Category: European Union

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Statement by President von der Leyen with UK Prime Minister Starmer

    Source: EuroStat – European Statistics

    European Commission Statement London, 24 Apr 2025 Thank you very much, Keir. It is good to meet a friend again and to be here with you We are friends, and we are Europeans, we are very like-minded.

    The President of the European Commission and the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom met today and agreed to strengthen the relationship between the United Kingdom and the European Union.

    They agreed on the shared challenges facing the European Union and the United Kingdom including the altered strategic context for the wider continent notably resulting from Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine. They reiterated their unwavering support for Ukraine’s sovereignty.

    The leaders agreed the UK and European Union would also continue to work closely to address wider global challenges including economic headwinds, geopolitical competition, irregular migration, climate change and energy prices, which pose fundamental challenges to the shared values of the United Kingdom and the European Union and provide the strategic driver for stronger cooperation.

    The leaders reflected on the events in the Middle East overnight and condemned the egregious attack by Iran on Israel. They recognised Israel’s right to self-defence in the face of this unacceptable aggression. De-escalation by all parties in the region was of the upmost importance. They reiterated the need to coordinate the diplomatic response to the situation in the Middle East and called on all sides to show restraint and end the bloodshed. An immediate ceasefire in Lebanon and Gaza was required to create the space to allow for political solutions, the leaders underlined.

    They agreed on the importance of the unique relationship between the European Union and the United Kingdom in addressing such challenges and resolved, in line with our shared values, to strengthen ambitiously their structured strategic cooperation.

    They reaffirmed that the Withdrawal Agreement, including the Windsor Framework, and the Trade and Cooperation Agreement underpin relations between them and underlined their mutual commitment to the full and faithful implementation of those agreements. They reaffirmed their mutual commitment to uphold international law and to the European Convention on Human Rights. They agreed a stable, positive and forward-looking relationship was in their mutual interests and provided the basis for long term cooperation.

    They agreed to take forward this agenda of strengthened cooperation at pace over the coming months, starting with defining together the areas in which strengthened cooperation would be mutually beneficial, such as the economy, energy, security and resilience, in full respect of their internal procedures and institutional prerogatives. They agreed to meet again this autumn.

    They agreed on the importance of holding regular EU-UK Summits at leader-level to oversee the development of the relationship. They agreed that a first Summit should take place ideally in early 2025.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Prison capacity shortage – E-001008/2025(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    Detention issues, including the management of detention capacity and arrangements between EU countries in this regard, are a Member State competence.

    In the past, Norway and Belgium have rented detention spaces in the Netherlands to address overcrowding in their prisons. The experiment had mixed results[1] and ultimately neither Norway nor Belgium extended their contracts with the Netherlands[2].

    The Commission adopted a recommendation[3] that provides guidance to Member States on how to ensure, among other things, that detainees’ fundamental rights are respected and that they are treated with dignity.

    • [1] See ‘Where Two “Exceptional” Prison Cultures Meet: Negotiating Order in a Transnational Prison’
      Alison Liebling, Berit Johnsen, Bethany E Schmidt, Tore Rokkan, Kristel Beyens, Miranda Boone, Mieke Kox, An-Sofie Vanhouche, The British Journal of Criminology, Volume 61, Issue 1, January 2021, Pages 41-60. https://academic.oup.com/bjc/article/61/1/41/5892706
    • [2] https://prisonreformtrust.org.uk/blog-renting-foreign-prison-places-the-unanswered-question. The Norwegian scheme ran for three years from 2015 to 2018 and the arrangements in Belgium for seven years from 2009 to 2016.
    • [3] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=celex%3A32023H0681
    Last updated: 24 April 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Revitalising Spanish industry – E-000246/2025(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    1. The Strategic Technologies for Europe Platform (STEP)[1] is a Commission initiative to boost investment in manufacturing of critical technologies, digital and deep-tech innovation, clean and resource-efficient technologies, and biotechnologies. Spain can amend its Cohesion Policy funding towards these priorities under the STEP Regulation. Furthermore, Spain is currently setting up a Member State compartment under InvestEU[2] using their Recovery and Resilience Facility[3] funds and the national budget to mobilise additional private and public investments in Spain under the sustainable infrastructure, research, innovation and digitisation and the small and medium-sized enterprises policy windows.

    2. The Net-Zero Industry Act[4] and the Critical Raw Materials Act[5] strengthen the EU’s manufacturing capacity for net-zero technologies while ensuring access to critical raw materials. The Commission has engaged with Spain to ensure their early implementation.

    The new Competitiveness Compass[6] places competitiveness as a core principle for EU action. The Commission’s Clean Industrial Deal is a key deliverable in this regard[7]. The Commission counts on Spain to contribute to the simplification effort. The Commission will also present a Quality Jobs Roadmap to improve working conditions and labour market participation.

    3. The Commission considers it important for Spain to design and implement a national exploration programme[8] to improve critical raw material potential. The Commission has published the first list of strategic projects on 25 March 2025[9]. Five of them are located in Spain and one concerns lithium. To support these projects, including early-stage exploration, Spain could develop financing instruments such as a national critical raw materials fund.

    • [1] Regulation (EU) 2024/795 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 29 February 2024 establishing the Strategic Technologies for Europe Platform, https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2024/795/oj/eng
    • [2] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=LEGISSUM:4516649
    • [3] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/HTML/?uri=CELEX:02021R0241-20240301
    • [4] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/HTML/?uri=OJ:L_202401735
    • [5] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/HTML/?uri=CELEX:02024R1252-20240503
    • [6] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/HTML/?uri=CELEX:52025DC0030
    • [7] COM(2025) 85 final.
    • [8] Art. 19 2024/1252 https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2024/1252/oj/eng
    • [9] Strategic projects under the Critical Raw Materials Act https://single-market-economy.ec.europa.eu/sectors/raw-materials/areas-specific-interest/critical-raw-materials/strategic-projects-under-crma_en
    Last updated: 24 April 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Former ILVA plant and JTF financing – E-000927/2025(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    According to available information, the EUR 400 million in question are distinct from the so-called bridge loan and are part of the EUR 1.1 billion seized from the former owners of ILVA to remedy the environmental impact of the plant.

    In Decision (EU) 2018/1498[1], the Commission concluded that the latter amount[2] was not state aid[3]. The destination of these funds was not an element retained by the Commission in its assessment (as non-aid) and, therefore, without prejudice to the application of Italian law, a change in such destination does not constitute a breach of the decision.

    A new permit in line with the Industrial Emissions Directive (IED)[4] is due to be issued to the Acciaierie d’Italia plant by June 2025. The Commission receives updates on the progress made to bring the plant into compliance with the IED and is in contact with the Italian authorities to address the issues raised in the infringement procedure[5].

    The European Regional Development Fund (ERDF)[6] can only support small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) or investments related to the production, processing, transport, distribution, storage, or combustion of fossil fuels, with some exceptions[7]. Regulation (EU) 2021/1056[8] excludes support to those activities under the Just Transition Fund (JTF)[9].

    Further exceptions for the support of such investments are introduced in the proposal for a regulation amending Regulation (EU) 2021/1058 and (EU) 2021/1056[10].

    In addition, while support to enterprises others than SMEs is allowed by Regulation (EU) 2021/1056, it is not under the Italian JTF National Programme[11].

    Thus, investments involving large enterprises and related to blue hydrogen cannot be financed under the above-mentioned programmes, unless exceptions apply.

    • [1] Commission Decision (EU) 2018/1498 of 21 December 2017 on the state aid and the measures SA.38613 (2016/C) (ex 2015/NN) implemented by Italy for Ilva SpA in Amministrazione Straordinaria (notified under document C(2017) 8391), OJ L 253, 9.10.2018, p. 45-75.
    • [2] ‘Measure 1: the transfer of the assets seized during criminal proceedings against Ilva’s previous owners’.
    • [3] Section 2.2.1, Section 5.2.1 and Article 1(a) of Decision (EU) 2018/1498.
    • [4] Directive (EU) 2024/1785 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 24 April 2024 amending Directive 2010/75/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council on industrial emissions (integrated pollution prevention and control) and Council Directive 1999/31/EC on the landfill of waste, OJ L, 2024/1785, 15.7.2024.
    • [5]  INFR(2013)2177: https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_13_866
    • [6] Regulation (EU) 2021/1058 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 24 June 2021 on the European Regional Development Fund and on the Cohesion Fund, OJ L 231, 30.6.2021.
    • [7] Article 7(1)(h) of Regulation (EU) 2021/1058.
    • [8] Regulation (EU) 2021/1056 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 24 June 2021 establishing the Just Transition Fund, OJ L 231, 30.6.2021.
    • [9] Article 9(d) of Regulation (EU) 2021/1056.
    • [10] Proposal for a regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council amending Regulation (EU) 2021/1058 and (EU) 2021/1056 as regards specific measures to address strategic challenges in the context of the mid-term review .
    • [11] https://www.jtf.gov.it/the-program/

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Wholesale natural gas prices and increasing costs of storage refill – E-000111/2025(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    The Commission is committed to bring down energy prices for households and businesses to support the energy transition and EU’s competitiveness.

    As part of the Clean Industrial Deal[1], the Commission adopted an Action Plan for affordable Energy[2] outlining key actions to lower energy costs for European consumers, including by ensuring well-functioning and transparent gas markets.

    Mandatory filling targets in the Gas Storage Regulation (EU) 2022/1032[3] have increased transparency and predictability of market participants’ behaviour, contributing to market stability, especially during the 2022-2023 energy crisis[4].

    Although the situation has improved, the gas market remains tight and competition for global liquified natural gas has increased. This is why the Commission has proposed to extend this regulation by 2 years[5].

    At the same time, understanding the need for greater flexibility, the Commission issued a recommendation[6] to support Member States on how to identify and apply flexibility existing within the existing legislative framework to better coordinate and smartly design their storage filling policies ahead of winter 2025/2026.

    The Commission on the other hand will consider actual market conditions when deciding on enforcement of the storage filling targets.

    The Commission is carefully monitoring the internal energy market and has a good overview of the situation in individual Member States, including the effects the war against Ukraine may have on their security of supply.

    Analysis shows that the impact of the end of Russian gas transit via Ukraine on gas prices has been limited. To address specific challenges, the Commission has established a High-Level Working Group with Slovakia, and is going to launch one with Hungary.

    • [1] The Clean Industrial Deal: A Joint roadmap for competitiveness and decarbonisation COM(2025) 85 final.
    • [2] Action Plan for Affordable Energy: Unlocking the true value of our Energy Union to secure affordable, efficient and clean energy for all Europeans COM(2025) 79 final.
    • [3] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/1032/oj/eng
    • [4] Report from the Commission on solidarity and certain aspects concerning gas storage based on Regulation (EU) 2017/1938 of the European Parliament and of the Council COM(2025) 98 final.
    • [5] Proposal for Regulation of the European Parliament and the Council amending Regulation (EU) 2017/1938 as regards the role of gas storage for securing gas supplies ahead of the winter season.
    • [6] Commission Recommendation on the implementation of the gas storage filling targets in 2025 COM(2025) 1481 final.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Briefing – EU-UK trade flows: Continuities, changes and trends – 24-04-2025

    Source: European Parliament

    The Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA) between the European Union (EU) and the United Kingdom (UK), which entered into force in May 2021, governs the EU’s relationship with the UK, following its withdrawal from the EU. In addition to the European Commission evaluating the implementation of the TCA on an annual basis, Article 776 of the TCA provides for a joint review of the deal’s implementation five years after its entry into force, in 2026. On 20 November 2024, the European Parliament’s Conference of Presidents approved a joint request from the Committees on Foreign Affairs (AFET) and on International Trade (INTA) to draw up an implementation report in response to the European Commission’s 21 March 2024 report on the implementation and application of the EU-UK TCA. This briefing seeks to inform the drafting of the joint AFET–INTA implementation report. The briefing provides an analysis of the data on trade flows between the EU and the UK in the last two years (2023 and 2024), in the context of the implementation of the TCA. It should be read in tandem with the European Implementation Assessment on the EU-UK TCA, published by the European Parliamentary Research Service (EPRS) in December 2023, which analyses EU-UK trade flows in the first two years of the TCA’s implementation. That EPRS study was requested by AFET and INTA to inform their 2023 joint implementation report on the same subject. Similar to the 2023 EPRS study, this briefing concludes that the TCA continues to have a stronger impact on the UK than on the EU in the trade relationship. Trade between the EU and the UK continues to be more complex and challenging compared to when the UK was an EU Member State, even if the implementation of the TCA in the last four years has been generally smooth, with some exceptions. The UK has managed to bounce back from COVID and Brexit less successfully than the EU and has, like the EU-27, been affected by Russia’s war in Ukraine and inflation. EU-UK trade in goods decreased slightly in 2023 and 2024, and it is still below pre-Brexit levels. EU-UK trade in services (the TCA does not cover financial services), continues to be less disrupted, and surpassed pre-COVID 19 levels as of 2023. At a time of uncertainty on the future direction of trade policy, geopolitical upheaval, and the United States administration’s (potential) new tariffs on imports from its trading partners (including the UK and the EU), the TCA offers an opportunity to deepen EU-UK trade relations.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – Safeguarding the security interests of all Member States in the context of Türkiye’s possible inclusion in the EU defence programme SAFE – E-001528/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    Question for written answer  E-001528/2025
    to the Commission
    Rule 144
    Afroditi Latinopoulou (PfE)

    The EU is considering various forms of possible military cooperation with Türkiye, including the deployment of European multinational forces in Ukraine to secure peace or a ceasefire with the active participation of Türkiye. At the same time, it is considering launching a new dialogue on Türkiye’s accession path.

    It should be noted that the White Paper on the Future of European Defence included provisions according to which the EU would act ‘in a way that is without prejudice to the specific character of the security and defence policy of certain Member States, and takes into account the security and defence interests of all Member States’.

    Can the Commission therefore answer the following:

    • 1.How will it be ensured that the strategic cooperation between the EU and Türkiye is commensurate with Türkiye’s progress in its accession process as well as the country’s bilateral relations with Greece and Cyprus?
    • 2.On the basis of the provisions of the White Paper, what specific measures are envisaged to protect Greece’s security interests in the event that Türkiye is included in the defence programme SAFE?
    • 3.What mechanisms does it have at its disposal to deal with any deterioration in the relations between Türkiye and Greece or Cyprus or efforts by Türkiye to utilise its defence cooperation with the EU in a way that would jeopardise the security of Member States?

    Submitted: 14.4.2025

    Last updated: 24 April 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Ban on sailors entering certain countries – E-000896/2025(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    The Commission is not in a position to reply on substance, as the matter is not subject to EU legislation: border control comes under national legislation as far as Ireland is concerned, given that Ireland is not bound by the Schengen Borders Code, and under third country legislation as far as the United Kingdom is concerned.

    Last updated: 24 April 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – EU support for investigations of the crime at Tempi – P-001585/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    Priority question for written answer  P-001585/2025
    to the Commission
    Rule 144
    Emmanouil Fragkos (ECR)

    With regard to the crime that took place at Tempi (on 28 February 2023), the government’s narrative refers to the fatalities as a result of the crash. Investigations have shown that the hydrocarbons benzene, toluene and xylene, weighing 3.8-5.4 tonnes, were to blame for the fatal fireball. It was found that passengers who survived the crash were burnt to death, with the fire starting 1.5-3 minutes after the crash. It is estimated that 8.9-12.6 tonnes of aromatic hydrocarbons spilled onto the soil, with their evaporation creating dangerous conditions for those who later ventured onto the site. The fact that the smuggled cargo is to blame for the fireball, and thus for most of the deaths, is being covered up by the government – presumably at the request of the smugglers.

    The government’s manipulation of justice clearly results in the failure to investigate the identity of the smuggler and his connection to the government. Since 2014, the EU has provided almost EUR 700 million in funding towards 16 transport projects in Greece, and the crime at Tempi presents an – indirect – insult to it.

    In light of the above, can the Commission answer the following:

    • 1.Could it request that a European agency, such as the European Railway Agency (ERA), carry out an independent investigation of the accident?
    • 2.Is there a possibility for EU action to ensure that the Greek Government takes all the necessary measures to hold those responsible to account?
    • 3.Has the decision been taken to monitor Greece more closely with regard to the investigation of the case and the implementation of security measures following the crime at Tempi?

    Submitted: 21.4.2025

    Last updated: 24 April 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – Regulated tariffs for the sale of electricity: a force for stability and social justice in Europe – E-001358/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    Question for written answer  E-001358/2025
    to the Commission
    Rule 144
    Thomas Pellerin-Carlin (S&D)

    The recent energy crisis has demonstrated the importance of a tariff framework that guarantees stable and predictable prices for consumers. In France, regulated tariffs for the sale of electricity (TRVEs) play this essential role, protecting 60% of households and many very small businesses against market volatility.

    Refuting the argument that TRVEs constitute a barrier to competition, the French Energy Regulatory Commission has demonstrated that these tariffs are compatible with a balanced market and provide direct benefits to consumers. By extending the TRVEs until 2030, France is opting for the path of protection and economic stability.

    At a time when the EU is promoting the electrification of uses and the energy transition, it is time to draw inspiration from this type of mechanism to guarantee affordable electricity for all Europeans.

    • 1.Does the Commission intend to promote mechanisms inspired by the TRVEs to guarantee fair and stable prices at the European level?
    • 2.What tools does it propose to ensure effective consumer protection in the face of market volatility, based on the principles of social justice and ecological transition?

    Submitted: 2.4.2025

    Last updated: 24 April 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – TikTok platform – E-000503/2025(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    In the context of the Romanian presidential elections held on 24 November 2024, the Commission sent to TikTok requests for information on 29 November[1] and 6 December 2024 regarding its measures to address risks from inauthentic activity, automated exploitation, and its recommender systems.

    Additionally, on 5 December 2024, the Commission adopted a decision imposing on TikTok an obligation to retain all information relevant to its management of the risks of any actual or foreseeable negative effects to electoral processes and civic discourse in the context of national elections held between 24 November 2024 and 31 March 2025[2]. On 17 December 2024, the Commission decided to open a third set of formal proceedings against TikTok[3].

    These proceedings focus on TikTok’s compliance with its obligation to diligently assess and mitigate systemic risks related to civic discourse and electoral processes stemming from: (1) the intentional manipulation of TikTok’s services and its related systems, including its recommender systems, and (2) the amplification and potentially rapid and wide dissemination of political advertisements and paid-for political content that is incompatible with TikTok’s terms and conditions. This investigation is ongoing: the Commission is currently gathering and analysing evidence.

    Furthermore, the Commission published in March 2024 guidelines on recommended measures under the DSA to mitigate systemic risks online for election[4], and released, in February 2025, the DSA elections toolkit for Digital Services Coordinators[5].

    In addition, certain very large online platforms (VLOPs), together with the Commission, took part in an election stress test in March 2025, organised by the Romanian authorities[6].

    • [1] https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/news/commission-sends-additional-request-information-tiktok-under-digital-services-act
    • [2] https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_24_6243
    • [3] https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_24_6487
    • [4] https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_24_1707
    • [5] https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/library/dsa-elections-toolkit-digital-services-coordinators
    • [6] See also the European Board for Digital Services’ post-election report on the EU elections: https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/library/european-board-digital-services-publishes-post-election-report-eu-elections
    Last updated: 24 April 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Telephone conversation with the Sultan of Oman

    Source: Government of Italy (English)

    24 Aprile 2025

    The President of the Council of Ministers, Giorgia Meloni, had a telephone conversation today with the Sultan of Oman, His Majesty Haitham bin Tariq Al Said.

    During the call, President Meloni thanked the Sultan for the role he has played in facilitating negotiations between the United States and Iran, and assured him of Italy’s full support for the initiative, in line with what it has already done in hosting the second round of talks in Rome. 

    The two leaders also discussed the strengthening of bilateral relations at all levels, from energy to culture, from the economy to tourism. In this context, they expressed their satisfaction with the cooperation between the two nations with regard to digital interconnections.

    At the end of the conversation, President Meloni accepted the Sultan’s invitation to visit Oman.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Security: FBI-Led Operation in Nigeria Leads to Sextortion Arrests

    Source: Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI Crime News (b)

    In early 2023, a unit in the FBI’s Criminal Division that focuses on child exploitation sifted through terabytes of communications and uncovered thousands of digital breadcrumbs that led to Nigeria. The Child Exploitation Operational Unit assembled priority lists of subjects to locate and interview in the West African country, including some of the cases that involved suicides.

    The FBI, through the legal attaché office in Nigeria, coordinated all this with Nigeria’s Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), the country’s lead agency for investigating financial crimes. Other partners included federal agencies in Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom that had similar sextortion cases resolving to Nigeria.

    In late summer 2023, a team of FBI special agents, analysts, and forensic examiners—along with criminal investigators from the Australian Federal Police (AFP) and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP)—set up a discreet temporary command post in the city of Lagos. The operation was dubbed Artemis after the Greek goddess who protects youths. In Nigeria, the teams worked in shifts for weeks at a time exchanging information with EFCC investigators to facilitate the arrests and interviews of Nigerians whose digital footprints appeared to connect them to some of the most appalling cases in the U.S.

    “Everybody was equally invested in making this one goal happen,” said Special Agent Karen R., who managed the Bureau’s coordination of the sextortion cases that led up to the weeks-long operation in Nigeria. While Canada and Australia are well-known partners for the FBI, Karen pointed out that Nigeria’s EFCC has a uniquely strong track record of working with the Bureau, particularly on sprawling financial crimes that both countries are trying to stamp out.

    “They are just as invested as we are in trying to make this problem go away,” she said. “We all know Nigerian prince scams. We know all of the scams that are traditionally done there. They’re aware of it, too, and don’t like that their country is known for that type of activity.”

    Indeed, as everyone set out in the summer of 2023 to find and arrest the criminals and bring them to justice, Nigerian authorities were on a parallel mission of trying to dissuade would-be scammers in their own country from taking up sextortion and other financial crimes as an easy way to make money.

    Poverty is widespread in Nigeria, and jobs and opportunities are scarce. Smart, tech-savvy, college-aged individuals with a phone, nude images scraped from the internet, and a script for duping faraway boys might view sextortion as a viable trade with little risk or downside. 

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Global: What 2,000 years of Chinese history reveals about today’s AI-driven technology panic – and the future of inequality

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Peng Zhou, Professor of Economics, Cardiff University

    In the sweltering summer of AD18, a desperate chant echoed across China’s sun-scorched plains: “Heaven has gone blind!” Thousands of starving farmers, their faces smeared with ox blood, marched toward the opulent vaults held by the Han dynasty’s elite rulers.

    As recorded in the ancient text Han Shu (the book of Han), these farmers’ calloused hands held bamboo scrolls – ancient “tweets” accusing the bureaucrats of hoarding grain while the farmers’ children gnawed tree bark. The rebellion’s firebrand warlord leader, Chong Fan, roared: “Drain the paddies!”

    Within weeks, the Red Eyebrows, as the protesters became known, had toppled local regimes, raided granaries and – for a fleeting moment – shattered the empire’s rigid hierarchy.

    The Han dynasty of China (202BC-AD220) was one of the most developed civilisations of its time, alongside the Roman empire. Its development of cheaper and sharper iron ploughs enabled the gathering of unprecedented harvests of grain.

    But instead of uplifting the farmers, this technological revolution gave rise to agrarian oligarchs who hired ever-more officials to govern their expanding empire. Soon, bureaucrats earned 30 times more than those tilling the soil.

    Revolutionary iron ploughs from the Han dynasty.
    Windmemories via Wikimedia, CC BY-NC-SA

    And when droughts struck, the farmers and their families starved while the empire’s elites maintained their opulence. As a famous poem from the subsequent Tang dynasty put it: “While meat and wine go to waste behind vermilion gates, the bones of the frozen dead lie by the roadside.”

    Two millennia later, the role of technology in increasing inequality around the world remains a major political and societal issue. AI-driven “technology panic” – exacerbated by the disruptive efforts of Donald Trump’s new administration in the US – gives the feeling that everything has been upended. New tech is destroying old certainties; populist revolt is shredding the political consensus.

    And yet, as we stand at the edge of this technological cliff, seemingly peering into a future of AI-induced job apocalypses, history whispers: “Calm down. You’ve been here before.”

    The link between technology and inequality

    Technology is humanity’s cheat code to break free from scarcity. The Han dynasty’s iron plough didn’t just till soil; it doubled crop yields, enriching landlords and swelling tax coffers for emperors while – initially, at least – leaving peasants further behind. Similarly, Britain’s steam engine didn’t just spin cotton; it built coal barons and factory slums. Today, AI isn’t just automating tasks; it’s creating trillion-dollar tech fiefdoms while destroying myriads of routine jobs.

    Technology amplifies productivity by doing more with less. Over centuries, these gains compound, raising economic output and increasing incomes and lifespans. But each innovation reshapes who holds power, who gets rich – and who gets left behind.

    As the Austrian economist Joseph Schumpeter warned during the second world war, technological progress is never a benign rising tide that lifts all boats. It’s more like a tsunami that drowns some and deposits others on golden shores, amid a process he called “creative destruction”.

    The Kuznets curve.
    Wikimedia Commons, CC BY

    A decade later, Russian-born US economist Simon Kuznets proposed his “inverted-U of inequality”, the Kuznets curve. For decades, this offered a reassuring narrative for citizens of democratic nations seeking greater fairness: inequality was an inevitable – but temporary – price of technological progress and the economic growth that comes with it.

    In recent years, however, this analysis has been sharply questioned. Most notably, French economist Thomas Piketty, in a reappraisal of more than three centuries of data, argued in 2013 that Kuznets had been misled by historical fluke. The postwar fall in inequality he had observed was not a general law of capitalism, but a product of exceptional events: two world wars, economic depression, and massive political reforms.

    In normal times, Piketty warned, the forces of capitalism will always tend to make the rich richer, pushing inequality ever higher unless checked by aggressive redistribution.

    So, who’s correct? And where does this leave us as we ponder the future in this latest, AI-driven industrial revolution? In fact, both Kuznets and Piketty were working off quite narrow timeframes in modern human history. Another country, China, offers the chance to chart patterns of growth and inequality over a much longer period – due to its historical continuity, cultural stability, and ethnic uniformity.


    The Insights section is committed to high-quality longform journalism. Our editors work with academics from many different backgrounds who are tackling a wide range of societal and scientific challenges.


    Unlike other ancient civilisations such as the Egyptians and Mayans, China has maintained a unified identity and unique language for more than 5,000 years, allowing modern scholars to trace thousand-year-old economic records. So, with colleagues Qiang Wu and Guangyu Tong, I set out to reconcile the ideas of Kuznets and Piketty by studying technological growth and wage inequality in imperial China over 2,000 years – back beyond the birth of Jesus.

    To do this, we scoured China’s extraordinarily detailed dynastic archives, including the Book of Han (AD111) and Tang Huiyao (AD961), in which meticulous scribes recorded the salaries of different ranking officials. And here is what we learned about the forces – good and bad, corrupt and selfless – that most influenced the rise and fall of inequality in China over the past two millennia.

    Chinese dynasties and their most influential technologies:

    Black text denotes historical events in the west; grey text denotes important interactions between China and the west.
    Peng Zhou, CC BY-NC-SA

    China’s cycles of growth and inequality

    One of the challenges of assessing wage inequality over thousands of years is that people were paid different things at different times – such as grain, silk, silver and even labourers.

    The Book of Han records that “a governor’s annual grain salary could fill 20 oxcarts”. Another entry describes how a mid-ranking Han official’s salary included ten servants tasked solely with polishing his ceremonial armour. Ming dynasty officials had their meagre wages supplemented with gifts of silver, while Qing elites hid their wealth in land deals.

    Map of the Han dynasty in AD2.
    Yeu Ninje via Wikimedia, CC BY-NC-SA

    To enable comparison over two millennia, we invented a “rice standard” – akin to the gold standard that was the basis of the international monetary system for a century from the 1870s. Rice is not just a staple of Chinese diets, it has been a stable measure of economic life for thousands of years.

    While rice’s dominion began around 7,000BC in the Yangtze river’s fertile marshes, it was not until the Han dynasty that it became the soul of Chinese life. Farmers prayed to the “Divine Farmer” for bountiful harvests, and emperors performed elaborate ploughing rituals to ensure cosmic harmony. A Tang dynasty proverb warned: “No rice in the bowl, bones in the soil.”

    Using price records, we converted every recorded salary – whether paid in silk, silver, rent or servants – into its rice equivalent. We could then compare the “real rice wages” of two categories of people we called either “officials” or “peasants” (including farmers), as a way of tracking levels of inequality over the two millennia since the start of the Han dynasty in 202BC. This chart shows how real-wage inequality in China rose and fell over the past 2,000 years, according to our rice-based analysis.

    Official-peasant wage ratio in imperial China over 2,000 years:

    The ratio describes the multiple by which the ‘real rice wage’ of the average ‘official’ exceeds that of the average ‘peasant’, giving an indication of changing inequality levels over two millennia.
    Peng Zhou, CC BY-SA

    The chart’s black line describes a tug-of-war between growth and inequality over the past two millennia. We found that, across each major dynasty, there were four key factors driving levels of inequality in China: technology (T), institutions (I), politics (P), and social norms (S). These followed the following cycle with remarkable regularity.

    1. Technology triggers an explosion of growth and inequality

    During the Han dynasty, new iron-working techniques led to better ploughs and irrigation tools. Harvests boomed, enabling the Chinese empire to balloon in both territory and population. But this bounty mostly went to those at the top of society. Landlords grabbed fields, bureaucrats gained privileges, while ordinary farmers saw precious little reward. The empire grew richer – but so did the gap between high officials and the peasant majority.

    Even when the Han fell around AD220, the rise of wage inequality was barely interrupted. By the time of the Tang dynasty (AD618–907), China was enjoying a golden age. Silk Road trade flourished as two more technological leaps had a profound impact on the country’s fortunes: block printing and refined steelmaking.

    Block printing enabled the mass production of books – Buddhist texts, imperial exam guides, poetry anthologies – at unprecedented speed and scale. This helped spread literacy and standardise administration, as well as sparking a bustling market in bookselling.

    Meanwhile, refined steelmaking boosted everything from agricultural tools to weaponry and architectural hardware, lowering costs and raising productivity. With a more literate populace and an abundance of stronger metal goods, China’s economy hit new heights. Chang’an, then China’s cosmopolitan capital, boasted exotic markets, lavish temples, and a swirl of foreign merchants enjoying the Tang dynasty’s prosperity.

    While the Tang dynasty marked the high-water mark for levels of inequality in Chinese history, subsequent dynasties would continue to wrestle with the same core dilemma: how do you reap the benefits of growth without allowing an overly privileged – and increasingly corrupt – bureaucratic class to push everyone else into peril?

    2. Institutions slow the rise of inequality

    Throughout the two millennia, some institutions played an important role in stabilising the empire after each burst of growth. For example, to alleviate tensions between emperors, officials and peasants, imperial exams known as “Ke Ju” were introduced during the Sui dynasty (AD581-618). And by the time of the Song dynasty (AD960-1279) that followed the demise of the Tang, these exams played a dominant role in society.

    They addressed high levels of inequality by promoting social mobility: ordinary civilians were granted greater opportunities to ascend the income ladder by achieving top marks. This induced greater competition among officials – and strengthened emperors’ authority over them in the later dynasties. As a result, both the wages of officials and wage inequality went down as their bargaining power gradually diminished.

    However, the rise of each new dynasty was also marked by a growth of bureaucracy that led to inefficiencies, favouritism and bribery. Over time, corrupt practices took root, eroding trust in officialdom and heightening wage inequality as many officials commanded informal fees or outright bribes to sustain their lifestyles.

    As a result, while the emergence of certain institutions was able to put a break on rising inequality, it typically took another powerful – and sometimes highly destructive – factor to start reducing it.

    3. Political infighting and external wars reduce inequality

    Eventually, the rampant rise in inequality seen in almost every major Chinese dynasty bred deep tensions – not only between the upper and lower classes, but even between the emperor and their officials.

    These pressures were heightened by the pressures of external conflict, as each dynasty waged wars in pursuit of further growth. The Tang’s three century-rule featured conflicts such as the Eastern Turkic-Tang war (AD626), the Baekje-Goguryeo-Silla war (666), and the Arab-Tang battle of Talas (751).

    The resulting demand for more military spending drained imperial coffers, forcing salary cuts for soldiers and tax hikes on the peasants – breeding resentment among both that sometimes led to popular uprisings. In a desperate bid for survival, the imperial court then slashed officials’ pay and stripped away their bureaucratic perks.

    The result? Inequality plummeted during these times of war and rebellion – but so did stability. Famine was rife, frontier garrisons mutinied, and for decades, warlords carved out territories while the imperial centre floundered.

    So, this shrinking wage gap cannot be said to have resulted in a happier, more stable society. Rather, it reflected the fact that everyone – rich and poor – was worse off in the chaos. During the final imperial dynasty, the Qing (from the end of the 17th century), real-terms GDP per person was dropping to levels that had last been seen at the start of the Han dynasty, 2,000 years earlier.

    4. Social norms emphasise harmony, preserve privilege

    One other common factor influencing the rise and fall of inequality across China’s dynasties was the shared rules and expectations that developed within each society.

    A striking example is the social norms rooted in the philosophy of Neo-Confucianism, which emerged in the Song dynasty at the end of the first millennium – a period sometimes described as China’s version of the Renaissance. It blended the moral philosophy of classical Confucianism – created by the philosopher and political theorist Confucius during the Zhou dynasty (1046-256BC) – with metaphysical elements drawn from both Buddhism and Daoism.

    Neo-Confucianism emphasised social harmony, hierarchical order and personal virtue – values that reinforced imperial authority and bureaucratic discipline. Unsurprisingly, it quickly gained the support of emperors keen to ensure control of their people, and became the mainstream school of thought in the Ming and Qing dynasties.

    However, Neo-Confucianist thinking proved a double-edged sword. Local gentry hijacked this moral authority to fortify their own power. Clan leaders set up Confucian schools and performed elaborate ancestral rites, projecting themselves as guardians of tradition.

    Over time, these social norms became rigid. What had once fostered order and legitimacy became brittle dogma, more useful for preserving privilege than guiding reform. Neo-Confucian ideals evolved into a protective veil for entrenched elites. When the weight of crisis eventually came, they offered little resilience.

    The last dynasty

    China’s final imperial dynasty, the Qing, collapsed under the weight of multiple uprisings both from within and without. Despite achieving impressive economic growth during the 18th century – fuelled by agricultural innovation, a population boom, and the roaring global trade in tea and porcelain – levels of inequality exploded, in part due to widespread corruption.

    The infamous government official Heshen, widely regarded as the most corrupt figure in the Qing dynasty, amassed a personal fortune reckoned to exceed the empire’s entire annual revenue (one estimate suggests he amassed 1.1 billion taels of silver, equivalent to around US$270 billion (£200bn), during his lucrative career).

    Imperial institutions failed to restrain the inequality and moral decay that the Qing’s growth had initially masked. The mechanisms that once spurred prosperity – technological advances, centralised bureaucracy and Confucian moral authority – eventually ossified, serving entrenched power rather than adaptive reform.

    When shocks like natural disasters and foreign invasions struck, the system could no longer respond. The collapse of the empire became inevitable – and this time there was no groundbreaking technology to enable a new dynasty to take the Qing’s place. Nor were there fresh social ideals or revitalised institutions capable of rebooting the imperial model. As foreign powers surged ahead with their own technological breakthroughs, China’s imperial system collapsed under its own weight. The age of emperors was over.

    The world had turned. As China embarked on two centuries of technological and economic stagnation – and political humiliation at the hands of Great Britain and Japan – other nations, led first by Britain and then the US, would step up to build global empires on the back of new technological leaps.

    In these modern empires, we see the same four key influences on their cycles of growth and inequality – technology, institutions, politics and social norms – but playing out at an ever-faster rate. As the saying goes: history does not repeat itself, but it often rhymes.

    Rule Britannia

    If imperial China’s inequality saga was written in rice and rebellions, Britain’s industrial revolution featured steam and strikes. In Lancashire’s “satanic mills”, steam engines and mechanised looms created industrialists so rich that their fortunes dwarfed small nations.

    In 1835, social observer Andrew Ure enthused: “Machinery is the grand agent of civilisation.” Yet for many decades, the steam engines, spinning jennies and railways disproportionately enriched the new industrial class, just as in the Han dynasty of China 2,000 years earlier. The workers? They inhaled soot, lived in slums – and staged Europe’s first symbolic protest when the Luddites began smashing their looms in 1811.

    A spinning jenny.
    Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

    During the 19th century, Britain’s richest 1% hoarded as much as 70% of the nation’s wealth, while labourers toiled 16-hour days in mills. In cities like Manchester, child workers earned pennies while industrialists built palaces.

    But as inequality peaked in Britain, the backlash brewed. Trade unions formed (and became legal in 1824) to demand fair wages. Reforms such as the Factory Acts (1833–1878) banned child labour and capped working hours.

    Although government forces intervened to suppress the uprisings, unrest such as the 1830 Swing Riots and 1842 General Strike exposed deep social and economic inequalities. By 1900, child labour was banned and pensions had been introduced. The 1900 Labour Representation Committee (later the Labour Party) vowed to “promote legislation in the direct interests of labour” – a striking echo of how China’s imperial exams had attempted to open paths to power.

    Slowly, the working class saw some improvement: real wages for Britain’s poorest workers gradually increased over the latter half of the 19th century, as mass production lowered the cost of goods and expanding factory employment provided a more stable livelihood than subsistence farming.

    And then, two world wars flattened Britain’s elite – the Blitz didn’t discriminate between rich and poor neighbourhoods. When peace finally returned, the Beveridge Report gave rise to the welfare state: the NHS, social housing, and pensions.

    Income inequality plummeted as a result. The top 1%’s share fell from 70% to 15% by 1979. While China’s inequality fell via dynastic collapse, Britain’s decline resulted from war-driven destruction, progressive taxation, and expansive social reforms.

    Wealth share of top 1% in the UK

    Evidence for UK inequality before 1895 is not well documented; dotted curve is conjectured based on Kuznets curve. Sources: Alvaredo et al (2018), World Inequality Database.
    Peng Zhou, CC BY-SA

    However, from the 1980s onwards, inequality in Britain has begun to rise again. This new cycle of inequality has coincided with another technological revolution: the emergence of personal computers and information technology — innovations that fundamentally transformed how wealth was created and distributed.

    The era was accelerated by deregulation, deindustrialisation and privatisation — policies associated with former prime minister Margaret Thatcher, that favoured capital over labour. Trade unions were weakened, income taxes on the highest earners were slashed, and financial markets were unleashed. Today, the richest 1% of UK adults own more 20% of the country’s total wealth.

    The UK now appears to be in the worst of both worlds – wrestling with low growth and rising inequality. Yet renewal is still within reach. The current UK government’s pledge to streamline regulation and harness AI could spark fresh growth – provided it is coupled with serious investment in skills, modern infrastructure, and inclusive institutions geared to benefit all workers.

    At the same time, history reminds us that technology is a lever, not a panacea. Sustained prosperity comes only when institutional reform and social attitudes evolve in step with innovation.

    The American century

    While China’s growth-and-inequality cycles unfolded over millennia and Britain’s over centuries, America’s story is a fast-forward drama of cycles lasting mere decades. In the early 20th century, several waves of new technology widened the gap between rich and poor dramatically.

    By 1929, as the world teetered on the edge of the Great Depression, John D. Rockefeller had amassed such a vast fortune – valued at roughly 1.5% of America’s entire GDP – that newspapers hailed him the world’s first billionaire. His wealth stemmed largely from pioneering petroleum and petrochemical ventures including Standard Oil, which dominated oil refining in an age when cars and mechanised transport were exploding in popularity.

    Yet this period of unprecedented riches for a handful of magnates coincided with severe imbalances in the broader US economy. The “roaring Twenties” had boosted consumerism and stock speculation, but wage growth for many workers lagged behind skyrocketing corporate profits. By 1929, the top 1% of Americans owned more than a third of the nation’s income, creating a precariously narrow base of prosperity.

    When the US stock market crashed in October 1929, it laid bare how vulnerable the system was to the fortunes of a tiny elite. Millions of everyday Americans – living without adequate savings or safeguards – faced immediate hardship, ushering in the Great Depression. Breadlines snaked through city streets, and banks collapsed under waves of withdrawals they could not meet.

    Unemployed men queued outside a Great Depression soup kitchen in Chicago, 1931.
    National Archives at College Park via Wikimedia

    In response, President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal reshaped American institutions. It introduced unemployment insurance, minimum wages, and public works programmes to support struggling workers, while progressive taxation – with top rates exceeding 90% during the second world war. Roosevelt declared: “The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much – it is whether we provide enough for those who have too little.”

    In a different way to the UK, the second world war proved a great leveller for the US – generating millions of jobs and drawing women and minorities into industries they’d long been excluded from. After 1945, the GI Bill expanded education and home ownership for veterans, helping to build a robust middle class. Although access remained unequal, especially along racial lines, the era marked a shift toward the norm that prosperity should be shared.

    Meanwhile, grassroots movements led by figures like Martin Luther King Jr. reshaped social norms about justice. In his lesser-quoted speeches, King warned that “a dream deferred is a dream denied” and launched the Poor People’s Campaign, which demanded jobs, healthcare and housing for all Americans. This narrowing of income distribution during the post-war era was dubbed the “Great Compression” – but it did not last.

    As oil crises of the 1970s marked the end of the preceding cycle of inequality, another cycle began with the full-scale emergence of the third industrial revolution, powered by computers, digital networks and information technology.

    The first personal computer, made by IBM.
    Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-ND

    As digitalisation transformed business models and labour markets, wealth flowed to those who owned the algorithms, patents and platforms – not those operating the machines. Hi-tech entrepreneurs and Wall Street financiers became the new oligarchs. Stock options replaced salaries as the true measure of success, and companies increasingly rewarded capital over labour.

    By the 2000s, the wealth share of the richest 1% climbed to 30% in the US. The gap between the elite minority and working majority widened with every company stock market launch, hedge fund bonus and quarterly report tailored to shareholder returns.

    But this wasn’t just a market phenomenon – it was institutionally engineered. The 1980s ushered in the age of (Ronald) Reaganomics, driven by the conviction that “government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem”. Following this neoliberalist philosophy, taxes on high incomes were slashed, capital gains were shielded, and labour unions were weakened.

    Deregulation gave Wall Street free rein to innovate and speculate, while public investment in housing, healthcare and education was curtailed. The consequences came to a head in 2008 when the US housing market collapsed and the financial system imploded.

    The Global Financial Crisis that followed exposed the fragility of a deregulated economy built on credit bubbles and concentrated risk. Millions of people lost their homes and jobs, while banks were rescued with public money. It marked an economic rupture and a moral reckoning – proof that decades of pro-market policies had produced a system that privatised gain and socialised loss.

    Inequality, long growing in the background, now became a glaring, undeniable fault line in American life – and it has remained that way ever since.

    Fig 5. Wealth share and income share of top 1% in the US

    Sources: wealth inequality: World Inequality Database; income share: Picketty & Saez (2003). Dotted curves are conjectured based on Kuznets curve.
    Peng Zhou, CC BY-SA

    So is the US proof that the Kuznets model of inequality is indeed wrong? While the chart above shows inequality has flattened in the US since the 2008 financial crisis, there is little evidence of it actually declining. And in the short term, while Donald Trump’s tariffs are unlikely to do much for growth in the US, his low-tax policies won’t do anything to raise working-class incomes either.

    The story of “the American century” is a dizzying sequence of technological revolutions – from transport and manufacturing to the internet and now AI – crashing one atop the other before institutions, politics or social norms could catch up. In my view, the result is not a broken cycle but an interrupted one. Like a wheel that never completes its turn, inequality rises, reform stutters – and a new wave of disruption begins.

    Our unequal AI future?

    Like any technological explosion, AI’s potential is dual-edged. Like the Tang dynasty’s bureaucrats hoarding grain, today’s tech giants monopolise data, algorithms and computing power. Management consultant firm McKinsey has predicted that algorithms could automate 30% of jobs by 2030, from lorry drivers to radiologists.

    Yet AI also democratises: ChatGPT tutors students in Africa while open-source models such as DeepSeek empower worldwide startups to challenge Silicon Valley’s oligarchy.

    The rise of AI isn’t just a technological revolution – it’s a political battleground. History’s empires collapsed when elites hoarded power; today’s fight over AI mirrors the same stakes. Will it become a tool for collective uplift like Britain’s post-war welfare state? Or a weapon of control akin to Han China’s grain-hoarding bureaucrats?

    The answer hinges on who wins these political battles. In 19th-century Britain, factory owners bribed MPs to block child labour laws. Today, Big Tech spends billions lobbying to neuter AI regulation.

    Meanwhile, grassroots movements like the Algorithmic Justice League demand bans on facial recognition in policing, echoing the Luddites who smashed looms not out of technophobia but to protest exploitation. The question is not if AI will be regulated but who will write the rules: corporate lobbyists or citizen coalitions.

    The real threat has never been the technology itself, but the concentration of its spoils. When elites hoard tech-driven wealth, social fault-lines crack wide open – as happened more than 2,000 years ago when the Red Eyebrows marched against Han China’s agricultural monopolies.

    To be human is to grow – and to innovate. Technological progress raises inequality faster than incomes, but the response depends on how people band together. Initiatives like “Responsible AI” and “Data for All” reframe digital ethics as a civil right, much like Occupy Wall Street exposed wealth gaps. Even memes – like TikTok skits mocking ChatGPT’s biases – shape public sentiment.

    There is no simple path between growth and inequality. But history shows our AI future isn’t preordained in code: it’s written, as always, by us.


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

    ref. What 2,000 years of Chinese history reveals about today’s AI-driven technology panic – and the future of inequality – https://theconversation.com/what-2-000-years-of-chinese-history-reveals-about-todays-ai-driven-technology-panic-and-the-future-of-inequality-254505

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Hyper-individualistic and focused on worth, the manosphere is a product of neoliberalism

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Sophie Lively, PhD Candidate in Human Geography, Newcastle University

    Marina April/Shutterstock

    Netflix’s hit drama, Adolescence, has reignited debates about the impact of the manosphere and violence against women.

    Many of the responses focus on trying to change the behaviour of boys and young men: encouraging them to find better role models, or to learn from the media about the harms of toxic influencers.

    But the problem is a wider one. The manosphere is a range of interconnected online misogynistic communities.

    My ongoing PhD research is analysing masculinity, class and nationalism and exploring how these narratives appear in the everyday lives of men. I argue that responding to the harm that stems from these online communities requires an understanding of the manosphere as a product of a global, neoliberal, capitalist system built on inequality and division.

    Neoliberalism can be described as “capitalism on steroids”. It’s a hyper-individualistic and market-driven ideology that fosters a culture of competition.

    Neoliberalism encourages us to see ourselves as isolated individuals, responsible for our own success or failure. Among many other things research has shown that one of its outcomes is a profound loneliness. This is something that the manosphere exploits.

    Role models are important, but the disconnect felt by so many today won’t be fixed by better role models within the same system. For example, black feminist thought, which recognises the way racism and sexism intersect and can offer extensive structural critiques, shows us that efforts to end violence against women must take place alongside work to change wider systems. So to start preventing violence we must first deal with root causes, such as poverty and inequality.

    Measuring people by ‘value’

    The manosphere picks up on messages around failing. Alongside hate-filled and misogynistic content, shame-based narratives from the manosphere suggest that boys and men are losers, weak and lazy if they aren’t “succeeding”. This is deeply damaging to all who find themselves drawn to such messages.

    The concept of self-worth regularly appears in the manosphere, but it’s largely in relation to wealth or productivity: hustle harder, rise and grind, make money. These ideas don’t just exist in these online spaces. Similar language – self-investment, output, productivity, personal growth, efficiency – has become part of our everyday way of talking about ourselves and others.

    The wellness industry promises us we can “glow up”. Self-help books and hustle culture encourage us to be better and produce more. Lifestyle influencers demonstrate how to turn our everyday existence into a marketable product.

    This way of thinking turns people into products. It’s not about who you are – it’s about what you produce. Today’s far-right (of which the manosphere is part) capitalises on these ideas and the obsession with economic value.

    There are versions of this aimed at women and girls, such as “cleanfluencers”, who reframe housework not only as a consumable personal brand but also as glamorous and fun.

    But the hustle culture messaging central to the manosphere is particularly distinct in its hypermasculine messaging centred on “self-improvement” which advocates working harder and longer while being ruthless and dominant.

    A focus on domination and individual success encourages young boys and men to see their self-worth tied up in that and that alone. This message extends beyond the manosphere and is part of the very system with which we all exist.

    Resisting the system

    Those captivated by manosphere narratives are victims as well as perpetrators. This doesn’t excuse their actions, or mean they shouldn’t be held accountable. How we care for each other within a capitalist society isn’t easy or straightforward.

    Too often, though, discussion focuses solely on punitive responses, such as advocating for longer prison sentences. If we only focus on punishment, we miss the bigger picture. We need to find more inclusive ways of talking about, and responding to, harm – while rethinking what it means to truly care for each other.

    Abolitionist movements strive to create systems which improve people’s health and safety and build a future without prisons. They seek to build responses to harm that are founded on education and community accountability – where communities take responsibility for identifying issues they need to address.

    Abolitionist approaches advocate for expanding support networks and investing in resources deemed appropriate by survivors. Proposals like this work towards preventing violence. Their community focus means they address the isolating effects of neoliberalism at the same time.

    We also can’t convince ourselves that once the likes of Andrew Tate and others involved in the manosphere disappear, women and girls will no longer suffer such extreme levels of misogyny and violence at the hands of boys and men.

    This is because we exist within a system built on inequality and violence. It’s a system which rewards competition over cooperation, greed over care and one which is harmful to us all.

    Sophie Lively receives funding from the Economic and Social Research Council as part of Northern Ireland and North East Doctoral Training Partnership.

    ref. Hyper-individualistic and focused on worth, the manosphere is a product of neoliberalism – https://theconversation.com/hyper-individualistic-and-focused-on-worth-the-manosphere-is-a-product-of-neoliberalism-254339

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Belgium’s euthanasia trends dispute ‘slippery slope’ argument – new study

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Jacques Wels, Principal Investigator, Unit for Lifelong Health & Ageing, UCL

    Euthanasia has been legal in Belgium since mid-2002, and in the past two decades, the number of reported cases has risen sharply. In 2003, only 236 cases were recorded, but by 2023, this had increased to 3,423. This means that euthanasia now accounts for around 3% of all deaths. But what explains this increase? And does it suggest a worrying trend, as some critics fear?

    In a new study published in Jama Network Open, my colleagues and I analysed trends in all reported euthanasia cases between 2002 and 2023. Our findings show that the rise in euthanasia cases can be attributed to two factors: “regulatory onset” (the time required for both the medical community to adapt its practices and protocols to the new law, and for the public to become informed about its availability and implications) and demographic change, including population ageing.

    We saw a sharp rise in cases during the 15 years following the law being introduced, followed by a period of stabilisation. About one-third of the increase can be explained by demographic changes – mainly population ageing. Euthanasia is indeed most common among people in their 70s and 80s, who often suffer from terminal cancer or several conditions. The number of people in those age categories has steadily increased.

    A common point of contention in the euthanasia debate is the inclusion of psychiatric disorders as a valid reason. In Belgium, euthanasia for psychiatric conditions has been permitted since the law was first introduced. However, despite concerns that this might lead to a rapid expansion of cases, our study finds that psychiatric euthanasia remains extremely rare.

    Between 2002 and 2023, psychiatric conditions accounted for just 1.3% of all euthanasia cases, and this figure has remained stable over time. The strict criteria mean that these cases typically involve long-standing conditions where all treatment options failed. In all cases, the person seeking to end their life underwent an extensive assessment before euthanasia was approved.

    Euthanasia for dementia, however, has increased slightly in recent years. While cases remain low – under 1% of total euthanasia cases – there has been a gradual rise, partially reflecting the ageing of Belgium’s population.

    There are also regional differences. Historically, euthanasia rates have been higher in the Flemish region than in French-speaking Wallonia and Brussels. However, our study shows that this gap has narrowed in recent years. This may reflect shifting cultural attitudes or changes in access to end-of-life care, but, overall, the trend points to a growing alignment in practices across the country.

    One of the biggest concerns around euthanasia laws is the so-called slippery slope argument – the idea that legalisation could lead to a broadening of criteria, eventually allowing euthanasia for non-terminal conditions, mental health issues or even socioeconomic reasons. However, our study finds no evidence to support this claim.

    Slippery slope argument explained.

    The increase in euthanasia cases has largely followed demographic trends and legislation implementation, rather than any broadening of legal criteria or changes in medical practice. Over time, both the regional and gender gaps have decreased, showing a more consistent pattern across the population rather than diverging trends.

    Belgium’s approach differs significantly from the assisted dying bill currently being debated in the UK. With assisted dying, the patient ends their own life but a doctor prescribes the life-ending medication. With euthanasia, a doctor administers the life-ending medication. The proposed UK legislation would allow assisted dying only for terminally ill patients with a short life expectancy, whereas Belgium’s law permits euthanasia even when death is not expected in the near future.

    This is particularly relevant for patients with psychiatric disorders or dementia, who may suffer unbearably for years before meeting the UK’s proposed eligibility criteria. Another key distinction is decision-making: in Belgium, the final decision is made by doctors, whereas the UK is mooting judicial oversight.

    Data gaps

    One thing that countries allowing assisted dying need to think about is how to track and collect euthanasia data. Belgium has a national system for reporting, but there are still gaps – especially in connecting euthanasia data with people’s social and economic backgrounds. It’s important to understand who asks for euthanasia and why, to assess the long-term effects of the law.

    As more countries consider assisted dying laws, Belgium’s experience offers valuable lessons – not only on regulation but also on the importance of robust data monitoring from the outset.

    Jacques Wels receives funding from the Belgian National Scientific Fund (FNRS) and the European Research Council (ERC).

    Natasia Hamarat reports participating in the Federal Commission for the Control and Evaluation of Euthanasia (FCCEE).

    ref. Belgium’s euthanasia trends dispute ‘slippery slope’ argument – new study – https://theconversation.com/belgiums-euthanasia-trends-dispute-slippery-slope-argument-new-study-252323

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Manchester marks Global Intergenerational Week with lessons in tech, chess, and fishing for city’s oldest and youngest residents

    Source: City of Manchester

    Lessons in using the latest tech, playing chess like a Grandmaster, the best bait to use to land the biggest fish, and enjoying a chat over a good book, are all things that Manchester’s youngest and oldest residents will be getting to grips with together over this next week as the city marks Global Intergenerational Week (24-30 April).

    The annual worldwide campaign celebrates the power of intergenerational relationships and the enormous benefits they bring to individuals and communities – from transferring skills across the generations, to helping combat social isolation and loneliness, and challenging ageism.

     Already reaping the benefits of time spent with each other are the residents of Belong Morris Feinmann in Didsbury and pupils at neighbouring Moor Allerton School, whose primary aged pupils delight in nipping through the fence that separates them from their next-door neighbours once a week, armed with a pile of books, to read together with their new-found older friends who live at the residential home.

    Teacher Angela Luckett said: “Every half term a different year group of children come across once a week to read, and so they get to really know each other.  Pupils read with the residents, sharing their literacy skills, but also quite often just having a chat with each other, which is really lovely to see.  It’s beautiful to see the relationships that have built over the visits – they get to form great friendships and really connect with each other.”

    Year 5 pupil Miles added: “I like it, it makes me calmer.  I like to read with them and it’s really fun.”

    For their part, the home residents really enjoy hearing the youngsters read and talking to them about the books they’ve brought in, as well also chatting with them about their own lives and things they’ve done.

    Resident Pauline Pike said: “I think it’s fantastic.  I think we both learn something from each other.  I think the children learn from us, and we certainly learn from them.”

    The weekly Book Buddies session at Belong Morris Feinmann

    Meanwhile, across at Didsbury Library a weekly chess club – running for a year now – provides the chance for would-be Grandmasters of all ages and all abilities to take each other on in sometimes tense table-top chess matches, learning new moves and strategies from each other as they talk and play, each vying to reach checkmate first.

    Didsbury Library is also the venue for a special intergenerational digital drop-in session that takes place each week.

    Talking tech and understanding all the ins and outs of how to get the most out of it is of course what young people often have a particular knack for and pupils at Barlow RC High School are no exception.  They’ve been putting their digital skills to good use over the last year by partnering with local charity Didsbury Good Neighbours to offer free tech training to any adults in the community who need it at the weekly drop-in sessions in the library.

    The weekly digi drop-in sessions run by pupils from The Barlow RC High

    Over in north Manchester the King William Angling Society based in Boggart Hole Clough offers a chance for young and old to put away their tech and enjoy the great outdoors together as they try their hand at the fine art of fishing.

    With a variety of fish of all sizes including Bream and Tench, Rudd, Perch, and Carp, all ready to be netted, the Society is running special intergenerational sessions this weekend on Saturday 26 April for young anglers to bring their grandparents along to learn to fish together – with all equipment and bait provided.

    Also in north Manchester, Heaton Park is inviting families to come together in the park this Saturday with their oldest and youngest family members and bring a picnic with them to enjoy together before taking a walk amongst the many blossom-filled trails full of spring colours, enjoying the ever-popular playground, or maybe taking a boat out on the lake in the park.

    Global Intergenerational Week 2025 takes place as Manchester journeys towards becoming a UNICEF recognised Child Friendly City – helping make Manchester the best place for a child to grow up in – a place where children are not only respected, but also where their voices are heard and they’re encouraged to participate in and play an active role in their local communities.

    Councillor Julie Reid, Executive Member for Early Years, Children and Young People, Manchester City Council, said: “Anyone who was lucky enough to grow up with much-loved grandparents, aunts and uncles or other older adults in their lives will already know how special these relationships across the generations can be and how much the different generations can learn from each other.  Not everyone however has been so fortunate or may no longer have these people in their lives, which is why creating opportunities for our younger and older generations in the city to get together and spend time with each other, enjoying each other’s company, helping each other, and learning new things, is so important.”

    Alongside the city’s ambition to be recognised as a Child Friendly City is its long-standing involvement in the World Health Organisation’s network of Age Friendly Cities and Communities – helping to ensure that people over the age of 50 in Manchester age well and have a happy and successful later life with greater independence and connectedness to their communities.

    Councillor Thomas Robinson, Executive Member for Healthy Manchester and Adult Social Care, said: “All generations can benefit from each other and here in Manchester, there are lots of opportunities for them to connect, share their skills, and not only stave off loneliness but benefit from each other’s wisdom, whatever it is, it’s important that they get the chance to come together.”

    Find out more information about Global Intergenerational Week in Manchester and activities across the city. 

    Find out more information about Global Intergenerational Week

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Europe: President Meloni’s telephone conversation with Indian Prime Minister Modi

    Source: Government of Italy (English)

    24 Aprile 2025

    The President of the Council of Ministers, Giorgia Meloni, had a telephone conversation with the Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi today, to whom she renewed the Italian Government’s condolences for the victims of the brutal terrorist attack in Kashmir on 22 April.

    President Meloni reiterated Italy’s commitment to fighting international terrorism, agreeing with Prime Minister Modi on the need to further strengthen bilateral dialogue and joint action in this area.

    The call also provided an opportunity for an exchange of views on the main topics currently on the international agenda and the progress of the strategic partnership between Italy and India, in line with the Action Plan adopted by President Meloni and Prime Minister Modi last November.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI: Lectra: Q1 2025 financial report available

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Q1 2025 financial report available

    Paris, April 24, 2025 – Lectra informs its shareholders, in compliance with Article 221-4-IV of the General Regulation of the Autorité des marchés financiers, that the Management Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations for the first quarter 2025 is available on the company’s website: www.lectra.com

    It is also available, upon request, by email: investor.relations@lectra.com

            .

    About Lectra :

    At the forefront of innovation since its founding in 1973, Lectra provides industrial intelligence technology solutions—combining software in SaaS mode, cutting equipment, data, and associated services—to players in the fashion, automotive and furniture industries. With boldness and passion, Lectra accelerates the transformation and success of its customers in a world in perpetual motion thanks to the key technologies of Industry 4.0: AI, big data, cloud and the Internet of Things. 

    The Group is present in more than one hundred countries. It operates three production sites for its cutting equipment, located in France, China and the United States. Lectra’s 3,000 employees are driven by three core values: being open-minded thinkers, trusted partners and passionate innovators. They all share the same concern for social responsibility, which is one of the pillars of Lectra’s strategy to ensure its sustainable growth and that of its customers.

    Lectra reported revenues of €527 million in 2024, including €77 million coming from its SaaS offerings. The company is listed on Euronext, and is included in the CAC All Shares, CAC Technology, EN Tech Leaders and ENT PEA-PME 150 indices.

    For more information, please visit lectra.com

    Lectra – World Headquarters et siège social : 16–18, rue Chalgrin • 75016 Paris • France
    Tél. +33 (0)1 53 64 42 00 – lectra.com
    Société anonyme au capital de 37 966 274 €. RCS Paris B 300 702 305

    Attachment

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Atos completes reverse stock split

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Press release

    Atos completes reverse stock split

    Paris, France – April 24, 2025 – Atos SE (the “Company”) announces today the completion of the reverse stock split of the shares comprising its share capital, as decided by the Board of Directors on March 6, 2025, following the delegation of powers by the shareholders’ combined General Meeting of January 31, 2025 (29th resolution).

    The reverse stock split is a purely technical exchange transaction with no direct impact on the total value of the Company’s shares held by each shareholder.

    Terms and conditions of the reverse stock split

    The main terms of this reverse stock split, as detailed in the notice of reverse stock split published in the Bulletin des Annonces Légales Obligatoires (BALO) on March 10, 2025 and in the press release published by the Company on March 7, 2025, are as follows:

    • Basis of the reverse stock split: exchange of 10,000 old shares with a par value of €0.0001 for 1 new share with a par value of €1.
    • Number of old shares subject to the reverse stock split: 190,358,728,519 shares with a par value of 0.0001€.
    • Number of new shares resulting from the reverse stock split: 19,035,872 shares with a par value of 1€.
    • Centralization: the new shares resulting from the reverse stock split were admitted to trading on the regulated market of Euronext in Paris from April 24, 2025, the first day of trading, under ISIN code FR001400X2S4.

    The new shares resulting from the reverse stock split are eligible for the DSS (Deferred Settlement Service) with effect from today.

    Shareholders holding a multiple of 10,000 shares do not need to take any action. These shares were automatically consolidated by their financial intermediary on the basis of 1 new share (€1 par value) for each block of 10,000 old shares (€0.0001 par value).

    Shareholders who were unable to obtain a number of old shares forming a multiple of 10,000 will be compensated for their fractional rights by their financial intermediary within 30 days of April 24, 2025, i.e., until May 25, 2025 inclusive. Shareholders are invited to contact their financial intermediary if they have any questions on this subject.

    Adjustment of the exercise parity for the Warrants issued by the Company

    On March 6, 2025, the Board of Directors, using the delegation of powers granted by the shareholders’ combined General Meeting of January 31, 2025 (29th resolution), decided to adjust the exercise parity of the share subscription warrants issued by the Company on December 18, 2024 (the “Warrants”) in accordance with the terms set out below, which are included in the reverse stock split notice published in the BALO on March 10, 2025.

    As a result of the reverse stock split, the exercise parity of the Warrants corresponds to the product of (i) the exercise parity in force before the start of the reverse stock split and (ii) the ratio between the number of new shares comprising the Company’s share capital after the reverse stock split and the number of old shares comprising the Company’s share capital before the reverse stock split, i.e. 1/10,000, i.e. a maximum number of new ordinary shares to which the Warrants give entitlement in the event of exercise after this reverse stock split, of 1,107,589 new ordinary shares in the Company with a par value of one euro each on exercise of the Warrants.

    Adjustment of the rights of beneficiaries of free allocations of shares

    By decision of the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of April 24, 2025, the rights of beneficiaries of free share allocations under the Company’s current free share allocation plans were adjusted to take account of reverse stock split transactions.

    As a result, the number of rights allocated to each plan beneficiary will correspond to the product of (i) the number of rights allocated to each plan beneficiary before the start of the reverse stock split, and (ii) the ratio between the number of new shares comprising the Company’s share capital after the reverse stock split and the number of existing shares comprising the Company’s share capital before the reverse stock split, i.e. 1/10,000, it being specified that where the number of rights calculated in this way is not a whole number, the number of rights allocated to the beneficiary will, for each holder, be rounded down to the nearest whole number, in accordance with the doctrine of the tax authorities.

    Timetable of upcoming operations

    April 24, 2025 Effective date of the reverse stock split and first day of trading of new shares (ISIN code: FR001400X2S4)
    From April 24 to May 25, 2025 Compensation period for shareholders with fractional rights through their financial intermediaries
    April 28, 2025 Restart of the period of suspension of exercise of the Warrants

    ***

    About Atos

    Atos is a global leader in digital transformation with circa 74,000 employees and annual revenue of circa €10 billion. European number one in cybersecurity, cloud and high-performance computing, the Group provides tailored end-to-end solutions for all industries in 68 countries. A pioneer in decarbonization services and products, Atos is committed to a secure and decarbonized digital for its clients. Atos is a SE (Societas Europaea) and listed on Euronext Paris.

    The purpose of Atos is to help design the future of the information space. Its expertise and services support the development of knowledge, education and research in a multicultural approach and contribute to the development of scientific and technological excellence. Across the world, the Group enables its customers and employees, and members of societies at large to live, work and develop sustainably, in a safe and secure information space.

    Contacts
    Investor relations:

    David Pierre-Kahn | investors@atos.net | +33 6 28 51 45 96

    Sofiane El Amri | investors@atos.net | +33 6 29 34 85 67

    Individual shareholders: +33 8 05 65 00 75

    Press contact: globalprteam@atos.net

    Attachment

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: WENDEL: Q1 2025 Trading update

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Q1 2025 NAV per share at €176.7

    Continued strategic deployment :

    €34bn of private Assets under Management for third parties

    Solid financial structure:
    Strong liquidity and LTV ratio at 17.2%

    Fully diluted Net Asset Value1as of March 31, 2025: €176.7 per share

    • Fully diluted NAV per share down -4.8% since the start of the year reflecting market volatility and evolution of valuation multiples:
      • Listed assets (29% of Gross Asset Value): flat total value year-to-date
      • Unlisted assets (33% of GAV): total value down 7.3%, mainly due to lower market multiples
      • Following the acquisition of Monroe Capital, Asset Management now represents 17% of GAV

    Good performance of Group companies in Q1 20205

    • Principal investments: all Group companies generated positive total sales growth in Q1, except Scalian

    Asset management: good momentum in fundraising and revenue growth

    • IK Partners’ revenues up +33% in Q1. Successful closing of the IK X flagship fund at €3.3 billion, the largest fund raised in its history and continued momentum in fundraising of IK Small & Dev Cap
    • Altogether IK Partners and Monroe have successfully raised more than €3 billion of new funds on various strategies over Q1 2025

    Successful implementation of new strategic directions

    • Principal Investments: successful Forward Sale of 6.7% of Bureau Veritas’ share capital, at a price of €27.25 per share on March 12, 2025
      • Wendel entered into a call spread transaction to benefit from up to c.15% of the stock price appreciation over the next three years on the equivalent number of shares underlying the Forward Sale Transaction
      • Total net proceeds for Wendel of €750 million
      • Wendel has retained 26.5% of the share capital and 41.2% of the voting rights of Bureau Veritas
    • Asset Management: With Monroe Capital acquisition, Wendel’s third party asset management platform reached €34 billion in AUM2
      • On March 31, 2025, Wendel has invested $1.133 billion to acquire 72% of Monroe Capital’s shares together with rights to c.20% of the carried interest generated on past and future funds

    Dividend: €4.70 per share, up 17.5%, proposed to May 15, 2025, AGM

    • c.2.5% of NAV as of December 31, 2024, as stated in the strategic roadmap
    • Representing a yield of c. 5.5% compared to the current share price4

    Strong financial structure and committed to remaining Investment Grade

    • Debt maturity of 3.4 years with an average cost of 2.4%
    • LTV ratio at 17.2%5 as of March 31, 2025, on a pro forma basis
    • Pro forma total liquidity of €1.76 billion as of March 31, 2025, including c.€800 million in cash and €875 million in committed credit facility (fully undrawn)
    • On March 31, 2025, S&P revised Wendel outlook to ‘Stable’ from ‘Negative’ on debt reduction and reaffirmed its ‘BBB’ rating
    Laurent Mignon, Wendel Group CEO, commented:

    “The first quarter of 2025 marks a significant milestone for Wendel, with the successful closing of Monroe Capital’s acquisition, materializing our strategy to grow third-party asset management alongside our principal investment activity. With €34 billion of assets under management and €3.4 billion raised in Q12025 now with Monroe Capital and IK Partners, we are building a strong and significant Asset management player generating recurring and predictable income, enhancing significantly Wendel’s value creation profile.

    We also successfully completed a forward sale of Bureau Veritas shares, achieved in good conditions, generating €750M of proceeds, that, combined with our financial discipline, contributed to significantly improve of our LTV ratio. This strengthened financial profile is a key lever to successfully deliver our 2027 value creation roadmap. Our teams remain fully mobilized to generate value through the current portfolio and put in place the asset management platform.”

    Wendel’s net asset value as of March 31, 2025: €176.7 per share on a fully diluted basis

    Wendel’s Net Asset Value (NAV) as of March 31, 2025, was prepared by Wendel to the best of its knowledge and on the basis of market data available at this date and in compliance with its methodology.

    Fully diluted Net Asset Value was €176.7 per share as of March 31, 2025 (see detail in the table below), as compared to €185.7 on December 31, 2024, representing a decrease of -4.8% since the start of the year. Compared to the last 20-day average share price as of March 31, the discount to the March 31, 2025, fully diluted NAV per share was -47.9%.

    Bureau Veritas contributed negatively to Net Asset Value, as end of March 2025, its 20-day average share price was down YTD (-3.2%). IHS Towers (+37.2%) and Tarkett (+55.5%) 20-day average share prices impacted positively the NAV. Total value creation per share of listed assets was therefore neutral (+€0.0) on a fully diluted basis over the first quarter.

    Unlisted asset contribution to NAV was negative over the course of the quarter with a total change per share of -€6.5 reflecting overall multiples’ decrease.

    Asset management activities contribution to NAV was slightly negative, -€0.8, due to IK Partners multiples’ evolution. A total of €29M of sponsor money is included in the NAV as of end of March, both for IK Partners and Monroe.

    Cash operating costs, Net Financing Results and Other items impacted NAV by -€1.7, as Wendel benefits from a positive carry and maintains a good cost control.

    Total Net Asset Value evolution per share amounted to -€9.0 since the start of the year.

    Fully diluted NAV per share of €176.7 as of March 31, 2025

    (in millions of euros)     03/31/2025 12/31/2024
    Listed investments Number of shares Share price (1) 2,965 3,793
    Bureau Veritas 89.9m(2)/120.3m €28.5/€29.5 2,565 3,544
    IHS 63.0m/63.0m $4.4/$3.2 254 192
    Tarkett   €16.4/€10.5 146 57
    Investment in unlisted assets (3) 3,346 3,612
    Asset Management Activities (4) 1,778 616
    Asset Managers (IK Partners & Monroe) 1,749 616
    Sponsor Money 29
    Other assets and liabilities of Wendel and holding companies (5) 161 174
    Net cash position & financial assets (6) 2,058 2,407
    Gross asset value     10,308 10,603
    Wendel bond debt     -2,378 -2,401
    IK Partners transaction deferred payment and Monroe earnout -244 -131
    Net Asset Value     7,686 8,071
    Of which net debt     -564 -124
    Number of shares     44,461,997 44,461,997
    Net Asset Value per share 172.9 €181.5
    Wendel’s 20 days share price average   €92.0 €93.5
    Premium (discount) on NAV -46.8% -48.5%
    Number of shares – fully diluted 42,456,176 42,466,569
    Fully diluted Net Asset Value, per share 176.7 €185.7
    Premium (discount) on fully diluted NAV -47.9% -49.6%

    (1)  Last 20 trading days average as of March 31, 2025, and December 31, 2024.
    (2)  Number of shares adjusted from the Forward Sale Transaction of 30,357,140 shares of Bureau Veritas. The value of the call spread transaction to benefit from up to c.15% of the stock price appreciation on the equivalent number of shares is taken into account in Other assets & liabilities.
    (3)  Investments in unlisted companies (Stahl, Crisis Prevention Institute, ACAMS, Scalian, Globeducate, Wendel Growth). Aggregates retained for the calculation exclude the impact of IFRS16.
    (4)  Investment in IK Partners (excl. Cash to be distributed to shareholders), in Monroe and sponsor money.
    (5)  Of which 2,005,821 treasury shares as of March 31, 2025, and 1,995,428 as of December 31, 2024.
    (6)  Cash position and short-term financial assets of Wendel & holdings.
    Assets and liabilities denominated in currencies other than the euro have been converted at exchange rates prevailing on the date of the NAV calculation.
    If co-investment and managements LTIP conditions are realized, subsequent dilutive effects on Wendel’s economic ownership are accounted for in NAV calculations. See page 285 of the 2024 Registration Document.

    Wendel’s Principal Investments’ portfolio rotation

    On March 12, 2025, Wendel realized a successful placement of Bureau Veritas shares as part of a prepaid 3-year forward sale representing approximately 6.7% of Bureau Veritas share capital and increased its financial flexibility by reducing the pro forma loan-to-value ratio to approximately 17%. The transaction immediately generated net cash proceeds of approximately €750M to Wendel.

    Wendel reinvested €11.5m in Scalian upon the acquisition of a specialized IT services player focused on the Defense sector in January 2025.

    Wendel’s Asset Management platform evolution

    Acquisition of a controlling stake in Monroe Capital LLC closed, a transformational transaction in line with the strategic roadmap

    Wendel completed on March 31, 2025 the definitive partnership agreement including the acquisition, together with AXA IM Prime, of 75% of Monroe Capital LLC (“Monroe Capital” or “the Company”), and a sponsoring program of $800 million to accelerate Monroe Capital’s growth, together with an investment of up to $200 million in GP commitment.

    With IK Partners and Monroe Capital, Wendel’s third party asset management platform reached €34 billion in AUM7, and should generate, on a full-year basis, c.€ 455 million revenues8, c.€160 million pre-tax FRE (c.€100 million in pre-tax FRE (Wendel share) in 2025. Wendel’s ambition is to reach €150 million (Wendel share) in pre-tax FRE in 2027.

    Strong value creation and performance of Third Party Asset Management (17% of Gross Asset Value)

    Q1 2025 performance

    Over the first quarter of 2025, IK Partners registered again particularly strong levels of activity, generating a total of €46.4 million in revenue, up 33 % vs. Q1 2024. Total Assets under Management (€14.9 billion, of which €4.8 billion of Dry Powder9) grew by 8% since the beginning of the year, and FPAuM10 (€10.2 billion) by 2%. Over the period, €0.64 billion of new funds were raised (IK X, IK PF III, IK SC IV and IK CV I) and 2 exits have been realized, for over €0.26 billion.

    As of March 31, 2025, Wendel’s third party asset management platform11 represented total assets under management of €34 billion and achieved €3.4 billion of fundraising.

    Sponsor money invested by Wendel

    Wendel committed €500 million in IK Partners funds (of which €300 million in IK X). As of March 31, 2025, €29 million of sponsor money have been called in IK Partners and Monroe Capital funds.

    Principal Investment companies’ sales

    Listed Assets: 29% of Gross Asset Value

    Bureau Veritas – A robust first quarter and an unchanged 2025 outlook; Increased returns to shareholders with a €200m share buyback program
    (full consolidation)

    Bureau Veritas revenue in the first quarter of 2025 amounted to €1,558.7 million, an 8.3% increase compared to the first quarter of 2024. Bureau Veritas delivered an organic growth of 7.3%.
    Three businesses led the growth: Industry, up 14.3%, Marine & Offshore, up 11.8%, and Certification, up 10.9%. Agri-Food & Commodities grew 6.0% while both Consumer Products Services and Buildings & Infrastructure grew low-single-digit organically in the first quarter of 2025.
    The scope effect was a positive 1.4%, reflecting bolt-on acquisitions (contributing to +3.0%) finalized in the past few quarters and partly offset by the impact of divestments completed over the last twelve months (contributing to -1.6%). Currency fluctuations had a negative impact of 0.4%, due to the strength of the euro against most currencies.

    2025 Share buyback program
    On April 24, 2025, Bureau Veritas announces a new EUR 200 million share buyback program to be completed by the end of June 2025. This decision reflects the Group’s confidence in its resilient business model and takes advantage of the current share price.

    2025 Outlook unchanged

    • While customers are navigating an uncertain period, Bureau Veritas has a robust opportunities pipeline, a solid backlog, and mid-to-long-term strong market fundamentals. Therefore, Bureau Veritas keeps its outlook unchanged, and expects to deliver for the full year 2025: Mid-to-high single-digit organic revenue growth;
    • Improvement in adjusted operating margin at constant exchange rates;
    • Strong cash flow, with a cash conversion12 above 90%.

    For more information: https://group.bureauveritas.com

    IHS Towers – IHS Towers will report its Q1 results in May 2025

    Tarkett reported its Q1 on April 17, 2025

    For more information: https://www.tarkett-group.com/en/investors/

    Unlisted Assets: 33% of Gross Asset Value

      Sales (in millions)
      Q1 2024 Q1 2025
    Stahl €225.6 €231.0
    CPI $29.0 $30.7
    ACAMS $20.7 $22.0
    Scalian €140.6 €131.8
    Globeducate (1) n/a €109.6

    (1)   Indian operations are deconsolidated and accounted for by the equity method due to the absence of audited figures. 3 months revenue from December 1, 2024, to February 28, 2025.

    Stahl – Total sales13up +2.4% in Q1 2025, in challenging market conditions
    (full consolidation)

    Stahl, the world leader in specialty coatings for flexible materials, posted total sales of €231.0 million in Q1 2025, representing a total increase of +2.4% versus Q1 2024.

    Q1 2025 was marked by increased levels of market uncertainty driven by geopolitical and trade tensions. Organic growth was -5.4%, against a high comparison basis with Q1 2024 (when sales grew organically by +9.8%). Scope contributed positively by +8.1% thanks to the Weilburger Graphics acquisition completed in September 2024, while FX was negative (-0.3%).

    Proforma for the sale of the wet-end leather chemicals activities, total growth over the quarter would have been +6.0%.

    Crisis Prevention Institute – Revenue growth of +5.8% as compared with Q1 2024

    (full consolidation)

    Crisis Prevention Institute recorded first quarter 2025 revenue of $30.7 million, up +5.8% vs. Q1 2024. Of this increase, +5.3% was organic growth, -0.9% came from FX movements and +1.4% from scope effect. Despite ongoing federal oversight and funding uncertainty for some of CPI’s customers, staff training sessions have continued to grow, however customers have been slower to add or replace new certified instructors during this period of uncertainty.

    On January 21, 2025, CPI announced the acquisition of Verge, a Norwegian leader in behavior intervention and training. This acquisition extends CPI’s presence in the Nordics, and enhances CPI’s ability to support professionals worldwide, leveraging Verge’s innovative techniques to address challenging behaviors, aggression and violence.

    ACAMS – Total sales up +6.4% in Q1, reflecting double-digit growth in the core North American segment as well as continued momentum in the conference sponsorship & exhibition business

    (full consolidation)

    ACAMS, the global leader in training and certifications for anti-money laundering and financial-crime prevention professionals, generated total revenue of $22.0 million, up +6.4% compared to the first quarter of 202414. First-quarter results were driven by double-digit growth in the core North American segment, with both bank and non-bank customers, as well as improved conference sponsorship & exhibition sales, offset by headwinds in select EMEA and APAC markets.

    Q1 growth reflects momentum from recent strategic and organizational changes including the senior leadership additions in 2024, a shift in focus to selling solutions for large enterprise customers, market expansion with the introduction of the Certified Anti-Fraud Specialist certification (CAFS), and investments in the technology platform. ACAMS anticipates continued growth in 2025 as these strategic changes and investments take hold.

    Scalian – Decrease of total sales of -6.3% in Q1 2025, in the context of continued market growth slowdown. Acquisition of a French IT services specializing in the defense sector in January 2025.

    (full consolidation)  

    Scalian, a leading consulting firm in digital transformation and operational performance reported total sales of €131.8M as of March 31, 2025, a -6.3% decrease vs. last year. The slowdown is spread across several sectors and geographies particularly automotive in Europe and Aeronautics (supply chain disruptions). Sales are down -11.2% organically but have benefited from a positive scope effect of +4.9%.

    In January 2025, Scalian completed the acquisition of a French IT services specialist. The acquisition was funded through shareholders’ equity contribution, including a €11.5m equity injection from Wendel in Scalian. This acquisition further reinforces Scalian’s unique positioning in the OT/IT space and is fully in line with the buy-and-build strategy implemented by the Group and which has resulted in the acquisitions of Yucca in 2023 as well as Mannarino and Dulin in 2024.

    Globeducate – Revenue growth of +11%15

    (Accounted for by the equity method. Globeducate acquisition was completed on October 16th, 2024. Indian operations are deconsolidated and accounted for by the equity method due to the absence of audited figures. 3 months revenue from December 1, 2024- February 28, 2025.)

    Globeducate, one of the world’s leading bilingual K-12 education groups, recorded first quarter 2025 revenue of €109.6 million, up +11% vs. Q1 2024. Of this increase, +3.5% came from accretive M&A transactions.

    Over September and November 2024, Globeducate completed 2 acquisitions:1 in Cyprus (Olympion School) and 1 in the UK (Ecole des Petits).

    Preliminary estimated impact of new tariffs on Wendel’s businesses

    Wendel Group’s companies are mainly business services, and are therefore only slightly directly impacted by conflicts over tariffs. For industrial companies (Stahl and Tarkett), these two companies have production units generally located in the countries in which they generate their revenues. According to the information available, the direct impact for these two companies is limited. The lack of visibility on the evolution of tariffs, as well as their real impact on global economic growth and USD exchange rates, constitute the main risk on the value creation potential of our assets.

    1 Fully diluted of share buybacks and treasury shares. Without adjusting for dilution, NAV stands at €7,719m and €173.6 per share.
    2 As of end of March 2025, AuM of IK Partners and Monroe Capital

    3 This amount includes usual closing adjustments

    4 Share price as of April 23, 2025: €86.05

    5 Including sponsor money commitment in IK (-€500m partly called as of 03.31.2025) & expected commitments in Monroe Capital (-$200m partly called as of 03.31.2025), IK Partners transaction deferred payment (-€131m), Monroe Capital 100% acquisition (including estimated earnout and puts on residual capital, i.e -$528M).

    6 €2.1bn of cash as of March 31, 2025, restated from sponsor money commitment in IK (-€500m partly called as of 03.31.2025) & expected commitments in Monroe Capital (-$200m partly called as of 03.31.2025), IK Partners transaction deferred payment (-€131m), Monroe Capital 100% acquisition (including estimated earnout and puts on residual capital, i.e -$528M).

    7 As of end of March 2025

    8 Based on USD/EUR exchange rate of 1.05

    9 Commitments not yet invested

    10 Fee Paying AuM

    11 IK Partners and Monroe Capital

    12 (Net cash generated from operating activities – lease payments + corporate tax)/adjusted operating profit.

    13 Total sales including wet-end activities, of which sale closing is expected in Q2 2025.

    14 Revenue in Q1 2024 excludes PPA restatement impact of $0.3m. Including this restatement, revenue is $20.4m in Q1 2024.

    15 Indian operations are deconsolidated and accounted for by the equity method due to the absence of audited figures. 3 months revenue from December 1, 2024 to February 28, 2025. These figures are compared with the same period last year and are estimated and non audited, accordingly, changes in percentages are rounded to the nearest whole figure.

    Agenda

    Thursday, May 15, 2025, at 3 PM CEST

    Annual General Meeting

    Wednesday, July 30, 2025

    H1 2025 results – Publication of NAV as of June 30, 2025, and condensed Half-Year consolidated financial statements (post-market release)

    Thursday, October 23, 2025

    Q3 2025 Trading update – Publication of NAV as of September 30, 2025 (post-market release)

    Friday, December 12, 2025

    2025 Investor Day.

    About Wendel

    Wendel is one of Europe’s leading listed investment firms. Regarding its principal investment strategy, the Group invests in companies which are leaders in their field, such as ACAMS, Bureau Veritas, Crisis Prevention Institute, Globeducate, IHS Towers, Scalian, Stahl and Tarkett. In 2023, Wendel initiated a strategic shift into third-party asset management of private assets, alongside its historical principal investment activities. In May 2024, Wendel completed the acquisition of a 51% stake in IK Partners, a major step in the deployment of its strategic expansion in third-party private asset management and also completed in March 2025 the acquisition of 72% of Monroe Capital. As of March 31, 2025, Wendel manages 34 billion euros on behalf of third-party investors, and c.6.3 billion euros invested in its principal investments activity.

    Wendel is listed on Eurolist by Euronext Paris.

    Standard & Poor’s ratings: Long-term: BBB, stable outlook – Short-term: A-2 

    Wendel is the Founding Sponsor of Centre Pompidou-Metz. In recognition of its long-term patronage of the arts, Wendel received the distinction of “Grand Mécène de la Culture” in 2012.

    For more information: wendelgroup.com

    Follow us on LinkedIn @Wendel 

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    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Ageas successfully places EUR 500 million Tier 2 Notes

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Ageas successfully places EUR 500 million Tier 2 Notes

    Today ageas SA/NV successfully placed debt securities in the form of EUR 500 million Subordinated Fixed to Floating Rate Notes (the “Notes”) maturing in May 2056 and with a first call date in November 2035. The issuance generated substantial interest and was more than 3 times oversubscribed (orderbook in excess of EUR 1.6 billion).

    The Notes will be issued in denominations of EUR 100,000 at a re-offer price of 99.89 with a fixed coupon rate of 4.625% payable annually until the first reset date (2 May 2036). As of the first reset date, the coupon becomes payable quarterly at a 3-month Euribor floating rate over the initial credit spread (215bp) and a 100 basis points step-up.

    The Notes will qualify as Tier 2 capital for both the Group and Ageas SA/NV under the Solvency II prudential regime in the EU and are rated A- by Fitch. Ageas expects Standard and Poor’s will assign an A- rating. Application has been made for the Notes to be listed on the official list and admitted to trading on the Luxembourg Stock Exchange’s Euro MTF market. The Notes are expected to be settled on 2 May 2025.

    The net proceeds of the Notes are expected to be used for the financing of the acquisition of esure as well as for general corporate purposes and to optimise the capital structure of the Group.

    Ageas is a listed international insurance Group with a heritage spanning of 200 years. It offers Retail and Business customers Life and Non-Life insurance products designed to suit their specific needs, today and tomorrow, and is also engaged in reinsurance activities. As one of Europe’s larger insurance companies, Ageas concentrates its activities in Europe and Asia, which together make up the major part of the global insurance market. It operates successful insurance businesses in Belgium, the UK, Portugal, Türkiye, China, Malaysia, India, Thailand, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Singapore, and the Philippines through a combination of wholly owned subsidiaries and long-term partnerships with strong financial institutions and key distributors. Ageas ranks among the market leaders in the countries in which it operates. It represents a staff force of about 50,000 people and reported annual inflows of EUR 18.5 billion in 2024.

    Disclaimer

    THIS COMMUNICATION IS NOT INTENDED FOR DISTRIBUTION, DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY, IN OR INTO THE UNITED STATES OR ANY OTHER JURISDICTION WHERE SUCH DISTRIBUTION IS PROHIBITED UNDER APPLICABLE LAW.

    The issue, exercise or sale of securities in the offering mentioned in this press release are subject to specific legal or regulatory restrictions in certain jurisdictions. The information contained herein shall not constitute or form part of an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy, nor shall there be any sale of the securities referred to herein, in any jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful. ageas SA/NV assumes no responsibility in the event there is a violation by any person of such restrictions.

    This press release does not constitute an offer to sell, or a solicitation of offers to purchase or subscribe for, securities in the United States or any other jurisdiction. The securities referred to herein have not been, and will not be, registered under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and may not be offered, exercised or sold in the United States or to, or for the account or benefit of, U.S. persons, except pursuant to an exemption from, or in a transaction not subject to, the registration requirements of the Securities Act of 1933. There is no intention to register any portion of the offering in the United States or to conduct a public offering of securities in the United States.

    This communication may only be communicated, or caused to be communicated, to persons in the United Kingdom in circumstances where the provisions of Section 21 of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000, as amended (the “Financial Services and Markets Act”) do not apply to ageas SA/NV and is directed solely at persons in the United Kingdom who (i) have professional experience in matters relating to investments, such persons falling within the definition of “investment professionals” in Article 19(5) of the Financial Services and Markets Act (Financial Promotion) Order 2005, as amended (the “Order”) or (ii) are persons falling within Article 49(2)(a) to (d) of the Order or other persons to whom it may lawfully be communicated (all such persons together being referred to as “relevant persons”). This communication is directed only to relevant persons and must not be acted on or relied on by persons who are not relevant persons.

    The securities referred to herein are not intended to be offered, sold or otherwise made available to, and should not be offered, sold or otherwise made available to, any retail investor in the European Economic Area. For these purposes, a retail investor means a person who is one (or more) of: (i) a retail client as defined in point (11) of Article 4(1) of Directive 2014/65/EU, as amended (“MiFID II”) or (ii) a customer within the meaning of Directive (EU) 2016/97, as amended (the “Insurance Distribution Directive”), where that customer would not qualify as a professional client as defined in point (10) of Article 4(1) of MiFID II.

    The securities referred to herein are not intended to be offered, sold or otherwise made available to, and should not be offered, sold or otherwise made available to, any retail investor in the United Kingdom. For these purposes, a retail investor means a person who is one (or more) of: (i) a retail client as defined in point (8) of Article 2 of Regulation (EU) No 2017/565 as it forms part of domestic law by virtue of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 (“EUWA”) or (ii) a customer within the meaning of the provisions of the Financial Services and Markets Act and any rules or regulations made under the Financial Services and Markets Act to implement the Insurance Distribution Directive, where that customer would not qualify as a professional client as defined in point (8) of Article 2(1) of Regulation (EU) No 600/2014 as it forms part of domestic law by virtue of the EUWA.

    The securities referred to herein are also not intended to be offered, sold or otherwise made available, and will not be offered, sold or otherwise made available, in Belgium to “consumers” (consumenten/consommateurs) within the meaning of the Belgian Code of Economic Law (Wetboek van economisch recht/Code de droit économique), as amended.

    The securities referred to herein may be held only by, and transferred only to, eligible investors referred to in Article 4 of the Belgian Royal Decree of 26 May 1994, holding their securities in an exempt securities account that has been opened with a financial institution that is a direct or indirect participant in the securities settlement system operated by the National Bank of Belgium or any successor thereto.

    This press release is not a prospectus nor an advertisement for the purpose of Regulation (EU) 2017/1129.

    Attachment

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: CalAmp Delivers Strong Financial Performance in 2024

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    CARLSBAD, Calif., April 24, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — CalAmp, a leading telematics company providing products and solutions that help organizations worldwide monitor, track, and protect vital assets, today announced strong results for calendar year 2024. The results underscore a transformative year marked by financial strength, strategic leadership hires, product innovation, and global expansion.

    “We are proud of the strides we made in 2024—financially, operationally, and strategically,” said Chris Adams, President and CEO of CalAmp. “Our refreshed leadership team is taking a customer first approach, with a focus on delivering innovative solutions and world-class customer service.”

    CalAmp delivered robust business results in 2024, including the following milestones:

    • Surpassed a total of 2.7 million subscribers across its business units
    • Generated revenue of $197 million and EBITDA of $12.7 million
    • Delivered strong positive free cash flow with >100% EBITDA conversion
    • Ended the year with a solid cash position of $72 million and positive net cash on the balance sheet following the elimination of $230 million of debt

    CalAmp’s technology solutions processed and analyzed over one trillion data points (3.5 billion a day) during 2024, reinforcing the company’s position as a powerhouse in connected intelligence. The flagship Here Comes the Bus® app served over 1.7 million parents, strengthening CalAmp’s leadership in student safety and family engagement.

    To further accelerate its rapidly growing Connected Car Solutions business unit, CalAmp expanded its global footprint with the opening of a new LoJack® France office, building on the trusted LoJack brand to better serve European markets.

    To enhance its market leadership and drive further growth, CalAmp strategically organized its operations into four core business units: Edge Devices, Telematics Solutions, Connected Car Solutions, and Student Safety. The company hired and promoted accomplished leaders to bolster each of these divisions:

    • Tom Ayers, a former VP at onsemi and Sony Electronics, hired to lead Edge Devices;
    • Paul Washicko, previously General Manager of SaaS at CalAmp, returned to lead Telematics Solutions;
    • Maurizio Iperti promoted to President of Connected Car Solutions, overseeing all regions, including Europe, the United Kingdom, and Mexico;
    • Thomas Polan, a co-founder of the Synovia K-12 solution acquired by CalAmp in 2019, rejoined as Deputy GM of Student Safety.

    These key management appointments align with CalAmp’s commitment to operational excellence and market expansion, reinforcing its ability to scale in key growth sectors.

    As CalAmp enters 2025, the company is well-positioned to build on its momentum, drive innovation, and deepen its partnerships across mobility, safety, and asset intelligence.

    About CalAmp

    CalAmp provides flexible solutions to help organizations worldwide monitor, track, and protect their vital assets. Our unique device-enabled software and cloud platform enables commercial and government organizations worldwide to improve efficiency, safety, visibility, and compliance while accommodating the unique ways they do business. With over 10 million active edge devices and 220+ approved or pending patents, CalAmp is the telematics leader organizations turn to for innovation and dependability. For more information, visit calamp.com, or LinkedInTwitterYouTube or CalAmp Blog.

    CalAmp, LoJack, TRACKERHere Comes The BusBus GuardianCalAmp Vision, CrashBoxx and associated logos are among the trademarks of CalAmp and/or its affiliates in the United States, certain other countries and/or the EU. Spireon acquired the LoJack® U.S. Stolen Vehicle Recovery (SVR) business from CalAmp and holds an exclusive license to the LoJack mark in the United States and Canada. Any other trademarks or trade names mentioned are the property of their respective owners.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: LECTRA: Q1 2025: Business slowdown due to unprecedented environment

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Q1 2025: Business slowdown due to unprecedented environment

    • Revenues: 134.4 million euros (+4%)*
    • EBITDA before non-recurring items: 21.1 million euros (stable)*
    • Net income: 5.8 million euros (-13%)*
    • Update of 2025 annual forecast premature

     *At actual exchange rates 

      January 1 – March 31
       2025 2024 Changes 2025/2024  
    (in millions of euros)        Actual
    exchange rates
    Like-for-like(1)  
    Revenues  134.4 129.6   +4% +1%  
    ARR (2)  90.3     +2% +3%  
    EBITDA before non-recurring items  21.1 21.1   +0% -6%  
    EBITDA margin before non-recurring items  15.7% 16.3%   -0,6 point -0,9 point  
    Net income  5.8 6.7   -13%  
    Shareholders’ Equity  368.8 341.6    
    Net cash (+) / Net financial debt (-)  -4.6 -18.8    

    (1) On a constant currency basis and for a comparable scope of consolidation
    (2) At December 31, 2024 and March 31, 2025

    Paris, April 24, 2025. Today, Lectra’s Board of Directors, chaired by Daniel Harari, reviewed the unaudited consolidated financial statements for the first quarter of 2025.

    MACROECONOMIC AND GEOPOLITICAL SITUATION: AN UNPRECEDENTED SHOCK

    Since early March, the global economic situation has deteriorated. The unexpectedly sweeping new tariffs announced on April 2 have caused considerable volatility in global financial markets and led to significant declines in market valuations and indices across all countries. They have also had major negative impacts on businesses worldwide, creating uncertainty and restraining their near-term growth prospects. 

    Limited direct impact

    As of today, software and services are not subject to customs duties. Half of the equipment sales in the United States come from local production. On the other hand, a small portion of this production is sold in China. Therefore, only 10% of the revenue is affected by the announced customs duties.

    The Group has reflected the increased customs duties in its selling prices.

    Robust competitive position 

    The distortion of competition regarding equipment is virtually nil in the near term, as manufacturing by competitors in the United States is extremely limited. Were the situation to continue over the long term, it would be expected to work in Lectra’s favor, as competitors manufacture for the most part in Asia and in Europe. The Group is also the only one to have three production sites, in France, China and the United Sates.

    A sense of apprehension that reinforces customers’ wait-and-see attitude 

    Customers and contract manufacturers must now adjust to this new economic landscape — in terms of pricing policy, production, investment, or future strategy. 

    The long-term effects of these new tariffs, if confirmed, could have repercussions on inflation, growth, and supply chains.

    Should the situation deteriorate, a global economic slowdown could be observed, with higher prices for consumers and lower profits for companies, leading to financing difficulties and reduced investment.

    SUMMARY FOR Q1 2025

    To facilitate the analysis of the Group’s results, the accounts are compared to those published for 2024 (at actual exchange rates) and, for the 2025 vs 2024 comparisons, to the aux 2024 pro-forma accounts (presented on a like-for-like basis), including Launchmetrics from January 1.

    Given the importance of SaaS activity for Lectra, the Group has decided to publish a new indicator, ARR (Annual Recurring Revenue), which is commonly used in the SaaS industry.

    ARR at March 31, 2025, came to 90.3 million euros, up 3% higher than at the end of 2024 at comparable exchange rates. 

    Q1 2025 revenues (134.5 million euros) were up 4% at actual exchange rates and up 1% on a like-for-like basis, reflecting the slowdown observed early in March.

    EBITDA before non-recurring items totaled 21.1 million euros, holding stable at actual exchange rates and down 6% on a like-for-like basis. The EBITDA margin before non-recurring items was 15.7%.

    After accounting for an amortization charge of intangible assets amounting to 5.9 million euros, the income from operation before non-recurring items decreased by 12% on a comparable basis, to 10.3 million euros.

    Net income amounted to 5.8 million euros, down 13% at actual exchange rates. 

    High free cash flow before non-recurring items

    Free cash flow before non-recurring items remained high at 17.7 million euros in Q1 2025, after the record level of 22.0 million euros posted in Q1 2024.

    A particularly robust sheet

    At March 31, 2025, the Group had a particularly robust balance sheet with a consolidated shareholders’ equity of 368.8 million euros and a net financial debt of 4.6 million euros. The Group has thus continued to reduce its debt at a sustained pace, 14 months after financing the acquisition of a majority stake in Launchmetrics.

    OUTLOOK 

    In the management discussion and analysis of the consolidated financial statements for the fourth quarter and full year 2024, published on February 12, 2025, Lectra reiterated its long-term vision, together with the objectives of its strategic roadmap for 2023-2025.  

    The Group noted that in a challenging environment, having proven its resilience and the quality of its fundamentals, Lectra had approached the year 2025 with confidence, pursuing its strategy by meeting customers’ needs as closely as possible through the quality of its offer for Industry 4.0 and by developing its SaaS activity. 

    In light of the unprecedented circumstances stemming from economic and policy announcements, leading to a stronger-than-anticipated wait-and-see attitude among its customers, it is premature to provide updated annual forecasts at this time.  

    The 2024 Financial Report, as well as the Management Discussion and analysis of financial conditions and results of operations and the financial statements for Q1 2025 are available on lectra.com. The Shareholders’ General and Special Meetings will be held on April 25, 2025, in the Company’s offices. Q2 and H1 2025 earnings will be published on July 24, 2025, after the close of the Paris Stock Exchange.

    About Lectra

    At the forefront of innovation since its founding in 1973, Lectra provides industrial intelligence technology solutions—combining software in SaaS mode, cutting equipment, data, and associated services—to players in the fashion, automotive and furniture industries. With boldness and passion, Lectra accelerates the transformation and success of its customers in a world in perpetual motion thanks to the key technologies of Industry 4.0: AI, big data, cloud and the internet of things. 

    The Group is present in more than one hundred countries. It operates three production sites for its cutting equipment, located in France, China and the United States. Lectra’s 3,000 employees are driven by three core values: being open-minded thinkers, trusted partners and passionate innovators. They all share the same concern for social responsibility, which is one of the pillars of Lectra’s strategy to ensure its sustainable growth and that of its customers.

    Lectra reported revenues of €527 million in 2024, including €77 million coming from its SaaS offerings. The company is listed on Euronext, and is included in the CAC All Shares, CAC Technology, EN Tech Leaders and ENT PEA-PME 150 indices.

    For more information, visit ww.lectra.com

    Lectra – World Headquarters: 16–18, rue Chalgrin • 75016 Paris • France 

    Tel. +33 (0)1 53 64 42 00 – www.lectra.com 

    A French Société Anonyme with capital of €37,966,274 • RCS Paris B 300 702 305 

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    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Cegedim: Like-for-like revenues grew 4.5% in the first quarter

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Quarterly financial information as of March 31, 2025
    IFRS – Regulated information – Not audited

    • Revenue grew 3.5% as reported and 4.5% LFL to €161.3 million in the first quarter of 2025.
    • The marketing, health insurance, HR, and cloud businesses delivered the most solid growth.

    Boulogne-Billancourt, France, April 24, 2025, after the market close

    Revenue

      First quarter Change Q1 2025 / 2024
    in millions of euros 2025 2024 Reported Life for like(1)(2)
    Software & Services 72.4 74.4 (2.6)% (0.4)%
    Flow 27.6 25.3 +8.9% +8.8%
    Data & Marketing 29.9 27.0 +10.6% +10.6%
    BPO 21.1 20.2 +4.3% +4.3%
    Cloud & Support 10.3 9.0 +14.8% +14.8%
    Cegedim 161.3 155.9 +3.5% +4.5%

    Cegedim’s consolidated first-quarter 2025 revenues rose to €161.3 million, up 3.5% as reported and 4.5% like for like(1) compared with the same period in 2024.

    Marketing, health insurance, HR, and cloud businesses delivered the most solid growth over the first quarter. The deconsolidation of INPS on December 10, 2024, following its voluntary placement in administration, weighed on reported growth at the Software & Services division and Group level.

    Analysis of business trends by division 

    • Software & Services
    Software & Services First quarter Change Q1 2025 / 2024
    in millions of euros 2025 2024 Reported Like for like(1)
    Cegedim Santé 18.9 18.1 +4.7% (4.7)%
    Insurance, HR, Pharmacies, and other services 44.1 42.7 +3.4% +3.4%
    International businesses 9.4 13.6 (31.1)% (6.9)%
    Software & Services 72.4 74.4      (2.6)% (0.4%

    Revenues at Cegedim Santé grew 4.7% as reported in the first quarter but fell 4.7% like for like. Reported growth got a boost from the consolidation over the full quarter of Visiodent, which was first consolidated on March 1, 2024. The Maiia suite of products and the Claude Bernard database are both doing well, but their momentum was obscured by the expiration of a contract to supply data. That contract is being renegotiated, but it did not generate any revenues in the first quarter.

    Other French subsidiaries saw revenue growth of 3.4% both as reported and like for like. The division was propelled by growth at the insurance businesses, thanks to robust project-based sales and the start of the run phase of projects started in 2024. The HR business is still getting a boost from its client diversification strategy and strong growth in its core market. On the other hand, because it is between waves of Ségur public health investments, sales of products and services for pharmacies in France are experiencing a lacklustre business environment.

    International businesses posted reported revenues down 31.1% owing to the deconsolidation of INPS from December 10, 2024, following its voluntary placement in administration. Like-for-like revenues declined 6.9% due to an unfavorable comparison in sales to pharmacies in the UK—which got a boost from the Pharmacy First program in Q1 2024—and because a client of Activus, a UK subsidiary selling software for health insurance and personal protection insurance for expats, went out of business at the end of 2024. Both businesses have clear prospects that will reverse the downward trend in the months ahead. Other international activities had a positive quarter and remain on track.

    Flow First quarter Change Q1 2025 / 2024
    in millions of euros 2025 2024 Reported Like for like(2)
    e-business 16.9 15.4 +9.0% +8.8%
    Third-party payer 10.7 9.9 +8.7% +8.7%
    Flow 27.6 25.3 +8.9% +8.8%

    First-quarter growth in e-business, e-invoicing, and digitized data exchanges was 9.0% as reported and 8.8% like for like, and both business segments contributed to the gains. E-Invoicing & Procurement continues to expand in France and abroad, whereas the Healthcare Flow segment is still getting a boost from dynamic new offerings for hospitals that are designed to make their drug purchasing secure.

    The Third-party payer business experienced 8.7% growth in Q1. It was boosted by strong growth in demand for its fraud and long-term illness detection offerings, a trend that began in H2 2024.

    • Data & Marketing
    Data & Marketing First quarter Change Q1 2025 / 2024
    in millions of euros 2025 2024 Reported Like for like(1)
    Data 13.8 13.0 +5.9% +5.9%
    Marketing 16.1 14.0 +14.9% +14.9%
    Data & Marketing 29.9 27.0 +10.6% +10.6%

    Data businesses were up 5.9% in the first quarter on the back of a strong showing in France, where sales are stronger than they are abroad.

    The Marketing segment posted robust growth of 14.9% owing to strong sales after new client wins and brisk business with existing clients.

    BPO First quarter Change Q1 2025 / 2024
    in millions of euros 2025 2024 Reported Like for like(1)
    Insurance BPO 15.2 14.5 +4.7% +4.7%
    Business Services BPO 5.9 5.7 +3.4% +3.4%
    BPO 21.1 20.2 +4.3% +4.3%

    The Insurance BPO business grew by 4.7% over the quarter, chiefly owing to its overflow business, which has been flourishing lately because it serves a critical need for clients.

    Business Services BPO (HR and digitalization) reported growth of 3.4% in the first quarter on the back of a popular compliance
    offering.

    • Cloud & Support
    Cloud & Support First quarter Change Q1 2025 / 2024
    in millions of euros 2025 2024 Reported Like for like(1)
    Cloud & Support 10.3 9.0 +14.8% +14.8%

    The Cloud & Support division continued to build on the momentum it generated in 2024, with growth of 14.8% in Q1 reflecting an expanded range of sovereign cloud-backed products and services.

    Highlights

    To the best of the company’s knowledge, there were no events or changes during the first quarter of 2025 that would materially alter the Group’s financial situation.

    Significant transactions and events post March 31, 2025
    To the best of the company’s knowledge, there were no post-closing events or changes after March 31, 2025, that would materially alter the Group’s financial situation.

    Outlook

    Based on the currently available information, the Group expects 2025 like-for-like revenue(3) growth to be in the range of 2-4% relative to 2024. Recurring operating income should continue to improve, following a similar trajectory as in 2024.

    These targets are not forecasts and may need to be revised if there is a significant worsening of geopolitical, macroeconomic, or currency risks.

                        

    WEBCAST ON APRIL 24, 2025, AT 6:15 PM (PARIS TIME)
    The webcast is available at: www.cegedim.fr/webcast
    The Q1 2025 revenue presentation is available at:
    https://www.cegedim.fr/documentation/Pages/presentation.aspx

    Financial calendar:

    2025 June 13 at 9:30

    July 24 after the close

    September 25 after the close

    September 26 at 10:00 am

    October 23 after the close

    Shareholders’ general meeting

    H1 2025 revenues

    H1 2025 results

    SFAF meeting

    Q3 2025 revenues

    Financial calendar: https://www.cegedim.fr/finance/agenda/Pages/default.aspx

    Disclaimer
    This press release is available in French and in English. In the event of any difference between the two versions, the original French version takes precedence. This press release may contain inside information. It was sent to Cegedim’s authorized distributor on April 24, 2025, no earlier than 5:45 pm Paris time.
    The figures cited in this press release include guidance on Cegedim’s future financial performance targets. This forward-looking information is based on the opinions and assumptions of the Group’s senior management at the time this press release is issued and naturally entails risks and uncertainty. For more information on the risks facing Cegedim, please refer to Chapter 7, “Risk management”, section 7.2, “Risk factors and insurance”, and Chapter 3, “Overview of the financial year”, section 3.6, “Outlook”, of the 2024 Universal Registration Document filled with the AMF on April 7, 2025, under number D.24-0233.

    About Cegedim:
    Founded in 1969, Cegedim is an innovative technology and services company in the field of digital data flow management for healthcare ecosystems and B2B, and a business software publisher for healthcare and insurance professionals. Cegedim employs nearly
    6,700 people in more than 10 countries and generated revenue of over €654 million in 2024.
    Cegedim SA is listed in Paris (EURONEXT: CGM).
    To learn more please visit: www.cegedim.fr
    And follow Cegedim on X @CegedimGroup, LinkedIn, and Facebook.

    Aude Balleydier
    Cegedim
    Media Relations
    and Communications Manager

    Tel.: +33 (0)1 49 09 68 81
    aude.balleydier@cegedim.fr

    Damien Buffet
    Cegedim
    Head of Financial
    Communication

    Tel.: +33 (0)7 64 63 55 73
    damien.buffet@cegedim.com

    Céline Pardo
    Becoming RP Agency
    Media Relations Consultant

    Tel.:        +33 (0)6 52 08 13 66
    cegedim@becoming-group.com

     

    ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

    Appendix

    Breakdown of revenue by quarter and division

    in millions of euros   Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Total
    Software & Services   72.4       72.4
    Flow   27.6       27.6
    Data & Marketing   29.9       29.9
    BPO   21.1       21.1
    Cloud & Support   10.3       10.3
    Group revenue   161.3       161.3
    in millions of euros   Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Total
    Software & Services   74.4 77.8 75.6 80.1 307.8
    Flow   25.4 24.2 23.7 27.0 100.3
    Data & Marketing   27.0 32.3 28.2 38.4 125.9
    BPO   20.2 19.7 21.6 21.2 82.7
    Cloud & Support   9.0 9.1 7.7 12.0 37.8
    Group revenue   155.9 163.1 156.8 178.7 654.5

    Breakdown of revenue by geographic zone, currency, and division at March 31, 2025

    as a % of consolidated revenues   Geographic zone   Currency
      France EMEA
    ex. France
    Americas   Euro GBP Other
    Software & Services   87.1% 12.8% 0.1%   91.1% 6.8% 2.0%
    Flow   91.6% 8.4% 0.0%   94.3% 5.7% 0.0%
    Data & marketing   97.7% 2.3% 0.0%   98.3% 0.0% 1.7%
    BPO   100.0% 0.0% 0.0%   100.0% 0.0% 0.0%
    Cloud & Support   97.0% 3.0% 0.0%   97.0% 0.0% 3.0%
    Cegedim   92.1% 7.8% 0.1%   94.5% 4.0% 1.5%

    (1)   At constant scope and exchange rates.
    (2)   The positive currency impact of 0.1% was mainly due to the pound sterling. The negative scope effect of 1.1% was attributable to the deconsolidation of INPS as of December 10, 2024, which the consolidation of Visiodent starting March 1, 2024 only partly offset.
    (2)At constant scope and exchange rates.

    (3)At constant scope and exchange rates.

    Attachment

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Best Bitcoin Casino Reddit 2025: JACKBIT Rated Top Bitcoin Casino By Reddit Experts

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    LARNACA, Cyprus, April 24, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The rise of Bitcoin and cryptocurrency casinos has revolutionized online gambling, offering players enhanced privacy, faster transactions, and innovative gaming experiences. With countless platforms competing for attention, finding the best Bitcoin casino Reddit recommends can be a challenge. Reddit, a hub for authentic user reviews, provides invaluable insights into which casinos truly deliver.

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    Disclaimers and Affiliate Disclosure

    1. General Disclaimer
      This content is for informational purposes only and not legal or financial advice. Information is based on research available at the time of writing. Verify details independently before acting.
    2. Gambling Disclaimer
      Online gambling involves risk and may not be suitable for everyone. Ensure you meet the legal age and follow your local laws. We do not promote gambling, and participation is at your own risk. JACKBIT is a third-party site; we are not responsible for any issues.
    3. Affiliate Disclosure
      We may earn a commission through affiliate links at no extra cost to you. Our reviews remain unbiased, and we only recommend services we trust. Please do your own research before making any decisions.

    Email: support@jackbit.com

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/8f027753-9fd2-4d7b-aba6-7b46b6aade19

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: British-Irish Intergovernmental Conference (BIIGC) Joint Communiqué

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    Press release

    British-Irish Intergovernmental Conference (BIIGC) Joint Communiqué

    Today the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, Hilary Benn MP, and the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Fleur Anderson MP, attended the British-Irish Intergovernmental Conference in Hillsborough Castle.

    Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, Hilary Benn MP, and Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, Fleur Anderson MP, with Tánaiste, Minister for Foreign Affairs and Minister for Defence, Simon Harris and Minister for Justice, Jim O’Callaghan, at the latest meeting of the British-Irish Intergovernmental Conference, held in Northern Ireland.

    A meeting of the British-Irish Intergovernmental Conference took place in Hillsborough Castle on 24 April 2025.

    The Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland was represented by the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, the Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, and the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, Fleur Anderson MP.

    The Government of Ireland was represented by the Tánaiste, Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade and Minister for Defence, Simon Harris TD, and the Minister for Justice, Jim O’Callaghan TD.

    Legacy

    The UK Government and the Government of Ireland noted that one of the aims of the Good Friday Agreement – to acknowledge and address the suffering of victims and survivors of the Troubles – remains unrealised. Both Governments reaffirmed their strong desire to work in partnership on this issue and expressed a mutual commitment to making timely progress so that families can obtain the information and accountability that they deserve and have long sought. 

    Both Governments reflected on the positive and constructive bilateral discussions that had taken place since the last BIIGC on the Northern Ireland Troubles (Legacy & Reconciliation) Act 2023 and the Commission it established. They noted the substantive progress made and emphasised that their aim remains to reach agreement on a joint, comprehensive approach to legacy issues consistent with the principles of the Stormont House Agreement – including ensuring that legacy mechanisms are human rights compliant and balanced, proportionate, transparent, fair and equitable.

    The UK Government and the Government of Ireland agreed that any joint approach to legacy will require agreement on all key issues, including: fundamental reform of the Independent Commission for Reconciliation and Information Recovery to ensure its human rights compliance and to strengthen its practical independence, governance and oversight; the approach to legacy inquests and information retrieval; and ensuring that there are clear reciprocal commitments by both the UK Government and the Government of Ireland. 

    It was agreed that both Governments would continue to work quickly and intensively in seeking to finalise a joint approach. The UK Government remains committed to introducing legislation to repeal and replace the Legacy Act when Parliamentary time allows, and the Government of Ireland will introduce its own legislation as necessary. Ultimately, securing the confidence of victims, survivors, and families will remain at the heart of the work of both Governments.

    Political stability

    The Governments discussed their shared commitment to the good operation of all three strands of the Good Friday Agreement. They affirmed the importance of the full and timely implementation of the Windsor Framework. They took stock of recent developments including US tariff measures and their respective engagement with stakeholders to date. 

    The UK Government also provided an update on the ongoing efforts to support the Northern Ireland Executive with public service transformation. 

    Security update

    The Governments discussed the current security situation, including the Northern Ireland-related terrorism (NIRT) threat. That the NIRT threat level remains unchanged at SUBSTANTIAL is testament to the work being done by agencies on both sides of the border. This cross-border cooperation remains a vital part of work to tackle the terrorist threat and wider harms.

    They discussed an update on the process underway jointly to appoint an Independent Expert to carry out a short scoping and engagement exercise to assess whether there is merit in, and support for, a formal process of engagement to bring about paramilitary group transition to disbandment.

    British-Irish cooperation

    Ministers reflected on the recent UK-Ireland Summit, including on how future meetings of the BIIGC could complement the programme of cooperation agreed at the Summit.

    They reaffirmed their shared commitment to protecting the Common Travel Area to the benefit of citizens across these islands and noted, in particular, the importance of continued engagement with all stakeholders to ensure the UK ETA scheme operates smoothly.

    The Governments agreed that the Conference would meet again in the coming months.

    Updates to this page

    Published 24 April 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: PM remarks at the IEA Future of Energy Security summit: 24 April 2025

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    Speech

    PM remarks at the IEA Future of Energy Security summit: 24 April 2025

    Prime Minister’s remarks from the IEA Future of Energy Security summit.

    Good afternoon, everyone – it’s really fantastic to see so many people here, in London, welcome to London, I’m so pleased we have got so many representatives from so many places and in a sense we’re here today for one simple reason:

    Because the world has changed.

    From defence and national security on the one hand, much discussed in recent months…

    To the economy and trade…

    Old assumptions have fallen away.

    We are living through an era of global instability…

    Which is felt by working people as an age of local insecurity.

    Factory workers, builders, carers, nurses, teachers… 

    Working harder and harder for the pound in their pocket…

    But feeling at the same time that they have less control of their lives.

    *

    And energy security is right at the heart of this.

    Every family and business across the UK…

    Has paid the price for Russia weaponizing energy. And it has.

    But it’s not just that.

    *

    Let’s be frank.

    When it comes to energy…

    We’re also paying the price for our over-exposure…

    Over many years…

    To the rollercoaster of international fossil fuel markets.

    Leaving the economy – and therefore people’s household budgets…

    Vulnerable to the whims of dictators like Putin…

    To price spikes…

    And to volatility that is beyond our control. 

    Since the 1970s, half of the UK’s recessions have been caused by fossil fuel shocks. 

    That’s true for many of the other nations represented here this afternoon.

    So what’s different today is not the information we have.

    It’s not our awareness of the problem.

    No.

    What’s different now… 

    Is our determination…

    In a more uncertain world…

    To fix it.

    It’s our determination that working people…

    Should not be exposed like this anymore.

    *

    So, to the British people, I say:

    This government will not sit back…

    We will step up.

    We will make energy a source…

    Not of vulnerability, but of strength.

    We will protect our critical infrastructure, energy networks and supply chains…

    And do whatever it takes…

    To protect the security of our people.

    Because this is the crucial point – 

    Energy security is national security…

    And it is therefore a fundamental duty of government.

    And I’m very clear – 

    We can’t deliver that by defending the status quo…

    Or trying to turn the clock back…

    To a world that no longer exists.

    *

    Of course, fossil fuels will be part of our energy mix for decades to come.

    But winning the fight for energy security depends on renewal –

    It depends on change…

    It depends on cooperation with others.

    And that’s why we’re all here today – so many countries, so many communities represented.

    *

    The IEA was founded in 1974,

    In the midst of an energy crisis,

    To help us work together to secure energy supplies…

    And reduce future energy shocks.

    Well, that has taken on a new urgency today. 

    So our task is clear – 

    To act – together… 

    To seize the opportunity of the clean energy transition. 

    Because homegrown clean energy…

    Is the only way…

    To take back control of our energy system… 

    Deliver energy security…

    And bring down bills for the long term.

    *

    And I want to tell you –  

    That is in the DNA of my government.

    When we came into office last year… 

    We knew there was no time to waste.

    So in our first 100 days…

    We launched Great British Energy –

    As a national champion to drive investment and transform clean power.

    We scrapped the ban on onshore wind…

    And became the first G7 economy to phase out coal power.

    While we won’t turn off the taps…

    We’re going all out –  

    Through our Plan for Change…

    To make Britain a clean energy superpower… 

    To secure home grown energy…

    And set a path to achieving clean power by 2030.

    *

    Now, I know, some in the UK don’t agree with that.

    They think energy security can wait.

    They think tackling climate change can wait.

    But do they also think that billpayers can wait too?

    Do they think economic growth can wait?

    Do they think we can win the race for green jobs and investment by going slow?

    That would serve no one. 

    Instead, this government is acting now…

    With a muscular industrial policy –

    To seize these opportunities…

    To boost investment…

    Build new industries…

    Drive UK competitiveness…

    And unlock export opportunities –

    In wind, nuclear, hydrogen, carbon capture, heat pumps and so much more.

    That is the change we need.

    We won’t wait – 

    We’ll accelerate.

    *

    Because we’re already seeing the benefits.

    The UK’s net zero sectors are growing three times faster than the economy as a whole.

    They have attracted £43 billion of private investment since last July. 

    And now they support around 600,000 jobs across the UK.

    That means more opportunities…

    And more money in people’s pockets.

    And we’re going further.

    We’ve stripped out unnecessary red tape…

    To put Britain back in the global race for nuclear energy…

    And allow for Small Modular Reactors for the first time.

    We’re speeding up planning for clean energy projects –

    Including onshore wind…

    To power millions of homes and unlock further investment of £40 billion each year.

    *

    It’s really clear to me – 

    That investors want policy certainty.

    They want ambition.

    That is what we’re providing.

    And now we are raising our ambition even further.

    I am really pleased to announce today…

    That we’re creating a new Supply Chains Investment Fund –

    As part of Great British Energy.

    It will be backed by an initial £300 million of new funding… 

    For domestic offshore wind…

    Leveraging billions of new private investment…

    Supporting tens of thousands of jobs…

    And driving economic growth.

    When companies are looking to invest in clean energy…

    When partners are looking to build new turbines, blades or cables…

    Our message is simple:

    Build it in Britain.

    I am determined to seize this opportunity –

    To win our share of this trillion-dollar market…

    And secure the next generation of great jobs.

    I’ve met apprentices at the docks in Grimsby – fantastic individuals…

    I’ve been to Holyhead in Wales…

    And the National Nuclear Laboratory in Preston…

    And I’ve seen the brilliant clean power infrastructure that we are building in this country.

    But more than that…

    I’ve seen the pride that these jobs bring.

    This is skilled, well-paid work…

    Meaningful work –

    A chance to reignite our industrial heartlands…

    To rekindle the sense of community pride and purpose…

    That comes from being part of something that is bigger than yourself.

    And so I’m pleased to tell you…

    That I can share some more good news this afternoon.

    Earlier today, we finalised a deal with ENI.

    It will see them award £2 billion in supply chain contracts…

    For the Hynet Carbon Capture and Storage project…

    Creating 2,000 jobs, across North Wales and the North West.

    I want to thank all those here today who are part of this success story.

    Because it is all built on stability, yes…

    But our ruthless focus on delivery…

    But it is also built on partnership.

    *

    So let me say –

    It is a real pleasure today to welcome my friend –

    President von der Leyen.

    Ursula – it is so good to have you with us this afternoon. Last time we were in this building, Ursula and I stood together with other colleagues here at Lancaster House, that was just last month, six weeks ago…

    Standing shoulder-to-shoulder with President Zelenskyy…

    Working together for European security.

    Today we stand, again together with Fatih and others and the IEA…

    United behind European energy security.

    Europe must never again be in a position where Russia thinks they can blackmail us on energy.

    And until Russia comes to the table and agrees a full and unconditional ceasefire…

    We must continue to crack down on their energy revenues which are still fuelling Putin’s war chest.

    This is the moment to act. 

    And it is the moment to build a partnership with the EU that meets the needs of our time –

    Facing up to the global shocks of recent years…

    And working together to minimise the impact on hard-working people.

    So we’re doing more with the EU to improve our interconnections…

    And make the most of our shared energy systems…

    As well as building on the fantastic partnerships that we already have…

    With countries like the Netherlands, Germany, Norway and so many others.

    We have a common and important resource in the North Sea…

    Which can help us meet common challenges –

    To me, this is just common sense.

    So let’s seize this potential…

    To drive down bills…

    And drive up investment, growth and energy security.

    I was elected with a mandate to deliver change.

    So I make no apologies for pursuing every avenue…

    To deliver in the national interest and secure Britain’s future.

    That is always my priority. 

    And of course this has to be a global effort as well.

    We need to see a wider coalition…

    That unites the north and south…

    In a global drive for clean power.

    That’s why I launched the Global Clean Power Alliance at the G20 last year…

    Working alongside the EU’s Global Energy Transitions Forum.

    And that’s why we’re joining forces to take this forward.

    We want to tackle the barriers and bottlenecks that are holding countries back.

    So I am pleased to announce today…

    That, under the Global Clean Power Alliance…

    We are establishing a first-of-its-kind global initiative…

    To unblock and diversify clean energy supply chains.

    We are harnessing the political leadership needed to make this happen.

    Because, ultimately…

    That is what this is about:

    Leadership.

    In this moment of instability and uncertainty…

    Where we are buffeted by global forces…

    We are taking control.

    We are working together with partners from around the world…

    With the IEA and all of you here today…

    To accelerate this vital global transition.

    And in the UK…

    We are stepping up now…

    To make energy a source…

    Not of vulnerability, and worry…

    Which it is at the moment and it has been for so long…

    But a source of strength, of security and pride.

    With British energy, powering British homes, creating British jobs –  

    A collective effort, to boost our collective security…

    For generations to come.

    Thank you very much.

    *

    And now it is my very great pleasure and privilege to introduce…

    President von der Leyen, my friend Ursula, thank you very much for being here. Ursula, the stage is yours.

    Updates to this page

    Published 24 April 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: UK bolsters support for Syrian people by amending Syria sanctions

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    UK bolsters support for Syrian people by amending Syria sanctions

    Updates to UK Syria sanctions regulations will help the people of Syria rebuild their country and economy following the fall of Assad

    • Today’s updates to UK Syria sanctions regulations will help the people of Syria rebuild their country and economy following the fall of Assad. 
    • Amendments will allow UK to hold Assad and his associates accountable for human rights violations. 
    • Ensuring long-term stability in Syria is essential for regional and UK security – the foundation of the government’s Plan for Change. 

    The Syrian financial system will be supported to open up and rebuild following the fall of Assad, with the UK government announcing today (24 April) that it is amending its sanctions regulations on Syria and lifting sanctions on 12 entities.  

    The amendments will remove UK restrictions on some sectors including financial services and energy production in Syria, helping to facilitate essential investment in Syria’s energy infrastructure and supporting the Syrian people to rebuild their country and economy. 

    Amendments to UK legislation will also allow the UK to hold Assad and his associates accountable for their atrocious actions against the people of Syria, while giving the UK scope to deploy future sanctions in the Syria context, should that become necessary. 

    Additionally, sanctions on 12 entities will be lifted, including the Syrian Ministry of Defence, Ministry of Interior and media companies. 

    Sanctions imposed on members of the former regime and those involved in the illicit trade in captagon will remain in place.  

    These amendments will support Syria’s transition to a more stable and prosperous country, bolstering regional and UK security in line with the government’s Plan for Change. 

    Hamish Falconer, Minister for the Middle East, said: 

    The Syrian people deserve the opportunity to rebuild their country and economy, and a stable Syria is in the UK’s national interest. That’s why I’m pleased that today the UK has amended its Syria sanctions and lifted sanctions on 12 entities to support them to do just that.

    The UK is committed to building greater stability in Syria and the wider region. This also enables us to bolster national security at home to support the government’s Plan for Change.

    This announcement builds on the decision in March to lift asset freezes on 24 Syrian entities, including the Central Bank of Syria, Syrian Arab Airlines, and energy companies. 

    The UK remains committed to working with the Syrian government and international partners to support an inclusive political transition in Syria, including the protection of human rights, unfettered access for humanitarian aid, safe destruction of chemical weapons stockpiles, and combatting terrorism and extremism. We will continue to press the Syrian government to ensure it meets the commitments it has made.

    The UK continues to provide life-saving humanitarian assistance to Syrians inside Syria and across the region, including pledging £160 million to support Syria’s recovery and stability in 2025. 

    Media enquiries

    Email newsdesk@fcdo.gov.uk

    Telephone 020 7008 3100

    Contact the FCDO Communication Team via email (monitored 24 hours a day) in the first instance, and we will respond as soon as possible.

    Updates to this page

    Published 24 April 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Court bill for verbally abusing City Council staff and Northumbria Police officers

    Source: City of Sunderland

    Two residents who verbally abused City Council and Northumbria Police officers have been left with court bills of more than £1,000 each.

    The court bills follow an incident earlier this year on Monday 28 January when officers from the council’s Neighbourhood Enforcement Team and Northumbria Police were making enquiries in Broadsheath Terrace, Southwick.

    They were investigating reports about ‘public nuisances’ caused by a caravan and quad bikes being stored on the public highway.

    During the visit, the two residents were verbally abusive and aggressive towards officers. They were both charged with offences under the Public Order Act 1986 for using threatening or abusive words or behaviour likely to cause harassment, alarm, or distress.

    Rebecca Trott and Bradley Moody, both of Broadsheath Terrace, admitted the offences when they appeared at South Tyneside Magistrates’ Court. Magistrates were shown bodycam footage of the incident and imposed fines of £660, victim surcharges of £264 and costs of £85 on both defendants.

    Sunderland City Council’s Deputy Leader and Cabinet Member for Health, Wellbeing and Safer Communities, Councillor Kelly Chequer said: “Officers in the City Council and Northumbria Police are working hard to help keep our communities safe. They should never be subjected to abuse or intimidation for simply doing their jobs.

    “The court has sent a very clear message that threatening officers while carrying out their community duties is completely unacceptable. Both the City Council and Northumbria Police stand united that any abuse and intimidation will not be tolerated.”

    A Northumbria Police spokesperson added: “We want to make it clear that violence towards our officers, or any of our partners – be that physical or verbal – is completely unacceptable. Our officers come to work every day to protect and serve our communities, not to be abused and violence and intimidation against them will not be tolerated under any circumstances.

    “Let this result be a clear message to those who choose to commit violence, you will be dealt with and put before the courts.”

    The case was heard at South Tyneside Magistrates’ Court on Wednesday 2 April.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom