Category: DJF

  • MIL-OSI Translation: 20.09.2024 Szczecin Szczecin is preparing for every scenario

    MIL ASI Translation. Region: Polish/Europe –

    Fuente: Gobierno de Polonia en poleco.

    Prime Minister Donald Tusk took part in the crisis headquarters in Szczecin, where he received reports on the state of preparations of the West Pomeranian Voivodeship to face the threat of flooding. The Prime Minister addressed words of gratitude to local government officials and services for their invaluable support. He also expressed his appreciation for the Polish women and men who are mobilizing and supporting people affected by the effects of the disaster. Report from Szczecin The last few years and days have shown that we must be prepared for every scenario. In the West Pomeranian Voivodeship, preparations for the arrival of the wave have been underway for several days. “We greatly appreciate that you are prepared for every scenario. Fortunately, there is no indication that this was a worst-case scenario,” said the head of government in Szczecin. The services are focused on protecting the population and their property from the great flood. West Pomerania helps flood victims The Prime Minister thanked local government officials and services from the West Pomeranian Voivodeship for their help in the post-flood areas in southern Poland. “I want to start by thanking you for your solidarity. […] When I heard your reports from the fire department, from the army, about where you are, how you are helping, I want to tell you that people there really appreciate it and have been waiting for it,” expressed his gratitude Donald Tusk. Soldiers from the West Pomeranian Voivodeship and the surrounding areas are helping people in the most critical places affected by the flood, e.g. in Stronie Śląskie, Lądek-Zdrój or Brzeg. “The situation there is still critical. We would all very much like to protect Brzeg from flooding, and your presence is very practical help that gives a lot of encouragement to the residents,” said the Prime Minister during the crisis team. The government, local governments, services, non-governmental organizations, companies and citizens are working for the benefit of people who suffered in connection with the flood. The Prime Minister emphasized how important bromea con support is. He added that one of the first needs of flood victims is to dry out buildings, and for this purpose dehumidifiers are needed. He also asked for support in the field of construction supervision. “Seven inspectors have already been selected and will go. […] We are collecting a few more applications and, to the extent possible, we will send construction inspectors to the south,” said Adam Rudawski, West Pomeranian Voivode. He also declared help in the matter of delivering the necessary equipment to places affected by the flood.

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  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – EU action in relation to migration pressure on the Canary Islands – P-001727/2024

    Source: European Parliament

    Priority question for written answer  P-001727/2024
    to the Commission
    Rule 144
    Tomas Tobé (PPE), Javier Zarzalejos (PPE), Juan Ignacio Zoido Álvarez (PPE), Gabriel Mato (PPE), Jeroen Lenaers (PPE), François-Xavier Bellamy (PPE), Alice Teodorescu Måwe (PPE), Rasa Juknevičienė (PPE), Elissavet Vozemberg-Vrionidi (PPE), Ioan-Rareş Bogdan (PPE), Loránt Vincze (PPE), Lukas Mandl (PPE), Emil Radev (PPE), Verena Mertens (PPE), Karlo Ressler (PPE)

    More than 25 500 migrants have arrived in the Canary Islands irregularly in 2024, 123 % more than in the same period in 2023[1]. In order to maintain the integrity of the EU’s external borders, the situation needs to be addressed, including through joint EU measures.

    In 2022, the Council authorised the Commission to negotiate status agreements with Senegal[2] and Mauritania[3], which include operational activities of the European Border and Coast Guard Agency (Frontex). Many of the migrant boats arriving in the Canary Islands come from these countries.

    Earlier this year, a migration deal that also includes Frontex activities was signed between the EU and Mauritania[4]. However, there has been no news about how the negotiations with Senegal are progressing.

    Given this:

    • 1.What measures is the Commission taking in response to the current situation in the Canary Islands?
    • 2.Can it report any progress on migration issues with Mauritania since the signing of the agreement?
    • 3.What measures is it taking to put in place an equivalent agreement with other West African countries, in particular Senegal?

    Submitted: 17.9.2024

    • [1] https://www.lavanguardia.com/mediterranean/20240903/9909369/arrival-irregular-migrants-canary-islands-cayuco-spain-route-mauritania-ceuta-morocco.html.
    • [2] Council Decision (EU) 2022/1169 of 4 July 2022 authorising the opening of negotiations on a status agreement between the European Union and the Republic of Senegal, http://data.europa.eu/eli/dec/2022/1169/oj.
    • [3] Council Decision (EU) 2022/1168 of 4 July 2022 authorising the opening of negotiations on a status agreement between the European Union and the Islamic Republic of Mauritania, http://data.europa.eu/eli/dec/2022/1168/oj.
    • [4] New migration partnership with Mauritania: https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_24_1335.
    Last updated: 20 September 2024

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Translation: 20/09/2024 The army reaches the smallest towns with aid, helping to remove the effects of flooding

    MIL ASI Translation. Region: Polish/Europe –

    Fuente: Gobierno de Polonia en poleco.

    The army reaches out to the smallest towns, helping to remove the effects of flooding 20.09.2024 – It is now very important not only to protect places from flooding, but also to clean houses and remove the effects of flooding. More trucks with soldiers have just set off. One task is set in the area where this water has already drained – pumping out the water and cleaning the apartments. Soldiers and officers must reach every house. (…) The army delivers water in tanks, mobile water treatment plants, mobile medical centers and outpatient clinics that reach the smallest towns. Everything takes time. I am aware that every minute is of great importance and that we need to reach help as soon as possible. Time is the biggest enemy in these activities. That is why such mobilization, over 25 thousand soldiers this weekend, who will clean up, secure this area together with other services – informed Deputy Prime Minister W. Kosiniak-Kamysz during a press conference.

    On September 20, Deputy Prime Minister Władysław Kosiniak-Kamysz discussed the current flood situation in the region and the actions taken to limit its effects in Lwówek Śląski. – We want to encourage all those who have experienced the effects of floods, this storm and disaster. Together, we can take action. The army is often mentioned, as are the volunteer and state guards, but we have also heard a lot of warm words from residents about the Police, which not only plays a role in maintaining order, but also in defending against this great flood. We thank and appreciate the Police officers very much, here in Lwówek Śląski, but also throughout the area. The Lwówek district was the subject of a decision by the Council of Ministers and was placed under a state of natural disaster. We are at the stage of strengthening the embankments in those places where the water is heading. We were in Brzeg Dolny. There, the water is 9 meters high. The values ​​are absolutely enormous, which causes even greater involvement of the army and other services, but also of the residents themselves. Their sense of responsibility for their area is truly impressive. In these difficult moments, we always manage to unite – noted the Deputy Prime Minister. The Minister of National Defense emphasized that soldiers are also reconstructing infrastructure in many of the smallest towns. – We are in places where the water has already receded and there are effects of flooding. Here, we talked about national road 364 and the repair of the bridge. This repair has already started and there is a chance that in a few days a key road crossing for this region will be opened. This is happening in many places. Głuchołazy is more media-related, because we hear about the bridge being built there by the army, by the General Directorate for National Roads and Motorways, but there are many such places. There are many smaller bridges that have been torn down. We will reach them everywhere with help – the minister said. – Another issue is also help for other groups, including entrepreneurs, whom we thank for putting WOT soldiers and volunteer firefighters at their disposal. Even more is needed, because this action is not ending and will last for many weeks. Operation Phoenix related to repairing the effects of the flood has been activated and will last until the end of the year. If necessary, it will be extended until such a need arises – emphasized Deputy Prime Minister W. Kosiniak-Kamysz.

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  • MIL-OSI Translation: 20/09/2024 Marcin Kierwiński, government representative for the reconstruction of flood-affected areas

    MIL ASI Translation. Region: Polish/Europe –

    Fuente: Gobierno de Polonia en poleco.

    Marcin Kierwiński is the government’s plenipotentiary for the reconstruction of areas affected by flooding20.09.2024El prime minister Donald Tusk went to the Lubuskie province, which is preparing for the arrival of a flood wave on the Odra. During the crisis headquarters in Nowa Sól, he announced that Marcin Kierwiński would be the government’s plenipotentiary for the post-flood reconstruction program.

    Flood Reconstruction Program

    During the meeting of the crisis team in Nowa Sól, the Prime Minister indicated the next step in this crisis situation – efficient organization of activities related to repairing the damage.

    We want to start as soon as possible not only with emergency aid, but also with organizing a reconstruction program.

    – announced Donald Tusk. Marcin Kierwiński will be the government’s representative for the flood reconstruction program.

    I was looking for someone who has a technical education, is an experienced politician when it comes to management, has local government experience and experience with crisis situations.”

    – Primer Ministro enumerated. Marcin Kierwiński, the new Minister of Internal Affairs and Administration, has all these competences. The politician has an engineering education; he was, among others, the initiator of the act on the protection of civilians, vice-marshal of the province and city councilor. This guarantees that the reconstruction program coordinated by him will function efficiently.

    It would be hard to find anyone with better qualifications for this very difficult project.

    – summed up the head of government. Kierwiński, currently serving as MEP, decided to resign from his mandate and return to Poland to help implement the planned activities.

    Cooperation as a Source of Hope

    During the staff meeting, the head of government also recalled that Nowa Sól withstood the flood in 1997 thanks to the heroic efforts of its residents.

    People saved their beloved city. A little something that gives us all strength. You can see here that great effort, solidarity, how people don’t argue, but cooperate – thanks to this, you can really save a lot of things

    – said Donald Tusk. The Prime Minister thanked the services and residents once again for their joint actions. He also informed that, as the situation develops, more and more areas are being declared a natural disaster.

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  • MIL-OSI Banking: WTO-FIFA “Partenariat pour le Coton” initiative kicks off national consultations in Benin

    Source: WTO

    Headline: WTO-FIFA “Partenariat pour le Coton” initiative kicks off national consultations in Benin

    The “Partenariat pour le Coton” initiative, launched in February 2024 following the signing of the WTO-FIFA Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) in 2022, brings together public and private sector partners to support the C-4 plus countries in moving up the cotton value chain and ensuring greater benefits for these nations.
    The launch event for the programme featured experts from partner organizations, such as the WTO, the UN Industrial Development Organization, Better Cotton, Gherzi, a textile management consulting company, and the UN Resident Coordinator’s Office in Benin. Following the launch, the first national consultation session for Benin took place, focusing on key challenges related to technology, employment, sustainability and productivity enhancement across the cotton value chain.
    Financial partners were engaged to identify potential areas of interest, paving the way for future investment projects aligned with Benin’s national priorities. The session also emphasized sustainable development and the importance of enhanced cooperation between partners and the C4 plus governments in upcoming consultations.
    Participants highlighted the significance of the upcoming World Cotton Day celebrations on 7 October, to be held in Cotonou. Taking place for the first time on African soil, the event will provide a critical platform to strengthen partnerships and map out the future direction of the cotton industry.
    Stephen Fevrier, Senior Advisor to the WTO Director-General, lauded the successful launch of the national consultation process. He said: “Since taking office, Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala has been committed to supporting African cotton-producing countries, in particular the C-4. It is encouraging to see the progress being made by the WTO-led Partenariat pour le Coton to spotlight opportunities in the cotton sector and generate the resources needed to increase the value and contribution of the sector to development in the C-4.”

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  • MIL-OSI Banking: WTO members seek fresh momentum for agriculture talks

    Source: WTO

    Headline: WTO members seek fresh momentum for agriculture talks

    Summarizing his informal consultations with members last week, the Chair of the negotiations, Ambassador Alparslan Acarsoy of Türkiye, highlighted a recurring emphasis on the need to rebuild trust among members.
    The Chair highlighted a widespread desire to resume negotiations as soon as possible and to focus on substance, with the goal of initiating text-based talks early enough before the 14th Ministerial Conference (MC14).
    There was a suggestion, he noted, to enhance political leadership by convening periodic negotiation meetings at the Head-of-Delegation level to review progress and to involve senior officials in addressing particularly intractable issues.
    Regarding the procedural steps forward, the Chair outlined two suggestions from the consulted members. One option is to establish informal small groups on various topics, each led by key proponents. The second option is for the Chair to appoint facilitators to lead such thematic negotiations.
    Other recommendations included setting milestones in the lead-up to MC14, adopting a comprehensive approach in the negotiations, and considering the relevance of past mandates when defining priorities.
    Members welcomed the Chair’s efforts to advance the negotiations and shared their views on the way forward. Members emphasized the importance of inclusiveness and transparency and the central role of the Committee on Agriculture in Special Session as the primary forum for negotiations.
    Questions were raised about the possible structure of the suggested thematic working group discussions. Some members called for pragmatic interest-based discussions, while others emphasized the need to honour past mandates or underscored the need for a balanced and realistic approach across the board.
    Several members also called for fresh perspectives. They noted the quality of the discussions held on agriculture during the Public Forum and the workshop organized by the WTO in early July and suggested convening additional seminars to introduce new insights into the negotiations.
    The African Group and the Cairns Group informed delegates that their bilateral meetings, which resumed after the summer break, have been conducted on a weekly basis. These technical-level discussions aim to find common ground and to draft modalities across all topics, in particular domestic support and public stockholding for food security purposes. They stressed the willingness of participants to engage constructively and expressed the hope that a joint proposal will be submitted to the committee for consideration in the near future.
    The Chair encouraged members to engage in substantive discussions on specific topics. He cited the ongoing collaboration between the African Group and the Cairns Group as a positive example.
    On the same day, members also participated in discussions at dedicated sessions on public stockholding and the Special Safeguard Mechanism.
    Brazil’s new submission on sustainable agriculture
    Brazil presented its submission titled “Dialogue on sustainable agriculture in the multilateral trading system” (JOB/AG/261), also circulated to the General Council and other WTO bodies in July. Brazil emphasized the urgent need to address more forcefully in the WTO critical sustainability challenges, with a view to ensuring WTO disciplines better support a more sustainable and resilient food and agriculture system, while not creating unnecessary trade restrictions, distortions or discrimination, and not weakening the fight against hunger and poverty.
    The submission noted the cross-cutting nature of this issue across various committees and called for the General Council to take the lead with a retreat on the topic in the second half of 2024, followed by a report on progress made at a senior officials’ meeting on agriculture in the second half of 2025.
    Members welcomed Brazil’s initiative and agreed that sustainability is a critical component of agricultural reform. Many expressed a willingness to engage in thematic discussions and participate in the proposed retreat. Members also suggested specific topics for further deliberation, including technology transfer, climate-smart agriculture, precision farming, and trade-restrictive measures implemented under the guise of environmental protection.
    Several members stressed the need to address jointly the environmental, economic and social dimensions of sustainability, encompassing food security and the livelihood of small farmers.

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  • MIL-OSI Translation: 20/09/2024 We provide flood victims with access to medical care

    MIL ASI Translation. Region: Polish/Europe –

    Fuente: Gobierno de Polonia en poleco.

    The Minister of Health, Izabela Leszczyna, took part in the morning crisis team in Wrocław. She presented the current situation regarding access to medical care for patients from flood areas. The Minister of Exterior Design, Cezary Tomczyk, prepared an update on the functioning of the temporary hospital in Nysa. Two crisis management representatives were appointed in Głuchołazy and Lewin Brzeski. Full access to medical services

    Patients from flood-affected areas can seek medical advice from any primary care physician. Additionally, each sanitary-epidemiological station provides free disinfectants.

    We have introduced a regulation by the president of the National Health Fund that family doctors do not only accept their own patients, they accept everyone and we will reimburse such visits

    – She informed the Minister of Health during the crisis team in Wrocław. The Ministry of Health has launched a 24/7 NFZ hotline, where you can get information about points of medical service implementation.

    Consultants provide ongoing information on where you can receive primary health care services, where you can receive hospital services, where pharmacies are open, and where you can get your prescription filled.

    – Izabela Leszczyna said. We also provide psychological care, thanks to two dedicated helplines. Children and young people can get support at 116 111. The number 116 123 is reserved for adults.

    There will be a mobile point with psychological help. For now, we have feedback that people need to clean up the area first and that the eventual reconstruction of their homes is important to them. I think that when the adrenaline subsides, this psychological help will probably be more necessary

    – the head of the Ministry of Health noted. The Minister of Health presented the information of the Chief Sanitary Inspector in the context of the epidemiological threat. She also reminded that flooded food is not fit for use.

    We have 89 waterworks flooded – in Lower Silesia 55, but in 36 the water is drinkable after boiling, so in 19 it is not. We deliver water there in tankers and in screw-top bottles. In Opole 31 waterworks are flooded, of which in 19 the water is drinkable after boiling and in Silesia 3, of which in 1 the water is drinkable after boiling

    – said Izabela Leszczyna. Patients who require dialysis therapy are provided with medical transport. On the other hand, people from flooded health resorts are informed about the postponed stay.

    Military Health Support

    In Nysa, the district hospital was flooded up to the first floor. An estimated 101 patients were evacuated. The military set up a temporary hospital, which will also provide pediatric care from today.

    I talked to General Sokołowski to get 100 soldiers to the hospital in Nysa within the next 6 hours to restore the hospital’s operational capacity as soon as possible.

    – emphasized Minister of National Defense Cezary Tomczyk. In the smallest towns that suffered from flooding, 10 mobile medical clinics will be created. The army has also launched a clinic that accepts patients 24 hours a day.

    Efficient crisis management

    Two representatives of the Ministry of Interior and Administration have been appointed to coordinate the rescue operation. In Głuchołazy, senior brigadier Arkadiusz Kuśmierski, and in Lewin Brzeski, brigadier Dariusz Kulawinek.

    We believe that there is a need to strengthen the position and to coordinate even better, as General Kamieniecki does in Lądek Zdrój and Stronie Śląskie. We are ready to provide any support.

    – Tomasz Siemoniak handed over the Minister of Internal Affairs and Administration.

    These proxies are there to help. Crisis management in extreme situations, such as the situation at the moment in Lewin Brzeski and still in Głuchołazy, requires such support

    – Prime Minister conveyed. The point is to ensure proper crisis management and efficient removal of flood effects. The Minister announced another amendment to the regulation on the state of natural disaster.

    Support for farmers

    The head of government announced that the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development is working on solutions that will help farmers affected by the flood.

    I want to reassure concerned farmers who have also suffered very serious losses – this is particularly true for small farms, so we are also preparing assistance there.

    – said Donald Tusk in Wrocław. El prime minister appealed to the services and local government officials for full further concentration and mobilization.

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  • MIL-OSI Banking: Christine Lagarde: Setbacks and strides forward: structural shifts and monetary policy in the twenties

    Source: European Central Bank

    Speech by Christine Lagarde, President of the ECB, at the 2024 Michel Camdessus Central Banking Lecture organised by the IMF

    Washington, DC, 20 September 2024

    Central banks are public institutions with powerful tools, but the way these tools affect the economy is constantly changing. This uncertainty comes, in part, from the famous “long and variable” lags of monetary policy transmission.[1] It typically takes 18 to 24 months for a change in interest rates to have its peak effect on the economy and inflation.[2]

    But there are also more fundamental issues that affect the transmission of monetary policy, which were identified by Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan 20 years ago. He wrote that:

    “The economic world in which we function is best described by a structure whose parameters are continuously changing. The channels of monetary policy, consequently, are changing in tandem.”[3]

    In other words, the effectiveness of monetary policy is intrinsically linked to the evolving structure of the economy. In recent years, uncertainty about policy transmission has been particularly acute.

    We have faced the worst pandemic since the 1920s, the worst conflict in Europe since the 1940s, and the worst energy shock since the 1970s. These shocks have changed the structure of the economy and posed a challenge for how we assess the impact of monetary policy. This challenge was exacerbated by the fact that the pandemic caught us after a long period of anaemic growth, below-target inflation and low interest rates.

    To manage this uncertainty, we introduced a three-pronged policy framework, focusing not only on forecast inflation but also on underlying inflation dynamics and the strength of transmission. This framework has been instrumental in helping us calibrate the rate path over the last phase of the hiking cycle, during the period when we held rates at their peak and, more recently, as we have started to make policy less restrictive.

    Our determined policy actions have successfully kept inflation expectations anchored, and inflation is projected to return to 2% over the second half of next year. Considering the size of the inflation shock, this unwinding is remarkable.

    But the uncertainty ahead is still profound. The economy is currently undergoing transformational changes and we need to analyse and understand their impact.

    While some of these changes – like climate change and ageing societies – are unique to our times, others resemble those that took place a century ago. Two specific parallels between the “two twenties” – the 1920s and the 2020s – stand out. Today, like back then, we are seeing setbacks in global trade integration, at the same time as strides forward in technological progress.

    But there is an important difference in how these changes are affecting monetary policy.

    In the interwar period, structural shifts affected the prevailing monetary policy strategy. The main lesson for central banks was that the dominant paradigm was not robust in times of profound structural change.

    It was this realisation that led to modern monetary policy strategies emerging a few decades later, with a core focus on price stability and flexible policy strategies to deliver it.

    Thanks to these developments, we are in a better position today to address these structural changes than our predecessors were. The challenge we face is not about our goals, which have proven successful, or our tools, which are sufficiently flexible.

    Rather, it is about how monetary transmission will be affected by structural shifts, and how we should adjust our analytical frameworks to these shifts.

    In my remarks today, I will start by exploring the parallels between the structural changes of the 1920s and those of the 2020s, while highlighting the different implications for monetary policy in each era. I will then share some preliminary considerations for the evolution of policy frameworks.

    My main message is that we must be ready for change and prepared to use the flexibility in our frameworks as necessary. To ensure stability in the future, our approach must continue to embody “stability without rigidity”, allowing us to adjust swiftly as the economy transforms.

    Post-war structural shifts and monetary policy in the 1920s

    If we go back a century to the 1920s, the world economy was going through a series of transformations. These shifts pulled in different directions, representing both setbacks and strides forward from the previous environment. They fundamentally changed the structure of the economy.

    Two of these shifts had profound implications for monetary policy.

    The first was global fragmentation, which put an end to the open, liberal economic order of the late 19th century and its assumed permanence.

    The decades leading up to the First World War had seen rapid global integration. World trade as a share of GDP rose from 10% in 1870 to 17% in 1900 and then to 21% by 1913, creating new expectations and lifestyles. As John Maynard Keynes famously wrote:

    “the inhabitant of London could order by telephone, sipping his morning tea in bed, the various products of the whole earth, in such quantity as he might see fit, and reasonably expect their early delivery upon his doorstep […] he regarded this state of affairs as normal, certain, and permanent.”[4]

    At the same time, the dominant paradigm among major central banks was the gold standard, which prioritised maintaining an external equilibrium and relying on intrinsic mechanisms for domestic credit to adjust to external imbalances.

    But the war brought about the end of Pax Britannica, while the United States was reluctant to assume the role of global hegemon sustaining open trade. Economic nationalism rose and a rapid unravelling of globalisation followed. World trade as a percentage of GDP fell to 14% in 1929 and 9% in 1938.[5][6] Tariffs more than tripled in most European countries[7] and also rose in the United States.[8]

    Major central banks initially attempted to revive the gold standard in the mid-1920s to recreate the conditions for open trade, but they faced a worsening trade-off.

    As Ragnar Nurkse showed in his seminal study, in a more unstable world, central banks increasingly had to use gold reserves as a buffer against external shocks rather than allowing them to be transmitted to domestic credit growth.[9] While this approach was intended as a “second-best” policy to maintain a degree of domestic stability, it ultimately exacerbated deflationary pressures. Deflation in turn fuelled economic malaise and contributed to the cycle of economic nationalism.

    The second major shift in this period was rapid technological progress. While fragmentation was a step back, technology unambiguously took a step forward. But it triggered a series of changes in the economy and financial markets that created new challenges for central banks.

    Innovation accelerated rapidly in this period, fuelled largely by spillovers from wartime advancements. This surge saw new machinery introduced on a much larger scale than before. Progress was most visible with the internal combustion engine, the assembly line pioneered by Henry Ford, and the electrical network and motor.[10]

    The technological boom drove rapid productivity gains. In Britain, for example, 55 employee weeks were required to produce a car at the Austin Motor Company in 1922, compared with only ten in 1927.[11] For Europe as a whole, the average rate of productivity growth[12] rose to over 2% per year between 1913 and 1929, up from about 1.5% per year between 1890 and 1913.[13]

    Irrational exuberance about technology, however, also fuelled a significant rise in stock market valuations. Research indicates that a 1% increase in a firm’s stock of cited patents corresponded to a 0.26% increase in market value during the 1920s.[14] But central banks lacked a framework for dealing with booms and busts.

    Several central banks tried unsuccessfully to pop stock bubbles[15], and then they took a series of wrong turns when the crash came. The resulting banking crisis and the return to a deflationary stance – which in the United States, for example, appeared justified by the prevailing real bills doctrine – are now widely considered to have played a significant role in exacerbating the Great Depression.[16]

    A key lesson ultimately became clear for governments: central banks needed a new concept of stability. And this concept had to be reflected in their monetary policy strategies.

    As the economic historian Michael D. Bordo observed, in the 1920s central banks tried to focus on both external and internal stability, “but as long as the gold standard prevailed, external goals dominated.”[17]

    The main realisation of the interwar period was that central banks in advanced economies needed to be assigned domestic stability targets first and foremost. But it took another 30 to 40 years to realise that they would do better stabilising inflation rather than fine-tuning output and employment.

    Structural shifts and monetary policy in the 2020s

    Today, we also face some setbacks as the global economy fractures, while seeing strides forward with transformative digital technologies expanding.

    The consequences for monetary policy, however, are different.

    The last few years have been an extreme stress test of inflation targeting across the globe. We have faced not only back-to-back shocks, but also a differing variety and strength of shocks in different places. For example, Europe suffered much more than the United States from high energy prices, while the United States had to contend with the legacies of a stronger stimulus to demand.

    Yet, inflation is converging towards target almost everywhere. And remarkably, disinflation has come – at least so far – at a low cost to employment. As I recently observed, it is rare to avoid a major deterioration in employment when central banks raise rates in response to high energy prices.[18] But employment has risen by 2.8 million people in the euro area since the end of 2022.

    There are two reasons for this greater stability.

    First, decades of inflation targeting have had a deep impact on how people build expectations about future inflation. Indeed, when the inflation goal is stated sufficiently clearly, and monetary policy is credible, inflation expectations will remain anchored, which makes the adjustment process to an inflationary shock less painful.

    Second, over time central banks have recognised that stability should not mean rigidity.

    Indeed, we are better placed to confront structural changes because policy strategies combine three elements: clearly defined inflation targets, flexible policy toolkits to deliver those targets, and analytical frameworks that can assess and respond to changes in the economy, thereby feeding into our reaction functions. We have used all these elements in recent years to ensure that monetary policy maintains price stability without excessive costs to the economy.

    For these reasons, the ongoing transformations will not revolutionise the goals of monetary policy as they did a century ago. But they are likely to have a more profound impact on monetary transmission.

    Setbacks: fragmentation

    Just as one era of globalisation reached a turning point in the aftermath of the First World War, we are now witnessing another wave of globalisation plateauing. The hallmark of this era was the geographical unbundling of production through global value chains (GVCs), which led to a doubling in the value of traded intermediate goods. It now accounts for over half of world trade.[19]

    But the landscape is changing. We are not seeing outright “de-globalisation” in the sense of a reversal in world trade. But we are seeing the structure of GVCs changing in response to a more volatile environment, marked by more frequent supply shocks[20] and a fragmenting geopolitical landscape.[21]

    ECB analysis finds that both the United States and the euro area have recently diversified their supply of imported goods, leading to a larger number of sourcing countries and increasing costs.[22] In the United States, firms appear to be exploring the options of both “nearshoring” production in Canada and Mexico and “reshoring” at home.[23] In Europe, the focus is on “nearshoring” production within the region while still exporting globally.[24]

    These changes have implications for monetary transmission, as they could partially reverse some of the long-term changes in the economy that may weaken transmission.

    First, they could strengthen the link between domestic slack and inflation.

    A key puzzle that central banks faced in the 2010s was that policy easing was transmitted strongly to activity but in a weaker fashion to inflation. One explanation for this disconnect was that the expansion of GVCs reduced the impact of domestic slack on inflation by shifting the focus to global factors.[25] However, if GVCs become shorter or less efficient, domestic slack and inflation may reconnect. This shift could make monetary policy impulses more powerful.

    Second, policy transmission may strengthen as GVC restructuring could potentially boost capital deepening. Inducements for “strategic sectors” to set up closer to home may lead to a resurgence of capital-intensive industries within advanced economies. In the United States, for instance, manufacturing construction spending has doubled since the end of 2021 in response to policies like the Inflation Reduction Act, the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and the CHIPS and Science Act.[26]

    Such a shift could somewhat attenuate the long-term shift in activity towards services and the observed slowdown in capital deepening over recent decades. In turn, capital deepening could increase the economy’s sensitivity to interest-rate changes, potentially enhancing the effectiveness of monetary transmission through the interest-rate channel.

    By strengthening the transmission mechanism, these shifts could potentially allow central banks to exercise more control over domestic outcomes. But these benefits would be offset if the restructuring of GVCs led to more volatile inflation.

    In a stable global environment, the expansion of GVCs facilitated a virtuous cycle of trade integration and stable inflation, as GVCs buffered the effects of cost-push shocks. Research shows that a 1% increase in input prices resulted in only a 0.44% increase in output prices owing to this buffering effect.[27] But if supply chains were to shorten, it could lead to stronger pass-through of cost shocks.

    Strides forward: technological progress

    Like in the 1920s, setbacks in some areas are being matched by advancements in others. We find ourselves in the midst of a digital revolution that echoes the technological boom of the 1920s.

    Just as that era saw rapid advancements in electricity, automobiles and mass production, our era is witnessing unprecedented growth in digital technologies. In particular, the rapid development of artificial intelligence (AI) looks set to transform a swathe of industries, including the financial sector. And financial technology (fintech) is already having a profound impact on finance.

    In 2022, fintech generated 5% of global banking revenue, totalling USD 150 billion to USD 205 billion. This share is expected to exceed USD 400 billion by 2028, growing at an annual rate of 15%. Banks are also acquiring fintech firms and adopting their technologies to enhance their lending operations.[28]

    By changing the nature of financial intermediation and fostering competition, fintech can significantly strengthen the transmission of monetary policy decisions to the wider economy, influencing interest rates, asset prices, credit conditions and ultimately growth and inflation.

    For example, advanced credit scoring[29] and new sources of credit provided by fintech platforms can reduce lending constraints. By leveraging alternative data sources, which can include over 1,000 data points per loan applicant, fintech using AI and machine learning has outperformed traditional credit scoring models in predicting loss rates, particularly for riskier firms.

    These developments are already expanding access to finance. Fintechs have been found to process mortgage applications around 20% faster than other lenders.[30] The use of data could also alleviate the need for collateral, thereby extending credit to underserved businesses at a lower cost.

    The modern consumer who can quickly check their creditworthiness and secure the best financial deals through their smartphone is no distant fiction. In some ways, it mirrors how the Londoner of the past could effortlessly order global goods from their bed.

    As a result, fintechs’ credit supply tends to be more responsive to changes in borrowers’ business conditions or broader economic conditions[31], contrasting with traditional banks’ emphasis on long-term relationships with borrowers. This responsiveness also means that fintech lending could be more procyclical in times of stress, amplifying credit cycles and volatility.[32]

    But the net benefits for transmission hinge crucially on the effect of digitalisation on market structures.

    Digital markets tend to be “winner-takes-most”, as is visible in the handful of “hyperscalers” that dominate digital platforms and cloud services. For example, just three US “hyperscalers” account for over 65% of the global cloud market. Google commands an outstanding market share of more than 90% among search engines. In e-commerce, business is concentrated among a handful of top players.

    Market power has important effects on policy transmission. IMF research finds that firms with greater market power are less sensitive to changes in interest rates. In the United States, a 100 basis point increase in the policy rate causes a low-markup firm to cut sales by about 2% after four quarters. By contrast, a high-markup firm barely reduces its sales in response to the same policy change.[we start to understand the effects of global fragmentation and digitalisation on monetary transmission, we will have to continuously reassess our analytical frameworks. Just as in previous eras, stability should not mean rigidity.

    Regular strategy reviews provide an opportunity for self-reflection. We published the results of our last strategy review in 2021, which mainly took stock of the low inflation era, and we expect to conclude the 2025 assessment of our strategy in the second half of next year.

    Important elements of the previous review remain valid. In particular, we will maintain the symmetric, medium-term oriented 2% inflation target. But there are two key areas in which we need to develop our framework to be more robust in times of profound change.

    First, we need to reduce as much as possible the uncertainty created by these structural shifts. We can do so by deepening our knowledge and analysis of the ongoing transformations, and how they may affect the shocks we face and the transmission of our policy.

    Second, as uncertainty will nonetheless remain high, we need to manage it better.

    In particular, we should reflect on how our policy framework incorporates risk assessments. While our current three-pronged policy framework provides a useful set of cross checks, the strategy review provides an opportunity to consider how to balance the information from baseline forecasts with real-time information, how to make best use of alternative scenarios, and the importance of the medium-term orientation when faced with different types of shocks.

    The two main strands of our 2025 review will correspond to these goals.

    First, we will look at how the economy has changed in the post-pandemic world, aiming to distinguish as best we can cyclical from structural drivers. As part of this analysis, we will consider how we can improve our analytical framework, including embedding new techniques and sources of data into our forecasts.

    Increasing the use of AI will be an important element. Machine learning will help us, for example, to identify non-linearities in macro forecasting, to use large data sets for event prediction, and to improve inflation nowcasting. These advances may be especially important in relation to near-term forecasting, which is not the strength of traditional macro models.

    Second, we will consider what we can learn from our past experience with too-low and too-high inflation, including for our reaction function. We will look at how our medium-term orientation can be made operational when faced with both upside and downside risks to inflation expectations.

    Conclusion

    Let me conclude.

    History shows that structural shifts matter for monetary policy, even if their effects take time to appear. They affect how monetary policy is transmitted through the economy. And, in the past, they sometimes affected the fundamental goals that monetary policy pursued.

    Today, the goals of monetary policy do not change, because a focus on price stability has been shown to be crucial in times of profound change. But that does not imply that the way in which we conduct monetary policy will remain the same.

    In 1933, the Governor of the Bank of England, Montagu Norman, told his newly appointed economic advisor that “you are not here to tell us what to do, but to explain to us why we have done it.”[36]

    So, let me end by promising you this: we will not take that approach. We will draw on our best analysis, experience and knowledge, so that when change comes, we will be ready.

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Canada pledges CAD 250,000 to support food, animal and plant health standards

    Source: WTO

    Headline: Canada pledges CAD 250,000 to support food, animal and plant health standards

    WTO Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala expressed her appreciation for Canada’s generosity. “I thank Canada for its longstanding commitment to the STDF. Canada’s contribution will allow the STDF to advance agricultural innovation, facilitate safe trade, and promote global food security. This support is necessary for fostering inclusive trade and enabling developing countries to actively participate in the global marketplace,” she said.
    The Honourable Lawrence MacAulay, Canada’s Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food, said: “Canada has a role to play when it comes to supporting efforts to improve food security, reduce poverty, and promote sustainable economic growth around the world. This investment will create opportunities for developing countries to enhance their trading relationships and competitiveness, while supporting a safe and secure global food system.”
    The donation underscores Canada’s long-standing commitment to the STDF’s mission, bringing its total contributions to CHF 7.4 million since 2001.
    Canada has contributed over CHF 15 million to WTO trust funds over the past 22 years.
    The STDF is a global multi-stakeholder partnership that promotes safe and inclusive trade. It was established by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the World Health Organization (WHO), the World Bank Group, the World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH), and the WTO, which houses and manages the partnership.
    In support of the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), the STDF responds to evolving needs, drives inclusive trade and contributes to sustainable economic growth, food security and poverty reduction.
    Developing economies and least developed countries are encouraged to apply to the STDF for SPS project and project preparation grants. Information on how to apply is available here.
    To date, the STDF has funded over 250 projects benefiting LDCs and other developing economies.

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  • MIL-OSI Security: Frankville — Antigonish County District RCMP charge man with attempted murder

    Source: Royal Canadian Mounted Police

    Antigonish County District RCMP has charged a man with attempted murder after a shooting in Havre Boucher.

    On September 19, at approximately 7:30 p.m., Antigonish County District RCMP responded to a report that a woman had been shot at a home on Havre Boucher Rd. in Frankville. Multiple additional RCMP units responded, including Pictou County District RCMP, Inverness County District RCMP, RCMP Police Dog Services, and Northeast Traffic Services. The suspect, a 28-year-old man of Frankville, was safely arrested at the scene.

    Preliminary investigation indicates there were several adults and children at the home at the time of the incident. No one else was physically injured.

    Francis Scott Durley has been charged with:

    • Attempted Murder
    • Possession of a Weapon for a Dangerous Purpose
    • Unauthorized Possession of a Firearm
    • Pointing a Firearm (four counts)
    • Uttering Threats (two counts)

    Durley appeared in Antigonish Provincial Court this morning, September 20, and will remain in custody pending a court appearance on September 25.

    The investigation remains ongoing and is being assisted by the Antigonish Street Crime Enforcement Unit and RCMP Forensic Identification Services.

    Durley and the victim are known to each other. This was an isolated incident and was not a random act.

    File #: 2024-1384457

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Moot Court competition opens with webinar support on offer for participants

    Source: WTO

    Headline: Moot Court competition opens with webinar support on offer for participants

    The competition is a simulated hearing under the rules of the WTO dispute settlement mechanism involving exchanges of written submissions and oral pleadings before panelists on international trade law issues. The competition is organized by the European Law Students’ Association (ELSA) with the technical support of the WTO.
    The WTO and the Advisory Centre on WTO Law (ACWL) are partnering to support participants interested in this competition by providing a series of webinars titled “Legal Mooting Masterclass”. These webinars will equip teams and their coaches with the information required to navigate the competition successfully.
    The webinars will provide an overview of the competition, useful tools for research on WTO law, and tips on best practices for participating in the competition from experts from the WTO and ACWL. 
    The sessions will be held the first week of October and require prior registration.
    For the complete schedule and to register click here.
    Every year, the John H. Jackson Moot Court Competition provides hundreds of students across the globe an opportunity to address interesting and novel questions of WTO law, and to engage with WTO experts who serve as panelists and sponsors of the competition. Students who participate in the Moot Court Competition often go on to internships, graduate programmes, and careers in international trade law.
    This year’s case, “Alabasta – Certain measures affecting electronic goods and digital services” – is a dispute between the fictitious WTO members Alabasta and Wano involving trade in tablet computers and services via video streaming platforms. It navigates the complex intersection of the domestic regulation of video streaming platforms and anti-competitive practices in the digital economy on the one hand and international trade obligations on the other. By debating whether Alabasta’s actions constitute legitimate state regulation or contravene WTO law, students will gain insight into the evolving landscape of digital trade regulations.

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  • MIL-OSI Security: Lake Echo — Man wanted on province-wide arrest warrant

    Source: Royal Canadian Mounted Police

    RCMP Halifax Regional Detachment is seeking information on the whereabouts of a man currently wanted on a province-wide arrest warrant in relation to an assault that occurred in Lower Sackville.

    Matthew Richard Hardy, 33, from Lake Echo, is wanted and facing charges of Assault, Assault by Choking, Failure to Comply with a Probation Order and Failure to Comply with an Undertaking.

    Hardy is described as 5-foot-10, 170 lbs. He has brown hair and brown eyes.

    Police have made several attempts to locate Hardy, and are requesting assistance from the public.

    Anyone with information on the whereabouts of Matthew Richard Hardy is asked to refrain from approaching him and to call police at 902-490-5020. To remain anonymous, call Nova Scotia Crime Stoppers, toll-free, at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477), submit a secure web tip at www.crimestoppers.ns.ca, or use the P3 Tips app.

    File #: 24-123618

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: NHCP opens new medical and dental clinic in Camp Del Mar

    Source: United States Navy (Medical)

    Naval Hospital Camp Pendleton officially opened the new and improved 21 Area Branch Health Clinic aboard Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton’s Camp Del Mar on Sept. 19, 2024.

    The new state-of-the-art facility stocked with up-to-date equipment was constructed through a collaborative effort by Soltek Pacific, HKS-WSP Joint Venture, Holitna, the Defense Health Agency, and Naval Facilities Engineering Systems Command Southwest.

    “Replacing a clinic built in 1966, this new clinic embodies the Navy’s and the Defense Health Agency’s dedication to delivering the highest standard of care, using the latest technology and clinical advancements to serve our troops,” said Navy Capt. Jenny Burkett, NHCP director.

    The 21 ABHC provides medical and dental care to the active-duty service members serving aboard Camp Del Mar.

    “This state-of-the-art facility was designed to ensure the readiness of the 5,000 Warfighters across the various tenant commands,” said Navy Capt. Nathan Wonder, NHCP director of branch clinics and master of ceremonies for the event.

    “I would like to recognize and thank the leaders and dedicated teams who made this project possible: our service members, medical and dental professionals, and all the men and women who work tirelessly behind the scenes to ensure the Marines and Sailors receive the best care possible,” added Burkett. “Specifically, Branch Clinic staff, Medical and Dental Battalion staff, and staff from the MEF, Division and Marine Logistics Group, who work here in the clinic. At the heart of all we do is the commitment to take care of our people. Every Marine and sailor who walks through these doors can be assured they are receiving world class care.”

    Joining Burkett for the ceremonial ribbon cutting were Lt. Gen. Michael Cederholm, commanding general of I Marine Expeditionary Force (I MEF), and Brig. Gen. Nick Brown, commanding general of Marine Corps Installations West / Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton.

    “As we cut this ribbon, and witness the opening of this incredible facility, we are reminded of the powerful role medical and dental care plays in the readiness and resilience of our force. This clinic is both an investment in care and an investment in the future of the Navy/Marine Corps team,” Burkett concluded.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Air, Space & Cyber Conference Wraps, PACAF’s Commitment to Indo-Pacific Continues

    Source: United States INDO PACIFIC COMMAND

    As the curtain closed today on the 2024 Air and Space Forces Association’s Air, Space & Cyber Conference, one theme resonated throughout the event – Pacific Air Forces total commitment to maintaining a decisive advantage in the Indo-Pacific region amidst growing global threats.

    Over the course of three days, Gen. Kevin Schneider, PACAF commander, laid out a strategic vision that accentuates readiness, innovation, and energized alliances to confront mounting challenges in the region.

    On day one, Schneider addressed the pressing need to enhance Agile Combat Employment. He discussed the ongoing efforts to refurbish remote Pacific locations, recover from natural disasters like last year’s typhoon in Guam, and build integrated air and missile defenses across the theater.

    “We continue to expand agile combat employment, to find ways we can move into austere airfields,” Schneider said. “Getting gas into airplanes is a key piece of that, and I give great credit to our logistics and sustainment professionals who find ways to solve those problems every day.”

    Schneider took the main stage in front of 5,000 people on day two to deliver a keynote address that captured the essence of PACAF’s priorities and the advantages it holds over any adversaries. He began by contrasting his early experiences as an F-16 pilot at Osan Air Base, Republic of Korea, in the early 1990s, with the challenges he faces today as commander of nearly 50,000 Airmen across the region.

    The keynote highlighted two critical components of PACAF’s strategy: Air Domain Awareness and ACE. Schneider spoke passionately about the need to stay ahead of adversaries through enhanced surveillance and rapid, flexible force deployment. He also noted the three-fold edge PACAF holds over its foes.

    “We have three asymmetric advantages that adversaries could never hope to have,” Schneider said. “One is the growing network of alliances and partnerships that we enjoy. We’re moving beyond bilats into multilateral events to be able to pull more and more partners in. The second is the professionalism, discipline and strength of our people. The third is the inherent strength of the joint force.”

    Throughout the event, PACAF’s role in fostering progress with allies and partners was a focal point. Schneider underscored the importance of complex, multi-national air exercises like Pitch Black, Arctic Defender, Red Flag Alaska, Cope Thunder and Northern Edge, as well as the Pacific Air Chiefs Symposium, which brought together 22 international Air Force leaders to strengthen military cooperation.

    On the final day, Schneider participated in a senior-leader panel discussion titled “Exercising for Great Power Competition,” which delved into the importance of high-end training, complex exercises, and key leader engagements in preparing for potential conflicts. The panel brought together commanders from mobility, space, Air Force Reserve, and the Pacific.

    During the panel, Gen. Schneider stressed the critical role exercises play in not only sharpening warfighting capabilities, but also in providing strategic deterrence.

    “The solutions to the challenges in the Indo-Pacific don’t all fall on my shoulders; it is a team effort in terms of problem-solving,” Schneider said. “We [commanders across the U.S. Air Force and Space Force] each have things we contribute to the fight, in terms of training, readiness, and our ability to deter or to fight and win if called upon.”

    Throughout the conference, PACAF’s commitment to innovation and excellence was evident. Schneider repeatedly called for the Air Force community and industry partners to bring their most complex training ideas, research, development projects, and asymmetric capabilities to the region.

    Schneider’s keynote closing remarks remain at the forefront: “Your airmen are absolutely prepared – 24/7/365 – to defend, to deter, and to prevail in the Indo-Pacific.”

    The 2024 Air, Space & Cyber Conference is over, but the hard work of maintaining a decisive advantage in an age of growing threats continues.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Eight Countries work together in largest Operation Render Safe to remove WWII UXO in Solomon Islands

    Source: United States INDO PACIFIC COMMAND

    The United States, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, United Kingdom, Republic of Korea, and Japan recently joined the Royal Solomon Islands Police Force for Operation Render Safe 2024-2 in New Georgia, Solomon Islands, from Aug. 12 to Sept. 27.

    Operation Render Safe is an Australian Defence Force operation that removes the danger posed by World War II-era explosive remnants of war in Pacific Island countries. 2024 marks the 20th year that Operation Render Safe has been conducted.

    The Solomon Islands were a major battleground during the Pacific Island campaign that left behind thousands of unexploded munitions that continue to pose significant risks to the public, hindering development and threatening local livelihoods. These remnants of war have also contributed to dangerous living conditions for local residents, limiting the availability of safe land for agriculture and community expansion.

    This year’s Operation Render Safe was the largest UXO removal effort in the region’s history. 3,240 explosive remnants of war were removed from 219 sites that will directly benefit the local population by providing safer access to land and water resources. The operation’s success will help open the door to future development projects, fostering economic growth and improving infrastructure in affected areas.

    This multinational mission, led by the RSIPF, covered a vast area of 1,600 square kilometers, with 17 multinational explosive ordnance teams undertaking a rolling program of community engagement, reconnaissance, and positive action in both land and maritime domains.

    “Being Army, we’re not really used to being on the water,” said Australian Army Cpl. Daniel Siyogu, an EOD technician with the 6th Engineer Support Regiment. “But we’re getting it done, identifying and disposing of explosive remnants of war on Kolombangara island.”

    Operation Render Safe 2024-2 also featured significant tri-service interoperability between eight contributing nations, ensuring smooth coordination across a wide operational area. The 17 EOD teams, supported by U.S. Marine Corps MV-22B Ospreys assigned to Marine Medium Tiltrotor Squadron 268 (Reinforced), Marine Rotational Force – Darwin 24.3, operated over a 350km internal-line supply chain to the rear echelon in Honiara.

    “Working alongside our Allies showcases the importance of our shared goals,” said U.S. Marine Corps Gunnery Sgt. Jesus Contreras, an EOD team leader with Combat Logistics Battalion 5 (Reinforced), MRF-D 24.3. “Leading a combined team of multinational personnel into the jungles of New Georgia has been a unique and rewarding experience. Working in a joint environment with different SOPs, [standard operating procedures], has been a challenge, but the similarities in our EOD procedures make it easier to cooperate and learn from each other.”

    The involvement of the RSIPF, with their knowledge of the area, was essential in identifying UXO caches, making the operation a success.

    “Getting input from the local community has been critical,” said Royal Canadian Navy Lt. Cmdr. Kevin Okahiro. “The people here know where the explosives are, and their guidance allows us to better assess and clear dangerous areas.”

    The operation focused on key areas like Kohinggo and Munda, contributing to improved infrastructure and a safer environment for Solomon Islands communities.

    “Ultimately, it’s about making the region safer and improving the quality of life for the local communities,” said Australian Army Lt. Col. Fabian Harrison, the commanding officer of Operation Render Safe 2024-2. “Through these partnerships and the commitment of all involved nations, we’re achieving that goal.”

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Russia: IMF Managing Director Appoints Yan Liu as General Counsel and Director of the Legal Department

    MIL OSI Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: IMF – News in English

    September 20, 2024

    Washington, DC: Kristalina Georgieva, Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), announced today her intention to appoint Ms. Yan Liu as General Counsel and Director of the Legal Department. Ms. Liu will succeed Ms. Rhoda Weeks-Brown and is expected to formally take up her appointment on October 7, 2024.

    “I am pleased to announce the appointment of Yan Liu as General Counsel and Director of the Legal Department,” Ms. Georgieva said. “I have informed the Executive Board of my intention to proceed with this appointment.”

    Ms. Liu joined the Fund in 1999 as Counsel and has risen through the ranks to Deputy General Counsel—the current role in which she leads key strategic initiatives to ensure that the Legal Department continues to fulfill its mandate and contribute to the Fund’s policy work and operations. Ms. Liu works to identify and manage actual and potential risks in key areas such as lending, central banking and payment systems, capital flows, non-performing loan resolution, public financial management, and capacity development.

    Additionally, as a well-recognized expert in sovereign debt, Ms. Liu has played a key role in shaping the Fund’s policies in this area and supporting the Common Framework and the Global Sovereign Debt Roundtable. She has also provided advice on the Fund’s role in facilitating orderly restructurings in countries such as Argentina, Greece, Ukraine, and Zambia. Furthermore, she was instrumental in the design and implementation of the Fund’s digital money strategy.

    “Yan brings to her new role over 25 years of legal expertise and deep understanding of the Fund policy and operations,” said Ms. Georgieva. “She is a thought leader and a trusted advisor who is also well known for her dedication to mentoring and supporting staff in their career journeys. The hallmark of Yan’s work is her collaborative and constructive approach in service to the institution.”

    Ms. Liu, a Chinese national, received her Juris Doctor from the University of Illinois, and a master’s degree from the University of Chicago. She is widely published on various aspects of the law, and policy perspectives on such areas as private debt, sovereign debt restructuring, and good governance. Prior to joining the Fund, she practiced corporate and securities law in the United States.

    IMF Communications Department
    MEDIA RELATIONS

    PRESS OFFICER: Pavis Devahasadin

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

    @IMFSpokesperson

    https://www.imf.org/en/Nevs/Articles/2024/09/20/pr24335-imf-md-appointments-yan-liu-gen-sunsel-director-legal-dept

    MIL OSI

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

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Security: 625 STOS completes SELM test

    Source: United States Strategic Command

    Airmen and Sailors from the 625th Strategic Operations Squadron, Offutt AFB, Neb., 576th Flight Test Squadron, Vandenberg Space Force Base, Calif., the 91st Missile Wing, Minot AFB, N.D., and the Navy’s Strategic Communications Wing 1, Offutt AFB, completed a simulated electronic launch minuteman (SELM) test at Offutt Air Force Base, Neb., Sept. 17.

    Twice a year, SELM tests the Minuteman III in its deployed environment at various missile wings without an actual launch occurring.

    “SELM tests the selected ICBMs from day-to-day operation to issuance of the first stage ignition signal,” said Maj. Raun Carnley, assistant director of operations, 625th STOS. “Commands up to and including launch commands are sent to the test configured launch facility from test configured launch control centers and the Airborne Launch Control System (ALCS) onboard a Navy E-6 Mercury.”

    SELM tests are vital to the health of the ICBM fleet as it ensures the system will do what it is commanded to do if needed and provides sustainment data to Air Force Global Strike Command and U.S. Strategic Command.

    “As updates to software and hardware are fielded, testing helps verify the system continues to work as designed,” said Carnley. “A SELM test validates the combat capability of our fielded ICBM weapon system…while saving the taxpayer money, and without the risk of escalatory messaging that the equivalent number of operational test launches would require to accomplish the same task.”

    From the 576th FTS running the tests to the 91st MW providing ground operations and maintenance support to SCW-1 providing the aircraft and aircrew, each organization plays a pivotal role to ensure the launch process is reliable and ready.

    A major player in a SELM test is the 625th STOS. The squadron is aligned under the 8th Air Force and provides everything from the targeting package on the missile, to the systems that simulate the flight of the projectile, to the launch track and range safety coordinates, to the training that prepared the team and the ALCS operators that provided the key turn.

    “We ensure the ALCS is able to fulfill its role as the backup to the launch control centers and ground crews in the case it is ever needed,” said Carnley.

    With so many moving parts, scheduling these tests doesn’t occur overnight, they are planned out years in advance.

    “We are currently on a five-year construct,” said Carnley.  “Specific preparations on the side of the 625th STOS start approximately four months in advance to coordinate our pieces of the mission. With two tests a year, as soon as one is complete, planning and preparation for the next one begins.”

    Although a SELM test isn’t as visible as an operational test launch, it provides a great deal of value to the various organizations supporting the mission.

    One such supporting organization is the Joint-Nuclear Operations Center (JNOC) at Barksdale AFB, La.

    The JNOC has six divisions and the ICBM division monitors and observes each SELM test and assists as necessary explained Senior Master Sgt. Matthew Tobey, JNOC senior enlisted leader.

    “Ensuring the sustainment and capabilities of our nuclear forces not only allows U.S. citizens to sleep soundly at night but provides global stability which also helps foster economic prosperity,” said Carnley. “It’s also a message to our Allies and adversaries: The ICBM leg of the nuclear triad is viable and ready at a moment’s notice to defend our freedoms and those of our Allies.”

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Director Rosie Hidalgo Delivers Remarks at the National Institute of Justice 2024 National Research Conference

    Source: United States Attorneys General 7

    Remarks as Prepared for Delivery

    Good morning! I want to thank the National Institute for Justice (NIJ) for hosting this panel discussion today commemorating the 30th anniversary of the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA), and for inviting me to participate. I also want to extend my deep gratitude to each of you here for your hard work and dedication; and for coming together to see how we can continue to learn from one another.

    I am honored to have the opportunity to serve as the Director of the Office on Violence Against Women (OVW) and to collaborate with so many dedicated individuals and organizations committed to furthering our nation’s vision for ending sexual assault, domestic violence, dating violence, stalking and other related forms of gender-based violence.

    OVW is tasked with overseeing the implementation of key parts of VAWA, landmark bipartisan legislation first enacted by Congress in 1994. The hallmark of VAWA is a coordinated community response (known as a CCR), which seeks to bring together agencies and community partners across many disciplines to address the needs of survivors. From victim advocates to law enforcement officers and investigators, to healthcare personnel to educational institutions, community-based organizations and judges and courtroom officials, how each person responds often determines how, of if, survivors are able to access safety, justice and healing. Since survivors’ lives do not exist in silos, it is therefore critical that no individual or entity works in a silo because it takes all of us to prevent and effectively address gender-based violence.

    Each subsequent reauthorization of VAWA has provided an opportunity for stakeholders and policymakers to identify what works well and how we can continue to scale up, as well as identify gaps and barriers that need to be addressed, ensuring that these efforts are rooted in the voices and lived realities of survivors. Research and evaluation play an important role in identifying the gaps and barriers, as well as the promising practices.

    The most recent VAWA reauthorization in 2022 is the most expansive yet, establishing numerous new grant programs and initiatives in order to enhance the ways in which we can support communities to prevent and address gender-based violence.

    Additionally, VAWA funding increased by more than 30% in just the last three years, allowing OVW to distribute a record amount of grant funding. In Fiscal Year 2024, Congress increased VAWA funding to $713 million, which is the highest amount that has ever been appropriated.

    The development of the original VAWA legislation was rooted in the lived experiences of survivors, and their courage and leadership to tell their stories to educate policy makers, as well as advocates who helped raise awareness about these critical issues. These leaders pushed for federal legislation, called for investments in research, advocated for funding to improve services and training and co-created much of the work that informs policy and legislation today.

    Just last week, we met with stakeholders and Technical Assistance (TA) providers at the VAWA 30th anniversary TA event to reflect on promising practices and discuss available data and research and how they continue to shape the evolution of policies and practices.

    Congress has appropriated some VAWA funding each year to support research on gender-based violence at NIJ. Additionally, OVW has had statutory authority since the beginning to use some of its program funds to study emerging issues and evaluate VAWA-funded approaches, including demonstration programs. In 2016, however, OVW launched the Research and Evaluation Initiative with support from NIJ and as a complement to NIJ’s longstanding portfolio of research on gender-based violence. Every year since then, OVW has issued a call for proposals that invites applicants to study a broad range of topics using a wide range of methods. We intentionally keep these grant opportunities very open, seeking to foster practitioner-research partnerships, since practitioners who work closest with survivors know about emerging innovations ripe for evaluation before we do and can partner with researchers to develop research proposals.

    To that end, at OVW, our Research and Evaluation Initiative supports collaboration between researchers and practitioners to study VAWA-funded approaches. We’ve funded studies looking at everything from victim notification protocols for cases in which a sexual assault kit is tested after having been shelved for years, to the evaluation of a therapeutic horticulture program at a domestic violence shelter. We’ve also funded a training program for faith leaders to help them support congregants who disclose domestic violence. We fund projects that employ community-based participatory research, quasi-experimental designs, randomized controlled trials and more. In fact, several of our Research and Evaluation grantees are presenting their work here at this conference!

    Since 2016, the Research and Evaluation Initiative has awarded over 50 grants, totaling more than $21 million, to study ways to improve responses to gender-based violence in victim services, law enforcement, prosecution and the courts. In fact, last year OVW awarded $3.1 million in new research grants. Among these projects is an evaluation of a flexible financial assistance program for domestic violence survivors. This study aims to show how cash assistance can help survivors for whom financial barriers impede their path to safety and recovery, recognizing that survivors often know best what they need. Another study will examine the occupational and economic needs and experiences of domestic violence victim advocates and will use its findings to adapt and pilot an innovative economic empowerment program. Preliminary research on economic empowerment programs has shown positive impacts, including improved financial management and related behaviors.

    We see our evidence-building activities not as a way of limiting the ways people work in their communities to support survivors and hold harm-doers accountable, but rather, to expand that work and better understand how, and why, under what circumstances and for whom certain strategies are helpful.

    We’re especially interested in supporting research that can help us learn from strategies created by and for survivors from historically marginalized and underserved communities. We know that gender-based violence places a disproportionately heavy toll on marginalized communities, often at the intersection with other issues that create additional barriers to seeking effective services and access to justice. It is also from these communities that especially novel and promising ways for reducing risk factors and facilitating protective factors for gender-based violence are emerging.

    As we commemorate the 30th anniversary of VAWA this month, it is an opportunity for all of us to collectively reflect on the substantial progress that has been made — but also how much further we have to go. There have been significant paradigm shifts in society’s perceptions of gender-based violence and our responses to it, but many survivors still encounter significant challenges navigating complex systems and accessing critical resources and support.

    Addressing these gaps and barriers requires consistent, long-term coordination, which is why just last year the White House launched the first-ever U.S. National Plan to End Gender-Based Violence (GBV), with the collaboration of more than 15 federal agencies. The Plan advances a whole-of-government approach to preventing and ending gender-based violence — which we refer to as a “federal coordinated community response” — and it acts as a blueprint that builds on the lessons learned and achievements made through the efforts of survivors, advocates and others in the field.

    The GBV National Plan encourages all federal agencies to strengthen their role in supporting efforts to prevent and address gender-based violence. It also calls for strengthening research efforts to better understand the needs and implement solutions. At OVW, we’re working with our colleagues across government to widen the aperture of the various tools we all use to measure social problems and evaluate ways of mitigating them.

    The GBV National Plan focuses on seven pillars, starting with prevention as Pillar 1. While Pillar 7 of the GBV National Plan focuses on Research and Data, there are clear research implications embedded throughout the other six pillars, as well as opportunities to work across and beyond systems to advance our understanding of what strategies make a real difference for preventing gender-based violence and ameliorating its impacts on people, families and communities.

    We have seen how research has had an impact on the evolution of VAWA, including helping support advocacy for the inclusion of special Tribal criminal jurisdiction to address the high rates of domestic violence and sexual assault perpetrated by non-Indian abusers in Indian country; helping provide evidence to strengthen protections at the intersection of domestic violence and firearms; and helping shine a light on the importance of addressing the disproportionate impact of GBV on historically marginalized and underserved populations, to name a few.

    One way that our work has been bolstered by another agency’s research is longitudinal research on the Domestic Violence Housing First model in Washington State that was funded by the Department of Health and Human Services. Among other promising discoveries from this work, we learned that flexible financial assistance contributes greatly to survivors’ safety and stability. These findings informed OVW’s request for appropriations specifically to stand up a flexible financial assistance program, for which Congress provided appropriations last year.

    Likewise, when we surveyed research on restorative justice to inform our program planning and later relied on it to support our appropriations requests, we looked to research that was funded by the National Science Foundation on a restorative justice-based abusive partner intervention program.

    And speaking of collaboration, I want to extend a special thanks to my colleagues from the NIJ and the Office for Victims of Crime (OVC). NIJ helped us establish our Research and Evaluation Initiative back in 2015 and 2016, and we work closely with NIJ and OVC to ensure we’re doing meaningful work in the spaces where science and ending gender-based violence overlap.

    I invite all of you to reach out to OVW as we strive to learn more about the protective factors and promising practices that need to be scaled up; the challenges and barriers that victims face; and how can we improve our partnership and strengthen a coordinated community response to more effectively address these issues. We’re also interested in learning more about other research and data efforts focus on helping prevent violence; support survivors to access safety, justice and healing; and equip communities with the tools they need to eliminate gender-based violence.

    As we move forward, we must continue to amplify the voices and leadership of survivors — work you all do every day — to advance a whole-of-society approach that continues to lift these issues out of the shadows, support survivors and hold offenders accountable. It is only together that we can build a world that affirms the dignity, rights and humanity of every individual, a world where gender-based violence is not tolerated, and a world where healing and justice are accessible to all. Thank you.  

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Banking: New wave of Copilot innovation coming to education

    Source: Microsoft

    Headline: New wave of Copilot innovation coming to education

    Enhance your AI journey with Business Chat and Copilot Pages, updates to Copilot in the Microsoft 365 apps, Copilot agents, enterprise data protection, and more.

    We’re introducing a new wave of Microsoft Copilot innovation with Business Chat and Copilot Pages, updates to Copilot in the Microsoft 365 apps, Copilot agents, enterprise data protection, and more. In this blog we’ll share new education insights, recap the latest innovations coming to our customers with Copilot and Microsoft 365 Copilot, and provide resources to support your AI journey.

    AI is reshaping education, and institutions need a plan. With new education insights from the 2024 Work Trend Index Annual Survey, it’s clear that AI use in education is here with 71% of education professionals using it at work. At the same time, 63% reported their institutions lack a vision and plan to implement AI, likely contributing to 81% of education professionals not using tools provided to them—but instead choosing to bring their own AI to work (BYOAI).

    Discover insights from the 2024 Work Trend Index Annual Survey

    As the future of work and education continues to evolve with AI innovation, it’s increasingly important to ensure that educators and students are engaged and encouraged to build AI literacy. 77% of business leaders say with AI, early-in-career talent will be given greater responsibilities, yet many education professionals express reluctance to admit to using AI and say they don’t know how to use it effectively. Learn more about the need for bridging the AI literacy gap and starting AI conversations in our AI in Education Report.

    Explore the AI in Education Report

    Enhancing Microsoft Copilot with enterprise data protection

    Microsoft Copilot is your AI assistant for education, providing secure access to advanced AI models for free so you can focus on what matters most. We’ll continue bringing new models to Copilot, now including GPT-4o, and capabilities like recent chats to reference or continue previous chats. In August 2024, we shared several additional updates to enhance data security, privacy, compliance, and user experience which begins rolling out today. While signed in with a school account, Copilot will offer enterprise data protection (EDP) in a simplified, ad-free interface that can be accessed at Microsoft.com/copilot, in the Microsoft 365 app, and will soon be available in Microsoft Teams and Outlook. 

    Enterprise data protection means that your Copilot prompts and responses are protected by the same terms and commitments that are widely trusted by our customers—not only for Microsoft 365 Copilot, but also for emails in Exchange and files in SharePoint. With EDP, we secure your data, your data is private, and your access controls and policies apply based on the underlying subscription plan. Additionally, we help safeguard against AI-focused risks such as harmful content and prompt injections, and your data isn’t used to train foundation models.

    Learn more about enterprise data protection
    Microsoft Copilot, now with enterprise data protection and available at Microsoft.com/copilot and in the Microsoft 365 app.

    Education institutions like Wichita Public Schools and Auburn University have already leveraged Copilot to empower students, faculty, staff, and researchers. We look forward to continuing to support institutions worldwide in their mission to provide equitable AI access and learning about where Copilot is improving educational outcomes.

    These updates will be available to all educators, staff, and higher education students aged 18 and older over the next month. We’re also excited to continue our private preview program for students 13 and older, now with enterprise data protection. For more information, review the enterprise data protection FAQ.

    Microsoft Copilot Wave 2 innovation

    Microsoft 365 Copilot, integrated into the apps you use every day and available as an add-on, has added 150 new features and capabilities since general availability and more than 700 product updates based on customer feedback. We’ve announced three key updates: Business Chat and Copilot Pages, transforming Copilot in the Microsoft 365 apps, and Copilot agents.

    Business Chat and Copilot Pages

    • Business Chat (BizChat) is a central hub that brings together all your data—web data, work data, and line of business data—with the rich capabilities of the Microsoft 365 apps. BizChat is where you can work with Copilot like a partner, turning organizational content into a rich database of information and insight.
    • Copilot Pages is a dynamic, persistent canvas in BizChat designed for AI collaboration to ensure the data in your organization is persistent, accessible, and valuable. You and your team can work collaboratively in a Page with Copilot, seeing everyone’s work in real time. In the coming weeks, we’re also bringing Pages to the free Microsoft Copilot when signed in with a Microsoft Entra account.

    Updates to Copilot in the Microsoft 365 apps

    • Copilot in Excel is now generally available with new skills, and we announced Copilot in Excel with Python—empowering anyone to conduct advance analysis or visualize complex data—all using natural language, no coding required. 
    • Copilot in PowerPoint now offers Narrative Builder, helping you to iterate with Copilot to build a great first draft in minutes and with Brand manager, Copilot can leverage your organization’s branded templates.
    • Copilot in Teams can now reason over both the meeting transcript and the meeting chat to give you a complete picture of what was discussed and leave no question, idea, or contribution behind.
    • Copilot in Outlook helps you quickly get to the messages that matter with Prioritize My Inbox, which analyzes your inbox and soon, you’ll even be able to teach Copilot the specific topics, keywords, or people that are important to you.
    • Copilot in Word will enable you to quickly reference not only Word, PowerPoint, PDFs, and encrypted documents, but also emails and meetings, and offers the ability to partner with Copilot inline as you work on specific sections of your document.
    • Copilot in OneDrive is rolling out now and makes it easy to gain insights, summarize, and compare up to five files with a clear, easy-to-ready summary of the details and differences within your files—without opening a file.

    Copilot agents

    • Now generally available in BizChat, Copilot agents run the spectrum from simple, prompt-and-response agents that anyone can build, to more advanced, fully autonomous agents.
    • Simple and secure to manage, all agents have the same Responsible AI and enterprise data protection promises—your data never leaves the Microsoft 365 trust boundary, and everything happens within your tenant.
    • To make it even easier to build custom agents, we announced agent builder. It’s a new, simplified experience that complements Copilot Studio to enable easy creation of custom agents and realize the value of your organizational data.

    Copilot is transforming productivity in the workplace, empowering customers to accelerate research on rare diseases, save customer service agents hours each week, or go from content ideation to production significantly faster, and more.

    In education, institutions like the University of South Florida are preparing students for this new future of work and are already seeing the value for their faculty and staff. We’ll also continue to enhance the value of Microsoft 365 Copilot with capabilities built for students and educators.

    The University of South Florida is preparing students for the future of work and seeing the benefits of Microsoft 365 Copilot for their faculty and staff.

    Get started on your AI journey

    With new innovations and improvements coming every day, one constant is the importance of providing guidance, learning opportunities, and resources. We’ve compiled a relevant list below to help you get started.

    Learn from more educators, and students:

    Explore and share AI resources:

    • Microsoft Education AI Toolkit: Designed to guide school leaders through the process of integrating AI into their school’s operations and building robust plans for your organization.
    • AI for educators learning pathway: Explore the potential of AI in education, enhance teaching and learning with Microsoft Copilot, and equip and support learners.
    • AI Classroom Toolkit: A creative resource that blends engaging narrative stories with instructional information to create an immersive learning experience.
    • Microsoft Copilot Scenario Library: Get inspired with guidance by departments such as IT, HR, Legal, Communications, Operations, and more.
    • Copilot technical skilling resources: A collection of kits, learning paths, Microsoft Mechanics videos, resources for developers, and upcoming events for Microsoft 365 Copilot.
    • Worklab: explore the latest research insights on the future of work and generative AI
    • Minecraft Education AI Foundations: A set of accessible, engaging materials for building AI literacy with Minecraft for students, educators, and families.
    • AI Guidance for Schools Toolkit from TeachAI: Designed to help education authorities, school leaders, and teachers create thoughtful guidance.

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI Economics: New wave of Copilot innovation coming to education

    Source: Microsoft

    Headline: New wave of Copilot innovation coming to education

    Enhance your AI journey with Business Chat and Copilot Pages, updates to Copilot in the Microsoft 365 apps, Copilot agents, enterprise data protection, and more.

    We’re introducing a new wave of Microsoft Copilot innovation with Business Chat and Copilot Pages, updates to Copilot in the Microsoft 365 apps, Copilot agents, enterprise data protection, and more. In this blog we’ll share new education insights, recap the latest innovations coming to our customers with Copilot and Microsoft 365 Copilot, and provide resources to support your AI journey.

    AI is reshaping education, and institutions need a plan. With new education insights from the 2024 Work Trend Index Annual Survey, it’s clear that AI use in education is here with 71% of education professionals using it at work. At the same time, 63% reported their institutions lack a vision and plan to implement AI, likely contributing to 81% of education professionals not using tools provided to them—but instead choosing to bring their own AI to work (BYOAI).

    Discover insights from the 2024 Work Trend Index Annual Survey

    As the future of work and education continues to evolve with AI innovation, it’s increasingly important to ensure that educators and students are engaged and encouraged to build AI literacy. 77% of business leaders say with AI, early-in-career talent will be given greater responsibilities, yet many education professionals express reluctance to admit to using AI and say they don’t know how to use it effectively. Learn more about the need for bridging the AI literacy gap and starting AI conversations in our AI in Education Report.

    Explore the AI in Education Report

    Enhancing Microsoft Copilot with enterprise data protection

    Microsoft Copilot is your AI assistant for education, providing secure access to advanced AI models for free so you can focus on what matters most. We’ll continue bringing new models to Copilot, now including GPT-4o, and capabilities like recent chats to reference or continue previous chats. In August 2024, we shared several additional updates to enhance data security, privacy, compliance, and user experience which begins rolling out today. While signed in with a school account, Copilot will offer enterprise data protection (EDP) in a simplified, ad-free interface that can be accessed at Microsoft.com/copilot, in the Microsoft 365 app, and will soon be available in Microsoft Teams and Outlook. 

    Enterprise data protection means that your Copilot prompts and responses are protected by the same terms and commitments that are widely trusted by our customers—not only for Microsoft 365 Copilot, but also for emails in Exchange and files in SharePoint. With EDP, we secure your data, your data is private, and your access controls and policies apply based on the underlying subscription plan. Additionally, we help safeguard against AI-focused risks such as harmful content and prompt injections, and your data isn’t used to train foundation models.

    Learn more about enterprise data protection
    Microsoft Copilot, now with enterprise data protection and available at Microsoft.com/copilot and in the Microsoft 365 app.

    Education institutions like Wichita Public Schools and Auburn University have already leveraged Copilot to empower students, faculty, staff, and researchers. We look forward to continuing to support institutions worldwide in their mission to provide equitable AI access and learning about where Copilot is improving educational outcomes.

    These updates will be available to all educators, staff, and higher education students aged 18 and older over the next month. We’re also excited to continue our private preview program for students 13 and older, now with enterprise data protection. For more information, review the enterprise data protection FAQ.

    Microsoft Copilot Wave 2 innovation

    Microsoft 365 Copilot, integrated into the apps you use every day and available as an add-on, has added 150 new features and capabilities since general availability and more than 700 product updates based on customer feedback. We’ve announced three key updates: Business Chat and Copilot Pages, transforming Copilot in the Microsoft 365 apps, and Copilot agents.

    Business Chat and Copilot Pages

    • Business Chat (BizChat) is a central hub that brings together all your data—web data, work data, and line of business data—with the rich capabilities of the Microsoft 365 apps. BizChat is where you can work with Copilot like a partner, turning organizational content into a rich database of information and insight.
    • Copilot Pages is a dynamic, persistent canvas in BizChat designed for AI collaboration to ensure the data in your organization is persistent, accessible, and valuable. You and your team can work collaboratively in a Page with Copilot, seeing everyone’s work in real time. In the coming weeks, we’re also bringing Pages to the free Microsoft Copilot when signed in with a Microsoft Entra account.

    Updates to Copilot in the Microsoft 365 apps

    • Copilot in Excel is now generally available with new skills, and we announced Copilot in Excel with Python—empowering anyone to conduct advance analysis or visualize complex data—all using natural language, no coding required. 
    • Copilot in PowerPoint now offers Narrative Builder, helping you to iterate with Copilot to build a great first draft in minutes and with Brand manager, Copilot can leverage your organization’s branded templates.
    • Copilot in Teams can now reason over both the meeting transcript and the meeting chat to give you a complete picture of what was discussed and leave no question, idea, or contribution behind.
    • Copilot in Outlook helps you quickly get to the messages that matter with Prioritize My Inbox, which analyzes your inbox and soon, you’ll even be able to teach Copilot the specific topics, keywords, or people that are important to you.
    • Copilot in Word will enable you to quickly reference not only Word, PowerPoint, PDFs, and encrypted documents, but also emails and meetings, and offers the ability to partner with Copilot inline as you work on specific sections of your document.
    • Copilot in OneDrive is rolling out now and makes it easy to gain insights, summarize, and compare up to five files with a clear, easy-to-ready summary of the details and differences within your files—without opening a file.

    Copilot agents

    • Now generally available in BizChat, Copilot agents run the spectrum from simple, prompt-and-response agents that anyone can build, to more advanced, fully autonomous agents.
    • Simple and secure to manage, all agents have the same Responsible AI and enterprise data protection promises—your data never leaves the Microsoft 365 trust boundary, and everything happens within your tenant.
    • To make it even easier to build custom agents, we announced agent builder. It’s a new, simplified experience that complements Copilot Studio to enable easy creation of custom agents and realize the value of your organizational data.

    Copilot is transforming productivity in the workplace, empowering customers to accelerate research on rare diseases, save customer service agents hours each week, or go from content ideation to production significantly faster, and more.

    In education, institutions like the University of South Florida are preparing students for this new future of work and are already seeing the value for their faculty and staff. We’ll also continue to enhance the value of Microsoft 365 Copilot with capabilities built for students and educators.

    The University of South Florida is preparing students for the future of work and seeing the benefits of Microsoft 365 Copilot for their faculty and staff.

    Get started on your AI journey

    With new innovations and improvements coming every day, one constant is the importance of providing guidance, learning opportunities, and resources. We’ve compiled a relevant list below to help you get started.

    Learn from more educators, and students:

    Explore and share AI resources:

    • Microsoft Education AI Toolkit: Designed to guide school leaders through the process of integrating AI into their school’s operations and building robust plans for your organization.
    • AI for educators learning pathway: Explore the potential of AI in education, enhance teaching and learning with Microsoft Copilot, and equip and support learners.
    • AI Classroom Toolkit: A creative resource that blends engaging narrative stories with instructional information to create an immersive learning experience.
    • Microsoft Copilot Scenario Library: Get inspired with guidance by departments such as IT, HR, Legal, Communications, Operations, and more.
    • Copilot technical skilling resources: A collection of kits, learning paths, Microsoft Mechanics videos, resources for developers, and upcoming events for Microsoft 365 Copilot.
    • Worklab: explore the latest research insights on the future of work and generative AI
    • Minecraft Education AI Foundations: A set of accessible, engaging materials for building AI literacy with Minecraft for students, educators, and families.
    • AI Guidance for Schools Toolkit from TeachAI: Designed to help education authorities, school leaders, and teachers create thoughtful guidance.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI USA: Chicago Congressman Jonathan Jackson to Meet with Colombian President Gustavo Petro

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Jonathan Jackson – Illinois (1st District)

    Chicago Congressman Jonathan Jackson to Meet with Colombian President Gustavo Petro on Saturday to Discuss Advancing Opportunities for Afro Colombians in Chicago and Abroad

    Chicago Congressman Jonathan Jackson to Meet with Colombian President Gustavo Petro on Saturday to Discuss Advancing Opportunities for Afro-Colombians in Chicago and Abroad

    CHICAGO – U.S. Representative Jonathan L. Jackson (D- 1st Congressional District of Illinois) will meet in the city on Saturday with Colombian President Gustavo Petro to discuss improving opportunities for Afro-Columbians in the nation’s third-largest city and abroad.

    Since the 1970s, the city’s Colombia population has grown from 3,500 to more than 40,000 residents, making Colombians the sixth largest Hispanic community in Chicago.

    Since assuming office in 2022, Petro has visited Chicago seven times. In 2009, Chicago established a sister city relationship with Colombia’s capital city, Bogota. This visit is for the three-day Colombia Grows in Chicago festival, which concludes on Saturday. The festival celebrates Colombia’s rich culture and diversity and unites communities through art, performances, exhibitions, and a panel on migration. Congressman Jackson will meet with President Petro after Petro’s speech.

    “President Petro is a leader in diversity, equity, and inclusion,” Congressman Jackson said. “He has the most diverse cabinet in the history of Colombia and the hemisphere. There are some lessons we can learn from Colombia, including how Colombia is addressing its migrant issue because most of the migrants fleeing Venezuela have crossed the border into Colombia. His

    presence in Chicago demonstrates his commitment to addressing the needs of Colombians, and we are here to offer support to help them advance in our world-class city.”

    In 2022, Congressman Jackson attended the inauguration of President Petro and vice president, Francia Marquez, the nation’s first Afro-Colombian woman vice president.

    Last year, he invited VP Marquez to Chicago as the guest speaker in a forum on diversity and how it impacts the African Diaspora.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: MAINE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION AMENDS ELECTRIC AND GAS UTILITY RULES TO PROVIDE PROTECTIONS TO VICTIMS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE

    Source: US State of Maine

    September 20, 2024

    Hallowell, Maine – The Maine Public Utilities Commission (Commission) recently adopted amendments to its Chapter 815 Rules for electric and gas utilities to provide certain protections for victims of domestic violence. The Commission joins seven other states that have protections for utility customers who have experienced the economic abuse connected to domestic violence.

    “I hope the changes will address any concerns raised during this proceeding to better protect domestic violence victims,” said Chair Philip L. Bartlett, II. We truly appreciate the efforts of the Maine Coalition to End Domestic Violence in raising some very important considerations.

    These amendments provide the following protections to applicants or customers who present an enforceable protection from abuse order to the utility:

    -Certain customer information may not be reported by the utility to debt collectors and credit reporters;

    -A utility may not deny service or require payment of a catch-up amount; and

    -A utility may not demand a deposit under certain conditions.

    A utility with a reasonable belief that a protection from abuse order presented by an applicant or customer is not authentic may require the applicant or customer to submit a court-certified copy of the order.

    The Commission’s Chapter 815 Rules regulate the relationship between electric and gas utilities and their customers, establishing the minimum standards for the provision of service including application for service, deposit requirements and the administration of credit and collection programs. These amendments became enforceable on August 31, 2024.

    Additional information about the case may be found on the Commission’s website:

    CONTACT: Susan Faloon, Media Liaison CELL: 207-557-3704 EMAIL: susan.faloon@maine.gov

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Strong Introduces Legislation to increase Tennessee Valley power generation

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Dale Strong (Alabama)

    Washington, D.C.  — This week, Congressman Dale W. Strong (AL-05) introduced legislation to advance the research, development, demonstration, and commercial application of Small Modular Reactors (SMR) and micro-reactors in the U.S.  

    To achieve this goal, the Department of Energy will be required to construct and demonstrate two near-term SMR or micro-reactor projects that can be fully deployed by 2034. At least one of these projects must be located on or adjacent to an operating or retired nuclear reactor site. 

     

    Bellefonte Nuclear Plant, an unfinished Tennessee Valley Authority asset, is one such site that would qualify under this legislation. 

     

    “North Alabama has seen tremendous population growth and economic expansion in the last two decades, and I am committed to ensuring we make enough power to fuel North Alabama residents and businesses,”said Congressman Strong.“Winter Storm Elliott was a wake-up call for us all. To avoid shortages in the future, we must be constantly investing in modern energy sources to power our economy for the next generation.” 

     

    Fellow North Alabama Representative Robert Aderholt (AL-04) co-sponsored Strong’s Small Modular Reactor (SMR) Demonstration Act of 2024. 

     

    “Our nation’s energy policy must reflect a commitment to increasing energy production so those in North Alabama, and across the nation, will always have access to power when they need it most,” said Congressman Aderholt.“Residents of Alabama’s Fourth Congressional District should never be subjected to a lack of power or lack of economic opportunities due to electric providers not being able to produce adequate energy supplies. This is why this bill is so important. Those in rural areas of the nation, like my district, will benefit greatly from the use of SMRs.” 

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Congressman Morgan McGarvey Slams Republican Majority’s Inability to Fund Government

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Morgan McGarvey (Kentucky-03)

    September 18, 2024

    WASHINGTON, D.C. (September 18, 2024) – Congressman Morgan McGarvey (KY-03) released the following statement following his vote against a continuing resolution (CR) that would fund the government at insufficient levels for six months and includes the SAVE Act, one of the most extreme and restrictive elections bills ever considered in the House of Representatives:
     
    “This is not a serious bill, it’s political theater.
     
    Republicans say they’re the party of fiscal responsibility, but for the second year in a row, they’ve failed to pass a budget on time.
     
    In kicking the can down the road once again, House Republicans are hurting our national security, veterans, seniors, low-income families, small businesses, and more.
     
    The House Majority claims to back our veterans, but the funding levels they presented mean our troops don’t get a raise and veterans don’t get the care they need.
     
    House Republicans say they want all eligible voters to be able to vote, but they’re tying government funding to the most extreme and restrictive election bill in history—a dead-on-arrival bill intended to prevent something that is already illegal.
     
    It’s unserious and it’s a waste of time. We should be working to pass a budget that addresses the current needs of our country.
     
    I voted no.”
     
    The continuing resolution failed 202-220, with 206 Democrats and 14 Republicans voting against it. If no budget or continuing resolution is passed by both chambers and signed into law by September 30, the government will shut down. 
     
    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Missouri Department of Natural Resources opens 2024-2025 Bus Grant Program

    Source: US State of Missouri

    JEFFERSON CITY, MO, SEPT. 20, 2024 – The Missouri Department of Natural Resources’ Division of State Parks has opened the Bus Grant Program for the 2024-2025 school year. This is a noncompetitive grant that is awarded on a first-come, first-served basis to qualified applicants. The deadline to apply is May 23, 2025.

    The Bus Grant Program is available to public school districts, private schools, charter schools and youth-focused nonprofit organizations with 501(c) 3 status. Program funding is available only to Missouri schools and nonprofit organizations.

    Missouri State Parks offers busing grants to underwrite the cost of field trips for schools (pre-K–grade 12) and nonprofit organizations in an effort to connect youth with nature at Missouri’s state parks and historic sites.  

    For more information about this program and to download the Missouri State Parks Bus Grant Application Guidance, visit mostateparks.com/page/94781/missouri-state-parks-bus-grant-program.

    For more information on state parks and historic sites, visit mostateparks.com. Missouri State Parks is a division of the Missouri Department of Natural Resources.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Rep. Lauren Boebert Votes to End Bailouts for Sanctuary Cities

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Lauren Boebert (Colorado, 3)

    Washington, D.C. — Today, U.S. Congresswoman Lauren Boebert (CO-03) released the following statement after voting in favor of the “No Bailout for Sanctuary Cities Act.” The House of Representatives passed this legislation by a vote of 219-186, with 12 Democrats voting to advance the bill. 

    “Kamala Harris’s reign as Border Czar has been one of the most detrimental decisions for our national security in American history. Colorado’s sanctuary policies for illegals encourage the surge from the Southern Border to our communities, like Aurora. 

    That’s why I’m proud to have voted in favor of Congressman LaLota’s ‘No Bailout for Sanctuary Cities Act’ today. His legislation will prohibit federal funds from being used to bail out sanctuary cities. We need to disincentivize illegal immigration, and this bill is a great step in the right direction,” said Congresswoman Boebert.

    Background, courtesy of the House Majority Whip’s office: 

    This legislation holds sanctuary cities accountable for exacerbating the Biden-Harris Border Crisis and flouting federal immigration law by prohibiting the use of taxpayer dollars to fund housing, healthcare, and other benefits for illegal immigrants in such municipalities. 

    • Despite the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act explicitly prohibiting any restriction on communication between state or local entities and federal immigration authorities relating to an individual’s immigration status, many Democrat-led jurisdictions like New York and California refuse to cooperate and enforce federal immigration law.
    • Sanctuary policies incentivize illegal immigration, which has already hit historic levels thanks to the Biden-Harris Administration’s open borders policies, by promising free taxpayer-funded benefits.  Woke mayors and governors are prioritizing illegal immigrants at the expense of residents, who are facing overburdened schools, hospitals, and other social services. They are also endangering the safety of both community members and the law enforcement officers who protect them by permitting criminal aliens to roam freely.
    • American taxpayers should not foot the bill for Democrat’s radical immigration policies. H.R. 5717 will ensure American families don’t bear this burden by prohibiting sanctuary cities from receiving federal funding intended to be used for the benefit of illegal immigrants, including for the provision of food, shelter, healthcare services, legal services, and transportation.

    Full text of the No Bailout for Sanctuary Cities Act can be found HERE.  

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    For updates, subscribe to Congresswoman Boebert’s newsletter here.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: 79th Session of the United Nations General Assembly (22-27 Sept. 2024)

    Source: Republic of France in English
    The Republic of France has issued the following statement:

    The 79th session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) is taking place at the UN Headquarters in New York from 22 to 27 September 2024. This year, the theme for the debate will be “Leaving no one behind: acting together for the advancement of peace, sustainable development and human dignity for present and future generations”.

    The UNGA was created under the Charter of the United Nations in 1945. It is the decision-making and representative body of the United Nations and now comprises 193 Member States. The UNGA adopts resolutions that help establish the standards of international law, on the basis of representativeness (1 State = 1 vote) and debate.

    During the 79th UNGA High-level Week, Heads of State and Government and other national representatives will gather to set out their priorities and discuss global challenges in order to advance peace, security and sustainable development.

    As the international community faces unprecedented challenges, this major diplomatic event will provide an opportunity for France to reaffirm its commitment to strong and effective multilateralism.

    France’s priorities for this UNGA are:

    • Addressing the main security crises

      France will reaffirm its support for Ukraine, advocate for an end to the crises in Gaza and Sudan, and mobilize to uphold international humanitarian law;
    • Fighting inequality linked to climate change and striving for environmental protection.

      France intends to increase the international community’s ambitions in relation to crucial issues such as the reduction of greenhouse gases, adaptation to climate change, and preservation of the oceans and biodiversity;
    • Fighting hate speech and disinformation

      France and its partners are working to combat disinformation and interference campaigns, which present a challenge to democracy;
    • Reforming the international system’s governance, in line with the Summit of the Future, to lead to institutions that are more efficient, equitable and representative of the diversity of our societies, including by promoting the participation of women in all decision-making processes.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI USA: State and federal partners encourage public to attend Jefferson City spin-off study public meeting

    Source: US State of Missouri

    JEFFERSON CITY, MO, SEPT. 20, 2024 – Federal and state officials will hold a public meeting for the Lower Missouri River Jefferson City spin-off study Thursday, Sept. 26, in Jefferson City. Doors open at 5 p.m., with the meeting held from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. at the Lewis and Clark State Office Building, 1101 Riverside Drive in Jefferson City.

    During the meeting, the Kansas City District, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the Missouri Department of Natural Resources will present all current study information in an effort to make sure all stakeholders are fully aware of the alternatives that have federal interest, as well as the study schedule going forward.

    The purpose of the study is to identify causes and impacts of recurring flooding along the Capital View Levee and the unconstructed, but authorized, Missouri River Levee System L-142 project near Jefferson City. The study area includes the north (left) bank of the Missouri River in the vicinity of mile marker 142.

    The meeting is an opportunity for the public to ask questions and provide input regarding the Lower Missouri Jefferson City spin-off study. After the meeting, the Corps of Engineers team will develop the study report and make it available for public comment in November. The public is encouraged to use that opportunity to formally provide feedback before the agency decision milestone in March 2025. ­­

    For more information about the Lower Missouri Jefferson City spin-off study, visit nwk.usace.army.mil/Missions/Civil-Works/Civil-Works-Programs-And-Projects/Lower-Missouri-River-Basin/Jefferson-City-MO-L142/ and dnr.mo.gov/water/what-were-doing/initiatives/lower-missouri-river-flood-resiliency.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Manitoba Government Investing in Construction Project on Provincial Road 224

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    Manitoba Government Investing in Construction Project on Provincial Road 224


    The Manitoba government is investing in making roads safer for Manitobans travelling on Provincial Road (PR) 224 from PR 325 to Fisher River First Nation, Transportation and Infrastructure Minister Lisa Naylor announced today.

    “Many sections along PR 224 became nearly impassable due to large surface failures caused by the 2024 spring breakup,” said Naylor. “This road is the main access route to Peguis First Nation, Fisher River First Nation and many other communities, and our government is committed to restoring its serviceability.”

    The Manitoba government is investing $18.3 million to reconstruct a 45-kilometre section of PR 224. The project will include excavating failed sections, repairing the subgrade and replacing the surface. Additionally, sections that have not yet failed will receive a thin lift overlay of bituminous asphalt to increase the overall life of the roadway, noted the minister, adding the gravel shoulders along the route will also be reconstructed.

    Construction is expected to be completed in fall 2025, said Naylor.

    Budget 2024 invests $500 million in capital funding to repair and rebuild Manitoba’s highways and public infrastructure to spur economic development and make it easier to get around the province.

    Additional details regarding Manitoba Transportation and Infrastructure’s capital projects can be found on an interactive map at www.gov.mb.ca/mti/mipmap/map.html.

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    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Malliotakis Statement on House’s Passage of The Enhanced Presidential Security Act of 2024

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Nicole Malliotakis (NY-11)

    (WASHINGTON, DC) – Congresswoman Nicole Malliotakis issued the following statement regarding the House’s unanimous passage of H.R. 9106, the Enhanced Presidential Security Act of 2024. 

    “I’m pleased the House unanimously passed legislation I cosponsored with Rep. Mike Lawler (R-NY) and Rep. Ritchie Torres (D-NY) to give President Trump and all major presidential candidates the same security as the sitting President. There is no greater threat to our democracy than an attempt to assassinate a presidential candidate, right before an election.”

    The legislation will direct the Director of the United States Secret Service to apply the same standards for determining the number of agents required to protect Presidents, Vice Presidents, and major Presidential and Vice Presidential candidates.

    MIL OSI USA News