Category: DJF

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Development of a new street and road network project in Sokolniki has begun

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    In the Sokolniki district, the development of a territory planning project (TPP) for a new street and road network has begun. The work will be carried out within the framework of the Targeted Investment Program. This was reported by the Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Urban Development Policy and Construction Vladimir Efimov.

    “The total area of the territory for which the PPT will be developed is about four hectares. It is located at the intersection of Bolshaya Olenya Street and Veteranov Avenue, Maly Oleny Lane and Oleniy Val Street. The project provides for the construction of a street and road network necessary for the full functioning of the modern sports and training base of the Spartak-Moscow football club. This is an example of how the city creates infrastructure to support sports initiatives, while simultaneously developing the area and making it more comfortable for residents,” said Vladimir Efimov.

    The emergence of new infrastructure will provide convenient access to the sports facility and improve the transport situation in the area.

    “Development of the street and road network will create additional prerequisites for the improvement of adjacent territories, will make the area more accessible and attractive for both residents and visitors to the city. As a result, traffic organization will improve, travel time will be reduced, new routes and convenient pedestrian connections will appear,” she added. Juliana Knyazhevskaya, Chairman of the Committee for Architecture and Urban Development of the City of Moscow.

    Earlier, Sergei Sobyanin spoke about the construction new road network in the Ramenki area.

    Get the latest news quicklyofficial telegram channel the city of Moscow.

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

    Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect

    https: //vv.mos.ru/nevs/ite/155843073/

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: The State University of Management proposes to form an industry of historical technologies in Russia

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: State University of Management – Official website of the State –

    On June 25, 2025, a delegation from the State University of Management took part in a scientific and methodological seminar of the Commission of the General Council of the United Russia party on education and science with the participation of experts from the Russian Historical Society, the Ministry of Education and Science of Russia, the Talent and Success Educational Foundation and the Kurchatov Institute National Research Center.

    The seminar took place at the Sirius Educational Center as part of the Pedagogy of Times of Trials project. The project aims to conduct research and create educational programs to study, comprehend, and pass on to young people the pedagogical experience gained by Soviet and Russian educators during military, socio-political, and humanitarian crises.

    The seminar was attended by the Vice-Rector of the State University of Management Maria Karelina, the leading researcher of the Research Institute of Public Policy and Management of Industrial Economy Irina Goncharova and the Director of the Center for Assessment and Development of Management Competencies Anton Velichko.

    During the seminars, university representatives and industry experts share their own experiences and practices of conducting scientific and historical work with students and young scientists through the prism of historical memory.

    Leading researcher at the Research Institute of Public Policy and Management of Industrial Economy Irina Goncharova presented a report entitled “Pedagogy of Memory: a Multi-Level System of Management Education at the State University of Management at the scientific and methodological seminar.” Today, the university is implementing specific projects in key areas of activity – education, science, practice – which involve students at all stages of training: from Pre-University students to postgraduates. The complex of these activities forms a systematic approach to the work on preserving and transmitting historical memory to younger generations and, moreover, becomes a tool for training leaders. The State University of Management sets itself the goal of not only educating and preserving patriotism, but also scaling up existing practices by creating an industry of historical technologies.

    The delegation of the State University of Management was given a tour of the campus of the Sirius Educational Center, the Sirius University of Science and Technology, and the Laboratory Complex. Deputy Director for Educational Activities of the Sirius University Oleg Fedorov spoke about the scientific centers operating within the university structure, where research is conducted in the fields of genetics, information technology, ecology, medicine, and cognitive research. The meeting participants discussed promising areas of joint work on the research track.

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

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Forest Protection and Wildland Firefighter Safety Act Passes Committee

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Doug LaMalfa 1st District of California

    Washington, D.C.—Today, the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee passed Congressman LaMalfa’s bill, H.R. 3300, the Forest Protection and Wildland Firefighter Safety Act, out of markup as part of a larger package. This legislation ensures that aerial fire retardant remains available for wildfire suppression efforts without being tied up in Clean Water Act permitting delays. The bill clarifies that federal, state, local, and tribal firefighting agencies do not need a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit to use fire retardant from aircraft when responding to wildfires.

    “Firefighters shouldn’t have to wait on a permit to fight a fire. With wildfire racing toward homes and forests, limiting or delaying the use of fire retardant due to waiting for bureaucracy to permit it is backward logic that gets people hurt and leaves entire landscapes scorched,” said Rep. LaMalfa. “Aerial retardant has been used safely for decades. What these lawsuits and delays really do is handcuff the very people trying to stop disaster. I’m glad to see this bill pass through committee, and I’ll keep working to make sure our firefighters can do their jobs without interference from fringe lawsuits or red tape.”

    Background

    In 2022, an environmental group sued the Forest Service over its use of aerial fire retardant, arguing it should be regulated under the Clean Water Act. A federal court ruled in 2023 that the Forest Service must obtain a NPDES permit from the EPA, but declined to issue an injunction that would have halted the use of retardant during fire season. The permitting process is expected to take years, and if future litigation results in a successful injunction, firefighters could be forced to ground aircraft or fly them with only water—putting lives, forests, and property at serious risk. Additionally, every state, local, and tribal fire agency may eventually need to get their own NPDES permit to use retardant, wasting tax dollars, time, and placing people in jeopardy.

    The Forest Service has made clear in testimony that aerial retardant is a critical part of its integrated wildfire strategy and that current operations already prohibit discharge into waterways or buffer zones. Over the past decade, less than 1% of fire retardant drops have affected waterways.

    The bill builds on existing exemptions in the Clean Water Act for fire control activities and ensures continued use of fire retardants that are approved and listed on the Forest Service’s Qualified Products List.

    Congressman Doug LaMalfa is Chairman of the Congressional Western Caucus and a lifelong farmer representing California’s First Congressional District, including Butte, Colusa, Glenn, Lassen, Modoc, Shasta, Siskiyou, Sutter, Tehama and Yuba Counties.

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: LaMalfa, California GOP Delegation Call on Newsom to Halt New Gas Price Hikes

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Doug LaMalfa 1st District of California

    Washington, D.C.—Congressman Doug LaMalfa (R-Richvale) joined the entire California Republican congressional delegation in sending a letter to Governor Gavin Newsom urging him to immediately suspend a scheduled increase to the state’s gasoline excise tax and pause the implementation of new California Air Resources Board (CARB) regulations projected to significantly raise fuel costs for California drivers.

    Starting July 1, 2025, California is set to raise its gas tax to 61.2 cents per gallon. On the same day, new CARB regulations under the Low Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS) are set to take effect—regulations estimated by University of Pennsylvania economists to drive fuel prices up by as much as 65 cents per gallon. Combined, these changes will further strain California’s already fragile fuel supply and add more costs for families and businesses across the state.

    “At a time when Californians are already paying $1.44 more per gallon than the national average, the last thing they need is another gas tax hike and a costly new mandate from unelected CARB officials,” said Rep. LaMalfa. “The Phillips 66 refinery is set to close this fall, and Valero’s Benicia facility will follow next spring. Together, those shutdowns will cut California’s refining capacity by over 20 percent. Resulting in less fuel available on the market, higher prices, and more pain for everyone. Instead of addressing this looming supply crisis, the Governor is adding 1.6 cents to the gas tax and letting CARB push through a regulation that is estimated to raise prices by up to 65 cents per gallon. These policies are not just tone-deaf, they’re dangerous to California’s economy. The Governor continues to ignore this reality. Refusing to change course will only make things worse.”

    These price increases come as California faces a looming supply crisis due to the scheduled closures of two major in-state refineries. According to a May 2025 report from the University of Southern California’s Marshall School of Business, the combined shutdown of the Phillips 66 refinery in Los Angeles and the Valero refinery in Benicia could result in a 21% drop in California’s refining capacity. This shortfall is expected to create a gasoline supply deficit of up to 13.1 million gallons per day and push prices as high as $8.43 per gallon by the end of 2026, especially when combined with the effects of new state mandates like the LCFS, Cap-and-Trade expansion, and excise tax increases.

    The USC study also warns that these disruptions will ripple across the economy, impacting air travel, food delivery, agriculture, manufacturing, and healthcare, while placing further pressure on household budgets and reducing state tax revenues at a time when California faces a projected $73 billion budget deficit.

    The California Republican congressional delegation has consistently urged the Governor to suspend the gas tax, address in-state supply constraints, and reject policies that deepen the cost-of-living crisis, but to date continue to be ignored.

    The full text of the letter is available here.

    Congressman Doug LaMalfa is Chairman of the Congressional Western Caucus and a lifelong farmer representing California’s First Congressional District, including Butte, Colusa, Glenn, Lassen, Modoc, Shasta, Siskiyou, Sutter, Tehama and Yuba Counties.

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: LaMalfa, Zinke Praise USDA Move to Scrap Roadless Rule Blocking Forest Access

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Doug LaMalfa 1st District of California

    Washington, D.C.—Today, Congressman Doug LaMalfa (R-Richvale) and Congressman Ryan Zinke (R-MT) released the following statement applauding the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s decision to rescind the Roadless Rule. This rule prevented road construction, reconstruction, and timber harvesting on almost 59 million acres of the National Forest System.

    “I want to thank Secretary Rollins for rescinding the Roadless Rule, a Clinton-era midnight regulation which has done more harm than good in the West,” said Rep. LaMalfa. “This policy blocked responsible forest management, preventing thinning, logging, and the ability to build roads that are critical for wildfire response and public safety. Two decades on, our forests are more overgrown, wildfires are more catastrophic, and rural economies have fewer jobs. Repealing the Roadless Rule is a major step toward restoring common-sense forest management and giving local experts the ability to do their jobs.”

    “The rescission of the outdated Roadless Rule is a victory for Montana, public lands, and forest management everywhere,” said Rep. Zinke. “As I’ve long maintained, one of the biggest obstacles to proper forest management and wildfire prevention has been unnecessary and overbearing regulations like this one. If you can’t build a road, you can’t fight fires, you can’t cut trees, and you can’t properly take care of our national heritage held in our public lands. I applaud the President and Secretary Rollins for their initiative to allow real and needed work to be done on our national forest land.”

    The Roadless Rule tied the hands of land managers for years, especially in Western states where wildfire risk is high and economic opportunities are closely linked to working forests. Its repeal is a long-overdue correction that restores balance between conservation and the practical need to access, manage, and protect our forests.

    Rep. LaMalfa spoke on the House floor in support of this decision and the need for active forest management. You can watch his full remarks here.

    Congressman Doug LaMalfa is Chairman of the Congressional Western Caucus and a lifelong farmer representing California’s First Congressional District, including Butte, Colusa, Glenn, Lassen, Modoc, Shasta, Siskiyou, Sutter, Tehama and Yuba Counties.

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Farmers backed to tackle endemic diseases with more funded vet visits

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Farmers backed to tackle endemic diseases with more funded vet visits

    Government funded vet visits to now include health assessments for multiple herds on the same farm helping to support better health and profitability within the sector. 

    Credit: Peter O’Connor

    Livestock farmers can now access funded vet visits for multiple herds or flocks belonging to the same farming business from today (26th June), helping to support better health and profitability within the sector. 

    The expansion to the Animal Health and Welfare Pathway provides farmers a more comprehensive understanding of livestock health on farms with many groups of animals, whether mixed holdings or larger farms with many groups of a single species.  

    Since funded vet visits began in 2023 there have been more than 8,000 visits benefiting hundreds of thousands of animals, with over 95% of farmers saying that they have or will take action based on the advice of their vet. The strong uptake and implementation of the advice supports increased disease resilience meaning healthier animals and greater food security which in turn will boost farmers profits. In simple terms healthier, happier cows produce more milk. 

    The application is quick taking less than 90 seconds to apply and less than 3 minutes to claim for the funding. 

    Daniel Zeichner, Minister for Food Security and Rural Affairs, said:     

    Increased disease resilience means healthier animals and greater food security, boosting farmers profits.  

    The vet visit roll-out gives eligible farmers access to tailored support to each herd or flock. It is one step in the Government’s plan to protect rural livelihoods, tackle disease and safeguard high welfare standards across our food chain.   

    Bryan and Liz Griffiths, Livestock farmers in North Devon, said:  

    We have received government supported vet visits since the Animal Health and Welfare Pathway began. These have allowed us to focus on issues specific to our farm as well as the set program. 

    Going forward the new multi-flock and herd option along with the multi-species option will allow funding for a review and follow up for each flock and species on the farm, all through one agreement, which is great.

    Keepers of beef cattle, dairy cattle, sheep or pigs, can all apply for a vet of their choice to assess all their herds and flocks along with an optional, funded, follow-up assessment.   

    Visits will be able to support monitoring and treatment of diseases including conditions Bovine Viral Diarrhoea (BVD) in cattle, Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome (PRRS) in pigs, and worming resistance in sheep. 

    Applications take just 90 seconds and can be applied for here: Apply for funding to improve animal health and welfare – GOV.UK)

    Updates to this page

    Published 26 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • Over 90% Indian employees confident about affording healthcare needs: Report

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    More than 90 per cent of employees in India are confident that they can afford the healthcare needs for themselves and their families, according to a report on Thursday.

    The Mercer Marsh Benefits report, based on a survey of over 18,000 employees across 17 markets, including in India, explores what employees value most from their workplace benefits, and how their expectations are evolving.

    The findings showed that for Indian employees there are high levels of well-being and satisfaction. The report also highlights growing expectations around flexibility, personalisation, and long-term support, indicating a broader evolution in the Indian workforce – one that is becoming more rooted in long-term ambitions.

    While the report showed that although 92 per cent of employees are confident about affording healthcare needs, the top two reasons for delaying healthcare are financial and anticipated long wait times.

    This suggests that even with insurance coverage, out-of-pocket costs, and other financial considerations are still preventing some employees from getting the care they need.

    Further, the report showed that employers have emerged as the most trusted source of affordable, quality healthcare.

    It showed that more than 80 per cent of employees who could personalise their benefits packages felt their employer cared about their health and well-being.

    For employers, this presents a timely opportunity to outpace their competition by adapting their benefits strategy and building affordable coverage by focusing on preventive care and early detection to primary care, through outpatient provisions (OPD), said the report.

    “Our report provides a strategic blueprint for employers. Specifically for India, it is the growing emphasis on longevity and planning for the future. As life expectancy increases and careers extend, employers have a profound opportunity to build trust and commitment by prioritising benefits that support long-term health planning and financial well-being, ensuring their workforce thrives not just today, but well into retirement,” said Sanjay Kedia, Chief Executive Officer, Marsh McLennan India President and CEO, Marsh India.

    The report also suggested employers bolster quality and timely healthcare by exploring innovative care delivery models, such as telemedicine and partnerships with local healthcare providers.

    (IANS)

  • Kargil Vijay Diwas 2025: Indian Army remembers fallen soldiers, plans memorial outreach

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    The Indian Army has begun commemorative events ahead of the 26th anniversary of Kargil Vijay Diwas, which marks India’s victory over Pakistani forces during the 1999 Kargil conflict in Jammu and Kashmir.

    The Army on Thursday shared moments from “Operation Vijay,” the military operation during which Indian forces reclaimed strategic positions infiltrated by Pakistani troops along the Line of Control. The conflict, which lasted from May to July 1999, ended with India regaining control over key mountain peaks, including Tiger Hill.

    A post from the Army’s public information department on social media platform X said: “Kargil Vijay Diwas 2025. 30 Days to Go… 30 Days to Remember. A tribute to the unmatched valour of our bravehearts. Their courage echoes through the heights of Kargil, forever etched in the soul of India.”

    Kargil Vijay Diwas is observed annually on July 26.

    This year’s commemorations come months after India carried out airstrikes under “Operation Sindoor,” targeting nine alleged terror camps in Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir, along with 11 airbases, according to Indian defence officials.

    As part of its outreach initiative, the Indian Army is reaching out to the families of 545 soldiers who were killed in the 1999 Kargil conflict. Army teams are visiting households across 25 states, two Union Territories, and Nepal to deliver letters of gratitude, commemorative mementoes, and detailed information on welfare benefits extended by the central and state governments. The visits also aim to gather feedback on unresolved issues or support gaps faced by the families.

    In one such visit this month, Army officers presented a memento to the parents of Captain Vijayant Thapar, who was killed in the conflict. The meeting took place at their residence in Noida, northern India.

    The Army also plans to collect personal memorabilia from the families of the deceased to preserve at the Kargil War Memorial in Dras. The commemorations will conclude with a wreath-laying ceremony at the memorial on July 26.

    The Kargil War began when Indian troops detected Pakistani forces occupying mountain posts on the Indian side of the Line of Control. After weeks of high-altitude fighting, Indian forces regained control of the territory, officially declaring victory on July 26, 1999.

    -IANS

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Press release – EP President Metsola to EU leaders: “Peace may be difficult, but it is not impossible”

    Source: European Parliament 3

    Speaking to EU leaders, Parliament President Metsola said that in a volatile world, Europe must do more for its security.

    On the Middle East, President Metsola said: “What we are witnessing between Israel and Iran, and its potential spill over effects, is a litmus test for us all. The recent ceasefire deal marks a hopeful step forward.” She also stressed that: “Iran cannot acquire a nuclear bomb. That is a threat not just to the region, but to the world.” With regards to Gaza, she said that work for a ceasefire must continue, calling “for the immediate release of all hostages, an end to the terror, and for humanitarian aid to reach those who so desperately need it. Peace may be difficult, but it is not impossible.”

    On Ukraine, she underlined that the EU’s support must remain strong, including support for Ukraine’s future membership: “Ukraine and Moldova have already met the conditions to open the initial set of negotiations – the so-called ‘fundamentals’ cluster. The ball is now in our court. We need to maintain momentum.” On defence, the President referred to NATO’s agreement of upping defence spending targets to 5% and emphasised the that the European Parliament is doing its part by having acted fast on the Common Procurement Act and the Act in Support of Ammunition Production. “The same sense of urgency is what will continue to guide us as we look to finalise the recent Defence Omnibus package by the end of the year. Our processes are reformed and fast,” she said.

    On simplification, she stressed that Europe must deliver and here too, the European Parliament is moving fast having adopted the ‘Stop-the-clock’ mechanism and suspended penalties on the automotive sector. “Processes that used to take 9 months, now can take just a few hours.” But she also warned that “If Europe is to be faster, smarter, and more SME-friendly, we need to go beyond cosmetic changes.”

    On maternity rights, the President informed EU leaders that the European Parliament will table a targeted, narrow and surgical amendment to the EU Electoral Act to allow Members of European Parliament who are pregnant or who have just given birth to delegate their vote. She encouraged EU leaders to support this saying: “No democracy should ever penalise elected representatives for choosing to start a family. Representation should never come at the cost of parenthood.

    Find here the full speech

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Press release – EP President Metsola to EU leaders: “Peace may be difficult, but it is not impossible”

    Source: European Parliament 3

    Speaking to EU leaders, Parliament President Metsola said that in a volatile world, Europe must do more for its security.

    On the Middle East, President Metsola said: “What we are witnessing between Israel and Iran, and its potential spill over effects, is a litmus test for us all. The recent ceasefire deal marks a hopeful step forward.” She also stressed that: “Iran cannot acquire a nuclear bomb. That is a threat not just to the region, but to the world.” With regards to Gaza, she said that work for a ceasefire must continue, calling “for the immediate release of all hostages, an end to the terror, and for humanitarian aid to reach those who so desperately need it. Peace may be difficult, but it is not impossible.”

    On Ukraine, she underlined that the EU’s support must remain strong, including support for Ukraine’s future membership: “Ukraine and Moldova have already met the conditions to open the initial set of negotiations – the so-called ‘fundamentals’ cluster. The ball is now in our court. We need to maintain momentum.” On defence, the President referred to NATO’s agreement of upping defence spending targets to 5% and emphasised the that the European Parliament is doing its part by having acted fast on the Common Procurement Act and the Act in Support of Ammunition Production. “The same sense of urgency is what will continue to guide us as we look to finalise the recent Defence Omnibus package by the end of the year. Our processes are reformed and fast,” she said.

    On simplification, she stressed that Europe must deliver and here too, the European Parliament is moving fast having adopted the ‘Stop-the-clock’ mechanism and suspended penalties on the automotive sector. “Processes that used to take 9 months, now can take just a few hours.” But she also warned that “If Europe is to be faster, smarter, and more SME-friendly, we need to go beyond cosmetic changes.”

    On maternity rights, the President informed EU leaders that the European Parliament will table a targeted, narrow and surgical amendment to the EU Electoral Act to allow Members of European Parliament who are pregnant or who have just given birth to delegate their vote. She encouraged EU leaders to support this saying: “No democracy should ever penalise elected representatives for choosing to start a family. Representation should never come at the cost of parenthood.

    Find here the full speech

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Can Zero Tariffs Drive Real Change? China’s New Trade Policy and Africa’s Energy-Led Future

    China’s zero-tariff policy for African goods has expanded rapidly in recent years, with 53 of the continent’s countries now eligible to export their taxable goods to the Chinese market duty-free. Promoted as a vehicle for deeper Sino-African cooperation and shared prosperity, the policy has gained attention for its potential to open access to one of the world’s largest consumer markets. But as the continent looks to secure long-term development and industrial transformation, a central question arises: will trade preferences like this serve as a catalyst for Africa’s economic evolution, or simply reinforce its role as a low-value commodity supplier?

    Eswatini – one of the few African countries that maintains diplomatic ties with Taiwan – was excluded from the tariff breaks, underscoring that access to China’s market remains conditional. The expanded duty-free and tax incentives also appear as a counter to the Trump-era tariffs, placing Africa in the throes of the China-U.S. trade war.

    As African Energy Week (AEW) 2025: Invest in African Energies prepares to convene in Cape Town from September 29 to October 3, the broader question for the continent is whether these expanding trade policies can deliver tangible, scalable benefits. Africa’s ability to meet its development and energy access goals will depend not only on increased trade, but on how effectively such policies translate into investment in infrastructure, energy, and industrial growth.

    The Promise and Limits of Zero-Tariff Access

    On paper, zero-tariff access is a welcome opportunity. For African countries seeking to diversify export destinations and boost agricultural, mineral and energy-based trade, the initiative offers a cost advantage that could help expand trade volumes. For oil and gas producers, there may be openings to increase exports of refined products, petrochemicals or fertilizers, if the necessary processing capacity exists.

    But therein lies the challenge. Most African countries lack the industrial and energy infrastructure to capitalize on such preferences. Many exports continue to be raw or semi-processed materials with limited value retention on the continent. Tariff-free access does little to change that if non-tariff barriers, unreliable power supply or inadequate transport logistics continue to undermine competitiveness.

    Energy sits at the core of that equation. Africa’s path to economic sovereignty depends on its ability to convert natural resources into industrial products – a process that begins with investment in upstream development and extends through midstream logistics and downstream transformation. Whether it’s building pipelines and LNG infrastructure, electrifying industrial corridors or developing fertilizer and plastics manufacturing hubs, Africa’s energy systems must evolve to support trade ambitions.

    Africa’s Path to Integrated Energy and Industrial Growth

    Several countries are already moving in that direction. Nigeria is pushing forward with its gas commercialization strategy; Mozambique is scaling up LNG; Senegal and Mauritania are emerging as cross-border gas hubs. These projects not only generate export revenue, but create the foundation for broader economic diversification, from petrochemical industries to power generation for local factories.

    Meanwhile, the African Continental Free Trade Area provides the framework to harmonize standards, reduce internal tariffs and build common infrastructure, such as pipelines, ports and refineries, thereby enabling economies of scale and intra-African trade. If combined with external access like China’s zero-tariff policy, this dual approach could allow African nations to integrate vertically and horizontally, moving from fragmented markets to unified production ecosystems.

    Still, risks remain. Trade with China remains heavily skewed toward raw materials, with manufactured imports often undercutting local industries. Without targeted support for African manufacturing, technology transfer and local content, tariff preferences risk entrenching the continent’s supplier status rather than overturning it. African governments must therefore ensure that policies – both trade- and energy-related – are designed to channel benefits inward, not just extract them outward.

    “That is the true promise of AEW 2025. As leaders, investors and institutions gather in Cape Town, the conference will not only facilitate deals and investment flows, but ask complex questions about how Africa can seize agency in its global partnerships. Energy security, industrialization and trade access must be viewed not in silos, but as interconnected levers for long-term prosperity,” says NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman, African Energy Chamber.

    AEW: Invest in African Energies is the platform of choice for project operators, financiers, technology providers and government, and has emerged as the official place to sign deals in African energy. Visit www.AECWeek.com for more information about this exciting event.

    Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Energy Chamber.

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI Africa: President El-Sisi Greets Arab and Islamic Nations on New Hijri Year


    Download logo

    On the occasion of the new Hijri year 1447, I would like to greet the great people of Egypt, as well as the peoples of the Arab and Islamic nations.

    The blessed Prophet’s migration (hijra) will forever remain an eternal symbol of diligence, patience, and sacrifice of the precious and valuable for the sake of truth. It will remain a beacon that guides us in our journey toward the building of an advanced nation that enjoys peace and stability.

    I ask Allah the Almighty to bestow upon us all goodness and blessings this year and to return this occasion with blessings and prosperity.

    Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Presidency of the Arab Republic of Egypt.

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-Evening Report: Grattan on Friday: Jim Chalmers juggles expectations and ambition in pursuing tax reform

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

    Next week will be the 40th anniversary of the Hawke government’s tax summit. Dominated by then treasurer Paul Keating’s unsuccessful bid to win support for a consumption tax, it was the public centrepiece of an extraordinary political and policy story.

    That story was about the possibilities for, but constraints on, bold reform; how a determined treasurer can muster a formidable department to push for change, and the way the ambitions of a minister can clash with the pragmatism of a prime minister.

    Ken Henry, later secretary of the treasury, was then part of what they dubbed the “treasury tax reform bunker”. He kept a timesheet, averaging 100 hours work a week for a three-month period. Officials brought sleeping bags and their small children (Henry’s were aged three and five) into the office.

    Before the summit, the government produced a comprehensive draft white paper. Keating battled to keep the conflicting interests “in the cart” for his blueprint. But the four-day summit, attended by business, unions, premiers and community groups, was inevitably divided by stakeholders’ self-interests. In particular, the unions couldn’t wear Keating’s consumption tax, and Bob Hawke kyboshed it unceremoniously. Keating, who had to settle for a more limited but still very significant set of reforms, was furious with Hawke, and it left a fracture in their relationship.

    Jim Chalmers was aged seven in 1985. But he’s a student of Keating (he did his PhD on his prime ministership) and you can be sure he’s boned up on what went right and wrong in that tax reform exercise. Now he is preparing for the government’s August 19-21 “roundtable” and his own bid at major tax reform.

    The roundtable, as first announced, focused on “productivity”, and that will be central. But Chalmers has taken to calling it an “economic reform” roundtable – its brief also includes budget sustainability and resilience – and he is effectively putting tax reform close to its heart, or at least letting others do so. After all, a fit-for-purpose tax system is one key to improving productivity.

    The roundtable (for which invitations to business and the union movement are now going out, with more to follow) is nothing like on the scale, in size (the 1985 summit had about 160 attendees, the roundtable will have about 25) or preparation, of the elaborate 1985 conference.

    And crucially, while that summit was the culmination of a process, Chalmers is using the roundtable to kick off a process.

    Chalmers is lowering expectations in regard to specific outcomes from the summit on tax. While those might be obtainable on some productivity issues, on tax he is likely to look for broad support for a direction of reform. For instance, is there a general appetite for reshaping the tax system towards lower personal and company tax, offset by higher taxes on certain investments and savings? `

    Most tax experts argue Australia’s system is too skewed towards taxing income rather than spending. This leads to calls to increase or broaden the GST, financing cuts to personal income tax.

    Chalmers has been a long-term opponent of changing the GST, but he says he is not ruling the GST out for discussion at the roundtable. (That’s a contrast to when Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, commissioning Henry to lead a major tax review, excluded the GST from its terms of reference.)

    Almost certainly, however, it would not be possible to get “consensus” from business and unions for GST changes. Not least of the constraints is that compensating the losers in such a change is very expensive and there is not the money to do so these days.

    That immediately limits the extent of reform.

    Henry tells The Conversation’s podcast that if he were designing a tax reform package “I’d be looking at opportunities to broaden the GST and maybe to increase the rate as well”.

    But “I do think it is possible to achieve major tax reform […] without necessarily increasing the [GST] rate or extending the base”.

    Henry’s (non-GST) wish list includes getting rid of the remaining state transaction taxes, such as stamp duty on property conveyancing.

    Notably, he argues for extracting more revenue from taxing natural resources and land, and also from taxing pollution from various sources. “We’re going to need to tax those things more heavily if we’re going to relieve the tax burden on young workers through lower personal income tax and introducing tax indexation.”

    Henry is particularly focused on the unfair burden at present put on these younger taxpayers. He has come around to the idea of income tax indexation as one means of assisting them.

    A system more geared to younger workers raises immediate questions about the present generous treatment of superannuants. Chalmers is already caught in that hornets’ nest with his proposed changes for those with balances more than $3 million.

    To what extent will the roundtable tax debate revive the issues of negative gearing and the capital gains tax discount? The government hosed down before the election the prospect of any changes to negative gearing this term. Chalmers, however, had work done on this last term and he would likely favour reining it in. But would this be a bridge too far for the prime minister?

    Indeed, where will Anthony Albanese’s limits be when it comes to reform? Would he only support changes that had strong consensus? And how far would he feel constrained in going beyond what he considers he has a mandate for?

    If Chalmers stays serious about the tax push, it is going to take many months of intense work. It can’t be rushed, but nor can it be delayed. If it ran for much over a year it would likely find the government’s political capital had been eroded. The size of its capital store can appear deceptive because so much of it is thanks to Peter Dutton and Donald Trump.

    In 2022, the Liberals boycotted Labor’s jobs and skills summit (although Nationals leader David Littlepround attended). This time, shadow treasurer Ted O’Brien has accepted Chalmers’ invitation and will participate in the roundtable.

    It will be a tricky gig for O’Brien, new to this shadow portfolio. He has to avoid being too negative, but nor can he endorse things the opposition might later reject. The Coalition will not have a tax policy against which to judge what’s said.

    The occasion will be a chance for O’Brien to make contacts and get more insight into stakeholders’ views on the key economic debates, much wider than just tax.

    Importantly, however, O’Brien will need to remember judgements will be being made about him by other participants in the room. Business in particular will be seeking to get a fix on whether opposition leader Sussan Ley’s declarations about wanting to be constructive where possible are fair dinkum.

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

    ref. Grattan on Friday: Jim Chalmers juggles expectations and ambition in pursuing tax reform – https://theconversation.com/grattan-on-friday-jim-chalmers-juggles-expectations-and-ambition-in-pursuing-tax-reform-258971

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: Grattan on Friday: Jim Chalmers juggles expectations and ambition in pursuing tax reform

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

    Next week will be the 40th anniversary of the Hawke government’s tax summit. Dominated by then treasurer Paul Keating’s unsuccessful bid to win support for a consumption tax, it was the public centrepiece of an extraordinary political and policy story.

    That story was about the possibilities for, but constraints on, bold reform; how a determined treasurer can muster a formidable department to push for change, and the way the ambitions of a minister can clash with the pragmatism of a prime minister.

    Ken Henry, later secretary of the treasury, was then part of what they dubbed the “treasury tax reform bunker”. He kept a timesheet, averaging 100 hours work a week for a three-month period. Officials brought sleeping bags and their small children (Henry’s were aged three and five) into the office.

    Before the summit, the government produced a comprehensive draft white paper. Keating battled to keep the conflicting interests “in the cart” for his blueprint. But the four-day summit, attended by business, unions, premiers and community groups, was inevitably divided by stakeholders’ self-interests. In particular, the unions couldn’t wear Keating’s consumption tax, and Bob Hawke kyboshed it unceremoniously. Keating, who had to settle for a more limited but still very significant set of reforms, was furious with Hawke, and it left a fracture in their relationship.

    Jim Chalmers was aged seven in 1985. But he’s a student of Keating (he did his PhD on his prime ministership) and you can be sure he’s boned up on what went right and wrong in that tax reform exercise. Now he is preparing for the government’s August 19-21 “roundtable” and his own bid at major tax reform.

    The roundtable, as first announced, focused on “productivity”, and that will be central. But Chalmers has taken to calling it an “economic reform” roundtable – its brief also includes budget sustainability and resilience – and he is effectively putting tax reform close to its heart, or at least letting others do so. After all, a fit-for-purpose tax system is one key to improving productivity.

    The roundtable (for which invitations to business and the union movement are now going out, with more to follow) is nothing like on the scale, in size (the 1985 summit had about 160 attendees, the roundtable will have about 25) or preparation, of the elaborate 1985 conference.

    And crucially, while that summit was the culmination of a process, Chalmers is using the roundtable to kick off a process.

    Chalmers is lowering expectations in regard to specific outcomes from the summit on tax. While those might be obtainable on some productivity issues, on tax he is likely to look for broad support for a direction of reform. For instance, is there a general appetite for reshaping the tax system towards lower personal and company tax, offset by higher taxes on certain investments and savings? `

    Most tax experts argue Australia’s system is too skewed towards taxing income rather than spending. This leads to calls to increase or broaden the GST, financing cuts to personal income tax.

    Chalmers has been a long-term opponent of changing the GST, but he says he is not ruling the GST out for discussion at the roundtable. (That’s a contrast to when Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, commissioning Henry to lead a major tax review, excluded the GST from its terms of reference.)

    Almost certainly, however, it would not be possible to get “consensus” from business and unions for GST changes. Not least of the constraints is that compensating the losers in such a change is very expensive and there is not the money to do so these days.

    That immediately limits the extent of reform.

    Henry tells The Conversation’s podcast that if he were designing a tax reform package “I’d be looking at opportunities to broaden the GST and maybe to increase the rate as well”.

    But “I do think it is possible to achieve major tax reform […] without necessarily increasing the [GST] rate or extending the base”.

    Henry’s (non-GST) wish list includes getting rid of the remaining state transaction taxes, such as stamp duty on property conveyancing.

    Notably, he argues for extracting more revenue from taxing natural resources and land, and also from taxing pollution from various sources. “We’re going to need to tax those things more heavily if we’re going to relieve the tax burden on young workers through lower personal income tax and introducing tax indexation.”

    Henry is particularly focused on the unfair burden at present put on these younger taxpayers. He has come around to the idea of income tax indexation as one means of assisting them.

    A system more geared to younger workers raises immediate questions about the present generous treatment of superannuants. Chalmers is already caught in that hornets’ nest with his proposed changes for those with balances more than $3 million.

    To what extent will the roundtable tax debate revive the issues of negative gearing and the capital gains tax discount? The government hosed down before the election the prospect of any changes to negative gearing this term. Chalmers, however, had work done on this last term and he would likely favour reining it in. But would this be a bridge too far for the prime minister?

    Indeed, where will Anthony Albanese’s limits be when it comes to reform? Would he only support changes that had strong consensus? And how far would he feel constrained in going beyond what he considers he has a mandate for?

    If Chalmers stays serious about the tax push, it is going to take many months of intense work. It can’t be rushed, but nor can it be delayed. If it ran for much over a year it would likely find the government’s political capital had been eroded. The size of its capital store can appear deceptive because so much of it is thanks to Peter Dutton and Donald Trump.

    In 2022, the Liberals boycotted Labor’s jobs and skills summit (although Nationals leader David Littlepround attended). This time, shadow treasurer Ted O’Brien has accepted Chalmers’ invitation and will participate in the roundtable.

    It will be a tricky gig for O’Brien, new to this shadow portfolio. He has to avoid being too negative, but nor can he endorse things the opposition might later reject. The Coalition will not have a tax policy against which to judge what’s said.

    The occasion will be a chance for O’Brien to make contacts and get more insight into stakeholders’ views on the key economic debates, much wider than just tax.

    Importantly, however, O’Brien will need to remember judgements will be being made about him by other participants in the room. Business in particular will be seeking to get a fix on whether opposition leader Sussan Ley’s declarations about wanting to be constructive where possible are fair dinkum.

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

    ref. Grattan on Friday: Jim Chalmers juggles expectations and ambition in pursuing tax reform – https://theconversation.com/grattan-on-friday-jim-chalmers-juggles-expectations-and-ambition-in-pursuing-tax-reform-258971

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Central African Republic: United Nations (UN) Expert calls for urgent institutional reform of electoral authority ahead of 2025 elections


    Download logo

    The National Elections Authority (ANE) in the Central African Republic is grappling with serious operational hurdles ahead of the 2025 legislative, presidential, and local elections, a UN expert warned today.

    “Despite the multiform support provided by national authorities and technical and financial partners to the ANE, persistent internal dysfunction has hampered its effectiveness, compromising the running of the electoral timetable,” said Yao Agbetse, Independent Expert on the situation of human rights in the Central African Republic.

    The ANE is the constitutional body mandated to organise elections in the Central African Republic (CAR).

    Legislative and presidential elections must be held within strict constitutional deadlines in 2025.

    The local elections are critically important to the transitional justice process in CAR and will strengthen local governance as a lever for the restoration of state authority and an instrument of peace and national reconciliation, the expert said.

    “ANE’s efforts to respond to challenges encountered, in particular by organising a high-level dialogue on 16 and 17 May 2025 to curb violence against women during the electoral period, do not prevent objective concerns about several aspects of the electoral process,” Agbetse said.

    “Local elections, initially scheduled for 2022, have been postponed several times,” he said.

    Agbetse noted that despite assurances provided by senior ANE officials during his mission to CAR in February 2025 and at several press conferences, the holding of these elections on the set date of 31 August 2025 remains uncertain.

    While a revised electoral register is a fundamental basis for transparency, credibility and inclusiveness of the electoral process, the ANE had so far failed to produce even a provisional version of the register, the expert noted.

    “This is a serious situation because the publication of a definitive electoral list was scheduled for 29 May 2025 to enable the Government to issue the decree convening the electorate on 4 June 2025,” Agbetse said.

    “The current electoral budget, which only covers local elections despite being six months away from presidential and legislative polls, needs urgent reassessment to reflect operational realities,” the expert warned.

    He cited the 17 May 2025 derogation law suspending Article 18 of the Electoral Code as proof of the hurdles faced by the ANE. Agbetse said there were major challenges in awarding contracts for electoral materials, deploying technical staff, and processing electoral data.

    “With the first round of presidential and legislative elections set for 28 December 2025, the electoral register must be finalised by 28 September. At the current pace, these deadlines are unlikely to be met, undermining confidence in the process. Swift action is essential,” the expert said.

    Agbetse urged an institutional overhaul of the ANE and its local branches to boost technical, organisational, and strategic capacity and ensure transparent internal governance.

    He called for a realistic, agreed electoral timetable and appealed to the international community to enhance support for CAR’s democratic institutions and ensure credible, inclusive, and peaceful elections in line with international standards.

    Distributed by APO Group on behalf of United Nations: Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR).

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI Analysis: How Nato summit shows Europe and US no longer have a common enemy

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Andrew Corbett, Senior Lecturer in Defence Studies, King’s College London

    Mark Rutte had an unenviable task at the Hague summit this week. The Nato secretary-general had to work with diverging American and European views of current security threats. After Rutte made extraordinary efforts at highly deferential, overt flattery of Donald Trump to secure crucial outcomes for the alliance, he seems to have succeeded for now.

    But what this meeting and the run-up has made increasingly clear is that the US and Europe no longer perceive themselves as having a single common enemy. Nato was established in 1949 as a defensive alliance against the acknowledged threat from the USSR. This defined the alliance through the cold war until the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991. Since Russia invaded Ukraine and annexed Crimea in 2014, Nato has focused on Moscow as the major threat to international peace. But the increasingly bellicose China is demanding more attention from the US.

    There are some symbolic moves that signal how things are changing. Every Nato summit declaration since the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022 has used the same form of words: “We adhere to international law and to the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations and are committed to upholding the rules-based international order.”

    The declaration published during the Hague summit on June 25 conspicuously does not mention either. Indeed, in a departure from recent declarations, the five paragraphs of the Hague summit declaration are brutally short and focused entirely on portraying the alliance solely in terms of military capability and economic investment to sustain that. No mention of international law and order this time.

    This appears to be a carefully orchestrated output of a deliberately shortened summit designed to contain Trump’s unpredictable interventions. This also seems symptomatic of a widening division between the American strategic trajectory and the security interests perceived by Canada and the European members of Nato.

    That this declaration was so short, and so focused on such a narrow range of issues suggests there were unusually entrenched differences that could not be surmounted.

    Since the onslaught of the full Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the Nato allies have been united in their criticism of Russia and support for Ukraine; until now.

    Since January, the Trump administration has not authorised any military aid to Ukraine and significantly reduced material support to Ukraine and criticism of Russia. Trump has sought to end the war rapidly on terms effectively capitulating to Russian aggression; his proposal suggests recognising Russia’s control over Crimea and de facto control over some other occupied territories (Luhansk, parts of Zaporizhzhia, Donetsk, and Kherson) He has also suggested Ukraine would not join Nato but might receive security guarantees and the right to join the EU.

    Meanwhile, European allies have sought to fund and support Ukraine’s defensive efforts, increasing aid and military support, and continuing to ramp up sanctions.

    Another sign of the differing priorities of Europe and Canada v the US, was the decision by Pete Hegseth, US secretary of defense, to step back from leadership of the Ukraine defence contact group, an ad-hoc coalition of states across the world providing military support to Ukraine. Hegseth also symbolically failed to attend the group’s pre-summit meeting in June.

    Trump has long been adamant that Nato members should meet their 2014 commitment to spend 2% of their GDP on defence, and Rutte recognised that. In 2018, Trump suggested that this should be increased to 4 or 5% but this was dismissed as unreasonable. Now, in a decision which indicates increasing concern about both Russia as a threat and US support, Nato members (except for Spain) have agreed to increase spending to 5% of GDP on defence over the next 10 years.

    Donald Trump gives a press conference after the Nato summit.

    Nato’s article 3 requires states to maintain and develop their capacity to resist attack. However, since 2022, it has become increasingly apparent that many Nato members are unprepared for any major military engagement. At the same time, they are increasingly feeling that Russia is more of a threat on their doorsteps. There has been recognition, particularly among the Baltic states, Germany, France and the UK that they need to increase their military spending and preparedness.

    For the US to focus more on China, US forces will shift a greater percentage of the US Navy to the Pacific. It will also assign its most capable new ships and aircraft to the region and increase general presence operations, training and developmental exercises, and engagement and cooperation with allied and other navies in the western Pacific. To do this US forces will need to reduce commitments in Europe, and European allies must replace those capabilities in order to sustain deterrence against Russia.

    The bedrock of the Nato treaty, article 5, is commonly paraphrased as “an attack on one is an attack on all”. On his way to the Hague summit, Trump seemed unsure about the US commitment to Nato. Asked to clarify this at the summit, he stated: “I stand with it [Article 5]. That’s why I’m here. If I didn’t stand with it, I wouldn’t be here.”

    Lord Ismay, the first secretary-general of Nato, famously (if apocryphally) suggested that the purpose of the alliance was to keep the Russians out, the Americans in and the Germans down. Germany is now an integral part of Nato, and the Americans are in, if distracted. But there are cracks, and Rutte will have his hands full managing Trump’s declining interest in protecting Europe if he is to keep the Russians at bay.

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

    ref. How Nato summit shows Europe and US no longer have a common enemy – https://theconversation.com/how-nato-summit-shows-europe-and-us-no-longer-have-a-common-enemy-259842

    MIL OSI Analysis

  • MIL-OSI Analysis: How Nato summit shows Europe and US no longer have a common enemy

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Andrew Corbett, Senior Lecturer in Defence Studies, King’s College London

    Mark Rutte had an unenviable task at the Hague summit this week. The Nato secretary-general had to work with diverging American and European views of current security threats. After Rutte made extraordinary efforts at highly deferential, overt flattery of Donald Trump to secure crucial outcomes for the alliance, he seems to have succeeded for now.

    But what this meeting and the run-up has made increasingly clear is that the US and Europe no longer perceive themselves as having a single common enemy. Nato was established in 1949 as a defensive alliance against the acknowledged threat from the USSR. This defined the alliance through the cold war until the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991. Since Russia invaded Ukraine and annexed Crimea in 2014, Nato has focused on Moscow as the major threat to international peace. But the increasingly bellicose China is demanding more attention from the US.

    There are some symbolic moves that signal how things are changing. Every Nato summit declaration since the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022 has used the same form of words: “We adhere to international law and to the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations and are committed to upholding the rules-based international order.”

    The declaration published during the Hague summit on June 25 conspicuously does not mention either. Indeed, in a departure from recent declarations, the five paragraphs of the Hague summit declaration are brutally short and focused entirely on portraying the alliance solely in terms of military capability and economic investment to sustain that. No mention of international law and order this time.

    This appears to be a carefully orchestrated output of a deliberately shortened summit designed to contain Trump’s unpredictable interventions. This also seems symptomatic of a widening division between the American strategic trajectory and the security interests perceived by Canada and the European members of Nato.

    That this declaration was so short, and so focused on such a narrow range of issues suggests there were unusually entrenched differences that could not be surmounted.

    Since the onslaught of the full Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the Nato allies have been united in their criticism of Russia and support for Ukraine; until now.

    Since January, the Trump administration has not authorised any military aid to Ukraine and significantly reduced material support to Ukraine and criticism of Russia. Trump has sought to end the war rapidly on terms effectively capitulating to Russian aggression; his proposal suggests recognising Russia’s control over Crimea and de facto control over some other occupied territories (Luhansk, parts of Zaporizhzhia, Donetsk, and Kherson) He has also suggested Ukraine would not join Nato but might receive security guarantees and the right to join the EU.

    Meanwhile, European allies have sought to fund and support Ukraine’s defensive efforts, increasing aid and military support, and continuing to ramp up sanctions.

    Another sign of the differing priorities of Europe and Canada v the US, was the decision by Pete Hegseth, US secretary of defense, to step back from leadership of the Ukraine defence contact group, an ad-hoc coalition of states across the world providing military support to Ukraine. Hegseth also symbolically failed to attend the group’s pre-summit meeting in June.

    Trump has long been adamant that Nato members should meet their 2014 commitment to spend 2% of their GDP on defence, and Rutte recognised that. In 2018, Trump suggested that this should be increased to 4 or 5% but this was dismissed as unreasonable. Now, in a decision which indicates increasing concern about both Russia as a threat and US support, Nato members (except for Spain) have agreed to increase spending to 5% of GDP on defence over the next 10 years.

    Donald Trump gives a press conference after the Nato summit.

    Nato’s article 3 requires states to maintain and develop their capacity to resist attack. However, since 2022, it has become increasingly apparent that many Nato members are unprepared for any major military engagement. At the same time, they are increasingly feeling that Russia is more of a threat on their doorsteps. There has been recognition, particularly among the Baltic states, Germany, France and the UK that they need to increase their military spending and preparedness.

    For the US to focus more on China, US forces will shift a greater percentage of the US Navy to the Pacific. It will also assign its most capable new ships and aircraft to the region and increase general presence operations, training and developmental exercises, and engagement and cooperation with allied and other navies in the western Pacific. To do this US forces will need to reduce commitments in Europe, and European allies must replace those capabilities in order to sustain deterrence against Russia.

    The bedrock of the Nato treaty, article 5, is commonly paraphrased as “an attack on one is an attack on all”. On his way to the Hague summit, Trump seemed unsure about the US commitment to Nato. Asked to clarify this at the summit, he stated: “I stand with it [Article 5]. That’s why I’m here. If I didn’t stand with it, I wouldn’t be here.”

    Lord Ismay, the first secretary-general of Nato, famously (if apocryphally) suggested that the purpose of the alliance was to keep the Russians out, the Americans in and the Germans down. Germany is now an integral part of Nato, and the Americans are in, if distracted. But there are cracks, and Rutte will have his hands full managing Trump’s declining interest in protecting Europe if he is to keep the Russians at bay.

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

    ref. How Nato summit shows Europe and US no longer have a common enemy – https://theconversation.com/how-nato-summit-shows-europe-and-us-no-longer-have-a-common-enemy-259842

    MIL OSI Analysis

  • MIL-OSI NGOs: Bonn ‘talking shop’ at odds with urgency needed to save forests, climate

    Source: Greenpeace Statement –

    Bonn, Germany – A lack of urgency to address the escalating climate crisis has marred the Bonn Climate Change Conference, leaving much work to be done to deliver real progress on climate and biodiversity action at COP30 in Brazil.   

    Ambition to accelerate mitigation, including transitioning away from fossil fuels in upcoming 2035 climate action plans was lacking and talks stalled on climate finance and the Baku to Belém roadmap to mobilise up to US$1.3 trillion for developing countries became polarised. Efforts to secure an end to deforestation by 2030 also struggled to find a landing ground.

    An Lambrechts, Biodiversity Policy Expert, Greenpeace International, said: “As temperatures escalate, efforts to end deforestation and protect critical ecosystems are an essential part of the 1.5°C solution. But if an action plan to end forest destruction is to be agreed in Belém, parties must grasp the urgency and deliver a transformative COP30 forest outcome.

    “While there were some positive signs for potential progress on synergies between climate and biodiversity action in Belém, there’s been far too much procrastination in Bonn and too little decision-making. We believe in multilateralism, but that spirit needs to be reinvigorated ahead of COP30 to accelerate the protection and restoration of critical ecosystems.”

    Lorelei Limousin, Climate and Fossil Fuels Campaigner, Greenpeace France said: “The 1.5°C goal is getting harder every day and ambition to deliver the Paris Agreement must be ramped up in 2035 climate action plans. As custodian of the Paris Agreement, France must drive ambition and needs to support EU targets for both 2035 and 2040 that are aligned with 1.5°C.

    “Macron’s attempts to weaken EU ambition is sabotaging the Paris Agreement in its 10th anniversary year, putting at risk EU climate leadership. Instead of backtracking, France – and the EU – need to signal they’ll move ahead and accelerate the transition away from fossil fuels.

    “But the EU and Global North as a whole, must also help unlock robust public climate finance to help stimulate climate action in developing countries. One clear solution is to give the bill to the fossil fuel producers and make them pay for the climate destruction their products cause.”

    Camila Jardim, International Politics Specialist, Greenpeace Brazil said: “Amid challenging times, this is a great opportunity for Brazilian climate leadership to emerge. As COP30 host, Brazil can make the goal of halting global deforestation and forest degradation a reality, delivering a fruitful COP30 legacy to forests all over the world.

    “2035 NDCs and bridging the 1.5°C ambition gap is the make-or-break for COP30. A strong COP outcome is needed to combat the expected shortfall in ambition alongside finance to enable greater action in developing countries. But in Bonn a stalemate on emission reductions and finance was exposed, as the Global Stocktake and NDCs became a new taboo in negotiation rooms and developed countries refused to step up on finance. This needs to change – it’s time to act.” 

    ENDS

    Contacts:
    Aaron Gray-Block, Climate Politics Communications Manager, Greenpeace International, [email protected]

    Greenpeace International Press Desk, +31 (0)20 718 2470 (available 24 hours), [email protected]

    Join the Greenpeace UNFCCC WhatsApp Update Group

    MIL OSI NGO

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Public views sought on the licensing of sexual entertainment venues

    Source: Scotland – City of Aberdeen

    A new consultation has been launched seeking the public’s views on the licensing of Sexual Entertainment Venues in Aberdeen.

    The Council’s Licensing Committee resolved on 3 December 2019 to licence Sexual Entertainment Venues.  The existing Sexual Entertainment Venue Licensing Policy was approved on 14th December 2021 and became effective from 1st March 2022.  

    Members of the committee are looking to undertake a formal review of the policy to establish whether it remains fit for purpose and to ensure details such as the numerical limit of premises remain at the appropriate level.

    Committee convener Councillor Gill Al-Samarai: “It is almost three years since our existing policy was introduced and we are encouraging interested parties to make their views known as to whether or not it requires amending.

    “In developing the current licensing policy, we took care to balance the freedom of individuals to engage in legal employment and activities with the right to exercise appropriate control and regulation to ensure the safety, health and wellbeing of the staff and patrons. The same approach will underpin our consultation and any changes that need to be made to further ensure public safety.”

    There are currently six licensed Sexual Entertainment Venues in Aberdeen city centre, although it is thought that one of the premises is not currently operating as a Sexual Entertainment Venue and another of the premises is currently up for sale.  

    It was previously decided that there should be zero licenced Sexual Entertainment Venues outwith Aberdeen city centre, as locations outside the city centre were deemed not suitable for the licensable activity.

    The committee is seeking views on:  
    •    the appropriate number of Sexual Entertainment Venues in Aberdeen city centre;
    •    whether the number of Sexual Entertainment Venue premises outwith Aberdeen city centre should remain at zero; and
    •    what matters should be taken into consideration in any amendments of the existing policy.  
    Premises are classed as a Sexual Entertainment Venue if:
    •    sexual entertainment is provided before a live audience for the direct or indirect financial benefit of the organiser; 
    •    sexual entertainment is any live performance or live display of nudity provided for the sole or principal purpose of sexual stimulation of members of the audience.
    Premises where sexual entertainment is provided on no more than four occasions in a 12-month period are not to be treated as Sexual Entertainment Venues.

    To take part in the consultation: Sexual Entertainment Venue Licensing Policy Consultation 2025

    The consultation ends on 31 July and feedback received will be included in the report to Licensing Committee on 27 August 2025.
     

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Give your view on the future of local government in Norwich

    Source: City of Norwich

    Norwich City Council is inviting residents to take part in a series of local engagement events this summer, as councils seek views on the future of local government in Norfolk.

    The Government is reducing the number of councils and bring services together to be provided by new ‘unitary councils’ (also known as unitary authorities), instead of by existing borough, city, district and county councils. 

    All Norfolk councils have been asked to send in their proposals for what the future of service delivery could look like. If areas can’t agree a proposal for the future, the Government has said it will pass a law to proceed with its own proposal. 

    Engagement events in Norwich

    The Norwich events, running from 1 to 19 July in all wards of the city, are part of a collaborative effort between six local authorities to explore how local services can be delivered more effectively, efficiently, and closer to the communities they serve.

    Residents are encouraged to attend their local ward event to learn more, ask questions, and share their views. Each event will be hosted by council representatives and will offer an opportunity to discuss what matters most to local people—from housing and transport to community services and the environment.

    Event details:

    Events will take place in locations across Norwich.

    Tuesday 1 July – Crome Ward
    Witard Road shops, Heartsease, NR7 9XD
    2 to 5pm

    Wednesday 2 July – Town Close Ward
    Outside Bread and Roses Café, Vauxhall Street, NR2 2AA
    10am to midday

    Thursday 3 July – University Ward
    Enfield Road playground, NR5 8LE
    2:30 to 4:30pm

    Friday 4 July – Mancroft Ward

    Outside the Forum, Millennium Plain, NR2 1TF
    11:30am to 4pm

    Monday 7 July – Lakenham Ward
    Jubilee Park, Long John Hill, NR1 2EX
    3 to 6pm

    Tuesday 8 July – Nelson Ward
    Heigham Park, The Avenues, NR2 3JF
    1:30 to 4:30pm

    Wednesday 9 July – Bowthorpe Ward
    Outside Roys of Bowthorpe, Wendene, NR5 9HA
    11am to 1:30pm

    Thursday 10 July – Thorpe Hamlet Ward
    St. Matthew’s Church, Telegraph Lane West, NR1 4JA
    3:30 to 6pm

    Monday 14 July – Wensum Ward
    West End Street Gardens, NR2 4NA
    3pm to 5:30pm

    Tuesday 15 July – Sewell Ward
    Sewell Park, St. Clement’s Hill, NR3 4BX
    3 to 6pm

    Wednesday 16 July – Eaton Ward
    Waitrose, Church Lane, NR4 6NU
    2 to 4pm

    Thursday 17 July – Catton Grove Ward
    Catton Grove Community Centre, Jewson Road, NR3 3RQ
    11am to 2pm

    Saturday 19 July – Mile Cross Ward
    The Phoenix Centre, Mile Cross Road, NR3 2LD
    11:am to 4pm

    Have your say:

    Residents can also read more about the proposals and take part in the consultation online at: https://futurenorfolk.com

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Council rolls out smart messaging to tackle debt fairly

    Source: City of Derby

    A new messaging service aimed at collecting debt more efficiently and ethically has been launched by Derby City Council.

    A key feature of the messaging service is its integration with an advanced AI-powered dashboard, which gathers and analyses information from across Council systems.

    The dashboard gives staff a detailed view of outstanding debt, allowing the Council to examine individual cases and identify where it needs to offer support to minimise debt, and maximise income collection.

    From 26 June, businesses in the city who don’t pay their business rates by Direct Debit can expect timely emails to remind them of upcoming payments and when instalments are overdue.

    This proactive approach aims to help businesses avoid arrears and potential costly recovery actions.

    Similar messaging services for Council Tax payers and sundry debtors are also set to launch shortly and are the latest applications in the Council’s pioneering AI programme.

    Councillor Hardyal Dhindsa, Cabinet Member for Digital and Organisational Transformation at Derby City Council said:

    At a time when every penny counts, it’s more important than ever that the Council manages its limited finances responsibly.

    This new service, supported by advanced technology, gives us a much more detailed view of individual cases. It means we can take a more tailored and compassionate approach to debt collection — ensuring support is targeted where it’s needed most, while still being fair and effective.

    It’s a great example of how smart use of technology can benefit the Council, city businesses and our residents.

    The Council has a legal duty and responsibility to Derby’s citizens to ensure that outstanding debt is paid promptly and in line with relevant legislation, best practice, and ethical collection methods.

    In February 2024, Cabinet approved a revised debt management policy. This provides a framework for the Council to manage its debt while ensuring that customers receive appropriate assistance, guidance and support, and that mutually agreed repayment arrangements are affordable and sustainable.

    Details on all payment methods, how to set up Direct Debits and paperless billing, can be found on the Council’s website.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Public consultation opens into Port Clarence Landfill

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Public consultation opens into Port Clarence Landfill

    The Environment Agency has opened a public consultation relating to Augean North Ltd’s revised environmental safety case.

    A public consultation has opened into a new environmental safety case (ESC) submitted by Augean North Ltd related to its environmental permit application in Teesside.

    Augean has applied for permission to dispose of low-level radioactive waste at its Port Clarence Landfill site in Teesside.

    This site has two existing permitted landfills: one for hazardous waste and one for non-hazardous waste. The application seeks to allow low-level radioactive waste disposal in both.  

    Augean submitted its application on 14 August 2019. Following a public consultation, which ended in January 2020, the Environment Agency reviewed the environmental safety case that supported its application.

    An ESC is a comprehensive document that demonstrates how an operator plans to ensure environmental safety.

    In September 2020, the Environment Agency requested more information from the operator, and in response to this request, Augean has now submitted a revised ESC and a document that addresses each of the Environment Agency requests in detail.

    Agency ‘welcomes people’s comments’

    The Environment Agency has opened a public consultation, which will close on 4 August 2025.

    People can view the consultation documents here: Port Clarence Landfill Site Revised Environmental Safety Case – Environment Agency – Citizen Space.

    Gary Wallace, area environment manager at the Environment Agency, said:

    It’s important the community has the opportunity to review the revised environmental safety case, which has changed significantly since the original public consultation.

    We welcome people’s comments on the new information received and relevant environmental factors people feel are important.

    Our technical assessment is ongoing and once we have reviewed the documents and information from the consultation we will make a draft decision on the application.

    The revised ESC is a large document, with the most significant changes below: 

    • a more detailed assessment of the potential evolution of the coastline and Tees Estuary and the impacts this may have on the landfill 
    • a more detailed assessment of the potential for flooding of the site due to extreme weather conditions/storm surge, or as a result of future climate change 
    • new and revised scenarios for assessing impacts to humans and the environment from the waste following closure of the landfill 
    • demonstration that the Port Clarence Landfill provides an optimised approach for the disposal of all low-level streams covered by the permit application 
    • additional information on the proposed environmental monitoring programme 

    People can respond to the consultation directly on the website or alternatively by e-mail to pscpublicresponse@environment-agency.gov.uk

    Background

    Environmental permits 

    • Environmental permits set out strict legal conditions with which an operator must comply in order to protect people and the environment. Should an environmental permit be issued, the Environment Agency has responsibility for enforcing its conditions.
    • The Environment Agency’s powers include enforcement notices, suspension and revocation of permits, fines and ultimately criminal sanctions, including prosecution.
    • The Environment Agency may only refuse a permit if it does not meet one or more of the legal requirements under environmental legislation, including if it will have a significant impact on the environment or harm human health. If all the requirements are met, we are legally required to issue a permit.

    Consultation responses  

    • Responses to the consultation can be made electronically.
    • People can respond directly on the website or alternatively by e-mail to pscpublicresponse@environment-agency.gov.uk
    • Those unable to view the documents or make representation via the consultation website or by e-mail should contact the Environment Agency on 03708 506 506.

    Updates to this page

    Published 26 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Exclusive: Commitment to the spirit of mutual respect, trust, benefit and support is the driving force behind the development of cooperation between China and Central Asia – expert from Uzbekistan

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

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

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

    Tashkent, June 26 (Xinhua) — The driving force behind the sustainable development of cooperation between China and Central Asian countries is the two sides’ commitment to the spirit of “mutual respect, trust, benefit and support,” Professor Nodira Murodova, head of department at Navoi State University, said in an exclusive interview with Xinhua.

    According to her, for Uzbekistan these principles are not just diplomatic slogans, but a real basis for a long-term and stable partnership with China, as well as for the entire region. She emphasized that it is on this foundation that strong and trusting interaction between the two countries is built.

    Mutual respect, according to N. Murodova, is the basis of deepening Uzbek-Chinese relations. China, as the expert noted, consistently demonstrates respect for the sovereignty, social structure and development strategy of Uzbekistan. “Such a sincere attitude on equal terms allows us to more confidently and independently build external relations, forming a truly equal partnership,” she said.

    Particular importance is also attached to mutual trust, which the expert called a guarantee of the strength of cooperation. “Thanks to regular high-level contacts, intergovernmental dialogues and projects implemented in practice, strong political trust has been formed between our countries,” N. Murodova noted. She also added that in such strategic areas as regional security and infrastructure development, Uzbekistan and China maintain close coordination and dialogue.

    As for the principle of mutual benefit, the professor emphasized that it is reflected in concrete results. “In key areas such as infrastructure, energy, agriculture and the digital economy, Chinese companies have brought advanced technologies and management experience to Uzbekistan, creating many jobs,” the expert said. China’s participation in the construction of roads, railways and energy facilities, according to her, helps strengthen production chains and accelerates the country’s modernization process.

    N. Murodova also particularly noted the importance of mutual support, which is especially evident at critical moments. “Whether it is the difficult period of the COVID-19 pandemic or today’s efforts on environmental transformation and development of education, Uzbekistan and China always act together. Such support at key moments is a manifestation of the true spirit of a community with a common destiny,” she said.

    In conclusion, the professor expressed confidence that, based on the principles of “mutual respect, trust, benefit and support,” cooperation between China and Central Asian countries, including Uzbekistan, will continue to deepen and expand, serving the interests of the peoples and strengthening peace, development and cooperation in the broader regional and international context. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Iran opens airspace in eastern part of country

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

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

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

    TEHRAN, June 26 (Xinhua) — Iran on Wednesday announced the opening of airspace in the eastern part of the country to domestic and foreign flights.

    The decision was made following approval from Iran’s Civil Aviation Organization and the completion of a safety assessment given the current circumstances in the country, the country’s Ministry of Roads and Urban Development said in a statement posted on the agency’s website.

    The move is aimed at gradually restoring air traffic to pre-conflict levels, ministry spokesman Majid Akhavan said, noting that only flights to and from airports in eastern Iran have resumed.

    The country extended the suspension of all domestic and international flights until midday Thursday, he said, citing concerns about the safety of passengers following the recent conflict with Israel.

    The agency’s spokesman added that the decision was made “in light of recent events and to ensure the safety of passengers and flights.”

    Iran closed its airspace on June 13 after Israel launched airstrikes on Tehran and other areas. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • Rajnath Singh holds ‘insightful’ meetings with Belarusian and Russian defence ministers in China

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Defence Minister Rajnath Singh on Thursday held meetings with his Belarusian and Russian counterparts on the sidelines of the SCO Defence Ministers Meeting in China’s Qingdao, exchanging views on bilateral defence cooperation along with challenges and security threats in the region.

    “Enriching interaction with the Belarusian Defense Minister Lieutenant General Viktor Khrenin in Qingdao,” said Rajnath Singh on X after the meeting.

    It was under India’s first-ever presidency of SCO in 2023 that Iran joined the SCO family as a new member and the signing of the Memorandum of Obligation for Belarus’ SCO membership took place.

    Earlier, Defence Minister Rajnath Singh also met with his Russian counterpart Andrey Belousov, discussing the longstanding and wide-ranging cooperation between the two countries in the field of defence.

    Talking to X, Singh said, “Happy to have met the Defence Minister of Russia, Andrey Belousov on the sidelines of SCO Defence Ministers’ Meeting in Qingdao. We had insightful deliberations on boosting India-Russia defence ties”.

    India has longstanding and wide-ranging cooperation with Russia in the field of defence which is guided by the IRIGC-M&MTC mechanism, headed by the Defence Ministers of both countries.

    Longstanding and time-tested partners, both countries have been involved in several bilateral projects, including the supply of S-400, licensed production of T-90 tanks and Su-30 MKI, supply of MiG-29 and Kamov helicopters, INS Vikramaditya (formerly Admiral Gorshkov), production of Ak-203 rifles in India and BrahMos missiles.

    New Delhi and Moscow have acknowledged that the military technical cooperation has evolved over time from a buyer-seller framework to one involving joint research and development, co-development and joint production of advanced defence technology and systems.

    Addressing the gathering of defence ministers and security officials earlier, Singh called for united global action against terrorism, radicalisation, and extremism, citing them as the biggest threats to regional peace and trust.

    Referring to the heinous April 22 Pahalgam terror attack that killed 26 civilians — including a Nepali national — Defence Minister Singh said India exercised its right to self-defence through Operation Sindoor to dismantle cross-border terror infrastructure. He urged the SCO nations to reject double standards and hold terror sponsors accountable.

    “Epicentres of terrorism are no longer safe,” he declared, reaffirming India’s zero-tolerance policy.

    The visit comes just over a month after Operation Sindoor, under which India conducted targeted airstrikes on nine high-value terrorist infrastructures in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK) following the deadly Pahalgam terror attack.

    It also marks the first trip to China by an Indian Union Minister since bilateral relations were severely strained by the military standoff along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in eastern Ladakh that began in May 2020.

    (With inputs from IANS)

  • Rajnath Singh holds ‘insightful’ meetings with Belarusian and Russian defence ministers in China

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Defence Minister Rajnath Singh on Thursday held meetings with his Belarusian and Russian counterparts on the sidelines of the SCO Defence Ministers Meeting in China’s Qingdao, exchanging views on bilateral defence cooperation along with challenges and security threats in the region.

    “Enriching interaction with the Belarusian Defense Minister Lieutenant General Viktor Khrenin in Qingdao,” said Rajnath Singh on X after the meeting.

    It was under India’s first-ever presidency of SCO in 2023 that Iran joined the SCO family as a new member and the signing of the Memorandum of Obligation for Belarus’ SCO membership took place.

    Earlier, Defence Minister Rajnath Singh also met with his Russian counterpart Andrey Belousov, discussing the longstanding and wide-ranging cooperation between the two countries in the field of defence.

    Talking to X, Singh said, “Happy to have met the Defence Minister of Russia, Andrey Belousov on the sidelines of SCO Defence Ministers’ Meeting in Qingdao. We had insightful deliberations on boosting India-Russia defence ties”.

    India has longstanding and wide-ranging cooperation with Russia in the field of defence which is guided by the IRIGC-M&MTC mechanism, headed by the Defence Ministers of both countries.

    Longstanding and time-tested partners, both countries have been involved in several bilateral projects, including the supply of S-400, licensed production of T-90 tanks and Su-30 MKI, supply of MiG-29 and Kamov helicopters, INS Vikramaditya (formerly Admiral Gorshkov), production of Ak-203 rifles in India and BrahMos missiles.

    New Delhi and Moscow have acknowledged that the military technical cooperation has evolved over time from a buyer-seller framework to one involving joint research and development, co-development and joint production of advanced defence technology and systems.

    Addressing the gathering of defence ministers and security officials earlier, Singh called for united global action against terrorism, radicalisation, and extremism, citing them as the biggest threats to regional peace and trust.

    Referring to the heinous April 22 Pahalgam terror attack that killed 26 civilians — including a Nepali national — Defence Minister Singh said India exercised its right to self-defence through Operation Sindoor to dismantle cross-border terror infrastructure. He urged the SCO nations to reject double standards and hold terror sponsors accountable.

    “Epicentres of terrorism are no longer safe,” he declared, reaffirming India’s zero-tolerance policy.

    The visit comes just over a month after Operation Sindoor, under which India conducted targeted airstrikes on nine high-value terrorist infrastructures in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK) following the deadly Pahalgam terror attack.

    It also marks the first trip to China by an Indian Union Minister since bilateral relations were severely strained by the military standoff along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in eastern Ladakh that began in May 2020.

    (With inputs from IANS)

  • Indian PSUs turn wealth creators, add Rs 57 lakh crore in market cap in just 5 years

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    The market capitalisation of the Indian public sector units (PSUs) surged from Rs 12 lakh crore in March 2020 to Rs 69 lakh crore in June 2025 — adding Rs 57 lakh crore in just five financial years, a report revealed on Thursday. 
     
    Over FY20–FY25, PSUs clocked a stellar 36 per cent earnings CAGR —outpacing private peers — and powered a 32 per cent surge in the BSE PSU Index, according to the report by Motilal Oswal Financial Services Ltd.
     
    Despite a cooling-off in FY25, the core profit engine remains intact. The decade-long recovery story is anchored in balance sheet clean-ups, policy tailwinds, and sector-specific structural shifts, the findings showed.
     
    “PSUs have clawed back space in the overall market cap pool. Their share, which had slipped to 10.1 per cent in FY22, now stands at 15.3 per cent, thanks to a strong rally and profit growth,” the report mentioned.
     
    PSU profits jumped from Rs 1.2 lakh crore in FY20 to Rs 5.3 lakh crore in FY25, far outpacing private sector growth and reversing their earlier underperformance from FY15–20.
     
    “Profitability metrics have improved materially. Better capital efficiency, operating discipline, and lower losses have lifted RoEs across the PSU board,” said the report.
     
    FY25 marks the fifth consecutive year of declining losses among PSUs.
     
    BFSI contribution rose to 38 per cent of PSU profits in FY25—from just 7 per cent in FY20. PSU banks, once weighed down by bad loans, are now leading the charge — with clean balance sheets, improving NIMs, and strong earnings visibility.
     
    Capital goods PSUs clocked a 28 per cent CAGR in profits over FY20–25. Defence and infra-led order flows have fuelled this growth. Names like HAL and BEL have emerged as institutional favourites, backed by execution and earnings consistency.
     
    With fundamentals intact and macro tailwinds building, the next phase of re-rating is already underway.
     
    BFSI is expected to drive 53 per cent of incremental PSU profits over the next two years. Loss-making PSUs now account for just 1 per cent of the total profit pool, down from 45 per cent in FY18.
     
    According to the report, structural clean-ups have reshaped the PSU universe, and the earnings base is now broad, resilient, and quality-led.
     
    (IANS)
  • Heavy rainfall to continue in Kerala, south Karnataka; widespread monsoon activity expected across India: IMD

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    The India Meteorological Department (IMD) has forecast extremely heavy rainfall over Kerala and South Interior Karnataka on Thursday, as the southwest monsoon continues to gain momentum across the country. In its latest update, the IMD stated that rainfall activity is expected to intensify across several parts of India over the next seven days, particularly affecting regions in the northwest, central, eastern, and northeastern states.

    The monsoon has advanced further into parts of Rajasthan, Haryana, and Punjab, with the northern limit of monsoon now passing through Jaisalmer, Bikaner, Jhunjhunu, Bharatpur, Rampur, Sonipat, and Anup Nagar.

    Conditions remain favourable for the monsoon to advance into the remaining areas of the country within the next three to four days.

    In addition to the heavy downpour expected in Kerala and South Interior Karnataka, very heavy rainfall is also likely in Konkan & Goa, the ghat areas of Madhya Maharashtra, and Gujarat over the coming week. Similar weather conditions are predicted for Jammu & Kashmir, parts of Tamil Nadu, Vidarbha, Odisha, and Himachal Pradesh.

    Rainfall intensity is expected to peak in states like Uttarakhand, East Rajasthan, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh, and both East and West Madhya Pradesh on varying dates through early July.

    In Delhi and the National Capital Region (NCR), the IMD has forecast light rain accompanied by thunderstorms and lightning between June 26 and June 29. On June 26 and 27, the city will experience partly cloudy skies with maximum temperatures hovering between 36 and 38°C, which are expected to remain near normal. Winds will predominantly blow from the southeast with moderate speeds.

    By June 28 and 29, the skies over Delhi are expected to turn generally cloudy with light to moderate rainfall during the evening and night. Maximum temperatures are forecast to dip to between 32 and 35°C, below normal by 2 to 5°C, while minimum temperatures may range from 25 to 27°C, also slightly below normal. Wind speeds will vary throughout the day but are expected to remain moderate.

  • Heavy rainfall to continue in Kerala, south Karnataka; widespread monsoon activity expected across India: IMD

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    The India Meteorological Department (IMD) has forecast extremely heavy rainfall over Kerala and South Interior Karnataka on Thursday, as the southwest monsoon continues to gain momentum across the country. In its latest update, the IMD stated that rainfall activity is expected to intensify across several parts of India over the next seven days, particularly affecting regions in the northwest, central, eastern, and northeastern states.

    The monsoon has advanced further into parts of Rajasthan, Haryana, and Punjab, with the northern limit of monsoon now passing through Jaisalmer, Bikaner, Jhunjhunu, Bharatpur, Rampur, Sonipat, and Anup Nagar.

    Conditions remain favourable for the monsoon to advance into the remaining areas of the country within the next three to four days.

    In addition to the heavy downpour expected in Kerala and South Interior Karnataka, very heavy rainfall is also likely in Konkan & Goa, the ghat areas of Madhya Maharashtra, and Gujarat over the coming week. Similar weather conditions are predicted for Jammu & Kashmir, parts of Tamil Nadu, Vidarbha, Odisha, and Himachal Pradesh.

    Rainfall intensity is expected to peak in states like Uttarakhand, East Rajasthan, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh, and both East and West Madhya Pradesh on varying dates through early July.

    In Delhi and the National Capital Region (NCR), the IMD has forecast light rain accompanied by thunderstorms and lightning between June 26 and June 29. On June 26 and 27, the city will experience partly cloudy skies with maximum temperatures hovering between 36 and 38°C, which are expected to remain near normal. Winds will predominantly blow from the southeast with moderate speeds.

    By June 28 and 29, the skies over Delhi are expected to turn generally cloudy with light to moderate rainfall during the evening and night. Maximum temperatures are forecast to dip to between 32 and 35°C, below normal by 2 to 5°C, while minimum temperatures may range from 25 to 27°C, also slightly below normal. Wind speeds will vary throughout the day but are expected to remain moderate.

  • Global energy CO2 emissions reached record high last year, report says

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Global carbon dioxide emissions from the energy sector hit a record high for the fourth year running last year as fossil fuel use kept rising even as renewable energy reached a record high, the Energy Institute’s annual statistical review of world energy showed on Thursday.
     
    The report’s figures highlight the challenge of trying to wean the world economy off fossil fuels at a time when conflict in Ukraine has redrawn oil and gas flows from Russia and fighting in the Middle East raises concern about security of supplies.
     
    Last year was the hottest year on record, with global temperatures exceeding 1.5 C (34.7 F) above the pre-industrial era for the first time.
     
    The world saw a 2% annual rise in total energy supply in 2024, with all sources of energy such as oil, gas, coal, nuclear, hydro and renewable energy registering increases, which last occurred in 2006, the report said.
     
    This led to carbon emissions increasing by around 1% in 2024 and exceeding the record level set the previous year at 40.8 gigatonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent.
    Of all the global fossil fuels, natural gas saw the biggest increase in generation, growing 2.5%. Meanwhile, coal grew by 1.2% to remain the largest source of generation globally, while oil growth was under 1%.
     
    Wind and solar energy expanded by 16% in 2024, nine times faster than total energy demand, the report showed.
     
    Industry body the Energy Institute, which comprises energy professionals across levels, together with consultancies KPMG and Kearney, took over from BP (BP.L), opens new tab last year to author the report.
     
    Analysts tracking progress have said the world is not on course to meet a global goal of tripling renewable energy capacity by 2030 despite record amounts being added.
     
    “Last year was another turning point for global energy, driven by rising geopolitical tensions,” Romain Debarre of consultancy Kearney, one of the authors of the report, said in a release.
     
    “COP28 set out a bold vision to triple global renewables by 2030, but progress is proving uneven and despite the rapid growth we have seen globally we are still not at the pace required,” said Wafa Jafri, a partner at KPMG.
     
    COP28 was the United Nations Climate Change Conference that took place in Dubai in 2023, at which countries signed a pact to transition away from fossil fuels in energy systems to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050.
     
    (Reuters)