Category: Europe

  • MIL-OSI Russia: How not to regret the choice you made

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: State University Higher School of Economics – State University Higher School of Economics –

    A “good” solution also comes at a price

    Even if we are satisfied with the final quality of the decision we made, we can look at the “price” we had to pay for it. According to Dmitry Leontiev, the author of the existential-activity theory of choice, the price of choice consists of the loss of rejected opportunities and the inevitable or probable undesirable consequences of the choice. For example, if a person has built a successful career as an academic musician and actively tours around the world, then when assessing the quality of this decision, it is important to take into account not only satisfaction with the chosen profession, but also what had to be sacrificed for it (for example, the dream of becoming a dentist, having free weekends for many years, quality sleep and, say, good relations with the family – if the family does not support the person’s lifestyle). From this we can conclude that no choice is completely “good” or “bad”: any of our decisions is associated with certain costs, and the perception of the choice as more or less suitable depends on how ready we are for these costs.

    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 China: Heathrow Airport in London closed due to power outage from nearby fire

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    London’s Heathrow Airport remains closed until midnight Friday due to a “significant power outage” caused by a fire at a nearby electricity substation, a spokesperson said.

    The outage has affected the entire airport, with no clear timeline for power restoration. “To maintain the safety of our passengers and colleagues, we have no choice but to close Heathrow until 23:59 GMT on March 21,” the spokesperson added.

    Passengers are advised not to travel to the airport until further notice. Over 1,300 flights, including 120 already airborne, are affected, according to Sky News, citing Flightradar24, a live flight-tracking website. Some planes have been diverted to other airports, including London Gatwick Airport, those in Paris and Shannon Airport in Ireland.

    British Airways, Heathrow’s largest carrier, urged customers not to go to the airport until further notice and said it is working to update them on travel options.

    London Heathrow, one of the world’s busiest airports, handled a record 83.9 million passengers last year.

    The fire that broke out in Hayes, north of the airport has also left around 16,000 nearby homes without power. The cause remains unknown, but the National Grid is working to restore electricity as quickly as possible. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Giuseppe Tornatore appointed Jury President for 27th Shanghai International Film Festival

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    Italian film director Giuseppe Tornatore, renowned for classics like Nuovo Cinema Paradiso, La leggenda del pianista sull’oceano (The Legend of 1900), and Malena, has been appointed as the jury president for the main competition section of the Golden Goblet Awards at the 27th Shanghai International Film Festival (SIFF).

    Italian film director Giuseppe Tornatore has handwritten a congratulatory note to the upcoming 27th Shanghai International Film Festival. [Photo/chinadaily.com.cn]

    The 27th SIFF is scheduled to take place from June 13 to 22.

    “Film festivals are not only a time to celebrate cinema — more importantly, it’s one of those moments when filmmakers from various countries meet, exchange ideas, and above all watch brilliant films together,” Tornatore said after accepting the invitation from the SIFF organizing committee on Friday.

    The Italian director extended his greetings and invitations to filmmakers worldwide, particularly emphasizing the festival’s vital role for young filmmakers.

    “For new directors, this is an exceptional opportunity to launch their careers and potentially achieve success through the festival,” he added. “May this edition be a resounding success, and may such festivals continue for many more editions!”

    Born in Sicily, Italy in 1956, Tornatore joined the film industry at 16. As one of the most recognized Italian directors in the world, Tornatore is celebrated for his “magical touch in deconstructing real-world dilemmas,” according to the SIFF organizing committee. Through his career spanning more than four decades, Tornatore has won the Grand Prix at the 42 Cannes Film Festival, the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 62nd Oscars, and the Grand Jury Prize at the 52nd Venice International Film Festival.

    The 2025 SIFF coincides with several significant anniversaries, including the 130th anniversary of world cinema, the 120th anniversary of Chinese cinema, and the 55th anniversary of diplomatic relations between China and Italy.

    Bridging cultures through the art of film, from Rome to Shanghai, the SIFF organizing committee said it holds high expectation to see how Giuseppe Tornatore’s “rich romanticism” transcend geographical boundaries to resonate with each viewer.

    Organizers also hope that Tornatore’s “professional yet almost detached” approach will inspire film enthusiasts from all over the world. “We also hope that led by him, the new Golden Goblet Awards Jury will foster cultural exchange and mutual learning of film cultures, contributing to the diversified development of world cinema.”

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Switzerland splits sanctions list on ISIL, Al-Qaida and the Taliban

    Source: Switzerland – Federal Council in English

    On 21 March, the Federal Council divided the Ordinance on Measures against Persons and Organisations with Links to Usama bin Laden, Al-Qaida or the Taliban into two separate ordinances. This decision reflects several UN Security Council resolutions. The ordinances will come into force on 15 May.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI: AI-Driven DevOps Frameworks Take Centre Stage at Eficode’s ‘The Future of Software’ Conference

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Eficode’s ‘The Future of Software’ conference will explore significant shifts in AI-driven DevOps, including automation, governance, and real-time analytics, shaping the future of enterprise software development.

    LONDON, UK: 21st March 2025 According to Eficode, Europe’s leading DevOps solutions provider, 2025 will be “The Year of AI Productivity,” with businesses increasingly adopting Generative AI to achieve substantial competitive advantages. Realising these benefits requires robust and flexible DevOps frameworks, enhanced by AI capabilities.

    “DevOps is rapidly embracing automation through Infrastructure-as-Code and Generative AI. Over the next 12-18 months, success will hinge on AI-enhanced frameworks and streamlined toolchains, driving productivity and innovation,” comments Marko Klemetti, CTO of Eficode.

    Eficode’s visionary ‘The Future of Software’ conference, held in London on 26th March, will feature keynotes from industry leaders including Kelsey Hightower and Patrick Debois, and expert insights from organisations such as JP Morgan Chase, The New York Times, Uber and Just Eat.

    The agenda will deep dive into:

    • The progress of the cloud-native movement
    • How AI can be leveraged to modernise existing systems, revitalise legacy software, and increase productivity
    • The intersection between product engineering and DevOps
    • Responsible use of AI
    • How to scale Agile delivery in enterprise organisations

    Influencing the event’s major discussion points, is Eficode’s 2025 DevOps Trends Guide, which has identified the following trends as being critical to the intersection of AI and DevOps:

    AI-driven tooling is accelerating both development and business innovation by:

    • Automating complex tasks
    • Providing intelligent code suggestions
    • Enhancing collaboration at an unprecedented pace ​

    DevOps teams are looking to integrate AI into IT Service Management (ITSM) and Enterprise Service Management (ESM) platforms to:

    • Improve operational efficiency
    • Streamline processes
    • Enhance customer satisfaction

    Consolidating Toolchains for Stronger Governance and Efficiency

    Eficode advocates the need for real-time insights, using AI-driven dashboards for real-time data analytics to bridge the gap between strategic initiatives and daily operations. This will enable quicker, informed decision-making and foster cross-functional collaboration, allowing organisations to remain agile and proactive.

    Join the Discussion at ‘The Future of Software’ Conference

    To register for The Future of Software conference, please click here.


    Eficode Media Contact
    Lauri Palokangas
    Chief Marketing Officer, Eficode
    lauri.palokangas@eficode.com
    +358 50 486 4918  

    Eficode Press Media Contact (UK)
    Jim Pople
    C8 Consulting for Eficode
    jim@c8consulting.co.uk 

    About Eficode
    Better made possible
    Eficode is the leading provider of DevOps solutions that drive real impact, with offices in Europe, the United Kingdom and the United States. Eficode empowers organizations to create a software development culture that unlocks their potential with the right ways of working, the right tools, and the right skillset. 

    Eficode provides a full range of services, from expert consulting and Eficode ROOT Managed DevOps platform, to training and license management. Eficode works with leading DevOps and cloud technology partners, including Atlassian, GitHub, GitLab, AWS, and Microsoft.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: TGS 2024 Annual Report

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    OSLO, Norway (21 March 2025) – TGS, a leading global provider of energy data and intelligence, published its 2024 annual report today. 

    In addition, TGS has published its 2024 Management Remuneration Report (MRR) according to the Norwegian Public Limited Liability Companies Act, section 6-16b (2). The 2024 annual report and the MRR are available on the TGS’ website https://www.tgs.com.

    The Annual Report has also been published in European Single Electronic Format (ESEF) and can be downloaded from TGS.com (http://www.tgs.com) or www.newsweb.no.

    About TGS
    TGS provides advanced data and intelligence to companies active in the energy sector. With leading-edge technology and solutions spanning the entire energy value chain, TGS offers a comprehensive range of insights to help clients make better decisions. Our broad range of products and advanced data technologies, coupled with a global, extensive and diverse energy data library, make TGS a trusted partner in supporting the exploration and production of energy resources worldwide. For further information, please visit www.tgs.com (https://www.tgs.com/).

    Forward Looking Statement
    All statements in this press release other than statements of historical fact are forward-looking statements, which are subject to a number of risks, uncertainties and assumptions that are difficult to predict and are based upon assumptions as to future events that may not prove accurate. These factors include volatile market conditions, investment opportunities in new and existing markets, demand for licensing of data within the energy industry, operational challenges, and reliance on a cyclical industry and principal customers. Actual results may differ materially from those expected or projected in the forward-looking statements. TGS undertakes no responsibility or obligation to update or alter forward-looking statements for any reason.

    For more information, visit TGS.com or contact:

    Bård Stenberg
    VP IR & Communication
    Mobile: +47 992 45 235
    investor@tgs.com

    Attachments

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Temenos named Technology Provider of the Year in FStech Awards

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    GRAND-LANCY, Switzerland, March 21, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Temenos (SIX: TEMN) today announced it has been named Technology Provider of the Year at the FStech Awards 2025, recognizing its leadership in modernizing financial institutions with banking solutions powered by GenAI, cloud, and SaaS.

    Now in their 25th year, the FStech Awards celebrate companies that have demonstrated excellence and innovation within the UK and EMEA financial services sector. In the Technology Provider of the Year category, judges evaluated vendors based on their exceptional performance, product innovations, and customer success.

    Mark Yamin-Ali, Managing Director – Europe, Temenos, commented: “This FStech award underscores Temenos’ leadership in core banking modernization and our reputation as a trusted industry partner. With proven expertise and reliable innovation, including in game-changing technologies such as Generative AI, Temenos enables banks to evolve with confidence, fostering growth and elevating customer experiences.”

    Sairam Rangachari, Chief Product Officer, Temenos, said: “We’re delighted to receive this prestigious award, which recognizes the rich functionality of Temenos’ mission-critical technology. With our relentless focus on innovation, as well as our leading SaaS solutions and Responsible AI capabilities embedded throughout the Temenos platform, we are thrilled to be leading the way in the banking industry.”

    Banks of all sizes utilize Temenos’ adaptable technology – on-premises, in the cloud, or as a SaaS solution – to deliver next-generation services and AI-powered experiences. Its clients benefit from the power of deep functionality, the convenience of best-of-suite software and the synergy of modular solutions.

    Recent customer announcements include the UK’s Aldermore Bank, which selected Temenos SaaS to modernize its savings operations, beginning with the swift launch of new savings notice accounts for small businesses. Additionally, Romania’s CEC Bank selected Temenos to modernize its retail and corporate core banking systems.

    About Temenos
    Temenos (SIX: TEMN) is the world’s leading platform for banking, serving clients in 150 countries by helping them build new banking services and state-of-the-art customer experiences. Top performing banks using Temenos software achieve cost-income ratios almost half the industry average and returns on equity 2x the industry average. Their IT spend on growth and innovation is also 2x the industry average.

    For more information, please visit www.temenos.com.

    Media Contacts  
       
    Scott Rowe & Michael Anderson
    Temenos Global Public Relations
    Tel: +44 20 7423 3857
    Email: press@temenos.com
    Gabriel Goonetillake
    Temenos Team at Edelman Smithfield
    Tel: +44 7813 407710
    Temenos@EdelmanSmithfield.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Economics: ASEAN-UK workshop paves path for engineering biology innovation

    Source: ASEAN – Association of SouthEast Asian Nations

    LONDON, 21 March 2025 – The United Kingdom hosted more than 25 delegates from all ten ASEAN Member States and the ASEAN Secretariat for an ASEAN-UK Regional Training and Workshop on Engineering Biology Chapter II from 18 to 20 March 2025. With ASEAN set to become the world’s fourth largest economy by 2030, the workshop presented a strategic opportunity to align regulatory frameworks, technical standards, and innovation pathways between the UK and one of the world’s most dynamic economic regions.

    The programme built on the learnings and engagement from the first chapter of the workshop held in Singapore in 2024, focusing on critical growth enablers through cross-pollination between ASEAN and UK expertise. Key areas of focus included technical standards and biometrology, responsible innovation frameworks, and commercialising engineering biology for success.

    Alignment across these areas will create levers for accelerating engineering biology innovations into scalable innovations, unlocking economic potential while deploying market-ready solutions to benefit our communities.

    UK Ambassador to ASEAN, Sarah Tiffin, said:

    “Engineering biology is a game-changer for economic growth and sustainable development.  This workshop reaffirms the UK’s commitment as an ASEAN Dialogue Partner to building the technical and ethical foundations needed to foster a thriving bioeconomy across ASEAN regions. The UK and ASEAN can excel together in this fast-growing field, driving responsible innovation that benefits businesses and communities alike. Our partnership is thriving, and this workshop is a testament to how we are shaping the future of science and technology together.”

    British High Commissioner to Singapore, Nik Mehta, said:

    “The USD4 trillion global bioeconomy isn’t just a market opportunity—it’s our pathway to solving some of humanity’s most pressing challenges, from food security and climate resilience to healthcare innovation.

    By aligning our approaches to technical standards, responsible innovation, and commercialisation pathways, we can create a powerful platform for businesses and researchers across both the UK and ASEAN to bring transformative products to market.”

    Senior Officer of Science and Technology Division, ASEAN Secretariat, Dr. Vanny Narita, said:

    ” ASEAN and the UK reaffirm our commitment to engineering biology as a catalyst for sustainable economic growth. As a key pillar of the bioeconomy, it drives innovation in healthcare, agriculture and manufacturing. The ASEAN bioeconomy employs over 8% of the global workforce and generates over US$2.3 trillion annually, contributing to a global bioeconomy expected to reach US$4 trillion by 2040. Integrating engineering biology into the ASEAN Economic Community Strategic Plan 2026-2030 and the ASEAN Plan of Action on Science, Technology and Innovation 2026-2035 will accelerate biotechnology innovation and regional sustainability.”

    This workshop reaffirms the UK’s dedication to deepening its scientific and technological ties with ASEAN, building on the strong foundation established since becoming an ASEAN dialogue partner.

    ###
    The post ASEAN-UK workshop paves path for engineering biology innovation appeared first on ASEAN Main Portal.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: French air firm to expand in HK

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    Elior Group SA today announced its intention to strengthen its presence in Hong Kong, after it signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the city’s Airport Authority on February 19.

    Witnessed by Financial Secretary Paul Chan, the MoU was signed by the authority’s Acting Chief Executive Officer Vivian Cheung and Elior Group SA Chairman and CEO Daniel Derichebourg.

    Mr Chan mentioned in the 2025-26 Budget last month that under the co-ordination of InvestHK the authority had signed an MoU with a leading overseas professional aeronautic services company to explore the possibility of providing services such as aircraft dismantling, parts recycling and related training in Hong Kong, thereby establishing Hong Kong as Asia’s first aircraft parts processing and trading centre.

    The company, Elior Group SA, is based in France, and is part of Derichebourg SA.

    Secretary for Commerce & Economic Development Algernon Yau highlighted that under the “one country, two systems” arrangement, Hong Kong boasts a high degree of internationalisation, a favourable business environment, a strategic location, a robust legal framework, and a low tax regime. He added that the city has always been a prime location for foreign investment and international conglomerates.

    Mr Yau said Hong Kong will continue to play its unique role of connecting the Mainland and the world, thereby attracting more companies from around the world to set up in the city.

    Secretary for Transport & Logistics Mable Chan said she was pleased that Elior Group SA and the authority are exploring the possibility of introducing aircraft parts handling and trading services in Hong Kong, as this will enrich the city’s standing as an international aviation hub and support aviation development in China and the wider Asian region.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI: Notification on AB Šiaulių Bankas executive transactions

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    AB Šiaulių Bankas, company code 112025254, address of the head office Tilžės str. 149, Šiauliai, Lithuania.

    AB Šiaulių Bankas has received a notification from its executive – a member of the Supervisory Board and long-time shareholder Gintaras Kateiva – regarding transactions for the acquisition of the Bank’s shares (attached).

    Through these transactions, Gintaras Kateiva acquired 318,510 bank shares and currently, together with his spouse, holds a total of 32,869,209 AB Šiaulių Bankas shares (4.96% of the total number of issued shares).

    Additional information: 
    Tomas Varenbergas 
    Head of Investment Management Division
    tomas.varenbergas@sb.lt

    Attachment

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: KH Group Plc’s Financial Statements Release for 1 January – 31 December 2024: Net sales increased – profitability declined; Sale process for Indoor Group initiated

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    KH Group Plc
    Stock Exchange Release 21 March 2025 at 8:00 EET

    KH Group Plc’s Financial Statements Release for 1 January – 31 December 2024

    Net sales increased – profitability declined;
    Sale process for Indoor Group initiated

    This is the summary of the Financial Statements Release for 2024. The full Financial Statements Release is attached to this release and is also available on the company’s website at www.khgroup.com

    KH Group announced on 13 March 2025, that it has initiated a sale process regarding its shareholding in Indoor Group. In this Financial Statements Release, Indoor Group is reported in accordance with “IFRS 5 – Non-current Assets Held for Sale and Discontinued Operations” standard. The continuing operations include the business areas KH-Koneet and Nordic Rescue Group.

    KH Group, October–December 2024 pro forma

    • Net sales amounted to EUR 61.7 (50.5) million.
    • Operating profit was EUR 3.4 (3.5) million.
    • KH-Koneet’s net sales increased, but profitability declined slightly year-on-year.
    • NRG’s net sales and operating profit were above the level of the comparison period.

    KH Group, January–December 2024 pro forma

    • Net sales amounted to EUR 194.0 (190.6) million.
    • Operating profit was EUR 7.2 (8.1) million.

    KH Group, January–December 2024 reported IFRS

    • Net sales amounted to EUR 194.0 (124.0) million. The figure for the comparison period includes net sales accumulated in May–December 2023. HTJ and Indoor have been retrospectively classified as discontinued operations.
    • Operating profit was EUR 5.8 (-6.7) million.
    • Net profit for the period from continuing operations was EUR 1.4 (-10.4) million.
    • Earnings per share (undiluted and diluted) from continuing operations were EUR 0.02 (-0.18).
    • Equity per share at the end of the review period was EUR 0.84 (1.36).
    • Return on equity for rolling 12 months was -46.6% (-17.5%).
    • The Group’s cash and cash equivalents amounted to EUR 9.8 million at the end of the review period.
    • Gearing at the end of the review period was 283.4% (195.4%).
    • Gearing excluding lease liabilities was 177.3% (116.7%).

    Proposal for the distribution of profit

    The Board of Directors proposes to the Annual General Meeting that no dividend be distributed for the past financial period. The profit distribution proposal of the Board of Directors takes into account the company’s liquidity situation at the time of making the profit distribution proposal, expected cash flows during the new year and the investments required by the change in strategy.

    CEO Ville Nikulainen:

    “KH Group divested HTJ in July 2024 in line with its strategic direction. In March 2025 KH Group informed about initiating the Indoor Group sale process.

    The Group’s pro forma net sales increased, and operating profit decreased in the review period year-on-year in October–December. KH-Koneet’s net sales increased in both operating countries, but operating profit was lower than in the comparison period. Nordic Rescue Group’s pro forma net sales and operating profit increased year-on-year during the fourth quarter. The demand for rescue vehicles in Sweden has remained at a good level but, in Finland, the budgeting phase of the wellbeing services counties has slowed down the realisation of new orders during last autumn and winter.

    For Indoor Group, the general market uncertainty and the increase to the general value-added tax rate in Finland had a negative impact on net sales and operating profit. In August 2024, KH Group announced the launch of an extensive operating model reform programme aimed at improving the group company Indoor Group’s profitability. The reform includes development initiatives to stabilise Indoor Group’s financial situation in the challenging furniture industry market environment. The company aims for an annual operating profit improvement of at least EUR 10 million by the end of 2026. Based on current information, a significant part of the targeted profitability improvement is estimated to be realised already during 2025. KH Group published a press release concerning the reform of Indoor Group’s operating model and change negotiations in December 2024. The outcome of the change negotiations was that 162 employment relationships will be terminated in Indoor Group.

    In 2025, the business areas will focus on securing net sales and operating profit as well as improving the efficiency of working capital. KH Group’s change in strategy is being advanced according to plan.”

    Events after the review period

    In March 2025 KH Group acquired the remaining KH-Koneet Group Oy minority shares in accordance with the shareholder agreement. As a result, KH-Koneet is a fully owned subsidiary of KH Group Plc. The share purchase price was EUR 2.0 million.

    On 30 September 2024, Indoor Group did not fulfil the covenants of its financing agreement, after which the company has negotiated with the financing provider on updating the financing agreement. In December 2024, Indoor Group signed an agreement with the financing provider, according to which the financing provider will not demand the repayment of loans despite the breach of covenants provided that certain conditions are met. According to the agreement, KH Group granted Indoor Group a shareholder loan of EUR 1.0 million in January 2025. After the end of the financial period, the agreement with the financing provider has been extended in steps until 31 May 2025, and the parties have negotiated on the financing agreement terms for the sale process period.

    On 13 March 2025 KH Group announced to have initiated a sale process regarding its shareholding in Indoor Group Holding Oy (“Indoor Group”), of which the Company owns 58.3 per cent. KH Group has engaged a financial advisor to explore various options for its Indoor Group shareholding. No final decision has been made on the sale of Indoor Group holdings and there is no certainty as to the timing, terms or completion of any such transaction. KH Group aims to complete the process during 2025. The Company will communicate the matter in accordance with the applicable rules on the basis of its possible progress.

    Future outlook

    KH Group’s objective is to become an industrial group built around the KH-Koneet business and to divest other business areas in line with previous strategy. At the same time, active developments will continue regarding other business areas. Exit planning and the assessment of exit opportunities for the other business areas will also continue.

    During the next few years, the aim is to invest in the growth of the core business and pay dividends after significant exits within the limits established by the balance sheet structure and financing agreements.

    The guidance with the current Group structure of continuing operations for 2025 is as follows: the company estimates that both the net sales (EUR 194.0 million) and the comparable operating profit (EUR 7.2 million) will remain approximately at the same level year-on-year.

    Results presentation webcast

    KH Group will organise a result briefing in Finnish for analysts, investors and the media on 21 March at 1:00 pm in Studio Eero at Sanomatalo. You can follow the live webcast at https://khgroup.events.inderes.com/q4-2024 . The presentation material and webcast recording will be available on the same day on KH Group’s website.

    KH GROUP PLC

    Ville Nikulainen
    CEO

    FURTHER INFORMATION:
    CEO Ville Nikulainen, tel + 358 400 459 343

    DISTRIBUTION:
    Nasdaq Helsinki Ltd
    Main media
    www.khgroup.com

    KH Group Plc is a Nordic conglomerate operating in the business areas of KH-Koneet, Indoor Group and Nordic Rescue Group. We are a leading supplier of construction and earth-moving equipment, furniture and interior decoration retailer as well as rescue vehicle manufacturer. The objective of our strategy is to create an industrial group around the business of KH-Koneet. KH Group’s share is listed on Nasdaq Helsinki.

    Attachment

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: WECANGROUP AND SEALCOIN INTEGRATE THEIR TECHNOLOGY TO SECURE DEVICE-TO-DEVICE TRANSACTIONS WITH STATE-OF-THE-ART KYO (KNOW YOUR OBJECT) SOLUTION BASED IN SWITZERLAND

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    WECANGROUP AND SEALCOIN INTEGRATE THEIR TECHNOLOGY TO SECURE DEVICE-TO-DEVICE TRANSACTIONS WITH STATE-OF-THE-ART KYO (KNOW YOUR OBJECT) SOLUTION BASED IN SWITZERLAND

    Geneva, Switzerland – March 21, 2025 –WISeKey International Holding Ltd (“WISeKey”) (SIX: WIHN, NASDAQ: WKEY), a leading global cybersecurity, blockchain, and IoT company, today announces that its subsidiary SEALCOIN and WeCanGroup are joining forces to enable secure transactions and advanced identity verification within the WeCanGroup ecosystem. This partnership will bring together SEALCOIN’s blockchain-based IoT and digital asset ecosystem with WeCanGroup’s trusted compliance and data security framework, enhancing the way banking, government and defense sectors onboard and interact with connected devices.

    SEALCOIN is designed to securely authenticate and facilitate transactions between IoT devices, making them fully trusted and autonomous actors within a decentralized economy. By integrating SEALCOIN’s cybersecurity and blockchain capabilities into the WeCanGroup ecosystem, IoT devices will be able to perform secure, verifiable transactions while ensuring compliance with industry regulations.

    WeCanGroup, a leader in secure digital identity and compliance solutions, is dedicated to enhancing data security and trust across industries. Through this collaboration, WeCanGroup’s Know Your Client (KYC) and Know Your Business (KYB) solutions will be expanded with Know Your Object (KYO), a revolutionary approach to verifying and managing IoT devices in highly regulated environments.

    Unlocking New Use Cases in Regulated Sectors

    The integration of SEALCOIN and WeCanGroup’s digital identity solutions will foster advanced onboarding processes for IoT ecosystems, enabling high-trust, high-security transactions in:

    Banking & Finance – Enabling trusted digital asset transactions, compliance-driven IoT payments, and regulatory oversight for financial services.

    Government & Public Services – Secure authentication of connected devices used in critical infrastructure, identity management, and smart city applications.

    Defense & Aerospace – Ensuring tamper-proof identity verification and transactional integrity for defense IoT systems and secure communication networks.

    Strengthening Cybersecurity & Compliance for the IoT Economy

    “This partnership marks a significant step toward making IoT truly transactional, while ensuring compliance and data security,” said Carlos Moreira, Founder and CEO at WISeKey. “With SEALCOIN’s advanced PKI-based IoT security and WeCanGroup’s trusted compliance solutions, we are creating a new standard for identity and transaction verification in highly regulated environments.”

    “WeCanGroup has always been committed to enhancing data integrity and regulatory compliance, and this collaboration will allow us to extend our expertise beyond individuals and enterprises to include connected devices,” added Vincent Pignon, Founder and Chairman at WeCanGroup. “By combining KYC, KYB and KYO, we are enabling a future where IoT transactions are as secure, compliant, and trusted as any financial transaction today.”

    Next Steps

    The partnership will initially focus on pilot programs with key partners in finance, government and defense, before expanding to broader industrial and smart infrastructure use cases.

    About WeCanGroup

    Founded in 2015 in Switzerland, WeCanGroup is a leading provider of blockchain-based solutions for secure data management, serving individuals, enterprises, and financial institutions. The company is dedicated to improving data handling efficiency in response to the increasing volume of sensitive information being generated globally. By leveraging blockchain technology, WeCanGroup promotes the tokenization of data as a solution to common issues related to data completeness, redundancy, and security.

    One of WeCanGroup’s flagship platforms, Wecan Comply, is a leading platform for orchestrating KYC & KYB compliance data. From onboarding to periodic reviews and audits, the platform seamlessly connects financial institutions through a secure and standardized data exchange protocol.

    WeCanGroup has established itself as a market leader in Switzerland, recognized and adopted by major wealth management firms, banks, financial intermediaries, and large global enterprises. The platform enables the storage, request, sharing, and management of various types of data, such as KYB and KYC, leveraging the most advanced data exchange and storage infrastructure on the market.

    About SEALCOIN

    SEALCOIN, powered by WISeKey, is a secure digital transaction platform designed to enhance safety and compliance in blockchain-based payments and device-to-device transactions. With a strong focus on identity verification and cryptographic security, SEALCOIN is shaping the future of trusted digital ecosystems.

    For more information, please visit www.sealcoin.ai and www.wecangroup.ch.

    About WISeKey

    WISeKey International Holding Ltd (“WISeKey”, SIX: WIHN; Nasdaq: WKEY) is a global leader in cybersecurity, digital identity, and IoT solutions platform. It operates as a Swiss-based holding company through several operational subsidiaries, each dedicated to specific aspects of its technology portfolio. The subsidiaries include (i) SEALSQ Corp (Nasdaq: LAES), which focuses on semiconductors, PKI, and post-quantum technology products, (ii) WISeKey SA which specializes in RoT and PKI solutions for secure authentication and identification in IoT, Blockchain, and AI, (iii) WISeSat AG which focuses on space technology for secure satellite communication, specifically for IoT applications, (iv) WISe.ART Corp which focuses on trusted blockchain NFTs and operates the WISe.ART marketplace for secure NFT transactions, and (v) SEALCOIN AG which focuses on decentralized physical internet with DePIN technology and house the development of the SEALCOIN platform.

    Each subsidiary contributes to WISeKey’s mission of securing the internet while focusing on their respective areas of research and expertise. Their technologies seamlessly integrate into the comprehensive WISeKey platform. WISeKey secures digital identity ecosystems for individuals and objects using Blockchain, AI, and IoT technologies. With over 1.6 billion microchips deployed across various IoT sectors, WISeKey plays a vital role in securing the Internet of Everything. The company’s semiconductors generate valuable Big Data that, when analyzed with AI, enable predictive equipment failure prevention. Trusted by the OISTE/WISeKey cryptographic Root of Trust, WISeKey provides secure authentication and identification for IoT, Blockchain, and AI applications. The WISeKey Root of Trust ensures the integrity of online transactions between objects and people. For more information on WISeKey’s strategic direction and its subsidiary companies, please visit www.wisekey.com.

    Disclaimer
    This communication expressly or implicitly contains certain forward-looking statements concerning WISeKey International Holding Ltd and its business. Such statements involve certain known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors, which could cause the actual results, financial condition, performance or achievements of WISeKey International Holding Ltd to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. WISeKey International Holding Ltd is providing this communication as of this date and does not undertake to update any forward-looking statements contained herein as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

    This press release does not constitute an offer to sell, or a solicitation of an offer to buy, any securities, and it does not constitute an offering prospectus within the meaning of the Swiss Financial Services Act (“FinSA”), the FinSa’s predecessor legislation or advertising within the meaning of the FinSA. Investors must rely on their own evaluation of WISeKey and its securities, including the merits and risks involved. Nothing contained herein is, or shall be relied on as, a promise or representation as to the future performance of WISeKey.

    Press and Investor Contacts

    WISeKey International Holding Ltd
    Company Contact: Carlos Moreira
    Chairman & CEO
    Tel: +41 22 594 3000
    info@wisekey.com 
    WISeKey Investor Relations (US) 
    The Equity Group Inc.
    Lena Cati
    Tel: +1 212 836-9611
    lcati@equityny.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: 13/2025・Notice of Annual General Meeting of Trifork Group AG

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Company announcement no. 13 / 2025
    Schindellegi, Switzerland – 21 March 2025

    Notice of Annual General Meeting of Trifork Group AG

    The Annual General Meeting 2025 of Trifork Group AG (the “AGM”) will be held on 15 April 2025 at 12:00 p.m. CEST at Grabenstrasse 2, 6340 Baar, Switzerland.

    The AGM will be streamed live on the internet. Shareholders who wish to participate in the livestream shall register on the e-voting platform of Computershare no later than 11 April 2025 at 11.59 p.m. CEST.

    All relevant documentation for the AGM is available on Trifork’s investor website: https://investor.trifork.com/

    The documents include:

    • Invitation to the AGM (including agenda and motions of the Board of Directors);
    • Annual report 2024 (including the remuneration report 2024, the ESG report 2024 (sustainability statements), the consolidated financial statements 2024, the annual financial statements 2024 and the respective reports of the auditors);
    • Presentation of the new Board member Lars Stugemo standing for election;

    Olivier Jaquet has decided not to stand for a re-election at the upcoming AGM.
    The Board of Directors and Executive Management expresses their highest appreciations for Olivier’s services and are thankful for his valuable contributions towards the Company over the last six years and accompanying the growth story of Trifork Group, including the IPO in May 2021.

    Shareholders registered in the share register on the publication date of this notice convening the AGM will receive an invitation for the AGM by mail along with individual login codes to the voting platform of the AGM.

    Information and questions
    Frederik Svanholm, Group Investment Director, frsv@trifork.com, +41 79 357 73 17

    About Trifork
    Trifork is a pioneering global technology partner, empowering enterprise and public sector customers with innovative solutions. With 1,229 professionals across 73 business units in 16 countries, Trifork delivers expertise in inspiring, building, and running advanced software solutions across diverse sectors, including public administration, healthcare, manufacturing, logistics, energy, financial services, retail, and real estate. Trifork Labs, the Group’s R&D hub, drives innovation by investing in and developing synergistic and high-potential technology companies. Trifork Group AG is a publicly listed company on Nasdaq Copenhagen. Learn more at trifork.com.

    Attachment

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Communique – Tourism Ministers’ meeting

    Source: Australian Attorney General’s Agencies

    Tourism Ministers met in Adelaide on 21 March 2025 to discuss their collective and continued efforts to supporting Australia’s travel and tourism industry. 

    Chaired by Minister for Trade and Tourism, Senator the Hon Don Farrell, the Minister was joined by Chief Minister Andrew Barr MLA of the Australian Capital Territory, the Hon Jeremy Rockliff MP, Premier of Tasmania, the Hon Zoe Bettison MP from South Australia, the Hon Andrew Powell MP from Queensland and Steve Dimopoulos from Victoria. Ms Karen Jones, A/g Chief Executive Officer, Destination NSW attended on behalf of the Hon Stephen Kamper MP; Ms Suzana Bishop, Chief Executive Officer, Northern Territory Department of Tourism and Hospitality attended on behalf of the Hon Marie-Clare Boothby; and Ms Anneke Brown, Managing Director, Tourism Western Australia attended on behalf of the Hon Reece Whitby MLA.

    Tourism Ministers noted the impact of recent natural disasters across Australia on communities and businesses, including tourism businesses. Ministers acknowledged the work of the Commonwealth, State, Territory and local Governments to support these regions to recover, and the importance, when regions are ready, of attracting visitors back.

    Tourism Ministers noted the progress update for the THRIVE 2030, Australia’s national strategy for the long-term sustainable growth of the visitor economy, and welcomed the achievements of governments and industry, as highlighted in the THRIVE 2030 Recovery Phase final report, which was released at the meeting. Ministers acknowledged that State and Territories had collaborated with the Commonwealth to deliver:

    • the National Sustainability Framework and Toolkit to help tourism businesses become more sustainable;
    • the WELCOME Framework to provide practical advice to make tourism businesses more accessible and inclusive;
    • the Longitudinal Indicators for the Visitor Economy (LIVE) Framework, to better measure the visitor economy across economic, social, environmental and institutional dimensions; and
    • the Choose Tourism workforce program.

    Tourism Ministers welcomed the establishment of the First Nations Visitor Economy Partnership, which met for the first time on 18 March, to support greater First Nations participation and economic opportunities in the visitor economy. Ministers were pleased that a record 3 million trips had included a First Nations experience in 2023-24. 

    Ministers noted an update on Australia’s tourism industry from Austrade CEO, Dr Paul Grimes, including Tourism Research Australia’s work to modernise its data collection. Ministers discussed performance and current conditions in domestic and international tourism and noted that:

    • Data from Austrade’s Tourism Research Australia shows that over the 12 months to September 2024, visitor expenditure (from tourism and international education) reached $211 billion, including $80 billion in regional Australia, exceeding the THRIVE 2030 visitor spend target for 2024 of $166 billion, including $70 billion in regional expenditure. 
    • International visitor numbers continued to recover towards pre-COVID levels, with 8.3 million short term visitors arriving in Australia in 2024, up 15% on 2023 numbers. Australia’s top 5 international markets in 2024 were: New Zealand, China, the United States, the United Kingdom and India.
    • Domestic visitor overnight spend was $110.3 billion in 12 months to September 2024, which was slightly up on year before. 
    • The investment pipeline for tourism was strong, with 346 projects, worth $64 billion, underway in 2023-24. 

    Ministers welcomed a presentation from Tourism Australia on its efforts to drive international demand for Australian holidays and business events, with an emphasis on coordinated marketing efforts with the States and Territories tourism promotion agencies. 

    Ministers welcomed recent developments in Australia’s aviation industry, including the announcement of the Australian Government’s support for Regional Express (Rex) Airlines, noting aviation is a critical enabler of tourism in Australia. Ministers acknowledged ongoing challenges with insurance affordability. 

    Ministers agreed to continue collaborating to address these shared challenges, and maximise opportunities for Australia’s visitor economy.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Joint press conference, Canberra

    Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

    Jim Chalmers:

    Thanks, everyone, for being available relatively early. We’ve got a fair bit to cover this morning.

    Katy and I will say a few things about the Budget and then Andrew and I on the ACCC and supermarkets.

    Then I wanted to also touch on crypto and also the intelligence review which has just been released by the Prime Minister. And then obviously happy to take your questions.

    We’re in the home stretch of the government’s fourth Budget. It’s going to be a big day, a full day today, of putting the finishing touches on the Budget so that we can get it off to the printer this weekend. We’re looking forward to telling you all about it on Tuesday night.

    The Budget will reflect the progress that Australians have made together. We’ve got inflation down. We’ve got wages and incomes growing again. Unemployment is low. We’ve got the debt down. Interest rates have started to come down, and now growth is rebounding solidly in our economy as well.

    But despite all of the progress that Australians have made together, we know that there’s more work to do because people are still under pressure and because there’s all of this global economic uncertainty playing out around the world as well.

    The Budget will be focused primarily on 2 things: more cost‑of‑living help where we can do that in an affordable and in a responsible way, and also strengthening our economy and making it more resilient in the face of all of this global economic uncertainty.

    So it will have that familiar combination of relief, repair and reform in the fourth Budget, the same as it did in the third. It will be a very responsible Budget. It will help with the cost of living. And it will also continue to clean up the mess that we inherited when came to office 3 years ago.

    Australians have made a lot of progress together. The Budget will reflect that progress. And that progress will be a platform for what we need to do into the future.

    The Budget will be an economic plan to build on the progress that we have made, help people with the cost of living and also make sure that we’re more resilient because the global economy is such an uncertain, volatile and unpredictable place.

    I’ll throw to Katy and then to Andrew.

    Katy Gallagher:

    Thanks, Jim. Morning, everybody. You’ll see in the next Budget our continued investment in driving gender equality and investments in women, and when you look back over the 4 Budgets you’ll see that each budget or budget update has built on the investments from the October Budget where we started this work.

    For too long investments in women had been left behind by the former government. Not enough had been done in 10 years to address women’s wages, to close the gender pay gap, to invest in ending violence against women, to address gender inequality in women’s health and also in investments in the care economy. We know such a big, important part of our economy, highly feminised areas where women’s work was being undervalued and underpaid. You will see continued investment in that.

    Over the 4 budgets we’ve invested in those wages for female‑dominated industries. We’ve invested in childcare, in early education and care, in women’s health, women’s safety, in paid parental leave, in putting super on PPL. We’re also addressing the highly gendered nature of our labour force by investing in skills and training and encouraging women into male‑dominated jobs and increasingly with the wages being addressed in the care economy, seeing more men consider those jobs as good and secure jobs for them.

    We’ve also made important investments in women and girls’ sport, and because of all of these investments – and you’ll see more of it in the Budget – women are earning on average $217 more per week because of the investments we’ve made both through submissions to the minimum wage but also those investments particularly in aged care and early education and care.

    We’ve seen women’s economic participation reach record highs under this government. And we’ve seen the gender pay gap close to the lowest level ever.

    So this is what you can do when you have a concerted effort, when you have women’s policy at the centre of your economic policy and when you really take steps through the ERC, through having leadership from the Treasurer, the PM, having the Minister for Women as the Minister for Finance helps –

    Chalmers:

    Doesn’t hurt.

    Gallagher:

    – to make sure that you can deliver the outcomes that we want. I should also point out this investment is testament to the caucus in general, who are 50 per cent women. When you have women represented at equal levels in the political process you get better outcomes for women.

    Chalmers:

    Thanks, Katy. Andrew.

    Andrew Leigh:

    Well, thanks, Treasurer. Today the government’s released the ACCC’s grocery competition report. This is the first report on the grocery sector in 17 years. Over the last 17 years products like kombucha and kale have hit the shelves, but unfortunately, we haven’t seen a whole lot more competition in the grocery sector.

    And, indeed, this report reveals that the market share of the big 2 supermarkets has increased over that period. It’s seen the entry of Aldi but the shrinking of Metcash. And it sounds a cautionary note about what the future might hold, making clear that it doesn’t see a future in which Metcash’s market share grows substantially, nor does it see a significant competitive threat from Amazon.

    The report also suggests that the big 2 may have been playing tag team rather than tug‑of‑war. It suggests patterns of specials oscillation which look like a little too cosy for the comfort of many Australians.

    It makes a set of wide‑ranging recommendations which the government has said we will accept in principle. Some of those recommendations involve long lead times, others involve consultation with states and territories. We will focus on doing that.

    But the report makes very clear that the Coalition’s approach is not the right way of delivering a fairer deal for farmers and a fairer deal for families. The Coalition voted against Labor’s new mandatory Food and Grocery Code, which the ACCC report talks about as an important measure for holding supermarkets to account in their dealings with farmers.

    This is a significant report – 400 pages, data analysis that covers over a billion prices. But there’s no suggestion in any of that that the Coalition’s favoured approach of divestment would deliver better outcomes for farmers or better outcomes for families.

    Labor’s new mandatory supermarket code of conduct comes into effect next month with multimillion dollar penalties. That’s the Food and Grocery Code that the Liberals voted against. We’ve increased ACCC funding to go after supermarkets who are using misleading pricing tactics. As part of the Treasurer’s merger reforms – the biggest shake‑up in the merger laws in 50 years – we’ve made clear that every supermarket merger and land acquisition would need to be notified.

    We’re making it easier for new supermarkets to enter the market with incentives for states and territories to cut planning and zoning red tape through the work that the Treasurer is doing with the Council on Federal Relations, backed by our $900 million National Productivity Fund. We’re clamping down on shrinkflation by strengthening the Unit Pricing Code, funding CHOICE to give shoppers more information on the best value supermarkets and providing over $70 million in low‑cost essentials subsidy scheme to improve food security.

    We’re also providing supplier education for those suppliers that find themselves negotiating with supermarkets with one hand tied behind their back. Now, the supermarkets won’t like that, but farmers will. It will be welcome news as we aim to provide more information to those suppliers, particularly in the fresh produce area.

    Shrinkflation, sneaky prices, unfair deals – we’re tackling those head on. We are working hard to secure a fairer deal for farmers and a fairer deal for families. We understand that it is critical that the supermarkets do the right thing, and we are holding them to account through our existing reforms and through our in‑principle adoption of this important new ACCC report.

    Chalmers:

    Thanks, Andrew. We know that Australians are still under pressure, and a lot of that pressure is felt at the checkout.

    That’s why we’re cracking down on the supermarkets, and it’s why the Budget will have a real focus on the cost of living.

    Even with the progress that we’ve been making on inflation, we know that people are still under the pump, and we know that the weekly trip to the supermarket can be a source of that pressure.

    That’s why we’re taking all of the very significant steps that we are to crack down on the supermarkets. Cracking down on the supermarkets is all about getting a fair go for families at the checkout and farmers at the farm gate. That’s what this ACCC report is all about as well. The ACCC report is about more scrutiny, more information and more competition.

    We are acting on all those fronts simultaneously. Andrew has run through all of the ways that we are doing that. Our primary focus as a government is the cost of living. And we’re coming at it from every conceivable and responsible angle – cost‑of‑living help which is already rolling out combined with keeping the supermarkets in check at the checkout. These are the important parts of our plan.

    It’s important to remember that even with the pressures that people are still under, food inflation was something like 5.9 per cent when we came to office; it’s now around half that at 3.0 per cent. What that means is we are making that progress. That progress is welcome and it is encouraging, but we’ve got more work to do because we know that people are still under the pump.

    I wanted to touch on 2 more issues briefly, and then happy to take your questions.

    First of all is in relation to digital assets. We’re releasing our statement today to give certainty and clarity to the industry and to stakeholders and to Australians more broadly about the next steps when it comes to crypto and digital assets more broadly.

    Crypto and digital assets have a role to play in our economy, and that role will grow over time. We want to make sure that the growth of this really important part of the economy happens in a way that we can be comfortable with.

    Data and digital are such an important part of our productivity agenda more broadly, and so with the appropriate framework, we believe that digital assets can make our economy more dynamic.

    We see in this area big opportunities for our financial sector, our payments industry, our capital markets and our economy more broadly. So what we’re trying to do here is seize the opportunities that come from digital assets and platforms. We want to encourage investment and innovation and growth, but we also want to make sure that that innovation and growth happens with an element of certainty and security as well.

    So we’re working with the industry and with the regulators. We’re proposing a legislative framework in 2025. We’ve already started talking with experts and regulators and interested parties about what that legislation should contain. But it’s quite a detailed statement we’ve put out there today. We’ve done that in the interests of certainty and clarity. It sets out 4 main steps that we’re taking, and it also releases the conclusions of the Board of Tax Review that we did in this really important part of the economy.

    We can be enthusiastic about this part of the economy and recognise that, in encouraging that innovation and in encouraging that dynamism that comes from data and digital, that productivity that we get in our financial sector and more broadly, we need to make sure that that’s consistent with keeping consumers and investors safe as the industry evolves quite quickly.

    The last thing I wanted to touch on was the Intelligence Review. So the Prime Minister has released the Intelligence Review in the last half hour or so. There’s a lot of uncertainty in the world and there’s a lot of risk. We will see that responded to in the Budget, and we see that responded to when it comes to the conclusions of this Intelligence Review.

    I wanted to give a big shoutout and a big thank you to Richard Maude and Heather Smith for doing the review for the government, also Andrew Shearer and his colleagues for the conversations that we have been having with them about the implementation of the Intelligence Review.

    We see this uncertainty and we see this risk in the way that national security and economic policy have become more and more intertwined. They’ve always been intertwined to some extent, but they’re now almost inseparable from each other, and that’s because so much of the uncertainty and risk that we see in the world, the geopolitical uncertainty, has an element of economic consequences attached to it as well.

    So we commissioned the review to ensure that our intelligence agencies are best placed to understand that and advise on that. We are blessed with outstanding agencies and people, and this is about supporting their crucial work. We’ve released an unclassified version of the report. As you would expect, a lot of the response will be classified, but I wanted to announce today that there will be $45 million in the budget to implement in an initial way the conclusions and recommendations of the Intelligence Review.

    This is part of a big 20 per cent increase in funding for national security that we’ve seen under the life of this government, primarily defence but funding our intelligence agencies is an important part of the story as well, $45 million in new funding, responding to the recommendations of the Intelligence Review that we are releasing today.

    With that, happy to take some questions, and we’ll start on this side for a change with Pablo.

    Journalist:

    Treasurer, the ACCC says the margins of the big 2 supermarkets have been rising over the last 5 years. So a lot of customers might be wondering how they possibly are not gouging Australians?

    Chalmers:

    There is market dominance, and that’s why we’re acting in all of the ways that Andrew ran through.

    If you think about our efforts to boost scrutiny, to boost information, to boost competition, it’s all about recognising that there is market dominance in the sector, and that’s what we are responding to in a number of ways. That’s what the ACCC is dealing with.

    Now, what the ACCC said was there’s been an increase, obviously, in grocery prices over that 5‑year period, so spanning the life of 2 governments. Those price increases slowed in 2024 in their estimation. Our price increases, they’ve gone up by less than most of the OECD is another conclusion of the report. As I said, food inflation has basically halved during our time in office.

    But there still is that market concentration. There still is that market dominance, especially by the 2 major players, and that’s why we’re taking all of the steps that we are taking in competition reform, in planning and zoning, in the mandatory Food and Grocery Code, in empowering CHOICE, funding the ACCC. All of these things are about dealing with and responding to the market dominance that the ACCC identifies.

    Journalist:

    Treasurer, we’ve spoken to farmers in places like Orange that have had to rip up orchards because of the dominance of the supermarkets. You’ve announced $2.9 million for them to stand up to supermarkets. Some of them may wake up and hear that and think they’ve been short‑changed, or is that all there is for them?

    Chalmers:

    I’ll say something about that, then I’m going to throw to Andrew because Andrew’s been a very enthusiastic advocate for helping the organisations in the way that we’re announcing today.

    This $2.9 million is about strengthening the arm of the groups which represent our farmers and our producers. We want to make sure that when supermarkets are negotiating with our farmers that we can strengthen the arguments and strengthen the arm of the people who produce our food. That’s what this funding is all about.

    Now, always organisations will always want more funding. We understand that. We’re realistic about that. But this is a new investment. It’s also not the only thing that we’re doing to empower farmers and suppliers. Making the Food and Grocery Code mandatory, the big penalties that Andrew talked about, all of this is part of the story as well. But I’ll throw to Andrew to say a few more things.

    Leigh:

    Thanks, Treasurer. It’s very clear from this report that the supermarkets have been stacking the shelves in their favour. We knew that from the report that we asked former Competition Minister Craig Emerson to do on the Food and Grocery Code. That followed a period under the former Coalition government where they had set up a toothless voluntary code and then when they reviewed it when David Littleproud was Agriculture Minister, decided to keep it, the toothless voluntary code.

    We brought into parliament multimillion dollar penalties, and the Liberals and the Nationals voted for the status quo, for the toothless voluntary code. Labor’s mandatory Food and Grocery Code of Conduct includes an ability to make anonymous complaints to the ACCC. That gets to the issue of retribution, where suppliers have said they’re too scared to speak out to the independent code assessors for fear that they won’t be able to sell their product. When you’ve got a duopoly accounting for such a big share of the market, that’s a reasonable fear.

    We’ve seen particular concerns around fresh produce suppliers, required to sign up to annual contracts but then subject to week‑to‑week bidding with the notion that if a big supermarket doesn’t take their stuff, then they’re faced with getting much lower prices at the markets. So this supplier training, which was not in place under the former government – it’s a new initiative by us – does ensure that the suppliers are going into those negotiations better prepared, better armed, better able to take on the big supermarkets.

    We’re looking not only to get a fairer deal for families at the checkout, but also a fairer deal for farmers at the farm gate.

    Journalist:

    The report’s assessment is that not much can be done about the market dominance, that it will persist, it’s already entrenched and it will keep going. Do you disagree with that? You’ve listed various things that are going on. Do you think your efforts will make a big difference to that?

    Chalmers:

    Any time you introduce more scrutiny, more information and more competition, that can only be a good thing for consumers. While the ACCC talks about this entrenched market dominance, they also provide 20 recommendations about things that we can do about it. And, as we’ve said, we accept all of those recommendations in principle, and in most of those areas we are already taking substantial steps.

    There are things that we can do and there are things that we are doing, remembering that some of the steps that we are taking, including the mandatory Food and Grocery Code, they’re yet to come in. They’re about to come in. So we should give those things the opportunity to work.

    I’ll see if Andrew wants to add to that.

    Leigh:

    Thanks, Treasurer. Just the only thing to add to that very comprehensive answer is the work we’re doing with states and territories around planning and zoning reform. So, Tom, you’d be aware of the $900 million productivity fund. That ensures that there are incentives for states and territories to think about planning and zoning through a competition lens, which hasn’t always happened.

    Australians would be familiar with the value that’s come from the growth of Aldi but also the missed opportunity from Kaufland attempting to enter the Australian market and then deciding to back off. Had measures like this been in place we might have seen a different outcome from Kaufland and we might today have a more competitive grocery market.

    So this is all about ensuring that the market is there for new entrants who are willing to enter and they have the opportunity to bring an injection of fresh competition, which is so much at the heart of this government’s economic agenda.

    Journalist:

    Treasurer, on the Budget, you’ll announce a deficit. You’ve said that that’s what you’ll do. And that’s the underlying cash. But the fiscal balance will be substantially larger because of the losses being made by everything from HECS to the Regional Investment Corporation. Do you think there is an argument to properly account for the money that is going into the economy from these off‑budget organisations and entities that are controlled by the federal government?

    Chalmers:

    A couple of things about that.

    First of all, we’re accounting for them in the usual way. We’ve not changed the way that we’re accounting for that. The difference between the headline balance and the underlying balance, what you’ll see on Tuesday is that some of the assumptions about the headline balance have not been quite right in the speculation – I say that respectfully – because in some instances what we have done already is provisioned for and included in one way or another in the mid‑year budget update.

    It’s not as simple as taking the mid-year update as the baseline for the headline balance and then adding any of the subsequent announcements. In some cases, we’ve made some responsible provisioning or allowed for it in one way or another.

    On the underlying cash balance, you’re right that this will be a deficit, but a smaller deficit than what we inherited – substantially smaller. And one of the defining themes not just of this Budget but of the whole set of 4 Budgets is that we have helped engineer a $200 billion improvement in the budget position over the years that we have been responsible for, and that is the biggest ever nominal improvement in the budget ever.

    In addition to that or part of that, we’ve delivered those 2 surpluses, we’ve got a smaller deficit this year, we’ve found more than $90 billion worth of savings, we’ve banked most of the upward revisions to revenue in our time in office, and all of that means that we’ve got the debt down substantially and we’re saving on interest cost.

    We’ve been managing the budget very responsibly to here. We will manage the budget very responsibly from here, and you’ll see that on Tuesday night.

    Journalist:

    Just talking about the Intelligence Review, are you able to say what the Review says about how the L’Estrange‑Merchant reforms from 2017 are actually progressing in terms of turning the ONA into the ONI, an intelligence body that actually directs the broader national intelligence community? And are you looking to boost the ONI’s role in terms of a director?

    Chalmers:

    The newish role for the ONI is obviously a really important one, and you’ll see when you go through the detail of the unclassified report, which is on the web now, you’ll see how we’ve dealt with the evolution of our agencies from L’ Estrange through to the Maude‑Smith report and what we intend to do about it.

    You’ll also see, as I’ve said earlier on, that there are some ways that we can fund in an initial sense $45 million in 2 parts – 30 and 15 – which is all about strengthening the role of these agencies in our intelligence armoury.

    I’d encourage you to read the report. I acknowledge it’s only just gone up. You wouldn’t have had a chance to read it in between then and coming to this press conference. But have a squiz at it, and if you want to have a conversation about it separately, we can do that.

    Journalist:

    You’ve had it for 9 months. You’re releasing it on the same day as this significant ACCC report. What does that say about scrutiny, and is there anything in it that you don’t like?

    Chalmers:

    It’s a really important report. The reason why we have taken the time – I acknowledge we have taken the time – to go through it. And without going into the detail of the discussions, it’s because we’ve worked through it with the other members of the National Security Committee in a very methodical, very considered, very careful way, because there’s a lot of in it. And I think people would expect us to do that, to work through it in a methodical way.

    In terms of the timing of the release. I wanted to release it today because I see it as important.

    It is part of the Budget on Tuesday night and I didn’t want it to be lost in that. I wanted to bring it out and indicate – because there has been some commentary about how long we’ve had it – I wanted to make it clear, the Prime Minister wanted to make it clear in making the announcement this morning that the recommendations of the review are really important – important enough for us to allocate an extra $45 million in a tight budget.

    Journalist:

    Katy, have you identified any more savings in this Budget and, if so, how much?

    Gallagher:

    You’ll see the same approach we’ve taken in previous budgets so – where we’ve found savings in every budget. We’ll have more to say on that in the lead‑up to the Budget. But we’ve taken the same approach – looking to find savings, reprioritise. The approach we’ve taken on the last 3 Budgets you’ll see in the fourth. But you’ll have to wait a bit more for the detail on that.

    Journalist:

    The Prime Minister already said you’re going to have a Buy Australian component in the Budget. Is it going to be sort of more than flim flam? Are you worried – or do we no longer need to worry, because we’ve had procurement programs in the past where we’ve had to be mindful of breaching our WTO obligations. Given that Trump’s torn up the rule book, do we care about that anymore when it comes to your decision‑making on procurement?

    Chalmers:

    I’ll throw to Katy in a sec on procurement, but there are 2 issues here – they’re related but separate.

    The issue that the Prime Minister has been talking about in response to the announcement out of DC on the steel and aluminium tariffs is about encouraging Australians to buy Australian and to recognise that we’ve got wonderful Australian products, and if people are unhappy with the tariffs being levied on us then they can vote with their feet and buy Australian products.

    There will be some funding in the Budget to support a Buy Australian campaign.

    Separate to that is how we procure Australian goods and services, and Katy’s got an important role to play in that, so I’ll throw to her.

    Gallagher:

    We’ve been doing quite a lot of work under the procurement policy where we can. So in the last month or so we’ve announced with the work I’ve been doing with Ed Husic the definition of an Australian business for the first time. Previously it’s sort of been captured by your ABN, but that doesn’t really, as you know, define an Australian business. So we’ve worked with industry to do that. We’ll have that definition. That will help us track exactly how much we are procuring.

    And also in the value‑for‑money assessments, not just having that on cost but broadening out value‑for‑money assessments from the Commonwealth.

    We want to use procurement. We’re a big procurer of services and programs, and we want to make sure that we are using the capacity of the Commonwealth to drive better outcomes for Australian businesses.

    There are some constraints, as you say, under our free trade agreements and things like that, but we see there’s a lot of opportunity to think about how we use the Commonwealth spend to drive good outcomes here for Australian business.

    And all the discussions I’ve had with Australian business, they don’t want favouritism, they don’t want preferential treatment. They just want a level playing field, and that’s what we’re trying to create through the procurement programs.

    Journalist:

    Will that be in the Budget – sorry, Minister? That procurement stuff, or is it more just the campaign?

    Gallagher:

    We’ve been rolling out the Buy Australian plan through the last couple of years. We did the announcement on Australian business I think within the last 3 weeks or so. And we’ll update the guidelines, the procurement guidelines and rules.

    Chalmers:

    I might just say something more broadly about that and then we’ll finish up.

    Australians are huge beneficiaries of the rules of international trade. We’re a trade exposed economy. We’ve got a lot of skin in the game when it comes to the way that these trade tensions are escalating.

    But the rules of the global economy are being rewritten, which goes to your point about the WTO, Phil.

    We’re in a whole new world of uncertainty, and a big part of that is the new policies of a new administration in DC, but that’s not the only part of it.

    Two major conflicts – Eastern Europe and the Middle East, slowdown in China, political division and dissatisfaction around the world, places like Korea, France and elsewhere. This is a whole new world of uncertainty.

    The reason I finish on this point is because this is one of the key influences on the Budget.

    There are 2 big influences on the Budget – global economic uncertainty from which we are not immune. Like everyone around the world, we want to make sure that we can be beneficiaries of the way that the world is churning and changing, not victims of that. Big part of our efforts, huge influence on the Budget.

    The other one is the pressures that we acknowledge that people are still under, despite our really quite substantial, significant, meaningful progress on inflation and unemployment and growth rebounding, the private sector reclaiming its rightful role as a driver of growth in our economy. We know that people are still under pressure.

    That’s why the Budget is going to be about those 2 things. It’s going to be about helping people with the cost of living where we can do that in an affordable and a responsible way. And it’s going to be about making our economy stronger and more resilient in the face of this global economic uncertainty which is upending the world. That’s what you’ll see on Tuesday night. Those are really the 2 main themes, the 2 main influences and the 2 main sets of responses that you can expect to see.

    Thanks very much.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-Evening Report: How will the history-making new Olympics boss shape sports worldwide, and in Australia?

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Richard Baka, Honorary Professor, School of Kinesiology, Western University, London, Canada; Adjunct Fellow, Olympic Scholar and Co-Director of the Olympic and Paralympic Research Centre, Institute for Health and Sport, Victoria University

    In a surprisingly emphatic result, 41-year-old Kirsty Coventry, Zimbabwe’s Sport Minister, was selected as the new president of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) at its 144th session in Greece.

    Coventry is the first woman, the first African, and the youngest person ever to take on the role.

    So how did she rise to this position, and what should sports in Australia and globally expect?

    Unpacking the votes

    Coventry comes well-credentialed as a five-time Olympic swimmer, representing Zimbabwe from 2000 to 2016 and winning seven medals, two of them gold.

    An IOC member since 2013, Coventry was initially an athlete-elected member.

    She has taken on various IOC roles, including most recently on the Coordination Committee for the Brisbane 2032 Olympic and Paralympic Games.

    Although Coventry was one of the three favourites, along with Sebastian Coe from the United Kingdom and Juan Antonio Samaranch Jr from Spain (son of the previous IOC President Juan Antonio Samaranch), she won the vote in a landslide on the first ballot, securing 49 votes of the 97.

    Having obtained the required 50% majority, no further rounds were held.

    So begins a new dawn for the IOC’s now extremely powerful inaugural woman leader, who will face several challenges.

    How did she win?

    Foremost, Coventry had longstanding president Thomas Bach’s informal endorsement and support.

    Bach no doubt had a huge sway over the voting members, many of whom were elected to the IOC during his 12-year reign.

    Bach’s appointment as Honorary President for Life from June this year means he will still have a powerful role and be able to mentor and influence Coventry.

    A lack of transparent voting for the position means we cannot know who voted for whom. Some will presume the new president garnered the majority of votes from women and African delegates, but such an observation can only be speculative.

    With women comprising 43% of IOC members, it is a reasonable assumption this cohort provided a strong support base.

    Several candidates proposed quite significant (and in some cases radical) changes, suggesting a vote for Coventry was a nod to keeping the status quo.

    Or was it just time to break the hold of male presidents?

    The 2024 Paris Olympics were the first games with equal 50-50 men-women participation. The IOC membership has also changed over the past few decades, with growing representation of women. As a result, its long-held reputation as an “old boys’ club” is slowly shifting.

    Coventry triumphed despite previous doubts about her domestic political ties, and a limited change agenda that seemed to be mainly a legacy choice for Bach.

    In this context, Bach might continue to exert his influence.

    Global challenges for the new president

    As Olympic Agenda 2020+5 draws to its end, the new president will have the opportunity to set a future-focused strategy.

    There are plenty of areas she will need to consider in taking the reins. Here are our top ten:

    1. Safeguarding athletes. The provision of safe spaces for sport is an area of global concern as the incidents of athlete harm are brought to light.

    2. Environmental, sustainability and global warming issues, such as lack of snow for the winter games, venue rationale, spending on mega events, and lack of bidders for future games.

    3. The impact of AI and digital transformation on all aspects of sport, from athlete performance and officiating to governance and management.

    4. Bidding processes for future host cities.

    5. Transgender athletes and diversity, equity and inclusion considerations.

    6. The (Australian-initiated) proposal for the pharmaceutical free-for-all Enhanced Games.

    7. Sponsorship changes – longtime sponsors Toyota and Panasonic have dropped out but others have come in, with some from China.

    8. Relations with Russia and the United States

    9. Athlete advocacy – perhaps giving the athletes more of the financial windfall the Olympics generate.

    10. Addition of new sports and culling or dropping existing less popular ones.




    Read more:
    Cricket? Lacrosse? Netball? The new sports that might make it to the 2032 Brisbane Olympic Games


    What about Australia?

    Coventry comes from an impressive swimming background, and this could work to Australia’s advantage.

    Although she will step down from her role on the Coordination Committee for the Brisbane Olympics and Paralympics to handle other pressing presidential duties, she will no doubt retain a close link to the third Australian Olympic host city.

    The Australian Olympic Commission was quick to congratulate her on her ascension to the IOC presidency.

    Coventry knows AOC President Ian Chesterman, a fellow IOC member, so we can expect a close, friendly working relationship between them.

    With the Brisbane games only seven years away, the new IOC president will certainly have a strong vested interest in Australia and aspects of the Olympic and Paralympic movement in this part of the world.

    Tracy Taylor is on the Olympic Studies Centre Grant Award committee.

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

    ref. How will the history-making new Olympics boss shape sports worldwide, and in Australia? – https://theconversation.com/how-will-the-history-making-new-olympics-boss-shape-sports-worldwide-and-in-australia-252623

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Save the Children – Young ocean champions off to France for Global Summit

    Source: Save the Children

    Six young Kiwi ocean advocates, alongside representatives from WWF-New Zealand and Save the Children New Zealand, will travel to France this week to attend a global Ocean Citizen Summit aimed at exploring solutions to better protect our ocean and accelerate youth-led ocean action.
    The global forum, hosted at Nausicaá, Centre National de la Mer in Boulogne sur Mer, France, brings together more than 60 youth representatives from around the world to share the insights and solutions from their regions.
    Together, with senior experts in marine science and advocacy, they will identify individual and collective responses to five key challenges of the United Nations Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development: changing humanity’s relationship with the ocean; unlocking ocean-based solutions to climate change, protecting and restoring marine ecosystems and biodiversity, developing a sustainable and equitable ocean economy and understanding and beating marine pollution from source to sea.
    The world’s oceans and seas are critical to our planet’s health, covering 71% of the Earth’s surface, producing 50% of our oxygen, feeding over 3 billion people, and absorbing 1/3 of global CO2 emissions. However, they face severe threats from climate change, pollution, overfishing, and ocean acidification. The Ocean Citizen Summit aims to empower young people to address these pressing challenges at both local and global levels.
    “Young people have the most to lose from climate and ocean degradation, as they will experience the long-term consequences,” says Save the Children Advocacy Director Jacqui Southey.
    “That’s why youth voices are crucial in these global conversations, particularly Pacific youth who are experiencing the impact of the world’s changing climate first hand. Here in Aotearoa, our marine environment is an important part of our lives and national and cultural identities, but sadly it is facing many threats, with unsustainable fishing, plastic pollution and climate change pushing our marine species and habitats to the brink of extinction.”
    WWF-New Zealand’s CEO Dr Kayla Kingdon-Bebb says the global summit is an amazing opportunity for the New Zealand group to meet other ocean youth champions from around the world.
    “I’m so proud that our rangatahi will be representing us on the world stage in France. This is a chance for these talented ocean conservation advocates to discuss global ocean conservation issues, share a Pacific perspective, and help shape the United Nations’ Ocean Citizen Charter.”
    The six youth advocates were selected following a series of ocean workshops held by WWF-New Zealand and Save the Children New Zealand in late 2024.
    Alongside Save the Children Youth Engagement Coordinator Vira Paky and WWF New Zealand’s Conservation Impact Advisor Carolyn Aguilar, the six youth delegates are:
    Quack Pirihi (Ngāpuhi, Ngāti Wai, Ngāti Whātua ki Kaipara, Patuharakeke) is a takatāpui activist, storyteller, and community organiser from Aotearoa, working at the intersection of indigenous sovereignty, climate justice, and queer liberation. Their mahi centres on rangatahi takatāpui empowerment, kaupapa Māori, and resisting environmental destruction. As the Founder and Director of Mana Āniwaniwa, Quack uplifts takatāpui and rangatahi Māori voices in decolonial and climate movements. A staunch opponent of deep-sea mining, Quack has spoken internationally, advocating for moana as an extension of whakapapa. In 2023, they joined the Pacific delegation to the International Seabed Authority conference, challenging corporate and colonial interests. Through storytelling and activism, Quack amplifies indigenous resistance to extractivism, pushing for solutions grounded in mātauranga Māori and a future where whenua, moana, and tangata thrive.
    Lottie Stevenson was born in Westport/Kawatiri on the West Coast of Te Waipounamu, and has lived close to the ocean her whole life. She earned her Bachelor of Science in Geography, studying at universities in Wellington/Te Whanganui-a-Tara and The Netherlands. Her recently completed Master’s thesis examines Antarctic paleoclimate and glaciology, including a chapter advocating for decolonising Antarctic research. She aims to foster collaboration across borders, ultimately driving collective action for Papatūānuku (Earth Mother). Lottie largely splits her time between mountains and sea, being an avid tramper, beach-cleaner, and aspiring environmental activist.
    Kat Cooper’s background is in marine biology and geography with a special interest in sharks, the deep sea, and queer ecology. Having just submitted their Master’s in marine biology they spend their time baking, annoying their flatmates, and volunteering. Love of the ocean began for Kat with their dad in the big blue backyard of Tāmaki Makaurau, with summers spent camping by the beach or snorkelling. To Kat, the way forward for ocean conservation is taking a holistic view of ocean ecosystems that acknowledges the place of people within the ecosystem, and emphasises the importance of indigenous knowledge. The Citizens of the Ocean Summit is Kat’s first international event, and they’re excited to explore the varied perspectives of the other delegates, and work together to create change.
    Maia Horn Nō hea Whāngārā Mai Tawhiti ahau. Spending my childhood summers in Whāngārā fostered my deep love and connection to the ocean and there has never been any doubt in my mind about the career I have dreamt of. Growing up with the tale of the Whale rider, Paikea also meant that I aspire to study tohorā as they are not only ecologically significant, but also culturally significant to Māori.
    Wei Heng Pok (卜炜衡) is a Climate & Sustainability consultant based in Tāmaki Makaurau (Auckland) at Edge Impact. An advocate for indigenous solidarity, climate policy, and justice, Pok has contributed to prominent forums such as the Nobel Prize Dialogue, the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting in Davos, COP26, and TIME Magazine. Outside of work, he serves on the Strategic Council of Climate Catalyst and was a former Climate Justice Design Partner for the World Economic Forum. Constantly unlearning and unlearning, he hopes to find his way home as he works on decolonising his identity. His most recent projects are building on regenerative soil practice within community-supported agriculture, alongside tracing his genealogy back to China.
    Veronica Rotman is a marine scientist, tertiary lecturer, science communicator and doctoral student. Her entire life revolves around the ocean, for work, for play and for kaimoana gathering, having grown up freediving and spearfishing in the frosty water of Te Waipounamu. Veronica is a TEDx speaker, has delivered many public talks and university lectures, and sat on the Sustainable Seas National Science Challenge Stakeholder Panel for five years. Her proudest mahi has been setting up and delivering the first remote tertiary training in sustainable aquaculture and marine science to Mana Whenua of the Muriwhenua in Kaitaia. The purpose of this was to empower students with knowledge and skills to get jobs and set up their own ventures. Veronica is in the final year of her PhD titled: Ki uta ki tai (mountains to sea): microplastics in Southern Aotearoa, that hopes to highlight the interconnectedness of terrestrial, freshwater and marine environments and to promote mountains to sea management. Her previous research looked into the physiological impacts of microplastics on snapper, incidence of microplastics in wild fish, and microplastics in aquaculture systems.
    The Citizen of the Ocean Youth-led Summit is being held March 25-28 2025. It aligns youth advocacy with global agreements like the Paris Agreement, the UN Sustainable Development Goal 14 (Life Below Water), the UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development and the European Union’s Mission “Restore our Ocean and Waters” 
    About Save the Children NZ:
    Save the Children works in 120 countries across the world. The organisation responds to emergencies and works with children and their communities to ensure they survive, learn and are protected.
    Save the Children NZ currently supports international programmes in Fiji, Cambodia, Bangladesh, Laos, Nepal, Vanuatu, Solomon Islands and Papua New Guinea. Areas of work include child protection, education and literacy, disaster risk reduction and climate adaptation, and alleviating child poverty.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Energy and Business – Equinor presents 2024 Annual report

    Source: Equinor

    20 MARCH 2025 – “2024 was marked by continued unpredictability in energy markets, with growing energy demand, political uncertainty and uneven progress in the energy transition. Our focus is on producing the energy the world needs today, and at the same time developing the energy systems needed for the future,” says Anders Opedal, President and CEO of Equinor ASA.

    Safety

    “A systematic approach to safety over time is paying off with the best safety results to date in 2024. However, the year was marked by the fatal search and rescue (SAR) helicopter accident where we lost a dear colleague. We believe close collaboration with suppliers and shared learning in the industry is important for our continued safety improvement effort”, says Opedal.

    The twelve-month average Serious Incident Frequency (SIF) for 2024 was 0.3, down from 0.4 in 2023.

    Strong operational and financial performance

    Equinor delivered adjusted operating income* of USD 29.8 billion, and adjusted net income* of USD 9.18. Net operating income was reported at USD 30.9 billion and net income at USD 8.83 billion.

    “Our operational performance was strong, built on the dedicated efforts from employees across the company. Our role as a major supplier of energy to Europe is important and I am proud of the work we have done to provide energy security”, says Opedal.

    Strong operational performance across the portfolio contributed to an equity production of liquids and gas of 2,067 mboe per day in 2024, on par with the year before. Equity production of renewable power increased by 51% to 2,935 GWh.

    Strong financial result contributed to a return on average capital employed (RoACE)* at 21% for 2024. Capital discipline remained firm with organic capital expenditures* ending at USD 12.1 billion for the year. Equinor maintained a strong balance sheet with net debt to capital employed adjusted* of 11.9% at the end of 2024.

    The strong financial results of 2024 also led to strong contributions to society through taxes. In 2024, Equinor paid USD 20.6 billion in corporate income taxes of which USD 19.7 billion was paid in Norway, where Equinor has the largest share of its operations and earnings.

    Firm strategy and progressing industrial development

    “We have a consistent growth strategy, and our strategic direction remains firm. By adapting to market situation and opportunities, we are positioned for stronger free cash flow and growth, and set to create shareholder value for decades to come”, Opedal continues.

    Through progressing projects and portfolio shaping transactions Equinor spent 2024 high-grading the portfolio and positioning for stronger growth and cash flow.

    On the Norwegian continental shelf, the development of the portfolio continued with 39 new licences and approvals of the PDOs of Eirin, Irpa, Verdande and Andvare projects. The Johan Castberg FPSO arrived at the field and started preparations for startup.

    The international upstream portfolio was focused with the exits from our long-standing positions in Nigeria and Azerbaijan and deepened in core areas with the acquisitions of US Onshore gas assets close to premium markets. In the UK an agreement was signed to establish an incorporated joint venture with Shell UK Ltd., which will become the largest independent oil and gas company on the UK continental shelf.

    Through 2024 Equinor high-graded the renewables portfolio to ensure profitable growth, in a market challenged by cost inflation and regulatory delays. In the UK the world’s largest offshore wind farm, Dogger Bank, continued to progress towards commercial start-up. Production was commenced at the Mendubim solar plants in Brazil.

    The long-term view on the importance of offshore wind remains firm. Through an acquisition of a 10% stake in Ørsted, Equinor got exposure to a premium portfolio of offshore wind projects and assets in operation.

    Value chains for carbon transport and storage progressed notably. In Norway, Northern Lights, the first commercial CO2 transport and storage infrastructure was completed and is expected to receive and store CO2 in 2025. In the UK, execution started for two of UK’s first carbon capture and storage infrastructure projects where Equinor is a partner.

    Progress on the Energy transition plan

    In 2024, Equinor achieved a year-on-year reduction of 5% in operated scope 1+2 greenhouse gas emissions, bringing the total down to 11.0 million tonnes CO2 equivalents. This is a 34% reduction from 2015, which is the reference year for Equinor’s ambition to reduce group-wide operated emissions by 50% on a net basis by 2030. Throughout 2024, actions were taken for further emission reductions with the partial electrification of the Sleipner field center, the Gudrun platform, as well as the Troll B and C fields.

    The average upstream CO2 intensity of Equinor’s operated portfolio was 6.2 kg of CO2 per boe in 2024 (100% basis), an improvement from 6.7kg of CO2/boe in 2023 and well below the industry average. The scope 3 GHG emissions from use of our products were 251 million tonnes in 2024, on par with the level in 2023.

    Equinor improved in the net carbon intensity of energy produced (including scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions) in 2024, which is now 2% below the 2019 baseline. The reduction was mainly driven by increased renewable energy production and lower scope 1+2 emissions.

    Equinor ambition is to to be a leading company in the energy transition. The updated Energy Transition Plan, published on March 20 2025, outlines the approach to deliver on Equinor’s strategy of creating value in the transition, while adjusting to changing external context and market realities.

    ***

    The previously announced decision of the French Energy Regulatory Commission (CRE), includes a requirement for Equinor to publish the following summary language:

    “Les sociétés Danske Commodities A/S et Equinor ASA ont été condamnées, par une décision n° 08-40-23 de la Commission de régulation de l’énergie (CRE) du 20 janvier 2025, au titre de la méconnaissance de l’article 5 du règlement REMIT qui prohibe les manipulations de marché, au paiement de sanctions pécuniaires, dont les montants s’élèvent à huit millions d’euros (8.000.000 €) pour la société Danske Commodities A/S et quatre millions d’euros (4.000.000 €) pour la société Equinor ASA, pour des manipulations commises sur le marché de gros en 2019 et en 2020, en ce qui concerne les capacités de transport de gaz naturel entre la France et l’Espagne.

    Danske Commodities A/S and Equinor ASA were ordered by decision no. 08-40-23 of Commission de régulation de l’énergie (CRE) of 20 January 2025 to pay – for infringement of Article 5 of REMIT Regulation prohibiting market manipulations – financial penalties in the amount of eight million euros (€8,000,000) as regards Danske Commodities A/S and four million euros (€4,000,000) as regards Equinor ASA, for manipulations committed on the wholesale market in 2019 and 2020, with regard to natural gas transmission capacity between France and Spain.”

    The full decision is included in the attached appendix “Full decision text”. Equinor does not agree with the decision from CRE and will appeal the case to the Higher Administrative Court in France.

    Our annual report and the subsidiary reports published separately can be downloaded from equinor.com/reports.

    In accordance with Section 203.01 of the New York Stock Exchange Listed Company Manual, Equinor ASA announces that on 20 March 2025 it filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission its 2024 Annual Report on Form 20-F that includes audited financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2024.

    The Equinor 2024 Annual Report on Form 20-F may be downloaded from Equinor’s website at www.equinor.com. References to this document or other documents on Equinor’s website are included as an aid to their location and are not incorporated by reference into this document. All SEC filings made available electronically by Equinor may be obtained from the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov.

    Shareholders may also request a hard copy of the annual report free of charge at www.equinor.com.

    (*) These are non-GAAP figures. See Use and reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures in the annual report for more details.

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-Evening Report: ACCC finds Australia’s supermarkets are among the world’s most profitable – but doesn’t accuse them of price gouging

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Gary Mortimer, Professor of Marketing and Consumer Behaviour, Queensland University of Technology

    Daria Nipot/Shutterstock

    Australia’s supermarket sector has endured a long, uncomfortable moment in the spotlight. There have been six comprehensive inquiries into its conduct, pricing practices, and specifically claims of “price gouging”, over the past 18 months.

    Today, the long-awaited final report from the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) Supermarkets Inquiry has been released, more than 400 pages long.

    It finds Australia’s supermarkets are highly profitable by international standards, ranking among the highest in their peer group. But it did not find the supermarkets were price gouging. In fact, it didn’t even mention the phrase.

    How we got here

    In February 2024, the federal government formally directed the ACCC to investigate the competitiveness of retail prices in Australia’s supermarket sector. It was the first inquiry of its kind since 2008.

    The move followed widespread allegations the supermarkets had been price gouging – using the cover of high inflation to jack up prices even higher.

    The interim report from the ACCC’s inquiry, released in September, found the supermarket industry was highly concentrated, and reported many suppliers had raised concerns about “being exploited”.




    Read more:
    ‘Concerning’: ACCC interim report on supermarket inquiry tells of supplier woes and ‘oligopolistic’ market


    Highly profitable supermarkets

    The ACCC’s final report found Australian supermarkets appear highly profitable when compared with their international peers.

    ALDI’s, Coles’ and Woolworths’ average earnings before interest and tax margins were noted to be “among the highest of supermarket businesses in relevant comparator countries”.

    Average net profit after tax margins were similar to Walmart in the United States, Dutch-Belgian Ahold Delhaise, and Tesco in the United Kingdom, but below Canada’s Loblaw supermarkets.

    The inquiry found ALDI acted as a “price constraint” on Coles and Woolworths. But as a low-cost operator, ALDI does not compete with them “head-to-head” on all product offerings.

    It found while independent grocers provided a “valuable alternative”, consumers in regional areas were disadvantaged by higher freight costs and higher prices.

    ALDI’s, Coles’ and Woolworths’ store networks have expanded since the last inquiry in 2008, leading to greater “geographic overlap” and increased competition between their stores.

    Rising grocery prices

    The report notes that between late 2022 and early 2023, grocery prices were rising at more than twice the rate of wages. Supply chains took a big hit in the pandemic and its wake.

    Since March 2019, food and grocery prices have increased by about 24%, but this is still less than in many other OECD countries.

    The report notes input costs for supermarkets have increased dramatically since the pandemic. However, it says the fact supermarkets have also increased certain margins during this time means:

    at least some of the grocery price increases have resulted in additional profits for ALDI, Coles and Woolworths.

    Supermarkets often did not engage with suppliers “meaningfully” in relation to trading terms. Rebates paid by suppliers were opaque, complex and not well understood.

    The report found ALDI had been increasing its prices at a faster annual rate than Coles or Woolworths, particularly between 2022 and 2024.

    The ACCC investigated concerns suppliers lacked bargaining power when negotiating with the big supermarkets.
    Hypervision Creative/Shutterstock

    Was there any evidence of price gouging?

    Quite simply, no. And there appears to be no hard evidence of the practice from other inquiries either.

    A range of other inquiries into supermarket pricing and conduct at state and federal level have published findings in the past year, many centring on this very question:

    The ACTU report refers to price gouging 43 times, but no evidence is offered. Theories and possible economic impacts of price gouging and anti-competitive behaviour are presented.

    The Senate Select Committee report mentions “price gouging” at least 50 times, saying on whether price gouging exists in the supermarket sector – “the answer seems to be resounding yes”.

    However, a closer analysis again finds no actual evidence. Instead, the committee highlights that Australia’s “concentrated” supermarket sector, “potentially [creates] an environment for anti-competitive practices and price gouging”.

    The interim and final reports from the independent review into the Food and Grocery Code of Conduct mention “price gouging” multiple times. However, they don’t offer any evidence, instead referring to claims in the ACTU Report.

    Neither the ACCC inquiry’s interim report nor its final report mention “price gouging”.

    ACCC recommendations

    While the ACCC acknowledges there is no “silver bullet” to address competition issues in the supermarket sector, it offers 20 recommendations.

    Making it easier for smaller supermarket competitors to enter and expand in the market was one area of focus. Recommendations include simplifying planning and zoning rules, and encouraging governments of all levels to support community-owned supermarkets in remote areas.

    The ACCC also recommends supermarkets be required to publish notifications when “adverse” package size changes occur. This is commonly referred to as “shrinkflation”.

    Other notable recommendations include:

    • a requirement to provide an “independent” body weekly data about prices paid to fresh produce suppliers
    • a review of loyalty program practices in three years’ time
    • minimum information requirements for discount price promotions.

    The report did not recommend divestiture or breaking up the big supermarkets.

    Will Australians see lower grocery prices?

    The widely popular narrative of “stamping out price gouging” by dragging supermarket chief executives into public hearings and threatening them with jail time might have inferred such inquiries would lead to lower food prices. In isolation, they have not.

    The federal government says it agrees in principle with the recommendations. In its initial response, it has announced $2.9 million will be provided over three years for “targeted education programs” to help suppliers understand their rights.

    Gary Mortimer receives funding from the Building Employer Confidence and Inclusion in Disability Grant, AusIndustry Entrepreneurs’ Program, National Clothing Textiles Stewardship Scheme, National Retail Association, Australian Retailers Association.

    ref. ACCC finds Australia’s supermarkets are among the world’s most profitable – but doesn’t accuse them of price gouging – https://theconversation.com/accc-finds-australias-supermarkets-are-among-the-worlds-most-profitable-but-doesnt-accuse-them-of-price-gouging-250503

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI China: Hong Kong, Macao, overseas compatriots commemorate 20th anniversary of Anti-Secession Law

    Source: China State Council Information Office 2

    Through a variety of events, compatriots from Hong Kong, Macao and overseas recently commemorated the 20th anniversary of the enforcement of China’s Anti-Secession Law.
    They commended the significance of the law in deterring separatist activities aimed at “Taiwan independence,” stemming external interference, safeguarding national sovereignty and territorial integrity, and ensuring peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait.
    Two decades ago, China’s top legislature voted to adopt the Anti-Secession Law. To mark the law’s enforcement since then, a symposium was held earlier this month in Beijing, stressing firm action against “Taiwan independence” separatist activities and foreign interference.
    Echoing the message sent during the Beijing symposium, Yiu Chi-shing, president of the Hong Kong Association for Promotion of Peaceful Reunification of China, said in a seminar on March 15 that no individual or force can stop the invincible trend of China’s reunification.
    Attendees of the seminar, held by the association to mark the 20th anniversary of the Anti-Secession Law, unanimously stressed the need to understand the significant role of the law, to promote cross-Strait exchanges and cooperation, and to advance the reunification of the motherland.
    On March 16, the Macao-based organization for promoting China’s peaceful reunification also held a seminar to mark the anniversary.
    Over the past 20 years, the legal framework for punishing “Taiwan independence” separatist activities has been further refined, while systems and policies in furtherance of Taiwan compatriots’ well-being have been improved, according to the seminar.
    Focusing on the same theme, the Alliance for China’s Peaceful Reunification, USA, recently held a seminar and issued a joint statement.
    The implementation of the law over the past two decades has formed a widely accepted consensus in the international community that red lines on the Taiwan question shall not be crossed, the statement said.
    From this anniversary forward, overseas Chinese in the United States will continue to make contributions to China’s cause of national reunification and rejuvenation, according to the statement.
    On March 15, the All Africa Association for Peaceful Reunification of China issued a joint statement that hails the significance of the law and condemns the separatist forces seeking “Taiwan independence” and the external forces supporting them.
    Overseas Chinese compatriots in France, Spain, Serbia, Germany, Australia, Japan, Canada, Indonesia and other countries also joined in the commemoration, voicing the common aspiration of Chinese both at home and abroad to oppose “Taiwan independence” and foreign interference and to advance the great cause of national reunification.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Trump says US to sign rare earth minerals deal with Ukraine

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    U.S. President Donald Trump said on Thursday that he will sign a rare earth minerals deal with Ukraine “very shortly.”

    “We are doing good work with Ukraine and Russia. And one of the things we are doing is signing a deal very shortly with respect to rare earth with Ukraine,” the president said.

    Trump made the remarks shortly after he signed an executive order to invoke emergency powers to “dramatically increase production of critical minerals and rare earths.”

    “We’re also signing agreements in various locations to unlock rare earths and minerals and lots of other things all over the world, but in particular Ukraine,” Trump said.

    He said last month that he asked Ukraine to provide the United States rare earth worth 500 billion U.S. dollars.

    “I told them [Ukraine] that I want the equivalent like $500B worth of rare earth. And they’ve essentially agreed to do that so at least we don’t feel stupid,” Trump said in an interview with Fox News at the time.

    Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky were scheduled to sign a deal at the end of February in Washington that would grant Washington access to Ukraine’s mineral deposits.

    However, the deal remained unsigned after Zelensky’s meeting in the Oval Office with Trump and his deputy JD Vance turned into a heated exchange.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Kremlin says Russia, US to hold talks Monday

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    The next round of Russia-U.S. talks on Ukraine will be held on Monday in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Russian presidential aide Yuri Ushakov said Thursday.

    The Russian delegation will be led by Grigory Karasin, chairman of the committee on international affairs in Russia’s upper house, and Sergey Beseda, adviser to the head of Russia’s Federal Security Service, Ushakov said.

    Ushakov said he had a phone call with U.S. National Security Advisor Michael Waltz on Wednesday, during which they discussed organizing a meeting of expert groups, mainly to explore the prospects for possible implementation of the Black Sea initiative.

    The Kremlin said Tuesday that Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.S. President Donald Trump agreed to begin talks to further work out specific details of an agreement regarding the safety of navigation in the Black Sea. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Three More Defendants Plead Guilty in Large Bank Fraud Conspiracy

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    ALBANY, NEW YORK – Davon Hunter, age 27, of Richmond, Virginia, Christian Quivers, age 20, of Richmond, and Crystal Kurschner, age 44, of Brooklyn, New York, have pled guilty for their respective roles in a bank fraud conspiracy. United States Attorney John A. Sarcone III and Craig L. Tremaroli, Special Agent in Charge of the Albany Field Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), made the announcement.

    As part of their pleas, Hunter, Quivers, and Kurschner each admitted that they were members of a conspiracy to defraud financial institutions all over the country by obtaining the personal identifying information (“PII”) of victims and using lower-level “workers” to impersonate the identity-theft victims to conduct fraudulent banking transactions in their names.  As part of a plea agreement entered today, Quivers admitted that he was a supervisor in the conspiracy and relayed instructions he obtained from supervisors, including Oluwaseun Adekoya, Kani Bassie, and Hunter, to lower-level members of the conspiracy who impersonated identity-theft victims and conducted fraudulent transactions in their names.  As part of a plea agreement entered earlier this week, Kurschner admitted that she was a “worker” who impersonated identity-theft victims and provided most of the fraud proceeds to her supervisors.  Earlier this month, Hunter admitted that he was a manager of the conspiracy who received directions and PII from supervisors including Adekoya and Bassie and orchestrated fraudulent transactions on their behalf.

    Hunter and Quivers each pled guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit bank fraud and one count of aggravated identity theft.  Kurschner pled guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit bank fraud. 

    These remaining defendants are charged as follows in the second superseding indictment: 

    • Adekoya, age 39, a Nigerian citizen living in Cliffside Park, New Jersey, is charged with one count of conspiracy to commit bank fraud, one count of money laundering conspiracy, and nine counts of aggravated identity theft;
    • Bassie, age 36, of Brooklyn, is charged with one count of conspiracy to commit bank fraud, one count of money laundering conspiracy, and two counts of aggravated identity theft; and
    • Jermon Brooks, age 20, of Richmond, Virginia, is charged with conspiracy to commit bank fraud and one count of aggravated identity theft.

    As to these defendants, the charges in the second superseding indictment are merely accusations. These remaining defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

    The prosecution is the result of an ongoing investigation led by the U.S. Attorney’s Office and FBI-Albany, which began after the May 2022 arrest of Daniyan, Gaysha Kennedy, age 46, of Brooklyn, and Victor Barriera, age 64, of the Bronx, by the Cohoes Police Department after the trio traveled to the Capital Region to commit bank fraud.  According to documents previously filed in the case, the investigation has uncovered over $1.7 million in fraudulent transactions to date.  Eleven defendants have pled guilty and forfeited hundreds of thousands of dollars in proceeds, luxury apparel, and jewelry.

    At sentencing later this year, Hunter, Quivers, and Kurschner each face a maximum term of 30 years’ incarceration for the bank fraud conspiracy, and Hunter and Quivers each face a mandatory consecutive term of 2 years’ incarceration for their convictions of aggravated identity theft.  The defendants will be ordered to pay restitution and will also face a term of post-incarceration supervised release of up to 5 years. 

    FBI Albany is investigating the case, with assistance from the FBI Field Offices in New York, Newark, Richmond and Resident Agencies in Westchester, New York; Brooklyn/Queens, New York; Garrett Mountain, New Jersey; and Fort Walton Beach, Florida.  Additional assistance was provided by other law enforcement agencies, including Immigration and Customs Enforcement – Enforcement & Removal Operations (New York Field Office & Albany sub-office); U.S. Department of State Diplomatic Security Service (Buffalo Field Office & St. Albans Resident Office); U.S. Social Security Administration – Office of the Inspector General; New York law enforcement agencies including the New York State Police; Cohoes PD; Colonie PD; Elmira PD; Corning PD; Plattsburgh PD; Florida law enforcement agencies including the Okaloosa County Sheriff’s Office and Escambia County Sheriff’s Office; the Pennsylvania State Police; Alabama law enforcement agencies including the Calhoun County Sheriff’s Office, Gasden PD, and Rainbow City PD; Georgia law enforcement agencies including the Georgia State Patrol, Bartow County Sheriff’s Office, and Morrow PD; Kansas law enforcement agencies including Lawrence PD and Overland Park PD; New Hampshire law enforcement agencies including Rochester PD, Manchester PD, and Amherst PD; the Delaware State Police; Maryland law enforcement agencies including the Maryland State Police, Harford County Sheriff’s Office and Baltimore County Sheriff’s Office; Wisconsin law enforcement agencies including Onalaska PD and Eau Claire PD; and Indiana law enforcement agencies including the Allen County Sheriff’s Office.

    Assistant United States Attorneys Benjamin S. Clark and Joshua R. Rosenthal are prosecuting this case.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI USA: Klobuchar, Grassley, Durbin, Colleagues Press Administration on U.S. Support for Recovering Abducted Ukrainian Children

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn)
    Senators request any support that has been halted resume immediately
    WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senator Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-IA), and Senate Judiciary Committee Ranking Member Dick Durbin (D-IL) led a bipartisan group of their colleagues in calling for the State Department to continue supporting efforts to investigate Russia’s abduction and deportation of Ukrainian children.
    In a letter to Secretary Marco Rubio, the Senators wrote “to convey serious concerns over reports that the State Department has terminated a contract with a university-based research team that is working to find Ukrainian children abducted by the Russian government.” The Humanitarian Research Lab at the Yale School of Public Health has stated that it was recently notified that government funding for the Lab’s work on the war in Ukraine has been “discontinued.” That work reportedly includes the Conflict Observatory program’s open source research tracing Russia’s forcible deportation of Ukrainian children.
    The Senators continued: “If, in fact, State Department funding for this program has been terminated, we request that you provide information regarding the decision-making procedure and justification, and immediately resume U.S. support for this critical work. In addition, we ask that you identify officials who can provide Congress with a briefing on U.S. support for Ukrainian war crimes investigations more generally.” The State Department has supported U.S. participation in the U.S.-EU-UK Atrocity Crimes Advisory Group for Ukraine, which helps to advance the Ukrainian government’s investigations and prosecutions. Ukraine has opened more than 140,000 war crimes cases in total since Russia’s February 2022 invasion.
    The Senators concluded by underscoring that “it must remain the policy of the United States to pursue accountability for the Russian Federation’s atrocities in Ukraine.”
    In addition to Klobuchar, Grassley, and Durbin, the letter was signed by Senators Thom Tillis (R-NC), Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), and Chris Coons (D-DE).
    In 2023, Klobuchar introduced a bipartisan resolution condemning Russia’s abduction of Ukrainian children after reports indicated that Russia had kidnapped thousands of children from their families in Ukraine, relocating them to reeducation camps in Russia and forcing them to be raised by Russian families.
    The full text of the letter is available here and below.
    Dear Secretary Rubio:
    We write to convey serious concerns over reports that the State Department has terminated a contract with a university-based research team that is working to find Ukrainian children abducted by the Russian government.
    The Humanitarian Research Lab at the Yale School of Public Health stated that it was recently notified that government funding for the Lab’s work on the war in Ukraine has been “discontinued.” That work reportedly includes the Conflict Observatory program’s open source research tracing Russia’s forcible deportation of Ukrainian children.
    Such cases of Russian child abduction now number more than 19,500, according to the Ukrainian initiative Bring Kids Back UA, and the total may be higher. In December 2024, the Yale research team published the most comprehensive public report to date on the subject. The report concluded that the Russian government “has engaged in the systematic, intentional, and widespread coerced adoption and fostering of children from Ukraine.” It detailed an operation initiated by President Putin and subordinate officials to “Russify” those children, and documented 314 individual cases. The Lab has transferred dossiers on each of these cases to Ukrainian authorities, but reportedly has been unable to transfer the evidence to European Union law enforcement officials due to the cancellation of its funding.
    The State Department has had an important role in holding Russian officials accountable and supporting Ukrainian efforts to recover abducted children. In August 2024, for example, the Department imposed sanctions on two entities and 11 individuals involved in deporting Ukrainian children “to camps promoting indoctrination in Russia and Russia-occupied Crimea.” The Department has also supported U.S. participation in the U.S.-EU-UK Atrocity Crimes Advisory Group for Ukraine (ACA), which helps to advance the Ukrainian government’s investigations and prosecutions. Ukraine has opened more than 140,000 war crimes cases in total since Russia’s February 2022 invasion, but there are reports that U.S. programs supporting Ukraine’s Prosecutor General’s Office have been suspended.
    We request that you provide immediate clarification regarding the status and future of the State Department’s partnership with Yale’s Humanitarian Research Lab, including with respect to maintenance of the Lab’s data. If, in fact, State Department funding for this program has been terminated, we request that you provide information regarding the decision-making procedure and justification, and immediately resume U.S. support for this critical work. In addition, we ask that you identify officials who can provide Congress with a briefing on U.S. support for Ukrainian war crimes investigations more generally, including U.S. participation in the ACA and assistance to Ukrainian prosecutors.
    We underscore that it must remain the policy of the United States to pursue accountability for the Russian Federation’s atrocities in Ukraine.
    Thank you for your attention to this issue, and we look forward to your reply.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Samsung Electronics’ Water Conservation Efforts for World Water Day

    Source: Samsung

    March 22 marks World Water Day, designated by the United Nations (UN) to underscore the vital importance of water and promote global collaboration in addressing water-related challenges. In observance of this day, Samsung Electronics carried out a variety of water conservation initiatives across 26 domestic and international worksites, engaging approximately 36,200 participants, including employees, local governments, NGOs and members of the community. Beyond these activities, Samsung Electronics remains dedicated to responsible water stewardship by enhancing its initiatives focused on water reuse and replenishment, strengthening worksite management systems, and deepening partnerships with key stakeholders.
     
     
    Global Participation by Samsung Electronics Employees in Water Conservation Efforts
    Each year, Samsung Electronics collaborates with employees and local communities on a variety of initiatives, including stream clean-ups near its facilities and water-saving campaigns across its operations. This year, the company aligned these activities with its environmental strategies, including water replenishment projects. These efforts included upgrading reservoirs and pumping facilities in drought-affected regions near its worksites, as well as supporting clean drinking water initiatives for neighboring villages.
     
    ▲ Employees at Samsung Electronics Vietnam participated in a cleanup at Cau River
     
    To raise awareness about the importance of clean water, Samsung Electronics employees around the world participated in a variety of initiatives. Here are some highlights of their efforts, captured in photos.
     
     
    ① River Cleanup Activities With Employees, Local Governments, NGOs and Community Members
    * Regions of participation: Korea, Vietnam, U.S, Mexico, Brazil, Hungary, Indonesia, South Africa
    ▲ Employees at Samsung Electronics Home Appliances America took part in cleanup activities along nearby rivers and streams.
     
    ▲ At the Cheonan and Onyang worksites in Korea, employees visited streams such as Jangjaecheon, Cheonancheon and Gokgyocheon as part of the One Company, One Stream initiative, contributing to local ecological preservation efforts. In addition, the Hwaseong worksite in Korea is planning stream cleanup activities along Woncheonricheon stream in collaboration with local civic groups and residents, in celebration of World Water Day.
     
     
    ② Returning Clean Water – Water Replenishment Projects
    * Regions of participation: Samsung Electronics is currently implementing water replenishment projects in Korea, Vietnam, India, Mexico, the United States and Indonesia. The company also plans to launch water replenishment projects in Malaysia, Brazil, China, Thailand, Hungary, Türkiye, Slovakia, Poland and Egypt, starting this year.
    ▲ Samsung Electronics Malaysia held an opening ceremony to launch its water replenishment project.
     
     
    ③ ‘Join Us in Saving Water!’ – Water Conservation Campaign
    * Regions of participation: Korea, Vietnam, Mexico, Thailand
    ▲ Samsung Electronics Thailand aired a water-saving campaign video in the company cafeteria.
     
     
    ④ Protecting Aquatic Ecosystems Near Worksites
    * Regions of participation: Korea and Vietnam
    ▲ As part of efforts to protect aquatic ecosystems, employees at Samsung Electronics Vietnam monitored water quality in nearby streams and carried out environmental awareness surveys in collaboration with local government offices, residents and NGOs.
     
     
    Partnering With Stakeholders To Drive Water Conservation and Reduce Usage
    Samsung Electronics recognizes water as a vital resource for a sustainable future and is committed to reducing water intake and promoting water reuse across its operations.
     
    The DX Division has set a goal of achieving 100% water replenishment by 2030, returning to local communities an amount of water equivalent to what is used in its production processes, thereby helping to prevent the depletion of water resources. To achieve this, Samsung is actively implementing water replenishment projects across multiple regions worldwide.
     
    In 2023, Samsung Electronics partnered with the Korea Rural Community Corporation (KRC) to support the construction of water redistribution facilities, enabling the reuse of agricultural water by channeling it from downstream to upstream areas in farmland regions. In collaboration with the Korea Ecological & Environmental Institute (KEEI), Samsung also carried out reservoir dredging in the Haman region in Korea to expand aquatic ecosystems and secure agricultural water supplies, contributing to water reuse and mitigating the risks of drought and water scarcity.
    * Regions where agricultural water reuse facilities have been established (Five locations in Korea): Wando, Shinan, Pyeongtaek, Andong, Changnyeong
     
    ▲ Samsung Electronics, in collaboration with the KRC Andong held a completion ceremony in July 2024 to mark the construction of an agricultural water redistribution facility in Andong, Korea. In April 2024, Samsung Electronics Vietnam signed an agreement with the local People’s Committee to support water replenishment projects.
     
    Building on these efforts, Samsung implemented 23 water replenishment projects across six countries in 2024, returning a total of 1.35 million tonnes of water annually to local communities and achieving 100% water replenishment by Korean facilities’ water usage standards. The company is committed to expanding this achievement globally by 2030, helping to mitigate local water risks and advance water resource conservation across all its international operations.
     
    Meanwhile, the DS Division is promoting various initiatives to protect water resources through partnerships with public, private and governmental organizations.
     
    In March 2024, Samsung signed a public-private-governmental memorandum of understanding (MOU) with the Ministry of Environment, K-water and other stakeholders to advance water-related initiatives. This collaboration was further strengthened in November 2024 through an additional MOU for the Jangheung Dam Artificial Wetland Creation Project, jointly developed with the Ministry of Environment and K-water. This marks the first project in Korea jointly led by public, private and governmental partners. The project aims to enhance riparian ecological belts and artificial wetlands through forest restoration, planting and waterway rehabilitation. In addition, it will create cultural and recreational spaces, including an ecological art museum and walking trails, contributing to the well-being of local communities.
     
    The DS Division has also set a target to keep water intake to 2021 levels by 2030. To that end, Samsung signed another MOU in December 2024 with the Ministry of Environment, Gyeonggi Province, the cities of Hwaseong and Osan, K-water and the Korea Environment Corporation for the Gyeonggido Region Semiconductor Site Reclaimed Water Project (Phase 1). This project will recycle treated wastewater from Hwaseong and Osan to supply 120,000 tonnes of reclaimed water per day to Samsung’s Giheung and Hwaseong semiconductor facilities. The project will proceed with feasibility studies for private investment, basic and detailed phases, and then installation and operation of reuse facilities, with water supply to the DS Division’s Giheung and Hwaseong worksites scheduled to begin in 2029.
     
     
    Expanding Platinum Certifications From the Alliance for Water Stewardship (AWS)
    In March 2023, Samsung Electronics’ Hwaseong worksite became the first facility in Korea to achieve the Platinum certification, the highest level from the Alliance for Water Stewardship (AWS).* Since then, Samsung has continued to expand the number of AWS-certified worksites across its global operations. AWS is a global water stewardship initiative jointly established by international organizations to assess companies’ comprehensive water management systems.
    * The Alliance for Water Stewardship (AWS) is a global water management initiative jointly established by organizations such as the UN Global Compact (UNGC) and Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP). AWS evaluates a company’s water stewardship performance across 100 criteria, including ▲ sustainable water management, ▲ pollution control, ▲ water sanitation, ▲impact on aquatic ecosystems within the watershed, and ▲ governance. Based on these assessments, certifications are awarded at three levels, including ‘Platinum,’ ‘Gold,’ and ‘Core.’
     
    The DS Division has achieved Platinum certification for its Giheung/Hwaseong and Pyeongtaek worksites in Korea, followed by its Xi’an worksite in China and most recently its Cheonan/Onyang worksites in Korea in November 2024. The DX Division has also expanded its certifications, securing Platinum certifications for its Suwon, Gumi and Gwangju worksites in 2023, as well as for its Vietnam worksites in 2024. Samsung Electronics also plans to extend AWS certifications to its India operations by 2025.
     
    Water is a vital resource, and ensuring the availability of clean and safe water for future generations is a critical responsibility. Samsung Electronics is fully committed to this mission and will continue to promote water stewardship and the importance of sustainable water management among its employees. The company will also actively collaborate with stakeholders to advance water-related initiatives and take a leading role in the conservation of global water resources.

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Survey: Global Consumers Prioritize Personalization and Security in AI Home Appliances

    Source: Samsung

    What do people expect from their home appliances?
     
    According to an online survey by Samsung Electronics, consumers worldwide seek personalized AI-powered home solutions that streamline household chores with minimal time and effort.
     
    From May 23 to 28, 2024, Samsung conducted an independent online survey with 1,880 participants aged 20 to 59 across South Korea, the United Kingdom and the United States. The multiple-response survey targeted primary home appliance users and key purchasing decision-makers, gathering insights into perceptions of AI and the outlook for AI home appliances.
     
    When asked about the expected role of AI in the home, respondents frequently mentioned “help / helpful / assist” (379 responses), “cleaning” (259), “cooking” (181), “automatic” (178) and “easy / easier” (144).
     
    Expectations for AI within Households

     
    Moreover, some respondents highlighted security and safety as key expectations — anticipating that AI home appliances will not only reduce household burdens based on individual needs but also manage home safety.
     
    Samsung Newsroom examines how the company continues to refine its AI Home experience by leveraging AI and connectivity to help consumers effortlessly manage daily tasks while ensuring robust security.
     
     
    An Intuitive and Connected AI Home Experience
    The survey revealed a strong demand for simple, intuitive controls in home appliances.
     
    When asked about AI interaction preferences, respondents most frequently mentioned “voice / tell / talk” (203 responses) — followed by “help / helpful / assist” (175), “convenient / comfort” (155) and “control” (128).
     
    Expectations for AI Interactions in Home Appliances

     
    Samsung’s AI home appliances maximize ease of use through the advanced AI-powered Bixby voice assistant and seamless device connectivity via built-in screens. With Bixby’s ability to analyze context, understand intent and remember conversations, users can easily control their appliances.
     
    This year, Bixby has been integrated into the Bespoke AI Dishwasher1 for the first time. Additionally, the 2025 Bespoke AI Hybrid Refrigerator with AI Family Hub+ and the latest washers and dryers will feature voice recognition to provide personalized information tailored to each family member.2
     
    These innovative screen-equipped appliances offer effortless control and seamless access to information.
     
    ▲ Samsung Electronics is bringing AI to life through its ‘Screens Everywhere’ vision.
     
    The Bespoke AI Hybrid Refrigerator with Kitchen Fit,3 featuring a 9-inch AI Home screen, displays a Daily Board that summarizes personalized information such as weather forecasts, daily schedules and meal recommendations.
     
    Meanwhile, the 7-inch AI Home screen on the 2025 Bespoke AI Laundry Combo4 serves as a built-in hub — allowing users to manage SmartThings-connected home appliances and IoT devices without a separate hub.5

     

    AI Home Appliances Must Do More With Less
    Many respondents expressed strong interest in conserving resources. When asked about the most relevant AI-driven experiences, “minimizing resource usage” ranked highly among respondents in the U.S. (67%), U.K. (59%) and South Korea (49%).6
     
    Samsung’s latest AI home appliances enhance performance and energy efficiency by combining advanced hardware, AI and SmartThings.
     
    The new Bespoke AI Laundry Combo reduces drying time by approximately 20 minutes compared to its predecessor, completing a wash and dry cycle in just 79 minutes7 using Super Speed cycle. Meanwhile, the Bespoke AI Hybrid Refrigerator optimizes cooling efficiency and energy savings by using a compressor and Peltier module8 to deliver rapid cooling while maximizing energy efficiency.
     
     

    Enhancing Home Security and Safety With AI
    Respondents expect AI-driven security features to protect their homes and ensure their families’ safety. “Security / safe” was frequently mentioned as a key factor in interactions with AI home appliances.
     
    To address these concerns, Samsung equips all its smart appliances with the proprietary Samsung Knox9 security solution to safeguard user data from external threats such as malware.
     
    ▲ Jong-Hee (JH) Han, Vice Chairman, CEO and Head of Device eXperience (DX) Division at Samsung Electronics, describes Samsung Knox.
     
    This year, the company is expanding Knox Matrix10 — its blockchain-based security system that enables connected appliances to monitor each other’s security status — to appliances with 7- and 9-inch screens as well as the latest robot vacuum cleaner.
     
    The Knox Matrix Dashboard will be introduced to Samsung’s 2025 home appliance lineup,11 allowing users to monitor the security status of all connected devices and receive alerts for potential security issues.
     
    Furthermore, Samsung is integrating Knox Vault into its screen-equipped home appliances and robot vacuum cleaners this year.12 This system securely stores sensitive user data — such as passwords and biometric information — on a dedicated hardware security chip, protecting against data breaches and hacking attempts while reinforcing security.
     
    Passkey will be introduced to screen-equipped home appliances that support browsers, helping users replace traditional passwords with biometric authentication — such as fingerprint or facial recognition — via their smartphones for more secure and convenient logins.13
     
    “As global interest in AI continues to grow, more consumers expect enhanced experiences through AI-powered home appliances,” said Bona Lee, Vice President and Head of Customer eXperience (CX) Insight Group of Digital Appliances (DA) Business at Samsung Electronics. “We will continue researching consumer needs and delivering innovative Bespoke AI experiences so that consumers can enjoy convenient and safe daily lives.”
     
    Samsung will unveil its 2025 Bespoke AI product lineup at the “Welcome to Bespoke AI” event on March 26.
     

     
    1 The launch timeline, model, available features may vary by country.2 Scheduled for release in the first half of 2025 via Smart Forward. With Bixby voice recognition, Family Hub syncs with the linked Samsung account to provide access to schedules, phone location services, photos and more. The Calendar app supports integration with Google and Microsoft. Bixby’s voice recognition feature will be available on screen-equipped appliances running Tizen OS but will not be supported on the washer and dryer models with 4.3-inch screen running Tizen Lite OS.3 The launch timeline, model, available features may vary by country.4 The launch timeline, model, available features may vary by country.5 Supports Wi-Fi, Zigbee, Matter and Thread.6 The personal relevance metric is divided into seven categories, with the top two aggregated for analysis.7 According to the DOE standard test fabric with a composition of 50% cotton and 50% polyester, the quick course may vary depending on the type of clothing, moisture content, characteristics, and washing volume in real use environments.8 The Peltier module operates under one of the following conditions:
    – When the temperature in the fridge rises above the normal range.
    – When AI analyzes the user’s refrigerator usage patterns, predicts the temperature after a certain period and detects situations like large-scale stocking or cleaning.9 Samsung Knox has been integrated into Samsung smart appliances released since 2018.10 As of February 2025, Knox Matrix Credential Sync has been implemented into the 2024 Bespoke AI Hybrid Refrigerator with AI Family Hub+.11 2025 Bespoke AI Hybrid Refrigerator with AI Family Hub+ and appliances equipped with 7- and 9-inch screens.12 2025 Bespoke AI Hybrid Refrigerator with AI Family Hub+ and appliances equipped with 7- and 9-inch screens.13 Supports Passkey authentication for websites using the FIDO (Fast Identity Online) international standard.

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Germany

    Source:

    We’ve reviewed our travel advice for Germany and continue to advise exercise a high degree of caution due to the threat of terrorism. Attacks can occur at any time. There have been multiple attacks using vehicles or knives in the last year. Be alert in public places and report suspicious activity to the police (see ‘Safety’). There are temporary border checks at all German land borders until 15 September.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI China: Kremlin says Russia, US to hold talks Monday in Riyadh

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    The next round of Russia-U.S. talks on Ukraine will be held on Monday in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Russian presidential aide Yuri Ushakov said Thursday.

    The Russian delegation will be led by Grigory Karasin, chairman of the committee on international affairs in Russia’s upper house, and Sergey Beseda, adviser to the head of Russia’s Federal Security Service, Ushakov said.

    Ushakov said he had a phone call with U.S. National Security Advisor Michael Waltz on Wednesday, during which they discussed organizing a meeting of expert groups, mainly to explore the prospects for possible implementation of the Black Sea initiative.

    The Kremlin said Tuesday that Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.S. President Donald Trump agreed to begin talks to further work out specific details of an agreement regarding the safety of navigation in the Black Sea. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Crapo, Warner Lead Colleagues in Letter Reaffirming Support for Community Development Financial Institutions

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Idaho Mike Crapo
    Washington, D.C.–U.S. Senators Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) and Mark R. Warner (D-Virginia), co-chairs of the Senate Community Development Finance Caucus, led a letter to Secretary of the U.S. Department of the Treasury Scott Bessent emphasizing bipartisan support for the Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFI) Fund, and highlighting the fund’s critical role in providing capital to underserved communities.  The letter was signed by 23 Senators.
    The CDFI Fund boosts economic growth in largely underserved communities that lack traditional access to financing, creating a public-private partnership to promote access to capital. Since 1994, the CDFI sector has grown to over 1,400 institutions, located in every state and territory in the nation.  It has leveraged at least $8 in private sector investment for every $1 in public funding received.
    “Over 1,400 CDFIs represent a significant portion of America’s financial services sector, delivering over $300 billion in financial services each year to urban and rural communities across every state,” the Senators wrote.  “Each year, CDFIs provide affordable growth capital to over 100,000 small businesses and finance over $100 billion in residential real estate, bringing down the cost of housing through new construction and affordable home mortgages. The important work of the CDFI sector is strengthened by the CDFI Fund, which provides seed funding to new CDFIs, grows the capacity of existing CDFIs, and provides oversight to ensure federal dollars are spent appropriately. Elimination of key CDFI Fund functions would undermine this important progress, including for small businesses and homeowners.” 
    The letter continued, “The CDFI Fund’s public-private partnership model aligns with this Administration’s emphasis on ensuring that taxpayer dollars are spent efficiently and with measurable impact. Every federal dollar injected into a CDFI generates at least eight more dollars from private-sector investment. Due in large part to the investments the Trump Administration made in the CDFI Fund in 2020, industry assets have tripled and the number of CDFI-certified entities has risen by 40 percent.”
    In addition to Senators Crapo and Warner, the letter was also signed by U.S. Senators Chuck Schumer (D-New York), Tina Smith (D-Minnesota), Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-Mississippi), Amy Klobuchar (D-Minnesota), Roger Wicker (R-Mississippi), Rev. Raphael Warnock (D-Georgia), Dr. Bill Cassidy (R-Louisiana), Chris Van Hollen (D-Maryland), Mike Rounds (R-South Dakota), Jack Reed (D-Rhode Island), Steve Daines (R-Montana), Gary Peters (D-Michigan), John Boozman (R-Arkansas), John Hickenlooper (D-Colorado), Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), Ron Wyden (D-Oregon), Tim Sheehy (R-Montana), Cory Booker (D-New Jersey), Jim Justice (R-West Virginia), Dick Durbin (D-Illinois) and Ruben Gallego (D-Arizona).
    Following President Trump’s Executive Order, Senators Crapo and Warner highlighted the success of the CDFI fund.  In 2022, Crapo and Warner launched the bipartisan Senate Community Development Finance Caucus, focused on coordinating and expanding on public and private-sector efforts in support of the missions of CDFIs.  Since its inception, the Caucus has grown to 28 members, 14 Democrats and 14 Republicans.
    A copy of letter is available here and text is below.
    Dear Secretary Bessent,
    We write to reaffirm our bipartisan support of the CDFI Fund, its operations and the critical role it plays in the communities it serves. We appreciate your recent statement recognizing how the CDFI Fund and CDFIs are integral to the Administration’s pursuit of job growth, wealth creation and prosperity.
    Federal support for the CDFI mission began in 1994, with enactment of the bipartisan Riegle Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act. Since its inception over three decades ago, the CDFI Fund has proven critical to the CDFI sector’s growth and has met the mission to create a public-private partnership to promote access to capital in our most underserved urban and rural communities.
    Over 1,400 CDFIs represent a significant portion of America’s financial services sector, delivering over $300 billion in financial services each year to urban and rural communities across every state. Each year, CDFIs provide affordable growth capital to over 100,000 small businesses and finance over $100 billion in residential real estate, bringing down the cost of housing through new construction and affordable home mortgages. The important work of the CDFI sector is strengthened by the CDFI Fund, which provides seed funding to new CDFIs, grows the capacity of existing CDFIs, and provides oversight to ensure federal dollars are spent appropriately. Elimination of key CDFI Fund functions would undermine this important progress, including for small businesses and homeowners.
    The CDFI Fund’s public-private partnership model aligns with this Administration’s emphasis on ensuring that taxpayer dollars are spent efficiently and with measurable impact. Every federal dollar injected into a CDFI generates at least eight more dollars from private-sector investment. Due in large part to the investments the Trump Administration made in the CDFI Fund in 2020, industry assets have tripled and the number of CDFI-certified entities has risen by 40 percent.
    In sum, more distressed communities are being served by CDFIs than ever before, more first-time buyers are receiving the financing they need to purchase a home, more community facilities are being built, and more commercial loans are reaching entrepreneurs. A reduction in the functions and operations of the CDFI Fund will have a corresponding impact on CDFI-certified entities and local communities and we urge you to avoid this unfortunate outcome. 
    Thank you for your consideration of our request. We stand ready to work with your Administration to promote policies that deliver opportunity and prosperity to all Americans.
    Sincerely,

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Two Eastern European Organized Crime Leaders Convicted Of Murder-For-Hire Targeting U.S.-Based Journalist On Behalf Of The Iranian Government

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    The Iranian Government Hired Polad Omarov and Rafat Amirov to Kill Masih Alinejad in Exchange for $500,000

    Matthew Podolsky, the Acting United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, and Leslie R. Backschies, the Acting Assistant Director in Charge of the New York Field Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”), announced today that a jury returned guilty verdicts against RAFAT AMIROV, a/k/a “Farkhaddin Mirzoev,” a/k/a “Pᴎᴍ,”  a/k/a “Rome,” and POLAD OMAROV, a/k/a “Araz Aliyev,” a/k/a “Polad Qaqa,” a/k/a “Haci Qaqa,” on all five counts in the Superseding Indictment, which included murder-for-hire and attempted murder in aid of racketeering charges, in a trial before U.S. District Judge Colleen McMahon.  AMIROV and OMAROV are scheduled to be sentenced on September 17, 2025.

    Acting U.S. Attorney Matthew Podolsky said: “For years, the Government of Iran has attempted to silence an outspoken Iranian journalist, author, activist and critic of their regime through any means necessary, including harassment, violence, intimidation, and even attempted murder.  Chillingly, the plot to murder this Iranian dissident culminated over 6,000 miles from Iran, on U.S. soil, right here in New York, when a hitman with an AK-47 camped outside her home to kill her.  I commend the career prosecutors of this Office and our law enforcement partners at the FBI’s Counterintelligence Division for their tireless work in bringing these defendants to justice.  This verdict should send a clear message around the world:  if you target U.S. citizens, we will find you, no matter where you are, and bring you to justice.”

    FBI Assistant Director in Charge Leslie R. Backschies said: “The convictions of Rafat Amirov and Polad Omarov send a clear message to all foreign governments who violate our laws and attempt to commit violence against Americans — they and their proxies will face justice for any attempt to silence Americans on U.S. soil.  The Iranian government’s shameless conduct and attempt to violate our laws and assassinate a critic of their human rights atrocities will not be tolerated.  The FBI is determined to disrupt any effort by foreign governments to use violence to repress our citizens’ freedoms, here or abroad.”

    As reflected in the Superseding Indictment and the evidence presented at trial:

    AMIROV and OMAROV were high-ranking members of an Azeri faction of the Russian Mob (the “Organization”) who worked with other members of the Organization to attempt to kill Masih Alinejad on instructions from high-ranking members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (“IRGC”). Alinejad has previously been the target of plots by the Government of Iran to intimidate, harass, and kidnap her for her work as a journalist, author, and human rights activist who has publicized the Government of Iran’s human rights abuses around the world.  As recently as 2020 and 2021, Iranian intelligence officials and assets plotted to kidnap Alinejad from within the U.S. for rendition to Iran in an effort to silence her criticism of the Iranian regime.

    After these brazen efforts to kidnap Alinejad from the U.S. failed, the IRGC turned to AMIROV and OMAROV to locate, surveil, and murder her.  Beginning in approximately July 2022, AMIROV sent targeting information—which he had received directly from IRGC officials in Iran—about Alinejad to OMAROV.  In turn, OMAROV communicated this information to Khalid Mehdiyev, another member of the Organization who had been residing in Yonkers, New York, so that Mehdiyev could surveil Alinejad and murder her. In turn, Mehdiyev sent photographs and videos of Alinejad’s residence to OMAROV, who shared these materials with AMIROV and the IRGC officials who orchestrated the plot in Iran.  AMIROV and OMAROV then arranged for a $30,000 cash payment to Mehdiyev, who used a portion of this payment to buy an AK-47 style assault rifle, two magazines, and at least 66 rounds of ammunition; as Mehdiyev boasted in electronic communications, a “war machine” he could use to kill Alinejad.

    In late July 2022, Mehdiyev repeatedly traveled to Alinejad’s neighborhood to surveil her.  Mehdiyev sent reports of his surveillance to OMAROV, who passed them to AMIROV.  On July 24, 2022, Mehdiyev reported to OMAROV from Alinejad’s residence that he was “at the crime scene.”  On July 27, 2022, OMAROV told AMIROV that Mehdiyev was ready to kill Alinejad, writing “this matter will be over today.  I told them to make a birthday present for me.  I pressured them, they will sleep there this night.”  On July 28, 2022, Mehdiyev sent OMAROV a video taken from inside the car that Mehdiyev was driving with the assault rifle and a message reading “we are ready.”  AMIROV sent an image of the interior of Alinejad’s home to OMAROV to be forwarded to Mehdiyev, writing “this is the house where she stays.”  As OMAROV continued to update AMIROV about Mehdiyev’s readiness, AMIROV cautioned OMAROV “let him keep the car clean.”  When Mehdiyev subsequently drove from where he was surveilling the residence, he was stopped after a traffic violation and, during a subsequent search of the vehicle, police officers found the assault rifle, 66 rounds of ammunition, approximately $1,100 in cash, and a black ski mask.

    After Mehdiyev was arrested and placed into custody, OMAROV contacted Mehdiyev’s mother and threatened to kill her and her other son if she did not locate Mehdiyev. 

    *               *                *

    AMIROV, 46, of Iran; OMAROV, 40, of the country of Georgia, were convicted on five counts:  murder-for-hire, which carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison (Count One); conspiracy to commit murder-for-hire, which carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison (Count Two); conspiracy to commit money laundering, which carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison (Count Three); attempted murder in aid of racketeering, which carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison (Count Four); and possession and use of a firearm in connection with the attempted murder, which carries a maximum sentence of life in prison and a mandatory minimum sentence of five years in prison (Count Five).

    Mr. Podolsky praised the outstanding investigative work of the FBI and its New York Field Office Counterintelligence-Cyber Division and the New York FBI Iran Threat Task Force.  Mr. Podolsky also thanked the New York City Police Department (“NYPD”) and the NYPD Intelligence Bureau, as well as the Department of Justice’s National Security Division and the Department of Justice’s Office of International Affairs, for their assistance. Mr. Podolsky also thanked the authorities in the Czech Republic.

    This case is being handled by the Office’s National Security and International Narcotics Unit. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Michael D. Lockard, Jacob H. Gutwillig, and Matthew J.C. Hellman are in charge of the prosecution, with assistance from paralegal specialist Owen Foley and Trial Attorneys Christopher Rigali and Leslie Esbrook of the Counterintelligence and Export Control Section. 

    MIL Security OSI