for Business and Trade, the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office and South Africa’s Department of Public Works & Infrastructure. It builds on the close business relationship between both countries and paves the way to unlocking new export opportunities for UK businesses, primarily in the professional and business services and infrastructure sectors, bringing economic growth to the UK.

    Today’s announcement also further builds on the UK’s Growth and Investment Partnership with South Africa, a first-of-its-kind collaboration initiated by Foreign Secretary David Lammy during his visit to Cape Town in November 2024. Projects announced to date through the Growth and Investment Partnership include initiatives around inclusive agriculture, export promotion, and rail reform delivered by Crossrail international.

    It comes as Prime Minister Keir Starmer and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz signed the UK-Germany Treaty in London this afternoon. Included within this is a commitment for public financial institutions in the UK and Germany to work together in mobilising private capital into high-growth industries, opening up opportunities for innovative British businesses. Reeves will mark the agreement in a meeting with her counterpart Vice-Chancellor Lars Klingbeil, in Durban later this afternoon.

    Coupled with the launch of the UK-SA Infrastructure Partnership, the agreements recognise infrastructure as key to growth and that cooperating with international partners to invest in that infrastructure is a route to delivering the UK Government’s Industrial Strategy: with more good jobs and more money in the pockets of working people across our countries.

    Business and Trade Secretary, Jonathan Reynolds said:

    Our Modern Industrial Strategy, and Trade Strategy, are about playing to the UK’s strengths.

    Our businesses lead the way in engineering and major infrastructure projects, and partnerships like these help unlock new exports, investment and job-creating contracts. 

    This Government-to-Government Partnership builds on the UK’s thriving business relationship with South Africa and shows how our Plan for Change is paving the way for growth at home by unlocking new opportunities abroad.

    As the government unlocks infrastructure pipelines abroad, it has today published its pipeline of infrastructure projects at home through the National Infrastructure and Service Transformation Authority.

    The 10-Year Infrastructure Strategy includes investment of at least £725 billion into infrastructure over the next decade across eight growth-driving sectors where Britain holds a cutting-edge on the world stage, while the landmark Planning and Infrastructure Bill will also speed up and streamline the delivery of new homes and critical infrastructure – cutting unnecessary red tape which stifles delivery. The measures in the Bill are expected to boost the UK economy by £7.5 billion over the next 10 years – with planning reforms having the largest positive growth effect from a single measure ever scored by the Office for Budget Responsibility.

    Updates to this page

    Published 17 July 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Green energy and deepening connectivity are the focus of business circles in SCO countries

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

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

    BEIJING, July 17 (Xinhua) — The Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) Business Forum was held in Beijing on Thursday, where participants discussed issues on promoting green energy transformation and deepening connectivity within the SCO.

    The event, themed “Promoting Shanghai Spirit, Businesses in Action,” was attended by about 400 government and business representatives from China and overseas.

    Gao Yunlong, Vice Chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) and Chairman of the All-China Association of Industry and Commerce, noted that the SCO is a regional international organization with the largest territory and population in the world, and trade and economic cooperation is a powerful engine for the dynamic development of the SCO.

    According to him, China is ready to work with all parties to further align development strategies, promote improvement of the quality and level of trade and economic cooperation, and ensure stability and continuity of production chains and supply chains.

    SCO Secretary General Nurlan Yermekbayev said that the SCO has unique resources and political will to form a model of open, pragmatic and mutually beneficial economic cooperation.

    He added that direct interaction between enterprises and investors, as well as between regions, is intended to become a reliable basis for strengthening industrial cooperation, developing new markets and implementing specific projects specifically under the SCO brand.

    The President of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of the Russian Federation, Sergei Katyrin, noted that the powerful economic, natural and human resources possessed by the SCO countries create serious preconditions for the accelerated development of trade between member states and the implementation of joint economic projects.

    “The high dynamics of Russia’s trade turnover with the SCO countries is supported by the growth of settlements in national currencies, the share of which currently amounts to more than 92 percent,” said S. Katyrin, adding that increasing multifaceted interaction with SCO partners is one of Russia’s foreign policy priorities.

    “In the context of modern global challenges, instability in external markets and rapid digital transformation, we see enormous potential in developing economic ties in the SCO space,” emphasized Temir Sariev, President of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of the Kyrgyz Republic, noting that Kyrgyzstan welcomes cooperation in the technical, investment and administrative spheres with partners from the SCO countries.

    Wang Mingda, a representative of the Marketing and Financing Department of China Energy Engineering Corporation Limited, said that in the future, the company, adhering to the concept of green development, will enhance the coordination and mutual recognition of green standards and norms with the SCO countries, promote the construction of more future cities, smart grids and smart parks in these countries, so as to make China’s contribution to the green transformation of the SCO countries.

    The event, hosted by the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade (CCPIT), also saw the release of a report on the development of SCO supply chains. -0-

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    .

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI: No Credit Check Loans With Guaranteed Approval & Same-Day Payday Loans — GADCapital Launches New Digital Platform for Instant Online Loans in 2025

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Aventura, July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) —  GADCapital has launched a new digital lending platform designed to connect U.S. borrowers with no credit check loans with guaranteed approval options and same-day payday loans online for urgent financial needs. More details about the service are available on GADCapital’s same-day payday loans page, where consumers can explore features built for rapid funding and expanded access even for those with lower credit scores..

    GADCapital’s platform responds to the growing demand for faster, more inclusive financial solutions by evaluating real-time income and bank activity rather than relying solely on FICO scores. The system enables instant payday loans online guaranteed approval possibilities and same-day cash deposits for loans up to $5,000, helping consumers address unexpected expenses quickly and discreetly.

    How GADCapital’s Platform Delivers No Credit Check Loans Online

    Unlike traditional bank loans that require hard credit pulls and strict scoring thresholds, GADCapital’s digital platform focuses on no credit check loans that rely on alternative data like income and bank transactions. Through the use of soft credit inquiries, GADCapital helps ensure that applying for same-day payday loans online will not harm a borrower’s credit score.

    Borrowers using GADCapital’s platform can:

    • Complete secure applications in under five minutes
    • Avoid hard credit checks that could lower FICO scores
    • Receive loan offers from multiple licensed lenders
    • Access funds as quickly as the same business day
    • Request amounts ranging from $100 to $5,000

    By modernizing the lending process, GADCapital positions itself as a leading provider of no credit check loans guaranteed approval possibilities, ensuring consumers receive timely support during financial emergencies.

    Why Borrowers Choose GADCapital for Same-Day Payday Loans Online

    Many Americans encounter situations where traditional lenders can’t offer the speed or flexibility needed for sudden expenses. GADCapital’s platform specifically addresses this gap by connecting consumers to same-day payday loans online no credit check options, giving them tools to manage costs such as medical bills, auto repairs, or unexpected utility payments.

    GADCapital’s platform stands out because it:

    • Avoids traditional credit requirements
    • Focuses on current financial health instead of past credit challenges
    • Prioritizes digital convenience over lengthy bank processes
    • Enables fast funding for urgent needs
    • Maintains partnerships only with state-licensed, reputable lenders

    This modern approach aligns with consumer demand for instant payday loans online guaranteed approval possibilities, offering a smoother alternative to traditional bank loans.

    GADCapital’s Digital Platform vs. Traditional Bank Loans

    Traditional banks often fall short for borrowers needing emergency cash loans, primarily because:

    • They require hard credit pulls that lower scores
    • They impose rigid credit score cutoffs
    • Loan decisions can take days or weeks
    • Rejections are frequent for subprime or thin-credit applicants
    • Loan sizes tend to be too large for small emergency needs

    By contrast, GADCapital’s platform:

    • Uses soft credit checks only
    • Bases decisions on verified income and real-time banking data
    • Delivers same-day or next-day funding for qualified borrowers
    • Provides loan offers for as little as $100
    • Focuses on urgent financial situations

    This makes GADCapital’s system a practical alternative for those searching for payday loans online no credit check instant approval while avoiding the bureaucracy of traditional financial institutions.

    How GADCapital’s Process Works for No Credit Check Loans

    Applying for a same day payday loan no credit check through GADCapital involves a simple four-step path:

    1. Online Application: Consumers fill out a secure digital form detailing employment, income, and banking information in just a few minutes.
    2. Soft Credit and Bank Data Review: GADCapital’s system performs a soft credit inquiry and analyzes recent bank activity to confirm financial stability.
    3. Multiple Lender Offers: Licensed lenders respond with side-by-side offers, presenting clear loan terms, rates, and repayment schedules.
    4. E-Signature and Funding: Once borrowers choose an offer, they e-sign documents electronically and may receive funds via ACH deposit or debit card push as quickly as the same business day.

    This digital workflow provides consumers with a faster and more transparent way to secure instant payday loans online guaranteed approval possibilities compared to traditional lenders.

    Who Can Apply for GADCapital’s No Credit Check Loans

    Consumers interested in using GADCapital’s platform for payday loans online no credit check instant approvalgenerally need to:

    • Be at least 18 years old
    • Reside in the United States
    • Have verifiable income from wages, benefits, or self-employment
    • Maintain an active checking account for loan deposits and repayments
    • Provide a valid email address and phone number

    By focusing on current financial circumstances rather than credit history alone, GADCapital opens access to no credit check loans guaranteed approval possibilities for individuals who might otherwise be excluded from traditional lending options.

    Types of No Credit Check Loans Offered Through GADCapital’s Platform

    GADCapital’s digital platform connects borrowers with various lending products, including:

    • $255 Payday Loans: A popular micro-loan option in states with lending caps for covering immediate small expenses.
    • Instant Payday Loans Online Guaranteed Approval Possibilities: Larger loan amounts up to $1,000 for urgent financial situations like auto repairs or medical bills.
    • Bad Credit Payday Loans: Designed for borrowers with sub-600 FICO scores who can verify income and employment.
    • Emergency Loans: Aimed at covering life-critical costs, such as emergency medical expenses or overdue utility bills.
    • Same Day Loans: Specifically designed for consumers needing funds within hours rather than waiting for traditional processing.

    All loans are provided by licensed lenders who adhere to state regulations, helping borrowers secure payday loans online no credit check instant approval safely and legally.

    Key Features of GADCapital’s Digital Lending Platform

    GADCapital’s platform introduces several advantages for consumers exploring no credit check loans:

    • Soft Credit Inquiries: Borrowers avoid hard credit pulls, preserving credit scores.
    • Same-Day Funding Available: Many loans are funded the same business day for urgent needs.
    • Income-Based Approvals: Decisions rely on current income and banking activity, not just credit scores.
    • Transparent Terms: All loan offers disclose rates and fees clearly for consumers seeking payday loans online.
    • Strong Security Measures: GADCapital’s encryption protocols protect sensitive personal and financial data.

    These features make GADCapital’s digital platform a trusted choice for those seeking instant payday loans online guaranteed approval possibilities without traditional lending barriers.

    Benefits and Considerations of GADCapital’s Platform

    Advantages of GADCapital’s platform:

    • Fast application and funding process
    • Access to multiple lenders for competitive loan offers
    • Eligibility for borrowers with diverse credit histories
    • Clear and transparent loan terms
    • Digital convenience with secure online transactions

    Important considerations:

    • Short-term loans may carry higher interest rates
    • Repayment periods are often shorter than traditional loans
    • Loans should only be used for genuine emergencies, not ongoing expenses
    • Borrowers should review terms carefully to avoid future financial strain

    GADCapital emphasizes that same-day payday loans online no credit check are intended as emergency solutions, not long-term financial strategies.

    How GADCapital Fits Into Today’s Emergency Lending Landscape

    As demand for rapid financial solutions grows, GADCapital continues to position itself as a leader in the payday loans online no credit check instant approval market. Through technology and strong partnerships with licensed lenders, the company remains focused on:

    • Expanding credit access for underserved consumers
    • Delivering transparent lending processes
    • Offering a digital alternative to traditional bank loans

    By leveraging advanced digital tools and an extensive lender network, GADCapital helps consumers handle financial emergencies quickly and securely.

    About GADCapital

    GADCapital is a digital lending platform connecting consumers with licensed lenders offering no credit check payday loans, same-day payday loans online, and other short-term financial solutions. The company’s mission is to simplify the borrowing process and deliver fast, secure funding for individuals facing unexpected expenses.

    Disclaimer

    This article provides general information about emergency lending services and should not be considered financial or legal advice. Loan terms, interest rates, and availability vary by lender and state. While some lenders may offer high approval rates, no loan approval is truly “guaranteed” and depends on individual circumstances and lender verification processes. This content is for informational purposes only. Prospective borrowers should carefully review all terms and conditions before accepting any loan offer. The publisher assumes no responsibility for actions taken based on this information. All company names and trademarks are the property of their respective owners and are used for informational purposes only.

    Contact Data:
    GADCapital Press Office
    Phone: (800) 961-5909
    Email: info@gadcapital.com
    Website: https://gadcapital.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: VERAXA Biotech and Voyager Acquisition Corp. Announce Filing of Form F-4 Registration Statement with the SEC

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    ZURICH, July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — VERAXA Biotech AG (“VERAXA” or the “Company”), an emerging leader in designing novel cancer therapies, and Voyager Acquisition Corp.,  a Cayman Islands exempted company and special purpose acquisition company targeting the healthcare sector (NASDAQ:VACH, “Voyager” or the “SPAC”), announced today the filing of a registration statement on Form F-4 (the “Registration Statement”), which includes a preliminary proxy statement, with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) in regards to the proposed Business Combination Agreement announced April 23, 2025.

    “We are excited to share this pivotal milestone in VERAXA’s journey toward becoming a public company,” commented Christoph Antz, Ph.D., CEO and Co-Founder of VERAXA. “The filing of our Registration Statement marks a significant step forward in our path to accessing the public capital markets and vision of bringing the next generation of safe and highly effective cancer therapies to patients. We remain focused on executing the merger effectively with Voyager as we move forward together.”

    While the Registration Statement has not been declared effective, and the information included within is not complete and subject to change, it contains key information about Voyager’s business and securities listing, VERAXA’s drug development pipeline, technology platform, licensing partnerships, intellectual property, and research and development program. It also includes the proposed Business Combination Agreement and the proposals to be considered by SPAC’s shareholders.

    Transaction Overview

    Under the terms of the Business Combination Agreement, VERAXA’s equity value contribution to the Business Combination will amount to approximately $1.3 billion. Accordingly, VERAXA’s shareholders will receive approximately 130 million ordinary shares of the combined company in exchange for their existing VERAXA shares. Existing VERAXA shareholders and management will not receive any cash proceeds as part of the transaction and will roll over 100% of their equity into the combined company.

    Assuming a share price of $10.00 per share and no redemptions of Voyager’s shares by Voyager’s public shareholders, VERAXA (as a combined entity) is expected to have an implied pro forma equity value of approximately $1.64 billion at closing.

    Upon the closing of the Business Combination, VERAXA anticipates access to approximately up to $253 million in cash held in trust by Voyager, prior to the payment of transaction costs of VERAXA and Voyager, and assuming no redemptions by Voyager’s public shareholders.

    The boards of directors of both Voyager and VERAXA unanimously approved the Business Combination. Voyager and VERAXA expect the Business Combination to close in the fourth quarter of 2025. The transaction is subject to approval of Voyager’s and VERAXA’s shareholders and the satisfaction of certain other customary closing conditions.

    Additional information about the transaction will be provided in a Current Report on Form 8-K that will contain an investor presentation to be filed with the SEC and will be available at www.sec.gov. In addition, VERAXA will file other documents regarding the Business Combination with the SEC. This communication is not intended to be, and is not, a substitute for the proxy statement/prospectus or any other document that Voyager has filed or may file with the SEC in connection with the Business Combination.

    Advisors

    Anne Martina Group is acting as sole M&A advisor to VERAXA. Duane Morris LLP is acting as legal counsel to VERAXA. Winston & Strawn LLP is serving as legal counsel to Voyager. Cantor Fitzgerald is acting as Voyager’s capital markets advisor.

    About VERAXA Biotech

    At VERAXA, we are building a premier engine for the discovery and development of next-generation antibody-based therapeutics, including bispecific ADCs, bispecific T cell engagers and other innovative formats. Powered by a suite of transformative technologies and guided by rigorous quality-by-design principles, we are rapidly advancing our pipeline of ADCs and proprietary BiTAC formats into clinical development and beyond. VERAXA was founded on scientific breakthroughs made at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory, a world-renowned institution known for pioneering life science research and cutting-edge technology. For more information, please visit www.veraxa.com.

    On April 22, 2025, VERAXA entered into a definitive business combination agreement (the “Business Combination Agreement”) with Voyager Acquisition Corp., a Cayman Islands exempted company and special purpose acquisition company targeting the healthcare sector (NASDAQ: VACH, “Voyager”). Upon closing of the Business Combination Agreement, VERAXA is expected to become a publicly traded company listed on NASDAQ.

    About Voyager Acquisition Corp.

    Voyager is a special purpose acquisition company with a bold mission: to revolutionize the healthcare sector through a merger, stock purchase, or business combination. Our team of experienced executives includes unparalleled expertise in investing, operations, and medical innovation, supported by a vast network of connections. With these strengths, we not only seek to drive success but commit to scaling companies to unprecedented heights in the healthcare industry. For more information, please visit https://www.voyageracq.com.

    Participants In the Solicitation

    Voyager, VERAXA, and their respective directors, executive officers, other members of management, and employees may be deemed participants in the solicitation of proxies from Voyager’s stockholders with respect to the Business Combination. Investors and security holders may obtain more detailed information regarding the names and interests in the Business Combination of Voyager’s directors and officers in Voyager’s filings with the SEC, including, when filed with the SEC, the preliminary proxy statement/prospectus, the definitive proxy statement/prospectus, amendments and supplements thereto, and other documents filed with the SEC. Such information with respect to VERAXA’s directors and executive officers will also be included in the proxy statement/prospectus. You may obtain free copies of these documents as described below under the heading “Additional Information and Where to Find It”.

    Non-Solicitation

    This press release is not a proxy statement or solicitation of a proxy, consent or authorization with respect to any securities or in respect of the potential transaction and shall not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy the securities of Voyager or VERAXA, nor shall there be any sale of any such securities in any state or jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation, or sale would be unlawful prior to registration or qualification under the securities laws of such state or jurisdiction. No offer of securities shall be made except by means of a prospectus meeting the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This press release includes certain statements that may be considered forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. Forward-looking statements include, without limitation, statements about future events or Voyager’s or VERAXA’s future financial or operating performance. For example, statements regarding VERAXA’s anticipated growth and the anticipated growth and other metrics, statements regarding the benefits of the Business Combination, and the anticipated timing of the completion of the Business Combination are forward-looking statements. In some cases, you can identify forward-looking statements by terminology such as “may,” “should,” “could,” “might,” “plan,” “possible,” “project,” “strive,” “budget,” “forecast,” “expect,” “intend,” “will,” “estimate,” “anticipate,” “believe,” “predict,” “potential” or “continue,” or the negatives of these terms or variations of them or similar terminology.

    These forward-looking statements regarding future events and the future results of Voyager and VERAXA are based on current expectations, estimates, forecasts, and projections about the industry in which VERAXA operates, as well as the beliefs and assumptions of Voyager’s management and VERAXA’s management. These forward-looking statements are only predictions and are subject to, without limitation, (i) known and unknown risks, including the risks and uncertainties indicated from time to time in the final prospectus of Voyager relating to its initial public offering filed with the SEC, including those under “Risk Factors” therein, and other documents filed or to be filed with the SEC by Voyager; (ii) uncertainties; (iii) assumptions; and (iv) other factors beyond Voyager’s or VERAXA’s control that are difficult to predict because they relate to events and depend on circumstances that will occur in the future. They are neither statements of historical fact nor promises or guarantees of future performance. Therefore, VERAXA’s actual results may differ materially and adversely from those expressed or implied in any forward-looking statements and Voyager and VERAXA therefore caution against relying on any of these forward-looking statements.

    These forward-looking statements are based upon estimates and assumptions that, while considered reasonable by Voyager and its management, VERAXA and its management, as the case may be, are inherently uncertain and are inherently subject to risks, variability and contingencies, many of which are beyond Voyager’s or VERAXA’s control. Factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from current expectations include, but are not limited to: (i) the occurrence of any event, change or other circumstances that could give rise to the termination of the Business Combination Agreement and any subsequent definitive agreements with respect to the Business Combination; (ii) the outcome of any legal proceedings that may be instituted against Voyager, VERAXA, or others following the announcement of the Business Combination and any definitive agreements with respect thereto; (iii) the inability to complete the Business Combination due to the failure to obtain consents and approvals of the shareholders of Voyager, to obtain financing to complete the Business Combination or to satisfy other conditions to closing, or delays in obtaining, adverse conditions contained in, or the inability to obtain necessary regulatory approvals required to complete the transactions contemplated by the Business Combination Agreement; (iv) changes to the proposed structure of the Business Combination that may be required or appropriate as a result of applicable laws or regulations or as a condition to obtaining regulatory approval of the Business Combination; (v) projections, estimates and forecasts of revenue and other financial and performance metrics, projections of market opportunity and expectations, and the estimated implied enterprise value of VERAXA; (vi) VERAXA’s ability to scale and grow its business, and the advantages and expected growth of VERAXA; (vii) VERAXA’s ability to source and retain talent, the cash position of VERAXA following closing of the Business Combination; (viii) the ability to meet stock exchange listing standards in connection with, and following, the consummation of the Business Combination; (ix) the risk that the Business Combination disrupts current plans and operations of VERAXA as a result of the announcement and consummation of the Business Combination; (x) the ability to recognize the anticipated benefits of the Business Combination, which may be affected by, among other things, competition, the ability of VERAXA to grow and manage growth profitably, maintain key relationships and retain its management and key employees; (xi) costs related to the Business Combination; (xii) changes in applicable laws, regulations, political and economic developments; (xiii) the possibility that VERAXA may be adversely affected by other economic, business and/or competitive factors; (xiv) VERAXA’s estimates of expenses and profitability; (xv) the failure to realize estimated shareholder redemptions, purchase price and other adjustments; and (xvi) other risks and uncertainties set forth in the filings by Voyager with the SEC. There may be additional risks that neither Voyager nor VERAXA presently know or that Voyager and VERAXA currently believe are immaterial that could also cause actual results to differ from those contained in the forward-looking statements. Any forward-looking statements made by or on behalf of Voyager or VERAXA speak only as of the date they are made. None of Voyager or VERAXA undertakes any obligation to update any forward-looking statements to reflect any changes in their respective expectations with regard thereto or any changes in events, conditions or circumstances on which any such statement is based.

    Additional Information and Where to Find It

    In connection with the Business Combination Agreement, Voyager and/or VERAXA intend to file relevant materials with the SEC, including the Registration Statement, which will include a proxy statement/prospectus of Voyager, and will file other documents regarding the proposed transaction with the SEC. This communication is not intended to be, and is not, a substitute for the proxy statement/prospectus or any other document that Voyager has filed or may file with the SEC in connection with the proposed transaction. When available, the definitive proxy statement and other relevant materials for the proposed transaction will be mailed or made available to stockholders of Voyager as of a record date to be established for voting on the proposed transaction.

    Before making any voting or investment decision, investors and stockholders of Voyager are urged to carefully read, when they become available, the entire registration statement, the proxy statement/prospectus, and any other relevant documents filed with the SEC, as well as any amendments or supplements to these documents, and the documents incorporated by reference therein, because they will contain important information about Voyager, VERAXA, and the proposed transaction. Voyager’s investors and stockholders and other interested persons will also be able to obtain copies of the registration statement, the preliminary proxy statement/prospectus, the definitive proxy statement/prospectus, other documents filed with the SEC that will be incorporated by reference therein, and all other relevant documents filed with the SEC by Voyager in connection with the Transaction, without charge, once available, at the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov, or by directing a request to Voyager at the address set forth below.

    Contact

    VERAXA Biotech AG Voyager Acquisition Corp.
    Dr. Christoph Antz
    CEO
    Telephone: +49-6221-3521330
    Email: antz@veraxa.com
    Mr. Adeel Rouf
    Chief Executive Officer, and Director
    Email: adeel@voyageracq.com
       
    For Media & Investors
    Mario Brkulj
    Valency Communications
    Telephone: +49 160 9352 9951
    Email: mbrkulj@valencycomms.eu
     
       
    BiTAC is a trademark of VERAXA Biotech AG.  
       

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Cyabra Launches AI-Powered Deepfake Detection Tool to Expose Media Manipulation

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    New York, NY, July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Cyabra Strategy Ltd. (“Cyabra”), the AI-powered platform for real-time disinformation detection, has announced the launch of its advanced deepfake detection tool designed to help brands and governments counter the growing threat of AI-generated “synthetic” media.

    The new capability uses artificial intelligence to analyze images and videos for signs of manipulation, providing rapid verification of content authenticity. In an era when hyper-realistic fake videos and photos spread disinformation at alarming speeds, Cyabra’s tool empowers organizations to distinguish real content from convincing forgeries, detecting threats to brand reputation and public safety.

    Earlier this year, the World Economic Forum warned that organizations must be vigilant and maintain awareness of attacker techniques to protect their people and systems. In February 2024, it was reported that a finance worker for a multinational firm in Hong Kong was tricked into paying $25 million based on a Zoom meeting in which all of the participants, including the company’s chief financial officer, were all deepfakes.

    The advanced detection tool leverages two proprietary AI models: PixelProof for images and MotionProof for videos. PixelProof uses spatio-frequency analysis to detect invisible pixel inconsistencies, while MotionProof identifies unnatural movement patterns and lip-sync errors across video frames. Both models deliver results in seconds and provide confidence scores with visual heatmap explanations showing exactly where content appears manipulated.

    Dan Brahmy, CEO and Co-founder of Cyabra. “Our detection tool acts as a digital magnifying glass, revealing the invisible fingerprints of even the most convincing deepfakes. As digital manipulation evolves, our defenses must keep pace. This new tool gives our customers the forensic clarity needed to help them preserve trust, safeguard discourse, and defend democratic institutions.”

    Recently fabricated videos of public figures – one depicting U.S. President Donald Trump being “arrested,” and another showing Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy seemingly surrendering to Russia – briefly went viral and misled audiences before being debunked. Companies are also increasingly targets of deepfake-driven disinformation. Malicious actors can use AI-generated videos and images to fabricate corporate scandals or executive remarks, wreaking havoc on a company’s reputation and stock price. This vulnerability has made deepfake detection a critical component of brand reputation management.

    Unlike standalone deepfake detection tools, Cyabra’s solution integrates into the company’s comprehensive disinformation detection platform. Deepfakes are rarely used in isolation; they are often deployed alongside fake social media profiles, bot networks, and orchestrated false narratives as part of larger influence campaigns. Recognizing this, Cyabra has built the deepfake detector to work in concert with its existing suite of tools for authenticity analysis, narrative tracking, and 24/7 real-time monitoring. This integrated approach gives government agencies and corporations the context and early-warning signals needed to counter complex disinformation threats.

    Cyabra has entered into a business combination agreement with Trailblazer Merger Corporation I (NASDAQ: TBMC), a blank-check special-purpose acquisition company.

    About Cyabra

    Cyabra is a real-time AI-powered platform that uncovers and analyzes online disinformation and misinformation by uncovering fake profiles, harmful narratives, and GenAI content across social media and digital news channels. Cyabra’s AI solutions protect corporations and governments against brand reputation risks, election manipulation, foreign interference, and other online threats. Cyabra’s platform leverages proprietary algorithms and NLP solutions, gathering and analyzing publicly available data to provide clear, actionable insights and real-time alerts that inform critical decision-making. Cyabra uncovers the good, bad, and fake online.

    For more information, visit www.cyabra.com.

    Media Contact:

    Jill Burkes
    Jill@cyabra.com

    About Trailblazer

    Trailblazer is a blank check company formed for the purpose of entering into a merger, share exchange, asset acquisition, stock purchase, recapitalization, reorganization, or other similar business combination with one or more businesses or entities. For more information, visit: www.trailblazermergercorp.com

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This press release contains certain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws with respect to certain products and services that are the subject of a proposed transaction (the “Business Combination”) between Trailblazer and Cyabra. All statements other than statements of historical facts contained in this press release, including statements regarding Cyabra’s business strategy, products and services, research and development costs, plans and objectives of management for future operations, and future results of current and anticipated product offerings, are forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements generally are identified by the words “believe,” “project,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “estimate,” “intend,” “strategy,” “future,” “opportunity,” “plan,” “may,” “should,” “will,” “would,” “will be,” “will continue,” “will likely result,” and similar expressions. These forward-looking statements are subject to a number of risks, uncertainties and assumptions, including, but not limited to, the following risks relating to the proposed transaction: the ability to complete the Business Combination or, if Trailblazer does not consummate such Business Combination, any other

    initial business combination; expectations regarding Cyabra’s strategies and future financial performance, including its future business plans or objectives, prospective performance and opportunities and competitors, revenues, products and services, pricing, operating expenses, market trends, liquidity, cash flows and uses of cash, capital expenditures, and Cyabra’s ability to invest in growth initiatives and pursue acquisition opportunities; the occurrence of any event, change or other circumstances that could give rise to the termination of the Business Combination Agreement; the outcome of any legal proceedings that may be instituted against Trailblazer or Cyabra following announcement of the Business Combination Agreement and the transactions contemplated therein; the inability to complete the proposed Business Combination due to, among other things, the failure to obtain Trailblazer stockholder approval; the risk that the announcement and consummation of the proposed Business Combination disrupts Cyabra’s current operations and future plans; the ability to recognize the anticipated benefits of the proposed Business Combination; unexpected costs related to the proposed Business Combination; the amount of any redemptions by existing holders of Trailblazer’s common stock being greater than expected; limited liquidity and trading of Trailblazer’s securities; geopolitical risk and changes in applicable laws or regulations; the size of the addressable markets for Cyabra’s products and services; the possibility that Trailblazer and/or Cyabra may be adversely affected by other economic, business, and/or competitive factors; the ability to obtain and/or maintain the listing of the combined company’s common stock on Nasdaq following the Business Combination; operational risk; and the risks that the consummation of the proposed Business Combination is substantially delayed or does not occur.

    Important Information for Investors and Stockholders

    In connection with the Business Combination, Trailblazer Holdings, Inc., a subsidiary of Trailblazer (“Holdings”) has filed a registration statement on Form S-4 (the “Registration Statement”) with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”), which includes a preliminary proxy statement/prospectus, and certain other related documents, which will be both the proxy statement to be distributed to holders of shares of Trailblazer’s common stock in connection with its solicitation of proxies for the vote by its stockholders with respect to the Business Combination and other matters as may be described in the Registration Statement, as well as the prospectus of Holdings relating to the offer and sale of its securities to be issued in the Business Combination. . After the Registration Statement is declared effective, the proxy statement/prospectus will be sent to all Trailblazer stockholders so that they may vote on the Business Combination.

    INVESTORS AND STOCKHOLDERS OF TRAILBLAZER ARE URGED TO READ CAREFULLY THE REGISTRATION STATEMENT, PROXY STATEMENT/PROSPECTUS, AND OTHER RELEVANT DOCUMENTS FILED OR TO BE FILED WITH THE SEC WHEN THEY BECOME AVAILABLE, AS THEY WILL CONTAIN IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT THE BUSINESS COMBINATION AND THE PARTIES INVOLVED.

    Trailblazer stockholders are currently able to obtain copies of the preliminary proxy

    statement/prospectus and other documents filed with the SEC that are incorporated by reference therein, and will be able to obtain the definitive proxy statement/prospectus and other documents filed with the SEC that will be incorporated by reference therein, once available, in all cases without charge, at the SEC’s web site at www.sec.gov, or by directing a request to: Trailblazer at 510 Madison Avenue, Suite 1401, New York, NY 10022, Telephone: 646-747-9618.

    Participants in the Solicitation

    Cyabra, Trailblazer, and their respective directors and executive officers may be deemed participants in the solicitation of proxies from Trailblazer stockholders regarding the proposed Business Combination. Information about Trailblazer’s directors and executive officers and their ownership of Trailblazer’s securities is set forth in the proxy statement/prospectus pertaining to the proposed Business Combination.

    No Offer or Solicitation

    This press release does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any securities, or a solicitation of any vote or approval. No sale of securities shall occur in any jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation, or sale would be unlawful before registration or qualification under applicable laws.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: zerohash funding infrastructure helps power World App Mini App ecosystem; launches Account Funding SDK for Mini Apps in World App

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NEW YORK, July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — zerohash today announced it is providing funding infrastructure for Mini Apps within the World App ecosystem.

    Zerohash for World App’s Mini App ecosystem aims to help pave the way for real-world adoption of digital assets including WLD (Worldcoin), as well as offering an additional technical foundation for developers building Mini Apps. The Mini App ecosystem allows third-party developers to build experiences directly inside the platform – ranging from event-based trading to AI-powered utilities and decentralized services. Notable Mini Apps include Kalshi, UNO Swap, and World Chat, across over 1 million unique users (Source:World App).

    Mini App developers can now seamlessly embed zerohash’s regulated funding rails to enable compliant, in-platform transactions. By extension, World App users are able to instantly fund their accounts in USDC or WLD, without needing to manually input their wallet addresses or leaving the platform. zerohash’s Account Funding SDK works by automatically detecting the World App environment using pre-populated user context to deliver a faster, frictionless funding experience.

    The integration is now live for the growing roster of Mini App developers, as World App becomes a leading hub for on-chain, user-friendly companies.

    Edward Woodford, CEO of zerohash said, “as the go-to partner for compliant, regulated, on-chain infrastructure, zerohash is proud to deliver the rails that make innovators including World App.”

    Head of Financial Products at Tools for Humanity, Patrick Traughber said, “zerohash’s infrastructure helps deliver a more seamless Mini App developer experience as we build out engaging products for the real human network.”

    About zerohash
    zerohash is the leading infrastructure provider for crypto, stablecoin, and tokenized assets. Its API and embeddable dev-kit enables innovators to easily launch solutions across cross-border payments, commerce, trading, remittance, payroll, tokenization and on/off-ramps.

    zerohash powers solutions for some of the largest and innovative companies including Interactive Brokers, Stripe, Shift4, Franklin Templeton, Felix Pago, Kalshi and LightSpark. Zerohash Holdings is backed by investors, including Point72 Ventures, Bain Capital Ventures, and NYCA.

    In the United States, zerohash LLC is a FinCen-registered Money Service Business and a regulated Money Transmitter that can operate in 51 U.S. jurisdictions. zerohash LLC and zerohash Liquidity

    Services LLC are licensed to engage in virtual currency business activity by the New York State Department of Financial Services. zerohash Trust Company LLC has been approved by the North Carolina Commissioner of Banks as a non-depository trust company. For information about our global regulatory footprint, including our Argentinian registrations, see here.

    zerohash Disclosures
    zerohash services and product offerings may not be available in all jurisdictions.

    zerohash accounts are not subject to FDIC or SIPC protections, or any such equivalent protections that may exist outside of the US. zerohash’s technical support and enablement of any asset is not an endorsement of such asset and is not a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any crypto asset.

    zerohash is not registered with the SEC or FINRA. zerohash does not provide any securities services and is not a custodian of securities, including security tokens, on behalf of Customers.

    Learn more by visiting zerohash.com or following us on X @ZeroHashX

    Media Contacts
    zerohash
    Shaun O’Keeffe
    (855) 744-7333
    media@zerohash.com 

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Ataccama brings AI to data lineage to help business users understand and trust their data

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    BOSTON, July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Ataccama, the data trust company, today announced the release of Ataccama ONE v16.2, the latest version of its unified data trust platform. This release makes it easier for business users to understand how data moves and changes across systems without writing a single line of SQL. With intuitive, compact lineage views and improved performance, teams can make better decisions with greater confidence and speed.

    Most business teams can’t see where their data comes from or how it has been changed. Instead, they rely on technical experts to explain the logic behind key metrics, which slows decision-making and exposes organizations to unnecessary risk. Forrester reports that only 20% of business decision-makers are self-sufficient with analytics tools. The result is a persistent trust gap that makes it harder to govern data, scale analytics, or move at the speed business demands. 

    Ataccama closes that gap by turning complex data logic into plain language. Business users can now trace a data point’s origin and understand how it was profiled or flagged without relying on IT. Ataccama shows how data flows through systems and provides plain-language descriptions of the steps behind every number. For example, in a financial services setting, a data steward can immediately see how a risk score was derived or how a flagged transaction passed through a series of enrichment and quality checks. That kind of visibility shortens reviews, streamlines audits, and gives business teams the confidence to act on the data in front of them.

    “We’re seeing enterprise data projects increasingly kick off in the business, not just in IT, and that changes everything,” said Jessica Smith, VP of Data Quality at Ataccama. “The teams driving these initiatives need to understand where the data comes from, how it’s changed, and whether it can be trusted. That’s why we’ve focused on making complex data processes, like profiling, quality checks, and lineage, clear and usable to everyone. Because if data is going to scale across the business, it has to work for the people who are using it.”

    Ataccama strengthens day-to-day governance and lays the groundwork for more scalable, compliant AI initiatives. Key features include:

    • AI-powered data lineage. Automatically generates readable descriptions of how data was transformed both upstream and downstream, clarifying filters, joins, and calculations, so business users can understand the logic behind each dataset without reading SQL.
    • Compact lineage diagrams. Presents a simplified, high-level view of data flows with the option to drill into details on demand. This makes it easier to identify issues, answer audit questions, and align stakeholders on how data flows through the organization.
    • Edge processing for secure lineage. Enables metadata extraction from on-prem or restricted environments without moving sensitive data to the cloud. Organizations can maintain compliance, minimize risk, and still get full visibility into their data pipelines, regardless of where the data lives.
    • Expanded pushdown support and performance enhancements. Users can now execute profiling and data quality workloads in pushdown mode for BigQuery and Azure Synapse, minimizing data movement and improving performance for large-scale workloads. The release also includes volume support for Databricks Unity Catalog, further optimizing execution within modern cloud platforms. 

    Ataccama ONE v16.2 data trust platform is available immediately. To learn how to simplify data lineage and drive clarity for both business and IT, watch the webinar

    About Ataccama

    Ataccama is the data trust company. Organizations worldwide rely on Ataccama ONE, the unified data trust platform, to ensure data is accurate, accessible, and actionable. By integrating data quality, lineage, observability, governance, and master data management into a single solution, Ataccama enables businesses to unlock value from their data for AI, analytics, and operations. Trusted by global enterprises, Ataccama helps organizations drive innovation, reduce costs, and mitigate risk. Recognized as a Leader in the 2025 Gartner Magic Quadrant for Augmented Data Quality and the 2025 Magic Quadrant for Data and Analytics Governance, Ataccama continues to set the standard for trusted data at scale. Learn more at www.ataccama.com.

    Media contact 
    press@ataccama.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: BYDFi’s MoonX Integrates xStocks for Onchain Trading of Tokenized U.S. Equities

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    VICTORIA, Seychelles, July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — BYDFi’s professional-grade onchain trading tool, MoonX, now supports xStocks—a tokenized equity product issued by Switzerland-based Backed Finance. Through this integration, users can seamlessly buy and sell tokenized representations of leading U.S. stocks such as NVDA, GOOGL, TSLA, and AMZN directly on the Solana blockchain using crypto assets.

    Introducing xStocks: Real-World Equities on Solana

    xStocks are onchain tokens representing shares of publicly traded U.S. companies. Each token is fully backed 1:1 by the corresponding underlying equity held by a licensed custodian, providing users with blockchain-native access to traditional assets while ensuring transparency and security.

    The tokens are issued by Backed, a Swiss financial services provider that operates under the country’s DLT regulatory framework. xStocks are built using the SPL token standard and are fully deployed on the Solana blockchain, ensuring high-speed transferability and onchain compatibility with Web3 tools and decentralized applications.

    To ensure transparency, xStocks are integrated with Chainlink’s Proof of Reserve (PoR) system. This allows anyone to independently verify, onchain and in real time, that the number of tokenized shares in circulation is fully backed by the underlying securities held in custody. The product offers 24/7 access to U.S. equities without the constraints of traditional trading hours or brokerage account requirements.

    Why It Matters: Unlocking Stock Market Access for Crypto Users

    The addition of xStocks significantly extends MoonX’s asset offering, allowing users to invest in traditional U.S. equities without leaving the crypto ecosystem. Retail and international investors can now trade fractionalized shares of high-value stocks using cryptocurrencies, removing the need for fiat conversion, traditional brokerage access, or lengthy onboarding procedures.

    All transactions are executed directly on the Solana blockchain, offering high-speed finality, transparency, and seamless user experience. All xStocks trades on MoonX are currently zero-fee.

    Access xStocks on MoonX: https://www.bydfi.com/en/moonx/xstocks

    BYDFi’s Vision for Onchain Capital Markets

    The integration of xStocks marks a strategic step in BYDFi’s efforts to support regulated, tokenized real-world assets. By offering onchain access to tokenized U.S. stocks via a compliant product, MoonX reinforces a vision of borderless, inclusive, and regulation-aligned finance for global crypto users.

    “Tokenized stocks represent a meaningful advancement in the evolution of capital markets,” said Michael, Co-founder and CEO of BYDFi. “With xStocks now live on MoonX, we are giving users around the world a frictionless way to access U.S. equities—powered by blockchain, backed by real assets, and available 24/7. This is a step toward our broader vision of building a more open, inclusive, and efficient global financial system.”


    About BYDFi

    Established in 2020, BYDFi has built a global user base of over one million across 190+ countries and regions. Recognized by Forbes as one of the Best Crypto Exchanges & Apps for Beginners of 2025, BYDFi offers a full range of trading services—from Spot and Perpetual Contracts to Copy Trading, Automated Bots, and Onchain Tools—empowering both novice and experienced traders to navigate the digital asset market with confidence.

    BYDFi is dedicated to delivering a world-class crypto trading experience for every user.

    BUIDL Your Dream Finance.

    • Website: https://www.bydfi.com
    • Support email: cs@bydfi.com
    • Business partnerships: bd@bydfi.com
    • Media inquiries: media@bydfi.com

    Twitter( X ) | LinkedIn | Telegram | YouTube | How to Buy on BYDFi

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Allied Energy Corporation (OTC: AGYP) Signs Strategic MOU with Green Rain Energy Holdings (OTC: GREH) to Convert Stranded Gas into Power for Texas-Based EV Charging Infrastructure

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    • Allied Energy Corporation (OTC: AGYP) has signed a strategic Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with Green Rain Energy Holdings Inc. (OTC: GREH) to supply natural gas for powering EV charging stations across Texas, transforming stranded and underutilized gas resources into sustainable energy for high-speed electric vehicle infrastructure.
    • This partnership positions AGYP at the forefront of Texas’s energy transition, leveraging the state’s leadership in oil and gas production alongside over $400 million in NEVI funding to address grid constraints and support the projected 1 million EVs on Texas roads by 2030 through off-grid, localized power generation.
    • By converting natural gas into power for Level 3 DC fast chargers along key corridors like I-35 and I-10, AGYP aims to generate recurring revenue in the $120B+ EV charging market, promote decarbonization, and align with Texas’s goals for energy independence and carbon reduction, as highlighted by President George Monteith.

    DALLAS, July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Allied Energy Corporation (OTC: AGYP), a Texas-based independent energy producer focused on hydrocarbon production and well-site optimization, is proud to announce the execution of a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with Green Rain Energy Holdings Inc. (OTC: GREH), a clean energy infrastructure developer, to supply natural gas for EV charging station deployment across Texas and other high-growth U.S. markets.

    The agreement marks a bold step in bridging traditional energy with the future of electrified transportation, allowing Allied Energy Corporation to monetize a broad spectrum of energy resources to help power the next generation of high-speed charging networks.

    “This is where energy/oil field innovation meets clean energy execution,” said George Monteith, President of Allied Energy Corporation. “We’re taking energy resources that are often wasted, stranded, or underutilized and turning them into revenue-producing power for EV infrastructure. That’s a win for Texas, a win for decarbonization, and a win for investors.”

    Texas: The Epicenter of the Energy Transition

    Texas leads the U.S. in both oil & gas production and energy transition investment. According to the U.S. Department of Energy, Texas is eligible for over $400 million in NEVI funding to expand electric vehicle infrastructure across interstate corridors and underserved areas.

    With more than 1 million EVs projected to hit Texas roads by 2030, and the state facing ongoing grid constraints, there is a growing need for off-grid, localized power generation to support fast-charging infrastructure. This MOU positions Allied Energy Corporation to become a key energy supplier for those systems.

    MOU Highlights: Natural Gas to Power EV Corridors

    Under the agreement, Green Rain Energy Holdings will identify priority charging station corridors, and Allied Energy Corporation will:

    • Conduct gas composition testing, where required (BTU, methane content, impurities)
    • Negotiate surface rights & Energy leases for micro-generation integration
    • Provide quarterly reports on Energy quality and Energy output from all sources.

    The Energy resources will fuel small-scale turbine or generator units that power Level 3 DC fast chargers—bypassing lengthy grid interconnect timelines and enabling rapid deployment in key areas, such as West Texas, the I-35 corridor, and along I-10.

    Economic & Environmental Upside

    This model allows Allied Energy Corporation to:

    • Generate new recurring revenue from all energy sources
    • Participate in the rapidly growing $120B+ EV charging market (Fortune Business Insights, 2024)
    • Provide a cleaner alternative to diesel-based mobile charging units
    • Support Texas’s dual mandate of energy independence and carbon reduction

    “We’re transforming how to use energy resources to create value,” Monteith added. “And we’re doing it in a way that aligns with infrastructure funding, clean air goals, and decentralized energy strategies.”

    The MOU is effective for 120 days and is expected to result in a definitive Energy Purchase and Sales Agreement (EPSA) upon commencement of site development.

    About AGYP:

    Allied Energy Corp. is an energy development and production company acquiring oil & gas reserves in some of the most prolific hydrocarbon bearing regions of the United States. The Company specializes in the business of reworking & re-completing ‘existing’ oil & gas wells located in the thousands of mature oil & gas producing fields across the United States. The Company applies its knowledge, experience, and effective well-remediation technologies to achieve higher production volumes, longer well life, and more efficient recovery of the proven and available oil and gas reserves in the fields/projects in which it has acquired an ownership interest. The Company will utilize updated technologies such as hydraulic fracturing (“fracking”), drilling of lateral (“horizontal”) legs in productive zones, and utilizing new cased hole electric logging to locate bypassed pays, all to enhance daily rates and oil & gas recoveries. By acquiring interests in a growing number of selected projects in various regions, Allied Energy Corp. is diversifying its exposure and effectively minimizing risk as it pursues corporate growth, top line & bottom-line revenues to the benefit of all stakeholders. There are proven, recoverable reserves contained in the many aging oil & gas fields that have been bypassed by companies moving away from these fields in search of deeper, more plentiful, but more costly reserves. The Company plans to concentrate on bypassed oil and gas as there is less competition and, as mentioned above, the costs are considerably less. Additionally, the company will acquire interests in marginal wells that can be acquired at minimal cost, of which there are 420,000 wells in the U.S. Quoting Barry Russell, President of the Independent Petroleum Association of America (“IPAA”) – “With approximately 20 percent of American oil production and 10 percent of American natural gas production coming from marginal wells, they are America’s true strategic petroleum reserve.”

    For more information about Allied Energy Corporation, visit: www.alliedengycorp.com.

    Safe Harbor Statement:

    This press release may contain certain forward-looking statements that are within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The Company has tried, whenever possible, to identify these forward-looking statements using words such as “anticipates,” “believes,” “estimates,” “expects,” “plans,” “intends,” “potential” and similar expressions. These statements reflect the Company’s current beliefs and are based upon information currently available to it. Accordingly, such forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which could cause the Company’s actual results, performance or achievements to differ materially from those expressed in or implied by such statements. The Company undertakes no obligation to update or advise in the event of any change, addition or alteration to the information catered in this Press Release, including such forward-looking statements.

    Contact:

    Allied Energy Corporation
    Phone: 972-632-2393
    Email: info@alliedengycorp.com
    X: https://x.com/AlliedEnergyCo1

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/1d2d9c88-6393-4129-8fe3-ce2783eea12a

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Analysis: Children living near oil and gas wells face higher risk of rare leukemia, studies show

    Source: The Conversation – USA (3) – By Lisa McKenzie, Associate Professor of Health, Department of Environmental & Occupational Health, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus

    The U.S. has nearly 1 million oil and natural gas wells. Some, like the one here in Commerce City, Colo., are within a few thousand feet of schools and neighborhoods. RJ Sangosti/Getty Images

    Acute lymphocytic leukemia is one of the most commonly diagnosed cancers in children, although it is rare. It begins in the bone marrow and rapidly progresses.

    Long-term survival rates exceed 90%, but many survivors face lifelong health challenges. Those include heart conditions, mental health struggles and a greater chance of developing a second cancer.

    Overall cancer rates in the U.S. have declined since 2002, but childhood acute lymphocytic leukemia rates continue to rise. This trend underscores the need for prevention rather than focusing only on treatment for this disease.

    A growing body of literature suggests exposure to the types of chemicals emitted from oil and natural gas wells increases the risk of developing childhood acute lymphocytic leukemia.

    Heavy machinery injects water under the surface of the earth to push oil and natural gas out.
    NurPhoto/GettyImages

    We are environmental epidemiologists focused on understanding the health implications of living near oil and natural gas development operations in Colorado and Pennsylvania. Both states experienced a rapid increase in oil and natural gas development in residential areas beginning in the early 21st century. We’ve studied this issue in these states, using different datasets and some different approaches.

    2 studies, similar findings

    Both of our studies used a case-control design. This design compares children with cancer, known as cases, with children without cancer, known as controls. We used data from statewide birth and cancer registries.

    We also used specialized mapping techniques to estimate exposure to oil and natural gas development during sensitive time windows, such as pregnancy or early childhood.

    The Colorado study looked at children born between 1992 and 2019. The study included 451 children diagnosed with leukemia and 2,706 children with no cancer diagnosis. It considered how many oil and natural gas wells were near a child’s home and how intense the activity was at each well. Intensity of activity included the volume of oil and gas production and phase of well production.

    The Colorado study found that children ages 2-9 living in areas with the highest density and intensity wells within eight miles (13 kilometers) of their home were at least two times more likely to be diagnosed with acute lymphocytic leukemia. Children with wells within three miles (five kilometers), of their home bore the greatest risk.

    The Pennsylvania study looked at 405 children diagnosed with leukemia between 2009 and 2017 and 2,080 children without any cancer diagnosis. This study found that children living within 1.2 miles (two kilometers) of oil and natural gas wells at birth were two to three times more likely to be diagnosed with acute lymphocytic leukemia between ages 2 to 7 than those who lived farther than 1.2 miles away.

    The risk of developing leukemia was more pronounced in children who were exposed during their mother’s pregnancy.

    The results of our two studies are also supported by a previous study in Colorado published in 2017. That study found children diagnosed with acute lymphocytic leukemia were four times more likely to live in areas with a high density of oil and natural gas wells than children diagnosed with other cancers.

    Policy implications

    To extract oil and natural gas from underground reserves, heavy drilling equipment injects water and chemicals into the earth under high pressure. Petroleum and contaminated wastewater are returned to the surface. It is well established that these activities can emit cancer-causing chemicals. Those include benzene, as well as other pollutants, to the air and water.

    The U.S. is the world’s largest producer of oil and natural gas. There are almost 1 million producing wells across the country, and many of these are located in or near residential areas. This puts millions of children at increased risk of exposure to cancer-causing chemicals.

    In the U.S., oil and natural gas development is generally regulated at the state level. Policies aimed at protecting public health include establishing minimum distances between a new well and existing homes, known as a setback distance. These policies also include requirements for emission control technologies on new and existing wells and restrictions on the construction of new wells.

    Setbacks offer a powerful solution to reduce noise, odors and other hazards experienced by communities near oil and gas wells. However, it is challenging to establish a universal setback that optimally addresses all hazards. That’s because noise, air pollutants and water contaminants dissipate at different rates depending on location and other factors.

    In addition, setbacks focus exclusively on where to place oil and natural gas wells but do not impose any restrictions on releases of air pollutants or greenhouse gases. Therefore, they do not address regional air quality issues or mitigate climate change.

    In many U.S. cities there are set distances that oil and gas wells are allowed to be from places such as schools and neighborhoods. In this Frederick, Colo., neighborhood the oil rig is very near houses.
    UGC/GettyImages

    Furthermore, current U.S. setback distances range from just 200 feet to 3,200 feet. Our results indicate that even the largest setback of 3,200 feet (one kilometer) is not sufficient to protect children from an increased leukemia risk.

    Our results support a more comprehensive policy approach that considers both larger setback distances and mandatory monitoring and control of hazardous emissions on both new and existing wells.

    Future research

    More research is needed in other states, such as Texas and California, that have oil and natural gas development in residential areas, as well as on other pediatric cancers.

    One such cancer is acute myeloid leukemia. This is another type of leukemia that starts in bone marrow and rapidly progresses. This cancer has exhibited a strong link to benzene exposure in adult workers in several industries, including the petroleum industry. Researchers have also documented a moderate cancer link for children exposed to vehicular benzene.

    It remains unclear whether benzene is the culprit or if another agent or combination of hazards is an underlying cause of acute myeloid leukemia.

    Even though questions remain, we believe the existing evidence coupled with the seriousness of childhood acute lymphocytic leukemia supports enacting further protective measures. We also believe policymakers should consider the cumulative effects from wells, other pollution sources and socioeconomic stressors on children and communities.

    Read more of our stories about Colorado and Pennsylvania.

    Lisa McKenzie receives funding from the American Cancer Society and the University of Colorado Cancer Center.

    Nicole Deziel receives funding from the American Cancer Society, the National Institutes of Health, and the Yale School of Public Health.

    ref. Children living near oil and gas wells face higher risk of rare leukemia, studies show – https://theconversation.com/children-living-near-oil-and-gas-wells-face-higher-risk-of-rare-leukemia-studies-show-252994

    MIL OSI Analysis

  • MIL-OSI USA: Gov. Kemp: King’s Hawaiian to Invest $54 Million in Hall County Expansion

    Source: US State of Georgia

    ATLANTA – Governor Brian P. Kemp today announced that family-owned, Hawaii-inspired food company King’s Hawaiian® will invest approximately $54 million in expanding its Oakwood facility, creating more than 135 new jobs. 

    “For nearly 15 years, King’s Hawaiian has proven to be an incredible partner in creating quality jobs in northeast Georgia, and we look forward to even more years of great success for them in Hall County,” said Governor Brian Kemp. “Expansions like these are an important part of our economic development work, helping create further opportunities in growing communities.”

    King’s Hawaiian was founded in 1950 by the Taira family in Hilo, Hawaii. Since establishing a presence in Georgia in 2010, the company’s footprint has grown to support more than 800 jobs in the state.

    “This expansion represents a major milestone in our journey, and we’re thrilled to continue growing our ohana in Hall County,” said Mark Taira, CEO of King’s Hawaiian. “For 15 years, Georgia has been an essential part of our success. The support from Lanier Technical College, Georgia Quick Start, and the Greater Hall Chamber of Commerce has been instrumental in helping us train and develop talent to grow our business.”

    The expansion will add a new production line at the 150,000-square-foot King’s Hawaiian facility located in the Oakwood South Industrial Park. Start-up of the new line is expected in the second quarter of 2026, producing additional flavors of King’s Hawaiian Pretzel Bites. The company will be hiring for positions in management, maintenance, food safety, and quality control. Interested individuals can learn more and apply at kingshawaiian.com/careers.

    “King’s Hawaiian has become a cornerstone of our regional economy and a shining example of a company that invests in both business and community,” said Tim Evans, President and CEO of the Greater Hall Chamber of Commerce. “This sixth major expansion since 2010 is a testament to the company’s deep roots in Hall County. We are especially proud of their ongoing support for youth and community programs, including the University of North Georgia’s First Generation Scholars, Junior Achievement, and Youth Leadership Hall. We look forward to continuing this remarkable partnership.”

    Regional Project Manager Brandon Lounsbury represented the Georgia Department of Economic Development’s (GDEcD) Global Commerce team on this competitive project in partnership with the Greater Hall Chamber of Commerce and Georgia EMC. 

    “King’s Hawaiian has been a cornerstone employer in northeast Georgia and a valued partner of Georgia Quick Start for more than a decade,” said GDEcD Commissioner Pat Wilson. “By continuing to invest in people and innovation – and by working closely with the Technical College System of Georgia – King’s Hawaiian is helping build the skilled workforce that drives its success. Congratulations to Hall County on another exciting chapter in this thriving partnership.”

    About KING’S HAWAIIAN 
     
    Founded more than 70 years ago in Hilo, Hawaii, by Robert R. Taira, KING’S HAWAIIAN is a family-owned business that has been dedicated to providing Hawaii-inspired foods made with original recipes and Aloha Spirit for three generations. For more information, visit the company’s website at www.KingsHawaiian.com, or find KING’S HAWAIIAN on FacebookInstagram, and X (formerly Twitter). 

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: ICE Tucson, multiagency case results in Nigerian national pleading guilty to international fraud scheme targeting the elderly

    Source: US Immigration and Customs Enforcement

    TUCSON, Ariz. — A Nigerian national pleaded guilty recently to operating a transnational inheritance fraud scheme that defrauded elderly and vulnerable consumers across the United States. Multiple federal agencies including U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the United States Postal Inspection Service, the Consumer Protection Branch and members of the Homeland Security Taskforce are investigating the case.

    “Transnational fraud schemes thrive in the shadows, turning illicit gains into a facade of legitimacy, especially those involving seniors or other vulnerable people,” said ICE Homeland Security Investigations Arizona acting Special Agent in Charge Ray Rede. “HSI and our law enforcement partners commitment to investigate criminals who steal money sends a clear message: justice will prevail, and those who exploit others for personal gain will be held accountable. We thank all our partners who assisted in this investigation.”

    According to court documents, Ehis Lawrence Akhimie, 41, was a member of a group of fraudsters that sent personalized letters to elderly victims in the United States over the course of several years. The letters falsely claimed that the sender was a representative of a bank in Spain and that the recipient was entitled to receive a multimillion-dollar inheritance left for the recipient by a family member who had died overseas years before. Akhimie and his co-conspirators allegedly told a series of lies to victims, including that, before they could receive their purported inheritance, they were required to send money for delivery fees, taxes, and other payments to avoid questioning from government authorities. Akhimie and his co-conspirators allegedly collected money victims sent in response to the fraudulent letters through a complex web of U.S.-based former victims, whom the defendants convinced to receive money and forward to the defendants or persons associated with them. Victims who sent money never received any purported inheritance funds. In pleading guilty, Akhimie admitted to defrauding over $6 million from more than 400 victims, many of whom were elderly or otherwise vulnerable.

    “The Justice Department’s Consumer Protection Branch will continue to pursue, prosecute and bring to justice transnational criminals responsible for defrauding U.S. consumers, wherever they are located,” said Assistant Attorney General Brett A. Shumate, head of the Justice Department’s Civil Division. “This case is testament to the critical role of international collaboration in tackling transnational crime. I want to thank the members of the Postal Inspection Service and Homeland Security Investigations, as well as the National Crime Agency and Crown Prosecution Service of the United Kingdom for their outstanding contributions to this case.”

    “The U.S. Postal Inspection Service is committed to protecting American consumers from being defrauded by transnational criminal organizations,” said acting Postal Inspector in Charge Bladismir Rojo for the U.S. Postal Inspection Service Miami Division. “We have long partnered with the Department of Justice’s Consumer Protection Branch to deliver justice and we will continue to do so.”

    On June 17, Akhimie pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud. Akhimie faces a maximum penalty of 20 years’ imprisonment.

    This is the second indicted case related to this international fraud scheme. Seven other co-conspirators from the United Kingdom, Spain, and Nigeria have previously been convicted and sentenced in connection with this scheme. On Nov. 1, 2023, the Honorable Kathleen M. Williams sentenced Ezennia Peter Neboh, who was extradited from Spain, to 128 months of imprisonment. On Oct. 20, 2023, Judge Williams sentenced another defendant who was also extradited from Spain, Kennedy Ikponmwosa, to 97 months of imprisonment. Three other defendants who were extradited from the United Kingdom also received prison sentences. Judge Williams sentenced Emmanuel Samuel, Jerry Chucks Ozor, and Iheanyichukwu Jonathan Abraham to prison sentences of 82 months, 87 months, and 90 months, respectively, for their roles in the scheme. Amos Prince Okey Ezemma was paroled into the United States from Nigeria and was sentenced in July 2024 to 90 months imprisonment for his role in the scheme. Lastly, on April 25, the Honorable Roy K. Altman sentenced Okezie Bonaventure Ogbata, who was extradited from Portugal, to 97 months of incarceration for his role in the scheme.  

    Senior Trial Attorney and Transnational Criminal Litigation Coordinator Phil Toomajian and Trial Attorney Josh Rothman of the Justice Department’s Consumer Protection Branch are prosecuting the case. The Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Florida, the Department of State’s Diplomatic Security Service, and authorities from the U.K., Spain, and Portugal all provided critical assistance.

    If you or someone you know aged 60 or older has been a victim of financial fraud, help is standing by at the National Elder Fraud Hotline: 1-833-FRAUD-11 (1-833-372-8311). This U.S. Department of Justice hotline, managed by the Office for Victims of Crime, is staffed by experienced professionals who provide personalized support to callers by assessing the needs of the victim and identifying relevant next steps. Case managers will identify appropriate reporting agencies, provide information to callers to assist them in reporting, connect callers directly with appropriate agencies, and provide resources and referrals, on a case-by-case basis. Reporting is the first step. Reporting can help authorities identify those who commit fraud and reporting certain financial losses due to fraud as soon as possible can increase the likelihood of recovering losses. The hotline is open Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. ET. English, Spanish and other languages are available.

    More information about the Department’s efforts to help American seniors is available at its Elder Justice Initiative web page. For more information about the Consumer Protection Branch and its enforcement efforts, visit Consumer Protection Branch. Elder fraud complaints may be filed with the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov or at 877-FTC-HELP. The Department of Justice provides a variety of resources relating to elder fraud victimization through its Office for Victims of Crime.

    MIL OSI USA News