Category: Farming

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Operative Kisan Credit Card (KCC) amount crosses ₹10 Lakh Crore benefiting 7.72 Crore Farmers

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Operative Kisan Credit Card (KCC) amount crosses ₹10 Lakh Crore benefiting 7.72 Crore Farmers

    Loan limit under Modified Interest Subvention Scheme increased from ₹3 lakh to ₹5 lakh in Union Budget 2025-26

    Posted On: 25 FEB 2025 8:01PM by PIB Delhi

    The amount under operative Kisan Credit Card (KCC) accounts has more than doubled from ₹4.26 lakh crore in March 2014 to ₹10.05 lakh crore in December 2024. This indicates significant increase in quantum of affordable working capital loans provided to the farmers for agriculture and allied activities. This is reflection of credit deepening in agriculture and reduced dependency on non-institutional credit.

    Kisan Credit Card (KCC) is a banking product that provides farmers with timely and affordable credit for purchasing agricultural inputs such as seeds, fertilizers, and pesticides, as well as for meeting cash requirements related to crop production and allied activities. In 2019, the KCC scheme was extended to cover the working capital requirements of allied activities, viz. Animal Husbandry, Dairy and Fisheries.

    Government of India, under Modified Interest Subvention Scheme (MISS), provides interest subvention of 1.5% to banks for providing short-term agri loans through KCC up to Rs 3 lakh at a concessional interest rate of 7% per annum. An additional Prompt Repayment Incentive of 3% is provided to farmers on timely repayment of loans, which effectively reduces the rate of interest to 4% for farmers. Loans up to ₹2 lakh are extended on a collateral-free basis, ensuring hassle- free access to credit for small and marginal farmers.

    The Finance Minister in Budget Speech 2025-26 has announced to increase the loan limit under the Modified Interest Subvention Scheme from ₹3 lakh to ₹5 lakh which would further benefit the farmers.

    As of 31.12.2024, a total of ₹10.05 lakh crore has been given under operative KCCs benefitting 7.72 crore farmers.

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    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Prakriti 2025 – International Conference on Carbon Markets

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Prakriti 2025 – International Conference on Carbon Markets

    UN Goodwill Ambassador & Actor Dia Mirza attends Prakriti 2025

    Prakriti 2025: International Conference on Carbon Markets Concludes with Insights from National, International, and Government Experts

    Posted On: 25 FEB 2025 5:53PM by PIB Delhi

    PRAKRITI 2025 (Promoting Resilience, Awareness, Knowledge, and Resources for Integrating Transformational Initiatives), the International Conference on Carbon Markets, successfully concluded on its second day, bringing together national and international experts, policymakers, industry leaders, researchers, and practitioners. The conference was inaugurated on February 24, 2025, by Shri Manohar Lal, Hon’ble Minister of Power and Housing & Urban Affairs. As a flagship initiative of the Government of India, organized by the Bureau of Energy Efficiency under the patronage of the Ministry of Power and the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, PRAKRITI 2025 served as a premier platform for in-depth discussions on global carbon market trends, challenges, and future pathways.

          Ms. Dia Mirza, Actor, Producer, National Goodwill Ambassador for United Nations graced the event with her presence. She participated in an impactful fireside chat moderated by Mr. Saurabh Diddi, Director, Bureau of Energy Efficiency. Speaking of her role in making a change in the climate change scenario, she said that, As an individual, I have the capacity to change the way I live and hopefully thereby bring some change in the world. Big change will only occur when it starts from the top down because behaviours sometimes take hundreds of years to change.” She commended the Government of India for its initiatives under LiFE (Lifestyle for Environment), highlighting its role in promoting mindful consumption and leading a global movement. Additionally, she emphasized the importance of engaging children and youth to drive meaningful change in climate conversations. Concluding the interview, she shared her vision for sustainability, stating, “My dream sustainability project, if finances didn’t have any upper limit, would be one, to eradicate each and every unit of single use plastics, and two, a scenario where every resource comes in the circular economy.”

      

          Mr. Thomas Kerr, Lead Climate Change Specialist, World Bank chaired and moderated the opening plenary session on Private Sector Perspectives on Indian Carbon Market (ICM). He emphasized that the Indian Carbon Market does not operate in isolation, as global carbon pricing policies will influence India’s industries. Businesses must prepare for these shifts. He highlighted the impact of the European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) on Indian exports, particularly in steel, aluminium, and other high-emission industries, stating, “The European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) will impact Indian exports, particularly in steel, aluminium, and other high-emission industries. This calls for urgent action in domestic carbon markets.” Encouraging India’s active participation, he added, “If you build it, they will come.”

           Mr. Ashok Lavasa, Former Finance Secretary and Government Official, delivered a thematic address on Governance, Transparency, and Accountability in Climate Finance and Carbon Markets. His speech highlighted the complexities of global carbon markets and the challenges India faces in developing a robust system. Emphasizing key factors for success, he stated, “Strong MRV frameworks, fair benefit distribution, and strategic market alignment are crucial to India’s success in the carbon economy. International collaboration is necessary, but India must develop policies tailored to its own needs and challenges.”

           The second day of the conference featured thematic addresses and a series of plenary sessions led by senior government officials and industry experts. Key discussions focused on: Incentivizing Renewable Energy developers through Carbon Markets, Development in Article 6 and Opportunities for India, Bringing Price Transparency in Global Carbon Marketplace, Role of Ecosystem-Based Interventions in Achieving Net-Zero Goals, Climate Tech Startups for Sustainable Development, and Leveraging finance for the deployment of clean technologies.

            The two-day event witnessed robust participation from key Indian ministries, including the Ministry of Power, Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, and the Ministry of Agriculture, Financial Institutions, Corporates, International NGOs, PSUs, etc. Approximately 80+ experts and 600+ delegates engaged in the conference’s discussion in the last two days, focusing on carbon market mechanisms, policy framework, climate finance and technologies. This demonstrates a coordinated, intergovernmental strategy, fostering synergistic collaboration and broad stakeholder participation, affirming India’s dedication to meet climate goals.

             More than just a conference, Prakriti 2025 has distinguished itself as one of the most comprehensive and significant carbon market events for learning, sharing knowledge, and exploring opportunities for collaboration in the global effort to combat climate change. Prakriti 2025 will build on this momentum, marking a significant milestone in both India’s national climate agenda and the broader international climate discourse.

    About BEE

    The Government of India set up the Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) on March 1, 2002 under the provisions of the Energy Conservation Act, 2001. The mission of the Bureau of Energy Efficiency is to assist in developing policies and strategies with a thrust on self-regulation and market principles, within the overall framework of the Energy Conservation Act, 2001 with the primary objective of reducing the energy intensity of the Indian economy. BEE coordinates with designated consumers, designated agencies and other organizations and recognises, identifies and utilises the existing resources and infrastructure, in performing the functions assigned to it under the Energy Conservation Act. The Energy Conservation Act provides for regulatory and promotional functions.

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    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-Evening Report: I spy with my little eye: 3 unusual Australian plant ecosystems to spot on your next roadtrip

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Gregory Moore, Senior Research Associate, School of Agriculture, Food and Ecosystem Sciences, The University of Melbourne

    A boab tree in the Kimberley. Hideaki Edo Photography/Shutterstock

    When the growing gets tough, the tough trees and shrubs get growing.

    Australia’s environment is brutal. Its ancient, low-nutrient soils and generally low rainfall make it a hard place for plants to grow. Despite this, the continent is filled with wonderfully diverse plant ecosystems.

    If you don’t know what you’re looking for, it can be easy to miss these seemingly unremarkable species. So, here are three little-known Australian plant species and ecosystems to look out for during your next roadtrip.

    1. Cycads and eucalypts

    If you are driving a coastal route along southern New South Wales, keep an eye out for the stunning combination of burrawang cycads (Macrozamia communis) and spotted gum (Corymbia maculata). These species live in harmony along the NSW coastline, from Kempsey to Bega, and inland as far as Mudgee.

    Spotted gum trees with burrawang cycad understorey on the Burrawang walking track, NSW South Coast.
    Destinations Journey/Shutterstock

    If you’re on a road trip, now is the perfect time to talk to children about ancient moving continents, volcanoes and dinosaurs.

    Cycads are ancient gymnosperms (cone-bearing plants) which evolved long before the Gondwanan supercontinent separated. These tough, hardy plants saw the dinosaurs come and go, and their relatives are found all around the world.

    These cycads form a striking understorey to the spotted gum. As their scientific name (Macrozamia communis) suggests, they form a dense community.

    Further north in Queensland, pineapple cycads (Lepidozamia peroffskyana), and Western Australia’s zamia palm (Macrozamia riedlei) are also worth spotting.

    Cycad seeds are poisonous, but First Nations Australians worked out a complex process to prepare them for safe eating. This involved dissolving the plant’s toxins in running water, cooking, working and grinding the seeds into a powder.

    Spotted gums evolved long after dinosaurs went extinct. Early eucalypt fossils date from about 34 million years ago, while current species are often only a few million years old.

    Spotted gums are a great example of how plants that survive tough environments often also do well in difficult urban situations.

    Cycads are similarly found growing in poor soils and arid conditions. They have long, glossy leaves up to about 1.5 metres in length with lots of leaflets.

    There are both male and female plants. The female cone is an impressive, wide-domed structure that can be almost half a metre across. Its bright orange-red seeds are eaten by foraging marsupials, large birds and flying foxes.

    Spotted gums are tall, straight eucalyptus trees with dark green, glossy leaves. Old bark creates dark grey spots against their cream coloured trunk, giving them a mottled look.

    It is interesting to see ancient and modern species in such a close community relationship in cycad-spotted gum forests. Both are also well-adapted to the fires that frequent their habitat.

    2. Ancient acacias

    Travelling inland, the environment gets even tougher. Most large trees disappear and are replaced by woodlands dominated by inland acacia (wattle) species.

    These inland acacias are short but mighty, with deep, extensive root systems.

    Two of these species, mulga (Acacia aneura) and brigalow (A. harpophylla) are part of Australian folklore. A Banjo Paterson character says: “You know how the brigalow grows […] saplings about as thick as a man’s arm”.

    Nutrients and water resources are limited, so mulga and brigalow trees are often evenly spaced across the landscape. This eerie symmetry makes it look like they were planted by humans.

    Acacias grow in arid conditions and are what many Australians think of when they envisage the red inland of our continent.
    Ashley Whitworth/Shutterstock

    Many people are unaware that the twisted, stunted specimens they see are more than 250 years old and occupy vast tracts of the Australian landscape.

    Waddy-wood (Acacia peuce) is a rare species of acacia, found in just three locations on the edge of the Simpson Desert. This tree has very strong wood, and was used by Indigenous Australians for making clubs (waddys) and tools for carrying fire.

    Inland acacias were widely used by Indigenous Australians for their wood, resins and medicinal properties. They have also been used as fodder for livestock, especially during drought.

    These crucial species provide important habitat for other plants and animals. But they are under threat.

    As old trees collapse and die, there are no young trees replacing them. This is because of drought and grazing, compounded by climate change.

    Desertification – where fertile land is degraded until it essentially becomes desert – is becoming a huge problem due to the massive area dominated by acacias.

    3. Boabs

    If you’re driving across the Northern Territory and Western Australia, you might come across the mighty boab (Adansonia gregoryii).

    These close relatives of the African and Madagascan baobabs floated to Australia as seeds or seedlings around 12 million years ago.

    Swollen boab tree trunks (called a caudex) can store thousands of litres of water.
    bmphotographer/Shutterstock

    These deciduous trees live in mostly dry environments that also experience strong monsoonal-type rains. Boabs trap and store water in their trunks, allowing them not only to survive but thrive.

    Their African and Madagascan baobab relatives are sometimes called trees of life, as they support many species.

    Australian boabs are similar. They offer habitat, roosting and nesting sites. Their flowers and fruits are food sources to many species of insects and birds.

    They were – and are – important trees in First Nations cultures. Carvings and symbols on their trunks can last for more than a century, much longer than on other trees. These are called dendroglyphs.

    For example, snake carvings dated to more than 200 years old have been found on boab trees in Northern Australia’s Tanami Desert.

    While these special trees are usually found far from the beaten track, they can be spotted growing around Darwin and other remote towns. If you get the chance to see them, count yourself lucky.

    Tough terrain, tough trees

    Plant communities are remarkably resilient. They also display great creativity when evolving ways to survive tough environments.

    Make sure to keep an eye out as you’re exploring Australia and enjoy the fascinating plants our country has to offer.

    Gregory Moore 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. I spy with my little eye: 3 unusual Australian plant ecosystems to spot on your next roadtrip – https://theconversation.com/i-spy-with-my-little-eye-3-unusual-australian-plant-ecosystems-to-spot-on-your-next-roadtrip-246129

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Verizon Business launches turnkey IoT solution with Atlanta Hawks as first customer

    Source: Verizon

    Headline: Verizon Business launches turnkey IoT solution with Atlanta Hawks as first customer

    What you need to know:

    • Verizon Sensor Insights, a turnkey IoT solution that has been sold to companies in diverse industries such as food refrigeration and insurance, is being deployed by the Atlanta Hawks at State Farm Arena to monitor and manage the temperature and condition of sensitive technical equipment and to better track waste disposal and resource efficiency.
    • Sensor Insights is part of a larger technology initiative with Verizon to enhance stadium operations at State Farm Arena.
    • The solution includes pre-approved sensors, Verizon-certified gateways, cellular connectivity, and a central management portal.

    NEW YORK — Verizon Business today announced the Atlanta Hawks and State Farm Arena as the marquee launch partner for Verizon Sensor Insights, an innovative solution that allows for the management and scaling of complex Internet of Things (IoT) infrastructure. Installed in the arena’s technical equipment hub, Verizon Sensor Insights provides near real-time data-driven intelligence to ensure all technical equipment is operating at peak efficiency.

    Sensor Insights is designed to be turnkey and convenient for businesses of any size, including small and medium businesses, and has also been sold to companies in food refrigeration and insurance. Suitable for nearly any industry, the solution includes pre-approved sensors, Verizon-certified gateways, cellular connectivity, and a central management portal, all atop the foundational Verizon ThingSpace IoT platform.

    “State Farm Arena is constantly looking for ways to push the boundaries of innovation and improve the experience for our fans and staff,” said Kim Rometo, Chief Technology & Innovations Officer for the Atlanta Hawks & State Farm Arena. “By implementing Verizon Sensor Insights, multiple stakeholders can proactively monitor and manage critical operational aspects, ensuring a more seamless and efficient experience for everyone.”

    Organizations across commercial sectors are embracing IoT to improve energy efficiency, streamline maintenance operations, and enhance their overall sustainability efforts. Sensor Insights allows customers to activate, onboard, and manage sensors and gateways, and manage cellular and IoT connections across multiple IoT protocols including LoRaWAN, BLE (Bluetooth Low Energy) — all from an easy-to-use central web portal. Users gain near real-time alerts and trend analysis for optimized operational decision-making.

    By deploying Sensor Insights to manage their network of IoT-enabled sensors at State Farm Arena, the Atlanta Hawks are already gaining actionable insights into the technology equipment health and IDF room environment to better predict maintenance needs and create a smarter and more efficient arena, with plans to expand into new use cases in the coming months.

    “We are thrilled to have the Atlanta Hawks and State Farm Arena as an early adopter of Verizon Sensor Insights,” said Scott Lawrence, Chief Product Officer, Verizon Business. “This deployment is a great example of how high-performing organizations use IoT and other connected technology to improve efficiency and enhance business operations.”

    As part of a larger technology partnership with Verizon, State Farm Arena has also installed Delta Fly-Through Lanes powered by Verizon at Gates 1, 2, 3, and 7, and a new Hawks Express Cashierless Checkout store, powered by Verizon’s 5G Edge technology and developed in collaboration with spatial intelligence and autonomous retail solutions provider AiFi.

    Located on the 100 West main concourse and operational today, the Hawks Express store uses AI-powered computer vision technology to make it simple, fast and convenient for fans to purchase food and beverages in the arena without waiting in line. Customers simply enter the store, select their items, and exit—with purchases automatically processed through their mobile payment method.

    The Delta Fly-Through Lanes lanes at State Farm Arena were designed to streamline the fan ticketing and entry experience. Underpinned by Wicket’s facial authentication technology, Verizon’s 5G Edge Accelerated Access solution for stadiums and venues enhances security while reducing wait times to ensure members are able to spend less time at the entrance and more time enjoying the game. Since becoming operational in October of 2024, these Delta Fly-Through Lanes have expedited the ticket scanning process for Atlanta Hawks members, showing 2,000 enrollments, approaching 10,000 tickets scanned with an average ticket redemption time of 6 seconds, and 72% of members are repeat users.

    Learn more on our Verizon Sensor Insights product page and contact your Verizon Business sales representative to begin a trial today.

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI Video: Occupied Palestinian Territory, Ukraine & other topics – Daily Press Briefing | United Nations

    Source: United Nations (Video News)

    Noon Briefing by Stéphane Dujarric, Spokesperson for the Secretary-General.

    ———————————

    Highlights:

    – Security Council/ Middle East
    – Occupied Palestinian Territory
    – Ukraine/Security Council
    – Biodiversity
    – Deputy Secretary-General
    – Senegal
    – DR Congo/humanitarian
    – DR Congo/peacekeeping
    – Chad
    – Haiti
    – International Organization for Migration
    – Financial Contributions

    ** Security Council/ Middle East
    You saw Sigrid Kaag, the Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process and Senior Humanitarian Coordinator for Gaza, brief the Security Council. She told the members that this may be our last chance to achieve a two-state solution, reiterating that all hostages must be released and while in captivity, they must be allowed to receive visits and assistance from the International Committee of the Red Cross. And she said that the resumption of hostilities must be avoided at all costs. Ms. Kaag called on both sides to fully honour their commitments to the ceasefire deal and conclude negotiations for the second phase.
    She told the Council that we are ready to support reconstruction efforts, and that Palestinians must be able to resume their lives, must be able to rebuild, and to construct their future in Gaza. There can be no question of forced displacement.

    **Occupied Palestinian Territory
    Turning to the situation on the ground in Gaza, the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs tells us that our humanitarian partners, in collaboration with the Ministry of Health in Gaza, yesterday continued to administer polio vaccinations for the third day to 548,000 children under the age of 10. This represents 93 per cent of the target population. The campaign has been extended until tomorrow to ensure full coverage.
    Since the start of the ceasefire, our friends at the World Food Programme have brought in more than 30,000 metric tonnes of food into Gaza. More than 60 kitchens supported by WFP across the Gaza Strip, including in North Gaza and in Rafah, have handed out nearly 10 million meals.
    For its part, the UN Relief and Works Agency, UNRWA, tells us that its teams have reached nearly 1.3 million people with flour and reached about two million people with food parcels since the start of the ceasefire.
    The head of Gaza’s Ministry of Health has said today that six children from the Gaza Strip have died in recent days due to the severe cold wave recently, bringing to 15 the total number of children who’ve passed away from the cold.
    And the Food and Agriculture Organization reports that last week it delivered animal feed in northern Gaza for the first time since the ceasefire, benefiting 146 families with livestock in Gaza city alongside another 980 in Deir al Balah. So some in Gaza City and some in Deir al Balah.
    Over the past four days, our partners working in education have identified additional schools in Rafah, Khan Younis and Deir al Balah that were used as shelters for displaced people. These schools will be assessed and repaired to prepare for their reopening.
    And turning to the situation West Bank, OCHA reports that the security situation remains alarming, with the ongoing Israeli operations in the north causing further casualties, mass displacement and generating additional humanitarian needs due to the displacement.
    In Jenin governorate, the two-day operation in Qabatiya was concluded yesterday.
    The operation was launched with bulldozers, involving exchange of fire between Israeli forces and Palestinians, as well as detentions and significant destruction of infrastructure, including electricity lines, water lines, and the closure of schools.
    We once again warn that lethal, war-like tactics are being applied, raising concerns over use of force that exceeds law enforcement standards.
    Meanwhile, the World Food Programme said it reached 190,000 people in January with cash assistance and has provided one-off cash assistance to more than 5,000 displaced people from the Jenin refugee camp.
    ** Ukraine/Security Council
    Yesterday, Rosemary DiCarlo, our Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs, briefed the Security Council on the situation in Ukraine.
    She said that during these three long years since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, more than 10 million Ukrainians remain uprooted – they are either internally displaced or refugees abroad. She reiterated our commitment to delivering assistance to those who need it as we’ve been telling you almost on a daily basis.
    Referring to the Resolution the Council adopted during the meeting, Ms. DiCarlo said that indeed it is high time for peace in Ukraine. This peace, however, must be just, sustainable and comprehensive, in line with the Charter of the United Nations, international law, and resolutions of the General Assembly, including the one that was adopted yesterday morning.

    Full Highlights:
    https://www.un.org/sg/en/content/noon-briefing-highlight?date%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=25%20February%202025

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oB5VuMM8bYY

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI Global: The UK farmer protests you probably haven’t heard about

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Alex Heffron, PhD Candidate in Geography, Lancaster University

    Fruit pickers and farm workers protesting labour abuses on British farms. Peter Marshall

    Farm owners have besieged parliament with tractors in order to protest new subsidy schemes and inheritance tax arrangements. The farm workers who milk cows, drive machinery and pick crops have grievances too, yet their demands have been less publicised. So, what do they want?

    I am a farmer based in the south-west of Wales and a researcher of farming policy. I recently joined a protest by a group of Latin American farm workers known as “Justice is Not Seasonal”, outside the Home Office in London.

    The group accused soft fruit supplier Haygrove, which operates farms on three continents and supplies veg box delivery schemes including Riverford and Abel and Cole, of presiding over poor living and working conditions, failing to pay workers and charging inflated flight costs for overseas workers. Haygrove has an annual turnover in excess of £50 million.

    Haygrove denies these allegations. In response to a case brought forward by the trade union United Voices of the World and the charity Anti Trafficking and Labour Exploitation Unit, the Home Office has made an interim decision stating there are reasonable grounds that one of the affected workers, Julia Quecaño Casimiro, has been subjected to human trafficking and modern slavery.

    The case tribunal is due to be held soon although it has been a slow, arduous process reaching this point.

    In an article for the BBC, a spokesperson for Haygrove said that Casimiro’s claims were “materially incorrect and misleading”. Haygrove’s practices are audited by third-party organisations including the Home Office, and the company takes “great care” in ensuring fair recruitment and working processes, the spokesperson said.

    Various trade unions and organisations attended the protest, including the Landworkers’ Alliance, United Voices of the World, Independent Workers’ union of Great Britain, Unite and Solidarity Across Land Trades.

    Conspicuously absent was the National Farmers’ Union, which predominantly represents farm owners. This highlights the divergent class interests that exist within terms like “farmer”.

    More workers and more exploitation

    There are 160,000 UK farm workers (as opposed to owners and managers). Of these, some of the most gruelling agricultural work is done by around 45,000 seasonal migrant workers, either in fields in all weather or in the sweltering heat of polytunnels.

    The UK attracts migrant farm workers with six-month temporary visas. A United Nations special rapporteur, Tomoya Obokata, an expert in human rights law and modern slavery, has suggested that the UK is breaking international law with its seasonal work scheme by failing to investigate instances of forced labour. Claims of exploitation and bullying on UK farms are also becoming more common. Meanwhile, in an effort to appease farm managers, the UK government recently announced a five-year extension of this scheme.

    Food and farming organisations have urged the UK to produce more fruit and vegetables as part of a wider shift towards a less carbon-intensive food system.

    To scale up domestic production will require more workers harvesting crops in poor conditions, especially migrant workers who don’t have the same legal rights as British citizens.

    Seasonal migrant workers, for example, cannot bring family members to the UK and have no access to benefits, while their visas are often tied to one place of work which typically includes accommodation which leaves them particularly vulnerable to abuse. A call for increased labour, without a call for improved conditions, could mean more exploitation on British farms.

    Exploitation is not limited to the allegations of a few bad apples either. It is so widespread that it threatens the resilience of the UK’s food system.

    A recent report found that more than half of migrants at risk of labour abuse work in the food system. A more resilient food supply will require better working conditions, pay and housing for workers in this sector, the report concludes.

    Higher prices don’t mean better welfare

    It’s tempting to ask consumers to pay more for their food so that farm workers might earn more. However, higher prices are no guarantee of better conditions. Leaving aside rising inflation and stagnating wages which make it harder for consumers to buy ethically, organic farms already sell produce at a premium and some are also among those accused of mistreating workers.

    This is even a problem among small-scale organic food producers, as documented by Solidarity Across Land Trades. A report by this land worker’s union found that some small farms use bogus traineeships to justify paying workers as little as £1.41 per hour. This is despite the produce usually being sold for more than conventional supermarket prices.

    Greener diets depend on increased fruit and vegetable production.
    Framarzo/Shutterstock

    The structural problems of the food system are more complicated than the price consumers pay for food. There is also the question of who gets to be heard, who is valued and who is deemed worthy of rights and dignity when food production takes place under a system of class-based exploitation. These challenges cannot be solved at the checkout alone.

    The ecological crisis demands transitions away from diesel-powered machinery and chemical fertilisers and herbicides produced with fossil fuels. Farm workers are needed to carry out the transition towards more sustainable practices, but there will be no green transition unless these workers have a stake in it.

    This idea of “a just transition” has gained traction in recent years, and it is just as relevant to farmers and farm workers as it is to workers in other sectors, such as oil and gas. But what might it look like?

    The demands made by Justice Is Not Seasonal are a good place to start: an end to forced labour and exploitation on UK farms and full accountability for those responsible, fair wages and safe working conditions, residency rights and access to justice and remediation.


    Don’t have time to read about climate change as much as you’d like?

    Get a weekly roundup in your inbox instead. Every Wednesday, The Conversation’s environment editor writes Imagine, a short email that goes a little deeper into just one climate issue. Join the 40,000+ readers who’ve subscribed so far.


    Alex Heffron 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. The UK farmer protests you probably haven’t heard about – https://theconversation.com/the-uk-farmer-protests-you-probably-havent-heard-about-249414

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Alcohol ingestion by animals is surprisingly widespread – and we’re starting to understand its impact

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Anna Christina Bowland, PhD Candidate in Biosciences, University of Exeter

    Humans may not be the only animals that ingest alcohol, research is suggesting. Studies on animals are showing they may be eating natural ethanol for its medicinal or nutritional properties.

    Humans drink alcohol in almost every part of the world, apart from places where people abstain for religious reasons. In the past, many people believed alcohol consumption was unique to humans, but growing evidence is showing we aren’t alone in our taste for booze.

    It has long been known that vinegar flies are closely linked to alcohol given their tendency to breed on fermented fruits. However, it turns out they are not an outlier.

    When you think of alcohol, you may think of a pint of beer or a glass of wine. But there are many types of alcohol, most of which are extremely toxic. For example, isopropanol (rubbing alcohol), which is commonly used as a disinfectant.

    Ethanol, or ethyl alcohol, is the alcohol found in alcoholic beverages, but ethanol is also prevalent in nature. Yeasts, including Saccharomyces cerevisiae, also known as brewer’s yeast, are widespread in the natural environment and produce ethanol (possibly to defend the plant’s sugary resource from competing microorganisms), when they metabolise sugars via fermentation. Many fruits, nectars and saps contain an abundance of sugars. Some of this sugar becomes ethanol when colonised by yeast.

    Fruit from plants in Panama, Costa Rica, Singapore, Israel and Finland have been found to contain ethanol, as well as some nectars and saps. The concentration of ethanol in naturally fermenting fruit is typically much lower than those in human-made alcoholic beverages, but some overripe fruit, such as fruits of the black palm (Astrocaryum standleyanum) have ethanol levels similar to a standard beer (5%).

    If fruit, nectars and saps ferment in the wild, it is not surprising that some animals may ingest ethanol. Studies, experimental and in the wild, have confirmed insects (including honeybees and butterflies) ingest it, as well as birds (such as hummingbirds, cedar waxwings and bohemian waxwings) and mammals (for example, pen-tailed tree shrews and the slow loris). Non-human primates, including one of our closest living relatives the chimpanzee, ingest it too.

    Although examples in the wild are rare, this may be due to lack of research rather than prevalence. Researchers are developing methods that make it easier to measure ethanol in the field, and as more research is conducted, more examples will probably be discovered.

    Do animals get drunk?

    There are many anecdotes of “drunk” animals, from moose to elephants, but none of these cases have actually been validated. From an evolutionary standpoint, being drunk is disadvantageous. Intoxicated animals could be more susceptible to injury or predation, and less likely to survive.

    Instead, many scientists expect natural selection would favour adaptations for increased ethanol metabolism to avoid becoming “drunk”. This allows animals to eat fermented foods while minimising the negative effects of intoxication.

    In animals, including humans, the primary metabolic route for ethanol is similar. Ethanol is first oxidised to acetaldehyde (a toxic intermediate) by the enzyme alcohol dehydrogenase.

    Acetaldehyde is then converted to acetate (which is less toxic) by aldehyde dehydrogenase. Yet, the efficiency at which different animals metabolise ethanol varies. It can vary between humans too.

    Some animals appear to have enhanced ethanol metabolism. Much like humans, chimpanzees, gorillas and bonobos share a mutation that make them particularly efficient at metabolising ethanol.

    Interestingly, the only Asian great ape (orangutan), which is highly arboreal (tree-dwelling), doesn’t share this mutation. This may be because orangutans did not experience the same evolutionary pressures as the more terrestrial (ground-dwelling) African great apes.

    For example, orangutans primarily feed in trees where fruit is expected to be less fermented than when it falls to the ground.

    Adult female chimpanzee feeding on ripe Spondias mombin
    Kimberley Hockings, CC BY-NC-ND

    It is possible that if sugary foods ferment naturally, then animals that eat these foods may consume ethanol without meaning to. Ethanol may have some benefits. It has antimicrobial properties and vinegar flies are known to use it to self-medicate against parasites. However, not much is known on whether other animals also use ethanol for medicinal purposes.

    There are confirmed sightings of many animals, from chimpanzees to orangutans using plants for medication, so the use of ethanol in this way could be widespread. Animals may also ingest food with ethanol in it because ethanol itself is a source of calories and its presence indicates sugar and nutrient content.

    Ambrosia beetles use the smell of ethanol as a cue to find suitable host trees to colonise. The ethanol increases the growth of fungi which the beetles feed on.

    Many of us are keenly aware of ethanol’s cognitive impact, including feelings of relaxation. Ethanol might play a significant role in promoting sociality among humans. This may also apply to other species, but has yet to be studied in a natural context.

    We still have much to learn about wild animals’ natural use of ethanol. Many
    hypotheses remain untested, and we know little about whether animals seek out ethanol and fermented foods. But many animals ingest it. It is clear the party is growing, and we are just one of many species that partake in ethanol.

    Anna Christina Bowland has received funding from the Primatological Society of Great Britain (PSGB) and the University of Exeter.

    ref. Alcohol ingestion by animals is surprisingly widespread – and we’re starting to understand its impact – https://theconversation.com/alcohol-ingestion-by-animals-is-surprisingly-widespread-and-were-starting-to-understand-its-impact-246638

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI USA: Welch Statement on Trump and Musk’s Continued Attacks on USAID

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Peter Welch (D-Vermont)
    WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senator Peter Welch (D-Vt.) released the following statement on the Trump Administration and Elon Musk’s continued attacks on the U.S. Agency for International Development:  
    “USAID supports programs that serve U.S. national interests overseas, but it is farmers here in America who grow the corn, wheat, beans, and peanuts. It is dairy farmers in Vermont who produce the powdered milk that USAID uses to feed millions of hungry children in Africa, Central America, and Asia. American companies manufacture the generators, water pumps, trucks, and computers for USAID’s programs, and American workers—in blue states and red states—implement those programs. Thanks to Elon Musk—an unelected billionaire—those American farmers and companies have lost their business with USAID, and workers are losing their jobs.  
    “If Donald Trump and Elon Musk were serious about rooting out wasteful spending, they would not have stopped programs in countries like Somalia where USAID is a key partner in counterterrorism efforts with the U.S. military. They would not have shut down the Famine Early Warning System, risking medicines and American-grown food aid to spoil in the supply chain. They would not have put more than a half dozen USAID lawyers on leave, including its ethics lawyers. They would not delay payment of invoices for work already completed on behalf of the U.S. government, incurring needless fees for violating the Prompt Payment Act. And they would not be incurring interest on late payments owed, penalties for early contract terminations, and legal fees. 
    “If this were truly about preventing waste, if this were truly about rooting out corruption, they would not empty U.S. embassies, leaving virtually no one trained in financial management and oversight. 
    “If there was any truth to their hyperbolic claims of corruption, for which DOGE has offered no credible evidence, they should have asked the USAID Inspector General to investigate rather than fire him without cause. And if they actually did discover programs they don’t support, they could have reprogramed the funds consistent with Congressional requirements and past practice. They also could have asked Congress to change the law. 
    “What is taking place right now is not about conducting a review, policy realignment, or addressing waste, fraud, and abuse. The Trump Administration’s own actions have made every one of those goals impossible to achieve.” 

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Tax credit fuels bioprocessing industry investment

    The province’s inviting and tax-friendly business environment, free and fast-flowing economy and abundant agricultural resources make it one of the best places to do business in North America. In addition, the Agri-Processing Investment Tax Credit (APITC), launched in spring 2023, helps to attract investment that will further diversify Alberta’s agriculture industry.

    The most recent example of a company choosing to grow its business in Alberta is Canary Biofuels, which has qualified for the APITC by constructing a cold press oilseed crushing plant in Lethbridge. Canary Biofuels is investing $18 million in the project that is expected to create 40 permanent and 25 temporary jobs, process 200,000 tonnes of seed per year and produce value-added products such as canola oil and meal. Through the Agri-Processing Investment Tax Credit, Alberta’s government has granted Canary Biofuels conditional approval for a tax credit estimated at $1.7 million.

    “Alberta is an agriculture powerhouse with a thriving food and bioprocessing sector. The Agri-Processing Investment Tax Credit has made the province a preferred destination for large-scale agri-processing investments and encourages companies like Canary Biofuels to invest in our province, create jobs and diversify the economy.”

    RJ Sigurdson, Minister of Agriculture and Irrigation

    “The Agri-Processing Investment Tax Credit is a prime example of how our government is strengthening our agriculture industry by supporting businesses, like Canary Biofuels, to grow, create jobs, and continue to help drive our economy forward.”

    Nathan Neudorf, MLA for Lethbridge-East

    The APITC provides a 12 per cent non-refundable, non-transferable tax credit when businesses invest $10 million or more in a project to build or expand a value-added agri-processing facility in Alberta. The program is open to any food manufacturers and bioprocessors that add value to commodities like grains or meat or turn agricultural by-products into new consumer or industrial goods.

    Canary Biofuels is an agricultural processor that produces feedstock for the renewable fuels industry as well as high-value products for the livestock feed industry. It is headquartered in Calgary with a process facility in Lethbridge.

    “Canary would like to thank the Government of Alberta for its support. Programs like the Agri-Processing Investment Tax Credit are essential for smaller companies like Canary to access capital. This project will support jobs and indirectly support thousands of Albertan and Canadian oilseed farmers by providing more localized offtake for their crops, including off-spec materials.”  

    George Wadsworth, CEO Canary Biofuels Inc.

    Alberta’s agri-processing sector is the second-largest manufacturing industry in the province and the biofuel industry plays an important role in the sector, generating millions in annual economic impact and creating thousands of jobs. Alberta continues to be an attractive place for agricultural investment due to its agricultural resources, one of the lowest tax rates in North America, a business-friendly environment, and a robust transportation network to connect with international markets.

    Quick facts

    • On Feb. 7, 2023, government announced the introduction of the Agri-Processing Investment Tax Credit through Budget 2023.
    • On Apr. 24, 2023, Alberta’s Agri-Processing Investment Tax Credit began accepting applications from agri-processing corporations for conditional approval.
    • As of Feb. 11, 2025, 16 corporations had applied to the program for projects worth about $1.63 billion in new investment in Alberta’s agri-processing sector.
    • So far, 10 corporations have received conditional approval under the program. Each one must submit progress reports on their project, then apply for a tax credit certificate when the project is complete.
    • Canary Biofuel’s crush process incorporates a proprietary cold press design that allows the processing of all varieties and qualities of seed while producing a super degummed quality oil suitable for animal feed, renewable diesel and renewable aviation biofuels. In addition, the non-solvent process produces a high-value animal feed ingredient.
    • The current crush plant in Lethbridge has been operating at 50,000 MT/year and has just completed the first phase of expansion at 80,000 MT/Y with following expansion phases of 120,000 and finally 200,000 MT/Y to be completed sometime in 2026.
    • Canary Biofuel currently employs about 25 people in Canada and at full expansion it is expected they will employ more than 40.

    Related information

    • Agri-Processing Investment Tax Credit

    Related news

    • Tax credit beefs up burger patty production (July 11, 2024)
    • Tax credit mooooves Alberta’s dairy industry forward (June 19, 2024)
    • Tax credit fuels investments in bioprocessing industry (April 22, 2024)
    • Tax credit sprouts more little potato products (Feb. 22, 2024)
    • New tax credit opens the door to big investments (April 24, 2023)
    • Capitalizing on value-added agriculture (Feb. 7, 2023)

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Everything revealed at latest ID@Xbox Showcase

    Source: Microsoft

    Headline: Everything revealed at latest ID@Xbox Showcase

    From action-roguelikes, to card games, to cozy adventures, to game genres that don’t even have a name yet, this Showcase revealed how wild and wonderful the indie space can be – it’s a celebration of what’s next for gaming.

    Read on for every single bit of news you might have missed.

    33 Immortals – Launching March 18

    [embedded content]

    We first saw 33 Immortals during 2023’s Xbox Game Showcase, and this long-awaited co-op action roguelike will arrive on March 18. Pitting up to 33 players against hordes of monsters and gigantic bosses, 33 Immortals captures the joy of MMO raids in a more ‘pick up and play’ context. The release date trailer showed us some of its dark cartoon looks, frenetic gameplay, and huge party sizes.

    Balatro – Out Today on Game Pass!

    [embedded content]

    This award-winning roguelike poker sensation gets a surprise Game Pass release today, but that was far from the only announcement we got. Balatro is also headed to Windows PC, and we got the fourth Friends of Jimbo collaboration update, bringing themed cards based on (deep breath) Fallout, Assassin’s Creed, Civilization VII, Rust, Slay the Princess, Bugsnax, Dead By Daylight, and YouTube channel Critical Role.

    Blue Prince – Launching With Game Pass on April 10

    [embedded content]

    A truly unique experience, Blue Prince combines exploration, puzzles, mapmaking, and card game systems to create a game we’ve truly never seen before. Solve the mysteries of Mount Holly manor by literally piecing its rooms together, and solving mysteries hidden throughout the house you build as a result. Discover its secrets when the game launches on April 10, coming to Xbox Series X|S, Windows PC, and launching day one with Game Pass.

    Buckshot Roulette – Coming to Xbox and Game Pass

    [embedded content]

    This haunting experience makes “gambling with your life” a very literal concept, and has already captivated and horrified PC players. Transforming the (already unpleasant) game of Russian Roulette by introducing a shotgun and some dastardly extra rules, this is a true tabletop strategy game with a grim twist. In today’s show, we learned that Buckshot Roulette is on its way to Xbox and Game Pass – prepare yourself.

    Descenders Next – Launching April 9

    [embedded content]

    This sequel to the downhill biking Game Pass sensation, Descenders Next broadens its scope to include multiple ways to go really, really fast down a mountain. Promising to be the ultimate extreme sports game, tackle multiple biomes on snowboards and mountainboards when it arrives on April 9 with Game Pass.

    Echo Weaver – Coming to Xbox and Game Pass

    [embedded content]

    This beautifully rendered “Metroidbrainia” draws from classic adventure platformers and the likes of Outer Wilds to create a time looping world where knowledge is your greatest weapon. The trailer offered clues as to how, across multiple loops, you’ll piece together the story and shape of a collapsed utopia and escape the temporal prison you’re trapped within. Echo Weaver is coming to Xbox, with Game Pass.

    Herdling – Coming to Xbox and Windows PC

    [embedded content]

    Developer Okomotive created two of the most exciting, mechanic-packed adventures of recent years in the form of Far: Lone Sails and Far: Changing Tides, so you can count us very excited for their first fully 3D outing, Herdling. In a new trailer, we saw much more of how you’ll guide a herd of curious cattle across a ruined world (and the dangers you’ll face along the way) – and learned that it’ll be coming to Xbox Series X|S and Windows PC when it launches this summer.

    Hotel Barcelona – Launching 2025

    [embedded content]

    This long awaited collaboration between legendary designers Suda51 and Swery is almost upon us. This 2.5D action-platformer pits you against the horror-inspired denizens of the titular hotel, and the new trailer dives deeper into the Slasher Phantom, a brutal game mechanic that summons echoes of the player’s past runs to aid them in battle. We also saw some of the game’s arsenal of deadly weapons and abilities, each designed to turn the tide of battle in the most gruesome ways possible.

    Jump Ship – Coming to Xbox Game Preview

    Developed by Hazelight (It Takes Two) and Mojang (Minecraft) alumni, this 1-4 player FPS puts you in charge of a spaceship and asks you to take on on-foot combat sections, seamlessly transitioning between the two. The new trailer gives us a taste of how you’ll have to work together to survive, not to mention its tongue-in-cheek approach to bombastic action – plus we learned that it’ll be available in early access through  Xbox Game Preview this summer.

    Lies of P: Overture – New Story Trailer

    [embedded content]

    We got a closer look at the newly announced DLC for acclaimed Soulslike, Lies of P. The Overture expansion will see Geppetto’s Puppet encounter a mysterious artifact that transports him back in time to the world of Krat in its final days of grandeur. The trailer gives us a melancholy look at Lea, the Legendary Stalker, on her relentless path of vengeance.

    The Lonesome Guild – World Premiere

    [embedded content]

    We got a world-first look at the new game from Don’t Nod (Life Is Strange, Jusant), a whimsical action-RPG full of heart, battles, and bonds that change everything. Embark on a heroic adventure as Ghost, a spirit who wakes to find they hold no memories. Build your dream team, switch seamlessly between them to solve puzzles and fight your way through the collapsing world of Etere. The Lonesome Guild arrives for Xbox Series X|S this fall.

    Moonlighter 2: The Endless Vault – Coming to Game Pass

    [embedded content]

    The sequel to the beloved action-RPG that answers the question, “where do RPG merchants get their stock”, Moonlighter 2 takes on a brand new full-3D, isometric look – offering new challenges and rewards as a result. The new trailer shows both your new hometown and shop, and the adventures in store as you adventure to keep your stock flowing. Moonlighter 2: The Endless Vault is coming to Xbox Series X|S, Windows PC and Game Pass in 2025.

    Outbound – Coming to Xbox in 2026

    This gorgeous open-world exploration game sets you off with an empty camper van and sees you turn it into the home of your dreams – alone or together with your friends. Build and explore at your own pace. Scavenge materials, craft, and build in and on top of your vehicle with modular parts. Advance in technology and efficiently use energy to power your home, while adjusting your playstyle to adapt to new landscapes and changing environmental conditions. Outbound is coming to Xbox Series X|S in 2026.

    Ratatan – Coming to Xbox

    [embedded content]

    A new game from the creators of the beloved Patapon, Ratatan is a rhythm strategy roguelike that sees you taking increasingly huge groups of minions through a world in which you need to literally conduct your attacks – hit the rhythm and you’ll stay alive. Mix in up to four-player co-op, and you can have over 100 characters onscreen in a single fight. Ratatan comes to Xbox this year.

    Revenge of the Savage Planet – Coming to Game Pass on May 8

    [embedded content]

    We got a new look at this co-op exploration adventure by way of an in-universe commercial for the Kindred Catalog – Revenge of the Savage Planet features dozens of fresh and funny upgrades such as the goo cannon, which allows players to create slippery, sticky or flammable surfaces in the world! Or a whip to keep creatures from eating your face! Or a grapple to swing from point to point! Or a lasso to capture creatures and send them back to your Habitat for research. So many tools, so many options, so many ways to play. We don’t have long to wait to try all of this out – Revenge of the Savage Planet arrives for Xbox on May 8, and will be available day one with Game Pass.

    Rockbeasts – World Premiere

    [embedded content]

    We got another world-first look at Rockbeasts, a “rock and roll band manager” game in which you playthe manager of a legendary ‘90s band (who just happen to be animals). Lead a band of misfits on a roller-coaster ride to stardom in the age of MTV, rock anthems, and bad haircuts. Rockbeasts is a story-driven, role-playing management game that puts you in the shoes of a manager of an up-and-coming rock band. Your job – take them to the top. It arrives for Xbox Series X|S this year.

    Tanuki: Pon’s Summer – Coming to Game Pass

    [embedded content]

    We got another look at this adorable courier life sim after its debut at Tokyo Game Show. The new trailer showed us how we’ll be performing stunt-filled delivery missions alongside relaxing in its bucolic town – from baseball, to sumo practice, to drumming. Tanuki: Pon’s Summer arrives in late 2025, and it’s coming to Game Pass.

    Tempopo – Coming to Game Pass on April 17

    [embedded content]

    The newest title from the award-winning team behind Unpacking, Tempopo is a puzzle adventure bursting with music. Playing as Hana, you enter a fantasy world in which you need to conduct the titular Tempopo creatures to solve puzzles scattered across the world’s sky islands – before heading back home and cultivating her garden. The new trailer showed off new gameplay, and revealed that the game will come to Xbox Series X|S and Xbox One on April 17, and will launch into Game Pass day one.

    Tron: Catalyst – Launching June 17

    [embedded content]

    From Disney, publisher BigFan, and the development team at Bithell Games, the new trailer for Tron: Catalyst gave us a closer look at our game’s protagonist, Exo, who is fighting for her survival in the arena. An explosive event has gifted Exo the ability to perceive the glitch tearing apart her home, the Arq Grid, and given her the unique ability to loop time itself. This thrilling isometric action our game offers combat, conversation, and Light Cycle exploration in the city of Vertical Slice. Tron: Catalyst comes to Xbox Series X|S on June 17.

    Ultimate Sheep Racoon – Coming to Game Pass

    This chaotic side-scrolling, bike riding party game got a new trailer announcing that it’ll come to Game Pass upon release – and then we saw the IGN team playing the game’s 8-player mode. They showed off a variety of different blocks that can hinder your movement or launch you ahead of the competition, two different levels with varying difficulty, and showed how the different power-ups can really make a difference in the race.

    Wax Heads – Launching Summer 2026

    [embedded content]

    We got a new look at this slice-of-life narrative game set around running a struggling record store. Showing off its gorgeous hand-drawn looks, the trailer shows more of how you’ll chat to quirky customers with unique tastes, explore a handcrafted record collection, fall in love with bands (and their drama!), or just slack off with your colleagues  – whatever gets everyone’s groove back! Wax Heads will come to Xbox Series X|S in summer 2026.

    Woodo – Coming to Xbox

    [embedded content]

    This cozy, story-driven game showed off more of its beautiful art style and pieced-together 3D puzzles. The trailer revealed how you’ll build the story by literally building the world, pulling 3D objects from your menus to fill a scene, revealing more of the tale of main characters Foxy and Ben as you go. Woodo is on its way to Xbox Series X|S.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Global: Land reform in South Africa doesn’t need a new law: the state should release property it owns – economists

    Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Johann Kirsten, Director of the Bureau for Economic Research, Stellenbosch University

    South Africa’s new Expropriation Act, which was signed into law by President Cyril Ramaphosa in January 2025, has been at the centre of a political storm set off by the new US administration under President Donald Trump.

    The Expropriation Act is not entirely new. It mainly updates the existing legislation from 1975 to align it with the constitution of democratic South Africa. But some have misinterpreted it as making room for land grabs by the state. That’s not what it does in reality. Property rights remain intact in South Africa.

    Hot on the heels of this furore has been a notice from the minister of land reform and rural development, Mzwanele Nyhontso, that the government is embarking on a new bit of legislation, the “Equitable Access to Land Bill”.

    There have been discussions over the last 10 years about developing a land reform framework bill or land redistribution bill. The main idea is to foster conditions that enable citizens to get access to land equitably. Land ownership was heavily skewed towards white people under apartheid.

    The parliamentary committee heard from the minister on 20 February 2025 that there were gaps between the white paper on South African land policy and existing legislation. The bill seeks to close the gaps. It would provide for, among other things, principles for access to land, access to land by the state and citizens, the identification and selection of beneficiaries, applications and records for land allocations, a register of agricultural land, notification of present land ownership, land ownership ceilings, a land tribunal and regulations.

    Based on our years of work on land reform and agricultural policy it’s unclear to us why such a bill is necessary. We believe there are two reasons a new law would be superfluous. Firstly, South Africa already has roughly 16 laws that address the issue of land. Secondly, policymakers tend to ignore the facts on land reform progress.

    It is hard not to view the obsession with new legislation by every new minister as a distraction from the core issues. The minister should be focusing on distributing the land the government has acquired to black farmers and give them title deeds. This will be sufficient effort to build an inclusive agricultural sector, while continuing with existing programmes of land acquisition from the open market.

    There are also other areas that should be reformed that would make a difference. These include making more finance available to aspirant black farmers and fixing the deeds office to reduce land registration times.

    What’s in place

    There should be no need for new legislation if one considers all the different pieces of legislation and government programmes that are already aimed at a more equitable distribution of land. There are at least 16 laws related to farm land and the restitution and redistribution process. These include:

    • Preservation and Development of Agricultural Land Act, signed into
      law in January 2025

    • State Land Disposal Act, 1961 (Act No. 48 of 1961)

    • Deeds Registries Act, 1937 (Act No. 47 of 1937)

    • Land Reform: Provision of Land and Assistance Act, 1993 (Act No. 126 of
      1993)

    • Restitution of Land Rights Act, 1994 (Act No. 22 of 1994)

    • Communal Property Associations Act, 1996 (Act No. 28 of 1996)

    • Land Reform (Labour Tenants) Act, 1996 (Act No. 3 of 1996)

    • Protection of Informal Land Rights Act, 1996 (Act No. 31 of 1996)

    • Extension of Security of Tenure Act, 1997 (Act No. 62 of 1997).

    In addition, South African policymakers tend to ignore the facts on land reform progress.

    As we have argued before, the mix of government programmes to restore land rights and redistribute land has already addressed 25% of the total area of farm land defined and registered by formal title deeds. This means that 19.5 million hectares of the 77.5 million hectares of South Africa’s farm land have been affected by the government land reform programmes.

    There is an important nuance here: 2.5 million hectares have been acquired by the state and are now owned by the State Land Holding Account.

    Calls for the state to redistribute this land to black farmers have been falling on deaf ears, and black farmers continue to despair.

    The government has been slow to distribute the land it has acquired. This shows that the problem of South Africa’s land reform is not only about acquisition but also the distribution of land with title deeds to beneficiaries.

    Included in the total of 19.5 million hectares are private purchases of farm land by black South Africans. We estimate a total of 2.4 million hectares have been acquired in this way up to the end of 2024.

    These individuals used their own funds or borrowed funds to acquire the land without using any of the state programmes.

    Some answers

    We have always argued that the private transactions where no bureaucrats are involved happen much quicker than any government programmes. The table below shows the relevant statistics for the last four years and confirms the argument.

    The table shows that over the last four years private land transactions (that is without any involvement of bureaucrats) have contributed 32% to the total area of farmland transferred or restituted. The land claims process, in terms of the Restitution of Land Rights Act, has made the biggest contribution of 60% (with 36% of land restituted via financial compensation and 24% of land transferred to claimants). Other government land reform programmes made a very small contribution.

    Do we have more equitable access to farm land (or rural land) after 30 years of democracy? To answer this question, we need to take into account the occupation of farm land under traditional tenure arrangements and occupation on land owned by the state, including the South African Development Trust land as well as the land recently acquired by the state under the Proactive Land Acquisition Strategy programme, which is in most cases leased to black beneficiaries for short terms.

    In addition, we account for the land redistribution programme and the land transferred back to land claimants. The numbers below provide an interesting picture of black ownership of rural land in South Africa. In some provinces, equitable access has shown remarkable progress, as shown in the table below.

    Instead of a new law, this is what’s needed

    First, access to affordable and preferential finance for land acquisition by black farmers would make an important contribution to equitable access. But no new law is needed to enable this. The answer lies in changing the way the Land Bank is funded so that it can provide affordable finance to aspirant farmers. This would be a game changer.

    Secondly, government should act on the president’s proposal to establish the Land Reform Agency, release more unused state land for agricultural use and change the regulations to facilitate private land donations to beneficiaries.

    Thirdly, fix the processes and data issues in the deeds office, which could reduce the time and costs to register property transfers.

    Wandile Sihlobo is the Chief Economist of the Agricultural Business Chamber of South Africa (Agbiz) and a member of the Presidential Economic Advisory Council (PEAC).

    Johann Kirsten 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. Land reform in South Africa doesn’t need a new law: the state should release property it owns – economists – https://theconversation.com/land-reform-in-south-africa-doesnt-need-a-new-law-the-state-should-release-property-it-owns-economists-250674

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Land reform in South Africa doesn’t need a new law: the state should release property it owns – economists

    Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Johann Kirsten, Director of the Bureau for Economic Research, Stellenbosch University

    South Africa’s new Expropriation Act, which was signed into law by President Cyril Ramaphosa in January 2025, has been at the centre of a political storm set off by the new US administration under President Donald Trump.

    The Expropriation Act is not entirely new. It mainly updates the existing legislation from 1975 to align it with the constitution of democratic South Africa. But some have misinterpreted it as making room for land grabs by the state. That’s not what it does in reality. Property rights remain intact in South Africa.

    Hot on the heels of this furore has been a notice from the minister of land reform and rural development, Mzwanele Nyhontso, that the government is embarking on a new bit of legislation, the “Equitable Access to Land Bill”.

    There have been discussions over the last 10 years about developing a land reform framework bill or land redistribution bill. The main idea is to foster conditions that enable citizens to get access to land equitably. Land ownership was heavily skewed towards white people under apartheid.

    The parliamentary committee heard from the minister on 20 February 2025 that there were gaps between the white paper on South African land policy and existing legislation. The bill seeks to close the gaps. It would provide for, among other things, principles for access to land, access to land by the state and citizens, the identification and selection of beneficiaries, applications and records for land allocations, a register of agricultural land, notification of present land ownership, land ownership ceilings, a land tribunal and regulations.

    Based on our years of work on land reform and agricultural policy it’s unclear to us why such a bill is necessary. We believe there are two reasons a new law would be superfluous. Firstly, South Africa already has roughly 16 laws that address the issue of land. Secondly, policymakers tend to ignore the facts on land reform progress.

    It is hard not to view the obsession with new legislation by every new minister as a distraction from the core issues. The minister should be focusing on distributing the land the government has acquired to black farmers and give them title deeds. This will be sufficient effort to build an inclusive agricultural sector, while continuing with existing programmes of land acquisition from the open market.

    There are also other areas that should be reformed that would make a difference. These include making more finance available to aspirant black farmers and fixing the deeds office to reduce land registration times.

    What’s in place

    There should be no need for new legislation if one considers all the different pieces of legislation and government programmes that are already aimed at a more equitable distribution of land. There are at least 16 laws related to farm land and the restitution and redistribution process. These include:

    • Preservation and Development of Agricultural Land Act, signed into law in January 2025

    • State Land Disposal Act, 1961 (Act No. 48 of 1961)

    • Deeds Registries Act, 1937 (Act No. 47 of 1937)

    • Land Reform: Provision of Land and Assistance Act, 1993 (Act No. 126 of 1993)

    • Restitution of Land Rights Act, 1994 (Act No. 22 of 1994)

    • Communal Property Associations Act, 1996 (Act No. 28 of 1996)

    • Land Reform (Labour Tenants) Act, 1996 (Act No. 3 of 1996)

    • Protection of Informal Land Rights Act, 1996 (Act No. 31 of 1996)

    • Extension of Security of Tenure Act, 1997 (Act No. 62 of 1997).

    In addition, South African policymakers tend to ignore the facts on land reform progress.

    As we have argued before, the mix of government programmes to restore land rights and redistribute land has already addressed 25% of the total area of farm land defined and registered by formal title deeds. This means that 19.5 million hectares of the 77.5 million hectares of South Africa’s farm land have been affected by the government land reform programmes.

    There is an important nuance here: 2.5 million hectares have been acquired by the state and are now owned by the State Land Holding Account.

    Calls for the state to redistribute this land to black farmers have been falling on deaf ears, and black farmers continue to despair.

    The government has been slow to distribute the land it has acquired. This shows that the problem of South Africa’s land reform is not only about acquisition but also the distribution of land with title deeds to beneficiaries.

    Included in the total of 19.5 million hectares are private purchases of farm land by black South Africans. We estimate a total of 2.4 million hectares have been acquired in this way up to the end of 2024.

    These individuals used their own funds or borrowed funds to acquire the land without using any of the state programmes.

    Some answers

    We have always argued that the private transactions where no bureaucrats are involved happen much quicker than any government programmes. The table below shows the relevant statistics for the last four years and confirms the argument.

    The table shows that over the last four years private land transactions (that is without any involvement of bureaucrats) have contributed 32% to the total area of farmland transferred or restituted. The land claims process, in terms of the Restitution of Land Rights Act, has made the biggest contribution of 60% (with 36% of land restituted via financial compensation and 24% of land transferred to claimants). Other government land reform programmes made a very small contribution.

    Do we have more equitable access to farm land (or rural land) after 30 years of democracy? To answer this question, we need to take into account the occupation of farm land under traditional tenure arrangements and occupation on land owned by the state, including the South African Development Trust land as well as the land recently acquired by the state under the Proactive Land Acquisition Strategy programme, which is in most cases leased to black beneficiaries for short terms.

    In addition, we account for the land redistribution programme and the land transferred back to land claimants. The numbers below provide an interesting picture of black ownership of rural land in South Africa. In some provinces, equitable access has shown remarkable progress, as shown in the table below.

    Instead of a new law, this is what’s needed

    First, access to affordable and preferential finance for land acquisition by black farmers would make an important contribution to equitable access. But no new law is needed to enable this. The answer lies in changing the way the Land Bank is funded so that it can provide affordable finance to aspirant farmers. This would be a game changer.

    Secondly, government should act on the president’s proposal to establish the Land Reform Agency, release more unused state land for agricultural use and change the regulations to facilitate private land donations to beneficiaries.

    Thirdly, fix the processes and data issues in the deeds office, which could reduce the time and costs to register property transfers.

    – Land reform in South Africa doesn’t need a new law: the state should release property it owns – economists
    – https://theconversation.com/land-reform-in-south-africa-doesnt-need-a-new-law-the-state-should-release-property-it-owns-economists-250674

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI USA: Unemployment rate for people with a disability changes little, at 7.5%, in 2024

    Source: US Department of Labor

    For release 10:00 a.m. (ET) Tuesday, February 25, 2025                              USDL-25-0247
    
    Technical information:  (202) 691-6378  *  cpsinfo@bls.gov  *  www.bls.gov/cps 
    Media contact:          (202) 691-5902  *  PressOffice@bls.gov
    
    
                     PERSONS WITH A DISABILITY: LABOR FORCE CHARACTERISTICS -- 2024
                     
                     
    In 2024, the employment-population ratio--the proportion of the population that is employed--
    was 22.7 percent among those with a disability, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported 
    today. In contrast, the employment-population ratio for those without a disability was 65.5 
    percent. The employment-population ratio for people with a disability changed little from
    2023 to 2024, following a 1.2 percentage-point increase from 2022 to 2023. The employment-
    population ratio for those without a disability decreased by 0.3 percentage point in 2024. 
    The unemployment rate for people with a disability (7.5 percent) changed little in 2024, 
    while the rate for those without a disability increased by 0.3 percentage point over the 
    year to 3.8 percent.
    
    The data on people with a disability are collected as part of the Current Population Survey 
    (CPS), a monthly sample survey of about 60,000 households that provides statistics on 
    employment and unemployment in the United States. The collection of data on people with a 
    disability is sponsored by the U.S. Department of Labor's Office of Disability Employment 
    Policy. For more information, see the Technical Note in this news release.
    
    Highlights from the 2024 data:
    
     --Half of all people with a disability were age 65 and over, nearly three times larger than 
       the share for those with no disability. (See table 1.)
    
     --For all ages, the employment-population ratio was much lower for people with a disability 
       than for those with no disability. (See table 1.)
    
     --Unemployment rates were much higher for people with a disability than for those with no 
       disability across all educational attainment groups. (See table 1.)
    
     --Workers with a disability were nearly twice as likely to work part time as workers with 
       no disability. (See table 2.)
    
     --Workers with a disability were more likely to be self-employed than were workers with no 
       disability. (See table 4.)
    
    Demographic characteristics
    
    People with a disability accounted for about 13 percent of the population in 2024. Those
    with a disability tend to be older than people with no disability, reflecting the increased 
    incidence of disability with age. In 2024, half of those with a disability were age 65 and 
    over, compared with about 18 percent of those with no disability. Overall, women were more 
    likely to have a disability than were men, partly reflecting the greater life expectancy of 
    women. Among the major race and ethnicity groups, people who are White (13.0 percent) and
    Black or African American (13.1 percent) had a higher prevalence of disability than those 
    who are Asian (6.8 percent) and Hispanic or Latino (8.7 percent). (See table 1.)
    
    Employment
    
    In 2024, the employment-population ratio for people with a disability changed little at 
    22.7 percent. The ratio for those with no disability decreased by 0.3 percentage point to 
    65.5 percent. The lower ratio among people with a disability reflects, in part, the older 
    age profile of people with a disability; people age 65 and over are less likely to be 
    employed regardless of disability status. However, across all age groups, people with a 
    disability were much less likely to be employed than those with no disability. 
    (See tables A and 1.)
    
    Among people with a disability ages 16 to 64, the employment-population ratio, at 37.4 
    percent in 2024, changed little over the year. Similarly, the ratio for people with a 
    disability age 65 and over was little changed at 8.1 percent. (See table A.)
    
    People with a disability were less likely to have completed a bachelor's degree or higher 
    than were those with no disability. In 2024, about 23 percent of all people with a 
    disability had completed a bachelor's degree or higher compared with about 42 percent of 
    those with no disability. Among both groups, those who had attained higher levels of 
    education were more likely to be employed than were those with less education. For all 
    levels of education, people with a disability were much less likely to be employed than 
    their counterparts with no disability. (Educational attainment data are presented for 
    those age 25 and over.) (See table 1.)
    
    Workers with a disability were more likely to be employed part time than were those with
    no disability. About 31 percent of those with a disability usually worked part time compared 
    with about 17 percent of workers without a disability. About 4 percent of workers with a 
    disability worked part time for economic reasons. These individuals would have preferred 
    full-time employment but were working part time because their hours had been reduced or 
    they were unable to find full-time jobs. (See table 2.)
    
    In 2024, people with a disability were more likely to work in sales and office occupations 
    than were those with no disability (20.8 percent compared with 18.4 percent, respectively). 
    Workers with a disability were also more likely than those with no disability to work in 
    service occupations (19.0 percent compared with 16.3 percent) and in production, 
    transportation, and material moving occupations (14.2 percent compared with 12.2 percent).
    People with a disability were much less likely to work in management, professional, and 
    related occupations than were their counterparts with no disability (37.9 percent compared 
    with 44.1 percent). Workers with a disability were also somewhat less likely to work in 
    natural resources, construction, and maintenance occupations (8.1 percent compared with
    9.0 percent). (See table 3.)
    
    A larger share of people with a disability were self-employed than were those with no
    disability in 2024 (9.2 percent versus 6.0 percent). Those with a disability were slightly
    more likely to be employed by the federal government than were their counterparts with no 
    disability (3.3 percent and 2.6 percent), while the proportions of people employed by state
    and local governments were about the same regardless of disability status. In contrast, 
    people with a disability were less likely to be employed as private wage and salary workers
    (76.6 percent) than were those with no disability (80.5 percent). (See table 4.)
    
    Unemployment
    
    The unemployment rate for people with a disability was about twice that of those with no 
    disability in 2024. (Unemployed people are those who did not have a job, were available for 
    work, and were actively looking for a job in the 4 weeks preceding the survey.) The 
    unemployment rate for people with a disability changed little in 2024 at 7.5 percent, while 
    the rate for people without a disability increased by 0.3 percentage point to 3.8 percent.
    (See tables A and 1.)
    
    Among people with a disability, the unemployment rates were the same for men and women in 
    2024 (7.5 percent). These rates were little different from a year earlier. Among the major
    race and ethnicity groups, the jobless rates for people who are White, Black or African 
    American, Asian, and Hispanic or Latino showed little change over the year. As is the case
    among people without a disability, the jobless rates for those with a disability were higher
    among people who are Black or African American (10.7 percent) and Hispanic or Latino 
    (9.4 percent) than among people who are White (6.9 percent) and Asian (6.3 percent). 
    (See table 1.)  
    
    Not in the labor force
    
    People who are neither employed nor unemployed are considered not in the labor force. A 
    large proportion of people with a disability--about 75 percent--were not in the labor force
    in 2024, compared with about 32 percent of those with no disability. In part, this too 
    reflects the older age profile of people with a disability; people age 65 and over were 
    much less likely to participate in the labor force than were those in younger age groups. 
    Across all age groups, however, people with a disability were less likely to participate 
    in the labor force than were those with no disability. (See table 1.)
    
    For both people with and without a disability, the vast majority of those who were not in
    the labor force did not want a job. In 2024, about 3 percent of those with a disability
    wanted a job, lower than about 6 percent of those without a disability. Among people who 
    wanted a job, a subset is classified as marginally attached to the labor force. These 
    individuals wanted and were available for work and had looked for a job sometime in 
    the prior 12 months but had not looked for work in the 4 weeks preceding the survey. 
    (People marginally attached to the labor force include discouraged workers.) About 1 
    percent of people with a disability were marginally attached to the labor force in 2024. 
    (See table 5.)
    
    
    
    
    Table A. Employment status of the civilian noninstitutional population by disability status and age, 2023 and 2024 annual averages [Numbers in thousands]
    Characteristic 2023 2024
    Total, 16 years
    and over
    16 to 64
    years
    65 years
    and over
    Total, 16 years
    and over
    16 to 64
    years
    65 years
    and over

    PEOPLE WITH A DISABILITY

    Civilian noninstitutional population

    33,501 16,685 16,816 33,945 16,915 17,030

    Civilian labor force

    8,112 6,715 1,397 8,328 6,886 1,441

    Participation rate

    24.2 40.2 8.3 24.5 40.7 8.5

    Employed

    7,528 6,196 1,331 7,701 6,326 1,375

    Employment-population ratio

    22.5 37.1 7.9 22.7 37.4 8.1

    Unemployed

    585 519 66 627 561 66

    Unemployment rate

    7.2 7.7 4.7 7.5 8.1 4.6

    Not in labor force

    25,389 9,970 15,419 25,618 10,029 15,589

    PEOPLE WITH NO DISABILITY

    Civilian noninstitutional population

    233,441 191,998 41,443 234,626 191,920 42,706

    Civilian labor force

    159,004 149,206 9,798 159,779 149,580 10,198

    Participation rate

    68.1 77.7 23.6 68.1 77.9 23.9

    Employed

    153,509 143,961 9,548 153,645 143,744 9,900

    Employment-population ratio

    65.8 75.0 23.0 65.5 74.9 23.2

    Unemployed

    5,495 5,245 250 6,134 5,836 298

    Unemployment rate

    3.5 3.5 2.6 3.8 3.9 2.9

    Not in labor force

    74,437 42,792 31,645 74,847 42,340 32,507

    NOTE: Updated population controls are introduced annually with the release of January data.

    Technical Note
    
       The estimates in this release are based on annual average data obtained from  
    the Current Population Survey (CPS). The CPS, which is conducted by the U.S. 
    Census Bureau for the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), is a monthly survey of 
    about 60,000 eligible households that provides information on the labor force 
    status, demographics, and other characteristics of the nation's civilian
    noninstitutional population age 16 and over.
       
       Questions were added to the CPS in June 2008 to identify people with a 
    disability in the civilian noninstitutional population age 16 and over. The 
    addition of these questions allowed the BLS to begin releasing monthly labor 
    force data from the CPS for people with a disability. The collection of these 
    data is sponsored by the Department of Labor's Office of Disability Employment 
    Policy.
       
       If you are deaf, hard of hearing, or have a speech disability, please dial
    7-1-1 to access telecommunications relay services.
    
    Reliability of the estimates
    
       Statistics based on the CPS are subject to both sampling and nonsampling 
    error. When a sample, rather than the entire population, is surveyed, there is 
    a chance that the sample estimates may differ from the true population values 
    they represent. The component of this difference that occurs because samples 
    differ by chance is known as sampling error, and its variability is measured 
    by the standard error of the estimate. There is about a 90-percent chance, or
    level of confidence, that an estimate based on a sample will differ by no more 
    than 1.6 standard errors from the true population value because of sampling 
    error. BLS analyses are generally conducted at the 90-percent level of 
    confidence.
    
       The CPS data also are affected by nonsampling error. Nonsampling error can 
    occur for many reasons, including the failure to sample a segment of the 
    population, inability to obtain information for all respondents in the sample, 
    inability or unwillingness of respondents to provide correct information, and
    errors made in the collection or processing of the data.
    
       Additional information about the reliability of data from the CPS and 
    estimating standard errors is available at 
    www.bls.gov/cps/documentation.htm#reliability.
    
       CPS estimates are controlled to population totals that are available by 
    age, sex, race, and Hispanic ethnicity. These controls are developed by the 
    Census Bureau and are based on complete population counts obtained in the 
    decennial census. In the years between decennial censuses, they incorporate 
    the latest information about population change (births, deaths, and net
    international migration). As part of its annual update of population
    estimates, the Census Bureau introduces adjustments to the total population
    controls. The updated controls typically have a negligible impact on 
    unemployment rates and other ratios. The estimates of the population of 
    people with a disability are not controlled to independent population totals 
    of people with a disability because such data are not available. Without 
    independent population totals, sample-based estimates are more apt to vary 
    from one time period to the next. Information about population controls is 
    available at www.bls.gov/cps/documentation.htm#pop.
    
    Disability questions and concepts
    
       The CPS uses a set of six questions to identify people with disabilities. 
    In the CPS, people are classified as having a disability if there is a response 
    of "yes" to any of these questions. The disability questions appear in the CPS 
    in the following format:
    
       This month we want to learn about people who have physical, mental, or emotional
    conditions that cause serious difficulty with their daily activities. Please answer
    for household members who are 15 years old or over.
    
       --Is anyone deaf or does anyone have serious difficulty 
         hearing?
    
       --Is anyone blind or does anyone have serious difficulty
         seeing even when wearing glasses?
    
       --Because of a physical, mental, or emotional condition, does
         anyone have serious difficulty concentrating, remembering, or
         making decisions?
    
       --Does anyone have serious difficulty walking or climbing
         stairs?
    
       --Does anyone have difficulty dressing or bathing?
    
       --Because of a physical, mental, or emotional condition, does
         anyone have difficulty doing errands alone such as visiting a
         doctor's office or shopping?
    
       The CPS questions for identifying individuals with disabilities are only 
    asked of household members who are age 15 and over. Each of the questions ask 
    the respondent whether anyone in the household has the condition described, and 
    if the respondent replies "yes," they are then asked to identify everyone in 
    the household who has the condition. Labor force measures from the CPS are 
    tabulated for people age 16 and over. More information on the disability 
    questions and the limitations of the CPS disability data is available on the 
    BLS website at www.bls.gov/cps/cpsdisability_faq.htm.
    
    Other definitions
    
       Other definitions used in this release are described briefly below. 
    Additional information on the concepts and methodology of the CPS is available 
    at www.bls.gov/cps/documentation.htm.
    
       Employed.  Employed people are all those who, during the survey reference 
    week, (a) did any work at all as paid employees; (b) worked in their own 
    business, profession, or on their own farm; or (c) worked 15 hours or more as 
    unpaid workers in a family member's business.  People who were temporarily 
    absent from their jobs because of illness, bad weather, vacation, labor 
    dispute, or another reason also are counted as employed.
    
       Unemployed.  Unemployed people are those who had no employment during the 
    reference week, were available for work at that time, and had made specific 
    efforts to find employment sometime during the 4-week period ending with the 
    reference week. People who were waiting to be recalled to a job from which they 
    had been laid off need not have been looking for work to be classified as 
    unemployed.
    
       Civilian labor force.  The civilian labor force comprises all people
    classified as employed or unemployed.
    
       Unemployment rate.  The unemployment rate is the number unemployed as a 
    percent of the labor force.
    
       Not in the labor force.  People not in the labor force include all those who 
    are not classified as employed or unemployed. Information is collected on their 
    desire for and availability to take a job at the time of the CPS interview, job 
    search activity in the prior year, and reason for not looking in the 4-week 
    period ending with the reference week. This group includes individuals marginally 
    attached to the labor force, defined as people not in the labor force who want 
    and are available for a job and who have looked for work sometime in the past 12 
    months (or since the end of their last job if they held one within the past 12 
    months). They are not counted as unemployed because they had not actively searched 
    for work in the prior 4 weeks. Within the marginally attached group are discouraged 
    workers--people who are not currently looking for work because they believe there 
    are no jobs available or there are none for which they would qualify. The other 
    people marginally attached to the labor force group includes people who want a
    job but had not looked for work in the past 4 weeks for reasons such as family 
    responsibilities or transportation problems.
    
       Part time for economic reasons.  People classified as at work part time for 
    economic reasons, a measure sometimes referred to as involuntary part time, are 
    those who gave an economic reason for working 1 to 34 hours during the reference 
    week. Economic reasons include slack work or unfavorable business conditions, 
    inability to find full-time work, and seasonal declines in demand. Those who 
    usually work part time must also indicate that they want and are available for 
    full-time work to be classified as part time for economic reasons.
    
       Occupation, industry, and class of worker.  The occupation, industry, and 
    class of worker classifications for the employed relate to the job held in the 
    survey reference week. People with two or more jobs are classified in the job 
    at which they worked the greatest number of hours. People are classified using 
    the 2018 Census occupational and 2017 Census industry classification systems. 
    The class-of-worker breakdown assigns workers to the following categories: 
    private and government wage and salary workers, self-employed workers, and 
    unpaid family workers. Wage and salary workers receive wages, salary, 
    commissions, tips, or pay in kind from a private employer or from a government 
    unit. Self-employed people are those who work for profit or fees in their own 
    business, profession, trade, or farm. Only the unincorporated self-employed are 
    included in the self-employed category. Self-employed people who respond that 
    their businesses are incorporated are included among wage and salary workers. 
    Unpaid family workers are people working without pay for 15 hours a week or 
    more on a farm or in a business operated by a family member in their household.
    
    
    
    
    Table 1. Employment status of the civilian noninstitutional population by disability status and selected characteristics, 2024 annual averages [Numbers in thousands]
    Characteristic Civilian
    noninsti-
    tutional
    population
    Civilian labor force Not in
    labor
    force
    Total Participation
    rate
    Employed Unemployed
    Total Percent of
    population
    Total Rate

    TOTAL

    Total, 16 years and over

    268,571 168,106 62.6 161,346 60.1 6,761 4.0 100,465

    Men

    130,939 88,974 68.0 85,313 65.2 3,661 4.1 41,965

    Women

    137,633 79,132 57.5 76,033 55.2 3,100 3.9 58,500

    PEOPLE WITH A DISABILITY

    Total, 16 years and over

    33,945 8,328 24.5 7,701 22.7 627 7.5 25,618

    Men

    15,923 4,308 27.1 3,984 25.0 324 7.5 11,615

    Women

    18,023 4,020 22.3 3,717 20.6 303 7.5 14,003

    Age

    16 to 64 years

    16,915 6,886 40.7 6,326 37.4 561 8.1 10,029

    16 to 19 years

    876 242 27.6 184 21.0 58 23.9 634

    20 to 24 years

    1,271 596 46.9 517 40.6 79 13.3 675

    25 to 34 years

    2,625 1,522 58.0 1,393 53.1 129 8.5 1,103

    35 to 44 years

    2,689 1,402 52.1 1,310 48.7 92 6.6 1,287

    45 to 54 years

    3,417 1,405 41.1 1,301 38.1 104 7.4 2,012

    55 to 64 years

    6,036 1,719 28.5 1,621 26.8 98 5.7 4,317

    65 years and over

    17,030 1,441 8.5 1,375 8.1 66 4.6 15,589

    Race and Hispanic or Latino ethnicity

    White

    26,629 6,584 24.7 6,129 23.0 455 6.9 20,045

    Black or African American

    4,593 1,045 22.8 934 20.3 112 10.7 3,548

    Asian

    1,219 252 20.7 236 19.4 16 6.3 967

    Hispanic or Latino ethnicity

    4,277 1,188 27.8 1,076 25.2 111 9.4 3,089

    Educational attainment

    Total, 25 years and over

    31,798 7,490 23.6 7,000 22.0 490 6.5 24,309

    Less than a high school diploma

    4,427 556 12.6 499 11.3 57 10.2 3,871

    High school graduates, no college

    11,075 2,081 18.8 1,912 17.3 169 8.1 8,993

    Some college or associate degree

    8,838 2,379 26.9 2,224 25.2 155 6.5 6,459

    Bachelor’s degree and higher

    7,459 2,474 33.2 2,365 31.7 109 4.4 4,985

    PEOPLE WITH NO DISABILITY

    Total, 16 years and over

    234,626 159,779 68.1 153,645 65.5 6,134 3.8 74,847

    Men

    115,016 84,666 73.6 81,329 70.7 3,337 3.9 30,350

    Women

    119,610 75,113 62.8 72,316 60.5 2,797 3.7 44,497

    Age

    16 to 64 years

    191,920 149,580 77.9 143,744 74.9 5,836 3.9 42,340

    16 to 19 years

    16,709 6,242 37.4 5,477 32.8 765 12.3 10,467

    20 to 24 years

    20,116 14,697 73.1 13,655 67.9 1,042 7.1 5,419

    25 to 34 years

    41,802 35,660 85.3 34,202 81.8 1,457 4.1 6,142

    35 to 44 years

    41,491 36,001 86.8 34,887 84.1 1,114 3.1 5,490

    45 to 54 years

    36,617 31,532 86.1 30,738 83.9 794 2.5 5,085

    55 to 64 years

    35,185 25,448 72.3 24,785 70.4 663 2.6 9,737

    65 years and over

    42,706 10,198 23.9 9,900 23.2 298 2.9 32,507

    Race and Hispanic or Latino ethnicity

    White

    178,457 121,048 67.8 116,904 65.5 4,144 3.4 57,409

    Black or African American

    30,410 21,001 69.1 19,794 65.1 1,207 5.7 9,409

    Asian

    16,756 11,429 68.2 11,034 65.9 394 3.5 5,327

    Hispanic or Latino ethnicity

    44,645 31,702 71.0 30,151 67.5 1,551 4.9 12,942

    Educational attainment

    Total, 25 years and over

    197,801 138,839 70.2 134,512 68.0 4,326 3.1 58,962

    Less than a high school diploma

    14,868 8,597 57.8 8,090 54.4 507 5.9 6,271

    High school graduates, no college

    52,631 34,175 64.9 32,813 62.3 1,362 4.0 18,455

    Some college or associate degree

    48,149 33,460 69.5 32,403 67.3 1,057 3.2 14,689

    Bachelor’s degree and higher

    82,153 62,607 76.2 61,206 74.5 1,400 2.2 19,547

    NOTE: Estimates for the above race groups (White, Black or African American, and Asian) do not sum to totals because data are not presented for all races. People whose ethnicity is identified as Hispanic or Latino may be of any race.

    Table 2. Employed full- and part-time workers by disability status and age, 2024 annual averages [Numbers in thousands]
    Disability status and age Employed At work
    part time for
    economic
    reasons
    Total Usually
    work
    full time
    Usually
    work
    part time

    TOTAL

    16 years and over

    161,346 133,361 27,985 4,467

    16 to 64 years

    150,070 126,401 23,669 4,267

    65 years and over

    11,276 6,960 4,316 200

    People with a disability

    16 years and over

    7,701 5,322 2,379 303

    16 to 64 years

    6,326 4,641 1,684 275

    65 years and over

    1,375 680 695 27

    People with no disability

    16 years and over

    153,645 128,039 25,605 4,164

    16 to 64 years

    143,744 121,760 21,985 3,991

    65 years and over

    9,900 6,280 3,621 172

    NOTE: Full time refers to people who usually work 35 hours or more per week; part time refers to people who usually work less than 35 hours per week.

    Table 3. Employed people by disability status, occupation, and sex, 2024 annual averages [Percent distribution]
    Occupation People with a disability People with no disability
    Total Men Women Total Men Women

    Total employed (in thousands)

    7,701 3,984 3,717 153,645 81,329 72,316

    Occupation as a percent of total employed

    Total employed

    100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0

    Management, professional, and related occupations

    37.9 34.7 41.3 44.1 39.8 49.1

    Management, business, and financial operations occupations

    16.6 17.3 16.0 19.1 19.6 18.5

    Management occupations

    11.5 12.8 10.2 12.9 14.1 11.4

    Business and financial operations occupations

    5.1 4.4 5.8 6.2 5.4 7.1

    Professional and related occupations

    21.3 17.5 25.4 25.1 20.2 30.6

    Computer and mathematical occupations

    3.1 4.2 1.9 4.0 5.6 2.2

    Architecture and engineering occupations

    1.8 2.7 0.8 2.2 3.5 0.8

    Life, physical, and social science occupations

    0.8 0.8 0.9 1.2 1.1 1.3

    Community and social service occupations

    2.0 1.5 2.6 1.8 1.0 2.7

    Legal occupations

    1.0 0.9 1.2 1.1 1.0 1.3

    Education, training, and library occupations

    5.6 3.1 8.4 6.0 3.0 9.3

    Arts, design, entertainment, sports, and media occupations

    2.6 2.4 2.8 2.1 2.0 2.3

    Healthcare practitioners and technical occupations

    4.3 1.9 6.8 6.6 3.0 10.6

    Service occupations

    19.0 16.0 22.2 16.3 13.0 19.9

    Healthcare support occupations

    4.3 1.3 7.5 3.3 1.0 6.0

    Protective service occupations

    1.6 2.4 0.8 1.9 2.7 1.0

    Food preparation and serving related occupations

    5.4 4.7 6.2 5.0 4.3 5.7

    Building and grounds cleaning and maintenance occupations

    5.0 6.4 3.5 3.5 3.9 3.1

    Personal care and service occupations

    2.6 1.2 4.2 2.5 1.1 4.0

    Sales and office occupations

    20.8 14.7 27.4 18.4 13.8 23.6

    Sales and related occupations

    9.6 8.6 10.8 8.7 8.6 8.8

    Office and administrative support occupations

    11.2 6.1 16.6 9.7 5.2 14.8

    Natural resources, construction, and maintenance occupations

    8.1 14.9 0.9 9.0 15.9 1.1

    Farming, fishing, and forestry occupations

    0.5 0.6 0.3 0.6 0.8 0.4

    Construction and extraction occupations

    4.4 8.1 0.4 5.3 9.6 0.5

    Installation, maintenance, and repair occupations

    3.3 6.1 0.3 3.0 5.5 0.3

    Production, transportation, and material moving occupations

    14.2 19.8 8.2 12.2 17.5 6.3

    Production occupations

    5.5 7.3 3.5 4.9 6.6 3.0

    Transportation and material moving occupations

    8.7 12.5 4.7 7.3 10.9 3.3
    Table 4. Employed people by disability status, industry, class of worker, and sex, 2024 annual averages [Percent distribution]
    Industry and class of worker People with a disability People with no disability
    Total Men Women Total Men Women

    Total employed (in thousands)

    7,701 3,984 3,717 153,645 81,329 72,316

    Industry as a percent of total employed

    Total employed

    100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0

    Agriculture and related industries

    2.1 3.0 1.2 1.4 1.8 0.8

    Nonagricultural industries

    97.9 97.0 98.8 98.6 98.2 99.2

    Mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction

    0.3 0.5 0.1 0.4 0.6 0.1

    Construction

    6.3 10.9 1.5 7.5 12.6 1.8

    Manufacturing

    8.5 11.5 5.3 9.4 12.5 5.8

    Wholesale trade

    1.6 2.0 1.1 2.0 2.6 1.3

    Retail trade

    13.1 12.8 13.5 10.0 9.9 10.0

    Transportation and utilities

    5.9 7.8 3.8 6.1 8.7 3.1

    Information

    1.7 1.8 1.6 1.8 2.0 1.5

    Financial activities

    5.8 5.1 6.6 6.8 6.4 7.3

    Professional and business services

    12.0 13.5 10.5 13.3 14.5 11.9

    Education and health services

    21.8 11.3 33.0 23.1 11.1 36.5

    Leisure and hospitality

    9.5 8.9 10.0 8.7 8.0 9.5

    Other services

    6.0 5.7 6.3 4.7 4.1 5.4

    Public administration

    5.4 5.3 5.5 5.0 5.1 4.9

    Class of worker as a percent of total employed

    Total employed

    100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0

    Wage and salary workers

    90.7 89.5 92.0 94.0 93.2 94.8

    Private industries

    76.6 77.4 75.9 80.5 82.2 78.5

    Government

    14.1 12.2 16.1 13.5 11.0 16.3

    Federal

    3.3 3.6 2.9 2.6 2.7 2.4

    State

    5.0 3.4 6.7 4.7 3.5 6.0

    Local

    5.8 5.2 6.4 6.3 4.8 7.9

    Self-employed workers, unincorporated

    9.2 10.4 7.9 6.0 6.8 5.1
    Table 5. People not in the labor force by disability status, age, and sex, 2024 annual averages [Numbers in thousands]
    Category Total,
    16 years and
    over
    16 to 64 years Total,
    65 years and
    over
    Total Men Women

    PEOPLE WITH A DISABILITY

    Total not in the labor force

    25,618 10,029 4,876 5,152 15,589

    People who currently want a job

    798 542 253 289 256

    Marginally attached to the labor force

    203 159 77 83 43

    Discouraged workers

    45 31 18 13 14

    Other people marginally attached to the labor force

    157 128 59 69 29

    PEOPLE WITH NO DISABILITY

    Total not in the labor force

    74,847 42,340 16,227 26,113 32,507

    People who currently want a job

    4,792 4,170 2,009 2,161 622

    Marginally attached to the labor force

    1,355 1,239 676 563 116

    Discouraged workers

    363 332 202 130 31

    Other people marginally attached to the labor force

    992 907 475 433 85

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Seasonal farm workers deserve proper protections

    Source: Scottish Greens

    Migrant workers are key to our farming industries – they must be treated as such.

    The Scottish Greens have welcomed an extension of the seasonal worker scheme for farmers, but have urged the UK Government to review their ambitions to taper it off too soon.

    Rural affairs spokesperson Ariane Burgess MSP is concerned that what is being proposed could have a lasting negative effect on Scotland’s agriculture industry that relies heavily on migrant workers annually. 

    Ms Burgess said:

    “It will be a sigh of relief for farmers knowing they will have workers to harvest their crops, fruit and veg. But they should not have been in this position in the first place, it is one of the many destructive legacies of Brexit on our agriculture and economy.

    “I have serious concerns about some of the government’s goals for the scheme, including lowering the number of visas granted, and its aim to replace workers with technology like robots for harvesting. 

    “While machines are continuing to get smarter, the act of picking strawberries and raspberries grown here in Scotland is a gentle handed one. 

    “Lowering visa numbers could create further problems and dangerous working situations for those who are working on our farms. 

    “While seasonal worker visas are necessary for farming here in Scotland, there are very real risks of exploitation and modern slavery, and there must be more protections offered to avoid workers being subjected to this.

    “One solution we would support is to introduce a Scottish visa as an alternative. This would be a fairer way to give migrant workers more rights on our own terms and to keep our rural and agricultural sectors thriving, without exploitative practice happening below the radar.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI: Enterprises wasted $104M on underused tech in 2024 while 75% of workers struggle to harness AI efficiencies, new WalkMe research finds

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 25, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — WalkMe, the leader of the Digital Adoption Platform (DAP) category for effectively navigating technology change, today released its annual report, The State of Digital Adoption 2025, Special AI Edition. This year’s report focuses on AI adoption in the enterprise and highlights an alarming disconnect – while 79% of executives express confidence in meeting their AI transformation goals, only 28% of employees feel adequately trained and only 25% report being able to use AI to work more efficiently.

    The report uncovers the staggering cost of digital inefficiencies, with enterprises losing over $104 million in 2024 alone due to underutilized technology and poor productivity practices. With AI spending expected to increase 64% in 2025 from $14M to $23M at large enterprises, companies must take proactive steps to ensure maximum ROI. According to the report, enterprises that implement even a single digital adoption best practice can nearly triple their digital transformation ROI from 22% to 64%. This gap reveals that without effective digital adoption, AI investments often fail.

    These insights are drawn from a survey of 3,700 senior executives and employees, as well as proprietary data from a subset of WalkMe’s user base, 1.5 million users across 2,400 enterprise applications. The full report provides actionable strategies for business leaders to close the AI adoption gap, optimize IT investments, and enhance workforce productivity in 2025 and beyond.

    “As we release the fourth annual State of Digital Adoption report, it’s clear that while AI is transforming enterprise ambitions, its success hinges on people,” said Dan Adika, Co-Founder & CEO of WalkMe. “Over a decade of innovation in digital adoption has shown us one truth: technology alone doesn’t deliver results – people do. This year’s findings outline actionable steps leaders can take to close the readiness gap and turn their AI investments into impact.”

    The report also revealed an alarming visibility gap in how employees are using software in their roles. Executives believe an average of 37 applications are in use at their organizations, but WalkMe’s data shows the average number is actually 625, a 17x discrepancy. This gap is hindering organizations’ ability to manage their software investments and properly support digital transformation.

    “WalkMe’s research highlights a clear need for organizations to bridge the AI adoption gap, and digital adoption platforms play a vital role in enabling organizations to maximize their AI transformation efforts,” said Andrea Lippin, Managing Director, Talent & Organization at Accenture. “The report showed that AI has sparked 93% of enterprises to reevaluate key parts of their digital organization, including IT infrastructure, software applications, and talent to unlock the benefits of AI. We are entering a new chapter of business innovation that will have lasting implications across industries. And that is why we recommend a WalkMe first approach—ensuring that AI adoption is not only strategic but also seamless, intuitive, and scalable.”

    “The success of AI in the enterprise is all about execution and, as this research shows, much of that is in the hands of employees,” said Alexa Cordell, Sr. Learning Technology Manager, EDF Renewables. “It’s about ensuring employees can seamlessly adopt and integrate it into their workflows to drive both individual and organizational success.”

    Additional highlights from the research include:

    • Employees still deal with technology frustrations, wasting an average of 36 working days a year.
    • Average digital adoption investment rose from $2.8 million in 2023 to $5.1 million in 2025.
      • Digital adoption teams have grown: 73% of large organizations have six or more people responsible for driving software adoption, compared to 63% in 2024.

    Download The State of Digital Adoption 2025 complete report here.

    Register now to join WalkMe and speakers from Accenture, State Farm, and EDF Renewables for an interactive webinar, Bridging the AI Divide: Insights from the State of Digital Adoption 2025 February 25th at 11:00 AM ET.

    About WalkMe:
    WalkMe, an SAP company, pioneered the world’s leading Digital Adoption Platform, enabling organizations to navigate the change brought on by technology. Leveraging over a decade of experience, WalkMe’s platform integrates generative AI to deliver proactive, accessible, and actionable insights. Our context-aware solutions guide users through any workflow, identifying and resolving digital friction to ensure seamless execution of critical processes across all departments. Trusted by global leaders like IBM, Nestlé, ThermoFisher Scientific, and the U.S. Department of Defense, WalkMe empowers organizations to maximize software ROI and drive people-centric digital transformation. Visit www.walkme.com.

    Media Contact:
    Melanie Pasch
    press@walkme.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Global: A hazy legal landscape means people can get high on hemp products, even where pot is prohibited

    Source: The Conversation – USA – By Katharine Neill Harris, Fellow in Drug Policy, Rice University

    Delta-8 supplements on a shelf at a Texas store. Sergio Flores/Washington Post via Getty Images

    In Texas, where I live, marijuana has long been illegal. Yet on a busy street in my Houston neighborhood, at least five stores within a half-mile of each other sell cannabis products that promise a strong high.

    Texas isn’t alone. Due to a mix of recent legal changes and an uncertain policy landscape, residents in roughly half of American states have easy access to impairing hemp products that bear a strong resemblance to marijuana and are far less regulated.

    As hemp sales soar – reaching nearly US$3 billion in 2023 – a number of states are tightening their restrictions, while experts are analyzing the public health implications. That’s why I analyzed hemp policies in all 50 states with some of my colleagues at Rice University’s Baker Institute, where I’m a drug policy fellow.

    Marijuana and hemp: Same plant, different policies

    Marijuana and hemp are both varieties of cannabis sativa, a plant with many uses that produces thousands of compounds. Among them is the popular intoxicant delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol, or delta-9 THC.

    Hemp is widely valued as an industrial crop, and for most of American history, farmers freely cultivated it. But by the mid-20th century, lawmakers had grown increasingly opposed to marijuana and were concerned by hemp’s similarity to its impairment-causing cousin.

    In an effort to permit hemp cultivation while prohibiting production of a psychoactive plant, the Agricultural Marketing Act of 1946 defined hemp as all parts of the cannabis plant with less than 0.3 percent concentration of delta-9 THC by dry weight. Cannabis that exceeded this threshold was considered marijuana.

    The 1970 Controlled Substances Act ushered in the modern era of prohibition of marijuana and other drugs. Hemp remained technically legal, but because of its similarity to marijuana, it was listed as a Schedule I drug, alongside heroin and other substances deemed to have a high potential for abuse and no medical value.

    Because of hemp’s Schedule I status, the Drug Enforcement Administration tightly regulated its production. But hemp farmers have long argued that these regulations were excessive – and in 2018, Congress agreed. That year, lawmakers passed a farm bill that removed hemp from the Controlled Substances Act and legalized the manufacture and sale of hemp and its derivatives.

    The ABC News affiliate in San Diego reports on the 2018 farm bill from a local perspective.

    Crucially, the 2018 bill still defines hemp as all parts of the plant and its derivatives that have less than 0.3 percent delta-9 THC. But it left a loophole: While delta-9 is the most well-known form of THC, it’s not the only one. Other forms of THC, known as THC isomers, have similar effects. These isomers, like delta-8 and delta-10 THC, can be derived from the hemp plant, and like delta-9 THC, they can cause impairment. The 2018 Farm Bill legalized all of them.

    In 2023, sales of hemp-derived cannabinoids reached US$2.8 billion. Market growth has been accompanied by a rise in adverse health events. Chemists have expressed alarm at how some hemp products are made, and analyses of commercially available products have found them to contain heavy metals, residual solvents and pesticides.

    Given the lax regulatory environment, many public officials now question the lack of guardrails on this burgeoning hemp industry. As a result, officials and governments across the country are now enacting or considering policy changes.

    Some states are imposing age and advertising restrictions

    In 2023, 11.4% of 12th graders said they had used hemp-derived delta-8 THC in the past year. Easy access to any substance can encourage use, and THC can have negative impacts on the adolescent brain.

    While federal law prohibits the sale of tobacco and alcohol to individuals under 21, there is no similar national requirement for hemp. But at least 27 states that permit the sale of hemp-derived products now have minimum age requirements, and several others have pending legislation.

    Lessons from the tobacco market also demonstrate that advertising restrictions can reduce the use of legal but potentially harmful products. Most efforts to curtail hemp advertising focus on youth. Sixteen states restrict the use of packaging and marketing materials that may appeal to minors. Meanwhile, federal regulations also limit youth-targeted marketing.

    There are fewer restrictions on advertising to adults. The Food and Drug Administration does prohibit using unverified health claims to sell hemp products, but this standard gives the industry plenty of leeway. Hemp ads often tout their purported physical benefits, like reducing pain or improving sleep, or portray them as mood-boosters that can make one feel euphoric and aroused, with few downsides.

    Other states are establishing potency limits

    The use of products high in THC has been linked to greater risk of cannabis dependence and adverse mental health outcomes. Concerns about product potency have led all states with recreational marijuana markets to limit the amount of delta-9 THC in edible products. This threshold is typically around 10 milligrams, a dose that’s strong enough to affect most people.

    Hemp is a different story. To satisfy federal requirements, hemp just has to have less than 0.3% delta-9 THC by weight. This limit sounds low, but the weight-based metric does not account for heavier products, like food and drinks.

    For example, a 50-gram candy bar – roughly the size of a Snickers bar – with 150 milligrams of hemp-derived delta-9 THC is legal in the 34 states that don’t have milligram caps on hemp products. This is a dose 15 times higher than what any recreational marijuana market allows. Meanwhile, states that only restrict hemp’s delta-9 content also leave the door open to products with high amounts of other forms of THC.

    At least 13 states have responded to potency concerns by adding milligram caps on the total THC permitted in a single serving of a hemp product. Some of these limits are so low – 1 milligram or less in Connecticut, New York, Montana and Rhode Island – that one serving is unlikely to cause impairment.

    Enforcement is a wild card

    Only regulations that are enforced are effective, and states differ in the level of energy they devote to industry oversight.

    In Virginia, the Office of Hemp Enforcement has issued over $12 million in fines to noncompliant hemp retailers since its creation in 2023. On the other end of the spectrum, Massachusetts considers hemp-derived THC products illegal, but it has not provided local jurisdictions with funding for enforcement, resulting in continued availability of prohibited products.

    Some states with legal hemp markets have added additional sales taxes to help fund enforcement. In Nebraska, Missouri and Connecticut, attorneys general have sued hemp retailers for selling illegal items, marketing to minors and engaging in deceptive trade practices.

    As the hemp industry expands, so will concerns about how to protect public health. The demand for THC, and the market to supply it, continues to grow. If lawmakers want to develop industrywide safety standards or deal with the challenges of online marketplaces that sell hemp products to minors, it will take action from Washington. In the meantime, many states and policymakers are exploring an expansive middle ground between unfettered access and blanket bans.

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

    ref. A hazy legal landscape means people can get high on hemp products, even where pot is prohibited – https://theconversation.com/a-hazy-legal-landscape-means-people-can-get-high-on-hemp-products-even-where-pot-is-prohibited-247168

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI: PureSky Energy Announces Full Term Conversion of Largest-to-Date Solar Portfolio

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    DENVER, Feb. 25, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — PureSky Energy (PureSky), a leader in sustainable energy solutions and independent power producer, is proud to announce the term conversion of a 54.5 MWdc of solar paired with 7.4 MWh of DC-coupled energy storage portfolio with a market value in excess of $150 million, marking a significant milestone as the company’s largest portfolio of solar projects to date. This accomplishment not only reinforces PureSky’s commitment to high-quality renewable energy development but also sets the stage for further expansion of our solar portfolios, driving the transition to clean energy forward.

    The portfolio includes 12 solar projects across New York and Massachusetts. This achievement represents the culmination of PureSky Energy’s strategic evolution from acquiring solar projects primarily through mergers and acquisitions (M&A) to increasing greenfield development—ensuring the consistent quality and reliability of its expanding portfolio and maintaining a balance between acquisitions and greenfield development.

    The Massachusetts projects—Cotuit and Three Rivers—are greenfield developments totaling 8.9 MWdc and feature the entirety of the portfolio’s energy storage capacity. Meanwhile, the New York projects span seven sites acquired from Omni Navitas and three sites from EDF Renewables, illustrating PureSky Energy’s strategic and diversified approach to solar project acquisition and development.

    “This milestone highlights the exceptional quality of our portfolio and reflects the confidence our long-term partners place in our projects,” said Jared Donald, CEO of PureSky Energy. “The successful conversion of this portfolio enables us to continue delivering renewable energy solutions that exceed industry standards and reinvest in initiatives that drive sustainable energy growth, benefiting both communities and the environment.”

    The portfolio’s success is a testament to the collaborative efforts of PureSky Energy’s partners:

    • U.S. Bancorp Impact Finance, a subsidiary of U.S. Bank, acted as the tax equity investor.
    • KeyBanc Capital Markets served as the lead debt arranger.
    • CS Energy and EDF Renewables oversaw the construction of the majority of the New York projects with Dynamic Energy building the Massachusetts ones.
    • Empyrean, subsidiary of PureSky Energy, expertly managed procurement and equipment supply, and served as the contractor for BESS.

    “U.S. Bancorp Impact Finance is proud to support PureSky’s portfolio and play a role in accelerating the transition to clean energy,” said Environmental Finance Managing Director Darren Van’t Hof. “These projects highlight the power of collaboration in building a more sustainable future.”

    “We are honored to serve as the lead debt arranger for the Amp IV portfolio, supporting PureSky Energy in achieving this significant milestone,” said Tyler Nielsen, Director, KeyBanc Capital Markets Utilities Power and Renewable Energy Group. “Our involvement reflects our ongoing commitment to financing projects that advance renewable energy and deliver lasting benefits to communities and the environment.”

    This landmark achievement underscores PureSky Energy’s dedication to advancing renewable energy development through a robust strategy that is transitioning from solely M&A to a balanced mix of M&A and greenfield development, guaranteeing the long-term quality and impact of its portfolio. By successfully completing its largest solar portfolio to date, PureSky Energy is positioned to channel its resources and expertise into future projects that will continue to transform the energy landscape.

    About PureSky Energy:
    PureSky Energy is a leading developer, owner, and operator of US community solar, C&I and storage projects with headquarters in Denver, Colorado. Since entering the US market in 2016, the company has rapidly expanded its scale and currently operates a portfolio with generation capacity of approximately 233MW across forty-four sites or under-construction projects expected to be completed in the short term. The company has a large pipeline of solar and battery storage projects across existing and new US markets, placing the platform in a primary position within the distributed generation market. The company’s mission is to make clean energy accessible and affordable to local communities across the United States, while shaping a brighter, more sustainable future for generations to come.

    Website: www.pureskyenergy.com

    Host A Solar Farm: https://www.pureskyenergy.com/community-host

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/puresky-energy

    For media inquiries, please contact:

    Janet Janzen: marketing@pureskyenergy.com

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/dd3265f2-1554-4f18-b826-50306d0c9bdb

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI China: China’s all-round efforts to drive agricultural development

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

    BEIJING, Feb. 25 — With the release of China’s “No. 1 Central Document” for 2025, which outlines a series of enhanced measures aimed at advancing all-around rural revitalization, the country has reaffirmed its commitment to prioritizing and strengthening the agricultural sector.

    China remains committed to “opening a new chapter in advancing the development of agriculture, rural areas, and farmers,” Han Wenxiu, the Executive Deputy Director of the Office of the Central Committee for Financial and Economic Affairs, told a press conference on Monday.

    It is poised to significantly boost agricultural efficiency, invigorate rural areas, and raise farmers’ incomes by implementing targeted measures that address key priorities and pressing challenges, Han said.

    ENHANCING FOOD SUPPLY CAPACITY

    Given the tight balance of overall grain supply and demand in China, “efforts to boost grain production must not be relaxed,” Han said. He stressed improving the supply capacity of grain and other essential agricultural products and firmly ensuring food security.

    China will focus on increasing per-unit yields of grain by expanding projects aimed at improving these yields and intensifying the promotion of high-yield and efficient production models.

    China will also harness cutting-edge technologies to improve the efficiency and diversity of its food supply, leverage national land resources to expand food sources in multiple ways, and establish a long-term mechanism to prevent grain and food waste, according to Han.

    “Arable land is the foundation of ensuring food security,” Han said. With less than 10 percent of the planet’s arable land, China feeds one-fifth of the world’s population.

    To consolidate the foundation of food security, China will also strengthen its protection efforts for arable land and improve its quality. This will be done through measures such as strictly maintaining the quantity of the land and regulating land use, according to the landmark document released on Sunday.

    EXTENDING SUPPORT FOR LOW-INCOME GROUPS, UNDERDEVELOPED REGIONS

    China’s policy support will not stop after the conclusion of the five-year transition period dedicated to both consolidating and expanding achievements in poverty alleviation and integrating them with rural revitalization. Instead, the country will refine its support policies for low-income residents and underdeveloped areas, according to Han.

    Safeguarding the bottom line to prevent a large-scale lapse or relapse into poverty is not a task that belongs solely to 2025, the last year in the transition period, Han said. “The bottom line must be upheld persistently and permanently after the transition period.”

    China will strengthen support for low-income rural populations by enhancing social assistance as a safety net and emphasizing the stimulation of the internal driving force within this population group, according to Han.

    For underdeveloped rural regions, the country will implement targeted policy support, with a key focus on promoting their revitalization and development. Differentiated assistance will be provided through mechanisms such as collaboration between eastern and western regions, as well as targeted assistance, enabling these regions to gradually catch up in the modernization process.

    ENCOURAGING ENTREPRENEURSHIP IN RURAL REGIONS

    The key to rural revitalization lies in the talent, Han said, emphasizing that the talent pool needed to revitalize rural areas must be developed to address prominent issues in the process of China’s modernization.

    The improvements in rural infrastructure over recent years, along with factors such as a favorable ecological environment, a slower pace of life and lower living costs have attracted college graduates and white-collar talent to develop new forms of businesses in rural areas, Han said.

    Currently, the number of people returning to or relocating to rural areas to start businesses in China has exceeded 12 million, according to data released at the press conference.

    The document outlines plans to improve the mechanisms for cultivating and developing rural talent, emphasizing a combination of local training and external recruitment.

    On the one hand, China will strengthen technical and skill training for farmers and advancing initiatives to cultivate rural artisans. On the other hand, it will create a favorable entrepreneurship environment and improve services at grassroot levels, attracting a group of urgently needed professionals to support rural development.

    “By addressing concerns such as career development and social security, we can ensure that young people not only stay in rural areas but also thrive and achieve greater success there,” Han said.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI USA: UConn Landscape Architecture Connecting Bridgeport’s Waterfront

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    Bridgeport sits at the mouth of the Pequonnock River on Long Island Sound, providing it with the longest waterfront in the state.

    However, due to historical and ongoing under-resourcing, 70% of the waterfront is currently inaccessible. This has perpetuated racial and socioeconomic disparities that affect access to the ecosystem and public services in Connecticut.

    Researchers, students, and alumni from the College of Agriculture, Health and Natural Resources (CAHNR) are working to create and implement plans that would make waterfront areas accessible for Bridgeport residents. The faculty leads on this effort are Jill Desimini, director and associate professor of landscape architecture, and Sohyun Park, associate professor of landscape architecture.

    This work aims to make two key portions of Bridgeport’s waterfront accessible. The first is the area known as the “sliver by the river,” in downtown Bridgeport by the train station, and the second is along Yellow Mill Channel, on the east side of the city.

    “The impact on the community will be huge,” Park says. “In the past, they did not have access to the waterfront, and now we are opening the access points and revitalizing some vacant land and public spaces to be more resilient and socially functioning.”

    As part of their landscape architecture studio, undergraduate students were divided into groups to generate proposals for the areas which have served as the basis for actual work on these sites.

    “It was a really exciting project to get to be a part of,” Kayla Villareal ’25 (CAHNR) says. “Being able to see the evolution and implementation of past suggestions was extremely motivating and served as inspiration to the work produced by my cohort. The best part about the work we completed was seeing the impacts it could have in various communities in Connecticut, as well as other states in the future.”

    The goal is to not only create a continuous path of access to the waterfront, but to provide community services along the pathway as well. Some amenities included in the plan are kayak launches, benches, parks, and areas for fishing.

    The marshlands on the north side of the “sliver by the river” also have the potential to offer important ecosystem services such as improving water quality, erosion control, habitat, and flood abatement once restored.

    On the Yellow Mill side, the group has introduced native plants, pollinator gardens, parking, and increased accessibility to the existing waterfront park there. They have also proposed various site activation and place-making strategies, like art walk, painted asphalt, underpass gallery, pop-up skate park, educational signage, guerilla gardening, and more.

    “Their ultimate goal is to provide continuous access along the waterfront to the residents of Bridgeport, both to improve the ecological health of the waterfront and the human health of the residents,” Desimini says.

    Park says she hopes this work helps inspire community members to continue pushing to improve their neighborhoods.

    “You actually spur community engagement further if they see some color on the pavement,” Park says. “I hope the small things we do can have some snowball effect and engage more people in their neighborhood.”

    The nationally accredited landscape architecture program at UConn has a longstanding relationship with groups including Groundwork Bridgeport, Trust for Public Land, National Park Service, and the Connecticut chapter of the American Society of Landscape Architects, all of which have been partners for this effort.

    Within these organizations and beyond, many CAHNR alumni have been involved in the effort.

    “It’s an honor to be involved in such a transformative and beautiful project right in the city I grew up in,” says Ely-Anna Becerril ’21, landscape designer at William Kenny Associates, LLC. [My colleague] Tom Tavella and the students of the Landscape Architecture program provided the fantastic initial ideas and saw the potential for this space to be something special. I’m excited to help push this project forward to becoming a reality for the Bridgeport community to enjoy.”

    This project is funded by the City of Bridgeport and various grants from the National Park Service, National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, Long Island Sound Futures Fund, and the National Coastal Resiliency Fund.

    This work relates to CAHNR’s Strategic Vision area focused on Promoting Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Justice

     

    Follow UConn CAHNR on social media

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: State Leaders Announce Digitization of Plants and Animals Declaration Form

    Source: US State of Hawaii

    Office of the Governor — News Release — State Leaders Announce Digitization of Plants and Animals Declaration Form

    Posted on Feb 24, 2025 in Latest Department News, Newsroom, Office of the Governor Press Releases

    STATE OF HAWAIʻI 
    KA MOKU ʻĀINA O HAWAIʻI 

     
    JOSH GREEN, M.D. 
    GOVERNOR
    KE KIAʻĀINA 

    SYLVIA LUKE
    LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR
    KE KEʻENA O KA HOPE KIAʻĀINA

     

    STATE LEADERS ANNOUNCE DIGITIZATION OF PLANTS AND ANIMALS DECLARATION FORM

    ʻAkamai Arrival’ Pilot Program to Launch on March 1 on Select Domestic Flights

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    February 24, 2025

    HONOLULU – State leaders today announced the launch of ʻAkamai Arrival,’ a pilot program that will digitize Hawaiʻi’s Plants and Animals Declaration Form, streamlining the process for travelers arriving in the islands. The initiative, authorized under Act 196 (2024), marks a significant step toward modernizing Hawaiʻi’s biosecurity efforts, by improving form completion rates and strengthening protections against invasive species.

    Beginning March 1, 2025, the pilot program under the Hawaiʻi Department of Agriculture (HDOA) will roll out on select domestic flights in partnership with major airlines, including Alaska Airlines, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Hawaiian Airlines, Southwest Airlines and United Airlines. Participating airlines will integrate the digital form into their arrival processes, giving passengers a more efficient way to submit required agricultural declarations before landing in Hawaiʻi.

    “Protecting Hawaiʻi’s unique environment from invasive species is critical to our way of life, our economy, and our future. The ‘Akamai Arrival’ program is a forward-thinking approach that modernizes our biosecurity efforts while making it easier for travelers to comply with our agricultural protections. This initiative is another step toward preserving our islands for generations to come,” said Governor Josh Green, M.D.

    This concerted effort to modernize and adapt technology is an important step to further protect Hawaiʻi’s natural heritage. Lieutenant Governor Sylvia Luke, together with legislators, HDOA, airline partners, and stakeholders, developed the digital agriculture form pilot program. “This is what government should be doing — utilizing technology to improve our state processes and better serve the public. Every one of us, whether coming home or traveling to Hawaiʻi, is very familiar with filling out the paper agriculture form. By digitizing this form, we’re making compliance easier for travelers while using technology to protect what makes Hawaiʻi so special,” said Lieutenant Governor Luke.

    Airlines participating in the pilot have discretion over flight selection and implementation methods. The ʻAkamai Arrival’ website will serve as a hub for passengers, providing access to the digital form, flight information and an FAQ page to assist travelers.

    “U.S. airlines play a critical role in connecting travelers to Hawaiʻi, and the transition from paper to digital agriculture declaration forms is a significant step toward modernizing the travel experience. We’re proud to support the ‘Akamai Arrival’ program, making the arrival process more seamless and efficient for travelers,” said Sean Williams, Airlines for America vice president of State and Local Government Affairs.

    “The Department of Agriculture has been addicted to paper for nearly 60 years. Five years ago, I advocated for the digitization of the declaration form, but was met with resistance. Lawmakers had to pass a law last year to encourage the migration from paper to an app,” said Senator Glenn Wakai, who chairs the Senate Committee on Energy and Intergovernmental Affairs. “The ʻAkamai Arrival’ program will inform passengers about what’s not acceptable to bring to Hawaiʻi BEFORE they board the plane, rather than when they’re scrambling for a pen over the Pacific.”

    “Enhancing our state’s biosecurity efforts and protecting our islands from invasive species requires modern solutions, and the implementation of a digital form is long overdue,” said Representative Kirstin Kahaloa, chair of the House Committee on Agriculture and Food Systems. “I appreciate the collaboration among stakeholders to streamline the screening process and strengthen our state’s ability to ensure safe arrivals.”

    The pilot program will run from March 1 through May 31, 2025. Monthly progress updates will be shared with participating airlines and data collected will help determine potential expansions of the program in the future.

    For more information about the digital declaration form and the ʻAkamai Arrival’ initiative, visit: https://akamaiarrival.hawaii.gov/

    For questions from the public, please email: [email protected]

    A link to the fact sheet can be found here.
    The slides presented at the news conference can be seen here.
    Photos from today’s news conference can be found here.

    # # #

    Media Contacts:   
    Erika Engle
    Press Secretary
    Office of the Governor, State of Hawai‘i
    Office: 808-586-0120
    Email: [email protected] 

    Makana McClellan
    Director of Communications
    Office of the Governor, State of Hawaiʻi
    Cell: 808-265-0083
    Email: [email protected]

    Shari Nishijima
    Communications Director
    Office of the Lieutenant Governor
    Cell: 808-978-0867
    Email: [email protected]

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Office of the Governor — News Release — State Leaders Announce Digitization of Plants and Animals Declaration Form

    Source: US State of Hawaii

    Office of the Governor — News Release — State Leaders Announce Digitization of Plants and Animals Declaration Form

    Posted on Feb 24, 2025 in Latest Department News, Newsroom, Office of the Governor Press Releases

    STATE OF HAWAIʻI 
    KA MOKU ʻĀINA O HAWAIʻI 

     
    JOSH GREEN, M.D. 
    GOVERNOR
    KE KIAʻĀINA 

    SYLVIA LUKE
    LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR
    KE KEʻENA O KA HOPE KIAʻĀINA

     

    STATE LEADERS ANNOUNCE DIGITIZATION OF PLANTS AND ANIMALS DECLARATION FORM

    ʻAkamai Arrival’ Pilot Program to Launch on March 1 on Select Domestic Flights

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    February 24, 2025

    HONOLULU – State leaders today announced the launch of ʻAkamai Arrival,’ a pilot program that will digitize Hawaiʻi’s Plants and Animals Declaration Form, streamlining the process for travelers arriving in the islands. The initiative, authorized under Act 196 (2024), marks a significant step toward modernizing Hawaiʻi’s biosecurity efforts, by improving form completion rates and strengthening protections against invasive species.

    Beginning March 1, 2025, the pilot program under the Hawaiʻi Department of Agriculture (HDOA) will roll out on select domestic flights in partnership with major airlines, including Alaska Airlines, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Hawaiian Airlines, Southwest Airlines and United Airlines. Participating airlines will integrate the digital form into their arrival processes, giving passengers a more efficient way to submit required agricultural declarations before landing in Hawaiʻi.

    “Protecting Hawaiʻi’s unique environment from invasive species is critical to our way of life, our economy, and our future. The ‘Akamai Arrival’ program is a forward-thinking approach that modernizes our biosecurity efforts while making it easier for travelers to comply with our agricultural protections. This initiative is another step toward preserving our islands for generations to come,” said Governor Josh Green, M.D.

    This concerted effort to modernize and adapt technology is an important step to further protect Hawaiʻi’s natural heritage. Lieutenant Governor Sylvia Luke, together with legislators, HDOA, airline partners, and stakeholders, developed the digital agriculture form pilot program. “This is what government should be doing — utilizing technology to improve our state processes and better serve the public. Every one of us, whether coming home or traveling to Hawaiʻi, is very familiar with filling out the paper agriculture form. By digitizing this form, we’re making compliance easier for travelers while using technology to protect what makes Hawaiʻi so special,” said Lieutenant Governor Luke.

    Airlines participating in the pilot have discretion over flight selection and implementation methods. The ʻAkamai Arrival’ website will serve as a hub for passengers, providing access to the digital form, flight information and an FAQ page to assist travelers.

    “U.S. airlines play a critical role in connecting travelers to Hawaiʻi, and the transition from paper to digital agriculture declaration forms is a significant step toward modernizing the travel experience. We’re proud to support the ‘Akamai Arrival’ program, making the arrival process more seamless and efficient for travelers,” said Sean Williams, Airlines for America vice president of State and Local Government Affairs.

    “The Department of Agriculture has been addicted to paper for nearly 60 years. Five years ago, I advocated for the digitization of the declaration form, but was met with resistance. Lawmakers had to pass a law last year to encourage the migration from paper to an app,” said Senator Glenn Wakai, who chairs the Senate Committee on Energy and Intergovernmental Affairs. “The ʻAkamai Arrival’ program will inform passengers about what’s not acceptable to bring to Hawaiʻi BEFORE they board the plane, rather than when they’re scrambling for a pen over the Pacific.”

    “Enhancing our state’s biosecurity efforts and protecting our islands from invasive species requires modern solutions, and the implementation of a digital form is long overdue,” said Representative Kirstin Kahaloa, chair of the House Committee on Agriculture and Food Systems. “I appreciate the collaboration among stakeholders to streamline the screening process and strengthen our state’s ability to ensure safe arrivals.”

    The pilot program will run from March 1 through May 31, 2025. Monthly progress updates will be shared with participating airlines and data collected will help determine potential expansions of the program in the future.

    For more information about the digital declaration form and the ʻAkamai Arrival’ initiative, visit: https://akamaiarrival.hawaii.gov/

    For questions from the public, please email: [email protected]

    A link to the fact sheet can be found here.
    The slides presented at the news conference can be seen here.
    Photos from today’s news conference can be found here.

    # # #

    Media Contacts:   
    Erika Engle
    Press Secretary
    Office of the Governor, State of Hawai‘i
    Office: 808-586-0120
    Email: [email protected] 

    Makana McClellan
    Director of Communications
    Office of the Governor, State of Hawaiʻi
    Cell: 808-265-0083
    Email: [email protected]

    Shari Nishijima
    Communications Director
    Office of the Lieutenant Governor
    Cell: 808-978-0867
    Email: [email protected]

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Germany and WFP join forces to reach crisis-affected children in northern Togo with nutritious school meals

    Source: World Food Programme

    LOME – TOGO: The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) has welcomed a contribution of EUR 11 million from the Government of Germany, facilitated by the Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ).

    The funding channelled through the German Development Bank (KfW), will enable WFP to provide daily nutritious meals to 28,000 pre-school and primary school children in the Kara and Savanes regions of northern Togo.

    With Germany’s funding, WFP will rehabilitate school kitchens, provide fuel-efficient stoves, establish school gardens and grain milling units, and support nutrition education to children, parents and teachers, ensuring a holistic approach to food security, health, and education. 

    ““Through this collaboration with Germany, we are extending our activities to some of Togo’s most vulnerable populations, building sustainable systems that connects local production with school feeding, creating a powerful cycle of development.” said Dr Moïse BALLO, WFP’s Country Director and Representative in Togo. “Our school feeding programme not only improves children’s education and nutrition but also empowers local communities.”

    WFP will target 110 schools within communities hosting refugees and internally displaced persons (IDPs), from the spillover of the Sahel crisis. Food commodities for school meals will be sourced locally from smallholder farmers and women’s cooperatives, thereby stimulating the local economy. 

    “We are pleased to be able to work with WFP to make an important contribution to food security for children in a region that is affected by spillover of the Sahel crisis,” said Dr. Claudius FISCHBACH, German Ambassador to Togo. “Germany is supporting Togo and the other states in the Gulf of Guinea through various measures in the areas of stability, social cohesion and development. It is particularly important to us that the chosen approaches can be continued in a sustainable way.” 

    In collaboration with the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), and the Ministry of Agriculture and local organizations, WFP will provide agricultural inputs, equipment and technical training to 8,250 smallholder farmers and 1,000 members of food transformation cooperatives most of whom are women.

    WFP’s Home-Grown School Feeding programme in Togo targets 45,500 children in 160 primary schools in the northern regions of the country.

    #                 #                   #

    About WFP

    WFP is the world’s largest humanitarian organization, saving lives in emergencies and using food assistance to build a pathway to peace, stability and prosperity for people recovering from conflict, disasters, and the impact of climate change. 

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: The Department of Administrative Reforms and Public Grievances (DARPG) released the 33rd Monthly Report on Centralized Public Grievance Redress and Monitoring System (CPGRAMS) of Central Ministries/ Departments performance for the month of January, 2025

    Source: Government of India

    The Department of Administrative Reforms and Public Grievances (DARPG) released the 33rd Monthly Report on Centralized Public Grievance Redress and Monitoring System (CPGRAMS) of Central Ministries/ Departments performance for the month of January, 2025

    A total of 1,25,789 Grievances were Redressed by Central Ministries/Departments in January, 2025

    For the 31st month in a row, the monthly disposal crossed 1 lakh cases in the Central Secretariat

    Department of Posts, Department of Telecommunications, andDepartment of Revenuetopped in Group A category in the rankings released for the month of January, 2025

    Department of Land Resources, Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs and Department of Heavy Industry topped in Group B category in the rankings released for the month of January, 2025

    Posted On: 25 FEB 2025 4:19PM by PIB Delhi

    The Department of Administrative Reforms and Public Grievances (DARPG) released the Centralized Public Grievance Redress and Monitoring System (CPGRAMS) monthly report for January 2025, which provides a detailed analysis of types and categories of public grievances and the nature of disposal. This is the 33rdreport on Central Ministries/Departments published by DARPG.

    The progress for January 2025 indicates 1,25,789 Grievances Redressed by Central Ministries/Departments. The Average Grievance Disposal Time in the Central Ministries/Departments from 1st January to 31stJanuary 2025 is 15 days. These reports are part of the 10-step CPGRAMS reform process which was adopted by DARPG to improve the quality of disposal and reduce the timelines.

    The report provides the data for new users registered through the CPGRAMS Portal in the month of January 2025. A total of 56,214new users registered in the month of January 2025, with maximum registrations from Uttar Pradesh (8,843) registrations.

    The said report also provides the Ministry/Department-wise analysis on the grievances registered through Common Service Centres in January 2025. CPGRAMS has been integrated with the Common Service Centre (CSC) portal and is available at more than 5 lakh CSCs, associating with 2.5 lakh Village Level Entrepreneurs (VLEs). 5,863 grievances were registered through CSCs in the month of January 2025. It also highlights the major issues/categories for which the maximum grievances were registered through CSCs.

    In January 2025, the Feedback Call Centre collected 53,821feedbacks. 33,028 feedbacks (61%) were collected for Central Ministries/Departments by the Feedback Call Centre.

    The following are the Key Highlights of the DARPG’s monthly CPGRAMS report for January 2025 for Central Ministries/ Departments:

    1. PG Cases:
    • In January 2025, 1,25,442 PG cases were received on the CPGRAMS portal, 1,25,789 PG cases were redressed and there exists a pendency of 58,425PG cases, as of 31stJanuary 2025.
    1. PG Appeals:
    • In January 2025, 21,175appeals were received and 20,086 appeals were disposed.
    • The Central Secretariat has a pendency of 25,160 PG Appeals at the end of January 2025.
    1. Grievance Redressal Assessment and Index (GRAI) – January 2025
    • Department of Posts, Department of Telecommunications, and Department of Revenue are amongst the top performers in the Grievance Redressal Assessment & Index within the Group A (more than equal to 500 grievances) for January 2025.
    • Department of Land Resources, Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs and Department of Heavy Industry are amongst the top performers in the Grievance Redressal Assessment & Index within the Group B (less than 500 grievances) for January 2025.

    The report also features 4 success stories of effective grievance resolution from Central Ministries/Departments:

    1. Grievance of Shri Selva Kumar – HDFC Account under debit freeze

    Shri Selva Kumar received a notification from HDFC Bank stating that a Debit/Withdrawal Block had been placed on his account due to non-compliance with account guidelines. Following this, he visited the branch, completed the e-KYC process, and submitted the required documents as instructed. Despite repeating this process three times at the bank’s request, his debit account remained frozen. Upon further inquiry, the bank informed Shri Kumar that the freeze was due to excessive UPI P2P transactions. The branch manager suggested converting his Farmer’s Savings Account into a regular Savings Account as an alternative solution. However, this conversion was not processed, and the account’s debit freeze remained unresolved. Frustrated by the delays and lack of resolution, Shri Kumar escalated the matter by filing a grievance on the CPGRAMS Portal, seeking immediate action. In response, HDFC Bank provided a written confirmation stating that the debit freeze on his account had been successfully removed. The grievance was resolved within a week to complainant’s satisfaction.

    1. Grievance of Shri Ram Prasad Dhakar – Transfer of balance to new HDFC Smart Hub Vypaar Prepaid Card

    Shri Ram Prasad Dhakar reported that his HDFC Smart Hub Vypaar Prepaid Card, which had a balance of Rs. 10,500, was accidentally lost. He promptly lodged a complaint with the customer care center and received a new card. However, the balance of Rs. 10,500 from the lost card was not credited to the new card. Despite filing multiple complaints with the HDFC Branch Manager over the past two years, the issue remained unresolved. Frustrated by the lack of action, Shri Dhakar raised a grievance on the CPGRAMS Portal, seeking a prompt resolution. In response, HDFC Bank provided a written confirmation that the balance of Rs. 10,500 had been successfully transferred from the lost card to the new one. The issue was resolved within two weeks, and Shri Dhakar praised the CPGRAMS platform for its efficient and effective grievance redressal mechanism.

    1. Grievance of Shri Rama Shankar Singh – Non-receipt of gratuity payment

    Shri Rama Shankar Singh, who retired as Chief Travelling Ticket Inspector (CCTT) from Northeast Frontier Railways on 30th June 2024, faced delays in receiving his gratuity amount of approximately Rs. 16 lakhs, despite having submitted all the required No Dues certificates. Seeking intervention for the prompt release of his gratuity along with applicable interest, he filed a grievance on the CPGRAMS Portal. In response, the gratuity amount of Rs. 16,33,500 was transferred to Shri Singh, resolving the grievance within 10 days to his utmost satisfaction.

    1. Grievance of Smt. Swati – Removal of EMI lock from device

    Smt. Swati purchased a mobile phone on EMI, financed by Bajaj Finance. Despite completing all the EMI payments, her phone was locked by the financier. Seeking immediate resolution, she filed a grievance on the CPGRAMS portal. In response, Bajaj Finance confirmed in a written reply that the loan had been successfully closed and the EMI lock has been removed from her device. The grievance was successfully resolved to complainant’s satisfaction.

    ***

    NKR/PSM

    (Release ID: 2106128) Visitor Counter : 58

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: TRIFED signs MoUs with National Institute of Fashion Technology and Himachal Pradesh Horticulture Produce Marketing and Processing Corporation Ltd for facilitating tribal entrepreneurship

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Posted On: 25 FEB 2025 4:08PM by PIB Delhi

    In a significant move to transcend from B2C to B2B approach for tribal marketing, Tribal Cooperative Marketing Development Federation of India Ltd (TRIFED), under the Ministry of Tribal Affairs, has entered into a strategic partnership with NIFT, and HPMC to facilitate tribal businesses. To take it forward, Memoranda of Understanding (MoUs) were signed on 24th February in New Delhi, marking a pivotal step in facilitating the implementation of the B2B approach and augmentation of the tribal product market.

    The MoUs were signed in the presence of Managing Director of TRIFED Shri Ashish Chatterjee and NIFT Director General Ms Tanu Kashyap during the ongoing flagship event ‘Aadi Mahotsav’, held at Major Dhyan Chand National Stadium in the National Capital from 16 to 24 February 2025. The NIFT MoU was signed and exchanged between TRIFED General Manager Shri Sandeep Pahalwan and NIFT Director Head Office Mr Gaurav Mishra.  The HPMC MoU was signed and exchanged between TRIFED General Manager Ms Mamta Sharma and HPMC General Manager Shri Sunny Sharma.

    The principal objective of the MoU with NIFT is to facilitate the product curation and design development of the handloom and handicraft products of the tribal artisans. The HPMC will assist in augmenting technology and tertiary processing of horticulture and minor forest products.

    President of India Smt Droupadi Murmu had inaugurated the festival on February 16, 2025, in the august presence of Shri Jual Oram, Union Minister for Tribal Affairs; Shri Durga Das Uikey, MoS Tribal Affairs and Ms Bansuri Swaraj, Member of Parliament.

    About TRIFED:

    * TRIFED is an organization under the Ministry of Tribal Affairs, Government of India, dedicated to the socio-economic development of tribal communities through the marketing development of tribal products.

    About NIFT:

    *NIFT typically refers to the National Institute of Fashion Technology, which is a premier fashion institute in India. Established in 1986, NIFT offers undergraduate, postgraduate, and doctoral programs in various fields related to fashion, design, technology, and management. The institute is known for its comprehensive curriculum, which combines creative design, technical expertise, and managerial skills.

    About HPMC:

    *Himachal Pradesh Horticulture Produce Marketing and Processing Corporation Ltd (HPMC) is a state government undertaking established to support the horticulture sector in Himachal Pradesh, India. Founded in 1974, the corporation aims to facilitate the marketing and processing of horticultural produce from the region, which is known for its diverse range of fruits and vegetables.

    ***

    Pawan Singh Faujdar/Divyanshu Kumar

    (Release ID: 2106121) Visitor Counter : 52

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Government committed to fostering business climate, enhance Ease of Doing Business: Union Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Government committed to fostering business climate, enhance Ease of Doing Business: Union Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal

    PM’s visit to USA, France paved the way for greater investment and collaboration: Shri Goyal

    Small & Medium enterprises have a transformative role in driving Viksit Bharat: Shri Goyal

    Posted On: 25 FEB 2025 5:02PM by PIB Delhi

    The Centre is committed to creating a favourable investment climate, ensuring regulatory stability, and enhancing the Ease of Doing Business (EoDB) in the country. This was stated by Union Minister of Commerce & Industry Shri Piyush Goyal during his virtual address at the Pune International Business Summit 2025, which was organised by Mahratta Chamber of Commerce, Industries, and Agriculture (MCCIA) on January 24, 2025.

    The Minister stressed that Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi’s recent visits to the USA and France have paved the way for greater investment and enhanced collaborations. Emphasising that the 2-day summit will delve into emerging trade trends, build robust alliances and highlight the transformative role of Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) in driving Viksit Bharat, Shri Goyal pointed out that representatives from over 20 countries will participate at the event, reflecting global confidence in India’s resilience.

    Minister Goyal emphasised that the Union Budget reinforces its commitments with a ₹10k Cr Fund of Funds for Startups and a Deep Tech Fund empowering entrepreneurs. He further stressed that a significant investment committed towards R&D with an initial estimation of Rs 20,000 crore for Anusandhan National Research Foundation (ANRF) along with a high-level committee, an investment-friendly index & Jan Vishwas 2.0 further bolster trust-based governance.

    Noting that Pune known as the ‘Detroit of the East’ is the hub of innovation, the Minister stressed that the city is setting benchmarks across industries, making it the ideal venue to host events that foster collaborations and drive India’s growth story.

    Shri Goyal praised MCCIA for bringing together an inspiring confluence of industry leaders and visionaries and said that the 90-year old Association has played a transformative role in fueling progress, empowering entrepreneurs and driving growth across Maharashtra and India.

    ***

    Abhijith Narayanan/Asmitabha Manna

    (Release ID: 2106145) Visitor Counter : 26

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI: Castellum, Inc. Announces Its GTMR Subsidiary Has Been Selected as a SCI MAC Vendor

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    VIENNA, Va., Feb. 25, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Castellum, Inc. (NYSE-American: CTM) (“Castellum” or “CTM”), a cybersecurity, electronic warfare, and software engineering services company focused on the federal government, announces that its Global Technology and Management Resources, Inc. (“GTMR”) subsidiary has been selected as a Special Compartmented Information Multiple Award Contract (“SCI MAC”) vendor, supporting the Intelligence Division of Naval Air Warfare Center – Aircraft Division (“NAWCAD”). This single pool unrestricted Indefinite Delivery Indefinite Quantity (“IDIQ”) contract, which was effective as of February 21, 2025, has a ceiling of $249 Million that will be shared among the selected awardees on the SCI MAC.

    Castellum/GTMR will engage with a wide range of customers across the U.S. Department of Defense, providing analytical, technical, and managerial efforts in the areas of acquisition, analysis, research and engineering, test and evaluation, logistics, training, and program management, as well as IT and Software Development Support. Castellum/GTMR will support Naval Air Systems Command (“NAVAIR”) across all aspects of the Acquisition Life Cycle of various platforms and systems, as well as intelligence and threat support to numerous research, development, test, and evaluation activities. This contract vehicle is intended to provide general contractor support services requiring access to intelligence and threat information at various classification levels to enable NAVAIR, subordinate Commands, Program Executive Offices, and subordinate Programs to execute their mission.

    “Another important strategic win for our CTM Team as we continue our strong momentum to posture CTM, through our subsidiary companies of GTMR, SSI and Corvus, for vigorous and enduring organic growth. The federal government has increasingly shaped its acquisition strategy over the past few years to leverage IDIQ MAC’s and on follow Task Orders as their primary acquisition strategy, and Government Contracting companies must win an ‘invitation to a seat at the ‘table’ to be able to compete for new opportunities. This win is especially significant as we will have that all-important ‘seat at the table’ to help support one of our primary and strategic mission customers and their vital classified programs that directly impact our warfighters and their ability to ensure our national security. This is precisely where we want to be as CTM: helping to build as many essential and strategically enduring opportunities as we can to support mission-critical programs with our world-class CTM team and bring our unmatched technology services and solutions to our warfighters,” said Glen Ives, President and Chief Executive Officer of Castellum.

    About Castellum, Inc.:

    Castellum, Inc. (NYSE-American: CTM) is a cybersecurity, electronic warfare, and software engineering services company focused on the federal government – https://castellumus.com/.

    Cautionary Statement Concerning Forward-Looking Statements:

    This release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. These forward-looking statements represent the Company’s expectations or beliefs concerning future events and can generally be identified by the use of statements that include words such as “estimate,” “project,” “believe,” “anticipate,” “shooting to,” “intend,” “plan,” “foresee,” “likely,” “will,” “would,” “appears,” “goal,” “target” or similar words or phrases. Forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements regarding the Company’s expectations for revenue growth and new customer opportunities, improvements to cost structure, and profitability. Forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements regarding the Company’s expectations for revenue growth and new customer opportunities including opportunities arising from its contracts with SCI MAC and NAVAIR and other customers, improvements to cost structure, and profitability. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks, uncertainties, and other factors, many of which are outside of the Company’s control, that could cause actual results to differ materially from the results expressed or implied in the forward-looking statements, including, among others: the Company’s ability to compete against new and existing competitors; its ability to effectively integrate and grow its acquired companies; its ability to identify additional acquisition targets and close additional acquisitions; the impact on the Company’s revenue due to a delay in the U.S. Congress approving a federal budget, operating under a prolonged continuing resolution, government shutdown, or breach of the debt ceiling, as well as the imposition by the U.S. government of sequestration in the absence of an approved budget; the ability of the U.S. federal government to unilaterally cancel a contract with or without cause, and more specifically, the potential impact of the U.S. DOGE Service Temporary Organization on government spending and terminating contracts for convenience. For a more detailed description of these and other risk factors, please refer to the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K and its Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q and other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) which can be viewed at www.sec.gov. All forward-looking statements are inherently uncertain, based on current expectations and assumptions concerning future events or future performance of the Company. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which are only predictions and speak only as of the date hereof. The Company expressly disclaims any intent or obligation to update any of the forward-looking statements made in this release or in any of its SEC filings except as may be otherwise stated by the Company.

    Contact:

    Glen Ives, President and Chief Executive Officer
    Phone: (703) 752-6157
    info@castellumus.com

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/8e355a09-de05-4150-b0bf-af06a2535f06

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Environment Secretary Steve Reed – NFU Conference speech

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    Speech

    Environment Secretary Steve Reed – NFU Conference speech

    Speech by Environment Secretary Steve Reed at the NFU Conference

    Thank you very much Tom for inviting me to speak today.  

    I’ve been to the NFU Conference before of course – but this is my first time attending as the Secretary of State for Defra. I want to personally thank Tom for our work together since I took up this role last July.  

    You were the first visitor to my office after the election and you’ve been back more since then than anyone else since. That conversation between us is invaluable as we navigate the farming transition together. 

    And I’m grateful for your views Tom – even where we’ve disagreed.  

    You set that out in your speech and I was listening to it, plain speaking as you always do. And I know it’s reflected here today, and the protests in Westminster and around the country. But even if the conversation gets difficult – I will always show up to have it. Because I respect this union and I respect British farming.

    Now, I can’t give the answer I know many of you want on inheritance tax. But I want you to know that I understand the strength of feeling in the room and in the sector, we can see and example of that right in front of me right now. And I am sorry it’s a decision that we’ve had to take.   

    Like I said I am always going to turn up to have the conversation with you, there’s an opportunity to ask questions afterwards and it might be better to ask them in that way because I have an awful lot that I think will be of interest to other people who are here in the room today that might want to hear what I have to say about that.

    Now I’ve heard many farmers describing that decision as ‘the final straw’ – and the truth is those straws have been piling up for many years. Tom you were outlining many of them in your speech.

    This sector is facing high input costs, tight margins, and unfairness in the supply chain. You’ve struggled to get enough workers to pick your fruit and veg. Frankly, you’ve been sold out in past trade deals. Farmland is increasingly at risk from severe flooding and drought.  

    And this all comes as we face the biggest transition for farming in generations, moving away from the Basic Payment Scheme to more sustainable methods of farming. 

    The underlying problem in this sector is that farmers do not make enough money for the hard work and commitment that they put in.   

    I will consider my time as Secretary of State a failure if I do not improve profitability for farmers up and down this country. 

    Today I can announce I will set up a new farming profitability unit within the department to drive that goal. I want to outline what the Government is doing to tackle the deep-rooted problems holding the sector back. Because time and again, I hear farmers say that they do not make a fair profit for the food they produce. And it is only by overcoming these long-standing challenges that we can create the conditions for your farming businesses to succeed. Achieving this starts by treating farms as the businesses they are. That’s something, in my view, the previous government forgot.  

    Farmers have repeatedly told me they want to stand on their own two feet. They are proud people and rightly so. But it is paternalistic and patronising for government to treat farmers as if they are not operating in a marketplace in which they need to turn a decent profit. 

    I worked in business for 16 years, with responsibility every year for driving up profit and driving down cost. British farming has some of the hardest working, most creative people anywhere in the British workforce. But a sector that isn’t profitable doesn’t have a future. I know that from my own long experience in business.   

    My focus is on ensuring farming becomes more profitable – because that is the best way to make your businesses viable for the future. And that’s how we ensure the long-term food security this country needs.   

    This approach will underpin our 25 Year Farming Roadmap and our Food Strategy, where we will work in partnership with farmers to make farming and food production sustainable and profitable. We will work with farmers and stakeholders to build the roadmap together, covering every part of the sector, and the first workshops will start next week. 

    The roadmap stands on three principles. 

    First, a sector that has food production at its core. The role of farming will always be to produce the food that feeds our nation. The instability we see across the world shows us why it’s so important we help farmers to get this right.  

    Second, a sector where farm businesses are more resilient in withstanding the shocks that periodically disrupt farming – severe flooding, drought, animal disease. We will help farmers who want to diversify their income to put more money into their business so they can survive these more difficult times when they come.   

    Third, a sector that recognises restoring nature is not in competition with sustainable food production, but is essential to it. 

    It is only by pursuing all three of these principles – and recognising that farms are businesses that need to be profitable, that we can guarantee national food security and a thriving food production and farming sector.  

    Our New Deal for Farmers is supporting farmers to produce food sustainably and profitably.  

    It won’t all happen overnight, but we are already making changes. 

    Tom has repeatedly told me farmers need certainty about seasonal workers. I’ve listened Tom, and I’m pleased to announce that we’re extending the Seasonal Worker visas for five years. That on it’s own is not the long-term solution. We will reduce the number of seasonal workers coming to the UK in the future.  

    But I recognise your business needs stability over the coming years as we work at pace to embrace innovation, develop the agri-tech and invest in farming practices so you can reduce your reliance on seasonal workers as quickly as possible. 

    We are making the Supply Chain fairer, with new regulations for the pig sector coming in by the end of next month in March to make sure contracts clearly set out expectations and only allow changes if they’ve agreed by all parties. We are engaging with industry on similar proposals for eggs and fresh produce. 

    For the first time ever, we are measuring where the public sector buys food from so we can use the Government’s own purchasing power to back British produce wherever we can. I have worked with my colleague Pat McFadden in the Cabinet Office to create new requirements for government catering contracts to favour high-quality, high-welfare products that British producers are well placed to meet.  

    This means British farmers and producers can compete for a fairer share of the £5 billion pounds a year the public sector spends on food. That’s money straight into farmers’ bank accounts to boost turnover and boost profits.  

    Ours is an outward-facing trading nation. But I want to be clear, we will never lower our food standards in trade agreements. We will promote robust standards nationally and internationally and will always consider whether overseas produce has an unfair advantage. British farming deserves a level playing field where you can compete and win and that is what you’ll get. We will use the full range of powers at our disposal to protect our most sensitive sectors. 

    Innovation and technology will help farmers produce more food more sustainably and more profitably. I’m delighted to announce the legislation to implement the Precision Breeding Act for plants in England has been laid in Parliament today. This offers huge potential to transform the plant breeding sector in England by enabling innovative products to be commercialised in years instead of in decades, and we are reinstating the Precision Breeding Industry Working Group so the whole food supply chain can work together to bring new food and feed products to market faster. 

    We are investing in the UK Agri-Technology sector with a further £110 million pounds in farming grants being announced today. In Spring we will launch new competitions under our Farming Innovation Programme for groundbreaking research that will help the sector transition towards net zero, and unlock opportunities from the Precision Breeding Act.  

    This is not just for the biggest farms. We will help farms of any size access technology that makes a real difference to the bottom-line over the years ahead. Like the chemical-free cleaning for integrated milking equipment by Oxi-Tech – funded through FIP, which boosts profits by lowering energy costs and chemical use. Our new ADOPT programme will fund farmer-led trials that bridge the gap between these new technologies and their use in the real world,  showing farmers that their investments in technology will deliver financial returns and boost profits. And once technologies and equipment hit the market, we are making them available through the Farming Equipment and Technology Fund. Products like the electric weeder developed by Rootwave to reduce chemical use. We will launch another opportunity this Spring to bring more products to the farmgate. 

    Farms must be resilient to future challenges if they are to remain financially viable and strengthen food security. That includes severe flooding and droughts through to animal disease, and geopolitical tensions that increase demands on our land for energy generation. 

    I know new tech doesn’t bring the same benefits for every type of farm. We are investing to help farm businesses build resilience against animal diseases that can devastate livelihoods and threaten our entire economy. Like the Bluetongue Virus, Avian Flu, or the recent case of Foot and Mouth that we saw in Germany. 

    That’s why we’re investing £208 million pounds to set up a new National Biosecurity Centre, modernising the Animal and Plant Health Agency facilities at Weybridge, to protect farmers, food producers and exporters from disease outbreaks that can wipe out businesses in a moment. 

    We are helping keepers of cattle, sheep and pigs in England improve the health, welfare and productivity of their animals by expanding the fully funded farm visits offer. 

    Tom had raised with me, and he just did in his speech, the risk from illegal meat imports. More than 92,000 thousand kilograms of illegal meat products were seized at ports across the UK over the last year. They carry huge risk of diseases such as African Swine Fever and Foot and Mouth getting into the country. We can’t tolerate this.   

    I am working with the Home Office and Border Force on plans to seize the cars, vans, trucks and coaches used by criminal gangs to smuggle illegal meat into our country and crush them so they can’t be used again.   

    I’ve listened to your concerns about other forms of crime as well. Crime damages farm profitability as you are forced to wait for farm or construction machinery to be replaced, or clear rubbish that has been dumped in your gateways or on your land. The National Rural Crime Unit is already supporting forces to tackle rural crime around the country.   

    To strengthen our approach and protect your profits, the Home Secretary Yvette Cooper will lay the legislation this year to better protect agricultural equipment like all-terrain vehicles, by requiring immobilisers and forensic marking as standard.  

    At the Oxford Farming Conference earlier this year, I announced new ways to help farmers remain profitable and viable, even in a challenging harvest. We will consult on national planning reforms this Spring to make it quicker for farmers to build new buildings, barns and other infrastructure to boost food production.  And ensure permitted development rights work for farms to convert larger barns into a farm shop, holiday let, or a sports facility if that suits their business planning. We will get red tape out of the way so you can invest to become more profitable.   

    I’m working with Ed Miliband and the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero so more farm businesses can connect their own electricity generation to the grid much faster, so you can sell surplus energy and diversify your income.   

    The third element of our vision is nature. Restoring nature is vital to food production, not in competition with it. It is healthy soils, abundant pollinators and clean water that are the foundations farm businesses that they rely on to produce high crop yields and turn over a profit. Without nature thriving, there can be no long-term food security. 

    I want to thank everyone – upland, tenant, grassland farmers and others – everyone who is involved in our farming schemes. Almost 50 thousand farm businesses are now in schemes and around half of farmed land in England is being managed to enhance nature while producing food. 

    I recognise the frustration when we had to pause the Capital Grants offer last year without proper warning because of unprecedented demand. I promised to update you as soon as I could. And I can confirm today that every application submitted for capital grants before the pause in November will be taken forward, and following this, we will reopen the ELM capital grants offer this summer. 

    I’m also pleased to announce that we’re investing £30 million pounds to increase payment rates in Higher Level Stewardship with immediate effect to bring them more closely in line with our other farming schemes. Something the NFU and others have long called for. You just called for it again, Tom. These farmers are the pioneers of nature-friendly farming, often based in upland areas. They deliver high-quality environmental outcomes; now, finally, they will get a fair price for their work.  

    There’s a lot to be done to make British farming profitable and viable for the long term. I know we can only get there if we build the future together.   

    We will work with Tom, the NFU and farmers around the country to support farmers to keep producing the food we love to eat. This requires a new approach that recognises farms are businesses, and businesses need to turn a fair profit.  

    I’ll play my part in creating the conditions for that to happen. I know you’ll play your part in building resilient businesses that will innovate and succeed. Together, we will overcome the challenges this sector faces and give British farming the bright future this country knows you deserve.

    Updates to this page

    Published 25 February 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Historic road to World Heritage site transformed

    Source: New South Wales Government 2

    Headline: Historic road to World Heritage site transformed

    Published: 25 February 2025

    Released by: Minister for Regional Transport and Roads


    The Minns and Albanese Labor Governments have partnered with Balranald Shire Council to deliver a major road upgrade which is improving safety and access to the World Heritage Mungo National Park and Willandra Lakes Region.

    Marma Box Creek Road is a critical link to the World Heritage listed sites in remote south-western New South Wales and historically, around 26 kilometres of the road was dirt.

    Now thanks to a $3.25 million investment from the NSW Government’s Fixing Local Roads program and $900,000 from Balranald Shire Council, a 23.1 kilometre stretch of the road has been sealed.

    Additionally, with investment from the Australian Government’s Roads to Recovery program of over $1.35 million, council is working to seal the final 2.9 kilometres of Marma Box Creek Road before the end of 2025, weather permitting.

    These upgrades will significantly reduce road closures during wet weather and improve safety for local farmers, families and school students.

    Tourists who visit the site will also benefit from safer journeys in the world-famous region where Mungo Lady and Mungo Man were discovered.

    For the Mutthi Mutthi, Paakantji and Ngyimpaa people, the 40,000-year-old remains, and other evidence of their ancestors found in the area are an important part of their communal history.

    The remains of Mungo Lady were returned to Lake Mungo in 1992, while Mungo Man’s remains were repatriated in 2017, both via Marma Box Creek Road.

    Quotes attributable to Minister for Regional Transport and Roads Jenny Aitchison:

    “The upgraded Marma Box Creek Road represents more than just improved tourism and freight infrastructure; it signifies a crucial link to the ancient cultural heritage of First Peoples.

    “This investment not only enhances access to the area but also supports the preservation and sharing of Indigenous history dating back over 40,000 years.

    “By facilitating safer and more accessible travel, this initiative promises to enrich tourism experiences and foster greater appreciation for the profound cultural significance of this unique landscape.”

    Quotes attributable to Deborah O’Neill, Senator for New South Wales:

    “This is a very special part of the world and a place that all Australians can be proud of.

    “The Australian Government’s Roads to Recovery program provides critical funding directly to local councils for maintenance and upgrades like these works for Marma Box Creek Road. Investments like this mean better local roads for residents, and for tourists – and less pressure on councils and ratepayers.”

    Quotes attributable to Member for Murray, Helen Dalton:

    “Government investment in maintaining and upgrading rural and remote transport infrastructure is vital to keeping our communities connected, and for their economic growth. It’s reassuring to see continued investment in rural and remote NSW.

    “Mungo National Park is a spectacular location in my electorate, a significant cultural site and hidden gem.

    “It’s fantastic that the government is making this incredible part of the world more accessible for us to improve our knowledge of the heritage, culture and history of our First Nations people.”

    Quotes attributable to Balranald Shire Council Mayor, Cr Louie Zaffina:

    “This road is ‘the gateway’ to major tourism attractions in the area and an integral freight route for the area’s mining interests and local farms.

    “Ensuring the road’s safety and resilience supports the longevity of the significant economic benefits and employment opportunities that are fed back into the nearby communities through these industries.”

    Quotes attributable to Tanya Charles, Discovery Ranger at Mungo National Park:

    “The improved all weather access to Mungo National Park and the Willandra Lakes World Heritage Area brings added safety for visitors, tour operators, local and staff using the new road.”

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI: Barnwell Industries, Inc. Informs Ned Sherwood of Defective and Insufficient Director Nomination Notice and Investigation of Circumstances that May Have Triggered Shareholder Rights Plan

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Actions Continue Ned Sherwood’s Long History of Disruption, Breaches of Settlement Agreements and Blatant Disregard for Established Bylaws and Shareholder Protections

    Board Forms Executive Committee to Protect Shareholder Interests

    Executive Committee Believes Sherwood’s Nomination of Himself, His Friends and His Affiliates Underscores Desire to Take Control of Barnwell at Shareholders’ Expense and Without Paying a Premium for Control

    HONOLULU, Feb. 25, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Barnwell Industries, Inc. (NYSE American: BRN) (“Barnwell” or the “Company”) today announced that it has informed Ned Sherwood, a shareholder who recently submitted a control slate of five nominees comprising friends and affiliates, that his nomination notice is defective and insufficient. Sherwood’s nomination notice fails to include material information required by the Company’s bylaws, and in light of these material deficiencies and omissions required both by the bylaws and federal securities regulations, the Executive Committee of the Barnwell Board of Directors is strongly inclined to reject the nomination notice as defective and insufficient and to disqualify Sherwood’s nominees.

    In light of the inherent conflicts of interest of Sherwood’s candidates, one of who is a current Board member, the Board has formed an Executive Committee comprising independent Vice Chairman, Kenneth Grossman, independent director Joshua Horowitz and Executive Chairman, Alexander Kinzler, to protect the interests of all other shareholders.

    The Executive Committee has requested that a Special Committee consisting of independent directors Grossman and Horowitz investigate, among other things, the facts and circumstances of the relationship between Sherwood and his board nominee, Ben Pierson, who has privately purchased shares of Barnwell while also currently serving as the Chief Investment Officer of Sherwood’s family office, to determine whether a distribution under the Company’s Shareholder Rights Plan has been triggered.

    Sherwood is Nominating Himself, His Friends and His Business Associates to
    Steal Control of the Company

    Notwithstanding the obvious conflicts, the Board remains open to considering new candidates and intends to vet the individuals proposed by Sherwood through its usual governance process. However, the Executive Committee cautions shareholders that a preliminary review shows clearly that two of the four nominees other than Sherwood cannot be expected to exercise judgement independent of Sherwood, and three of Sherwood’s five nominees have no public company Board experience.

    • Ben Pierson has been employed by the Sherwood Family Office as its Chief Investment Officer since 2021.
    • Doug Woodrum has been a Director at Barnwell since 2020 as Sherwood’s designee having joined the Board following an earlier proxy contest and then through a prior settlement with the Company. Woodrum has been the mouthpiece for all of Sherwood’s misguided policy proposals, including the sale of assets at fire sale prices and various attempts at co-opting day-to-day control, which have only resulted in damaging management morale and creating distrust of Sherwood’s motives, as well as incurring significant costs for the Company to address these matters.
    • Woodrum has been reprimanded on multiple occasions for leaking confidential board matters to Sherwood. Woodrum has also attempted to end-run the Board of Directors by directly interfering with management. Sherwood has stated many times he would elevate Woodrum to CEO or CFO, but no member of management or director not affiliated with Sherwood has endorsed or supports Woodrum as qualified for either position.

    The Company further notes that Sherwood’s nomination of a control slate continues his long history of disrupting the Company’s governance processes and interfering with the Company’s operations, while creating significant expense to the Company. Sherwood’s nomination of himself, his friends and business associates, without any credible plan for the Company and without paying a premium to shareholders for control, flies directly in the face of shareholder interests.

    Sherwood and His Director Appointees Have Hid Investments and
    Acted to Intentionally Undermine Management and the Board

    • Sherwood made a significant investment in a Canadian Oil and Gas venture founded and operated by one of his former director designees, which investment was only belatedly and incompletely disclosed. The Executive Committee believes this arrangement was undertaken as a quid pro quo so that Sherwood’s nominee would execute on Sherwood’s self-serving agenda.
    • From 2021-2022, Sherwood and Woodrum offered a then-new member of the Board, Colin O’Farrell, the Company’s CEO position. Sherwood and Woodrum did so without consulting the Board and seemingly to co-opt O’Farrell’s independence. This conduct was in breach of a then-valid standstill agreement, resulted in a costly investigation, severely damaged the morale of the Canadian-based management team, and resulted in O’Farrell’s resignation from the Board only seven months after his appointment.
    • In April 2024, without prior Board discussion or direction, Sherwood and his director appointee Woodrum demanded that management immediately begin a search for a Calgary-based CFO and that Woodrum would help lead the search.
    • Sherwood continues to interfere with the Company’s executive leadership transition. Ten months ago, Craig Hopkins succeeded Kinzler as CEO of the Company with the support of Sherwood’s nominees and as part of an overall succession plan for the retirement of the Company’s prior senior management and expense reduction efforts. Both Kinzler and Russell Gifford, the Company’s longtime CFO, have expressed their desire to retire from day-to-day operations of the Company by the end of the fiscal year and have indicated their willingness to support CEO Craig Hopkins during the transition to the extent desired by him and the Board. Multiple directors supported by Sherwood, including former director Laurance Narbut, have expressed the belief that the decades of experience and knowledge held by Kinzler and Gifford will enable the Company to undertake a smooth transition and maintain its excellent track record of accounting and legal compliance.

    Despite Repeated Requests, Sherwood Has Failed to Propose a Different Plan or
    Business Strategy

    Sherwood has NO PLAN for Barnwell Other than to Take Over the Company
    Without Paying a Control Premium

    The Company has repeatedly asked Sherwood to specify what Company plans and policies he opposes or would change. The only response has been incessant demands “to shut down Hawaii,” which lacks any semblance of thoughtful consideration. It has no backing from a single budget, spreadsheet or alternative strategy that would adequately support the back-office functions of a publicly listed company. Barnwell can only conclude that Sherwood’s current nomination notice is merely an attempt to take full control of a company where he holds a 30% stake and no articulated plan to change any personnel, policies or business practices. Sherwood and his designees on the Board have been engaged in a steady stream of actions interfering with management and compromising Board confidentiality and function, all in pursuit of full control of the Company and often in violation of the standstill agreement that the Company and Sherwood entered into in 2023.

    Sherwood has accused the Company of excessive expenditures for lawyers and other professionals when the vast majority of these expenditures were necessitated by the abusive, improper and often illegal actions of Sherwood and his designees on the Board. Sherwood’s group recently served the Company with a books and records request, which will require significant legal expense to address, ironically asking for shareholder records when Sherwood’s own group has played fast and loose with their own Section 16 and Section 13 SEC reporting obligations.

    The Barnwell Executive Committee Comprises Majority Independent and
    Highly Experienced Directors Acting on Behalf of All Shareholders

    The current Board was expressly approved by Sherwood under a 2023 settlement whereby the Company and Sherwood each designated two directors and a fifth director, Joshua Horowitz, was selected as a compromise board member who was vetted by Sherwood and expressly endorsed by both parties to the settlement agreement.

    The current Board is overseeing the transition out of the Company’s water well drilling activities and is currently completing its final well project. The water well subsidiary recently sold one of its rigs for approximately $585,000 and will shut down its operations and sell its remaining assets in the near term. This is part of a larger plan to transition out of the Company’s Hawaii main office and move those executives to transitional roles, to streamline the Company’s accounting operations and further reduce general and administrative expenses in order to increase funds available for investment.

    The Company’s Twining oil & gas property in Alberta continues to be the engine for the Company’s future growth. We are pleased that our newest development well is online and producing as expected. There are approximately 50 additional wells that can be drilled, which would enable the Company to grow its revenues and results organically, as a major portion of the costs of the operations are fixed.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    The information contained in this press release contains “forward-looking statements,” within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. A forward-looking statement is one which is based on current expectations of future events or conditions and does not relate to historical or current facts. These statements include various estimates, forecasts, projections of Barnwell’s future performance, statements of Barnwell’s plans and objectives, and other similar statements. Forward-looking statements include phrases such as “expects,” “anticipates,” “intends,” “plans,” “believes,” “predicts,” “estimates,” “assumes,” “projects,” “may,” “will,” “will be,” “should,” or similar expressions. Although Barnwell believes that its current expectations are based on reasonable assumptions, it cannot assure that the expectations contained in such forward-looking statements will be achieved. Forward-looking statements involve risks, uncertainties and assumptions which could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in such statements. The risks, uncertainties and other factors that might cause actual results to differ materially from Barnwell’s expectations are set forth in the “Forward-Looking Statements,” “Risk Factors” and other sections of Barnwell’s annual report on Form 10-K for the last fiscal year and Barnwell’s other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Investors should not place undue reliance on the forward-looking statements contained in this press release, as they speak only as of the date of this press release, and Barnwell expressly disclaims any obligation or undertaking to publicly release any updates or revisions to any forward-looking statements contained herein.

    Important Additional Information and Where to Find It

    Barnwell Industries, Inc. (the “Company”) plans to file proxy materials with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) in connection with the solicitation of proxies for the Company’s 2025 annual meeting of stockholders (the “2025 Annual Meeting”). Prior to the 2025 Annual Meeting, the Company will file a definitive proxy statement (the “Proxy Statement”) together with a WHITE proxy card. STOCKHOLDERS ARE URGED TO READ THE PROXY STATEMENT (INCLUDING ANY AMENDMENTS OR SUPPLEMENTS THERETO) AND ANY OTHER RELEVANT DOCUMENTS THAT THE COMPANY WILL FILE WITH THE SEC CAREFULLY AND IN THEIR ENTIRETY WHEN THEY BECOME AVAILABLE BECAUSE THEY WILL CONTAIN IMPORTANT INFORMATION. Stockholders will be able to obtain, free of charge, copies of the Proxy Statement, any amendments or supplements thereto and any other documents (including the WHITE proxy card) when filed by the Company with the SEC in connection with the 2025 Annual Meeting at the SEC’s website (http://www.sec.gov) or at the Company’s website at https://ir.brninc.com/ or by contacting Alexander Kinzler, Secretary and General Counsel of the Company, by phone at (808) 531-8400, by email at akinzler@brninc.com or by mail at Barnwell Industries, Inc., 1100 Alakea Street, Suite 500, Honolulu, Hawaii 96813.

    Certain Information Regarding Participants

    The Company, its directors and certain of its executive officers and other employees may be deemed to be “participants” (as defined in Section 14(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended) in the solicitation of proxies from stockholders in connection with the 2025 Annual Meeting. Additional information regarding the identity of these potential participants and their direct or indirect interests, by security holdings or otherwise, will be set forth in the Proxy Statement and other materials to be filed with the SEC in connection with the 2025 Annual Meeting. Information relating to the foregoing can also be found in the Company’s definitive proxy statement for its 2024 annual meeting of stockholders, filed with the SEC on April 2, 2024. To the extent holdings of such participants in the Company’s securities have changed since the amounts described in the Proxy Statement, such changes have been reflected on Statements of Change in Ownership on Form 3 and Form 4 filed with the SEC: Form 3, filed by Craig Hopkins, with the filings of the Company on May 16, 2024; Form 4, filed by Craig Hopkins, with the filings of the Company on May 20, 2024, August 29, 2024, January 13, 2025 and January 17, 2025; Form 4, filed by Joshua Horowitz, with the filings of the Company on August 23, 2024 and October 28, 2024; Form 4, filed by Kenneth Grossman, with the filings of the Company on October 28, 2024; and Form 4, filed by Douglas Woodrum, with the filings of the Company on October 28, 2024. These filings can be found at the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. More detailed and updated information regarding the identity of potential participants, and their direct or indirect interests (by security holdings or otherwise), will be set forth in the proxy statement and other materials to be filed with the SEC. These documents can be obtained free of charge from the sources indicated above.

    CONTACT: Kenneth S. Grossman
      Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors
      Email: kensgrossman@gmail.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Government to increase Higher Level Stewardship payments and re-open Capital Grants Offer

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Government to increase Higher Level Stewardship payments and re-open Capital Grants Offer

    The government is increasing payment rates for those in existing Higher Level Stewardship and confirming the ELM standalone Capital Grants offer worth £45m in 2025/26 will re-open in the summer.

    Farmers and land managers who have been at the forefront of nature-friendly farming in England will see an uplift to Higher Level Stewardship (HLS) payment rates, the government has announced today (Monday 24 February).   

    The increased payment rates, which will apply for agreement holders across a range of HLS options will provide a boost for farmers – often living and working in upland areas – who have been the pioneers of nature-friendly farming.  

    It will bolster support for farmers delivering high-quality environmental outcomes to maintain species-rich grasslands, managing our most important habitats and delivering a range of high-quality environmental outcomes.  

    In a further boost for nature recovery and the environment, the popular standalone ELM Capital Grants scheme will re-open in the summer, worth around £45 million in 2025/26. 

    The Rural Payments Agency is now processing the remaining 4,000 applications held when the scheme paused. These agreements will be worth £120 million over their lifetime. 

    We are also supporting farmers to improve productivity and protect the environment with a £110 million investment in equipment and technology grants.  

    The newly designed grant competitions launching this spring will focus on helping the sector transition to net zero and unlock opportunities from the Precision Breeding Act. 

    Minister for Food Security and Rural Affairs Daniel Zeichner said:   

    This government’s focus is on ensuring farming becomes more profitable and businesses are viable for the future – delivering the long-term food security this country needs. 

    Investing in innovation and technology will help farmers produce food more sustainably and profitably, and get the equipment they need to help their bottom line. 

    And with nature being so crucial to long-term food security, we’re rewarding the pioneers of nature-friendly farming – including many upland farmers.

    Our £110 million investment in innovation, equipment, technology includes:  

    • The launch of one round of the Farming Equipment and Technology (FETF) Fund in the spring, providing grants of between £1,000 and £25,000. 
    • New Farming Innovation Programme (FIP) grants worth more than £42.5 million, including competitions focussed on unlocking the benefits of precision breeding and supporting the net zero transition. 
    • Our new ADOPT fund will provide £20 million of additional funding for farmer-led trials that bridge the gap between new technologies and their real-world application, giving farmers the confidence investments in tech will deliver the returns they need. 

    Alongside these grants, we are also extending the Farming in Protected Landscapes (FiPL) programme to continue to support and improve England’s most precious areas of natural beauty, and improving animal health and welfare through government funded vet visits.  

    Through the Animal Health and Welfare Pathway farmers will be able to apply for visits to cover every eligible species they have from this week, and from summer they will also be able to apply for a visit for every eligible herd or flock of the same species. 

    Additionally, the recruitment campaign for the Commissioner for Tenant Farming Sector role is now live. The Commissioner will encourage behaviour in the sector to meet standards set out in the Agricultural Landlord and Tenant Code of Practice for England.   

    As part of the government’s Plan for Change, we are delivering on the Government’s New Deal for Farmers, with the first steps set out by the Secretary of State at the Oxford Farming Conference.

    We will work with the sector to boost profitability through fair competition across the supply chain, use planning reforms to support food production and monitor food currently bought in the public sector and where it is bought from. 

    We will help farmers diversify income streams and make additional money from selling surplus energy from solar panels and wind turbines by accelerating connections to the grid.

    We are going further to develop a 25-year farming roadmap to make the sector more profitable in the decades to come.

    Updates to this page

    Published 25 February 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom