Category: housing

  • MIL-OSI China: China’s home price decline continues to narrow in June

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

    The decline in the prices of commercial residential homes in China’s 70 large and medium-sized cities continues to ease on a year-on-year basis in June, official data showed on Tuesday.

    In the four first-tier cities, namely, Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Shenzhen, new home prices dropped 1.4 percent from a year earlier, with the pace of decline narrowing by 0.3 percentage points from May, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

    Notably, Shanghai, the country’s economic hub, recorded a 6 percent year-on-year increase in new home prices last month, the NBS said.

    Second- and third-tier cities saw new home prices fall by 3 percent and 4.6 percent year on year in June, with the declines narrowing by 0.5 and 0.3 percentage points, respectively.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: China’s home price decline continues to narrow in June

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

    The decline in the prices of commercial residential homes in China’s 70 large and medium-sized cities continues to ease on a year-on-year basis in June, official data showed on Tuesday.

    In the four first-tier cities, namely, Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Shenzhen, new home prices dropped 1.4 percent from a year earlier, with the pace of decline narrowing by 0.3 percentage points from May, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

    Notably, Shanghai, the country’s economic hub, recorded a 6 percent year-on-year increase in new home prices last month, the NBS said.

    Second- and third-tier cities saw new home prices fall by 3 percent and 4.6 percent year on year in June, with the declines narrowing by 0.5 and 0.3 percentage points, respectively.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: China’s industrial output grows faster in June

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

    China’s value-added industrial output grew at a faster pace in June, up 6.8 percent year on year, as the world’s second-largest economy stepped up efforts to support growth despite challenges both at home and abroad.

    The growth accelerated from a 5.8 percent rise in May, according to data released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) on Tuesday.

    In the first six months of this year, China’s industrial output increased by 6.4 percent compared to the same period last year, according to NBS data.

    The industrial output is used to measure the activity of large enterprises, each with an annual main business turnover of at least 20 million yuan (about 2.8 million U.S. dollars).

    A breakdown of the data showed that the manufacturing sector’s value-added output increased by 7 percent year on year during the January-June period, while that of equipment manufacturing and high-tech manufacturing expanded by 10.2 percent and 9.5 percent, respectively, according to the NBS.

    The production of 3D printing equipment, new energy vehicles, and industrial robots surged 43.1 percent, 36.2 percent and 35.6 percent year on year during the period, respectively.

    Tuesday’s data also showed that the country’s GDP grew by 5.3 percent year on year in the first half of 2025. Retail sales of consumer goods, a major indicator of the country’s consumption strength, expanded 5 percent year on year during the period, while fixed-asset investment rose 2.8 percent. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Foreign Minister Lin delivers remarks at opening of 2025 ILA-ASIL Asia-Pacific Research Forum, urges democracies to jointly address challenges posed by authoritarian expansion

    Source: Republic of China Taiwan

    July 8, 2025  
    No. 232  

    Minister of Foreign Affairs Lin Chia-lung on July 7 attended the opening of the 2025 International Law Association-American Society of International Law Asia-Pacific Research Forum, where he addressed more than 50 noted international scholars from over 20 nations.
     
    In his remarks, Minister Lin said that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs had been promoting the policy of integrated diplomacy, which aimed to deepen partnerships with like-minded countries based on the values of freedom, democracy, and human rights. He explained that Taiwan had proactively leveraged its diplomatic strengths—consolidating diplomatic ties, expanding its alliance of friendly nations, and integrating the resources of the public and private sectors with the goal of having Taiwan continue to be a Taiwan of the world.
     
    Noting the extreme turbulence of international relations and the severe geopolitical challenges facing the Indo-Pacific region, Minister Lin said that in recent years, China had repeatedly challenged the rules-based international order, gravely undermining democracy, the rule of law, human rights, freedom, and even fair trade. He observed that the world’s leading states had gone on alert and that an increasing number of countries had acted by sending warships through the Taiwan Strait, underscoring that the Taiwan Strait constituted international waters and demonstrating the great importance that they attached to the security of the Indo-Pacific region.
     
    Minister Lin also pointed out that China had long sought to pressure Taiwan in the international arena, enacting the Anti-Secession Law in 2005 and 22 guidelines on punishing independence in 2024, among other legal warfare tools. He said that China had inappropriately distorted UN General Assembly (UNGA) Resolution 2758, seeking to weaponize the text and transform it into a tool to suppress Taiwan’s international participation and provide cover for an armed invasion. He stated that China had used the resolution as justification for its false claims that Taiwan was a part of China and that the Taiwan Strait was China’s internal waters, adding that such claims were clearly contrary to the facts and to democratic values.
     
    Minister Lin noted that in response to China’s efforts to distort UNGA Resolution 2758, last year the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China, the European Parliament, and the parliaments of Australia, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and the Czech Republic passed resolutions clearly opposing China’s misrepresentations. He said that senior US officials had also publicly expressed a similar position and that the international community had gradually gained an accurate understanding of Resolution 2758—that it neither mentioned Taiwan nor precluded Taiwan’s international participation.
     
    Looking back on history, Minister Lin remarked that following the Second World War, the signing of the San Francisco Peace Treaty, which was binding under international law, had supplanted the political statements contained in the Cairo Declaration and the Potsdam Proclamation. He also pointed out that the People’s Republic of China had never governed Taiwan. He said that since the mid-1980s, Taiwan had experienced political liberalization and democratization, leading to the completion of its first direct presidential election in 1996. At that point, he said, the central executive and legislative representatives of government of the Republic of China were all elected by the people of Taiwan—and since then, the Republic of China government had been the sole legitimate government exercising effective rule over Taiwan and representing Taiwan internationally. He added that this underscored the cross-strait status quo that the Republic of China (Taiwan) and the People’s Republic of China existed as equals, with neither being subordinate to the other. He said that the Republic of China (Taiwan) had experienced three changes of governing party—in 2000, 2008, and 2016—that had consolidated the democratic system and helped create a clearer sense of national identity, reflecting the Taiwanese people’s pursuit of and desire for freedom and democracy.
     
    Minister Lin went on to explain that, in response to dramatic changes in the international geopolitical landscape and the threat of authoritarian expansion, President Lai Ching-te had issued 17 national security measures. He said that China’s vaulting ambition had alerted the international community to the fact that Taiwan was not subordinate to the PRC. He observed that this had upended China’s cross-strait framework, making the issue of democratic Taiwan and authoritarian China not merely a regional matter, but a question the countries of the world must address together.
     
    Minister Lin emphasized that the more secure Taiwan was, the more secure the world would be, and that the stronger Taiwan grew, the more secure the world’s democracies would be. He reiterated that Taiwan was a Taiwan of the world and said that the Republic of China (Taiwan), as a democratic nation and a force for good in the world, had demonstrated that it was part of the global village through the continued application of democratic processes and through its international participation.
     
    Concluding his remarks, Minister Lin said that Taiwan would continue to be at the forefront of the global battle against authoritarian expansionism, adding that Taiwan would work with like-minded countries to defend the values of freedom and democracy and ensure regional peace, security, and prosperity. (E)

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: “Kimberlite Magic”: NSU postgraduate student Alexey Tarasov became a laureate of the RAS medal for the study of deep mantle melts

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Novosibirsk State University –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    The Russian Academy of Sciences has announced the winners of the 2024 competition for medals with prizes for the best scientific works of young scientists and students. One of the laureates was a postgraduate student Faculty of Geology and Geophysics (FGG) of NSU Alexey Tarasov. He received the award in geology, geophysics, geochemistry and mining sciences for his research on melt inclusions in minerals of mantle peridotite xenoliths.

    We talked to Alexey about his scientific path, research topic, participation in the competition and plans for the future.

    — How did you end up at NSU?

    — I entered NSU in 2018 after finishing school in Barnaul, based on the results of the Unified State Exam. I studied for a bachelor’s degree at the Faculty of Geography and Geography, then entered the master’s program. Now I continue my studies in graduate school.

    — Why did you choose the Faculty of Geology and Geophysics?

    — I have been interested in minerals since childhood, I had a small collection at home. I attended the “Young Geologist” club — there was one in Barnaul. Gradually, my hobby turned into a professional interest. I knew that Novosibirsk had a strong school in geochemistry, and this played a decisive role. There was no doubt where to go.

    — Tell us about your scientific work for which you received the Russian Academy of Sciences medal.

    — The overall goal of all our work is to understand how diamond deposits are formed. Diamond is a form of carbon that is stable only under very high pressure, so it forms deep in the mantle, at depths of 150–160 kilometers and more. Most diamonds formed more than 2.5 billion years ago and are still in the mantle because it is too deep to mine them.

    But there are kimberlite magmas. They form in the mantle and, unlike most other magmas, rise to the surface very quickly. In doing so, they take with them fragments of mantle rocks – so-called xenoliths, and minerals – xenocrysts. Sometimes – with diamonds.

    When magma reaches the surface, it forms kimberlite pipes, which are the main source of diamonds in nature. But what is kimberlite magma? What it consists of, where it comes from, and under what conditions it originates – is still not exactly known. This is a key scientific question, and I am working on solving it.

    – How do you research this?

    — I study melt inclusions in xenolith minerals. These are tiny drops of magma that were “sealed” in crystals during their growth and preserved in their original form. These inclusions provide a unique opportunity to reconstruct the composition of kimberlite melts at the moment of their origin — before all the changes and contaminations that occur during their ascent to the surface.

    The composition of these inclusions can tell us about the temperature and pressure of formation, and the type of rock from which they formed. This helps us get closer to understanding where and how new kimberlite pipes can form, and therefore potentially predict where diamonds can be found.

    — What, in your opinion, helped you receive the RAS medal?

    — It’s hard to say how exactly the selection took place. But I think several factors played a role. I tried to show that my work was not just fundamental, but also had potential applied significance. In addition, at the time of application, I had six published articles in which I was the author or co-author.

    But, to be honest, the main thing is not “what”, but “who”. My scientific supervisor Alexander Viktorovich Golovin. He insisted that I participate in conferences, helped with writing articles, tolerated my mistakes, demanded high quality. It was he who convinced me to apply for the RAS competition. In addition to him, other colleagues at the institute and teachers at the faculty supported me. Without them, nothing would have happened.

    — How did the competition itself go?

    — It was quite simple: you had to prepare an application, attach a research paper (in my case, it was a master’s thesis), provide a list of publications, and sign documents. There were no in-person stages — everything was done in writing.

    — What are your plans next?

    — I am continuing my postgraduate studies and working at the Institute of Geology and Mineralogy of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences. I plan to defend my PhD thesis in 2027. I am currently finishing my first article, where I am the first author, and I want to publish it in a foreign journal of the 1st–2nd quartile. I already sent it six months ago, but was rejected. The reviewers pointed out the weak discussion and insufficient English.

    Now I am rewriting the text, looking for a translator and funding for professional translation. In parallel, I am working on the following articles. My supervisor has set a task – five articles by the end of my postgraduate studies. To be honest, I am not sure that I will cope, but I will make every effort.

    The Russian Academy of Sciences holds an annual competition for medals and prizes for young scientists and students. In 2024, 21 young scientists and 21 students received awards. Each laureate receives a medal, a diploma, a badge, and a cash prize of 100,000 rubles for young scientists and 50,000 rubles for students.

    The competition covers key areas of natural, technical and human sciences and is held with the aim of encouraging young scientists, supporting professional growth and enhancing the prestige of research activities.

    We congratulate Alexey Tarasov on his well-deserved award and wish him success in his future scientific research!

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    .

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: “Kimberlite Magic”: NSU postgraduate student Alexey Tarasov became a laureate of the RAS medal for the study of deep mantle melts

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Novosibirsk State University –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    The Russian Academy of Sciences has announced the winners of the 2024 competition for medals with prizes for the best scientific works of young scientists and students. One of the laureates was a postgraduate student Faculty of Geology and Geophysics (FGG) of NSU Alexey Tarasov. He received the award in geology, geophysics, geochemistry and mining sciences for his research on melt inclusions in minerals of mantle peridotite xenoliths.

    We talked to Alexey about his scientific path, research topic, participation in the competition and plans for the future.

    — How did you end up at NSU?

    — I entered NSU in 2018 after finishing school in Barnaul, based on the results of the Unified State Exam. I studied for a bachelor’s degree at the Faculty of Geography and Geography, then entered the master’s program. Now I continue my studies in graduate school.

    — Why did you choose the Faculty of Geology and Geophysics?

    — I have been interested in minerals since childhood, I had a small collection at home. I attended the “Young Geologist” club — there was one in Barnaul. Gradually, my hobby turned into a professional interest. I knew that Novosibirsk had a strong school in geochemistry, and this played a decisive role. There was no doubt where to go.

    — Tell us about your scientific work for which you received the Russian Academy of Sciences medal.

    — The overall goal of all our work is to understand how diamond deposits are formed. Diamond is a form of carbon that is stable only under very high pressure, so it forms deep in the mantle, at depths of 150–160 kilometers and more. Most diamonds formed more than 2.5 billion years ago and are still in the mantle because it is too deep to mine them.

    But there are kimberlite magmas. They form in the mantle and, unlike most other magmas, rise to the surface very quickly. In doing so, they take with them fragments of mantle rocks – so-called xenoliths, and minerals – xenocrysts. Sometimes – with diamonds.

    When magma reaches the surface, it forms kimberlite pipes, which are the main source of diamonds in nature. But what is kimberlite magma? What it consists of, where it comes from, and under what conditions it originates – is still not exactly known. This is a key scientific question, and I am working on solving it.

    – How do you research this?

    — I study melt inclusions in xenolith minerals. These are tiny drops of magma that were “sealed” in crystals during their growth and preserved in their original form. These inclusions provide a unique opportunity to reconstruct the composition of kimberlite melts at the moment of their origin — before all the changes and contaminations that occur during their ascent to the surface.

    The composition of these inclusions can tell us about the temperature and pressure of formation, and the type of rock from which they formed. This helps us get closer to understanding where and how new kimberlite pipes can form, and therefore potentially predict where diamonds can be found.

    — What, in your opinion, helped you receive the RAS medal?

    — It’s hard to say how exactly the selection took place. But I think several factors played a role. I tried to show that my work was not just fundamental, but also had potential applied significance. In addition, at the time of application, I had six published articles in which I was the author or co-author.

    But, to be honest, the main thing is not “what”, but “who”. My scientific supervisor Alexander Viktorovich Golovin. He insisted that I participate in conferences, helped with writing articles, tolerated my mistakes, demanded high quality. It was he who convinced me to apply for the RAS competition. In addition to him, other colleagues at the institute and teachers at the faculty supported me. Without them, nothing would have happened.

    — How did the competition itself go?

    — It was quite simple: you had to prepare an application, attach a research paper (in my case, it was a master’s thesis), provide a list of publications, and sign documents. There were no in-person stages — everything was done in writing.

    — What are your plans next?

    — I am continuing my postgraduate studies and working at the Institute of Geology and Mineralogy of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences. I plan to defend my PhD thesis in 2027. I am currently finishing my first article, where I am the first author, and I want to publish it in a foreign journal of the 1st–2nd quartile. I already sent it six months ago, but was rejected. The reviewers pointed out the weak discussion and insufficient English.

    Now I am rewriting the text, looking for a translator and funding for professional translation. In parallel, I am working on the following articles. My supervisor has set a task – five articles by the end of my postgraduate studies. To be honest, I am not sure that I will cope, but I will make every effort.

    The Russian Academy of Sciences holds an annual competition for medals and prizes for young scientists and students. In 2024, 21 young scientists and 21 students received awards. Each laureate receives a medal, a diploma, a badge, and a cash prize of 100,000 rubles for young scientists and 50,000 rubles for students.

    The competition covers key areas of natural, technical and human sciences and is held with the aim of encouraging young scientists, supporting professional growth and enhancing the prestige of research activities.

    We congratulate Alexey Tarasov on his well-deserved award and wish him success in his future scientific research!

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    .

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI: SIGMA AI Closes on Investment from Trading Technologies to Build TT AI and Innovation Hub

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    London, July 15, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — SIGMA AI, an innovative fintech company specialising in real-time data and AI-driven insights, today announced a minority investment by Trading Technologies, International Inc. (TT), a global capital markets technology platform services provider.

    This strategic investment establishes a deeper partnership, with SIGMA AI developing a proprietary AI and innovation hub for TT. The hub will focus on integrating AI into the TT® platform and driving AI adoption across TT’s products and services.

    This extends SIGMA AI’s existing partnership with TT, which began in 2024 with a smaller investment focused on leveraging advanced technology within TT’s data and analytics offering. 

    In addition, Andy Simpson, the founder and CEO of SIGMA AI, is expanding his leadership responsibilities taking on the additional role of Head of AI and Innovation at TT. With deep expertise in market structure and a proven track record of delivering strategic transformation for banks, exchanges, and clearing houses, Simpson will advise on AI strategy reporting to TT CEO, Justin Llewellyn-Jones. His role at SIGMA AI remains unchanged.

    TT’s Llewellyn-Jones said: “This partnership with SIGMA AI will deliver ground-breaking AI-driven solutions to our clients through products that are faster, smarter, and easier to use, with robust governance frameworks that put security and safety at the forefront to guard against the nefarious use of this technology. It will also enhance internal productivity by giving our global teams access to innovative new tools and processes – again, in a safe and secure manner.”

    SIGMA AI’s Simpson said: “I’m thrilled to extend our partnership with Trading Technologies, which reflects our shared commitment to advancing AI in financial markets. I’m equally pleased to be expanding my role with TT. The AI and Innovation Hub will act as a centre of excellence, helping to embed AI more deeply across the TT® platform and operations, and strengthening TT’s long-standing position as a technology leader in global trading.”

    “TT has long set the standard for developing cutting-edge tools for institutional traders. It’s a privilege to contribute to that progress while continuing to evolve Sigma AI’s work in delivering forward-thinking solutions for clients across the global trading ecosystem.”

    About Sigma AI
    SIGMA AI is a specialist data analytics company known for its cutting-edge data platform. Our low-latency Engineering & Artificial Intelligence platform offers personalised research, investment tools, and bespoke analytics. Our analytics capabilities are multi-asset and data-type agnostic, covering technicals, fundamentals, news, and client-specific data—delivered on-demand, scheduled, or event-driven. We support wealth managers, asset managers, brokers, traders, research vendors, data vendors, and technology vendors. For more information, visit www.sigmafinancial.ai.

    About Trading Technologies
    Trading Technologies is a global capital markets platform services company providing market-leading technology for the end-to-end trading operations of Tier 1 banks, brokerages, money managers, hedge funds, proprietary traders, Commodity Trading Advisors (CTAs), commercial hedgers and risk managers. With its roots in listed derivatives, the Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) company delivers “multi-X” solutions, with “X” representing asset classes, functions, workflows and geographies. This multi-X approach features trade execution services across futures and options, fixed income, foreign exchange (FX) and cryptocurrencies augmented by solutions for data and analytics, including transaction cost analysis (TCA); quantitative trading; compliance and trade surveillance; clearing and post-trade allocation; and infrastructure services. The award-winning TT platform ecosystem also helps exchanges deliver innovative solutions to their market participants, and technology companies to distribute their complementary offerings to Trading Technologies’ clients.

    Media Contact:
    Melanie Budden
    Realization Group 
    +44 (0) 7974 937970
    melanie.budden@therealizationgroup.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: SIGMA AI Closes on Investment from Trading Technologies to Build TT AI and Innovation Hub

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    London, July 15, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — SIGMA AI, an innovative fintech company specialising in real-time data and AI-driven insights, today announced a minority investment by Trading Technologies, International Inc. (TT), a global capital markets technology platform services provider.

    This strategic investment establishes a deeper partnership, with SIGMA AI developing a proprietary AI and innovation hub for TT. The hub will focus on integrating AI into the TT® platform and driving AI adoption across TT’s products and services.

    This extends SIGMA AI’s existing partnership with TT, which began in 2024 with a smaller investment focused on leveraging advanced technology within TT’s data and analytics offering. 

    In addition, Andy Simpson, the founder and CEO of SIGMA AI, is expanding his leadership responsibilities taking on the additional role of Head of AI and Innovation at TT. With deep expertise in market structure and a proven track record of delivering strategic transformation for banks, exchanges, and clearing houses, Simpson will advise on AI strategy reporting to TT CEO, Justin Llewellyn-Jones. His role at SIGMA AI remains unchanged.

    TT’s Llewellyn-Jones said: “This partnership with SIGMA AI will deliver ground-breaking AI-driven solutions to our clients through products that are faster, smarter, and easier to use, with robust governance frameworks that put security and safety at the forefront to guard against the nefarious use of this technology. It will also enhance internal productivity by giving our global teams access to innovative new tools and processes – again, in a safe and secure manner.”

    SIGMA AI’s Simpson said: “I’m thrilled to extend our partnership with Trading Technologies, which reflects our shared commitment to advancing AI in financial markets. I’m equally pleased to be expanding my role with TT. The AI and Innovation Hub will act as a centre of excellence, helping to embed AI more deeply across the TT® platform and operations, and strengthening TT’s long-standing position as a technology leader in global trading.”

    “TT has long set the standard for developing cutting-edge tools for institutional traders. It’s a privilege to contribute to that progress while continuing to evolve Sigma AI’s work in delivering forward-thinking solutions for clients across the global trading ecosystem.”

    About Sigma AI
    SIGMA AI is a specialist data analytics company known for its cutting-edge data platform. Our low-latency Engineering & Artificial Intelligence platform offers personalised research, investment tools, and bespoke analytics. Our analytics capabilities are multi-asset and data-type agnostic, covering technicals, fundamentals, news, and client-specific data—delivered on-demand, scheduled, or event-driven. We support wealth managers, asset managers, brokers, traders, research vendors, data vendors, and technology vendors. For more information, visit www.sigmafinancial.ai.

    About Trading Technologies
    Trading Technologies is a global capital markets platform services company providing market-leading technology for the end-to-end trading operations of Tier 1 banks, brokerages, money managers, hedge funds, proprietary traders, Commodity Trading Advisors (CTAs), commercial hedgers and risk managers. With its roots in listed derivatives, the Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) company delivers “multi-X” solutions, with “X” representing asset classes, functions, workflows and geographies. This multi-X approach features trade execution services across futures and options, fixed income, foreign exchange (FX) and cryptocurrencies augmented by solutions for data and analytics, including transaction cost analysis (TCA); quantitative trading; compliance and trade surveillance; clearing and post-trade allocation; and infrastructure services. The award-winning TT platform ecosystem also helps exchanges deliver innovative solutions to their market participants, and technology companies to distribute their complementary offerings to Trading Technologies’ clients.

    Media Contact:
    Melanie Budden
    Realization Group 
    +44 (0) 7974 937970
    melanie.budden@therealizationgroup.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: SIGMA AI Closes on Investment from Trading Technologies to Build TT AI and Innovation Hub

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    London, July 15, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — SIGMA AI, an innovative fintech company specialising in real-time data and AI-driven insights, today announced a minority investment by Trading Technologies, International Inc. (TT), a global capital markets technology platform services provider.

    This strategic investment establishes a deeper partnership, with SIGMA AI developing a proprietary AI and innovation hub for TT. The hub will focus on integrating AI into the TT® platform and driving AI adoption across TT’s products and services.

    This extends SIGMA AI’s existing partnership with TT, which began in 2024 with a smaller investment focused on leveraging advanced technology within TT’s data and analytics offering. 

    In addition, Andy Simpson, the founder and CEO of SIGMA AI, is expanding his leadership responsibilities taking on the additional role of Head of AI and Innovation at TT. With deep expertise in market structure and a proven track record of delivering strategic transformation for banks, exchanges, and clearing houses, Simpson will advise on AI strategy reporting to TT CEO, Justin Llewellyn-Jones. His role at SIGMA AI remains unchanged.

    TT’s Llewellyn-Jones said: “This partnership with SIGMA AI will deliver ground-breaking AI-driven solutions to our clients through products that are faster, smarter, and easier to use, with robust governance frameworks that put security and safety at the forefront to guard against the nefarious use of this technology. It will also enhance internal productivity by giving our global teams access to innovative new tools and processes – again, in a safe and secure manner.”

    SIGMA AI’s Simpson said: “I’m thrilled to extend our partnership with Trading Technologies, which reflects our shared commitment to advancing AI in financial markets. I’m equally pleased to be expanding my role with TT. The AI and Innovation Hub will act as a centre of excellence, helping to embed AI more deeply across the TT® platform and operations, and strengthening TT’s long-standing position as a technology leader in global trading.”

    “TT has long set the standard for developing cutting-edge tools for institutional traders. It’s a privilege to contribute to that progress while continuing to evolve Sigma AI’s work in delivering forward-thinking solutions for clients across the global trading ecosystem.”

    About Sigma AI
    SIGMA AI is a specialist data analytics company known for its cutting-edge data platform. Our low-latency Engineering & Artificial Intelligence platform offers personalised research, investment tools, and bespoke analytics. Our analytics capabilities are multi-asset and data-type agnostic, covering technicals, fundamentals, news, and client-specific data—delivered on-demand, scheduled, or event-driven. We support wealth managers, asset managers, brokers, traders, research vendors, data vendors, and technology vendors. For more information, visit www.sigmafinancial.ai.

    About Trading Technologies
    Trading Technologies is a global capital markets platform services company providing market-leading technology for the end-to-end trading operations of Tier 1 banks, brokerages, money managers, hedge funds, proprietary traders, Commodity Trading Advisors (CTAs), commercial hedgers and risk managers. With its roots in listed derivatives, the Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) company delivers “multi-X” solutions, with “X” representing asset classes, functions, workflows and geographies. This multi-X approach features trade execution services across futures and options, fixed income, foreign exchange (FX) and cryptocurrencies augmented by solutions for data and analytics, including transaction cost analysis (TCA); quantitative trading; compliance and trade surveillance; clearing and post-trade allocation; and infrastructure services. The award-winning TT platform ecosystem also helps exchanges deliver innovative solutions to their market participants, and technology companies to distribute their complementary offerings to Trading Technologies’ clients.

    Media Contact:
    Melanie Budden
    Realization Group 
    +44 (0) 7974 937970
    melanie.budden@therealizationgroup.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Top of the South state highway update – response work continuing across the region

    Source: New Zealand Transport Agency

    NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi (NZTA) contractors are hard at work at several state highway sites across the top of the South Island, as the massive clean-up and repair job in the region continues.

    The summary below outlines the current status of the region’s state highway network.

    SH6 Rocks Road – CLOSED
    State Highway 6 Rocks Road remains CLOSED between Bisley Avenue and Richardson Street, while work continues to assess the slip and rockfall, and to remove loose material and vegetation.

    “Areas at the top of the cliff have been destabilised by the heavy rain. We’re working to remove  the loose material and vegetation from the top of the cliff so that the road can be safely reopened as soon as possible,” says Rob Service, NZTA System Manager Nelson/Tasman.

    The route remains closed to all traffic, cyclists, and pedestrians until further notice. NZTA is reminding everyone not to go beyond the closure points on Rocks Road, as there is serious danger from potential falling debris, while contractors work to remove material from the cliff face.

    To allow people to access businesses and shops on Rocks Road, there is a ‘soft closure’ in place at the intersection of Russell Street, but no travel is permitted between Bisley Avenue and Richardson Street.

    NZTA will provide updates as further information is available.

    SH60 Takaka Hill – OPEN
    State Highway 60 Tākaka Hill is OPEN to light and heavy vehicles, but the road has suffered slip and washout damage and extra care and time is needed when travelling this route. The road remains vulnerable to further disruptions and possible closure.

    There are active worksites on Takaka Hill which are under temporary speed restrictions and single lane sections, both operating 24/7. Please be careful and patient when driving over the hill and adhere to the temporary speed limits.

    SH6 Belgrove to Kohatu – OPEN
    State Highway 6 is OPEN between Belgrove and Kohatu. Extra care and time is needed when travelling this route. There are three active worksites in this section of road under temporary speed restrictions 24/7 and one single lane section controlled by traffic lights.

    SH63 – OPEN to residents and essential travel only
    SH63 between Waihopai Valley Road and Korere-Tophouse Road is open for residents and those with essential travel needs only.  

    General advice

    All other state highways are open, but it is not business as usual on the roads or for driving.

    Across the network, because of weather damage, drivers must drive to the conditions and take extreme care when travelling. There remains an ongoing risk of slips, rock and tree falls, and the potential for further road closures. These may happen at short notice.

    Road users can expect to encounter multiple road work and repair sites across the region and must allow extra time for their journeys.

    Please follow all traffic management and temporary speed limits in place. They are there to keep the public and work crews safe.

    More information

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Top of the South state highway update – response work continuing across the region

    Source: New Zealand Transport Agency

    NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi (NZTA) contractors are hard at work at several state highway sites across the top of the South Island, as the massive clean-up and repair job in the region continues.

    The summary below outlines the current status of the region’s state highway network.

    SH6 Rocks Road – CLOSED
    State Highway 6 Rocks Road remains CLOSED between Bisley Avenue and Richardson Street, while work continues to assess the slip and rockfall, and to remove loose material and vegetation.

    “Areas at the top of the cliff have been destabilised by the heavy rain. We’re working to remove  the loose material and vegetation from the top of the cliff so that the road can be safely reopened as soon as possible,” says Rob Service, NZTA System Manager Nelson/Tasman.

    The route remains closed to all traffic, cyclists, and pedestrians until further notice. NZTA is reminding everyone not to go beyond the closure points on Rocks Road, as there is serious danger from potential falling debris, while contractors work to remove material from the cliff face.

    To allow people to access businesses and shops on Rocks Road, there is a ‘soft closure’ in place at the intersection of Russell Street, but no travel is permitted between Bisley Avenue and Richardson Street.

    NZTA will provide updates as further information is available.

    SH60 Takaka Hill – OPEN
    State Highway 60 Tākaka Hill is OPEN to light and heavy vehicles, but the road has suffered slip and washout damage and extra care and time is needed when travelling this route. The road remains vulnerable to further disruptions and possible closure.

    There are active worksites on Takaka Hill which are under temporary speed restrictions and single lane sections, both operating 24/7. Please be careful and patient when driving over the hill and adhere to the temporary speed limits.

    SH6 Belgrove to Kohatu – OPEN
    State Highway 6 is OPEN between Belgrove and Kohatu. Extra care and time is needed when travelling this route. There are three active worksites in this section of road under temporary speed restrictions 24/7 and one single lane section controlled by traffic lights.

    SH63 – OPEN to residents and essential travel only
    SH63 between Waihopai Valley Road and Korere-Tophouse Road is open for residents and those with essential travel needs only.  

    General advice

    All other state highways are open, but it is not business as usual on the roads or for driving.

    Across the network, because of weather damage, drivers must drive to the conditions and take extreme care when travelling. There remains an ongoing risk of slips, rock and tree falls, and the potential for further road closures. These may happen at short notice.

    Road users can expect to encounter multiple road work and repair sites across the region and must allow extra time for their journeys.

    Please follow all traffic management and temporary speed limits in place. They are there to keep the public and work crews safe.

    More information

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI China: Mendes completes Vasco da Gama move

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

    Vasco da Gama has completed the signing of former Lyon and Lille midfielder Thiago Mendes on a free transfer, the Brazilian Serie A club said on Monday.

    The 33-year-old agreed to a contract that runs until December 2027 after parting ways with Qatar’s Al-Rayyan last month.

    “I wanted to return to Brazil to feel the energy of the fans,” Mendes told Vasco TV, adding that manager Fernando Diniz had convinced him it was the right move.

    “The coach spoke very positively about his plans and that was fundamental to my desire to wear this shirt.”

    Mendes has already passed a medical and is expected to make his debut for Vasco in next Saturday’s home clash against Gremio.

    Vasco is currently 14th in Brazil’s 20-team Serie A standings with 13 points from 13 games.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Chinese archaeologists inspired by Xixia Imperial Tombs’ World Heritage inscription

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

    Chinese archaeologists inspired by Xixia Imperial Tombs’ World Heritage inscription

    Tourists visit the Xixia Imperial Tombs archaeological site park in Yinchuan, northwest China’s Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, July 13, 2025. China’s Xixia Imperial Tombs were officially added to the UNESCO World Heritage List on Friday during the 47th session of the World Heritage Committee held in Paris, France. (Photo by Yuan Hongyan/Xinhua)

    Upon receiving the news that the Xixia Imperial Tombs have been inscribed on the World Heritage List, archaeological workers at the historical site of Yinxu in central China’s Henan Province were overjoyed.

    “We’ve always had high hopes for the Xixia Imperial Tombs’ successful inscription on the list,” said Yang Liying, deputy head of the Anyang Yinxu world cultural heritage protection and management committee in the city of Anyang, where Yinxu, or the Yin Ruins, are located.

    She added that the Xixia Imperial Tombs’ inscription on the list will help elevate China’s status and influence in the realm of world cultural heritage preservation, and hoped that the two sites can engage in broader cooperation and exchange.

    The 3,300-year-old Yin Ruins, confirmed as the capital site of the late Shang (Yin) Dynasty (1600 B.C.-1046 B.C.), was added to the World Heritage List in 2006 by UNESCO.

    Now, nearly two decades later, the Xixia Imperial Tombs were inscribed on the list during UNESCO’s 47th session of the World Heritage Committee held in Paris, France, on July 11. This has brought the total number of World Heritage sites in China to 60, nearly doubling the figure from 2006, when there were 33.

    Located at the foot of Helan Mountain in Yinchuan, capital of Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, the tombs were built by the Tangut, an ethnic group that thrived in northwest China between the 11th and 13th centuries. In 1038, the Tangut people founded the Xixia Dynasty, establishing its capital in what is now Yinchuan.

    By analyzing the tombs’ location, layout, architecture and artifacts, historians were able to see how the Xixia Dynasty adapted Han models during the Tang (618-907) and Song (960-1279) dynasties while infusing distinct ethnic features.

    This evidence of ethnic integration is not unique to the Xixia tombs. It can be found in many of China’s historical sites. According to Ji Tao, head of the Hailongtun cultural heritage management bureau in Zunyi, Guizhou Province, the tombs and the ancient ruins of Hailongtun Fortress share similarities in this regard.

    “Both are important physical evidence of the development of a pluralistic yet integrated ethnic pattern in Chinese history, and both manifest the political wisdom of ‘harmony without uniformity,’” said Ji.

    In 2015, Hailongtun Fortress was added to the World Heritage List, along with two other historical sites. The three were jointly referred to as “Tusi Sites”. They were deemed to “bear exceptional testimony” to the Tusi system, a chieftain system adopted by ancient Chinese central governments to unify national administration, while allowing ethnic minorities to retain their customs and way of life.

    Apart from its historic and cultural value, the Xixia Imperial Tombs also illustrate China’s multifaceted preservation of cultural heritage sites, said Liu Xiangyu, head of the cultural relics protection and management institute of Ji’an, northeast China’s Jilin Province.

    The protection work of the tombs is overseen by the cultural relics administration department of Yinchuan Municipal People’s Government. Meanwhile, departments of city planning, land and resources, as well as housing and urban-rural development all work in coordination within their respective duties, forming a joint force for protection.

    According to Liu, this tiered and coordinated system of historical site preservation was also adopted in the protection of the Capital Cities and Tombs of the Ancient Koguryo Kingdom in Jilin, which was inscribed on the World Heritage List in 2004. “As heritages of the same type, the two sites share many similarities in terms of protection methods,” Liu said.

    With its World Heritage inscription, the Xixia Imperial Tombs have now gained a new opportunity to inspire archaeological workers in China and the Chinese people as a whole. The head of the Xixia tomb area management office has vowed to take the inscription as an opportunity to comprehensively and continuously explore the cultural value of the site, and spare no effort in advancing its systematic protection, utilization and research. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Chinese archaeologists inspired by Xixia Imperial Tombs’ World Heritage inscription

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

    Chinese archaeologists inspired by Xixia Imperial Tombs’ World Heritage inscription

    Tourists visit the Xixia Imperial Tombs archaeological site park in Yinchuan, northwest China’s Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, July 13, 2025. China’s Xixia Imperial Tombs were officially added to the UNESCO World Heritage List on Friday during the 47th session of the World Heritage Committee held in Paris, France. (Photo by Yuan Hongyan/Xinhua)

    Upon receiving the news that the Xixia Imperial Tombs have been inscribed on the World Heritage List, archaeological workers at the historical site of Yinxu in central China’s Henan Province were overjoyed.

    “We’ve always had high hopes for the Xixia Imperial Tombs’ successful inscription on the list,” said Yang Liying, deputy head of the Anyang Yinxu world cultural heritage protection and management committee in the city of Anyang, where Yinxu, or the Yin Ruins, are located.

    She added that the Xixia Imperial Tombs’ inscription on the list will help elevate China’s status and influence in the realm of world cultural heritage preservation, and hoped that the two sites can engage in broader cooperation and exchange.

    The 3,300-year-old Yin Ruins, confirmed as the capital site of the late Shang (Yin) Dynasty (1600 B.C.-1046 B.C.), was added to the World Heritage List in 2006 by UNESCO.

    Now, nearly two decades later, the Xixia Imperial Tombs were inscribed on the list during UNESCO’s 47th session of the World Heritage Committee held in Paris, France, on July 11. This has brought the total number of World Heritage sites in China to 60, nearly doubling the figure from 2006, when there were 33.

    Located at the foot of Helan Mountain in Yinchuan, capital of Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, the tombs were built by the Tangut, an ethnic group that thrived in northwest China between the 11th and 13th centuries. In 1038, the Tangut people founded the Xixia Dynasty, establishing its capital in what is now Yinchuan.

    By analyzing the tombs’ location, layout, architecture and artifacts, historians were able to see how the Xixia Dynasty adapted Han models during the Tang (618-907) and Song (960-1279) dynasties while infusing distinct ethnic features.

    This evidence of ethnic integration is not unique to the Xixia tombs. It can be found in many of China’s historical sites. According to Ji Tao, head of the Hailongtun cultural heritage management bureau in Zunyi, Guizhou Province, the tombs and the ancient ruins of Hailongtun Fortress share similarities in this regard.

    “Both are important physical evidence of the development of a pluralistic yet integrated ethnic pattern in Chinese history, and both manifest the political wisdom of ‘harmony without uniformity,’” said Ji.

    In 2015, Hailongtun Fortress was added to the World Heritage List, along with two other historical sites. The three were jointly referred to as “Tusi Sites”. They were deemed to “bear exceptional testimony” to the Tusi system, a chieftain system adopted by ancient Chinese central governments to unify national administration, while allowing ethnic minorities to retain their customs and way of life.

    Apart from its historic and cultural value, the Xixia Imperial Tombs also illustrate China’s multifaceted preservation of cultural heritage sites, said Liu Xiangyu, head of the cultural relics protection and management institute of Ji’an, northeast China’s Jilin Province.

    The protection work of the tombs is overseen by the cultural relics administration department of Yinchuan Municipal People’s Government. Meanwhile, departments of city planning, land and resources, as well as housing and urban-rural development all work in coordination within their respective duties, forming a joint force for protection.

    According to Liu, this tiered and coordinated system of historical site preservation was also adopted in the protection of the Capital Cities and Tombs of the Ancient Koguryo Kingdom in Jilin, which was inscribed on the World Heritage List in 2004. “As heritages of the same type, the two sites share many similarities in terms of protection methods,” Liu said.

    With its World Heritage inscription, the Xixia Imperial Tombs have now gained a new opportunity to inspire archaeological workers in China and the Chinese people as a whole. The head of the Xixia tomb area management office has vowed to take the inscription as an opportunity to comprehensively and continuously explore the cultural value of the site, and spare no effort in advancing its systematic protection, utilization and research. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • Amit Shah hails Bharat Vikas Parishad’s role in nation-building at 63rd Foundation Day

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Union Home Minister and Minister of Cooperation, Amit Shah, on Monday addressed the 63rd Foundation Day celebration of the Bharat Vikas Parishad (BVP) in New Delhi, praising the organisation for its six-decade-long contribution to national development and social service. The event was attended by several dignitaries, including retired Supreme Court Judge and National President of the Parishad, Justice Adarsh Kumar Goel.

    Describing BVP as a living embodiment of India’s civilisational ethos, Shah said the organisation has effectively connected “service with organisation, organisation with values, and values with nation-building.” Inspired by the ideals of Swami Vivekananda, BVP has, according to Shah, helped mobilise society’s creative energy through its core principles of dedication (Samarpan), organisation (Sangathan), and values (Sanskar).

    “An institution that works tirelessly for 63 years doesn’t just survive—it thrives on the dedication of countless volunteers. While 63 years may be old in a person’s life, for a service-driven institution like BVP, it marks youthful vibrance,” Shah remarked.

    Shah also honoured the legacy of freedom fighter Hemam Nilamani Singh from Manipur, who was posthumously recognised at the event. Singh, inspired by Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose, joined the Indian National Army in 1944 and devoted his life to education, service, and linguistic unity.

    Highlighting the reach of BVP, Shah noted that the organisation operates more than 1,600 branches across 412 districts and engages over 84,000 families. BVP has actively contributed to disaster relief, blood donation drives, rural education camps, and moral value-building initiatives in schools across the country.

    Turning to national development, Shah said that Prime Minister Narendra Modi has envisioned a Viksit Bharat (Developed India) by 2047 and laid out five foundational goals: economic progress, freedom from mental and cultural slavery, pride in India’s heritage, unity and solidarity, and a sense of civic duty. “The Bharat Vikas Parishad has worked silently but powerfully toward these goals for years,” Shah said.

    He highlighted achievements from the last 11 years of Modi’s tenure: the opening of over 55 crore bank accounts, the provision of safe drinking water to 15 crore households, construction of toilets in 12 crore homes, distribution of gas cylinders to 10 crore families, and the building of over 4 crore homes for the poor. He also emphasized the empowerment of women through initiatives like Lakhpati Didi and Mudra Yojana, where two-thirds of the loan beneficiaries are women.

    Shah pointed to the government’s efforts to decolonize national symbols and reclaim India’s heritage. From renaming Rajpath to Kartavya Path to replacing colonial insignia in the Indian Navy with Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj’s sword, he said these moves inspire national pride. Other symbolic actions include renaming islands in Andaman-Nicobar as Subhash Dweep and Shaheed Dweep, and Race Course Road as Lok Kalyan Marg.

    “Prime Minister Modi has shown how heritage and development can progress hand-in-hand,” said Shah. “While he built the Ram Temple, he also rolled out 5G and expanded digital payments to every corner of the country—even to vegetable vendors.”

    He also highlighted simultaneous progress in education and technology, citing the New Education Policy’s focus on mother-tongue instruction, and the expansion of premier institutes like IITs, IIMs, and AIIMS. India, he said, is emerging as a leader in AI, cybersecurity, drones, and green hydrogen. He connected this progress with national pride initiatives like the establishment of the Sengol in Parliament and the international promotion of Yoga.

  • MIL-OSI USA: PHOTO RELEASE: Tuberville Celebrates Roy Drinkard’s 105th Birthday, Speaks To Alabama Community Colleges and Grocers

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Tommy Tuberville (Alabama)

    WASHINGTON – Over the weekend,U.S. Senator Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) spoke at several events while at home in Alabama.

    On Saturday, Sen. Tuberville attended Mr. Roy Drinkard’s 105th birthday party in Cullman. Mr. Drinkard served in the Marine Corps during World War II and went on to have a successful career in business. He is the oldest known living Marine in the United States. At the birthday party, Sen. Tuberville let Mr. Drinkard know that he submitted his inspiring story to the Veterans’ History Project at the Library of Congress and presented him with a letter from President Trump congratulating him on 105 years.

    On Sunday, Sen. Tuberville gave remarks at the Alabama Community College System’s annual conference in Orange Beach, Alabama. During his remarks, Sen. Tuberville focused on the importance of workforce development and ensuring community colleges in Alabama get the support they need. Sen. Tuberville has long been a champion of workforce development as he does not believe a traditional, four-year college degree is for everyone. 

    On Monday, Sen. Tuberville spoke to the Alabama Grocers Association. During his remarks, he talked about the importance of protecting Alabama’s farmland from China, the urgent need to pass a Farm Bill, and how President Trump’s tariffs are bringing back domestic production. Senator Tuberville also highlighted some of the wins he was able to secure for Alabama farmers in the One Big Beautiful Bill.

    Senator Tommy Tuberville represents Alabama in the United States Senate and is a member of the Senate Armed Services, Agriculture, Veterans’ Affairs, HELP, and Aging Committees.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Interview with Tom McIlroy, Australian Politics podcast, The Guardian

    Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

    Tom McIlroy:

    Hi, I’m Tom McIlroy, coming to you from the lands of the Ngunnawal and Ngambri peoples in Canberra. We have a special early episode in your podcast feed this week.

    Ahead of his trip to the G20 Finance Ministers meeting in Durban this week, Treasurer Jim Chalmers joins the podcast to talk about Australia’s dream scenario in dealing with Donald Trump’s trade war.

    Jim Chalmers:

    Oh, the dream scenario is that these unnecessary tariffs are lifted. I mean we have to be realistic about that.

    McIlroy:

    As well as immediate challenges at home on housing and taxation.

    Chalmers:

    We’ve all got an interest in building more homes, it’s one of the defining challenges in our economy is that we don’t have enough.

    McIlroy:

    Plus, on a lighter note, the reading challenge laid down by his wife.

    Chalmers:

    And I gave her about a 12‑book head start in the lead‑up to the election. I’m trying to rein that in.

    McIlroy:

    From Guardian Australia, this is the Australian Politics podcast.

    Jim Chalmers, thanks for joining us on the pod.

    Chalmers:

    Thanks for having me back, Tom.

    McIlroy:

    This is actually my first face‑to‑face podcast interview with you, but I think you’ve been in the pod cave a few times over the years.

    Chalmers:

    I’ve been in here a bunch, all the way back to Murph days. And I really like it ‘cause it’s a good chance to go beyond the sound bites and key lines and themes that often dominate press conferences – a good chance to have a chat.

    McIlroy:

    That’s great, that’s great. Well, you’ve got a busy week. We’re going to talk about the G20 Finance Ministers meeting in a moment.

    I’ll start with the story of the day. There’s been a bit of a snafu with the Treasury incoming government brief, parts of it that would have been redacted, some sub‑headings have been made public. You say you’re relaxed about it. Tell us what’s going on here.

    Chalmers:

    Every incoming government, whether they’re a re‑elected government or when there’s a change, every department writes one briefing for a Labor government, one briefing for a Coalition government. And that advice is provided to you – well, in both of our instances, both times we’ve been elected I’ve received it on the Sunday morning after the election. And it runs through really all of the challenges in the portfolio, all the issues around policy.

    What’s happened this time is that there’s been a mistake made in the Treasury. Somebody’s sent out a document which has usually got bits of it pulled out, and they’ve left those parts in. And when I say I’m relaxed, we can’t change it now, it’s out there, so be it, is really my view about it. But the other reason I’m relaxed about it is because the Treasury is talking about a lot of things that I’ve talked about publicly when I’ve tried to be upfront with people about our economic challenges.

    Our economy is growing, there’s lots that’s going well in our economy, but it’s not productive enough. We’ve made a lot of progress getting the budget in much better nick, but we need it to be even more sustainable. And at a time when the global conditions are so volatile we need our economy to be more resilient as well. And those are really the major themes of the Treasury brief that was released. But also the major themes of really every opportunity I’ve taken since the election to talk about our challenges and what the government is doing about them. I’ve been focused on those 3 things too.

    McIlroy:

    One of the things that we’ve picked up with you today is that the brief says that the housing targets might not be met, or will not be met, I think is the language. You say that’s not quite right, that the government’s got real ambition. Give me some examples of the things that are happening, cutting red tape and speeding up housing construction that you think mean you will hit that 1.2 million.

    Chalmers:

    We’ve all acknowledged that this is an extremely ambitious target, and the Treasury advice is that we need to do better, and we need to do more in order to hit that target.

    I think that’s entirely consistent with what we’ve said, what the government and its ministers have said publicly.

    So there’s lots of things we’re focused on, we’re investing tens of billions of dollars in housing – record amounts of housing from a Commonwealth investment point of view. We’ve changed the tax arrangements when it comes to Build to Rent, for example, a whole range of things. A really important piece of the puzzle is around zoning and regulations and what you call red tape.

    We’re engaged with the state and territory governments and with local government to see where we can sensibly minimise that to get more homes built sooner. We’ve all got an interest in building more homes, it’s one of the defining challenges in our economies that we don’t have enough. And that’s why rents are higher than we would like, it’s why it’s harder than we would like for people to get a toe‑hold as first home buyers.

    Really the best solution is to build more homes. We have a whole bunch of ways that we intend to go about that, and the Treasury is really warning us that we’ll need to be better, we’ll need to do more, we’ll need to be quicker in order to hit the target.

    As I said to you earlier on when we did our press conference here in Canberra, I think it’s good to have ambitious targets. I think this challenge has been hanging around for so long, and the alternative to the ambition that we’re showing is to not build enough homes for our people. And we’d rather be ambitious, we’d rather set a big target and try and hit it than to continue to pretend that there’s not a challenge here.

    McIlroy:

    The incoming government brief talked about the need to increase taxes, and we’re going to talk in our interview today about the upcoming roundtable. That’s probably one of the things that has to come out, right; some taxes might have to be higher when the mix is reassessed?

    Chalmers:

    I think it’s good to think about the mix, as you just did in your question, Tom. Because for example, in our first term, we increased taxes on the PRRT, which is offshore gas, so that people – Australians – would get more return for their resources earlier. And that helped us pay for some other things like income tax cuts.

    We’re a government that’s actually enthusiastically been cutting income taxes 3 times for every Australian taxpayer. There is a mix in the tax system. We’re trying not to artificially limit the ideas or narrow the ideas that people will bring to that reform roundtable next month. There will be a whole bunch of ideas, some that the government will want to pick up and run with and some that we won’t be able to for whatever reason.

    But there’s a lot of pressure on the budget, and what we showed in the first term is we could deliver budget surpluses, we could engineer the biggest nominal turnaround in the Budget in a single term in our history, we could get the Liberal debt down, we could do all of those things. But we need ongoing effort to make the budget even more sustainable, and that will typically require a combination of spending restraint, which we’ve shown, spending cuts, which we’ve been able to deliver $100 billion worth working with Katy Gallagher. But also if there are opportunities like we found in multinational taxes or the PRRT, then sometimes that can help pay for lower taxes elsewhere.

    McIlroy:

    Today you’ve talked about the themes for the roundtable; resilience, productivity and sustainability. I think it’s going to attract a lot of attention; we’ll certainly be watching closely for Guardian readers. Are you expecting concrete outcomes quickly from that process; will they guide the rest of the term?

    Chalmers:

    I’m certainly expecting a lot of guidance. I think it’s still to be determined whether we pop up at the end of the 3 days and we’ve got some immediate changes that we want to make or whether we’ll need a bit more time to work with the States or with my Cabinet colleagues, or in other ways of consultation.

    So I think that remains to be seen, that’s an open question. But I spend a big chunk of my week thinking through the ideas that have already started coming in to us and thinking about the structure of the agenda and who we’ll invite and all of those sorts of things.

    I think the most likely outcome is that there are a couple of obvious things which we can commit to in one way or another, but obviously there will be the need to further explore and work up some of the other ideas that are put to us.

    But one of the things that’s been really encouraging, really surprised on the up side, is this – really this tsunami of interest that people have shown in that.

    We can’t have everyone in the room, ‘cause there’s a lot of interest in being in the room. But all these other opportunities people have taken, including the superannuation sector today have put forward a whole bunch of considered ideas; that’s good, that’s exactly what we want.

    And ideally the government can take from that ways to build on the progress we’re already making in our economy, to build on the big agenda we already have in economic policy and to work out what the next steps are. And that’s because from the Prime Minister down we genuinely believe that the best way to work out what the next steps are are together. And that’s why we go to this roundtable with not just an open door but an open mind.

    McIlroy:

    You’re off to Durban this week for the G20 Finance Ministers meeting hosted by South Africa. You’re going to meet with your counterparts from Canada, Indonesia, Japan, Germany, the UK. Will tariffs be one of the big things you’re talking about with your counterparts, will economic uncertainty around the world be guiding those talks?

    Chalmers:

    I think that will be the dominant theme, and the way we come at this is to recognise that the best defence against all of this uncertainty in the global economy. All this unpredictability and volatility which comes from either the trade tensions or conflict in the Middle East, conflict in Eastern Europe. The best defence against all of that is more engagement, not less, more diverse markets, not less diverse markets, and also more resilience in our own economy.

    And so that’s – when we engage with the world we engage with those objectives in mind, finding good reliable markets, good reliable partners and making our economy more resilient.

    I expect that the – really the foundation of all of the discussions we have with our international counterparts will be this global uncertainty and the big shift that’s happened in my thinking. But also I think in the world’s thinking, is that it used to be that periods of uncertainty were these sort of punctuation points. There’d be long periods of calm, they’d be punctuated by kind of an outbreak of uncertainty, temporary uncertainty, and I think there’s a more structural thing going on here where uncertainty and volatility and unpredictability has become the norm rather than the exception.

    We’ve had 4 big economic shocks now in less than 2 decades, and so this rolling challenge of volatility in the global economy is something that we’ve all had to adapt to.

    When I meet with my G20 counterparts, obviously trade will be a big part of the story, supply chains, critical minerals, how we get capital flowing more effectively in the global economy. These are the sorts of things I expect to be talking with them about.

    McIlroy:

    Are you and those ministers that you’re meeting with the same as the rest of us, you wake up every day and think, God what’s Donald Trump done this morning? Another round of tariffs, another setting his trade war. It must be taking years off your life.

    Chalmers:

    Look, I don’t know about that, but certainly when you check in with the international media every morning we’re becoming more and more accustomed to, probably more and more desensitised to some of these big announcements, and not just out of D.C., to be fair. That’s an important source of the uncertainty in the global economy but it’s not the only source of uncertainty.

    A lot of the old rules, as I said a moment ago, have kind of been thrown out the window. There’s a step change in the way that the world conducts its business, and that is – what I was trying to say earlier – uncertainty’s gone from a cyclical challenge to a kind of a structural challenge and part of that means expect the unexpected. Whether it’s the pretty much weekly news out of different parts of the world, some element of these escalating trade tensions, but also conflict, real conflict as well.

    I think all of that really feeds into this sense that the global economy is a dangerous place. We’re pretty well‑placed and pretty well‑prepared to deal with it as Australians, but we’re not spared from it. And that’s why our engagement’s so important, whether it’s what I’m doing at the G20 or what the Prime Minister’s doing in China.

    McIlroy:

    The proposed tariffs on pharmaceuticals were a big story last week, and a concerning one for you and for the economy here. Give us an update on how things are going in that specific area. You must have heard a lot from business about the possible effect those tariffs could have.

    Chalmers:

    The big developments from our point of view last week, I mean our baseline tariff has not changed, 10 per cent is at the low end. The lowest end of what the Americans are proposing as a baseline, but last week there was news about developments on copper and pharmaceuticals.

    Now copper is, we export less than 1 per cent of our copper to the US, it’s a very small part of our market. We, I think from memory, export 5 times more to Indonesia than we do to the US. And so our copper sector, our wonderful copper sector will work out the best way to adapt to those tariffs if and when they occur.

    Pharmaceuticals are a bit different in that a bigger part, a bigger chunk of our industry, are exports to the US. And President Trump has said he will take some time to work out the pharmaceutical arrangements. And so that gives us the opportunity to do what we have been doing, which is engage with the industry, try and work out what they think their exposures are. CSL, for example, has made a public contribution to our thinking about all of that.

    So we work through these issues, even when there’s a sense of unpredictability and volatility, we actually work through these issues in a pretty calm and considered way. And I think that’s been important, whether it’s been reacting to the initial tariff announcements on so‑called Liberation Day, or subsequently. We work through these issues in a methodical, calm, considered way from the Prime Minister right down, and that’s served us pretty well.

    McIlroy:

    Would a good outcome be Australia sticks on the 10 per cent, it’s the best deal going, the baseline, and the other steel and aluminium, pharmaceuticals, those kind of things we get an exemption from; is that your dream scenario?

    Chalmers:

    The dream scenario is that these unnecessary tariffs are lifted, we have to be realistic about that, and it feels like this discussion has a long way to run. Partly because as you rightly pointed out in your question before, you know, there’s a shift in emphasis or policy relatively frequently. And so we’re engaging at every level that we can to try and get the best outcome from Australia.

    We see these tariffs as unnecessary and self‑defeating; we’ve been pretty blunt about that, certainly blunt by the standards of international diplomacy. We’ve made it really clear that we think these tariffs are bad for the US, bad for Australia and bad for the global economy. Big implications potentially for global demand at a time when global growth is not exactly thick on the ground.

    We come at these issues, as I said a moment ago, in a pretty considered way. But we’ve been very, very clear that the best outcomes would be if they’re not levied in the first place.

    McIlroy:

    All right. Let me bring you home to some domestic matters here. The parliament’s coming back next week, it will be our first taste of Sussan Ley as Opposition Leader up against Anthony Albanese. What’s your assessment of her and of Ted O’Brien, your new Coalition counterpart, shadow? How do you see the term playing out politically in the parliament?

    Chalmers:

    Yeah, my general rule with politics is you don’t underestimate anyone. And for all his faults I didn’t underestimate Angus Taylor when he was my opposite number. And I won’t underestimate Ted O’Brien or Sussan Ley either.

    I personally get a bit worried by this idea because we won a big majority that the next election is kind of assured, I don’t believe it is. There are few such assurances I think in politics in modern times, but I think there are good reasons not to assume the outcome of the next election. Politics is volatile, and I mean it when I say I don’t underestimate either of those 2 people that you mentioned.

    I’s been interesting to see their reaction, you know, I invited Ted O’Brien to the reform roundtable in good faith. It’s been interesting to see his reaction to that, whether he takes up that opportunity in a mature way or wastes that opportunity, whether he reads the room. If Ted O’Brien comes to the reform roundtable and treats it as an extension of Question Time, I think that will go down pretty badly in the room.

    I also think if they aren’t constructive it will show that they haven’t learned anything from the last term which delivered that pretty stunning outcome on 3 May. And so let’s see how they perform.

    We intend to engage with them in a respectful way but there will be robust exchanges as well, no doubt, that’s the nature of our politics. But I for one won’t be underestimating anyone.

    McIlroy:

    They’ve signalled strong opposition to the $3 million super changes from the last parliament. You say you’ve got a mandate on that having won the election. Is the test for the Opposition on tax reform more broadly, that constructive approach that you mentioned? Is there any possibility of a bipartisan tax reform plan coming out of this?

    Chalmers:

    Oh, we’ll see. We need to have realistic expectations about that. I think a lot of the commentary, whether it’s from Ted O’Brien or Sussan Ley, I don’t think they are by their nature constructive, collaborative types. Here again, it feels like – when I listen to them it feels like they weren’t paying attention on 3 May.

    Ted O’Brien kind of looks like Scott Morrison but he sounds like Peter Dutton. And I think that’s interesting, because if I were them and I saw the outcome of 3 May I’d try and work out how to be different from the last term. Whereas they seem to be putting a lot of effort into working out how they can be the same with that obstructionist kind of hyper‑partisan, hyper‑critical approach.

    So let’s see, I might be wrong about that, let’s see. But by inviting Ted O’Brien to the roundtable, what we are trying to convey is we think that these big challenges in our economy will outlast governments. We’re talking about generational challenges – we’ve got all this global volatility which I think is structural and not cyclical. But it’s against the backdrop of changes in energy, technology, demography, industry, geopolitics, and we’d be mad to think they were constrained to kind of 3‑year Australian political cycles.

    From an Australian point of view, to take all of the parties out of it, all the partisanship out of it, the best outcome for our people would be if both parties could take a long‑term view about necessary reform and not just the Labor Party on its own.

    McIlroy:

    Are you open to the Greens counter‑proposals on 3 million super, for example, the $2 million threshold they’ve talked about?

    Chalmers:

    I’m grateful that the Greens have been privately and publicly pretty constructive about this. And at some stage, I’m not sure when – we were hoping that would be quite soon, but our pretty congested diaries with parliament coming back – at some point we’ll engage properly with the Greens on this. We can’t pass anything in the Senate on our own, that’s just the reality of the Senate. So we’ll have those discussions.

    But this won’t be the first piece of parliamentary business. We’ve made it clear that our first parliamentary priority coming back is to legislate the student debt relief. And so at some point there will be those discussions, but ideally we would legislate the proposal we announced a long time ago.

    McIlroy:

    Jillian Segal presented her report on combating antisemitism last week. Have you picked up any concern within the caucus about that? Some of those recommendations are pretty broad and there’s been a bit of bumpy politics, I would say, across the weekend.

    Chalmers:

    I’ve had conversations with a bunch of colleagues in the last week or so, but not about that. So if there is that concern, I haven’t heard it directly, it may be that others have heard that directly.

    But I don’t think it should surprise us in an area this contentious in the community, that there would be a range of views. And my personal point of view is that some of the antisemitism that we have seen, some of the attacks that we have seen are disgraceful, they have no place in a society like ours. So we are already taking a whole bunch of steps to crack down on antisemitism.

    The Envoy has provided us with some proposals; I think Tony and Anthony and others will work through those proposals.

    But as we do that, it would be pretty naive, I think, to assume that there was a unanimous view about the way forward here in an area which has got so much history, so much contention, where emotions are running hot for good reason. So let’s see where those considerations lead us.

    McIlroy:

    Okay. We’ve got a couple more minutes before we have to wrap up. Let me ask you about a budget question for the term ahead. Big big opportunities for Labor, big ambitions, as you’ve outlined. What’s a sign of success on budget repair for the end of this term, perhaps for you as Treasurer longer term; fixing the structural deficit perhaps, changing some of the settings to make things better going forward?

    Chalmers:

    I see it as an important part of our work, not on my own but with Katy Gallagher obviously, the Finance Minister, would see it along similar lines to the government. We’re lucky we’ve got a Prime Minister and a Cabinet very engaged and very enlightened about our budget challenges, that’s a good thing, and we have made all this progress together, that’s too easily dismissed, not by you but by a lot of commentators.

    They pretend that we haven’t engineered already this stunning improvement in the budget. Hundreds of billions of dollars better off than we inherited, much less debt, 2 surpluses for the first time in 2 decades.

    But Katy and I have always recognised that budget repair and budget sustainability is not the task of one budget, it’s the task of every budget.

    Measuring success would be making the budget more sustainable over time. There is a structural challenge in there, we have got some fast‑growing areas in the care economy and elsewhere which we’re very attuned to. And we would like to make some more progress on that.

    But the reason I’ve set up this roundtable around 3 priorities is because I think the big challenges are budget sustainability, but also our economy needs to be more productive. You can’t just flick a switch and make it more productive overnight, you’ve got to do that over time. And also resilience in the face of this global economic uncertainty. And so if we could make some progress on those 3 fronts for however long I’m here, then that would be good.

    McIlroy:

    Is there a risk that Labor is baking in some pretty big spending that will become part of the structural challenge itself? Your critics would say some of the big social spending – social policy areas, the spending in there is contributing to that problem even before the NDIS challenge is addressed properly.

    Chalmers:

    If you think about the 6 big fast‑growing areas in the budget, we’ve made really good progress on 3 of them – which is debt interest, aged care and the NDIS. And the other 3 are defence, childcare and health and hospitals. And so some of those changes are deliberate; in both directions necessary, some of them reflect demographic change. Our society is changing, our society is ageing, our preferences are changing, our industrial base is changing, the role of technology and energy, all of these things are happening, and so that has implications for the budget.

    There are some structural challenges there, but we’ve made more progress, I think, than is broadly acknowledged in reining in some of those structural challenges, but we know that there’s more work to do.

    McIlroy:

    Okay, Jim Chalmers, you’ve got a busy job, you’ve got a busy couple of weeks ahead.

    Tell us about a time when you’re not at work. What do you do to relax, what do you do when you’ve got a bit of free time?

    Chalmers:

    I think normal people have New Year’s resolutions, and people like me have after election resolutions. That’s because in elections you eat your feelings and you run out of time to do exercise and all those sorts of things. So my post‑election resolutions are more running, more reading – and I’m trying to get back into those 2 things.

    McIlroy:

    You’re an early‑morning runner, I think, right?

    Chalmers:

    I was, I haven’t been running a lot lately, I ran today, which was an effort, let’s say. When you’re – I’m not sure how old you are now, Tom, but I’m 47 now, and I’ve noticed that taking a break from running is more consequential than it used to be. I really felt that around Lake Burley Griffin this morning, so I’m trying to get back into better shape on that front.

    McIlroy:

    And what about reading? Tell us something that’s on your bedside table coming up.

    Chalmers:

    My reading is divided into my directly work reading and what I call nights and flights, and my nights and flights reading is – increasingly I’m getting back into a lot of history.

    But also I’ve got this – what seemed like a good idea at the time at the start of the year – my wife Laura and I, we agreed we’d try and read 30 books each this year. And I gave her about a 12‑book head start in the lead‑up to the election, I’m trying to rein that in. And so I’m trying to churn through a lot, but a lot of history, but also some classics too. Obviously I’m reading your book about Jackson Pollock and Blue Poles.

    McIlroy:

    Thanks for the plug.

    Chalmers:

    Yeah, everyone should get out and buy it. But if we’ve got time I’ll tell you a quick story. I was in Noosa with my family the other day and we went into the Village Bookshop and there’s a wonderful, wonderful woman there called Noelle. And I said to her quietly ‘cause the kids were there and Laura was there, I said, ‘Noelle, I’m a few books behind in our family reading challenge’. And she said, ‘I’ve got just the thing for you’, so she recommended to me the Steinbeck novel Of Mice and Men, but it’s a bleak but beautiful thing. And she said, ‘Come over here’, and she took me to the classics and she sold me a couple of classics of shorter length, let’s say, and that helped me –

    McIlroy:

    Some quick runs on the board.

    Chalmers:

    Quick runs on the board, it will help me make up the difference. So big shout‑out to Noelle at the Village Bookshop, a former schoolteacher. She knew exactly what I needed to try and close the gap on my reading.

    McIlroy:

    Well, Jim Chalmers, thanks for making some time for us today, we’ve covered a lot of ground. It’s really great to speak to you on the pod.

    Chalmers:

    I appreciate it, Tom. All the best, thank you.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Deluzio Introduces Bill to Limit Presidential Power to Deploy Troops on American Soil under the Insurrection Act

    Source: US Congressman Chris Deluzio (PA)

    WASHINGTON, D.C. — Today, Congressman Chris Deluzio (PA-17) introduced a new bill to check presidential authority under the centuries-old Insurrection Act. The new Insurrection Act of 2025 would reform legislation from 1807 that provides the President broad and vague authority to deploy troops—with or without the request of a state—to suppress “any insurrection, domestic violence, unlawful combination, or conspiracy.” Presidents have rarely used the current law, recognizing the long American tradition of keeping the military out of domestic law enforcement.

    “No President should have such wide-ranging power to deploy American troops against the American people,” said Congressman Deluzio. “This President has threatened to use the United States military to crush dissent among the American people, and Congress should act to reform and update the law that governs deployment of our troops for law enforcement in the United States. We need these urgent reforms to the centuries-old Insurrection Act so that no President has such expansive power to use military force against Americans.”

    Rep. Sara Jacobs (CA-51) said, “The troubling scenes unfolding in Los Angeles give us a glimpse of what could happen nationwide if President Trump tries to invoke the Insurrection Act and turn U.S. troops on civilians. We’ve already seen him twist the law for political gain, so Congress must leave zero ambiguity about when—and for how long—any president can deploy the military for domestic law-enforcement purposes. That’s why I was relieved that last month, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Dan Caine agreed with me that there’s currently no military invasion on our southern border that would justify invoking this law. Now we must go a step further by passing the Insurrection Act Reform Act of 2025—modernizing the 1807 statute for the 21st century to narrow this authority and mandate transparency, accountability, and consultation with Congress.”

    The new Insurrection Act of 2025 would:

    • Narrow and clarify the criteria for the domestic deployment of military troops for law enforcement purposes.
    • Specify that the use of the military is a last resort and is authorized only if the use of civilian law enforcement authorities would be insufficient.
    • Clarify that the law cannot be used to suspend habeas corpus, impose martial law, or deputize private militias to act as soldiers.
    • Require the President to consult with Congress prior to invoking the Insurrection Act and receive Congressional approval if the President seeks to exercise authority under the Act for longer than 7 days.
    • Require a report to Congress providing an explicit justification for the use of the Insurrection Act’s authority, as enumerated in this legislation, and a full description of the scope and duration of its use.
    • Provide for judicial review to ensure that individuals, or a state or local government, may bring a civil action if the President’s authority under the Insurrection Act is misused or abused.

    Full bill text of the version introduced in the House is available here. It is co-sponsored by Congresswoman Sara Jacobs (CA-51). U.S. Senators Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) and Alex Padilla (D-CA) introduced the Senate version of the bill in June.

    ### 

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Deluzio: “Hardworking Western Pennsylvanians Need Healthcare More Than Billionaires Need Tax Giveaways”

    Source: US Congressman Chris Deluzio (PA)

    Outside of a Local Nursing Home, Homecare Worker & Mom Whose Kids with Disabilities Rely on Medicaid Joined Congressman in Slamming Trump’s “Big Ugly Bill”

    HARMAR TOWNSHIP, PA – Today, Congressman Chris Deluzio (PA-17) spoke out against Donald Trump’s and Congressional Republicans’ “Big Ugly Bill” that will hurt Western Pennsylvania. Deluzio emphasized how it slashes healthcare for millions of hardworking Americans while giving tax handouts to the ultra rich—calling it “class warfare” and “fiscally reckless.” 

    Congressman Deluzio held his event outside of a local nursing home in Harmar Township. This is a sector where people count on Medicaid funding to pay for nursing home care for their loved ones, and businesses count on it as a revenue stream to fund their nursing home services and keep the doors open. At the press conference, a healthcare worker and a Pennsylvania mother whose kids rely on Medicaid shared their stories of how Medicaid is a lifeline for them that is now at risk.  

    “I was elected to do everything I can to make life better and less of a rip-off for my constituents. That’s exactly why I voted against this dangerous and unpopular bill that will rip away healthcare from hardworking Americans to pay for fiscally reckless tax giveaways to the richest and most powerful corporations and people to have ever walked our planet. Hardworking Western Pennsylvanians need healthcare more than billionaires need tax giveaways,” said Congressman Deluzio. “D.C. Republicans talk a lot about class warfare: they’re waging it against working class Americans.” 

    “I’m an Independent who voted for Trump, but these Medicaid cuts are a direct attack on the health of my family and my community,” said Denise Siters, a home care worker who lives in Beaver Falls. “I quit my job to become a full-time home care worker for my son David, who has schizoaffective disorder, autism and other health issues. His care is funded through Medicaid, and he also receives food support through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). Medicaid and SNAP cuts will put his life in danger and make it much harder for us just to get by. I am terrified about my son’s future. The fact that Pennsylvania Senator McCormick and nine of our Republican Congress members voted to sell out our healthcare just to fund huge tax giveaways to billionaires is sickening, it’s disgusting.” 

    “Medicaid is health coverage. But it is also so much more. Medicaid sustains our struggling hospitals, reduces levels of uncompensated care, and keeps insurance rates lower for everyone. Medicaid helps small businesses by covering low wage workers and ensuring that the local community is economically strong enough to support their local businesses,” said Erin Gabriel, Government Affairs Representative with the Pennsylvania Health Access Network, and the mother of children with disabilities who rely on Medicaid for care. “Ultimately, Medicaid means families like mine can stay together, seniors like my parents can age in place with the people they love, and people with disabilities can participate in their communities and live their lives – just like every other American.” 

    The “Big Ugly Bill”which was signed into law by President Trump on July 4th, will: 

    Congressman Deluzio will continue to fight back against the efforts of this Administration and Congressional Republicans to hurt the hardworking people of Western PA.  

    Photos from the event are available here. Video/audio is available upon request.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-Evening Report: After a hopeful start, Labor’s affordable housing fund is proving problematic

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Katrina Raynor, Director of the Centre for Equitable Housing, Per Capita and Research Associate, The University of Melbourne

    When the Albanese government announced the A$10 billion Housing Australia Future Fund in 2023, the news reverberated through the housing sector.

    A new funding facility to help build 30,000 social and affordable rental homes in five years. Given we only increased Australia’s social housing stock by 24,000 dwellings in the decade to 2024, this represents a significant uptick.

    The future fund is part of the National Housing Accord’s overall commitment to build 1.2 million new homes by the end of the decade. This target is now in serious doubt following advice from Treasury.

    Nonetheless, people were genuinely excited and hopeful about the focus on meeting the housing needs of lower income people.

    But stakeholders were also sceptical – and they had every right to be.

    How it works

    The future fund is a dedicated investment vehicle which helps finance new housing builds using the returns on the original $10 billion endowment.

    It does this by distributing loans and grants via competitive funding rounds open to not-for-profits, the private sector and other levels of government.

    When announcing the scheme, then Housing Minister Julie Collins said it would help address acute housing needs for people who are especially vulnerable:

    […] this will provide housing support to remote Indigenous communities, women and children experiencing domestic and family violence, older women at risk of homelessness, and veterans experiencing or at risk of homelessness.

    Two funding rounds have so far been announced – 9,284 social dwellings and 9,366 affordable homes.

    State and territory governments are involved in the process by providing access to land, expediting planning approvals and sometimes acting as developers.

    Reasons for hope

    The future fund is what the housing sector has been begging for for decades. It is a consistent, somewhat protected, pot of funding with a mandate to build social and affordable housing at scale.

    It is one of several hopeful changes underway in the housing space. The housing portfolio is now ensconced in cabinet after being elevated in the first Albanese ministry.

    Summerhill Village is a social housing project in Melbourne designed for older women to live independently.
    Author supplied, CC BY

    The relocation of housing and homelessness into Treasury is another positive development. Previously, policy areas were fragmented across a variety of departments.

    This is particularly welcome given we are yet to see the promised National Housing and Homeless Plan despite consultations beginning in 2023.

    Room for improvement

    While the future fund is a welcome infusion of money, my discussions with stakeholders have provided mixed feedback.

    As with any new program, there have been teething issues. Red tape has slowed contracts, while the May election paused all negotiations.

    Housing funding in Australia remains lumpy – characterised by sudden changes in the scale and priorities of funding – and policy is highly politicised.

    Survival of the cheapest

    Loans and grants are distributed through competitive, oversubscribed funding rounds.

    Coupled with a need for quick political wins, bigger players with lower cost projects are far more likely to receive funding to guarantee a larger quantum of housing.

    While this may appear to reflect greater value for money, it means the scheme is incentivised to fund affordable housing aimed at moderate income households rather than social housing aimed at more vulnerable people. New homes are not targeted where need is greatest.

    Given affordable housing will be delivered at 75% of market rent, there are many people who will still not be able to afford it. While we undoubtedly need both, the need is far greater for social housing.

    As the chart above shows, almost all funding in round one went to Tier One Community Housing Providers, who are the biggest developers with the most in-house capacity.

    While privileging larger organisations is not necessarily a bad thing, it does mean smaller players with more location or cohort-specific strengths are continuing to miss out.

    For example, only one Aboriginal Community Housing Provider was successful in the first round, sparking calls for an Aboriginal-specific funding round.

    Program inefficency

    Submitting bids is time consuming and uncertain, especially for funding rounds designed to stimulate new partnerships between stakeholders who haven’t worked together before.

    Further, establishing partnerships and contracts with government is labour intensive and complex.

    One industry insider recently joked the main things being funded by the scheme are new backyard pools for Sydney-based lawyers.

    Beyond this, the future fund provides availability payments – which recur quarterly during the operating phase of projects – rather than upfront capital grants.

    According to research, this is one of the most inefficient ways to fund social housing. Capital grants paid at the start to support construction are far more cost effective.

    Lack of operational funds

    Another key barrier is the focus on “bricks and mortar” to the exclusion of ongoing service costs.

    Funding to cover tenancy support, building maintenance and operations, and other wrap-around services is essential, especially for social housing aimed at individuals with higher needs.

    This is not covered by the fund and is yet to be substantively picked up by state governments either.

    Clearly, there are aspects of the housing future fund that need improvement. But this is not a call to abolish the scheme.

    The last thing the sector needs is another policy pivot or funding cut. In fact, doubling the fund to $20 billion would be warranted.

    The 30,000 new homes fall well short of the estimated 640,000 Australian households whose housing needs are currently unmet.

    The Housing Australia Future Fund is just one element – but an important one – in the suite of measures we should be using to address acute housing needs.

    Katrina Raynor is the Director of Per Capita’s Centre for Equitable Housing. Per Capita is an independent think tank that receives funding from a range of sources including philanthropy, unions, individuals and government.

    ref. After a hopeful start, Labor’s affordable housing fund is proving problematic – https://theconversation.com/after-a-hopeful-start-labors-affordable-housing-fund-is-proving-problematic-260085

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: After a hopeful start, Labor’s affordable housing fund is proving problematic

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Katrina Raynor, Director of the Centre for Equitable Housing, Per Capita and Research Associate, The University of Melbourne

    When the Albanese government announced the A$10 billion Housing Australia Future Fund in 2023, the news reverberated through the housing sector.

    A new funding facility to help build 30,000 social and affordable rental homes in five years. Given we only increased Australia’s social housing stock by 24,000 dwellings in the decade to 2024, this represents a significant uptick.

    The future fund is part of the National Housing Accord’s overall commitment to build 1.2 million new homes by the end of the decade. This target is now in serious doubt following advice from Treasury.

    Nonetheless, people were genuinely excited and hopeful about the focus on meeting the housing needs of lower income people.

    But stakeholders were also sceptical – and they had every right to be.

    How it works

    The future fund is a dedicated investment vehicle which helps finance new housing builds using the returns on the original $10 billion endowment.

    It does this by distributing loans and grants via competitive funding rounds open to not-for-profits, the private sector and other levels of government.

    When announcing the scheme, then Housing Minister Julie Collins said it would help address acute housing needs for people who are especially vulnerable:

    […] this will provide housing support to remote Indigenous communities, women and children experiencing domestic and family violence, older women at risk of homelessness, and veterans experiencing or at risk of homelessness.

    Two funding rounds have so far been announced – 9,284 social dwellings and 9,366 affordable homes.

    State and territory governments are involved in the process by providing access to land, expediting planning approvals and sometimes acting as developers.

    Reasons for hope

    The future fund is what the housing sector has been begging for for decades. It is a consistent, somewhat protected, pot of funding with a mandate to build social and affordable housing at scale.

    It is one of several hopeful changes underway in the housing space. The housing portfolio is now ensconced in cabinet after being elevated in the first Albanese ministry.

    Summerhill Village is a social housing project in Melbourne designed for older women to live independently.
    Author supplied, CC BY

    The relocation of housing and homelessness into Treasury is another positive development. Previously, policy areas were fragmented across a variety of departments.

    This is particularly welcome given we are yet to see the promised National Housing and Homeless Plan despite consultations beginning in 2023.

    Room for improvement

    While the future fund is a welcome infusion of money, my discussions with stakeholders have provided mixed feedback.

    As with any new program, there have been teething issues. Red tape has slowed contracts, while the May election paused all negotiations.

    Housing funding in Australia remains lumpy – characterised by sudden changes in the scale and priorities of funding – and policy is highly politicised.

    Survival of the cheapest

    Loans and grants are distributed through competitive, oversubscribed funding rounds.

    Coupled with a need for quick political wins, bigger players with lower cost projects are far more likely to receive funding to guarantee a larger quantum of housing.

    While this may appear to reflect greater value for money, it means the scheme is incentivised to fund affordable housing aimed at moderate income households rather than social housing aimed at more vulnerable people. New homes are not targeted where need is greatest.

    Given affordable housing will be delivered at 75% of market rent, there are many people who will still not be able to afford it. While we undoubtedly need both, the need is far greater for social housing.

    As the chart above shows, almost all funding in round one went to Tier One Community Housing Providers, who are the biggest developers with the most in-house capacity.

    While privileging larger organisations is not necessarily a bad thing, it does mean smaller players with more location or cohort-specific strengths are continuing to miss out.

    For example, only one Aboriginal Community Housing Provider was successful in the first round, sparking calls for an Aboriginal-specific funding round.

    Program inefficency

    Submitting bids is time consuming and uncertain, especially for funding rounds designed to stimulate new partnerships between stakeholders who haven’t worked together before.

    Further, establishing partnerships and contracts with government is labour intensive and complex.

    One industry insider recently joked the main things being funded by the scheme are new backyard pools for Sydney-based lawyers.

    Beyond this, the future fund provides availability payments – which recur quarterly during the operating phase of projects – rather than upfront capital grants.

    According to research, this is one of the most inefficient ways to fund social housing. Capital grants paid at the start to support construction are far more cost effective.

    Lack of operational funds

    Another key barrier is the focus on “bricks and mortar” to the exclusion of ongoing service costs.

    Funding to cover tenancy support, building maintenance and operations, and other wrap-around services is essential, especially for social housing aimed at individuals with higher needs.

    This is not covered by the fund and is yet to be substantively picked up by state governments either.

    Clearly, there are aspects of the housing future fund that need improvement. But this is not a call to abolish the scheme.

    The last thing the sector needs is another policy pivot or funding cut. In fact, doubling the fund to $20 billion would be warranted.

    The 30,000 new homes fall well short of the estimated 640,000 Australian households whose housing needs are currently unmet.

    The Housing Australia Future Fund is just one element – but an important one – in the suite of measures we should be using to address acute housing needs.

    Katrina Raynor is the Director of Per Capita’s Centre for Equitable Housing. Per Capita is an independent think tank that receives funding from a range of sources including philanthropy, unions, individuals and government.

    ref. After a hopeful start, Labor’s affordable housing fund is proving problematic – https://theconversation.com/after-a-hopeful-start-labors-affordable-housing-fund-is-proving-problematic-260085

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Russia: For the third time, NSU hosted the scientific and educational school for students in grades 7–11, “Sigma”

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Novosibirsk State University –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    “Sigma” is a free summer scientific and educational school for students in grades 7-11, which has been held for the third year at the Faculty of Information Technology NSUThis year the event took place from July 7 to 13.

    The main idea of “Sigma” is from students to schoolchildren. The goal of the project is to bring schoolchildren closer to the university, providing the opportunity to freely choose courses, participate in rich discussions and interact with teachers who care about their interests, not grades.

    This season, Sigma hosted 24 courses taught by 28 instructors, including students, graduates, and young researchers from various universities, such as NSU, MSU, SPbSU, HSE, Tyumen State University, MVSES, MSU Skolkovo, IPL SB RAS, as well as industry practitioners, including the Whatelse.lab marketing agency. The geography of the instructors covered the Novosibirsk Region, Krasnoyarsk, Tyumen, St. Petersburg, and Moscow.

    Each course was built as a cycle of 3-6 lessons. The format — from discussions and mini-lectures to role-playing games and workshops — was determined by the teachers and adjusted to the course concept. The course topics included a wide range of disciplines, such as sociology, anatomy, cinematography, linguistics, programming, biotechnology, as well as Olympiad courses in chemistry and literature. Thus, participants could try themselves in the humanities, social sciences, natural sciences and engineering and understand which of them were of the greatest interest.

    Kirill Kondrenko, a graduate of NSU and one of the permanent teachers at Sigma, shares his experience:

    — I think that Sigma is a great opportunity for schoolchildren to gain practical skills and learn interesting things that are ignored in a comprehensive school. Last year I taught the course Online Security, and this year — Telebot on developing Telegram bots in Python. During the course, we studied the basic elements of building bots, and at the end, the students did group projects — among them were a guide to interesting places, a bot for recognizing text from voice messages, a bot for analyzing user emotions, and others. During the classes, the students liked the interactivity the most: it was worth changing just a couple of lines of code — and the bot’s behavior in Telegram completely changed.

    “Sigma” creates an atmosphere in which schoolchildren with “burning eyes” receive knowledge from students with the same sincere interest. I am convinced that it is this atmosphere that influences skills and knowledge even more than the content of the classes themselves. Every day at “Sigma” there were extracurricular activities that helped “refresh the mind” and distract from the courses for a while. In my opinion, this is exactly what is lacking in ordinary schools, where students have 7-8 lessons a day.

    The Sigma organizers play no less an important role than the teachers: they set the tone for the entire school, coordinate processes and create the very atmosphere in which everything happens.

    Vladimir Sharapov, a second-year student at the NSU Institute of Information Technologies and the head of Sigma from the NSU Institute of Information Technologies, says:

    — Sigma was my first experience in organizing such a large-scale and long-term event. It was a truly exciting and responsible adventure. Of course, there were difficulties, but we overcame all the challenges. I am sure that everything went well — including thanks to the support and trust shown to me. Special thanks to the entire team of organizers, without whom this path would not have been possible — to those who supported me on this new path.

    As mentioned above, the geography of the school’s teachers was represented by different universities and regions. Tarina Iptysheva, the main organizer of Sigma, a student of SAS Tyumen State University, talks about her participation in the project:

    — For me, Sigma is, first of all, about the feeling of “Peace, friendship and chewing gum!” and establishing supportive and warm relationships. And only secondly, about gaining new experience, knowledge, and getting acquainted with interesting ideas and disciplines.

    I think many of the participants actually did it, at least from what they say. And that makes me incredibly happy.

    And I’m also very happy when the guys say that they managed to get to know each other, become friends and find a common language – and this is probably the most valuable thing.

    This year, 107 participants from the Novosibirsk region gathered at Sigma. Each could choose up to four courses and create their own educational trajectory. Upon completion of the school, the guys shared their impressions with us.

    Lisa, Sigma student:

    — This is my third year at the school, and I was looking forward to this season with great impatience. All my expectations were met in abundance — I am absolutely delighted with the variety of courses, the atmosphere, and, of course, the people I met or reconnected with. For me, Sigma is always about new cool acquaintances and warm meetings with old friends and new like-minded people.

    I really like the idea of “from students to schoolchildren” that Sigma promotes, and that’s probably why one of the highlights of the first half of the season was Self-Government Day. I really liked the idea, and it gave me new ideas about what I’d like to do in the future.

    In general, I always say that Sigma is a meaningful event of July for me. And I think the emotions and impressions I return home with after each school day are the best confirmation of this.

    Yulia, a student of Sigma:

    — Of course, the concept of Sigma as a place where you will be appreciated, where your opinion will be appreciated, where teachers respect you, is very important. Especially for teenagers who came here from a familiar school environment, often harsh and formal. To find yourself in such a comfortable place, where there is attention, respect and a sincere interest in you as a person — it’s really cool. Here, the teacher is interested in you, wants to share knowledge and is truly open to discussions.

    We thank all the teachers and organizers, without whom Sigma would not have become what it is: a place of genuine interest, academic freedom and friendly interaction.

    Special thanks to the Faculty of Information Technology of NSU and the Department of Youth Policy and Educational Work of NSU for their support in implementing the school – thanks to you, this project continues and develops.

    See you next season of Sigma!

     

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    .

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Two people died as a result of the collapse of part of a residential building in Tbilisi

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

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

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

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

    Tbilisi, July 15 (Xinhua) — Two people were killed when the facade of a five-story apartment building collapsed on Vokzalnaya Square in central Tbilisi on Monday, Tbilisi Police Department Director Vazha Siradze said after arriving at the scene.

    Search and rescue operations are continuing at the site of the tragedy, the area is being cleared of debris. Ambulance crews and employees of the Emergency Management Service are working.

    According to Tbilisi Mayor Kakha Kaladze, the building was declared unsafe and was assigned the fifth category of damage, and could not be restored.

    K. Kaladze stated that the city authorities had met with residents on numerous occasions and offered them participation in a housing replacement program, which would allow the building to be demolished and a new one built. However, according to him, it was not possible to reach an agreement with all residents.

    Immediately after receiving the report of the incident, emergency services were dispatched to the scene. Firefighters immediately evacuated citizens from the adjacent area. –0–

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    .

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: PRRT assessable receipts

    Source: New places to play in Gungahlin

    Assessable petroleum receipts

    Commercial recovery of petroleum is the most significant assessable receipts that result from a petroleum project. These are referred to as assessable petroleum receipts. They generally arise when recovered petroleum is sold before it is processed or after some preliminary processing has been undertaken.

    Certain other kinds of receipts are also assessable under the petroleum resource rent tax (PRRT). Broadly, these receipts are assessable to ensure there is symmetry in the PRRT as they generally arise from amounts that have been previously claimed as a deduction. For example, the consideration received from the disposal of property used in a petroleum project is assessable as the original purchase is deductible under the PRRT.

    There is no revenue or capital distinction in the PRRT. Therefore, receipts of a revenue or capital nature may be assessable under the PRRT.

    For more information, see PRRT concepts.

    Derivation of assessable receipts

    Assessable receipts derived in relation to a petroleum project need to be taken into account in the financial year in which they are receivable or, in certain cases, when they are deemed to be receivable.

    As assessable receipts are derived when they are receivable or deemed to be receivable, they may be derived before the project commences (that is, before a production licence comes into force) or after it has ceased.

    Broadly, assessable receipts from the North West Shelf project derived from 1 July 2012 will be assessable.

    Types of assessable receipts

    There are 7 types of assessable receipts for petroleum projects:

    For further information, see PRRT deductible expenditure.

    Assessable petroleum receipts

    Assessable petroleum receipts are derived when consideration becomes receivable from the sale of a marketable petroleum commodity (MPC). Assessable petroleum receipts are the consideration receivable for the sale less any expenses payable in relation to the sale.

    An MPC is a product produced from petroleum (for example, stabilised crude oil, sales gas and condensate) that is in its final form for the purpose of either sale, use as feedstock for conversion to another product or direct consumption as energy. However, it does not include a product that was produced from an MPC.

    In a situation where the MPC is not sold but it becomes an excluded commodity, the assessable petroleum receipts represent the market value of the MPC before it becomes or became an excluded commodity. Where there is insufficient evidence of the market value, the Commissioner of Taxation may determine a fair and reasonable amount to be the assessable petroleum receipts.

    An excluded commodity is an MPC that has been sold, further processed or treated after being produced, moved from the place of its production other than to an adjacent storage site or moved from a storage site adjacent to the place of production.

    Special rules

    Special rules apply in calculating assessable petroleum receipts from sales gas produced in an integrated gas-to-liquid (GTL) operation or an integrated gas-to-electricity (GTE) operation whereby the sales gas is further processed into a liquefied product or consumed in the commercial production of electricity.

    For more information, see:

    Assessable tolling receipts

    Assessable tolling receipts are consideration receivable for the processing of internal or external petroleum in relation to a petroleum project.

    Internal petroleum is petroleum recovered from a production licence area of the project. For example, a joint venturer who owns the processing facility may process the share of petroleum of one or more other venturers.

    External petroleum is petroleum recovered from an area other than the production licence area of the project. For example, petroleum recovered from project A is processed in the processing plant of project B.

    Assessable exploration recovery receipts

    Assessable exploration recovery receipts are derived in a similar manner as assessable petroleum receipts, except that they are derived from petroleum (or an MPC produced from the petroleum) recovered from the eligible exploration or recovery area (other than a production licence area) in relation to a petroleum project. In other words, they relate to recovery of petroleum from the area of an exploration permit or a retention lease.

    Assessable property receipts

    Assessable property receipts include certain amounts receivable in respect of the disposal, loss or destruction of property for which a deduction for capital expenditure (being eligible real expenditure) was incurred in relation to the project.

    Assessable property receipts include all of the following amounts:

    • consideration receivable on disposal of project property
    • the market value of property on termination of its use in the project
    • insurance payments for loss or damage to project property
    • consideration receivable for hiring, leasing out or granting of a right to use project property
    • consideration receivable for the provision of information obtained by incurring eligible real expenditure in relation to the project (for example, amounts receivable from sale of information obtained from a survey, appraisal or study).

    Where property has been purchased for use partly in relation to a project (and accordingly only that proportion of capital expenditure has been claimed as eligible real expenditure of the project), only a corresponding proportion of the receipts from the disposal of that property (or other things referred to above) will be included as assessable property receipts in relation to the project.

    Assessable miscellaneous compensation receipts

    Assessable miscellaneous compensation receipts include amounts receivable by way of insurance, compensation or indemnity in respect of all of the following:

    • the loss or destruction (or in respect of the loss of any profit caused by the loss or destruction) of petroleum before an MPC had been produced from the petroleum
    • the loss or destruction (or in respect of the loss of any profit caused by the loss or destruction) of an MPC before it becomes an excluded commodity
    • the loss of any amounts that would otherwise have been assessable receipts in relation to a project.

    Assessable miscellaneous compensation receipts also include amounts receivable by way of refund, rebate, discount, commission, compensation or indemnity received in relation to eligible real expenditure incurred in relation to a project.

    Assessable miscellaneous compensation receipts will include grossed up amounts of refunds of resource tax expenditure for the North West Shelf project.

    Refunds of resource tax expenditure

    The North West Shelf project is subject to certain Commonwealth, state and territory excise and royalties (resource tax expenditure).

    From 1 July 2012, resource tax expenditure is creditable against the PRRT liability of the North West Shelf project. This is achieved by grossing up payments of resource taxes by the PRRT rate that is then deductible against assessable receipts of the project.

    Entities may be entitled to a refund where there has been an overpayment of a royalty or excise. In these circumstances the refund will be grossed up (by dividing it by the PRRT rate) and will be treated as an assessable miscellaneous compensation receipt in the year it is received.

    However, refunds received after 1 July 2012 that relate to petroleum extracted before 1 July 2012, will not be assessable.

    Assessable employee amenities receipts

    Amounts receivable for or in respect of the provision of employee amenities in respect of which eligible real expenditure was incurred, are assessable employee amenities receipts.

    The term ’employee amenities’ means provision of non-profit housing, health, education, recreation, welfare or similar facilities and services (including provision of meals) to project employees or their dependents.

    Assessable incidental production receipts

    Consideration receivable from the sale of incidental products other than petroleum or an MPC which have been recovered, extracted or produced using operations, facilities and other things that are related to the petroleum project and for which eligible real expenditure was incurred, will be treated as assessable incidental production receipts.

    Examples include consideration receivable from the sale of both:

    • water from a water treatment facility that is an integral part of a petroleum project
    • excess electricity that is produced as part of a petroleum project.

    Assessable incidental production receipts also include consideration receivable from the sale of services relating to carbon capture and storage provided to another entity using operations, facilities and other things of the petroleum project and for which eligible real expenditure was incurred.

    Receipts which are not assessable receipts

    Some receipts are not assessable for PRRT purposes, particularly those receipts that relate to expenditure which has been categorised as excluded expenditure for PRRT purposes. Examples include:

    • amounts received as loans, or in respect of loans made
    • receipts of interest and capital repayments received from borrowers
    • share capital received as shareholders’ funds
    • dividend or bonus shares received from associated companies
    • private override royalty income
    • proceeds from the sale of interests in an exploration permit, retention lease or production licence.

    For more information, see PRRT deductible expenditure.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-Evening Report: ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for July 15, 2025

    ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on July 15, 2025.

    A warning from the future: the risk if NZ gets climate adaptation policy wrong today
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Tom Logan, Senior Lecturer Above the Bar, Civil and Natural Resources Engineering, University of Canterbury Getty Images New Zealand 2050: On the morning of February 27, the sea surged through the dunes south of the small town of Te Taone, riding on the back of Cyclone Harita’s

    ABC’s and CBS’s settlements with Trump are a dangerous step toward the commander in chief becoming the editor-in-chief
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michael J. Socolow, Professor of Communication and Journalism, University of Maine Will settlements by news companies with President Donald Trump turn journalists into puppets? MARHARYTA MARKO/iStock Getty Images Plus It was a surrender widely foreseen. For months, rumors abounded that Paramount would eventually settle the seemingly frivolous

    Is there any hope for the internet?
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Aarushi Bhandari, Assistant Professor of Sociology, Davidson College Hate and mental illness fester online because love and healing seem to be incompatible with profits. Ihor Lukianenko/iStock via Getty Images In 2001, social theorist bell hooks warned about the dangers of a loveless zeitgeist. In “All About Love:

    Hung parliament still likely outcome of Tasmanian election, with Liberals well ahead of Labor in new poll
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Adrian Beaumont, Election Analyst (Psephologist) at The Conversation; and Honorary Associate, School of Mathematics and Statistics, The University of Melbourne A new Tasmanian DemosAU poll gives the Liberals a 34.9–24.7 statewide vote lead over Labor, implying the Liberals will win the most seats but be short of

    Luxon and Peters to miss Cook Islands’ 60th Constitution Day celebrations
    By Caleb Fotheringham, RNZ Pacific journalist New Zealand will not send top government representation to the Cook Islands for its 60th Constitution Day celebrations in three weeks’ time. Instead, Governor-General Dame Cindy Kiro will represent Aotearoa in Rarotonga. On August 4, Cook Islands will mark 60 years of self-governance in free association with New Zealand.

    Keith Rankin Analysis – Reporting International Migration: Less than the Truth
    Analysis by Keith Rankin. Yesterday I listened to RNZ’s political commentators. The principal topic was an aspect of the recently released May 2025 international migration. Kathryn Ryan starts by reminding us of the “old saying, would the last person to leave New Zealand please turn out the lights” (a saying which has been used in

    Antisemitism plan fails on a number of fronts – a contentious definition of hate is just the start
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Louise Chappell, Scientia Professor, UNSW Sydney The antisemitism strategy presented to the Albanese government has attracted considerable – and wholly justifed – criticism. Produced by Jillian Segal, the special envoy to combat antisemitism, the blueprint falls short in a range of areas essential to good public policy.

    Do I have prostate cancer? Why a simple PSA blood test alone won’t give you the answer
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kevin M. Koo, NHMRC Emerging Leadership Fellow, The University of Queensland Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in Australia, with about 26,000 men diagnosed per year. The majority (more than 85%) are aged over 60. Prostate cancer kills around 3,900 Australians a year. Yet most prostate

    Many fish are social, but pesticides are pushing them apart
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kyle Morrison, PhD Candidate in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, UNSW Sydney Kazakov Maksim, Shutterstock Scientists have detected pesticides in rivers, lakes and oceans worldwide. So what are these pesticides doing to the fish? Long before pesticides reach lethal doses, they can disrupt hormones, impair brain function and

    Almost half of young workers expected to work unpaid overtime, while a quarter aren’t paid compulsory super
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By John Howe, Associate Dean (Research), Melbourne Law School, The University of Melbourne Anna Kraynova/Shutterstock A young person gets a job, excited to earn their first paycheck. Over time, they realise the hours are long and the payslips small. They are told to stay back to clean up

    Israeli settlers shoot, beat to death 2 Palestinians in latest lynchings
    BEARING WITNESS: By Cole Martin in occupied West Bank Two young Palestinians were shot and beaten to death on their land, and 30 injured, by Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank on Saturday. A large group of settlers attacked the rural Palestinian village of Sinjil, in the Ramallah governorate, beating Sayfollah “Saif” Mussalet, 20,

    View from The Hill: Segal’s antisemitism plan gives government controversy, not clarity
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra Prime Minister Anthony Albanese may be rueing what seemed a good idea at the time – the appointment of a special envoy to combat antisemitism (as well as an envoy to combat Islamophobia). Or perhaps Jillian Segal, a former president

    David Robie condemns ‘callous’ health legacy of French, US nuclear bomb tests in Pacific
    Report by Dr David Robie – Café Pacific. – A journalist who was on the Rainbow Warrior voyage to Rongelap last night condemned France for its “callous” attack of an environmental ship, saying “we haven’t forgotten, or forgiven this outrage”. David Robie, the author of Eyes of Fire: The Last Voyage and Legacy of the

    Was the Air India crash caused by pilot error or technical fault? None of the theories holds up – yet
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Guido Carim Junior, Senior Lecturer in Aviation, Griffith University Over the weekend, the Indian Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau released a preliminary report on last month’s crash of Air India flight 171, which killed 260 people, 19 of them on the ground. The aim of a preliminary report

    Confusing for doctors, inequitable for patients: why Australia’s medicinal cannabis system needs urgent reform
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Christine Mary Hallinan, Senior Research Fellow, Department of General Practice and Primary Care, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences, The University of Melbourne Vanessa Nunes/Getty Images In 2024 alone, Australia’s medicines regulator, the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA), authorised at least 979,000 prescription applications for medicinal cannabis

    Treasury warns the government it may not balance the budget or meet its housing targets
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By John Hawkins, Head, Canberra School of Government, University of Canberra Kokkai Ng/Getty In the runup to each election, federal treasury produces a “blue book” and a “red book”, with advice tailored to the priorities of the two alternative governments. One of these is given to the incoming

    UNESCO grants World Heritage status to Khmer Rouge atrocity sites – paving the way for other sites of conflict
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Rachel Hughes, Associate Professor of Geography, The University of Melbourne A series of atrocity sites of the Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia have been formally entered onto the World Heritage list, as part of the 47th session of the World Heritage Committee. This is not only important

    How do you stop an AI model turning Nazi? What the Grok drama reveals about AI training
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Aaron J. Snoswell, Senior Research Fellow in AI Accountability, Queensland University of Technology Anne Fehres and Luke Conroy & AI4Media, CC BY Grok, the artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot embedded in X (formerly Twitter) and built by Elon Musk’s company xAI, is back in the headlines after calling

    Author condemns ‘callous’ health legacy of French, US nuclear bomb tests in Pacific
    Asia Pacific Report A journalist who was on the Rainbow Warrior voyage to Rongelap last night condemned France for its “callous” attack of an environmental ship, saying “we haven’t forgotten, or forgiven this outrage”. David Robie, the author of Eyes of Fire: The Last Voyage and Legacy of the Rainbow Warrior, said at the launch

    Washington’s war demands – Australia right to refuse committing to a hypothetical conflict with China over Taiwan
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By John Blaxland, Professor, Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, Australian National University Andy. LIU/Shutterstock The United States can count on Australia as one of its closest allies. Dating back to the shared experiences in the second world war and the ANZUS Treaty signed in 1951, Australia has steadfastly

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for July 15, 2025

    ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on July 15, 2025.

    A warning from the future: the risk if NZ gets climate adaptation policy wrong today
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Tom Logan, Senior Lecturer Above the Bar, Civil and Natural Resources Engineering, University of Canterbury Getty Images New Zealand 2050: On the morning of February 27, the sea surged through the dunes south of the small town of Te Taone, riding on the back of Cyclone Harita’s

    ABC’s and CBS’s settlements with Trump are a dangerous step toward the commander in chief becoming the editor-in-chief
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michael J. Socolow, Professor of Communication and Journalism, University of Maine Will settlements by news companies with President Donald Trump turn journalists into puppets? MARHARYTA MARKO/iStock Getty Images Plus It was a surrender widely foreseen. For months, rumors abounded that Paramount would eventually settle the seemingly frivolous

    Is there any hope for the internet?
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Aarushi Bhandari, Assistant Professor of Sociology, Davidson College Hate and mental illness fester online because love and healing seem to be incompatible with profits. Ihor Lukianenko/iStock via Getty Images In 2001, social theorist bell hooks warned about the dangers of a loveless zeitgeist. In “All About Love:

    Hung parliament still likely outcome of Tasmanian election, with Liberals well ahead of Labor in new poll
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Adrian Beaumont, Election Analyst (Psephologist) at The Conversation; and Honorary Associate, School of Mathematics and Statistics, The University of Melbourne A new Tasmanian DemosAU poll gives the Liberals a 34.9–24.7 statewide vote lead over Labor, implying the Liberals will win the most seats but be short of

    Luxon and Peters to miss Cook Islands’ 60th Constitution Day celebrations
    By Caleb Fotheringham, RNZ Pacific journalist New Zealand will not send top government representation to the Cook Islands for its 60th Constitution Day celebrations in three weeks’ time. Instead, Governor-General Dame Cindy Kiro will represent Aotearoa in Rarotonga. On August 4, Cook Islands will mark 60 years of self-governance in free association with New Zealand.

    Keith Rankin Analysis – Reporting International Migration: Less than the Truth
    Analysis by Keith Rankin. Yesterday I listened to RNZ’s political commentators. The principal topic was an aspect of the recently released May 2025 international migration. Kathryn Ryan starts by reminding us of the “old saying, would the last person to leave New Zealand please turn out the lights” (a saying which has been used in

    Antisemitism plan fails on a number of fronts – a contentious definition of hate is just the start
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Louise Chappell, Scientia Professor, UNSW Sydney The antisemitism strategy presented to the Albanese government has attracted considerable – and wholly justifed – criticism. Produced by Jillian Segal, the special envoy to combat antisemitism, the blueprint falls short in a range of areas essential to good public policy.

    Do I have prostate cancer? Why a simple PSA blood test alone won’t give you the answer
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kevin M. Koo, NHMRC Emerging Leadership Fellow, The University of Queensland Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in Australia, with about 26,000 men diagnosed per year. The majority (more than 85%) are aged over 60. Prostate cancer kills around 3,900 Australians a year. Yet most prostate

    Many fish are social, but pesticides are pushing them apart
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kyle Morrison, PhD Candidate in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, UNSW Sydney Kazakov Maksim, Shutterstock Scientists have detected pesticides in rivers, lakes and oceans worldwide. So what are these pesticides doing to the fish? Long before pesticides reach lethal doses, they can disrupt hormones, impair brain function and

    Almost half of young workers expected to work unpaid overtime, while a quarter aren’t paid compulsory super
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By John Howe, Associate Dean (Research), Melbourne Law School, The University of Melbourne Anna Kraynova/Shutterstock A young person gets a job, excited to earn their first paycheck. Over time, they realise the hours are long and the payslips small. They are told to stay back to clean up

    Israeli settlers shoot, beat to death 2 Palestinians in latest lynchings
    BEARING WITNESS: By Cole Martin in occupied West Bank Two young Palestinians were shot and beaten to death on their land, and 30 injured, by Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank on Saturday. A large group of settlers attacked the rural Palestinian village of Sinjil, in the Ramallah governorate, beating Sayfollah “Saif” Mussalet, 20,

    View from The Hill: Segal’s antisemitism plan gives government controversy, not clarity
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra Prime Minister Anthony Albanese may be rueing what seemed a good idea at the time – the appointment of a special envoy to combat antisemitism (as well as an envoy to combat Islamophobia). Or perhaps Jillian Segal, a former president

    David Robie condemns ‘callous’ health legacy of French, US nuclear bomb tests in Pacific
    Report by Dr David Robie – Café Pacific. – A journalist who was on the Rainbow Warrior voyage to Rongelap last night condemned France for its “callous” attack of an environmental ship, saying “we haven’t forgotten, or forgiven this outrage”. David Robie, the author of Eyes of Fire: The Last Voyage and Legacy of the

    Was the Air India crash caused by pilot error or technical fault? None of the theories holds up – yet
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Guido Carim Junior, Senior Lecturer in Aviation, Griffith University Over the weekend, the Indian Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau released a preliminary report on last month’s crash of Air India flight 171, which killed 260 people, 19 of them on the ground. The aim of a preliminary report

    Confusing for doctors, inequitable for patients: why Australia’s medicinal cannabis system needs urgent reform
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Christine Mary Hallinan, Senior Research Fellow, Department of General Practice and Primary Care, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences, The University of Melbourne Vanessa Nunes/Getty Images In 2024 alone, Australia’s medicines regulator, the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA), authorised at least 979,000 prescription applications for medicinal cannabis

    Treasury warns the government it may not balance the budget or meet its housing targets
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By John Hawkins, Head, Canberra School of Government, University of Canberra Kokkai Ng/Getty In the runup to each election, federal treasury produces a “blue book” and a “red book”, with advice tailored to the priorities of the two alternative governments. One of these is given to the incoming

    UNESCO grants World Heritage status to Khmer Rouge atrocity sites – paving the way for other sites of conflict
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Rachel Hughes, Associate Professor of Geography, The University of Melbourne A series of atrocity sites of the Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia have been formally entered onto the World Heritage list, as part of the 47th session of the World Heritage Committee. This is not only important

    How do you stop an AI model turning Nazi? What the Grok drama reveals about AI training
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Aaron J. Snoswell, Senior Research Fellow in AI Accountability, Queensland University of Technology Anne Fehres and Luke Conroy & AI4Media, CC BY Grok, the artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot embedded in X (formerly Twitter) and built by Elon Musk’s company xAI, is back in the headlines after calling

    Author condemns ‘callous’ health legacy of French, US nuclear bomb tests in Pacific
    Asia Pacific Report A journalist who was on the Rainbow Warrior voyage to Rongelap last night condemned France for its “callous” attack of an environmental ship, saying “we haven’t forgotten, or forgiven this outrage”. David Robie, the author of Eyes of Fire: The Last Voyage and Legacy of the Rainbow Warrior, said at the launch

    Washington’s war demands – Australia right to refuse committing to a hypothetical conflict with China over Taiwan
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By John Blaxland, Professor, Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, Australian National University Andy. LIU/Shutterstock The United States can count on Australia as one of its closest allies. Dating back to the shared experiences in the second world war and the ANZUS Treaty signed in 1951, Australia has steadfastly

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: The southern hemisphere is full of birds found nowhere else on Earth. Their importance has been overlooked

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Matthias Dehling, Researcher, School of Biological Sciences, Monash University

    Matthias Dehling

    The snow petrel, a strikingly white bird with black eyes and a black bill, is one of only three bird species ever observed at the South Pole. In fact, the Antarctic is the only place on Earth where this bird lives.

    It isn’t alone in this. Antarctica and the sub-Antarctic harbour a large number of endemic species, which means these species are only found in one or a few locations in the world.

    In other words, these regions have a high degree of “endemism” – an important metric that tells us where to focus species conservation efforts.

    But our new study shows that the degree of endemism in Antarctica and the sub-Antarctic – and in the southern hemisphere more generally – has been underestimated.

    This is important because areas with a high degree of endemism harbour species with restricted ranges, unique evolutionary history or unique ecological functions. This makes them potentially more vulnerable to disturbances such as climate change, fundamental changes in habitat, or invasive introduced species.

    If the degree of endemism is underestimated, conservation efforts may overlook the sites that are home to irreplaceable birds.

    Biased measurements

    There are two reasons why global patterns of species endemism aren’t well defined. First, the most common method used to calculate endemism tends to give higher values to places with more species overall – this is known as species richness.

    In addition, global studies of diversity often exclude areas that are comparatively species-poor. These areas are mainly in the southern hemisphere – most notably the Antarctic region. When sites that only contain a few species are left out, this influences the estimates of endemism for all other sites.

    An alternative way to calculate endemism takes into account a site’s “complementarity”. This metric considers whether species found at a site are also found elsewhere. With this method, we can find sites that have the highest percentage of species with a restricted range.

    At such highly endemic sites, the local ecosystem relies heavily on species with restricted ranges to function, which makes them all the more irreplaceable.

    The superb lyrebird, known for its skillful vocal imitations, is endemic to southeast Australia.
    Matthias Dehling

    Global hotspots for endemic species

    This is the approach we used in our new study to reassess the endemism of birds worldwide. In our study, we also considered other aspects of bird diversity. We measured endemism with regard to whether sites hold irreplaceable evolutionary history and ecological functions of birds.

    We found that southern-hemisphere communities showed higher rates of local endemism than northern-hemisphere communities across all aspects of diversity. The sub-Antarctic islands and the High Andes, as well as several regions in Australia, Aotearoa New Zealand and southern Africa, stand out as global hotspots of endemism.

    These regions hold many charismatic birds with unique evolutionary histories or unique ecological functions, and these birds are largely restricted to the southern hemisphere.

    Among these are the palaeognaths – the bird lineage that includes kiwis, emus, cassowaries and ostriches. They also include the lyrebirds and the New Zealand wrens, as well as iconic Antarctic species such as penguins and albatrosses.

    Tawaki or Fiordland crested penguin is only found in Aotearoa New Zealand.
    Matthias Dehling

    Not much land, a lot of ocean

    The higher rates of endemism in the southern hemisphere are likely related to the uneven global distribution of landmass. Put simply, there is much more available landmass in the northern hemisphere. As you go further south, landmasses become increasingly separated by vast expanses of ocean.

    Because of the smaller and separated landmasses, species in the southern hemisphere have much smaller ranges than species in the northern hemisphere. Consequently, local species communities share fewer species with each other. This leads to the higher observed endemism in the southern hemisphere.

    The black-breasted buttonquail is a secretive rainforest bird whose range is restricted to a tiny area in south-east Queensland, Australia.
    Matthias Dehling

    A heightened vulnerability

    Our findings suggest that birds in the northern and southern hemisphere might react differently to environmental pressures. Unfortunately, most studies on the impact of climate change to date are from the northern hemisphere.

    In response to climate change in particular, species are expected to shift their ranges towards cooler climates. While northern-hemisphere birds are likely free to shift their ranges across large stretches of uninterrupted landmass, birds in the southern hemisphere are hindered by vast expanses of ocean that separate the different landmasses on which they live.

    For species at the southern tips of South America, Africa or Australia, the nearest major landmass towards the south is Antarctica. But it is unsuitable for most bird species.

    The potentially heightened vulnerability of southern-hemisphere birds suggests they deserve more protection. In addition to known species diversity hotspots that hold large numbers of species, conservation efforts should consider areas that might hold only a small number of species, but irreplaceable ones that aren’t found anywhere else.

    Matthias Dehling receives funding from the Australian Research Council.

    ref. The southern hemisphere is full of birds found nowhere else on Earth. Their importance has been overlooked – https://theconversation.com/the-southern-hemisphere-is-full-of-birds-found-nowhere-else-on-earth-their-importance-has-been-overlooked-260828

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: The southern hemisphere is full of birds found nowhere else on Earth. Their importance has been overlooked

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Matthias Dehling, Researcher, School of Biological Sciences, Monash University

    Matthias Dehling

    The snow petrel, a strikingly white bird with black eyes and a black bill, is one of only three bird species ever observed at the South Pole. In fact, the Antarctic is the only place on Earth where this bird lives.

    It isn’t alone in this. Antarctica and the sub-Antarctic harbour a large number of endemic species, which means these species are only found in one or a few locations in the world.

    In other words, these regions have a high degree of “endemism” – an important metric that tells us where to focus species conservation efforts.

    But our new study shows that the degree of endemism in Antarctica and the sub-Antarctic – and in the southern hemisphere more generally – has been underestimated.

    This is important because areas with a high degree of endemism harbour species with restricted ranges, unique evolutionary history or unique ecological functions. This makes them potentially more vulnerable to disturbances such as climate change, fundamental changes in habitat, or invasive introduced species.

    If the degree of endemism is underestimated, conservation efforts may overlook the sites that are home to irreplaceable birds.

    Biased measurements

    There are two reasons why global patterns of species endemism aren’t well defined. First, the most common method used to calculate endemism tends to give higher values to places with more species overall – this is known as species richness.

    In addition, global studies of diversity often exclude areas that are comparatively species-poor. These areas are mainly in the southern hemisphere – most notably the Antarctic region. When sites that only contain a few species are left out, this influences the estimates of endemism for all other sites.

    An alternative way to calculate endemism takes into account a site’s “complementarity”. This metric considers whether species found at a site are also found elsewhere. With this method, we can find sites that have the highest percentage of species with a restricted range.

    At such highly endemic sites, the local ecosystem relies heavily on species with restricted ranges to function, which makes them all the more irreplaceable.

    The superb lyrebird, known for its skillful vocal imitations, is endemic to southeast Australia.
    Matthias Dehling

    Global hotspots for endemic species

    This is the approach we used in our new study to reassess the endemism of birds worldwide. In our study, we also considered other aspects of bird diversity. We measured endemism with regard to whether sites hold irreplaceable evolutionary history and ecological functions of birds.

    We found that southern-hemisphere communities showed higher rates of local endemism than northern-hemisphere communities across all aspects of diversity. The sub-Antarctic islands and the High Andes, as well as several regions in Australia, Aotearoa New Zealand and southern Africa, stand out as global hotspots of endemism.

    These regions hold many charismatic birds with unique evolutionary histories or unique ecological functions, and these birds are largely restricted to the southern hemisphere.

    Among these are the palaeognaths – the bird lineage that includes kiwis, emus, cassowaries and ostriches. They also include the lyrebirds and the New Zealand wrens, as well as iconic Antarctic species such as penguins and albatrosses.

    Tawaki or Fiordland crested penguin is only found in Aotearoa New Zealand.
    Matthias Dehling

    Not much land, a lot of ocean

    The higher rates of endemism in the southern hemisphere are likely related to the uneven global distribution of landmass. Put simply, there is much more available landmass in the northern hemisphere. As you go further south, landmasses become increasingly separated by vast expanses of ocean.

    Because of the smaller and separated landmasses, species in the southern hemisphere have much smaller ranges than species in the northern hemisphere. Consequently, local species communities share fewer species with each other. This leads to the higher observed endemism in the southern hemisphere.

    The black-breasted buttonquail is a secretive rainforest bird whose range is restricted to a tiny area in south-east Queensland, Australia.
    Matthias Dehling

    A heightened vulnerability

    Our findings suggest that birds in the northern and southern hemisphere might react differently to environmental pressures. Unfortunately, most studies on the impact of climate change to date are from the northern hemisphere.

    In response to climate change in particular, species are expected to shift their ranges towards cooler climates. While northern-hemisphere birds are likely free to shift their ranges across large stretches of uninterrupted landmass, birds in the southern hemisphere are hindered by vast expanses of ocean that separate the different landmasses on which they live.

    For species at the southern tips of South America, Africa or Australia, the nearest major landmass towards the south is Antarctica. But it is unsuitable for most bird species.

    The potentially heightened vulnerability of southern-hemisphere birds suggests they deserve more protection. In addition to known species diversity hotspots that hold large numbers of species, conservation efforts should consider areas that might hold only a small number of species, but irreplaceable ones that aren’t found anywhere else.

    Matthias Dehling receives funding from the Australian Research Council.

    ref. The southern hemisphere is full of birds found nowhere else on Earth. Their importance has been overlooked – https://theconversation.com/the-southern-hemisphere-is-full-of-birds-found-nowhere-else-on-earth-their-importance-has-been-overlooked-260828

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Taipower Launches 2025 Environmental Month Dajia River Power Plant Builds Aquatic Ecological Corridor, Conservation Meets International Standards

    Source: Republic of China Taiwan

    Taipower officially launched its 2025 Environmental Month today (April 30). Following earlier conservation efforts such as relocating bat habitats at the Taixi Wind Farm and creating bird habitats at the Yong’an Wetlands by Hsinta Power Plant, Taipower has now completed an aquatic ecological corridor at its Dajia River Power Plant. Aligning with global trends in biological conservation, Taipower has embraced the principles of OECM (Other Effective Area-Based Conservation Measures) by extending conservation efforts beyond legally designated protected areas. Guided by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), Taipower proactively launched an OECM demonstration project in the Ma’an Dam area of the Dajia River. The results of this conservation effort, along with future planning, have been verified by an impartial third-party organization as meeting international standards.

    The Taipower 2025 Environmental Month Launch Event, held today at its headquarters under the theme Coexisting with Nature, Moving Forward with Taipower, was attended and supported by Taipower Chairman Wen-Sheng Tseng, President Yao-Ting Wang, Deputy Executive Director of the Executive Yuan’s Office of Energy and Carbon Reduction Tze-Luen Lin, Secretary General of the Ministry of Economic Affairs Ming-Chih Chuang, Director-General of the Department of State-owned Enterprise Affairs Wen-Chung Hu, Professor Kwang-Tsao Shao of National Taiwan Ocean University, Emeritus Professor Ching-Hsien Tseng of National Tsing Hua University, and Professor Lee-Shing Fang of National Sun Yat-sen University. A special guest, Professor Nobuyuki Yagi from the University of Tokyo, former UN biodiversity policy expert and a key architect of Japan’s OECM framework, attended to witness Taipower’s ecological conservation work at the Dajia River Power Plant meeting global benchmarks.

    Reviewing its 2024 environmental performance, Taipower reported major progress: compared to its 2016 baseline, air pollutant emission intensity from thermal power units (covering the total particulate matter (PM), sulfur oxides (SOx), and nitrogen oxides (NOx) per kilowatt-hour generated) have dropped by nearly 70%. Carbon emission intensity (greenhouse gas emissions per kilowatt-hour) have decreased by 11%.

    In terms of ecological conservation, Taipower emphasized that hydroelectric plants have strong connections to local ecosystems and cultural heritage. The Dajia River Basin hosts a rich diversity of species, including the Plumbeous Water Redstart, Formosan Reeve’s muntjac, and the Taiwan leaf-nosed bat, along with a diverse riverine ecosystem. The OECM demonstration zone covers the upstream and downstream stretches of the Ma’an Dam, home to 17 fish species and critical habitats for native species such as the Taiwan torrent carp, Taiwan shovel-jaw carp, and river loach. To balance power generation with ecological conservation, Taipower constructed a fishway at Ma’an Dam as early as 1998 to assist fish migration, and further upgraded it in 2016 by lowering the entrance threshold and riverbed drop, enabling smaller or leaping fish species to swim upstream more successfully.

    Taipower further explained that, to better evaluate the fishway’s effectiveness, the Company began deploying underwater monitoring cameras in 2023 to record fish movement within the passage. Last year, the Company also developed an AI-based Species Recognition System. By combining expert tagging with an expanding image database, Taipower now monitors fishway usage more accurately and in real time.

    Taipower noted that the Dajia River Power Plant has carried out sustained conservation efforts for more than a decade. The OECM project was guided by experts and further verified by PwC Taiwan (one of Taiwan’s Big Four Accounting Firms), confirming that the upstream and downstream sections of the Ma’an Dam align with IUCN’s OECM guidelines. A verification certificate was presented today and received by President Yao-Ting Wang on behalf of Taipower . Taipower also stated that as Taiwan officially announces its OECM standards and certification system, the Company will strive to support the process and is confident that it will become one of the first companies in Taiwan to earn government OECM certification.

    Glossary:
    OECM (Other Effective Area-based Conservation Measures ):
    Specific geographical areas outside of legally designated protected areas where diverse governance and management approaches deliver measurable biodiversity and ecosystem conservation outcomes.

    Spokesperson: Vice President Chih-Meng Tsai
    Tel: (02 )2366-6271/0958-749-333
    Email: u910707@taipower.com.tw

    Contact Person: Director of the Environmental Protection Department Cheng-Hung Wu
    Tel: (02 )2366-7200/0927-291-156
    Email: u015279@taipower.com.tw

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Reps. Sherman, Lucas, Calvert, Kamlager-Dove & Moore Introduce Bipartisan Legislation to Support America’s Olympic and Paralympic Games

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Brad Sherman (D-CA)

    WASHINGTON, D.C. — Today, Representatives Brad Sherman (D-Calif.-32), Frank Lucas (R-Okla.-03), Ken Calvert (R-Calif.-41), Sydney Kamlager-Dove (D-Calif.-37), and Blake Moore (R-Utah-01)  introduced bipartisan legislation to support and commemorate the 2028 and 2034 Olympic and Paralympic Games set to take place in Los Angeles, California and Salt Lake City, Utah, respectively, through the minting of new commemorative coins. U.S. Senators Alex Padilla (D-Calif.), John Curtis (R-Utah), Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), and Markwayne Mullin (R-Okla.) introduced companion legislation in the Senate.

    “The dedication demonstrated by the American athletes who participate in the Olympic and Paralympic Games is truly inspiring and our nation is honored to host both the Los Angeles 2028 Summer Games and Salt Lake City 2034 Winter Games. That is why I am proud to join my colleagues in celebrating our athletes by introducing America’s Olympic and Paralympic Games Commemorative Coins Act. As a senior member of the House Financial Services Committee, which has jurisdiction over this legislation, I look forward to Congress moving quickly to advance this important bill. As an Angelino, I am excited to witness the Olympics return to Los Angeles after 44 years, and I am proud to join with my colleagues to honor the Salt Lake City 2034 Games as well,” said Congressman Sherman.

    The America’s Olympic and Paralympic Games Commemorative Coins Act would direct the Treasury Department to mint and issue four types of coins each in commemoration of the 2028 and 2034 Olympic and Paralympic Games. The coins would be minted at no cost to the federal government, and any proceeds collected from the sale of these commemorative coins would aid in the execution of the 2028 and 2034 Games as well as support their legacy programs, which include the promotion of youth sports in the United States.

     “After years of careful preparation and federal collaboration, Los Angeles will be under the world spotlight for the Olympic and Paralympic Games before we know it,” said Senator Padilla. “Our bipartisan legislation will help ensure Los Angeles has the resources it needs to put on a world-class event — with a token to commemorate the Games for years to come. There is strong congressional interest in promoting and supporting all upcoming U.S.-hosted Olympic events to showcase our nation and our athletes on the global stage, and I look forward to working alongside my colleagues to advance this bill.”

     “The 2034 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games will showcase Utah’s pioneer spirit, community strength, and commitment to excellence,” said Senator Curtis. “These commemorative coins honor not just the athletes, but the values that built our state and the legacy we’ll pass on to future generations.”

     “It is such an honor that our Golden State will be hosting the 2028 Summer Olympic Games and Paralympic Games in Los Angeles. And I am proud to join my colleagues in introducing this bipartisan legislation to commemorate these historic games and our incredible athletes,” said Senator Schiff.

     “American athletes are the pinnacle of our exceptionalism and I am looking forward to them leading the way as we host both the 2028 Summer Olympic Games and the 2034 Winter Olympic Games. As Oklahoma’s world-class facilities will be home to multiple official venues, I am honored to join with my colleagues on this important legislation,” said Senator Mullin.

     “It is no small honor to host the Olympic Games, and no small feat to organize them either. That is why these commemorative coins would not only pay proper tribute to such a great honor, but also help pay for the preparations to ensure the upcoming Olympic games – including the 2028 games in my home state – receive the resources they need,” said Representative Lucas. 

     “The Olympic and Paralympic Games are incredible events that celebrate athletic achievement and the human spirit. I’m especially excited for the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games in Los Angeles, which will allow southern California residents to get an up-close look at these remarkable competitions as well as deliver a tremendous boost to our tourism economy. I want to thank all of my colleagues who have worked together to advance the bipartisan America’s Olympic and Paralympic Games Commemorative Coins Act,” said Representative Calvert.

     “As we gear up for the Los Angeles 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games, I’m proud to co-lead the America’s Olympic and Paralympic Games Commemorative Coins Act,” said Representative Kamlager-Dove. “This commemorative coin will celebrate not only the upcoming games, but also nearly a century of Olympic history in Los Angeles. The 2028 Games in Los Angeles memorialized by this coin will be a feat all Angelenos and Americans can be proud of.”

     “I’m immensely proud to represent Utah in co-leading the America’s Olympic and Paralympic Games Commemorative Coins Act. The return of the Winter Olympic and Paralympic Games to Salt Lake City in 2034 will mark only the second time in history that the Winter Olympics have returned to the same city, and I cannot wait to see Utah front and center on the world stage once again,” said Representative Moore. “This bid was supported by over 80% of Utahns and will bring billions in GDP growth, tens of thousands of jobs, and showcase the world’s best athletes on the Greatest Snow on Earth. I’m also thrilled that the Summer Olympics will return stateside to Los Angeles in 2028 and look forward to this bill quickly passing through both houses of Congress.”

     “The 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games will mark the historic return of the summer Games to America in more than 30 years,” said LA28 Chief Executive Officer Reynold Hoover. “The heart and dedication demonstrated by the athletes who participate in the Games is truly unparalleled. Los Angeles 2028, followed by Salt Lake 2034 will serve as an opportunity for American athletes to showcase their talent and resilience on the world’s stage. We’re grateful to Senators Padilla, Curtis, Schiff, and Mullin and Congressmembers Sherman, Lucas, Calvert, Kamlager-Dove and Moore for moving this bill forward to honor these athletes and our U.S. host cities for the 2028 and 2034 Games.”

     “As a four-time Olympian, I greatly appreciate the commemorative coin program as another means of showcasing our Olympic and Paralympic athletes,” said Catherine Raney Norman, Vice President Development and Athlete Relations, Salt Lake City-Utah 2034, A four-time Olympic speed skater. 

     Specifically, the America’s Olympic and Paralympic Games Commemorative Coins Act would direct the Treasury Department to mint and issue commemorative $5 gold coins, $1 silver coins, half-dollar clad coins, and proof silver $1 coins in commemoration of the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games set to be held in in Los Angeles and the 2034 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games set to be held in Salt Lake City.

     The United States has hosted the modern Olympic Games nine times, with the 2028 Games set to become the third time Los Angeles will host the summer Olympic Games and the 2034 Games set to become the second time Salt Lake City will host the Olympic Winter Games. 

     Senator Padilla has secured millions of dollars in federal investments to help prepare Los Angeles for the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games. Last year, Padilla, Representative Jimmy Gomez (D-Calif.-34), and former Representative Grace F. Napolitano celebrated nearly $900 million in federal investments in LA Metro to improve mobility and upgrade transportation infrastructure ahead of the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games. This included $139 million for LA Metro’s “Removing Barriers and Creating Legacy” project, which will reconnect communities and strengthen mobility across highway and arterial barriers ahead of the Games. The funding comes through the Reconnecting Communities and Neighborhoods Grant Program (RCN), which includes the Reconnecting Communities Pilot Program that was modeled off the Reconnecting Communities Act that Padilla co-led in 2021. Padilla also traveled on a presidential delegation to Paris last year for the opening ceremony of the Olympic and Paralympic Games in preparation for the 2028 Los Angeles Games.

     Full text of the bill is available here.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News