Category: Europe

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Marine Equipment Regulations consultation launched

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Marine Equipment Regulations consultation launched

    A six-week public consultation on revoking and replacing the UK Marine Equipment Regulations following the UK’s exit from the EU will begin on Monday 14 April.

    A six-week public consultation on revoking and replacing the UK Marine Equipment Regulations aims to provide and improve clarity for shipowners, operators and equipment manufacturers following UK’s exit from the EU.

    The Maritime and Coastguard Agency’s proposals revoke the 2016 Regulations and the amendments made in 2019 and replace them with a single new regulation.  

    The  UK Mark of Conformity for marine equipment – the ‘Red Ensign’ – became mandatory on 1 January 2023 and applies to all marine equipment placed on board all UK vessels that was previously subject to the European Union’s Mark of Conformity for marine equipment (the ‘Wheel Mark’). 

    The proposed Merchant Shipping (Marine Equipment) Regulations 2025 will include the ability to grant exemptions (in areas of technical innovation), through the ‘Red Ensign’.  

    Equipment manufactured before January 2023 remains out of scope of the proposed Regulations. These Regulations will also provide vessels with the opportunity to apply for a ‘Letter of acceptance’ to install non-UK approved equipment.   

    The amendments will also include requirements and standards for Ballast Water Management Systems to be installed on UK ships. 

    MCA Director of UK Technical Maritime Services Fraser Heasley said:

    The Maritime and Coastguard Agency regularly reviews legislation to ensure the UK’s commitment to safety at sea. Marine equipment, its standards and its conformities are crucial to that work. 

    Importantly, these proposals to update the Merchant Shipping (Marine Equipment) Regulations, seek to combine the 2016 Regulations and amendments made in 2019 in the wake of the UK’s exit from the EU.

    Further information

    The six-week public consultation runs from Monday 14 April until Monday 27 May. 

    Click here to take part in the consultation.

    Press office

    Email public.relations@mcga.gov.uk

    Press enquiries (Monday to Friday, 9am-5pm) 0203 817 2222

    Outside these hours or on bank holidays and weekends, for media enquiries ONLY, please send an email outlining your query and putting #Urgent in the subject title.

    Updates to this page

    Published 14 April 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: International Summit on the Future of Energy Security Partners

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    International Summit on the Future of Energy Security Partners

    Government welcomes Official Partners of International Summit on the Future of Energy Security.

    • The Official Partners sponsoring the International Energy Agency and UK Government’s energy security summit are Iberdrola/ScottishPower, National Grid, SSE and Urenco 

    • Ministers and industry leaders from around the world will gather in London in April to discuss the future of energy security 

    • Summit will be hosted by Energy Secretary Ed Miliband and International Energy Agency Executive Director Dr Fatih Birol

    The government has today (Monday 14 April) announced the four Official Partners sponsoring the upcoming summit marking a new era for energy security.  

    Energy ministers and key energy sector decision makers from around the world will convene at the UK Government and International Energy Agency’s Summit on the Future of Energy Security, co-hosted by the Energy Secretary Ed Miliband and IEA Executive Director Dr Fatih Birol, at Lancaster House, London, on 24-25 April.   

     Sponsorship from Iberdrola/ScottishPower, National Grid, SSE and Urenco will help deliver the summit at a lower cost to UK taxpayers and demonstrates their ongoing commitment to delivering clean energy and energy security in the UK and around the world.   

    In recent years, energy security has risen up the global agenda as countries act to respond to today’s challenges and protect themselves from future energy shocks. The summit is an opportunity to cooperate on rising to the challenges the world faces on energy security and seizing the opportunities to act. It comes as the UK sets a global example by accelerating to a new era of clean electricity by 2030.  

    The Official Partners  

    Iberdrola/ScottishPower   

    Iberdrola is the largest utility in Europe, with a market capitalization of £85 billion, and serves 100 million people worldwide thanks to a diversified portfolio of businesses across the electricity value chain in the UK, the US, Spain, France, Germany, Brazil and Australia. In the UK, Iberdrola is investing £24 billion up to 2028 through ScottishPower, mainly in transmission and distribution networks and offshore wind. Overall, the Group is dedicating around 70% of its investments to power networks to accelerate electrification as a way to increase energy security and competitiveness, create new industries and jobs, and improve sustainability. Around two thirds of Iberdrola’s global investments are allocated to the UK and to the US   

    Iberdrola Executive Chairman Ignacio Galán said:  

    Energy security is the first step towards overall security. Digitalization, big data, AI and the industries of the future rely on a secure power supply, driving demand growth not seen for decades, and network infrastructures are the backbone of a resilient power system.  Driven by the UK Government’s clear and stable energy policies, Iberdrola is investing £24 billion to 2028 in the UK in transmission, distribution and offshore wind to guarantee energy security, growth and competitiveness. We welcome the IEA and UK Government bringing together key policy makers and energy companies to analyse how best to enhance energy security globally.

    National Grid  

    National Grid is investing £60 billion in energy networks over the next five years in the UK and the northeastern United States. This represents nearly double the investment of the previous five years. Its commitment will unlock significant economic growth, create thousands of new jobs, reduce energy bills in the long term, increase energy security, and support an increasingly decarbonised, electrified economy.  

    National Grid Chief Executive Officer John Pettigrew said:   

    National Grid is investing £60 billion in energy networks to 2029, boosting energy security, driving economic growth, and supporting 60,000 more jobs across the UK and US. Innovation and investment will be essential to unlocking the benefits of the energy transformation for customers and communities; it is essential that events like this exist to enable the sector to collaborate and drive progress forwards.

    SSE  

    SSE is a UK-listed and headquartered company investing £20 billion over five years to 2027 in renewable energy, electricity networks, and flexible power generation. Harnessing some of Europe’s best renewable resources with projects like Dogger Bank – the world’s largest offshore wind farm – SSE generates homegrown clean energy, protecting billpayers from overdependence on imported fossil fuels. It also builds and operate vital transmission and distribution grids to connect and transport more secure power to homes and businesses. At the same time, through its fleet of flexible generation and storage assets across hydro, batteries and efficient gas-fired power stations, it provides the balance required to ensure an increasingly renewable energy system is not only cleaner but more secure.  

    SSE Chief Executive Officer Alistair Phillips-Davies said:   

    It has never been clearer that energy security equates to national security – and achieving it requires countries to focus both on developing their own homegrown energy sources and on international cooperation to ensure increased flexibility and resilience. This principle is at the heart of the UK Government’s Clean Power Mission, and we are proud to be playing our part in delivering mission-critical investments across renewables, networks, and system flexibility. But there is more we can and must do, and we are therefore thrilled to be partnering with the UK Government and the IEA to advance this crucial agenda.

    Urenco  

    Urenco is a global uranium enrichment company, fuelling nuclear power plants to ensure a secure, reliable, and low carbon supply of energy. With four facilities in different countries within the Western world, it is providing customers with choice of where to receive their supply from and are rapidly ramping up capacity to meet increased demand.  

    Urenco Chief Executive Officer Boris Schucht said:  

    There are now well-established drivers for an enhanced role of nuclear power: the need to meet climate change goals; and the need for countries to have a secure and independent energy supply. As a long-standing and integral part of the global nuclear industry, Urenco sees it as our responsibility to make a valuable contribution to meeting world-wide energy needs, complementing other low carbon sources through a 24/7 supply which is cost effective over the lifetime of a reactor. We will continue to collaborate with partners across the energy sector and beyond to help ensure the reliable, clean energy system our world needs are achieved.

    Updates to this page

    Published 14 April 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Africa: G20 Development Working Group meeting to get underway

    Source: South Africa News Agency

    The South African Presidency of the Group of Twenty (G20) is this week convening the second Development Working Group (DWG) meeting in the Western Cape.

    “The G20 DWG plays a pivotal role in shaping global development priorities, focusing on reducing inequalities, promoting sustainable growth, and strengthening international partnerships,” the Department of Planning, Monitoring and Evaluation said.

    Starting on Monday, 14 April and ending on Wednesday, 16 April, the meeting will serve as a platform for in-depth discussions on key development challenges and cooperative solutions.

    The G20 is an international forum of both developing and developed countries, which seeks to find solutions to global economic and financial issues. 

    South Africa’s G20 Presidency commenced on 1 December 2024 and will run until 30 November 2025. 

    The gathering will bring together representatives from G20 member states, invited countries, and international organisations to deliberate on policies that foster inclusive economic growth and sustainable development. 

    In alignment with the theme of Solidarity, Equality, and Sustainability, the discussions will focus on three high-level priorities:
    •    High-Level Principles on Global Public Goods and Global Public Investment.
    •    Mobilising Finance for Development and Means of Implementation.
    •    Building Resilience through Universal Social Protection Floors.

    The G20 members represent around 85% of the global Gross Domestic Product, over 75% of the global trade, and about two-thirds of the world population.

    It comprises 19 countries (Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Republic of Korea, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Türkiye, United Kingdom, and United States) and two regional bodies, namely the European Union (EU) and African Union (AU).

    The three-day meeting is taking place at the Lord Charles Hotel in Somerset. –SAnews.gov.za
     

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Addendum to Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024 Impact Assessment

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Correspondence

    Addendum to Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024 Impact Assessment

    Technical corrections to the Impact Assessment for the Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024.

    Applies to England

    Documents

    Leasehold and Freehold Reform Bill Impact Assessment

    Addendum to Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024 Impact Assessment

    Request an accessible format.
    If you use assistive technology (such as a screen reader) and need a version of this document in a more accessible format, please email alternativeformats@communities.gov.uk. Please tell us what format you need. It will help us if you say what assistive technology you use.

    Details

    This addendum sets out technical corrections to certain formulas used in the modelling in the Impact Assessment for the Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024.

    Updates to this page

    Published 14 April 2025

    Sign up for emails or print this page

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: UK’s F-35 Lightning force ready for full operational capability on major international deployment14 Apr 2025

    Source: United Kingdom – Royal Air Force

    Fighter jet crews from the Royal Air Force and Royal Navy are fully prepared for a significant international deployment as the UK’s F-35 Lightning Force steps confidently toward declaring full operational capability.

    The cutting-edge F-35 jets, operated by 809 Naval Air Squadron and 617 Squadron RAF, will take to the skies aboard the HMS Prince of Wales for Operation Highmast, also known as Carrier Strike Group 25.

    This dynamic mission will not only showcase the UK’s advanced carrier strike capabilities but also assert the Royal Navy’s flagship and UK jets as they travel through the Mediterranean, Middle East, and Indo-Pacific. This represents a crucial turning point for the F-35 program, affirming the UK’s power to project air superiority anywhere in the world, in the air, at sea or from land.

    Operation Highmast is poised to be a landmark event, with plans to declare full operational capability (FOC) for both the jets and the Carrier Strike Group within the year.

    “Achieving full operational capability is a substantial leap for 809. It empowers us to operate independently on a global scale at the request of the UK Government, delivering decisive air power from both land bases and aircraft carriers.”

    Commander Nick Smith
    809 Squadron

    While the F-35 jets have already proven their mettle in operational settings, this new capability will enable sustained deployment of multiple squadrons from land and sea, enhancing the UK’s rapid response capabilities significantly.

    Group Captain Butcher, Commander of the Lightning Air Wing noted, “Operation Highmast marks a pivotal milestone for the Lightning program. We are on track to achieve full operational capability for F-35 in the UK, with the ability to deploy two squadrons to the maritime operating base.”

    The 809 Naval Air Squadron, known as The Immortals, was re-established in December 2023 and consists of top-tier personnel from both the Royal Navy and RAF, exemplifying the strength of joint force operations. Commander Smith asserted, “about half of our personnel are from the Royal Air Force, and the other half are from the Royal Navy. We operate as a cohesive unit within the UK Combat Air Force.”

    During Operation Highmast, 809 Squadron will collaborate with 617 Squadron, in the largest F-35 Lightning deployment the UK has seen to date. This mission will involve exercises with allies across Europe and Asia, solidifying the UK’s crucial role in NATO and global defence.

    Lieutenant Colonel Carty, in command of 617 Squadron, underscored the strategic importance of this deployment for the UK’s defence capabilities. “The F-35 program is imperative to our defence. Its cooperation with Typhoon enhances our combat effectiveness considerably,” he stated with confidence.

    As the first Royal Marine to command a UK fighter squadron, Lieutenant Colonel Carty took pride in the collaborative nature of their operations.

    “Partnering with other F-35 nations, especially our NATO allies, significantly extends our reach and potency around the world.”

    Lieutenant Colonel Carty

    The deployment is set to demonstrate the impressive interoperability of the UK’s F-35 squadrons with allied forces, particularly in high-end strike operations and defensive missions from sea-based platforms.

    “Whether operating in Europe or the Indo-Pacific, we are fully equipped to work seamlessly with all partners flying F-35s.”

    Group Captain Butcher

    The F-35B Lightning is a formidable multi-role aircraft capable of executing air-to-surface strikes, electronic warfare, and intelligence gathering—all at once. The Lightning Force, based at RAF Marham and comprising elite personnel from both the RAF and Royal Navy, oversees operations involving the UK’s F-35B aircraft. To date, the UK has received 33 of the anticipated 48 fifth-generation fighter jets, with a clear pathway to achieving full operational capacity of 74 aircraft by 2033.

    As the UK steps into this extensive deployment, the capabilities of the F-35 Lightning, alongside its collaboration with allies, will play a pivotal role in fortifying the nation’s defence posture on the global stage, ensuring readiness and resilience in an ever-evolving security environment.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Bin Collections as normal over Easter holidays, along with many other Council Services

    Source: Northern Ireland – City of Derry

    Bin Collections as normal over Easter holidays, along with many other Council Services

    14 April 2025

    Derry City and Strabane District Council has issued details of its service provision over the Easter break and advising the public that bin collection service will operate as normal over the holiday period.

    Bin collections will operate as normal on Good Friday, Easter Monday and Tuesday. The public are kindly encouraged to use the appropriate bins and recycle or reuse as much Easter packaging and wrapping paper as possible.

    Recycling Centres will be closed on Easter Sunday and Monday and will open as normal on Tuesday 22nd April.

    The Guildhall and The Tower Museum will be closed only on Easter Sunday, 20th April only and open to visitors as normal from Easter Monday.

    Council offices on Strand Road, Derry will be closed on Good Friday 18th, Easter Monday 21st and Tuesday 22nd of April, while the Derry Road offices in Strabane will be closed on Easter Monday 21st and Tuesday 22nd April.

    Registry Offices in Derry will be closed on Friday 18th, Monday 21st and Tuesday 22nd April, while offices in Strabane will be closed on Good Friday 18th and Easter Monday 21st April.

    All Council owned cemeteries are open and operational over the Easter period from 8am to 8pm daily.

    The Council will continue to offer an Out of Hours Service for ongoing dog attacks on persons or animals over the Easter break. If you need this service over the holidays, you can contact them via telephone on 07734 128096. Whilst there is no obligation on council to respond to other serious matters outside hours, the Dog Warden may do so after an assessment of any voicemail messages left.  

    All Council parks across the city and district, as well as the Greenways, will be open and available for the public to enjoy over the Easter holidays. People are reminded to treat the areas with respect and continue to use the bins provided, keeping the areas safe and clean for everyone to have an enjoyable experience.

    The Alley Theatre will be open as normal over the Easter Holidays with Easter crafts and storytelling workshops scheduled for young children.

    There will be some minor changes to Leisure Services with a small number of centres closing on separate days over the holiday period. The following arrangements are in place for the centres and sports facilities:

    • Foyle Arena – Open Good Friday, Easter Saturday and Tuesday. Closed Easter Sunday and Monday
    • Templemore Sports Complex – Open Good Friday, Easter Saturday and Tuesday. Closed Easter Sunday and Monday
    • Melvin Sports Complex – Open Good Friday, Easter Saturday and Sunday. Closed Easter Monday and Tuesday
    • Derg Valley Leisure Centre – Open Good Friday, Easter Saturday and Sunday. Closed Easter Monday and Tuesday
    • Riversdale Leisure Centre – Open Good Friday, Easter Saturday and Sunday. Closed Easter Monday and Tuesday
    • City Baths – Closed Good Friday, Easter Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. Open Easter Saturday
    • Brooke Park – Closed Good Friday, Easter Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. Open Easter Saturday
    • Bishop’s Field – Closed Good Friday, Easter Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. Open Easter Saturday
    • Waterside Shared Village – Closed Good Friday, Easter Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. Open Easter Saturday

    Mayor of Derry City and Strabane District Council, Cllr Lilian Seenoi-Barr, wished the public a healthy and happy Easter holiday, and urged everyone to familiarise themselves with the full opening hours listing on the Council’s website.

    “I would like to take this opportunity to wish everyone a safe and pleasant Easter break. I would also like to remind everyone to make use of their Blue and Brown bins at home when throwing away all the packaging and food waste that comes along with Easter Eggs and sweet treats. 

    “Easter is always a lovely time to get out and about and enjoy all we have to offer across our city and district. I would encourage everyone to make use of our beautiful parks and green spaces while we get to enjoy this beautiful Spring weather.”

    For all updates, please keep an eye on Council social media pages or visit www.derrystrabane.com/services/openinghours

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Stakeholder Engagement: Magenta Book Update

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    News story

    Stakeholder Engagement: Magenta Book Update

    The ETF are pleased to invite stakeholders from across government and relevant external agencies to provide feedback on potential updates to the Magenta Book.

    The ETF are pleased to invite stakeholders from across government and relevant external agencies to provide feedback on potential updates to the Magenta Book.

    This is one of the initial steps in identifying and implementing improvements to the Magenta Book. Please send the form ( Stakeholder engagement on the Magenta Book update form (MS Word Document, 83.8 KB)) to etf@cabinetoffice.gov.uk by 15 May 2025.

    Background

    The Magenta Book outlines central government guidance on evaluation, and is aligned with the HM Treasury Green Book, which sets out the economic principles that should be applied to both appraisal and evaluation.

    The Evaluation Task Force is working with representatives from the Cross Government Evaluation Group, Government Social Research Heads of Profession, and Directors of Analysis to review and update the Magenta Book to reflect relevant advances in social research methods and practices since the last Magenta Book update in 2020.

    Aims

    The overall aim of the review is to enhance the Magenta Book by identifying and implementing potential improvements in evaluation methods, guidance, and practice. It is an opportunity to enhance the relevance and effectiveness of Government evaluation guidance for government social researchers, and organisations who undertake independent evaluations for government.

    Scope

    Initial engagement with key government stakeholders have identified four key areas where there is an appetite to add content to the Magenta Book: 

    1. Value for money evaluation; 
    2. ‘Test and learn’ evaluation approaches and other associated terms such as prototyping;
    3. Aligning evaluation and benefits realisation, including the distinctions between the two and how they complement and work together;
    4. Research transparency, including analysis replicability, availability of data/code, and use of open repositories.

    We would particularly welcome feedback on: 

    1. Whether you are supportive of additional content being added to the Magenta Book in the four areas listed above;
    2. Whether there are other aspects of the Magenta Book that you believe could be improved or adapted to better serve the needs of Government evaluators; 
    3. Whether there are any errors, inaccuracies or other errata in the current version of the Magenta Book that should be corrected or edited for clarity.

    The scope of the review is to enhance our evaluation guidance, and we are not looking to revise existing content where this is accurate and reliable. 

    How to provide feedback:

    You should complete the form ( Stakeholder engagement on the Magenta Book update form (MS Word Document, 83.8 KB)) to provide feedback and send it to etf@cabinetoffice.gov.uk by 15 May 2025. We look forward to your contributions.

    Updates to this page

    Published 14 April 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 14 April 2025 Departmental update New study highlights multiple long-term health complications from female genital mutilation

    Source: World Health Organisation

    Female genital mutilation (FGM) affects almost all dimensions of the health of women and girls, according to a new study published today from the World Health Organization (WHO) together with the United Nations’ Human Reproduction Programme (HRP). Health complications of the practice can be severe and life-long, causing both mental and physical health risks.

    Published in BMC Public Health, the publication analyzes evidence from more than 75 studies in around 30 countries to paint a comprehensive picture of the ways that FGM impacts survivors’ health at different life stages.

    It shows that women with FGM are significantly more likely to experience a wide range of complications during childbirth compared to those without, for instance. They have more than double the risk of enduring prolonged or obstructed labour or haemorrhage, while being significantly more likely to require emergency caesarean sections or forceps delivery.

    In addition, women with FGM have an almost three-times greater risk of depression or anxiety, and a 4.4 times higher likelihood of experiencing post-traumatic stress disorder.

    There is a critical need to ensure timely, high-quality health care for survivors, to engage communities for prevention and ensure families are aware of FGM’s harmful effects, alongside serious political commitment to stop the practice and educate and empower women and girls.

    Dr Pascale Allotey / Director of SRHR at WHO and head of HRP

    “This study paints a devastating picture of the manifold health implications of female genital mutilation, spanning mental and physical health and undermining emotional well-being,” said Dr Pascale Allotey, Director of Sexual and Reproductive Health and Research at WHO and head of HRP. “There is a critical need to ensure timely, high-quality health care for survivors, to engage communities for prevention and ensure families are aware of FGM’s harmful effects, alongside serious political commitment to stop the practice and educate and empower women and girls.”

    FGM is a harmful practice that involves the partial or total removal of the external female genitalia, or other injury to the female genital organs such as cutting or burning. It is an extreme form of gender discrimination and a stark violation of women and girls’ human rights.

    It is estimated that around 230 million women and girls alive today have undergone FGM. While evidence shows the overall proportion of those who experience FGM is declining, absolute numbers could increase given rising youth populations in countries where it is practiced. Abandonment of FGM is challenging, given that it is driven by deep-set cultural beliefs and norms.

    Also of concern, evidence shows more cases of FGM are now performed by health workers – its so-called medicalization – due in part to misperceptions that their involvement makes it safer and reduces risks. In fact, some studies have shown that longer-term damage from “medicalized” FGM may be greater, since it can result in deeper, more severe cuts.

    FGM’s immediate risks can be life-threatening and include severe infections, heavy blood loss, as well as extreme pain and emotional trauma. Longer-term consequences for survivors include, as well as those described above, menstrual difficulties; urological complications, including urinary tract infections and difficulty urinating; and painful sexual intercourse.

    In addition to various obstetric risks for women, the paper highlights that FGM can also have impacts on babies during or following childbirth. Babies born to women who had FGM are more likely to experience birth complications like fetal distress or asphyxia, resulting in lower newborn survival rates.

    Recognizing FGM’s devastating health impacts, WHO supports efforts to strengthen prevention efforts within the health sector, engaging health workers to educate communities and family members, while providing clinical guidance on effective care for survivors.

    Understanding the range of complications FGM can cause – spanning acute risks as well as impacts on obstetric and neonatal, gynaecological, urological, sexual and mental health – is critical for ensuring survivors receive appropriate treatment and support. Drawing on this evidence, WHO will shortly release a new guideline covering both FGM prevention and clinical care for affected women and girls. FGM is currently common in around 30 countries across Africa and Asia.

    About

    The present study, titled Exploring the health complications of female genital mutilation through a systematic review and meta-analysis, updates and expands previous reviews, compiling all available data on health complications from studies with comparison groups of women with and without FGM, and by the different types of FGM. The result of this process is a comprehensive summary of its various health complications.

    The study was supported by the Governments of Norway and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland alongside HRP (the UNDP/UNFPA/UNICEF/WHO/World Bank Special Programme of Research, Development and Research Training in Human Reproduction). HRP is the main research institution within the United Nations system for sexual and reproductive health.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Man Indicted for Making Threats to Employee of Augusta National Golf Club

    Source: Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) State Crime Alerts (b)

    AUGUSTA, GA:  The Grand Jury for the Southern District of Georgia returned an indictment against a man for his role in making threats against an employee of the Augusta National Golf Club.

    Joseph Armand Zimmer, 48, of North Dakota, is charged with Threats in Interstate Communication, said Tara M. Lyons, Acting U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Georgia.  Zimmer was arrested on April 8, 2025, in Las Vegas, Nevada. He appeared in federal court in the District of Nevada on April 9, 2025, for an initial appearance. He will be required to appear in the Southern District of Georgia to answer to the charge.   

    “Those who make threats against members of our community in violation of federal law will be held accountable, as we continue to work with our law enforcement partners to identify and bring to justice those who seek to intimidate and instill fear in our citizens,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Lyons.

    As described in court, Zimmer made a phone call on February 18, 2025, to the Augusta National Golf Club, during which he made numerous violent threats to the individual who answered the call.  These threats included that he would “throw [the individual] in a cell and have [her] set on fire,” and that he would “blow [her] head off.”

    Zimmer faces up to 5 years imprisonment on the charge.  There is no parole in the federal system.

    “The FBI treats threatening communications with the utmost seriousness and will dedicate all available resources to locating and prosecuting those responsible for such actions,” said Paul Brown, Special Agent in Charge of FBI Atlanta. “We trust that this indictment sends a clear message to anyone contemplating making threats, whether genuine or fabricated, through electronic means.”

    Criminal indictments contain only charges. Defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

    This case is being investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Patricia G. Rhodes.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI: Plantro Ltd. Files Amended and Restated Offer Documents in Respect of Premium All-Cash Tender Offer to Acquire up to 15% of Class A Limited Voting Shares of Information Services Corporation

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    • Offer Documents relate to amendment and extension of the Tender Offer, which were previously announced on April 8, 2025
    • Tender Offer is an opportunity for shareholders to de-risk their investment in ISC for an attractive all-cash premium in the face of ongoing business and dilution risks, and the lack of trading liquidity of the Class A Shares
    • Plantro believes Board refreshment is necessary to unlock ISC’s potential to allow it to become a made-in-Saskatchewan success story

    ST. MICHAEL, Barbados, April 14, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Plantro Ltd. (“Plantro”) today announced that it has filed amended and restated offer documents in respect of its offer (the “Tender Offer”) to acquire up to 2,777,242 Class A Limited Voting Shares (the “Class A Shares”) in the capital of Information Services Corporation (TSX: ISC) (“ISC” or the “Company”) at a price of $27.25 per Class A Share, payable in cash. The amendments and extension, which will benefit ISC shareholders, were previously announced on April 8, 2025, and were made following constructive engagement with the Financial and Consumer Affairs Authority of Saskatchewan and the Ontario Securities Commission.

    Shareholders depositing Class A Shares pursuant to the Tender Offer should utilize the amended and restated Letter of Transmittal filed today. Any deposits of Class A Shares utilizing the prior form of Letter of Transmittal must be resubmitted using the amended and restated Letter of Transmittal to be accepted as valid.

    Plantro’s Premium Offer Provides Shareholders a Rare Opportunity for Cash Liquidity in a Company With ‘Upside Down Economics’

    Plantro believes that the economics of ISC are ‘upside down’ and do not benefit long term shareholders. Since ISC’s IPO in 2013, there has been a clear troubling trend, expense growth has consistently outpaced revenue growth. When expenses consistently outpace revenue, it sets the stage for serious financial challenges over the long term.

    The Risk of Shareholder Dilution

    On April 10, 2025, despite recommending against the Tender Offer as “highly undervalued”, ISC filed a $275 million preliminary short form base shelf prospectus with the Canadian securities regulators (the “Prospectus”). Plantro believes it is impossible for ISC to fund its ‘buy-to-grow’ strategy to meet its 2028 revenue and Adjusted EBITDA targets through cash flow generation or without incurring significant new debt, and would have to sell equity. Plantro is concerned that the Prospectus provides ISC flexibility to issue up to $275 million in equity – more than half of its current market capitalization, which would massively dilute ISC shareholders.

    Board Refreshment Will Drive Shareholder Returns

    Plantro believes that the board of directors (the “Board”) must be refreshed, so that it can drive accretive growth for shareholders and derive true operating leverage and economies of scale. Plantro believes the Board requires an infusion of relevant skills and experience, and directors that can hold management accountable and drive operational execution. The interests of the directors, who collectively own little stock, differs from that of other shareholders. The Board has little incentive to prioritize shareholder returns and avoid unnecessary equity dilution.

    The Opportunity for a Made-in-Saskatchewan Success Story

    As a first step, a refreshed Board should fulfil ISC’s true potential to be a made-in-Saskatchewan success story. Saskatchewan has developed a business-friendly tech ecosystem and ISC should take full advantage of these benefits. However:

    The number of employees ISC has based in Saskatchewan appears to have steadily declined since its IPO1.

    Today, most of its remaining workforce, which make up the majority of ISC employees, is concentrated in high-cost global hubs, such as Toronto and Dublin, Ireland, where it appears new positions continue to be added.

    Plantro believes that a refreshed Board should commit to relocating at least 100 of these positions back to Saskatchewan over the next year.

    This move would establish a “center of excellence”, in Saskatchewan, driving enhanced operational performance and enabling opportunities for margin expansion. Plantro believes this would deliver significant near-term value to both the Company and its shareholders. Centralizing and repatriating jobs to Saskatchewan is just good business sense.

    The Board Should Engage with Plantro and Stop Attacking Constructive Shareholders

    From the outset, Plantro has made every effort to resolve these matters confidentially, in good faith, and behind closed doors. Unfortunately, the ISC Board has chosen a different path—pursuing public litigation of these matters and resorting to inappropriate personal attacks and mischaracterizations in the media.

    Despite the path chosen by the ISC Board to date, Plantro hopes to accomplish the refreshment of the Board through constructive engagement, and has not nominated individuals for the 2025 annual meeting of shareholders (the “Annual Meeting”). Plantro continues to make repeated requests to meet with the Chair, other members of the Board, and management. Unfortunately, all such outreaches have been ignored to date. If the Board does not engage constructively, and continues its current approach, Plantro may withhold votes, including those acquired through the Tender Offer, from the Board at the Annual Meeting, and it reserves all of its rights as a shareholder to take action in the future.

    An Opportunity for Long Term Shareholders to Receive an Attractive Risk-Adjusted Cash Premium

    Since the Class A Shares are so illiquid, even long term shareholders have no prospect of being able to sell stock without meaningfully affecting the price of the Class A Shares. The changes outlined above will take time, and for shareholders who been in the stock for many years, this is a unique opportunity – if they so choose.

    Important Amendments for ISC Shareholders

    The amendments to the terms of the Tender Offer include, among other things:

    • Extended Tender Offer Period – The Tender Offer is now open for acceptance by shareholders of the Company until 5:00 p.m. (Eastern Time) on April 28, 2025 (the “Expiry Time”), unless the Tender Offer is further extended, varied or withdrawn.
    • Tender Offer Made to All Shareholders – Plantro is making the Tender Offer to all shareholders of the Company, including shareholders who were not holders of record on March 24, 2025 and the Crown Investment Corporation of Saskatchewan.
    • No Longer Acquiring Shares on a First Come First Serve Basis – Plantro will only take up and pay for Class A Shares that are deposited pursuant to the Tender Offer as at the Expiry Time, and not on a “first come, first served” and/or “rolling” basis. As a result, if more than the maximum number of Class A Shares for which the Tender Offer is made are delivered in accordance with the Tender Offer and not withdrawn at the time of take up of the Class A Shares, the Class A Shares to be purchased from each depositing shareholder will be determined on a pro rata basis according to the number of Class A Shares delivered by each shareholder, disregarding fractions, by rounding down to the nearest whole number of Class A Shares.
    • Shareholders Have the Right to Opt Out of Voting Tender – Plantro has further amended the Tender Offer to allow Class A Shareholders of record on March 24, 2025, to opt out of appointing representatives of Plantro as their nominees and proxy in respect of such shares owned by a shareholder that are not deposited pursuant to the Tender Offer and ultimately taken up and paid for. For clarity, such opt out right will not apply to Class A Shares of record on March 24, 2025, which are deposited pursuant to the Tender Offer and ultimately taken up and paid for, and the holder of such shares will be required to appoint representatives of Plantro as its nominees and proxy for the Company’s annual meeting of shareholders to be held on May 24, 2025 in respect of such shares.

    In addition to the above amendments, the size of the Tender Offer has been reduced by 100 Class A Shares to reflect that Plantro has acquired such number of shares in the market, all in compliance with the terms of the Tender Offer.

    Plantro is relying on the exemption under section 9.2(4) of National Instrument 51-102 – Continuous Disclosure Obligations to the circular requirements of applicable Canadian proxy solicitation laws. For further details, please see below under the heading “Information in Support of Public Broadcast Exemption Under Canadian Law”. The Tender Offer is not a formal or exempt take-over bid under Canadian securities laws and regulations. In no event will Plantro (or its affiliates or associates) make any such purchases of Class A Shares that would result in Plantro, together with its affiliates and associates, beneficially owning or exercising control or direction over more than 15% of the outstanding Class A Shares upon completion of the Tender Offer.

    Full details of the Tender Offer are included in the Offer Documents and are available online on the Company’s SEDAR+ profile at www.sedarplus.ca.

    Plantro’s Advisors

    Plantro has engaged Goodmans LLP as its legal advisor, Carson Proxy as its information agent, Odyssey Trust Company as depositary, and Gagnier Communications as its strategic communications advisor.

    About Plantro

    Plantro is a privately-held company, with an established track record of making successful investments in undervalued and high quality legal, financial, and information services businesses.

    Shareholder Questions

    Shareholders who have questions with respect to the Tender Offer, or who need assistance in depositing their Class A Shares, please contact the depositary and information agent for the Tender Offer:

    Depositary: Odyssey Trust Company

    Toll Free (US & Canada): 1-888-290-1175
    Calls (All Regions): 587-885-0960
    Email: corp.actions@odysseytrust.com

    Information Agent: Carson Proxy

    North America Toll Free: 1-800-530-5189
    Local and Text: 416-751-2066
    Email: info@carsonproxy.com

    Information in Support of Public Broadcast Exemption Under Canadian Law

    Plantro is relying on the exemption under section 9.2(4) of National Instrument 51-102 – Continuous Disclosure Obligations to make this public broadcast solicitation. The following information is provided in accordance with corporate and securities laws applicable to public broadcast solicitations.

    This solicitation is being made by Plantro, and not by or on behalf of management of ISC. The information agent will receive a fee of up to $250,000 for its services as information agent under the Tender Offer, plus ancillary payments and disbursements. Based upon publicly available information, ISC’s registered and head office is located at 300 – 10 Research Drive, Regina, Saskatchewan, S4S 7J7, Canada. Plantro is soliciting proxies in reliance upon the public broadcast exemption to the solicitation requirements under applicable Canadian corporate and securities laws, conveyed by way of public broadcast, including press release, speech or publication, and by any other manner permitted under applicable Canadian securities laws. In addition, this solicitation may be made by mail, telephone, facsimile, email or other electronic means as well as by newspaper or other media advertising and in person by representatives of Plantro. All costs incurred for such solicitation will be borne by Plantro.

    A registered shareholder who has given a proxy under the terms of the Letter of Transmittal may, prior to its Class A Shares being taken up and paid for under the Tender Offer, revoke the proxy by instrument in writing, including a proxy bearing a later date. The instrument revoking the proxy must be deposited at the registered office of ISC at least 48 hours, exclusive of Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays, preceding the date of the meeting or an adjournment or postponement thereof, or with the Chair of the meeting on the day of the meeting, or in any other manner permitted by law, provided that, in each circumstance, a copy of such revocation has been delivered to the depositary, at its principal office in Toronto, Ontario, Canada prior to the Class A Shares relating to such proxy having been taken up and paid for under the Tender Offer.

    A non-registered shareholder may revoke a form of proxy or voting instruction form given to an intermediary at any time by written notice to the intermediary in accordance with the instructions given to the non-registered shareholder by its intermediary. Non-registered shareholders should contact their broker for assistance in ensuring that forms of proxies or voting instructions previously given to an intermediary are properly revoked.

    None of Plantro nor, to its knowledge, any of its associates or affiliates, has any material interest, direct or indirect, in any transaction since the commencement of ISC’s most recently completed financial year, or in any proposed transaction which has materially affected or will materially affect ISC or any of its subsidiaries. None of Plantro nor, to its knowledge, any of its associates or affiliates, has any material interest, direct or indirect, by way of beneficial ownership of securities or otherwise, in any matter to be acted upon at any upcoming shareholders’ meeting, other than as set out herein.

    Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking Information

    This press release may contain forward-looking information and forward-looking statements within the meaning of applicable securities laws. Specifically, certain statements contained in this press release, including without limitation statements regarding the Tender Offer, taking up and paying for Class A Shares deposited under the Tender Offer, and the expiry of the Tender Offer, contain “forward-looking information” and are prospective in nature. In some cases, but not necessarily in all cases, forward-looking statements can be identified by the use of forward looking terminology such as “plans”, “targets”, “expects” or “does not expect”, “is expected”, “an opportunity exists”, “is positioned”, “estimates”, “intends”, “assumes”, “anticipates” or “does not anticipate” or “believes”, or variations of such words and phrases or state that certain actions, events or results “may”, “could”, “would”, “might”, “will” or “will be taken”, “occur” or “be achieved”. In addition, any statements that refer to expectations, projections or other characterizations of future events or circumstances contain forward-looking statements.

    Statements containing forward-looking information are not based on historical facts, but rather on current expectations and projections about future events and are therefore subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from the future outcomes expressed or implied by the statements containing forward-looking information.

    Although Plantro believes that the expectations reflected in statements containing forward-looking information herein made by it (and not, for greater certainty, any forward-looking statements attributable to the Company) are reasonable, such statements involve risks and uncertainties, and undue reliance should not be placed on such statements. Material factors or assumptions that were applied in formulating the forward-looking information contained herein include the assumption that the business and economic conditions affecting the Company’s operations will continue substantially in the current state, including, without limitation, with respect to industry conditions, general levels of economic activity, continuity and availability of personnel, local and international laws and regulations, foreign currency exchange rates and interest rates, inflation, taxes, that there will be no unplanned material changes to the Company’s operations, and that the Company’s public disclosure record is accurate in all material respects and is not misleading (including by omission).

    Plantro cautions that the foregoing list of material factors and assumptions is not exhaustive. While these factors and assumptions are considered by Plantro to be appropriate and reasonable in the circumstances as of the date of this press release, they are subject to known and unknown risks, uncertainties, assumptions and other factors that may cause the actual results, levels of activity, performance, or achievements to be materially different from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking information. Many of these assumptions are based on factors and events that are not within the control of Plantro and there is no assurance that they will prove correct.

    Important facts that could cause outcomes to differ materially from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking information include, among other things, actions taken by the Company in respect of the Tender Offer, the content of subsequent public disclosures by the Company, the failure to satisfy the conditions to the Tender Offer, general economic conditions, legislative or regulatory changes and changes in capital or securities markets. If any of these risks or uncertainties materialize, or if the opinions, estimates or assumptions underlying the forward-looking information prove incorrect, actual results or future events might vary materially from those anticipated in the forward-looking information. Although Plantro has attempted to identify important risk factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in forward-looking information, there may be other risk factors not presently known to Plantro or that Plantro presently believes are not material that could also cause actual results or future events to differ materially from those expressed in such forward-looking information.

    Statements containing forward-looking information in this press release are based on Plantro’s beliefs and opinions at the time the statements are made, and there should be no expectation that such forward-looking information will be updated or supplemented as a result of new information, estimates or opinions, future events or results or otherwise, and Plantro disclaims any obligation to do so, except as required by applicable law. All of the forward-looking information contained in this press release is expressly qualified by the foregoing cautionary statements.

    1405-7479-8102

    1 Based on 2014 Annual Information Form vs. 2025 Annual Information Form and current LinkedIn Data.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Claim 100% Deposit Bonus and $100 Trading Bonus with 100x Leverage & No KYC – Only on BexBack

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SINGAPORE, April 14, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Global cryptocurrency derivatives exchange BexBack has launched two powerful bonus programs designed to give traders a significant edge in the volatile crypto market. With up to 100x leverage, zero slippage, and no KYC requirements, BexBack continues to attract both novice and professional traders across 200+ countries.

    Two Independent Bonus Promotions

    To further support user growth and trading activity, BexBack is now offering two separate bonus campaigns that can be used for trading and profit generation.

    1. 100% Deposit Bonus

    This bonus matches your deposit amount 1:1 — double your trading power instantly.

    How to Claim and Use:

    • Available to all users, including new and existing accounts
    • Bonus is automatically credited after a qualifying deposit
    • Bonus is non-withdrawable but fully usable for leveraged trading
    • Profits generated from the bonus are withdrawable
    • Details: https://www.bexback.com/activity/deposit-bonus

    2. $100 Trading Bonus

    Earn up to $100 in trading bonus through qualifying deposits.

    How to Claim and Use:

    • $50 Bonus: Deposit over 0.001 BTC or 100 USDT in a single transaction
    • $100 Bonus: First-time deposit over 0.01 BTC or 1000 USDT
    • Bonuses can offset losses and increase position size
    • Bonuses cannot be withdrawn but profits can
    • Details: https://www.bexback.com/activity/deposit-bonus-first

    Why Trade 100x Leverage Futures on BexBack?

    BexBack enables traders to multiply their exposure and opportunities through 100x leverage — a single winning trade could grow your account 10x or even 100x in just one day. Whether you’re swing trading or scalping, this level of margin access creates unmatched potential in both bull and bear markets.

    Key Advantages of BexBack

    • 100x leverage on top cryptocurrencies
    • 100% Deposit Bonus + Welcome Bonuses
    • No KYC — sign up and trade instantly
    • Zero slippage and tight spreads
    • 24/7 customer support
    • Licensed MSB in the U.S.
    • Beginner-friendly UI and Demo Mode with 10 BTC test funds

    Who is BexBack?

    Headquartered in Singapore with operational offices in Hong Kong, the United States, the United Kingdom, Japan, and Argentina, BexBack is a rapidly growing crypto derivatives exchange. It serves over 500,000 users globally, offering secure, fast, and transparent futures trading. As a regulated Money Services Business (MSB) in the U.S., BexBack combines global trust with local access.

    Ready to Multiply Your Crypto Trading?

    Don’t miss your chance to claim 100% deposit bonus or up to $100 in trading bonuses. Trade smarter with BexBack’s 100x leverage and take control of your financial future today.

    Sign up on BexBack now, claim your exclusive bonus and start accumulating more BTC today!

    Website: www.bexback.com

    Contact: business@bexback.com

    Contact:
    Amanda
    business@bexback.com

    Disclaimer: This content is provided by BexBack The statements, views, and opinions expressed in this content are solely those of the content provider and do not necessarily reflect the views of this media platform or its publisher. We do not endorse, verify, or guarantee the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of any information presented. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, investment, or trading advice. Investing in crypto and mining related opportunities involves significant risks, including the potential loss of capital. Readers are strongly encouraged to conduct their own research and consult with a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. However, due to the inherently speculative nature of the blockchain sector–including cryptocurrency, NFTs, and mining–complete accuracy cannot always be guaranteed. Neither the media platform nor the publisher shall be held responsible for any fraudulent activities, misrepresentations, or financial losses arising from the content of this press release. Speculate only with funds that you can afford to lose. Neither the media platform nor the publisher shall be held responsible for any fraudulent activities, misrepresentations, or financial losses arising from the content of this press release. In the event of any legal claims or charges against this article, we accept no liability or responsibility.

    Legal Disclaimer: This media platform provides the content of this article on an “as-is” basis, without any warranties or representations of any kind, express or implied. We do not assume any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information presented herein. Any concerns, complaints, or copyright issues related to this article should be directed to the content provider mentioned above.

    Photos accompanying this announcement are available at:

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/6545edce-37fd-406f-9976-01796f7492d9

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/9b73bcce-5548-4d38-8250-3fd22e9ee7df

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/03d1fedb-6653-4574-b0e3-05592c3244e1

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/0d4ad990-1de6-4d77-903b-18e5524a2b74

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Moody’s has upgraded Coop Pank’s covered bonds rating to Aa1

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Moody’s Investors Service has upgraded the rating of covered bonds issued by Coop Pank AS (Coop Pank) from Aa2 to Aa1.

    When upgrading the rating, the international rating agency Moody’s has analyzed Coop Pank’s covered bond issue, taking into account, among other things, the credit quality of the mortgage loans used as collateral, the issuer’s activities and the Estonian legal framework, as well as market risks and the economic environment.

    Read more: https://ratings.moodys.com/ratings-news/441062

    In March of this year, Coop Pank issued the first 250 million euros of 4-year covered bonds within the framework of the 750 million euro covered bond program. The covered bonds are listed on the Euronext Dublin stock exchange.

    According to Paavo Truu, CFO of Coop Pank, the rating upgrade is a recognition of both Coop Pank and the Estonian financial system and the legal framework regarding covered bonds as a whole.

    Coop Pank, based on Estonian capital, is one of the five universal banks operating in Estonia. The number of clients using Coop Pank for their daily banking reached 211,000. Coop Pank aims to put the synergy generated by the interaction of retail business and banking to good use and to bring everyday banking services closer to people’s homes. The strategic shareholder of the bank is the domestic retail chain Coop Eesti, comprising of 320 stores.

    Additional information:
    Paavo Truu
    CFO
    Phone: 5160 231
    E-mail: paavo.truu@cooppank.ee

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: TNB Announces Dividend and First-Quarter 2025 Financial Results

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    THOMASVILLE, Ga., April 14, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Thomasville Bancshares, Inc. (OTC PINK: THVB), the parent company of Thomasville National Bank and TNB Financial Services, reported its financial results for the first quarter ended March 31, 2025. The company also announced its Board of Directors approved a cash dividend of $1.25 per share. The dividend will be paid on July 2, 2025 to shareholders of record as of June 11, 2025.

    In announcing the dividend, the Company’s Chairman and CEO Stephen H. Cheney stated “We are pleased that our Bank’s strong financial performance allows us to continue our tradition of paying a dividend in July to our shareholders.”

    Cheney also stated “As we enter our 30th year we recognize the support of this community, our shareholders and customers have made our Bank extremely successful. We are very pleased to share the earnings of the Company with the people that made it a reality. One of the most important benefits of a locally owned bank is that the earnings remain in the community.” Over the past twenty-five years, TNB has returned over $116 million in dividends to local shareholders.

    First-Quarter 2025 Results

    • Net Income for the quarter of $10,503,378 compared to $9,386,870 for the same period last year, an increase of 12%.
    • Earnings per share for the quarter were $1.66 (basic) and $1.58 (diluted).
    • YTD Return on Average Assets of 2.27% and Return on Average Tangible Equity of 24.27%.
    • Total Assets of $1.899 billion, an increase of $156 million over the same period in 2024.
    • Loans grew to $1.592 billion, an increase of $158 million or 11% year-over-year.
    • Deposits grew to $1.642 billion, an increase of $134 million or 9% year-over-year.
    • Regulatory Capital was $180 million or 9.53% of assets.
    • TNB Financial, provider of trust and investment services, has client assets over $4.7 billion.

    Stephen H. Cheney, Chairman and CEO, said “In this time of economic uncertainty, our stability and consistent performance continues to set us apart. We are pleased to report our strong financial performance for the first quarter ended March 31, 2025. We believe that our Bank is well positioned to continue this strong performance throughout the year.”

    Bank President, Bert Hodges stated, “Our resilient culture that empowers our bankers to be creative thinkers has become extremely unique in our industry. This continues to set us apart and has led to superior credit quality, solid customer loyalty, and excellent opportunities for growth. The talent, pride and competitive spirit of our bankers makes us more confident than ever about the future of TNB.”

    About Thomasville Bancshares, Inc., and Thomasville National Bank

    Thomasville Bancshares, Inc. was founded in 1995 as the holding company for Thomasville National Bank. Today the Bank has total assets of over $1.899 billion. TNB is consistently recognized as a top performing community bank. In 2024, TNB was ranked 7th nationally in American Banker’s Top 200 Community Banks based upon three years average return on shareholders’ equity. The Bank’s trust and investment division, TNB Financial Services, has client assets over $4.7 billion under advisement and provides financial planning, investments, trust, brokerage, and other related financial services. TNBFS has offices located in Georgia, Florida, South Carolina, Illinois, and Ohio. The Company is headquartered in Thomasville, Georgia and has over 800 local shareholders. Thomasville National Bank is Member FDIC and an Equal Housing Lender. For more information, visit www.tnbank.com.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Economics: AGNICO EAGLE LAUNCHES NEW PODCAST SERIES – THE ARCTIC EDGE

    Source: Agnico Eagle Mines

    New podcast showcases stories from Canada’s frontier and the unique identity of Nunavut

    April 14, 2025, Toronto, ON – Agnico Eagle Mines Limited (Agnico Eagle) is proud to introduce a special podcast series, The Arctic Edge: Stories from Canada’s Frontier. The trailer is live, and listeners can subscribe now to be notified when the first two episodes drop on May 1, 2025. Hosted by award-winning journalist, Hannah Thibedeau, the podcast focuses on a series of engaging stories and insightful interviews that explore Nunavut’s, and the broader Canadian North’s, social, economic and environmental opportunities and responsibilities, highlighting the importance of sustainable change.

    “As the Arctic region grows in strategic importance, not only for Canadians, but for many of our neighbours, it is vital that we come together as a nation to implement a comprehensive Arctic vision and strategy,” says Sean Boyd, Chair of the Board, Agnico Eagle. “Our goal is that listeners of The Arctic Edge will leave with a deeper appreciation for the North’s rich heritage and its immense potential.”

    “Agnico Eagle is deeply honoured by the opportunity to help share stories from Canada’s North to a broader audience,” says Ammar Al-Joundi, President & Chief Executive Officer, Agnico Eagle. “The stories shared on this podcast are engaging, insightful and moving. I am confident the podcast will spark curiosity and pride across Canada and beyond.”

    Nunavut is a land of immense potential, stunning landscapes and rich cultural heritage. While the future holds great promise, challenges remain that need to be addressed. Through this podcast, Agnico Eagle aims to foster meaningful discussions, and believes it is essential to ensure that Inuit voices are heard and respected.

    Special guests that will be heard throughout the series include:

    • Kono Tattuinee, President of Kivalliq Inuit Association
    • Peter Tapatai, President of Peter’s Expediting Limited
    • Dennis Patterson, Former Senator for Nunavut
    • Mads Qvist Frederiksen, Executive Director, Arctic Economic Council
    • Scott Clancy, Former Director General for the Royal Canadian Air Force
    • Sean Boyd, Chair of the Board, Agnico Eagle

    Listen to the trailer and subscribe to The Arctic Edge so you don’t miss the first two episodes dropping on May 1, 2025, by visiting: https://thearcticedge.ca/.

    The podcast will be available in English wherever you listen to podcasts, including Apple Podcasts and Spotify. The podcast will also be available in Inuktitut, date of release to be announced.

    About Agnico Eagle

    Agnico Eagle is a Canadian-based and led senior gold mining company and the third largest gold producer in the world, producing precious metals from operations in Canada, Australia, Finland and Mexico, with a pipeline of high-quality exploration and development projects. Agnico Eagle is a partner of choice within the mining industry, recognized globally for its leading sustainability practices.

    For further information regarding Agnico Eagle, contact:

    Natalie Frackleton
    Director, External Communications, Agnico Eagle
    Email: natalie.frackleton@agnicoeagle.com

    For media enquiries, contact:

    Taylor Jantzi
    Global Public Affairs
    Email: tjantzi@globalpublic.com

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Surgery manager deducted money from staff wages but failed to pay it into NHS pension scheme

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Surgery manager deducted money from staff wages but failed to pay it into NHS pension scheme

    Sonia Simkins faces seven years of bankruptcy restrictions following an investigation by the Insolvency Service.

    • The Official Receiver’s investigation found Sonia Simkins failed to pay £75,000 into the NHS pension fund – despite deducting contributions from staff  

    • Seven-year restrictions prevent Simkins from starting a new company or being a company director   

    • Hawes Lane Surgery in Rowley Regis closed after a bankruptcy order was made against Simkins 

    A GP practice manager who failed to pay more than £75,000 into the pension funds of staff at her surgery now faces seven years of bankruptcy restrictions.  

    Sonia Simkins, 54, of Foxglove Way, Dudley, ran Hawes Lane Surgery in Rowley Regis as a sole trader. But in July 2024, the practice closed after a bankruptcy order was made against her.   

    Following the order, an investigation by the Official Receiver found Simkins had deducted pension contributions from staff wages, but failed to pay the money into the NHS Pension Scheme.  

    Investigations by the Official Receiver have been unable to confirm exactly what happened to the money. 

    On 3 April 2025, Simkins agreed a Bankruptcy Restrictions Undertaking (BRU), which prevents her from managing a limited company for the next seven years, taking out a loan of more than £500 without disclosing the restriction, or working in some senior health service roles.  

    David Chapman, Senior Official Receiver at the Insolvency Service, said:  

    Sonia Simkins deducted pension contributions from her staff’s wages, but failed to pay more than £75,000 into the NHS pension fund – while the closure of Hawes Lane Surgery had an immediate impact on staff and patients in Rowley Regis.   

    Following an Insolvency Service investigation by the Official Receiver, Simkins accepted her misconduct. The BRU will prevent her from acting as a company director or starting a new company until April 2032.

    Hawes Lane Surgery closed on 25 July 2024 with almost 4,000 registered patients receiving no notice of the closure.  

    The Official Receiver worked closely with the Black Country Integrated Care Board (BCICB) to ensure patients arriving for appointments that day were provided with appropriate medical care at nearby surgeries. BCICB also ensured patients at the surgery had continuing access to a GP before being re-registered at a new practice. 

    At the time of the closure, the practice employed 10 members of staff including a GP, and employees in receptionist and administrative roles.  

    Between August 2019 and December 2020, and June 2023 and June 2024, Simkins should have paid £76,868 into the NHS pension fund for her staff, but only £1,722 was contributed. 

    During this period, she deducted more than £25,000 from her employees’ salaries as pension contributions and failed to pay more than £50,000 of employer contributions. 

    Further information  

    • Sonia Simkins is of Foxglove Way, Dudley. Her date of birth is 24 November 1970.  

    • Details of the case are available online on the Individual Insolvency Register.  

    • Bankruptcy restrictions are wide ranging. A Bankruptcy Restrictions Undertaking (BRU) allows a bankrupt person suspected of misconduct to accept restrictions without needing to go to court. Accepting a BRU can also lead to a shorter time period of restrictions.   

    • More information is available on bankruptcy restrictions, including the full list of rules around orders and undertakings.

    Updates to this page

    Published 14 April 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Household recycling centres keep extended hours over Easter

    Source: City of Birmingham

    Published: Monday, 14th April 2025

    Our Household Recycling Centres will continue their extended opening hours every day over the Easter holiday.

    Slots can be booked online and details of opening hours for each centres can be found here.

    Since Friday 4th April 2025, our clean-up crews across the city have collected 11,588 tonnes of waste, including the waste taken to HWRCs – the equivalent to 1,000 killer whales.

    Our crews have been clearing approx. 1,500 tonnes of waste a day since our vehicles have been able to deploy on time, with around 100-120 refuse collection vehicles out every day. We have repurposed between 40 and 60 housing and street cleansing vehicles and deployed multiple ‘grab trucks’ to clear large rubbish piles each day, prioritising 15 of the most affected hotspot wards.

    We are also supported by extra vehicles through mutual aid, with military support working alongside the managing director to support with planning and logistics – this is not about having personnel on the ground clearing rubbish.

    Leader of the Council Cllr John Cotton said: “Our work to clear the backlog is gathering pace and we will continue collecting waste over the weekend.

    “I fully appreciate that there is still more to do, and I share the frustration of people across the city, but now that we are getting our crews out on time every day, we are starting to see a difference and I want to thank our amazing crews for their hard work over the last week.

    “I also want to thank every citizen, community group and organisation that is helping with the clear-up. People are helping in neighbourhoods right across the city and their support is helping to clear our streets.”

    Talks to resolve the dispute will continue this week and Cllr Cotton added: “I will stress again that we have made a fair and reasonable offer that means that no-one has to lose any pay at all, with alternative roles offered within the service, or indeed a promotion to work as a driver. We’re determined to reach an agreement but in the meantime, the clear-up continues.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Russia: As part of the Young Engineers project, SPbGASU opened its doors to its youngest guests

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Saint Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering – Saint Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering –

    A master class for pupils of kindergarten No. 83 of the Petrogradsky district was held at the Saint Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering. The event became part of a new joint project “Young Engineers” aimed at developing engineering and technical thinking in preschoolers.

    The meeting took place in the university’s model workshop, where young guests, under the guidance of experienced mentors, were able to immerse themselves in the world of architectural design. The master class was conducted by Associate Professor of the Department of Architectural Design, PhD in Architecture Olga Belousova together with second- and third-year students of the Faculty of Architecture.

    The Young Engineers project is the result of joint work of employees of the automobile and road, construction and architecture faculties of SPbGASU with teachers of kindergarten No. 83. As part of the cooperation, special methodological manuals and recommendations for preschool institutions are being developed to promote the early development of technical thinking in children.

    The project plays a special role in popularizing the engineering profession among preschool children. The organizers strive to show that engineering is not only interesting and exciting, but also very important for the development of modern society. Through game forms and practical tasks, children get acquainted with the basics of design, learn to solve creative problems and develop spatial thinking, which in the future can help them make a conscious choice of a professional path.

    The event was organized by the Institute of Continuing Education of SPbGASU, which continues to develop innovative approaches to technical education from an early age.

    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 Russia: The GUU team took silver at the DATA Hackathon

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

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

    The team of the State University of Management received a second-degree diploma at the student DATA Hackathon, which was held in person on April 11-12, 2025 in Moscow. The guys had previously passed the correspondence stage of selection.

    In 2025, 19 teams from various regions of Russia competed for victory.

    The State University of Management was represented by students of the Applied Mathematics and Informatics and Applied Informatics training programs of the 2nd and 4th years of the Institute of Information Systems. The team was given the symbolic name “GUUCoders”.

    Students Ilya Potalainen, Klim Kartashov, Daria Osadina, Karina Ruzieva, Yuri Polyakov and their supervisor, Associate Professor of the Department of Mathematical Methods in Economics and Management Inna Kramarenko, spent two days developing and presenting a solution to a problem from the General Partner of the Hackathon, Arenadata – “Development of an analytical application to improve the efficiency of logistics in retail”.

    The expert jury included representatives of large companies, including the CEO of JSC Innocifra Sergey Myasnikov, the CEO of OOO Fabrika Datnykh Alexey Nikulin, the team leader of Loginom Nikolay Paklin, the director of work with universities at Arenadata Igor Petrov and the development director of JSC Neyroseti Olga Tomuk.

    At the Hackathon, the guys gained tremendous experience in solving practical problems on real datasets and demonstrated their mastery of using big data and artificial intelligence technologies.

    We congratulate the students and their supervisor on their worthy results and wish them further victories!

    Subscribe to the TG channel “Our GUU” Date of publication: 04/14/2025

    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: Local guides hold the untranslatable edge in China’s tourism boom

    Source: China State Council Information Office 2

    Dan Niu, once confined to a cubicle crunching numbers at a Shanghai bank, now spends weekdays cycling through the city’s alleyways, leading foreign tourists past steamed bun stalls and hidden galleries tucked off the beaten path.
    “On our rides, we can stop anytime to chat with locals at breakfast spots or dance with retirees in public squares,” said Dan, whose cycling tours offer international travelers a half-day glimpse into everyday Shanghai, far from the usual tourist trail.
    Dan’s career shift reflects the boom in “China travel,” partly fueled by the continuous optimization of visa-free policies. To date, China has introduced unilateral visa-free policies for 38 countries, and implemented 240-hour transit visa-free arrangements for 54 countries.
    The impact has been striking. More than 20 million visa-free inbound trips were recorded in 2024, a 112.3 percent increase year-on-year, according to the National Immigration Administration.
    This inbound tourism boom has opened up opportunities for people with foreign language skills like Dan.
    GZL International Travel Service in Guangdong Province, south China, has expanded its multilingual guide team to around 30 people, including 14 new team members hired since late 2023, with English-speaking guides remaining the most sought-after.
    In an era of AI-powered instant translation, a tourist may travel to any foreign country without the need for a human translator. However, human connection remains highly valued. After all, while technology can translate, it cannot guide. The warmth of a smile and the bond forged in a shared moment still require a human touch.
    “What we’re seeing goes far beyond language assistance,” said Zhou Weihong, deputy general manager of Shanghai-based travel agency Spring Tour. Since the relaxation of visa policies, the agency has witnessed a growing influx of European and American tourists seeking immersive cultural experiences that standard itineraries often overlook.
    To meet this demand, the agency has included the 2025 Formula 1 Chinese Grand Prix in its tour packages, offering international visitors an exclusive combination of race event access and carefully curated Shanghai city experiences.
    Xu Junjie, a Japanese-speaking guide, has also observed a growing trend in demand for culturally distinctive experiences.
    “Alongside classic tours, visitors are increasingly drawn to quintessentially Chinese activities like tai chi and calligraphy,” Xu said. “Some even request tours of filming locations inspired by Chinese TV dramas.”
    Zhao Da, a Spanish-speaking guide, said Spanish tourist visitors tend to have different priorities. “Spanish tourists are captivated by China’s natural landscapes, with river cruises being their favorite,” Zhao told Xinhua. “Equally important is shopping for unique Chinese-style fashion items.”
    Even for the tourists from the same region, their interests can vary with their ages. Chen Junjun, an English-speaking guide in Shanghai, observed that elderly European tourists seek historical experience delivered with nostalgic warmth, while Gen Z travelers crave urban explorations, including the city’s hidden food gems and vibrant street culture. Therefore, Chen tailors itineraries to suit generational preferences.
    Xu Kai, another English-speaking tour guide, has seen a noticeable rise in visitors from South America. He also noticed that this year’s inbound tourism season started earlier than last year.
    Specializing in high-end travel, Xu curates personalized itineraries that offer visitors access to lesser-known, authentic experiences.
    “What surprises most guests is how different China is from what they expected,” Xu told Xinhua. “I often hear things like, ‘This isn’t what we imagined at all,’ or ‘seeing is believing.’”
    Though consulting tourist agencies remains a choice for many foreign travelers, popular Chinese social media platforms have become a thriving market where tourists discover potential tour guides. This is how Yami, a Russian-language graduate student, finds clients.
    Living in southwest China’s Sichuan Province, home of pandas and spicy hotpot, Yami obtained a tour guide certification in early 2024 and began offering services through Xiaohongshu, or rednote, a popular Chinese social media app.
    Yami receives a flood of inquiries through rednote. In the second half of 2024 alone, Yami led 16 Russian tour groups, and the schedule is already fully booked through June this year.
    For Yami, guiding is more than just a paycheck. “Through daily interactions, I learn about my guests’ lives back home. It feels like a study-abroad experience, with international visitors bringing the world to me,” Yami said. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI: APA Corporation Announces Executive Leadership Updates; Ben C. Rodgers Promoted to Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Operational Leaders Added to Support Key Priorities

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    HOUSTON, April 14, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — APA Corporation (Nasdaq: APA) today announced key updates to its executive leadership team.

    Ben Rodgers has been named executive vice president and chief financial officer, effective May 12, 2025. In this role, he will oversee all financial activities and departments, including Accounting, Audit, Investor Relations, Planning, Tax and Treasury. Rodgers joined APA in 2018 and previously served as SVP, Finance and Treasurer. He also served as CFO of Altus Midstream and later as a director on the board of Kinetik Holdings Inc. He currently serves on the board of Khalda Petroleum Company, a joint venture between APA subsidiary Apache Corporation and Egypt Petroleum Company.

    Steve Riney will continue in his role as president, overseeing asset development and operations. As part of Steve’s team, the company has added two key executives to help oversee operations.

    Shad Frazier has joined as senior vice president, U.S. Onshore Operations, effective immediately. Shad has nearly 30 years of industry experience, most recently as vice president, Production Operations at Endeavor Energy Resources, LP. Previously, he held various leadership positions at Legacy Reserves and SandRidge Energy. He holds a petroleum engineering degree from Texas Tech University and a master’s degree in business administration from Oklahoma University.

    Donald Martin will also be joining the company as vice president, Decommissioning, effective May 26, 2025. Donald has 20 years of operations and decommissioning portfolio experience, most recently as the head of decommissioning & projects at Spirit Energy E&P. He has also managed decommissioning at Canadian Natural Resources E&P. Donald holds a master’s degree with distinction in major programme management from Oxford University.

    “I am pleased to welcome Ben to our executive leadership team. He has done a tremendous job and will bring valuable expertise to our financial operations,” said John J. Christmann, APA Corporation CEO. “I am also excited to welcome both Shad and Donald to the team. Their extensive experience and leadership will be instrumental in driving our operations forward.”

    About APA

    APA Corporation owns consolidated subsidiaries that explore for and produce oil and natural gas in the United States, Egypt and the United Kingdom and that explore for oil and natural gas offshore Suriname and elsewhere. APA posts announcements, operational updates, investor information and press releases on its website, www.apacorp.com.

    Contacts
    Investor:  (281) 302-2286
    Media: (713) 296-7276  
    Website:  www.apacorp.com 
       

    APA-G

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: ARRAY Technologies Appoints Nick Strevel as Senior Vice President of Product Management and Technical Sales

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    ALBUQUERQUE, N.M., April 14, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — ARRAY Technologies (NASDAQ: ARRY) (“ARRAY” or the “Company”), a leading provider of tracker solutions and services for utility-scale solar energy projects, announced the appointment of Nick Strevel as senior vice president of product management and technical sales, effective today.

    In this dual leadership role, Strevel will be responsible for driving ARRAY’s global product strategy and building a high-performing technical sales function that strengthens ARRAY’s relationships with customers and partners worldwide.

    “Nick brings a rare blend of technical depth, commercial acumen, and international experience that will accelerate ARRAY’s innovation and customer engagement,” said Kevin G. Hostetler, chief executive officer at ARRAY. “Nick’s leadership will help ensure our products and solutions are contributing to driving the renewable energy sector and positioned for long-term success.”

    Strevel joins ARRAY from First Solar, where he spent more than a decade in increasingly senior roles across product management, technical sales, and technology development. Most recently, he served as Vice President of Product, responsible for driving the global product roadmap and aligning technology development with customer needs and market opportunities. Prior to that, he led First Solar’s global technical sales team and held multiple engineering and leadership positions in the U.S. and Germany.

    At ARRAY, Strevel will lead the development and execution of the company’s product strategy, promoting cutting-edge innovations and solutions for our customers. He will also oversee the creation of ARRAY’s technical sales function, empowering teams with the tools, knowledge, and processes needed to deliver high-impact, solution-based selling around the globe.

    “I’m thrilled to join ARRAY at such a transformative time for the solar industry,” said Strevel. “ARRAY’s commitment to innovation and customer success will allow us to help shape the next generation of solar tracking solutions that drive value for our customers and accelerate the clean energy transition.”

    With over 15 years of experience in the renewable energy and automotive electrification sectors, Strevel brings deep expertise in thin-film photovoltaics, semiconductor manufacturing, and custom equipment development. He began his career at United Solar Ovonic as a semiconductor process engineer and later served as a senior application engineer based in Frankfurt, Germany.

    Strevel holds a Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering from Michigan State University and studied at RWTH Aachen University in Germany.

    About ARRAY
    ARRAY Technologies (NASDAQ: ARRY) is a leading global provider of solar tracking technology to utility-scale and distributed generation customers who construct, develop, and operate solar PV sites. With solutions engineered to withstand the harshest weather conditions, ARRAY’s high-quality solar trackers, software platforms and field services combine to maximize energy production and deliver value to our customers for the entire lifecycle of a project. Founded and headquartered in the United States, ARRAY is rooted in manufacturing and driven by technology – relying on its domestic manufacturing, diversified global supply chain, and customer-centric approach to design, deliver, commission, train, and support solar energy deployment around the world. For more news and information on ARRAY, please visit arraytechinc.com.

    Forward Looking Statement
    This press release contains forward-looking statements. These statements are not historical facts but rather are based on the Company’s current expectations and projections regarding its business, operations and other factors relating thereto. Words such as “may,” “will,” “could,” “would,” “should,” “anticipate,” “predict,” “potential,” “continue,” “expects,” “intends,” “plans,” “projects,” “believes,” “estimates” and similar expressions are used to identify these forward-looking statements. These statements are only predictions and as such are not guarantees of future performance and involve risks, uncertainties and assumptions that are difficult to predict. Actual results may differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements as a result of a number of factors. Forward-looking statements should be evaluated together with the risks and uncertainties that affect our business and operations, particularly those described in more detail in the Company’s most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K and other documents on file with the SEC, each of which can be found on our website www.arraytechinc.com. Except as required by law, we assume no obligation to update these forward-looking statements, or to update the reasons actual results could differ materially from those anticipated in these forward-looking statements, even if new information becomes available in the future.  

    Media Contact
    Nicole Stewart
    505.589.8257
    nicole.stewart@arraytechinc.com

    Investor Relations Contact
    Array Technologies, Inc.
    Investor Relations
    investors@arraytechinc.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Unimot establishes a board of strategic advisors

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    WARSAW, Poland, April 14, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — On April 14, Unimot, a multienergy capital group and a leader among independent importers of liquid and gaseous fuels in Poland with a strong international presence, officially inaugurated the establishment of the Board of Strategic Advisors. The Board consists of international experts: Mark Brzezinski, PhD, Prof. Jim Mazurkiewicz, Prof. Boguslaw Pacek, Prof. Karl Rose and Isaac Querub, and is led by Andreas Golombek, Chairman of the Supervisory Board of Unimot. The establishment of the Board of Strategic Advisors strengthens the Unimot Group’s competence in the face of the growing importance of geopolitics, global challenges in the energy sector, and dynamic economic changes. The initiator of the Board of Strategic Advisory is Adam Sikorski, PhD, President of the Management Board of Unimot.

    Unimot has over 30 years of experience in the industry and operates internationally, with branches in Poland, China, Switzerland, and Ukraine; it also operates an LPG terminal in Wilhelmshaven, Germany, under a lease agreement. In response to the evolving global energy landscape and the growing significance of strategic expertise, the company has established its Board of Strategic Advisors, consisting of renowned experts with extensive professional experience in areas crucial for the energy sector – from strategic management, through energy security, raw material geopolitics, to advanced technologies and investments.

    “We are aware that success in the dynamic and unpredictable energy market requires the ability to anticipate trends and manage risk boldly. This is especially important in the face of geopolitical and economic challenges that go far beyond national or regional interests. Considering the long-term interests of our shareholders and the future of the entire group, we have deliberately established the Board of Strategic Advisors. This is a group of world-class experts whose extensive connections and unique experience will allow us to continuously monitor the market situation and draw appropriate conclusions based on this, ultimately building a competitive advantage, ensuring stable and sustainable development, and responsibly managing risk in an era when geopolitics determines the future of the energy industry,” says Dr. Adam Sikorski, President of the Management Board of Unimot.

    “Uncertainty is a constant in the energy sector, but success comes to those who are able to see opportunities where others only see threats. I would like to thank UNIMOT’s Management Board for the invitation to join the Board – our role will be to provide knowledge and tools that will help the company not only adapt to changes but actively shape the future of the market,” says Prof. Karl Rose, Member of the Board of Strategic Advisors.

    The establishment of the Board of Strategic Advisors is another step in the consistent strengthening of the Unimot Group’s position as an independent leader in the energy sector. All activities will be carried out in line with the current strategy of sustainable development, corporate responsibility, and care for the long-term interests of shareholders.

    About Unimot:

    Unimot is a multi-energy capital group and a leader among independent importers of liquid and gaseous fuels in Poland, listed on the main market of the Warsaw Stock Exchange. The company specializes in the wholesale of diesel oil and the distribution of other liquid fuels. It ranks third in the fuel storage market and second in asphalt production in Poland, operating nine fuel terminals and two bitumen production plants. Furthermore, Unimot is developing its photovoltaic segment and invests in additional renewable energy sectors. The company also manages the AVIA fuel station network in Poland and Ukraine.

    Source: Unimot

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/394ff6c4-2087-414b-83d2-8d5b8a438445

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: United Bank and Federal Home Loan Bank of Atlanta Award $4.7 Million to Support Affordable Housing in Washington, D.C. and Virginia

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    WASHINGTON, April 14, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — United Bank (NASDAQ: UBSI) and the Federal Home Loan Bank of Atlanta (FHLBank Atlanta) announced today an investment of $4.7 million in grant funding, designated for five separate projects that will create 363 new affordable housing units in Washington, D.C. and Virginia.

    The funding is sourced from FHLBank Atlanta’s Affordable Housing Program (AHP) General Fund and administered through United Bank.

    These funds will go toward the following projects in Washington, D.C.:

    • Hope View Apartments received $1 million to use for the development of 42 housing units for seniors with incomes 80% or below the area median income (AMI), 16 of which are reserved for homeless households. This development will include approximately 8,000 square feet for community services for residents and the surrounding community. Anacostia Economic Development Corporation is the sponsor and developer, and T&H Investment Properties LLC also sponsored the project, which is expected to be completed in early 2026.
    • 2229 M Street NE Apartments received $1 million for the development of 92 rental units for families, 89% of which are for households with incomes at or below 50% of AMI. The project is sponsored by Housing Up and THC Affordable Housing and is expected to be completed by the end of 2026.
    • Wagner Senior Residences received $742,805 for the development of an apartment complex that will provide 67 affordable housing units, 90% of which will be for seniors with incomes below 50% of AMI. The Residences are sponsored by Justice Housing Inc. in partnership with Miller Housing LLC and is expected to be completed by the end of 2026.
    • 2911 Rhode Island Avenue NE Apartments received $1 million toward the development of a new affordable rental project, which will provide 100 units for households between 30% and 80% of AMI. The project is sponsored by Lincoln-Westmoreland Housing, Inc. and is expected to be completed in spring of 2028.

    In Harrisonburg, Va.:

    • Bluestone Town Center Residences received $1 million for the development of 62 affordable housing units for seniors with incomes between 30% and 60% of AMI. These senior housing units will be part of the full Bluestone Town Center development, a 90-acre master planned, multi-phased community that will create 900 units of mixed-income housing and service-oriented commercial space less than five minutes from downtown Harrisonburg. Harrisonburg Redevelopment & Housing Authority is the project sponsor and developer. The project is expected to be completed by early 2026.

    Each property will provide residents with high-speed internet and offer education and training services on topics including computer skills, life skills, money management, GED preparation, literacy, and nutrition.

    “United Bank has a longstanding history of supporting community development initiatives that provide affordable housing, support low- or moderate-income senior citizens and families, and revitalize communities in meaningful ways,” said Christina Cudney, Corporate Social Responsibility Officer, United Bank. “These funds from FHLBank Atlanta help us continue to move the needle on pressing challenges faced by our communities to fulfill this ongoing commitment. With the rise in construction costs, several projects in our area had a need for gap funding, and FHLBank Atlanta’s grant program is enabling these initiatives to cross the finish line sooner than otherwise possible.”

    FHLBank Atlanta’s General Fund provides grants annually to assist in the acquisition, construction, rehabilitation, or preservation of affordable housing projects. In December 2024, FHLBank Atlanta announced 66 grant recipient winners of its 2024 program, which allocated a total of $55 million to support the development and repair of more than 4,200 affordable housing units.

    “It is inspiring to see United Bank’s dedication to affordable housing and economic vitality,” said FHLBank Atlanta President and CEO Kirk Malmberg. “Understanding the growing need for more affordable housing, our members like United Bank are working hand in hand with their local developers and nonprofits to make a lasting impact, and we are honored to see funds from FHLBank Atlanta support such transformational projects.”

    About United Bank
    United Bank is a premier community bank headquartered in Greater Washington, D.C. A subsidiary of United Bankshares, Inc. (NASDAQ: UBSI), United has consolidated assets of more than $32 billion with over 240 offices located throughout Virginia, Maryland, West Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Georgia, as well as Washington, D.C., where it is the community bank of the nation’s capital. The Bank is committed to growing the relationships it has built since 1839 and offering a competitive suite of banking and lending products, treasury management, wealth management, mortgage services, personal and business credit cards, and more. United is also committed to providing excellence in service to the communities throughout its footprint, strategically aligning resources to move the needle on pressing challenges in vital impact areas, including financial literacy, children and education, affordable housing, health, and economic vitality. For more information, visit BankWithUnited.com.

    About Federal Home Loan Bank of Atlanta
    FHLBank Atlanta offers competitively-priced financing, community development grants, and other banking services to help member financial institutions make affordable home mortgages and provide economic development credit to neighborhoods and communities. The Bank’s members—its shareholders and customers—are commercial banks, credit unions, savings institutions, community development financial institutions, and insurance companies located in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, and the District of Columbia. FHLBank Atlanta is one of 11 district Banks in the Federal Home Loan Bank System. Since 1990, the FHLBanks have awarded approximately $9.1 billion in Affordable Housing Program funds, assisting more than 1.2 million households.

    For more information, visit our website at www.fhlbatl.com.

    MEDIA CONTACTS:
    Federal Home Loan Bank of Atlanta
    Sheryl Touchton
    stouchton@fhlbatl.com

    United Bank
    Sameera Jordan
    sameera.jordan@bankwithunited.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Petra Tschudin, Thomas Moser: Fast and available round the clock – what instant payments mean for households, companies and financial institutions

    Source: Bank for International Settlements

    Ladies and gentlemen

    Welcome to the Swiss National Bank’s Money Market Event. My colleague Thomas Moser and I are delighted to be discussing the latest developments in Switzerland’s cashless payments landscape this evening.

    Since last year, bank customers in our country have been able to make transfers that are executed immediately. The amounts are credited within seconds, every day of the week and round the clock. In our speech, we will explore the significance of these instant payments for households, companies and financial institutions.

    To illustrate the relevance of this topic, it is worth reflecting briefly on our everyday lives. Consumer behaviour has changed considerably in many areas. Thanks to online shopping and streaming services, we have grown accustomed to being able to consume quickly and at any time. You know the situation: We order a pizza online from the comfort of our living room in the evening, and it is delivered within half an hour. We have come to take this for granted. And yet, surprisingly, the physical delivery of the pizza is much faster than the electronic transfer of the money to the pizzeria. The payment that we trigger when we click ‘Order’ takes longer than you might think; indeed, it can take several days – or even weeks – for the money to arrive on the pizzeria’s account.

    Types of cashless payment and the benefits of instant payments

    Why is this? The lag in payment settlement is due to the fact that legacy settlement mechanisms cannot keep up with the pace of modern business. A look at the structure of the financial system helps to better contextualise and understand what changes instant payments bring.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Ásgeir Jónsson: Speech – 64th Annual Meeting of the Central Bank of Iceland

    Source: Bank for International Settlements

    Madame Prime Minister, other Ministers, Chair of the Supervisory Board, honoured guests:

    An hour before noon on Friday 15 April 1904, all stores in Reykjavík were closed, and children were given the day off school. At noon, city merchants gathered at the square in Lækjartorg and “marched” to the tune of band music to the cemetery on Suðurgata. The weather was delightful, and the Icelandic flag, which was then blue and white, and the Danish flag were held aloft as the parade moved along. When it reached the cemetery, a garland was placed on the grave of Jón Sigurdsson, speeches were given, those gathered sang “Ó Guð vors lands [O God of our Land]”, and the group returned to midtown.

    That parade marked the fifty-year anniversary of free trade and the end of the Danish trade monopoly, the last vestiges of which had been lifted on 15 April 1854. The celebrations continued through the evening with gatherings all over town. Freedom was eulogised with a nineteen verse “ode to trade freedom” written by editor and Alaska explorer Jón Ólafsson. The last verse translates loosely as follows:

    Let freedom to trade be the beacon that guides us

    and helps us change boulders to bread.

    Let freedom to trade be the bedrock beneath us,

    the bulwark of freedoms ahead.

    Independence leader Jón Sigurdsson had certainly prioritised free trade. In 1843, he wrote an article for the magazine Ný félagsrit [New Association Writings] entitled “On Trade in Iceland”, in which he explored Icelandic history through the lens of classical economics in the spirit of Adam Smith and David Ricardo. He attributed Iceland’s poverty to the Danish trade monopoly, thereby staking out a new political policy: Free trade would be a cornerstone of Iceland’s sovereignty. The 1904 event was therefore a victory celebration, as much had been gained over the preceding half-century. Iceland had home rule and a new bank registered in Copenhagen. Motorised boats and urbanisation were just over the horizon. Perhaps more importantly, the Icelandic nation had gained the confidence to stand on its own feet.

    Honoured guests:

    The period from 1860 until 1914 is often referred to as the First Globalisation – when trade in goods and capital was unrestricted and countries were interlinked by railroads, steamships, and the telegraph. The British were in the vanguard of global trade at that time, harnessing their industrial power, their might as a colonial empire, and the strength of the gold-pegged pound sterling.

    This openness came to an end with the outbreak of World War I in 1914. The US took the helm from Britain as the twentieth century’s leading industrialised country but did not take the lead in world trade. This became obvious after the stock market crash of October 1929. In June 1930, the US responded by levying protective tariffs of 20% on the rest of the world. Other countries immediately responded in kind and world trade shrank by 60-70% over the ensuing two years, undeniably deepening the Great Depression.

    Iceland’s fight for independence was grounded not least in its having unrestricted access to foreign markets. It was in the shelter of this certainty that the nation chose to separate from Denmark and become a sovereign state on 19 October 1918. A mere 23 days later, on 11 November 1918, World War I ended with the signing of an armistice agreement on the Western Front, and soon afterwards, Europe stopped buying Icelandic herring. Iceland was close to insolvent by October 1920, and consumer goods had to be rationed in Reykjavík over the ensuing winter. The situation was only remedied after the króna had been devalued by 30% and a loan from Britain obtained – on onerous terms.

    Only two years after having gained sovereignty, Iceland had been battered by the fragility of international trade. Numerous shocks have shaken the country since then, and we have usually been poorly prepared for the headwinds. Perhaps it is not in Icelanders’ nature to make hay while the sun shines, as we are advised in to do in the Book of Proverbs. I believe the COVID pandemic in 2020 was the first and only severe shock we have weathered without staring down the barrel of a balance of payments crisis, a currency implosion, the imposition of capital controls, or goods rationing. But our relative strength in 2020 did not materialise out of nowhere.

    Honoured guests:

    Ever since the financial crisis struck in October 2008, we as a nation have given top priority to shoring up the economy’s resilience to external shocks. Of course, this is not the work of any single individual but a joint effort involving many, many people. With the passage of the new Central Bank Act in 2019 and the merger between the Bank and the Financial Supervisory Authority in 2020, Iceland endeavoured to integrate monetary policy, macroprudential policy, and financial supervision into a comprehensive strategy. Five years after the merger, the boundaries between the two institutions have vanished, but the improvement is plain to see.

    Anyone who doubts the efficacy of macroprudential tools should read the Bank’s most recent Financial Stability report, issued this March. According to the analysis in that report, households’ and businesses’ balance sheets have seldom been healthier than they are right now, owing to moderate debt levels and ample equity. There are few signs of increased arrears as yet. Iceland’s balance of payments is broadly satisfactory, and the króna has been relatively stable. In short, we are very well prepared to face headwinds.

    The application of macroprudential tools has also supported monetary policy effectively by restricting both debt levels in the real estate market and derivatives contracts in the foreign exchange market. It has enabled us both to prevent bubble formation amidst rising house prices and to limit opportunities for speculation and carry trade in the wake of a significant tightening of the monetary stance. It is also clear that capital requirements on credit institutions strengthen the transmission of the monetary stance along the credit channel by limiting the multiplier effects on deposits and lending, or the money creation associated with increased leverage.

    The Central Bank has now lowered its key interest rates four times since last autumn, and inflation has been on a more or less constant downward path for well over a year. Although inflation is still too high, it is moving steadily towards the 2½% inflation target. Monetary policy works. As long as private sector balance sheets remain strong and resilience is sufficient, it is quite likely that the economy will achieve a soft landing after a period of very buoyant GDP growth. This is the scriptural lesson that truly matters.

    Honoured guests:

    The voices insisting that we as a nation cannot afford the macroprudential buffers we have accumulated in recent years have grown ever louder. Icelandic banks, they say, are fenced in and their competitive position weakened by excessive capital requirements. Resolving this would involve either bank mergers or a relaxation of capital requirements. In this context, I want to ask everyone to pause for a minute and look back over the past five years, and to recognise that it is indeed possible to strengthen operations without increasing leverage and indebtedness in the system.

    In 2019, the three systemically important banks’ net interest income totalled 100 b.kr. or so. By 2024, it had grown to 150 b.kr. This is an increase of 16% in real terms. Over the same period, the banks’ operating expenses rose by 7 b.kr., which is equivalent to a decrease of 19% in real terms. Their expense ratios in terms of regular income fell from 57% in 2019 to 43% as of 2024. Their interest rate spreads have held broadly unchanged. Simply put, this is a revolution in Icelandic banking operations! And no wonder that the three banks’ returns were twice as strong over the past four years as over the four-year period immediately preceding. In 2017-2020, the banks’ average returns were 5.7%, but in 2021-2024 they were 11.7%. Strong returns and strong macroprudential policy therefore go hand-in-hand!

    I cannot resist quoting the closing line in Voltaire’s Candide: “We must cultivate our garden.” It seems crystal-clear to me that the three large banks have made astonishing progress in cultivating their gardens over the past five years – and that a host of opportunities still await them.

    I want to emphasise here that the best foundation for sound long-term returns in the financial system is economic policy that ensures stability. This should be obvious – and it is a lesson we ought to have learned many times over. The heart of the matter is this: Strong macroprudential policy and robust financial supervision create more stable revenues for the financial system and reduce the likelihood of loan losses and collapse. Macroprudential tools lay the groundwork for preventing competition in the lending market from devolving into a game of leapfrog where participants vie with each other to see who can make the most lenient requirements, as was the case during the years preceding the collapse of 2008. Being a systemically important bank in a small system brings with it both responsibilities and benefits, which must inevitably be reflected in higher capital requirements. But I want to mention that just this winter the Central Bank lowered capital buffers on Icelandic financial institutions not designated as systemically important. This is a reflection of the Bank’s assessment that systemic risk has subsided with the application of macroprudential tools.

    I also want to emphasise the importance of financial supervision for the credibility of the financial system, where transparency is a key to trust. It is vital to monitor risks within individual institutions because temptation within one entity can so easily become another’s problem. In this context, it is important that we be able to investigate such cases and conclude them appropriately without giving rise to doubts about the financial system or the market as a whole. It is also important that we increase the efficacy of supervision to the extent possible, given the international commitments we have undertaken under the EEA Agreement. I would like to point out that the capital requirements imposed on Icelandic credit institutions due to specific credit risk have declined in recent years, partly because the banks’ loan books are far better diversified and carry less concentration risk now that the share of real estate-backed loans has increased. The outlook is also for capital requirements due to mortgages with relatively low loan-to-value ratios to decline even further with the implementation of the third Capital Requirements Regulation (CRR III) in coming months.

    Not only have real estate-backed loans generated secure interest income for the banks and reduced capital requirements, they have also created new, favourable possibilities for foreign funding. I am convinced that, once the dust settles after the period of rapid price rises and supply shortages in the housing market, we will see continued growth in the banks’ mortgage lending, similar to that seen in neighbouring countries, and Icelandic households will then be able to borrow on the best possible terms. It is very important for the Government to support this loan form – one that is funded with deposits, on the one hand, and covered bonds, on the other – instead of launching a new system and/or sponsoring large-scale State-guaranteed lending. In this context, we should be chastened by the past, for the Housing Financing Fund’s remaining assets are hopefully being settled virtually as I speak, and at a large loss to the Treasury.

    Honoured guests:

    From the beginning of Iceland’s sovereignty in 1918 until November 2008, the country’s international reserves were too small to enable us to weather large external shocks. We changed course with loans taken in cooperation with the IMF in the wake of the financial crisis. But it was not until the Central Bank embarked on large-scale foreign currency purchases in the domestic interbank market in 2014-2017 that we acquired sizeable reserves financed in Icelandic krónur. These purchases created a glut of liquidity in the monetary system. Subsequently, the Central Bank’s key interest rate became its deposit rate rather than the rate on collateralised loans. Instead of receiving interest income from its collateralised loans to the banks, as it had previously, the Central Bank paid interest on banks’ deposits. If foreign interest income on the reserves were enough to cover these payments of deposit interest, the Central Bank’s finances would be broadly in balance. As things stand, however, interest rates on deposits with the Central Bank have far exceeded returns on the reserves, owing to Iceland’s interest rate differential with abroad. Furthermore, because of their prudential role, the reserves are invested in high-quality liquid assets, which generally yield lower returns than higher-risk assets would. This, in turn, entails a negative interest rate differential for the Central Bank and has eroded its capital in recent years. In 2024, the Bank took measures to curb this trend, as I explained in my speech at the Bank’s annual meeting a year ago.

    The shift was of direct benefit to the commercial banks. The foreign currency purchases of previous years expanded the stock of deposits and liquid assets in the system. Thus the banks’ gross interest income is higher than it would be otherwise, which should reduce their average expenses. Furthermore, financial institutions enjoy risk-free returns on their accounts with the Central Bank. The benefits of this stem from the difference between the deposit interest the banks pay to their customers and the deposit interest they receive from the Central Bank. Here it is worth noting that liquid assets such as the banks’ deposits with the Central Bank are not subject to reserve requirements. In view of all this, it should be beyond doubt that the commercial banks derive a net benefit from the past few years’ glut of liquidity in the Icelandic monetary system – not to mention the international reserves themselves.

    The advantages of large reserves should also be patently obvious. The reserves confer benefits such as improved credit ratings, easier access to foreign credit markets, and better interest rate terms, and moreover, they are available to ensure liquidity in the foreign exchange market when needed. The commercial banks benefit in particular, as they are the only domestic entities apart from the Treasury and State-owned companies that have issued bonds in foreign credit markets. The direct advantage to the three banks can be seen, among other things, in last year’s credit rating upgrades and in more favourable interest terms abroad, which ultimately deliver benefits to the banks’ customers.

    The international reserves currently total 865 b.kr., or 19% of GDP. They are held jointly by the Central Bank and the Treasury, although of course, the Icelandic nation is ultimately the owner. The 300 b.kr. worth of reserves owned by the Treasury are actually borrowed, as they are financed with foreign bond issues. The Central Bank’s share in the reserves, which are financed primarily in krónur, comes to 565 b.kr. At present, the Bank and the Treasury bear the cost of the reserves jointly, together with deposit institutions via the 3% reserve requirement.

    The Bank bases its assessment of the optimum size of the international reserves on the IMF’s reserve adequacy metric, or RAM. The Bank’s current assessment is that the reserves should not be below 120% of that metric. The reserves have shrunk in recent years, and their funding has changed markedly, owing in particular to the Bank’s programme of foreign currency sales during the pandemic and the Treasury’s foreign currency need. In 2024, the reserves were equivalent to 118% of the RAM. The outlook is for the reserves to shrink marginally in the coming term, all else being equal, owing to foreign payments made by the Bank on the Treasury’s behalf. The Central Bank is therefore of the opinion that the reserves need to be strengthened. As a result, and as a step in that direction, the Bank will initiate a new programme of regular foreign currency purchases in the domestic interbank market on 15 April 2025, the 171st anniversary of free trade in Iceland. The Bank plans to buy a total of 6 million euros, the equivalent of 870 b.kr., each week. The programme will be explained in more detail in a press release posted on the Bank’s website.

    Honoured guests:

    The foundations for the post-war renaissance of free global trade were laid at a conference of 44 nations in the small US town of Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, in July 1944. Iceland was among them. At the Bretton Woods conference, the groundwork was laid for the establishment of the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the so-called Bretton Woods fixed exchange rate system. Three years later, groundrules were created for the cancellation of tariffs and quotas in world trade with the signing in 1947 of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, or GATT Treaty. In a total of eight rounds of negotiations, the world was opened up again, and GATT led to the establishment of the World Trade Organization in 1995, a year after the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) came into being.

    The political capital for the endeavour came from the US, as did the political conviction that trade liberalisation was the only way to guarantee world peace and that big countries should not strong-arm smaller ones by levying tariffs on them. This perspective on the link between peace and free trade has been a leitmotif in US foreign policy for over 80 years – until 2025, that is.

    It is unclear what short- and long-term impact the tariffs introduced by the current US administration this April will have on the global economy or on the future of liberalised world trade. It is obvious, though, that the side-effects will be felt not least by the American people, who have benefited enormously from free international trade.

    I firmly believe in common sense: World trade will adjust to a new reality and will continue to grow. That does not change the fact that we Icelanders must always be prepared to respond to shocks and changed circumstances – to ensure the resilience of our economy. There is no question that strong macroprudential policy enabled us to weather the COVID storm without significant problems. And we have recouped our previous output capacity with 20% accumulated GDP growth since 2020. With this in mind, I want to encourage stakeholders and elected officials alike to avoid short-sightedness. Solid macroprudential policy is a good investment for the Icelandic nation.

    It would be highly appropriate for us to gather at Lækjartorg next Tuesday, the 15th of April, walk together to Jón Sigurdsson’s grave in the cemetery, and celebrate the abolition of the Danish trade monopoly. Jón’s political policy – that free trade is a cornerstone of sovereignty and prosperity – is still valid.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Survey on the Access to Finance of Enterprises: firms report lower interest rates amid reduced need for bank loans

    Source: European Central Bank

    14 April 2025

    • Firms reported declining interest rates on bank loans, while indicating a slight further tightening of other lending conditions.
    • The bank loan financing gap remained almost unchanged, with firms reporting a reduced need for such loans alongside a slight decrease in availability.
    • Firms’ one-year-ahead median inflation expectations decreased slightly to 2.9%, down from 3%, while median inflation expectations three and five years ahead remained unchanged at 3.0%.

    In the most recent round of the Survey on the Access to Finance of Enterprises (SAFE), covering the first quarter of 2025, euro area firms reported a net decrease in interest rates on bank loans (a net ‑12%, compared with a net ‑4% in the previous quarter), suggesting that monetary policy easing is being transmitted to firms. At the same time, a net 24% (a net 22% in the previous quarter) observed increases in other financing costs (i.e. charges, fees and commissions) (Chart 1).

    In this survey round, firms indicated a reduction in the need for bank loans (net ‑4%, unchanged from the fourth quarter of 2024, Chart 2). At the same time, firms reported broadly stable availability of bank loans (a net ‑1%, down from a net 2% in the previous quarter). This left the bank loan financing gap – an index capturing the difference between the need for and the availability of bank loans – broadly unchanged (a net ‑1%, after a net 1% in the previous survey round). The current composite financing gap indicator – which includes bank loans, credit lines and trade credit as well as debt securities and equity – is reaching levels historically associated with periods of monetary policy easing. Looking ahead, firms expect a modest improvement in the availability of external financing over the next three months.

    Firms continued to perceive the general economic outlook to be the main factor hampering the availability of external financing, as in the previous survey round (a net ‑21%, compared with a net ‑22%). A net 7% of firms indicated an improvement in banks’ willingness to lend (down from a net 8% in the previous survey round).

    A net 6% of firms reported an increase in turnover over the last three months, unchanged from the previous survey round, with a significantly higher percentage of firms becoming optimistic about developments in the next quarter (a net 30%, up from a net 11%). More firms saw a deterioration in their profits compared with the previous survey round (a net ‑16%, down from ‑14% in the previous survey round). The survey indicates that the net percentage of firms reporting rising cost pressures had also increased over the past three months.

    Firms’ expectations of selling prices over the next 12 months were unchanged, while expectations for wage costs slightly decreased, driven by lower expected pressures in the services sector (Chart 3). On average, firms’ selling price expectations remained unchanged at 2.9%, while the corresponding figure for wages was 3.0% (down from 3.3% in the previous round). At the same time, firms signalled a slight increase in other production costs (4%, up from 3.8% in the previous round).

    Firms’ inflation expectations for the short term slightly decreased, while remaining unchanged at longer horizons (Chart 4). Median expectations for annual inflation one year ahead declined by 0.1 percentage point to 2.9%, while those for three and five years ahead saw no changes, standing at 3.0%. For inflation five years ahead, fewer firms reported balanced risks (30%, down from 33% in the previous round). A higher percentage of firms is seeing risks to the five-year-ahead inflation as being tilted to the upside (55%, up from 51% in the previous round), which was mirrored by a decline in the proportion of those perceiving risks to the downside (14%, down from 16%).

    The report published today presents the main results of the 34th round of the SAFE survey for the euro area. The survey was conducted between 10 February and 21 March 2025. In this survey round, firms were asked about economic and financing developments over two different reference periods. Around half of firms were asked about changes in the period between October 2024 and March 2025. The remainder, all from the 12 largest euro area countries, were asked about changes in the period between January and March 2025. Additionally, firms also reported their expectations for euro area inflation, selling prices, and other costs. Altogether, the sample comprised 11,022 firms in the euro area, of which 10,167 (92%) had fewer than 250 employees.

    For media queries, please contact Benoit Deeg tel.: +49 172 1683704.

    Notes

    Chart 1

    Changes in the terms and conditions of bank financing for euro area firms

    (net percentages of respondents)

    Base: Firms that had applied for bank loans (including subsidised bank loans), credit lines, or bank or credit card overdrafts. The figures refer to rounds 27 to 34 of the survey (April-September 2022 to October 2024-March 2025).

    Notes: Net percentages are the difference between the percentage of firms reporting an increase for a given factor and the percentage reporting a decrease. The data included in the chart refer to Question 10 of the survey. The grey panels represent responses for three-monthly reference periods, whereas the white panels relate to replies for six-monthly reference periods.

    Chart 2

    Changes in euro area firms’ financing needs and the availability of bank loans

    (net percentages of respondents)

    Base: Firms for which the instrument in question is relevant (i.e. they have used it or considered using it). Respondents replying “not applicable” or “don’t know” are excluded. The figures refer to rounds 27 to 34 of the survey (April-September 2022 to October 2024-March 2025).

    Notes: The financing gap indicator combines both financing needs and the availability of bank loans at firm level. The indicator of the perceived change in the financing gap takes a value of 1 (-1) if the need increases (decreases) and availability decreases (increases). If firms perceive only a one-sided increase (decrease) in the financing gap, the variable is assigned a value of 0.5 (-0.5). A positive value for the indicator points to a widening of the financing gap. Values are multiplied by 100 to obtain weighted net balances in percentages. The data included in the chart refer to Questions 5 and Questions 9 of the survey. The grey panels represent responses for three-monthly reference periods, whereas the white panels relate to six-monthly reference periods.

    Chart 3

    Expectations for selling prices, wages, input costs and employees one year ahead, by size class

    (percentage changes over the next 12 months)

    Base: All firms. The figures refer to rounds 29 to 34 (September 2023 to March 2025) of the survey, with firms’ replies collected in the last month of the respective survey waves.

    Notes: Average euro area firms’ expectations of changes in selling prices, wages of current employees, non-labour input costs and number of employees for the next 12 months using survey weights. The statistics are computed after trimming the data at the country-specific 1st and 99th percentiles. The data included in the chart refer to Question 34 of the survey.

    Chart 4

    Firms’ median expectations for euro area inflation by size class

    (annual percentages)

    Base: All firms. The figures refer to pilot 2 and rounds 30 to 34 (December 2023 to March 2025) of the survey, with firms’ replies collected in the last month of the respective survey waves.

    Notes: Median firms’ expectations for euro area inflation in one year, three years and five years, calculated using survey weights. The statistics are computed after trimming the data at the country-specific 1st and 99th percentiles. The data included in the chart refer to Question 31 of the survey.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: VATICAN – Palm Sunday, the Pope: like Simon of Cyrene, he who carries the cross of Christ shares his redemptive love

    Source: Agenzia Fides – MIL OSI

    Sunday, 13 April 2025

    Vatican City (Agenzia Fides) – “Faced with the appalling injustice of evil, we never carry the cross of Christ in vain; on the contrary, it is the most tangible way for us to share in his redemptive love.” Under a gray sky, in St. Peter’s Square filled with pilgrims, Cardinal Leonardo Sandri, Vice Dean of the College of Cardinals, gave voice to the Pope by reading Pope Francis’ homily for Palm Sunday, the day that marks the beginning of Holy Week.The Pope, who is entering his fourth week of convalescence after being hospitalized for bilateral pneumonia, was absent from the ceremony, which began, as is tradition, with the blessing of olive and palm branches at the foot of the ancient obelisk in the center of St. Peter’s Square. From there, the procession continued to the square, decorated with olive trees.As last Sunday, at the end of the celebration, the Pope appeared unexpectedly on the square, greeted by long applause. “Happy Palm Sunday! Happy Holy Week!” These were the words spoken by the Pope, who, before returning to Casa Santa Marta, stopped to greet the Cardinals present and the authorities who had participated in the rite.[embedded content]In his commentary on today’s Gospel, that of the Passion according to Luke, Pope Francis, in the homily read by Cardinal Sandri, focused on the figure of Simon of Cyrene, the man who “while coming in from the countryside” was seized by the soldiers who then “laid the cross on him, and made him carry it behind Jesus.”The Pope described this action of carrying the cross as “ambivalent” because the man from Cyrene “was forced to carry the cross: he did not help Jesus out of conviction, but out of coercion.”On the other hand, “he then becomes personally involved in the Lord’s passion,” so that “Jesus’ cross becomes Simon’s cross. He was not the Simon, called Peter, who had promised to follow the Master at all times.That Simon disappeared on the night of betrayal, even after he had exclaimed: “Lord, I am ready to go with you to prison and to death”. Yet the Master had clearly taught: “If any want to become my followers, let them deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me”. Simon of Galilee spoke but did not act. Simon of Cyrene acts but does not speak. Between him and Jesus, there is no dialogue; not a single word is spoken. Between him and Jesus, there is only the wood of the cross.””The cross of wood that Simon of Cyrene bore is the cross of Christ, who himself bore the sins of all humanity,” the Pope emphasized, recalling that Christ carries the cross “for love of us, in obedience to the Father, he suffered with us and for us. It is precisely in this unexpected and astonishing way, Simon of Cyrene becomes part of the history of salvation, in which no one is a stranger, no one a foreigner.”And when “we see the great crowds of men and women whom hatred and violence are compelling to walk the road to Calvary, let us remember that God has made this road a place of redemption, for he walked it himself, giving his life for us. How many Simons of Cyrene are there in our own day, bearing the cross of Christ on their shoulders! Can we recognize them? Can we see the Lord in their faces, marred by the burden of war and deprivation?Faced with the appalling injustice of evil, we never carry the cross of Christ in vain; on the contrary, it is the most tangible way for us to share in his redemptive love.” Jesus’ passion “becomes compassion whenever we hold out our hand to those who feel they cannot go on, when we lift up those who have fallen, when we embrace those who are discouraged.””In order to experience this great miracle of mercy, let us decide how we are meant to carry our own cross during this Holy Week: if not on our shoulders, in our hearts. And not only our cross, but also the cross of those who suffer all around us; perhaps even the cross of some unknown person whom chance — but is it really chance? — has placed on our way. Let us prepare for the Lord’s paschal mystery by becoming each of us, for one another, a Simon of Cyrene,” the Pope concluded.In the text of the reflection prepared for the recitation of the Angelus, released for the ninth consecutive Sunday only in written form, the Pontiff thanks all the faithful for their prayers on his behalf: “At this time of physical weakness, they help me to feel God’s closeness, compassion and tenderness even more. I too am praying for you, and I ask you to entrust all those who suffer to the Lord together with me, especially those affected by war, poverty or natural disasters.”The Bishop of Rome then turned his thoughts to Santo Domingo: “May God receive in His peace the victims of the collapse of a building in Santo Domingo, and comfort their families.” Then the appeal for peace, beginning with Africa: “The 15th of April will mark the second sad anniversary of the beginning of the conflict in Sudan, in which thousands have been killed and millions of families have been forced to flee their homes. The suffering of children, women and vulnerable people cries out to heaven and begs us to act. I renew my appeal to the parties involved, that they may end the violence and embark on paths of dialogue, and to the international community, so that the help needed may be provided to the populations.And let us also remember Lebanon, where the tragic civil war began fifty years ago: with God’s help, may it live in peace and prosperity.””May peace come at last to martyred Ukraine, Palestine, Israel, the Democratic Republic of Congo, to Myanmar, to South Sudan. May Mary, Mother of Sorrows, obtain this grace for us and help us to live this Holy Week with faith,” is the plea at the end of Pope Francis’s text. (F.B.) (Agenzia Fides, 13/4/2026)
    Share:

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: ODIHR opens limited election observation mission in Poland

    Source: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe – OSCE

    Headline: ODIHR opens limited election observation mission in Poland

    Warsaw, 14 April 2025 – The OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) today opened a limited election observation mission for the 18 May 2025 presidential election in Poland, following an invitation from the national authorities.
    The mission is led by Dunja Mijatović and consists of 12 international experts based in Warsaw and 16 long-term observers, who will be deployed throughout the country from 19 April.
    The mission will assess the election for its compliance with OSCE commitments and other international obligations and standards, as well as with national legislation. Observers will follow voter registration, candidate registration, campaign activities, including online, the work of the election administration and relevant state bodies, implementation of the legislative framework, political and campaign finance and the resolution of election disputes. They will also assess the implementation of previous ODIHR recommendations. Comprehensive media monitoring forms an integral part of the observation.
    Meetings with representatives of national authorities, political parties, as well as with representatives from the judiciary, civil society and the media will take place throughout the observation. On election day itself, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) will join efforts with the ODIHR mission.
    The limited election observation format is used where concerns identified in ODIHR’s pre-election needs assessment centre on the pre-election environment, election preparations, the campaign, media coverage, and the handling of election disputes, and do not focus on the voting process on election day. In line with ODIHR’s methodology for this observation format, there will therefore be no systematic or comprehensive observation of the voting, counting and tabulation on election day, although mission members will observe in a number of polling stations across the country to follow election day procedures.
    An interim report will be published to update the public and the media during the course of the observation. The day after the election, a statement of preliminary findings will be presented at a press conference. A final report summing up the observation of the entire electoral process will be published some months after the election process has ended.
    Further information on ODIHR’s election observation activities in Poland is available here: https://www.osce.org/odihr/elections/poland
    Media contacts:
    Egor Tilpunov, Media Analyst: egor.tilpunov@odihr-leom.pl and +48 724 530 079
    or
    Katya Andrusz, ODIHR Spokesperson, katya.andrusz@odihr.pl and +48 609 522 266  

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: National Training on Cybercrime for Judges Launched in Tashkent

    Source: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe – OSCE

    Headline: National Training on Cybercrime for Judges Launched in Tashkent

    14–15 April 2025
    OSCE Conference Hall, Tashkent
    Today marked the opening of the first tailored national training course for representatives of the judiciary in Uzbekistan on “Cybercrime: from Detection to Court Judgment.” The training features discussions on international and national legal frameworks on cybercrime; comparative judicial practices and foreign court decisions; challenges in the classification and prosecution of cybercrimes and issues of collection and admissibility of electronic evidence. The event is organized by the OSCE Project Co-ordinator in Uzbekistan with the aim to assist in strengthening judicial capacity and promote effective and rights-based justice in the face of evolving digital threats. In his welcoming remarks, the Head of the OSCE Project Co-ordinator’s Office, Ambassador Antti Karttunen, emphasized the growing threat of cybercrime and highlighted the importance of judicial engagement in shaping balanced and fair legal practices in the digital age.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: OSCE Presence organizes advanced risk assessment training for Albanian State Police analysts

    Source: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe – OSCE

    Headline: OSCE Presence organizes advanced risk assessment training for Albanian State Police analysts

    One of the sessions of the advanced risk assessment training for State Police analysts organized by the OSCE Presence in Albania, Tirana, 11 April 2025. (OSCE) Photo details

    From 7 to 11 April 2025, the OSCE Presence in Albania held an intensive training programme focused on strengthening the analytical capabilities of the Albanian State Police. The training brought together analysts from the Information Analysis Units at central and local levels, equipping them with advanced skills in risk assessment of criminal groups.
    The programme aimed to enhance the capacity of police analysts to identify, assess and prioritize criminal threats, with a focus on organized crime networks operating in Albania. Through practical exercises and expert-led sessions, participants learned how to produce high-quality risk assessment products that support evidence-based policing and strategic decision-making.
    This initiative is part of the Presence’s broader, long-standing support to the Directorate of Information Analysis and Archive within the State Police. Over recent years, the OSCE Presence has played a pivotal role in modernizing the police’s analytical infrastructure and methods. A cornerstone of this support was the procurement and delivery of licenses for the i2 Analyst’s Notebook software – a premier tool used internationally for data visualization, link analysis and criminal intelligence processing.
    In addition to enhancing technical infrastructure, the Presence has facilitated comprehensive capacity-building programmes that include both basic and advanced training in crime analysis. These sessions have empowered police analysts and officers to effectively use modern analytical tools for crime mapping, trend analysis and operational planning.
    These efforts have significantly contributed to the Albanian State Police’s shift toward intelligence-led policing, enabling a more proactive and strategic approach to combating organized and serious crime.
    Through continued collaboration with national institutions, the OSCE Presence in Albania reaffirms its commitment to supporting sustainable security sector reforms and fostering professional law enforcement practices in line with international standards.

    MIL OSI Europe News