Category: housing

  • MIL-OSI Global: How aid cuts could make vulnerable communities even less resilient to climate change

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Kalle Hirvonen, Senior Research Fellow, International Food Policy Research Insitute; Research Fellow, UNU-WIDER, United Nations University

    An irrigation project in Mozambique. Marcos Villalta / Save the Children, CC BY-NC-ND

    As global temperatures rise and climate-related disasters become more frequent, the need to adapt is rapidly increasing. That need for adaptation – from adjusting farming practices to diversifying livelihoods and strengthening infrastructure – is most acute in vulnerable low- and middle-income countries such as Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Haiti and Vietnam.

    Despite contributing a negligible share of historical global greenhouse gas emissions, these countries are facing the brunt of climate change. Yet as the demand for long-term resilience grows, international aid priorities are shifting in the opposite direction.

    Over the past three years, several major rich countries have substantially cut their development aid budgets. Remaining funds have been redirected towards emergency relief.

    This shift could undermine the climate finance commitments made by wealthy countries to mobilise US$300 billion (£228 billion) a year for climate action in the most vulnerable low- and middle-income countries by 2035.


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    Emergency aid, while vital for saving lives during crises such as droughts and floods, is reactive by nature. It arrives only after disaster has struck, often with a substantial delay.

    By contrast, climate adaptation is proactive. It focuses on anticipating future risks and helping communities prepare for changing environments.

    A key part of this is supporting transitions away from sectors like crop agriculture that are particularly vulnerable to climate-related shocks. In some cases, adapting to a changing climate may also require helping families move safely — turning relocation into a choice rather than a last resort.

    In Ethiopia, one of the world’s most drought-prone countries, a US government-funded food security programme aimed to strengthen resilience by offering livelihood training, organising savings groups and providing a US$200 lump sum to poor rural households. Research shows that this programme improved food security and protected assets during periods of drought.

    Livestock farming in the Somali region of Ethiopia which was severely affected by droughts in 2011.
    Malini Morzaria/EUECHO, CC BY-NC-ND

    In Nicaragua, families who received cash transfers alongside vocational training or investment grants were better protected against drought shocks than those relying on cash alone. These households could supplement farming with other income sources. This made them less vulnerable to drought-related losses and helped stabilise their earnings throughout the year.

    These schemes are known as “cash-plus programmes”. They help create the conditions for households to adapt and thrive. But when climate and environmental shocks overwhelm the resilience of local communities, relocation may still become the only viable option.

    That’s why proactive adaptation efforts need to be scaled up and broadened — not only to meet immediate needs but to support longer-term transitions. This includes investing in sustainable livelihoods through diversified income sources, skills training and, when necessary, enabling safe and voluntary relocation.

    Some pilot interventions that supported seasonal rural-to-urban migration have shown what’s possible. In Bangladesh, a small migration subsidy of just US$8.50 helped the participating poor farm households affected by seasonal famine cover travel costs.

    Migration for temporary work increased by 22%, and families back home experienced improvements in food security. With even modest support, people were able to access job opportunities in cities and strengthen their resilience.

    Programmes that make it easier for people to choose to move from rural areas to cities could help families move with dignity rather than in desperation. However, scaling up such initiatives successfully remains a challenge, requiring strong political commitment and effective governance.

    Climate relocation

    Without proactive planning and support, migration often happens out of necessity rather than choice. This kind of displacement typically occurs within national borders rather than across continents — contrary to popular narratives.

    In fact, 59% of the world’s forcibly displaced population live within their own country. By the end of 2023, a record 75.9 million people across 116 countries were internally displaced — a 51% increase over the previous five years, driven in part by climate change.

    A family leave their home in Oklahoma, US, as a result of the 1930s dust bowl disaster.
    Dorothea Lange/Library of Congress, Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information.

    History provides sobering lessons about relocation triggered by environmental collapse. In the 1930s, a severe drought and dust storms struck the Great Plains in the US, creating the “dust bowl”. This devastated farmland and forced millions of people to leave their homes, as economic hardship became widespread and the land so degraded that crops wouldn’t grow.

    Today, similar patterns loom as droughts, floods and rising seas threaten livelihoods around the world. Small island states such as Tuvalu face existential threats from rising sea levels, with entire communities at risk of being displaced.

    These mounting threats underscore a hard truth: the window for effective climate adaptation is rapidly closing. As climate disruptions intensify, the case for long-term investment in resilience has never been clearer. Without proactive adaptation, the cycle of crisis and response will only deepen.

    Societies can adapt, but doing so takes foresight, investment and courage. In the face of escalating climate risks, bold, forward-looking policies are not a luxury — they are a necessity. By supporting longer-term strategies, rich-country governments and aid charities can enable vulnerable communities to withstand, adapt and, when necessary, move with dignity.


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    Kalle Hirvonen’s recent and ongoing research has been funded by the CGIAR Trust Fund (https://www.cgiar.org/funders/), the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland.

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

    ref. How aid cuts could make vulnerable communities even less resilient to climate change – https://theconversation.com/how-aid-cuts-could-make-vulnerable-communities-even-less-resilient-to-climate-change-255358

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Moomin merchandise and fashion: 80 years of ultra-savvy marketing that taps into childhood nostalgia

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Kiera Vaclavik, Professor of Children’s Literature & Childhood Culture, Queen Mary University of London

    On a visit to the British Library in London to research this piece, I was preceded by a woman with a lilac-coloured tote featuring a mischievous-looking girl with a severe top knot and black dress. I instantly recognised the distinctive outline of Tove Jansson’s Little My, one of the many brilliant characters of the Moominverse.

    A committed researcher, I summoned up the courage to ask about the bag and the woman carrying it. Anna – visiting the library to work on her fairy tale novel – immediately told all about her hold-all. About how she felt a connection with “fiery and independent” Little My specifically and Moomins generally. About how they took her back to her Swedish childhood, when she would hand-knit the distinctive rotund creatures. I had clearly hit the jackpot with Anna – Moomin owner, wearer and maker, all in one.

    Anna had bought the bag in Sweden, but you don’t have to go to the Scandinavian birthplace of the Moomins to buy into their world. Anna could have gone to the Moomin emporium 30 minutes’ walk away in Covent Garden, or just shopped online.


    This is part of a series of articles celebrating the 80th anniversary of the Moomins. Want to celebrate their birthday with us? Join The Conversation and a group of experts on May 23 in Bradford for a screening of Moomins on the Riviera and a discussion of the refugee experience in Tove Jansson’s work. Click here for more information and tickets.


    Today’s Moomin empire is vast and varied. The Moomins is a brand worth multi-millions, with 800 licencees worldwide. This 80th anniversary year will see capsule collections galore from the likes of Comme des Garçons, Acne Studios and Polarn O. Pyret.

    The products span interior décor, clothing and accessories, ceramics and much, much more. Driven in part by the extension into media that includes video games and TV, Moomins can be found on everything from planes to pencils. It’s very possible to eat, sleep, wear, play Moomin – to immerse yourself entirely in the Moomin world.

    It’s all very typical of the 21st-century media and entertainment asset landscape. And yet, as Moomin aficionados know full well, none of it is new. There has been Moomin merch for as long as there have been Moomins.

    Their creator Tove Jansson took an active role in the development of the Moomin industry. Part of her training had been in illustrations for advertising and when the books and comic strips took off, she herself provided images for a drinks manufacturer selling themed whortleberry juice and other libations. Jansson also designed a board game and supported and oversaw the development of several products and lines, taking immense care over their quality and details.

    The scale of the operation soon became overwhelming and Jansson became increasingly frustrated and resentful of the demands on her creative time. One of her characters, Snufkin, is bemused by why people “liked to have things” (Finn Family Moomintroll, 1948) and the books have a certain anti-consumerist bent. From this perspective, the vast Moomin industry today goes against the spirit of the works.

    And yet. The same book in which Snufkin spoke this way is also a book (whose Finnish original title is The Hobgoblin’s Hat) full to the brim with … things. And those things are invested with immense fascination and power. As the Snork character points out “a top hat is always somewhat extraordinary, of course”.

    Jansson herself had a strong impulse to work with others to extend and flesh out her creations, releasing them from the confines of the books. She was actively involved in early stage adaptations, crafting sets and costumes, and later became absorbed in the long-term creation of a Moominhouse diorama (and series of associated tableaux) with partner Tuulikki Pietilä and physician friend Pentti Eistola.

    Making her creations tangible and tactile was clearly a huge draw for this sculptor’s daughter. One of the most striking features of the Moomins on paper is their smooth rotundity – they’re almost begging to be made into three dimensions.

    So much for the creator. But what of Moomin consumers? People around the world have clearly long wanted to feel closer to the Moomin world, and to buy into it. But why? The reasons are both aesthetic and affective. As for the Swedish-born writer I encountered at the British Library, the Moomins are often keyed into the nostalgia and innocence of childhood. And, as with Anna’s sense of kinship with Little My, people often feel an instinctive affiliation with one or more of the Moomin’s vast and varied cast.

    The books also encapsulate and convey a whole host of associations (or “values” in brand speak) which people identify with, want to share and display. Some of these are relatively banal (though fundamental) and apparent elsewhere – things like friendship, warmth, family and acceptance.

    But there are also features quite specific to Moomins and to Jansson herself: a relish of life and sensuous experience, gender fluidity, space for both light and dark, for wanderlust and the joy of cocooning at home. All of this is conveyed in words and images of exceptional quality and distinction.

    The whimsy is delivered with distinctive Scandinavian style and flair: a clean, pared-back aesthetic and sharp lines accompanied by a rich and bold colour palette. Who wouldn’t want to wear a hand-painted silk AALTO dress by Finnish designer Tuomas Merikoski that transposes the lush greens of one of the later Moomin books, The Dangerous Journey?

    Eight decades after their first publication, Moomins continue to be highly covetable and to catalyse creativity. As with Anna’s Little My tote, they are set to accompany and assist many more generations of writers and creatives in their imaginative endeavours.

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

    ref. Moomin merchandise and fashion: 80 years of ultra-savvy marketing that taps into childhood nostalgia – https://theconversation.com/moomin-merchandise-and-fashion-80-years-of-ultra-savvy-marketing-that-taps-into-childhood-nostalgia-256168

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • Indian Ambassador expresses gratitude to Sri Lanka for backing anti-terrorism initiatives

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Indian High Commissioner to Sri Lanka, Santosh Jha, on Monday expressed gratitude to the Sri uLankan government for its strong condemnation of terrorism and its solidarity with the victims of the April 22 Pahalgam terror attack, which claimed 26 lives.

    In an interview with the Daily Mirror, a leading Sri Lankan daily, Jha emphasized that India’s response—Operation Sindoor—launched after the attack, reflects New Delhi’s firm and enduring stance against terrorism.

    Indian High Commissioner to Sri Lanka, Santosh Jha, on Monday extended gratitude to the Lankan government for condemning terrorism in the strongest terms and for their solidarity with the victims of the April 22 ghastly Pahalgam terror attack, which killed 26 people.

    In an interview with the leading Sri Lankan newspaper, Daily Mirror, Jha asserted that ‘Operation Sindoor,’ which was launched by India in response to the Pahalgam attack, “is not over; it is now India’s established policy against terrorism.”

    “As long as Pakistan maintains tranquillity and takes irrevocable steps to abjure terrorism against India, there will be no hostilities. The onus and responsibility for any hostility in the region lies squarely with Pakistan. Any act of terrorism will be seen as an act of war, and a befitting response will be delivered,” he stated.

    India launched Operation Sindoor on May 7, launching focused strikes on nine high-value terror bases in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK).

    Jha stressed that the terror hubs were destroyed, but Indian armed forces ensured that no civilians were targeted; however, Islamabad targeted India’s military, civilian, and religious infrastructure.

    “Our response was non-escalatory, measured, and proportionate. The same was communicated to the Pakistani side, with the clear intention not to escalate the hostilities. Instead of cooperating to wipe out terrorist hideouts, unfortunately, Pakistan chose to side with the terrorists and attacked India the next evening — targeting Indian military facilities, schools, colleges, places of worship, and homes,” he said.

    “India was then forced to respond in equal measure, but it was still proportionate and limited to Pakistani military facilities. Pakistan’s continued escalatory posture led India to respond on May 10 by targeting Pakistani military installations, causing significant damage to 13 of their airbases. This substantial and definitive damage to Pakistan’s military infrastructure forced Pakistan to reach out to India, and consequently, both sides reached an understanding to stop hostilities,” Jha added.

    Highlighting that terrorism is a global scourge and all countries must act together to deal with it, the High Commissioner said it is noteworthy that when Sri Lanka suffered from the Easter terror attacks, Prime Minister Narendra Modi was the only global leader who visited Sri Lanka to express India’s solidarity with the victims of the attack.

    He emphasized that the underlying principle of Operation Sindoor is zero tolerance for terrorism, adding that Sri Lanka has itself been a victim of terrorism and shares the principle of zero tolerance.

    Thanking President Anura Kumara Dissanayake, Jha said, “As a country that has recently faced the devastating consequences of terrorism, Sri Lanka understands the pain and destruction it causes to communities, societies, and their economies.”

    “Sri Lanka is a centerpiece of India’s Neighborhood First policy. Our relations today are marked by unprecedented trust and goodwill at all levels. Not just with Sri Lanka, but we have energy connectivity projects with our other neighbors such as Bhutan, Nepal, and Bangladesh,” said Jha, in response to Colombo’s interest in connectivity with India in the energy sector.

    Talking about the suspension of the Indus Water Treaty (IWT), Jha said that Pakistan is a country that has “consistently maintained a hostile posture towards India, not least through the implementation of terrorism as state policy.”

    “Pakistan is globally recognized as an epicenter of terrorism. There has hardly been a terrorist incident in the world in the last three decades without Pakistan’s fingerprint or direct involvement,” he further added.

    –ANI

  • MIL-OSI USA: Prepared Remarks Before SEC Speaks

    Source: Securities and Exchange Commission

    Thank you, Cicely, for your kind introduction. Ladies and gentlemen, I am very happy to be with you at my first SEC Speaks conference as SEC Chairman, though I have been a regular at this event over the past 15 years or so.[1] 

    The event has experienced some rather precipitous fits and starts over the past couple of years, and I shall make sure that it stays on track as valuable, comprehensive public outreach by the agency. 

    I extend my thanks to the folks at the Practising Law Institute for organizing the conference. I would also like to thank:

    • The SEC staff who have the annual opportunity to talk a little bit publicly about their work over the past year and discuss some of the things that they expect to come in the next few months,
    • The commentators taking part on the various panels who can pose questions and make observations that can help to focus the discussion on critical topics and perspectives that might not be top of mind to those of us within the halls of the SEC,
    • You here live in the audience where you have a chance to meet each other and talk to panelists, and
    • You viewing online who have a convenient opportunity to participate virtually.  

    Innovation and the SEC

    Today I intend to discuss innovation. In particular, about how the Securities and Exchange Commission should not fear innovation. Rather, it should embrace and champion it.

    Markets, by their nature, evolve. They are dynamic because they are made up of human beings. When human beings encounter problems, they innovate to solve them because there is a demand — and there are rewards — for solutions. In a free society, human nature rises to the occasion with inventiveness and competitive spirit, plus Adam Smith’s invisible hand to provide incentives beyond mere altruism. All of that is a good thing.  

    Over the decades, including during my time as a Commissioner from 2002 to 2008 and before that on the staff of two SEC chairmen, the SEC has both enabled innovation and, unfortunately at times, stifled it. Fortunately, innovation — in other words, progress — eventually won the day. Let me take a few moments to revisit some recent history. 

    In the late 1960s, there was a big, beautiful bull market. Trading volume doubled to some 12 million shares a day — which I realize sounds quaint today — overwhelming the paper-based clearance and settlement systems and transfer agent duties. Efficiency began to deteriorate as rising stacks of paper stock certificates had to be physically delivered by clerks trundling carts carrying boxes of those paper certificates to and from various broker-dealers up and down Wall Street and in other financial districts all across America. Investors paid the price for this inefficiency as securities were misplaced, misdirected, lost, or delivered late. Fails ballooned and many inadequately capitalized broker-dealers were caught by that whiplash of scuttled transactions. As a Band-Aid, trading times each day were reduced and exchanges eventually closed on Wednesdays to allow firms time to process the mountains of certificates. At times, the New York Stock Exchange closed two days in a week to catch up on the paperwork.

    The breakdown over an antiquated system became known as the “Paperwork Crisis.”

    As William Dentzer, the first CEO of the Depository Trust Company, or DTC, put it: “The paperwork crisis caused the post-trade processing of hundreds of millions of dollars to be delayed or to fail entirely, dividends to investors to be misdirected, and brokerage firms to go bust.”[2]

    Very much to its credit, the SEC at the time was proactive. It was clear that what needed to be done was to move to electronic transactions and book-entry. But how would we get there? The agency constructively held roundtables and engaged with industry. It used its rulemaking authority and powers of persuasion to allow for new ways of back-office processing of trades and other efficiencies tied to information technology. As a result of that collaboration between the SEC and market participants, the DTC was eventually established as an industry co-operative, later becoming the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation. The computerization of securities was born with the SEC very much at the forefront of advancing that effort.

    As things go, that late 1960s bull market was inevitably followed by a severe, long-lived bear market. Many broker-dealers went out of business because of the crushing downturn in revenues, rather than inadequate back-office capacity as in the preceding bull market. The SEC worked with Congress and the securities industry to enact the Securities Investor Protection Act in 1970. That law established the Securities Investor Protection Corporation, an industry-backed insurance fund to protect investors from losses in the event their broker fails. It was a positive innovation for investors in which the SEC played a significant role.

    In the late 1980s and early 1990s, the American Stock Exchange and other organizations had come up with a creative response to the SEC’s identification of program trading of index stocks as a contributor to the 1987 market break. They proposed an instrument for trading a basket of stocks — “SPIDERS” — the S&P Depository Receipts, which is a basket of equities traded as a fund.  It was the earliest exchange-traded fund, or ETF. But, the proposal languished at the Commission for several years, as the Divisions at the time raised various issues with this new fund. In no uncertain terms, Chairman Richard Breeden demanded that the Division heads “figure it out”[3] and gave them a limited amount of time to do so. He was emphatic about getting it done right away. And the SEC did. The SPDR launched in 1993. Some at the SEC were worried whether the market would accept this innovation. In fact, it took some effort by the sponsoring firms to persuade institutions to purchase the product. But, it grew to $1 billion in three years. Chairman Breeden’s view was, let the market decide; we cannot be the arbiter. I think we can all agree that the innovation of SPDRs and ETFs has been a boon for investors. 

    During Arthur Levitt’s tenure as chairman in the mid-to-late 1990s, proprietary trading systems took off in popularity, controversially drawing trading off-exchange. Chairman Levitt believed that the SEC needed to provide regulatory flexibility for the electronic markets to be able to innovate. So, Regulation Alternative Trading Systems, or “Reg ATS,” adopted in 1999, allowed for ATSs to be regulated like broker-dealers, rather than exchanges. 

    As we moved to a new century, the market came up with another innovation: the gold fund, the first commodity ETF. This concept had been internally bouncing around the Divisions like a pinball and across town to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Although it took a while, innovation prevailed, and investors gained the option to invest in gold without physically owning it.

    Crypto Innovation

    This brings me to today. The crypto markets have been languishing in SEC limbo for years.

    Initially, the SEC first pursued what I call the “head-in-the-sand” approach — perhaps hoping that crypto would go away. Then, it pivoted and pursued a shoot-first-and-ask-questions-later approach of regulation through enforcement. The “just come in to visit” entreaty often meant coming home to a subpoena. It seemed like a catch-22 for market participants. This environment did not create trust. In reality, the message was, “You go figure it out.” That is a fine approach if the regulator plays an active role in interacting with the marketplace to encourage solutions and adapt existing rules and practices if the existing approaches are inapposite to new developments in technology. Old ways of doing things should not be immutable, especially if Congress has granted an agency discretion to make changes consistent with Congressional intent and in the public interest. While the SEC must be faithful to its statutes in any effort to be innovative, it should use its available authority and discretion to adapt to and accommodate new developments.

    The SEC’s claim at the time that it was willing to talk to prospective registrants proved ephemeral at best because the SEC made no adaptations to registration forms or other regulatory requirements to accommodate this new technology. I have been told that market participants would in good faith enter what they thought were policy meetings with Commission staff only to receive enforcement inquiries shortly after their meeting. If that culture were not bad enough, SEC leadership for too long prevented staff from communicating with market participants when complicated legal questions arose. I am pleased to announce that I recently directed Division of Corporation Finance staff to maintain transparent interactions with the public. When staff is allowed to talk openly with industry, market participants can move more nimbly and allocate capital to productive uses. 

    It is a new day at the SEC. While I have directed Commission staff across our policy Divisions to begin drafting rule proposals related to crypto, the staff continue to “clear the brush” through staff-level statements. For example, last week the staff of the Division of Trading and Markets issued a set of FAQs that addressed broker-dealer and transfer agent questions. While the views of the staff are not rules or regulations of the Commission, they can provide useful insights for the public.[4] Ultimately, the Commission is, of course, responsible and must itself squarely address these issues to ensure that the public has clear rules of the road. 

    Last, as I mentioned at a recent Crypto Task Force roundtable, I would like the Commission to allow SEC registrants to custody and trade both securities and non-securities under one roof. Enabling this reality could reduce costs for investors while allowing non-security trading to enter a regulated environment at the federal level expeditiously. This would be an initial step towards the possibility of eventually achieving a “super-app” reality. Thank you to Commissioner Hester Peirce, the Crypto Task Force, and Trading and Markets staff for their continued efforts.       

    FinHub

    In keeping with this theme of innovation and the progress of the Crypto Task Force, we have asked Congress for reprogramming approval to integrate the functions of the agency’s Strategic Hub for Innovation and Financial Technology, or “FinHub” into other parts of the agency.  

    Established in 2018, FinHub was created during a critical period of emerging technologies. The rapid development of distributed ledger technology, including digital assets, artificial intelligence, and machine learning, required a centralized effort to build understanding at the SEC. Unfortunately, FinHub over time came to be perceived by many in the digital asset industry as a tool for enforcement rather than a tool to foster innovation. Moreover, as currently constituted, FinHub is too small to be viable and efficient, and this staff expertise can be better utilized elsewhere in the agency.

    The principles and priorities under which FinHub was founded are being integrated into the very fabric of the SEC. I will ensure that innovation will be ingrained in the culture SEC-wide, as it should be, and not focused on one small office.

    Investing in Private Funds

    Financial innovation sometimes means getting out of the way of capital formation and allowing all investors to gain the benefits of our robust markets.

    Since 2002, the SEC staff has taken the position that closed-end funds investing 15% or more of their assets in private funds should impose a minimum initial investment requirement of $25,000 and restrict sales to investors that satisfy the accredited investor standard.  As a result, many retail investors have missed out on opportunities to invest in closed-end funds that invest in private investment funds, like hedge funds and private equity funds.

    Much has changed since 2002 — including the growth of private markets and the increased oversight and enhanced reporting by both private fund advisers and registered funds. Indeed, in the last 10 years alone, private fund assets have almost tripled from $11.6 trillion to $30.9 trillion.[5]  Allowing this option could increase investment opportunities for retail investors seeking to diversify their investment allocation in line with their investment time horizon and risk tolerance.

    With this in mind, I intend to have the Commission address this situation and reconsider this 23-year-old practice concerning investments by closed-end funds in private funds. This common-sense approach will give all investors the ability to seek exposure to a growing and important asset class, while still providing the investor protections afforded to registered funds. We must consider and resolve important disclosure issues for these products, particularly for those that trade on exchanges, including conflicts of interest, illiquidity, and fees.

    CAT

    Before I close, I want to mention a topic that has drawn significant scrutiny, the Consolidated Audit Trail, known by the innocuous-sounding nickname “CAT.” This particular “CAT” has quite an appetite for data and computer power, with costs rising to nearly $250 million a year. These costs are divvied up and eventually, one way or another, fall on the shoulders of investors. The financial services industry and Congress have rightly pushed back on the seemingly endless cost increases and the risks of storing so much sensitive data together. Much of the increases are due to changing demands for information and access.

    Therefore, I have instructed the staff to undertake a comprehensive review of the CAT. In addition to examining the costs of the system, I would like to see the staff take a hard look at the reporting requirements and scope of what is collected. I look forward to the agency engaging with the public on this important issue.

    Conclusion

    As I begin my tenure as Chairman, I can tell you that we are getting back to our roots of promoting, rather than stifling, innovation. The markets innovate, and the SEC should not be in the business of telling them to stand still.

    It is a new day at the SEC, and I look forward to what we are going to be able to accomplish for investors and the markets.

    Thank you.


    [1] These remarks reflect my individual views as Chairman of the Commission and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Commission or my fellow Commissioners.

    [4] See 17 C.F.R. § 202.1(d).  Staff statements represent the views of the respective office or division; they are not rules, regulations, or statements of the Commission.  Further, the Commission neither approves nor disapproves their content.  Staff statements have no legal force or effect: they do not alter or amend applicable law, and they create no new or additional obligations for any person.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Jefferson, Liquidity Facilities: Purposes and Functions

    Source: US State of New York Federal Reserve

    Thank you, President Bostic, for that kind introduction and for the opportunity to talk to this group today.1 I am delighted to be here, and I look forward to discussions at this important conference.
    The theme of today’s conference is developments in financial intermediation and potential implications for monetary policy. As this conference embarks on a larger discussion of the role of banks and nonbanks in various market segments—including credit markets, Treasury and money markets, and payments—I believe it is worth taking a step back to explore an important background factor, which is how and why central banks provide liquidity.

    The provision of liquidity by central banks is a foundational element of financial intermediation. Central banks should be able to provide liquidity effectively for the financial system to function smoothly. Today, I will take this opportunity to discuss some aspects of liquidity provision by the central banks. Of course, the main forms of liquidity provided by central banks—namely, currency and bank reserves—are the foundation of safe liquidity in the economy. It is vital for a central bank to make clear that it stands ready to provide liquidity should stress emerge. But a central bank must also take steps to minimize moral hazard. “Moral hazard” in this context refers to the concern that publicly provided liquidity might encourage private financial institutions to take on excessive risk.
    What I would like to focus on in this speech are two types of liquidity provision that aim to reduce the frictions associated with the basic operations of banks. The first type of liquidity is intraday credit, which is key in handling payment system frictions during the day, and the second one is overnight credit, which deals with a range of frictions.2 I will also highlight some design features of broadly similar liquidity facilities in three other advanced economies: the U.K., Japan, and the euro area. I believe it is valuable to look at other central banks’ experiences with liquidity provision, which entails recognizing the important differences that exist across jurisdictions and mandates and considering what lessons can be learned.
    At their core, liquidity facilities support the smooth operation and stability of the banking system, the effective implementation of monetary policy, and the furtherance of a safe and efficient payment system. This activity in turn supports the flow of credit to businesses and households. Last year, the Federal Reserve Board issued a public request for information (RFI) seeking to identify operational frictions in these facilities, and those comments are under review. I hope that today’s discussion about how facilities operate in the U.S. and around the globe can further that dialogue among participants at this conference.
    How It Works in the U.S.Let me start by discussing how liquidity provisions work in the U.S., as summarized in slide 3. Banks maintain deposit accounts at the Federal Reserve (Fed). The balances in these accounts, known as reserves, are the most liquid assets that banks have and are used to meet payment flows as households and business customers of banks carry out their regular business. Banks often experience mismatches in the timing of payment inflows and outflows, which could occasionally cause the balance in a bank’s account at the Fed to become negative. To help institutions manage this mismatch and promote the smooth functioning of the payment system, the Fed extends intraday credit, also known as daylight overdrafts.
    Intraday credit facilities provide temporary credit to depository institutions such as commercial banks and credit unions to foster the smooth functioning of the payment system. If a bank temporarily lacks the funds to process payments, it can use intraday credit to avoid delaying payments until it has sufficient liquidity. The Fed provides intraday credit on both a collateralized and an uncollateralized basis. Collateralized intraday credit is provided free of charge, whereas uncollateralized credit incurs a fee. Since this type of credit is provided on an intraday basis, the Fed expects banks to have positive balances in their accounts by the end of the operational day. If a bank has a negative balance at the end of day, it incurs an overnight overdraft and pays a penalty.
    The Fed also provides overnight credit through the discount window to approved counterparties against a broad range of collateral. This type of liquidity provision is designed to mitigate short-term misallocations of liquidity. For example, a bank may need to settle a large payment at the end of the day, but it may temporarily have insufficient funds in its account to do so. To meet the payment obligation, the bank could borrow in private interbank markets—in which financial institutions lend funds to each other on a short-term basis—or from the central bank. The rate on overnight credit also helps central banks with monetary policy implementation. In addition, overnight liquidity facilities often serve as a first line of defense against stresses, and they stand ready to provide liquidity when institutions face outflows.
    All discount window loans are collateralized, and a wide range of bank assets, including a variety of loans and securities, are eligible to serve as collateral.3 The Fed operates three separate facilities under the discount window: primary credit, secondary credit, and seasonal credit.
    The first one, primary credit, is available to generally sound banks at a rate that is currently set at the top of the target range for the federal funds rate. Providing liquidity at this rate supports the implementation of monetary policy because institutions can turn to the Fed if conditions tighten in money markets that might otherwise push overnight money market rates above levels that would be consistent with the Fed’s target range. As I noted earlier, primary credit also helps deal with idiosyncratic funding challenges that banks might be experiencing. Most of the funding provided is on an overnight basis; however, funding is available for up to 90 days.
    The next one, secondary credit, is available to banks that are not sufficiently healthy to have access to primary credit. It is available at a higher rate, features higher haircuts on collateral, and is limited to overnight credit.4
    The third facility, seasonal credit, provides short-term liquidity to smaller institutions that experience sizable seasonal fluctuations in their balance sheets. Typically, these are banks located in agricultural or tourist areas.
    Short-Term Credit Provision across JurisdictionsLooking at central banks’ experiences across jurisdictions provides useful insights about different approaches to providing liquidity.5 Central banks choose a combination of interest rates, collateral requirements, collateral valuation practices, and other design features to encourage usage of facilities while minimizing undesired consequences—in particular, moral hazard. For example, a central bank facility that provides liquidity at an attractive interest rate could be very effective in ensuring that shocks to the financial system do not disrupt the flow of credit but may potentially increase moral hazard. If that facility only accepted a narrow set of high-quality collateral, however, then the moral hazard associated with it could be reduced. Alternatively, the usage of a facility that charges an interest rate above the market rate (a so-called penalty rate) is likely limited, but if the facility accepted a broad range of collateral, usage can be encouraged.6 In these two examples, the counterbalancing choices are with respect to the interest rate charged and the eligible collateral. Different central banks might prefer one approach over the other depending on specific aspects of their frameworks and banking systems.
    Of course, there are challenges in comparing liquidity facilities across jurisdictions given important differences with respect to central banks’ legal authorities, monetary policy frameworks, the size of the economy and financial sector, and institutional structures. This divergence is also true across the four advanced economies that I will consider today: the U.S., the U.K., Japan, and the euro area. There can be large differences in each jurisdiction’s banking sector and central bank balance sheets relative to the size of their economies, highlighting the need to use caution when comparing aspects of their liquidity provision.
    With that caveat in mind, let’s look at the design features of some foreign central bank liquidity facilities that are fairly similar to the Fed’s discount window. As shown in figure 1, the Bank of England (BOE) operates two such short-term facilities: an operational standing facility and a discount window. The operational standing facility features lower rates but restricts acceptable collateral to high-quality, highly liquid sovereign debt. The discount window facility accepts a broader range of collateral but charges a higher rate.
    Which facility an eligible borrower turns to in the U.K. depends on the sorts of collateral that are being pledged. In the U.S., whether an institution has access to primary or secondary credit depends on the condition of the borrower. The BOE monitors borrower conditions, and the Fed also sets haircuts on collateral based on asset riskiness. The differences in design considerations could influence how eligible borrowers integrate these facilities into their regular liquidity management practices.
    The Bank of Japan (BOJ) has two facilities: one that provides overnight loans and another that provides somewhat longer-term funding up to three months. Because the BOJ has been operating a system with a very large supply of reserves for some time, its lending facilities tend not to be used extensively, other than in stress periods.
    The European Central Bank (ECB) operates a marginal lending facility quite similar to the Fed’s discount window. It can meet the idiosyncratic funding needs of individual banks and serves as a ceiling on interbank rates and thus helps the ECB implement monetary policy. This facility is an important element of the ECB framework even though the ECB’s approach to monetary policy implementation involves providing the banking system with a sizable amount of reserves through weekly (repo) lending operations.7
    The international differences show that central banks can accomplish their objectives using facilities with quite different designs. As I noted earlier, one of the vital purposes of a short-term liquidity facility is to be able to provide support to the banking systems during stress. The Fed, the BOE, the BOJ, and the ECB have been able to do so. Figure 2 shows short-term credit provision over time for the four central banks: the BOJ, the green line; the Fed, the black line; the ECB, the blue line; and the BOE, the red line.8 Each line is the monthly short-term credit outstanding as a share of central bank assets in 2019. This figure illustrates a few important points.
    First, at most times, use of the short-term central bank liquidity facilities is modest. Second, central bank provision of short-term liquidity can increase very rapidly during times of stress.9 For example, the Fed and the ECB provided substantial short-term liquidity during the 2007–09 financial crisis. Third, the figure also illustrates that stress is not always global in nature and peak usage does not necessarily coincide. For instance, short-term liquidity provision rose in the euro area during the European sovereign debt crisis that began in late 2009 and peaked in 2012, but it did not increase much in the U.S. Similarly, short-term liquidity provision increased in the U.S. during the March 2023 banking stress episode, but it did not increase in the euro area. I also want to highlight that during stress events, central banks complement their regular short-term standing liquidity facilities with other facilities. Therefore, stress events may not necessarily result in an increase in liquidity provision through a short-term standing facility.
    Now let’s turn to more recent developments. Over the past few years, as central banks have shrunk their balance sheets, liquidity has been gradually reduced, which has made the existing liquidity provision tools more relevant. The BOE and the ECB have indicated that they are moving toward operating frameworks in which short-term liquidity providing repo operations will play a key role.10
    The Fed has stated that it will continue to operate in an ample-reserves regime. In this regime, the primary credit rate is positioned to be slightly above the rate expected to prevail in interbank markets so use of the discount window should typically remain modest. Still, the facility remains available to be used. Figure 3 shows the discount window credit as a share of Fed assets over the past decade. As you can see from this figure, over the past few years, the discount window has been used more than was the case before the pandemic. Increased usage may be due to the discount rate being set closer to private market rates than was the case before the pandemic, the availability of longer maturity loans, and shifts in communication.
    Intraday Credit Provision across JurisdictionsJust as there are differences with respect to the provision of overnight liquidity across central banks, there are also differences in the provision of intraday credit. One difference is with respect to unresolved intraday overdrafts. As I noted earlier, it is possible for banks to incur overnight overdrafts if they fail to take such action as requesting an overnight loan, although overnight overdrafts are not considered business as usual and carry a penalty rate in the U.S., currently set at the primary credit rate plus 400 basis points.11 The BOJ does something quite similar. By charging a high penalty on overnight overdrafts, both the Fed and the BOJ discourage overdrafts.
    In contrast to the Fed and the BOJ, the ECB and the BOE can automatically convert most of the intraday overdrafts into an overnight loan from the business-as-usual facility seamlessly, without action on the part of the bank, against the same collateral at the end of the day.12 That feature creates a greater similarity between intraday credit and overnight credit in those jurisdictions. The relationship between intraday credit and overnight credit is going to be an important one for central banks amid developments in payment systems, including advances in technology and the expansion of payment system operating hours.
    ConclusionToday, I provided an overview of the Fed’s provision of liquidity through the discount window and intraday credit and highlighted some similarities and differences across jurisdictions. In summary, the Fed’s discount window and intraday credit facilities have many features that are similar to those found in other central bank facilities. While differences in institutional, legal, and financial system structures across jurisdictions make central bank short-term lending context specific, looking at the experiences of central banks across other jurisdictions is informative, as central banks share similar goals and face similar challenges when it comes to liquidity provision.
    The Fed is continually assessing and striving to improve the operational aspects of discount window and intraday credit. The Federal Reserve System has made several important advancements to ensure that liquidity provision meets the needs of the 21st century economy. For example, Reserve Banks have worked to streamline the use of electronic files when establishing access to the discount window and made technological advancements in the process for requesting a discount window loan. The Federal Reserve System launched a convenient online portal called “Discount Window Direct” for requesting and prepaying discount window loans that is generally accessible to banks 24–7. To improve familiarity with the discount window, Reserve Banks have conducted outreach to banks and made efforts to guide them in using the program.
    To complement these efforts, the Board issued an RFI last September seeking input on the operations of the discount window and intraday credit. Any issues identified in the responses to the RFI can help the Fed understand further improvements that may promote efficiency and reduce the burden on banks.
    I look forward to hearing insights you may have into central banks’ liquidity facilities and how these issues intersect with the topics that will be discussed at this conference. Thank you!
    ReferencesArseneau, David, Mark Carlson, Kathryn Chen, Matt Darst, Dylan Kirkeeng, Elizabeth Klee, Matt Malloy, Benjamin Malin, Emilie O’Malley, Friederike Niepmann, Mary-Frances Styczynski, Melissa Vanouse, and Alexandros P. Vardoulakis (2025). “Central Bank Liquidity Facilities around the World,” FEDS Notes. Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, February 26.
    Jefferson, Philip N. (2024a). “A History of the Fed’s Discount Window: 1913–2000,” speech delivered at Davidson College, Davidson, North Carolina, October 8.
    Jefferson, Philip N. (2024b). “The Fed’s Discount Window: 1990 to the Present,” speech delivered at the Charlotte Economics Club, Charlotte, North Carolina, October 9.

    1. The views expressed here are my own and are not necessarily those of my colleagues on the Federal Reserve Board or the Federal Open Market Committee. Return to text
    2. I refer to primary credit lending as overnight lending for simplicity even though banks are able to borrow for maturities of up to three months. The vast majority of primary credit lending is overnight. See Jefferson (2024a) and (2024b) for a summary of the evolution of the discount window. Return to text
    3. Examples of assets that may serve as collateral include, but are not limited to, U.S. Treasury securities, investment-grade corporate bonds, U.S. government agency-backed mortgage securities, commercial and industrial loans, commercial real estate loans, agricultural loans secured by farmland, one- to four-family mortgage loans, and auto loans. For more detail on assets that may serve as collateral, please see Federal Reserve Banks (n.d.), “Collateral Eligibility – Securities and Loans,” Discount Window Direct. Return to text
    4. The Fed lends less than the fair market value of the collateral provided to manage the credit risk associated with its lending operations. For example, if a bank needs a loan of $100, a portfolio of securities valued at $200 may be required to be posted if the discount or haircut associated with that portfolio is 50 percent. The difference between the amount that the Fed will lend on a particular asset and the fair market value of that asset reflects the haircut, or margin. These haircuts differ, for instance, with the historical price volatility and credit risk associated with the asset. Information on the haircuts for different assets may be found at Federal Reserve Banks (n.d.), “Collateral Valuation,” Discount Window Direct. Return to text
    5. See Arseneau and others (2025). Return to text
    6. A penalty rate in the Board’s emergency lending regulation is defined as a rate that is higher than the market rate in normal circumstances, affords liquidity in unusual and exigent circumstances, and encourages repayment of the credit and discourages use of the program or facility as the unusual and exigent circumstances that motivated the program or facility recede and economic conditions normalize. See Regulation A—Extensions of Credit by Federal Reserve Banks, 12 CFR pt. 201.4(d)(7) (2024). Return to text
    7. See Isabel Schnabel (2024), “The Eurosystem’s Operational Framework,” speech delivered at the Money Market Contact Group meeting, Frankfurt, Germany, March 14. Return to text
    8. Values in figure 2 represent the marginal lending facility for the euro area, the complementary lending facility for Japan, the operational standing lending facility for the U.K., and primary credit for the U.S. Return to text
    9. See Jefferson (2024a) for a longer historical perspective on the Fed’s liquidity provision over time. Return to text
    10. See, for example, B (2024), “Transitioning to a Repo-Led Operating Framework,” discussion paper (London: BOE, December 9).
    See, for example, Schnabel, “The Eurosystem’s Operational Framework.” Return to text
    11. See Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (2023), Federal Reserve Policy on Payment System Risk (PDF), (Washington: Board of Governors), p. 33. Return to text
    12. The BOE is a special case because, for most institutions, intraday overdrafts are seamlessly converted into an overnight loan if the institution signed up to use the operational standing facility in advance. Institutions that have not signed up in advance and end the day with an overdrawn reserve account face an overdraft charge of 2 percent plus the Bank Rate or another rate set at discretion. Return to text

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Family Fun day set to celebrate community at Fratton Bridge Centre

    Source: City of Portsmouth

    Portsmouth City Council, through its Business Enterprise Centres, is thrilled to invite residents to a Fratton Family Fun day. This event is a free celebration of community taking place on Saturday 24 May from 11am–3pm at Fratton Bridge Centre which has recently undergone a refurbishment.

    This family event will take over Fratton Bridge Centre and includes Punch & Judy, a mesmerizing magic show, and craft activities alongside face painting, community performances, local history and gaming sessions.  Families are also invited to help create an art installation that will celebrate Fratton’s community.

    The event marks a milestone in the transformation of Fratton Bridge Centre, which was acquired by the Council in September 2023 with support from the Government’s Future High Streets Fund. The centre has since undergone refurbishment, including upgrades to retail spaces, a new welcoming entrance, and the arrival of new businesses and community organisations such as The Pompey Cycle Hub, Fratton Together, the Parenting Network, and the Electric Dreamz interactive technology exhibition centre.

    Cllr Steve Pitt, Leader of the council with responsibilities for economic development said:

    “The refurbishment has re-energised Fratton Bridge Centre.  By working together with community and local business we are committed to revitalising our high streets.  Events like the Fratton Family Fun Day are a great way to bring people together and celebrate the positive changes happening in our city.”

    The refurbishment of Fratton Bridge Centre is part of a wider regeneration effort to enhance the area through improvements to the high street and investments in new homes and employment opportunities.

    Fratton Family Fun is a free event. For programme details visit rediscoverportsmouth.co.uk/fratton-bridge

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI: Patriot Bank Expands Its Board and Senior Leadership Team

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    • Richard Smith, Jeff Seabold and Thedora Nickel elected Directors.
    • Paul Simmons appointed EVP, Chief Credit Officer
    • Nicole L. Wells appointed SVP, Head of Operations
    • Rebecca Mais appointed SVP, High Net Worth and Specialty Deposits
    • Raquel Gillett appointed SVP, Digital Transformation and Risk Analytics

    STAMFORD, Conn., May 19, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Patriot Bank, N.A. (“Patriot Bank”), the wholly owned subsidiary of Patriot National Bancorp, Inc. (NASDAQ: PNBK), is pleased to announce the election of Richard Smith, Jeffrey Seabold and Thedora Nickel to serve on the Patriot Bank’s Board of Directors and the appointment of the following leaders to the management team:

    • Paul Simmons as Executive Vice President, Chief Credit Officer
    • Nicole L. Wells as Senior Vice President, Head of Operations
    • Rebecca Mais as Senior Vice President, High Net Worth and Specialty Deposits
    • Raquel Gillett as Senior Vice President, Digital Automation and Risk Analytics

    These appointments strengthen Patriot Bank’s leadership team as the organization focuses on delivering exceptional banking services to high-net-worth clients and the fiduciaries who serve them.

    “We are delighted to welcome Richard, Jeff, Teddy, Paul, Nicole, Rebecca, and Raquel to their new roles,” said Steven Sugarman, Chief Executive Officer of Patriot Bank. “Their collective expertise and vision will advance Patriot’s mission to empower our clients while delivering exceptional value to our shareholders.”

    Richard Smith, Director

    Richard Smith brings 40 years of banking expertise, specializing in private banking for high-net-worth individuals. Beginning his career as a banking analyst with Manufacturers Hanover in New York, he later held senior roles at Imperial Bank and Comerica Bank in Southern California. In 2005, Smith founded The Private Bank of California and served as its President. After its sale to Banc of California in 2012, he was named President of Banc of California’s Private Banking Division. Smith serves on the Board of CalPrivate Bank, the Zimmer Children’s Museum, and the Westside Food Bank in Los Angeles.

    “It is a privilege to join Patriot Bank’s Board of Directors,” said Smith. “Patriot Bank’s commitment to serving high net worth clients and their advisors aligns with my passion for fostering strong client relationships.”

    Jeffrey Seabold, Director

    Jeff Seabold is an accomplished entrepreneur, investor, and executive leader with almost 30 years of experience in corporate strategy, business development, and executive management. He has a proven history in real estate finance and commercial banking.

    Mr. Seabold is the Co-Founder and a Director of The Change Company CDFI LLC and Change Lending LLC, a certified Community Development Financial Institution (CDFI) focused on home lending. Previously, Mr. Seabold was the Co-Founder and Executive Vice Chairman of Banc of California, Inc., a publicly traded bank holding company and federally chartered national bank headquartered in Irvine, California. Seabold was also the Founder of CS Financial, Inc., a national mortgage finance company, Co-Founder for Camden Capital Partners, LLC, a bridge & mezzanine real estate lender and servicer, and the Founder of Camden Escrow, Inc., a real estate settlement services provider.

    “I’m proud to join the Board of Directors at Patriot Bank and support its mission of delivering personalized, high-quality banking solutions,” said Seabold. “Throughout my career, I have seen the value of building lasting relationships based on trust, service, and understanding. I look forward to contributing my experience to help Patriot Bank deepen its connection with clients and to build a trusted financial partner for our clients.”

    Thedora Nickel, Director

    Thedora Nickel has over 30 years of banking leadership experience, with deep expertise in domestic and international operations, client service, and organizational transformation. She currently serves as Executive Director of The Change Company and Change Lending. Prior to this role, Nickel was Chief Administrative Officer at Banc of California where she led the strategic direction of key enterprise and operational functions. She previously held several senior leadership positions at Bank of America over a 25-year career, most recently as SVP, Group Operations Executive, overseeing national research, resolution, and reconcilement functions in support of the bank’s bank centers, capture sites, and cash vaults. Earlier, she led the Transaction Services West Region with responsibility for over two thousand employees and five processing units. A certified Six Sigma Executive, Nickel also dedicates her time mentoring MBA students at the University of California, Irvine and serves on the board of The Whole Child, a non-profit organization serving vulnerable families in Los Angeles County.

    “I’m honored to join Patriot Bank’s Board of Directors,” said Nickel. “With my experience driving operational excellence and delivering client-focused solutions, I look forward to helping the organization build a strong foundation for sustainable growth.”

    Paul Simmons, Executive Vice President, Chief Credit Officer

    Paul Simmons is a seasoned banking executive with over 35 years of experience in commercial lending, credit, and financial services. Prior to joining Patriot Bank, Mr. Simmons served as Executive Vice President and Chief Credit Officer of Sunwest Bank, Silvergate Bank and Banc of California. He has overseen all aspects of credit administration, asset quality, and lending operations. He also held senior leadership positions at Citigroup, GE Capital, Apollo Real Estate Advisors, and Zions Bancorporation. A graduate of Brigham Young University, Simmons is recognized for his strategic acumen and breadth of experience.

    “I’m honored to join Patriot Bank as its Chief Credit Officer,” said Simmons. “Over my career, I have been fortunate to lead credit organizations at banks of all sizes — always with a focus on building strong credit cultures, managing risk with discipline, and partnering with lending teams to drive smart, sustainable growth. I am excited to be a part of this high-performing executive team to bring that same approach to Patriot Bank and to contribute to Patriot Bank’s turnaround focused on serving our clients with excellence.”

    Nicole L. Wells, Senior Vice President, Head of Operations

    With over 30 years of experience in banking and financial services, Nicole L. Wells joins Patriot Bank as its Senior Vice President and Head of Operations. She served as Head of Strategic Retail Operations at Santander Bank, N.A. in Greater Boston, a role she started in September 2020. Previously, Ms. Wells served as SVP, Private Banking Operations at Banc of California. Wells also held roles at Bank of America, Countrywide Bank, Western Federal Credit Union, and Citibank. Wells holds an M.P.A. in Public Administration with a focus on Organizational Leadership from California State University-Dominguez Hills and completed the Executive Education Program at Columbia Business School.

    “I am delighted to join Patriot Bank and lead its bank operations,” said Wells. “My experience in driving strategic business enablement, simplification, and process excellence will support the Bank’s commitment to delivering seamless, client-focused services.”

    Rebecca Mais, Senior Vice President, High Net Worth and Specialty Deposits

    Rebecca Mais joins Patriot Bank as its Senior Vice President, High Net Worth and Specialty Deposits. Ms. Mais, bringing over 17 years of experience, leading Private Banking and Non-Profit divisions. Previously, she held leadership roles at Banc of California, Bank of Hope and Commerce Bank, where she specialized in market expansion and developing customized deposit solutions for high-net-worth individuals, centers-of-influence, and specialized sectors, including real estate, entertainment, Institutional Banking, Non-Profits, RIA and Business Management Services. Mais is passionately committed to the families and communities we serve and is the Board Secretary of the Westside Food Bank Non-Profit. She is a highly engaged, results-driven, and client-centric leader who is recognized for her ability to drive deposit growth and foster long-term client relationships. Mais holds an Executive M.B.A. from Pepperdine University’s Graziadio School of Business and a B.S. in Business Administration/Fashion Merchandising from Philadelphia University.

    “It’s a privilege to work with such an incredible team to deliver tailored financial solutions that meet the unique needs of our remarkable clients,” said Mais. “I look forward to building Patriot into a client-focused bank able to empower the communities we serve.”

    Raquel Gillett, Senior Vice President, Digital Transformation and Risk Analytics

    Raquel Gillett joins Patriot Bank as its Senior Vice President of Digital Transformation and Risk Analytics, bringing over 20 years of experience in banking and financial services. Previously, she served in senior roles at The Change Company, COR Clearing, Banc of California, California National Bank, and Southern Pacific. She has led technology-driven process improvements as well as overseen financial controls. Ms. Gillett is highly experienced implementing innovative digital risk and reporting solutions, integrating systems, and optimizing reporting frameworks.

    “I am thrilled to join Patriot Bank to lead its digital transformation, leveraging technology to empower our bankers to serve our clients safely and with operational excellence. Strengthening our risk analytics will allow Patriot to pursue our mission and vision safely and soundly,” Gillett said.

    For more information about Patriot Bank, please visit www.bankpatriot.com.

    Media Contact:

    Kirsten Hoekman
    Patriot Bank, N.A.
    Phone: (203) 252-5905
    Email: khoekman@bankpatriot.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Enphase Energy Launches IQ Energy Management Solution in France

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    FREMONT, Calif., May 19, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Enphase Energy, Inc. (NASDAQ: ENPH), a global energy technology company and the world’s leading supplier of microinverter-based solar and battery systems, today introduced IQ® Energy Management that integrates with Enphase solar and battery systems to enable smart management of variable electricity rates and select third-party electric vehicle (EV) chargers, heat pumps, and resistive electric water heaters in France. Homeowners can save money and maximize self-consumption through artificial intelligence (AI)-driven management of key home energy appliances – all controlled from the Enphase® App.

    In France, electrification is booming, with EV deployments up 400% since 2020 and a goal to manufacture one million new heat pumps by 2027. Recent data also shows that approximately 40% of all homes in France – 15 million homes – use electric water heaters, which can represent up to 20% of a household’s energy consumption. The IQ Energy Management solution consists of the IQ® Energy Router™ suite of products which comes with a 5-year warranty in France and works with leading EV chargers, heat pumps, and resistive electric water heaters.

    “Enphase’s IQ Energy Management is a smart solution for managing key home appliances more efficiently,” said Ludovic Vallée, general manager at Sun7, an installer of Enphase products in France. “It helps our customers maximize their solar energy use by intelligently managing EV chargers, heat pumps, and water heaters, ultimately helping users lower their energy costs and boosting energy independence.”

    “As more homeowners in France turn to smart energy solutions, they’re looking for flexibility and savings,” said Kevin Arteaga, manager at SAS Les Panneaux Solaires, an installer of Enphase products in France. “IQ Energy Management with the IQ Energy Router gives them the tools to better manage when and how they use electricity, helping them get the most out of their solar energy systems.”

    “This is a major step forward for smart energy solutions for residential homes in France,” said Alexandre Sibut, co-manager at Activ’Environnement 38, a Platinum level installer of Enphase products in France. “With significant annual savings potential on electricity bills, IQ Energy Management helps our customers to improve their self-consumption rate by steering excess production to critical energy needs and thus optimizing their solar investment.”

    “As part of our vision for smarter, more flexible energy management, we’re proud to offer homeowners in France a powerful solution to get more value from their solar,” said Sabbas Daniel, senior vice president of sales at Enphase Energy. “IQ Energy Management makes it possible to optimize electricity usage across key appliances using the Enphase App, driving savings, self-consumption, and energy resilience – all from one intelligent system.”

    For more information, please visit Enphase’s website for IQ Energy Management and the IQ Energy Router suite of products in France.

    About Enphase Energy, Inc.

    Enphase Energy, a global energy technology company based in Fremont, CA, is the world’s leading supplier of microinverter-based solar and battery systems that enable people to harness the sun to make, use, save, and sell their own power – and control it all with a smart mobile app. The company revolutionized the solar industry with its microinverter-based technology and builds all-in-one solar, battery, and software solutions. Enphase has shipped approximately 81.5 million microinverters, and approximately 4.8 million Enphase-based systems have been deployed in over 160 countries. For more information, visit https://enphase.com/.

    ©2025 Enphase Energy, Inc. All rights reserved. Enphase Energy, Enphase, the “e” logo, IQ, IQ8, and certain other marks listed at https://enphase.com/trademark-usage-guidelines are trademarks or service marks of Enphase Energy, Inc. Other names are for informational purposes and may be trademarks of their respective owners.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This press release may contain forward-looking statements, including statements related to the expected capabilities and performance of Enphase Energy’s technology and products, including safety, quality, and reliability; Enphase Energy’s expectations of homeowners’ ability to save money and maximize self-consumption through the intelligent management of these key home electricity appliances and statements regarding the timing and availability Enphase Energy’s products in France. These forward-looking statements are based on Enphase Energy’s current expectations and inherently involve significant risks and uncertainties. Actual results and the timing of events could differ materially from those contemplated by these forward-looking statements as a result of such risks and uncertainties including those risks described in more detail in Enphase Energy’s most recently filed Annual Report on Form 10-K, and other documents filed by Enphase Energy from time to time with the SEC. Enphase Energy undertakes no duty or obligation to update any forward-looking statements contained in this release as a result of new information, future events or changes in its expectations, except as required by law.

    Contact:

    Enphase Energy

    press@enphaseenergy.com

    This press release was published by a CLEAR® Verified individual.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Oxford Lane Capital Corp. Announces Net Asset Value and Selected Financial Results for the Fourth Fiscal Quarter and Provides April Net Asset Value Update

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    GREENWICH, Conn., May 19, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Oxford Lane Capital Corp. (NasdaqGS: OXLC) (NasdaqGS: OXLCP) (NasdaqGS: OXLCL) (NasdaqGS: OXLCO) (NasdaqGS: OXLCZ) (NasdaqGS: OXLCN) (NasdaqGS: OXLCI) (NasdaqGS: OXLCG) (“Oxford Lane,” the “Company,” “we,” “us” or “our”) announced today the following financial results and related information:

    • As previously announced, on March 26, 2025, our Board of Directors declared the following distributions on our common stock:
    Month Ending Record Date Payment Date Amount Per Share
    July 31, 2025 July 17, 2025 July 31, 2025 $0.09
    August 31, 2025 August 15, 2025 August 29, 2025 $0.09
    September 30, 2025 September 16, 2025 September 30, 2025 $0.09
     
    • Net asset value (“NAV”) per share as of March 31, 2025 stood at $4.32, compared with a NAV per share on December 31, 2024 of $4.82.
    • In addition, management’s unaudited estimate of the range of the NAV per share of our common stock as of April 30, 2025, is between $3.98 and $4.08. This estimate is not a comprehensive statement of our financial condition or results for the month ended April 30, 2025. This estimate did not undergo the Company’s typical quarter-end financial closing procedures and was not approved by our Board of Directors. We advise you that our NAV per share for the quarter ending June 30, 2025 may differ materially from this estimate, which is given only as of April 30, 2025. See additional information under “Supplemental Information Regarding April Net Asset Value Estimate” below.
    • Net investment income (“NII”), calculated in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”), was approximately $75.4 million, or $0.18 per share, for the quarter ended March 31, 2025.
    • Our core net investment income (“Core NII”) was approximately $95.8 million, or $0.23 per share, for the quarter ended March 31, 2025.
      • Core NII incorporates all applicable cash distributions received, or entitled to be received (if any, in either case), on our collateralized loan obligation (“CLO”) equity investments. See additional information under “Supplemental Information Regarding Core Net Investment Income” below.
      • We emphasize that our taxable income may differ materially from our GAAP NII and/or our Core NII, and that neither GAAP NII nor Core NII should be relied upon as indicators of our taxable income.
    • Total investment income for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 amounted to approximately $121.2 million, which represented an increase of approximately $6.7 million from the quarter ended December 31, 2024.
      • For the quarter ended March 31, 2025 we recorded investment income as follows:
        • Approximately $115.3 million from our CLO equity and CLO warehouse investments, and
        • Approximately $5.9 million from our CLO debt investments and other income.
    • Our total expenses for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 were approximately $45.8 million, compared with total expenses of approximately $42.0 million for the quarter ended December 31, 2024.
    • As of March 31, 2025, the following metrics applied (note that none of these metrics represented a total return to shareholders):
      • The weighted average yield of our CLO debt investments at current cost was 15.9%, down from 16.6% as of December 31, 2024.
      • The weighted average effective yield of our CLO equity investments at current cost was 15.9%, down from 16.1% as of December 31, 2024.
      • The weighted average cash distribution yield of our CLO equity investments at current cost was 20.5%, down from 23.9% as of December 31, 2024.
    • For the quarter ended March 31, 2025, we recorded a net decrease in net assets resulting from operations of approximately $120.8 million, or $0.28 per share, comprised of:
      • NII of approximately $75.4 million;
      • Net realized losses of approximately $8.5 million; and
      • Net unrealized depreciation of approximately $187.7 million.
    • During the quarter ended March 31, 2025, we made additional investments of approximately $526.2 million, and received approximately $136.0 million from sales and repayments of our CLO investments.
    • For the quarter ended March 31, 2025, we issued a total of approximately 60.7 million shares of common stock pursuant to an “at-the-market” offering. After deducting the sales agent’s commissions and offering expenses, this resulted in net proceeds of approximately $300.5 million. As of March 31, 2025, we had approximately 453.2 million shares of common stock outstanding and as of April 30, 2025, we had approximately 467.3 million shares of common stock issued and outstanding.
    • On May 15, 2025, our Board of Directors declared the required monthly dividends on our 6.25% Series 2027 Term Preferred Shares, 6.00% Series 2029 Term Preferred Shares, and 7.125% Series 2029 Term Preferred Shares as follows:
    Preferred
    Shares Type
    Per Share
    Dividend
    Amount
    Declared
    Record Dates Payment Dates
    6.25% – Series 2027   $ 0.13020833   June 16, 2025, July 17, 2025, August 15, 2025 June 30, 2025, July 31, 2025, August 29, 2025
    6.00% – Series 2029   $ 0.12500000   June 16, 2025, July 17, 2025, August 15, 2025 June 30, 2025, July 31, 2025, August 29, 2025
    7.125% – Series 2029   $ 0.14843750   June 16, 2025, July 17, 2025, August 15, 2025 June 30, 2025, July 31, 2025, August 29, 2025

    In accordance with their terms, each of the 6.25% Series 2027 Term Preferred Shares, 6.00% Series 2029 Term Preferred Shares, and 7.125% Series 2029 Term Preferred Shares will pay a monthly dividend at a fixed rate of 6.25%, 6.00% and 7.125%, respectively, of the $25.00 per share liquidation preference, or $1.5625, $1.5000 and $1.78125 per share per year, respectively. This fixed annual dividend rate is subject to adjustment under certain circumstances, but will not, in any case, be lower than 6.25%, 6.00% and 7.125% per year, respectively, for each of the 6.25% Series 2027 Term Preferred Shares, 6.00% Series 2029 Term Preferred Shares and 7.125% Series 2029 Term Preferred Shares.

    Supplemental Information Regarding April Net Asset Value Estimate

    The fair value of the Company’s portfolio investments may be materially impacted after April 30, 2025 by circumstances and events that are not yet known. To the extent the Company’s portfolio investments are impacted by market volatility in the U.S. or worldwide, the Company may experience a material impact on its future net investment income, the fair value of its portfolio investments, its financial condition and the financial condition of its portfolio investments. Investing in our securities involves a number of significant risks. For a discussion of the additional risks applicable to an investment in our securities, please refer to the section titled “Risk Factors” in our prospectus and the section titled “Principal Risks” in our most recent annual report or semi-annual report, as applicable.

    The unaudited estimate of the range of the NAV per share of our common stock as of April 30, 2025 included in this press release (the “preliminary financial data”) has been prepared by, and is the responsibility of, Oxford Lane Capital Corp.’s management. PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP has not audited, reviewed, compiled, or applied agreed-upon procedures with respect to the preliminary financial data. Accordingly, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP does not express an opinion or any other form of assurance with respect thereto.

    Supplemental Information Regarding Core Net Investment Income 

    We provide information relating to Core NII (a non-GAAP measure) on a supplemental basis. This measure is not provided as a substitute for GAAP NII, but in addition to it. Our non-GAAP measures may differ from similar measures by other companies, even in the event of similar terms being utilized to identify such measures. Core NII represents GAAP NII adjusted for additional applicable cash distributions received, or entitled to be received (if any, in either case), on our CLO equity investments. Oxford Lane’s management uses this information in its internal analysis of results and believes that this information may be informative in assessing the quality of Oxford Lane’s financial performance, identifying trends in its results and providing meaningful period-to-period comparisons.

    Income from investments in the “equity” class securities of CLO vehicles, for GAAP purposes, is recorded using the effective interest method; this is based on an effective yield to the expected redemption utilizing estimated cash flows, at current cost, including those CLO equity investments that have not made their inaugural distribution for the relevant period end. The result is an effective yield for the investment in which the respective investment’s cost basis is adjusted quarterly based on the difference between the actual cash received, or distributions entitled to be received, and the effective yield calculation. Accordingly, investment income recognized on CLO equity securities in the GAAP statement of operations differs from the cash distributions actually received by the Company during the period (referred to below as “CLO equity adjustments”). 

    Furthermore, in order for the Company to continue qualifying as a regulated investment company for tax purposes, we are required, among other things, to distribute at least 90% of our investment company taxable income annually. While Core NII may provide a better indication of our estimated taxable income than GAAP NII during certain periods, we can offer no assurance that will be the case, however, as the ultimate tax character of our earnings cannot be determined until after tax returns are prepared at the close of a fiscal year. We note that this non-GAAP measure may not serve as a useful indicator of taxable earnings, particularly during periods of market disruption and volatility, and, as such, our taxable income may differ materially from our Core NII.

    The following table provides a reconciliation of GAAP NII to Core NII for the three months ended March 31, 2025:

      Three Months Ended  
    March 31, 2025  
      Amount   Per Share  
    Amount  
    GAAP net investment income…………………………………………   $ 75,354,120      $ 0.18   
    CLO equity adjustments……………………………………….………   20,458,574      0.05   
    Core net investment income……………………………………………   $ 95,812,694      $ 0.23   
                 

    We will host a conference call to discuss our fourth fiscal quarter results today, Monday, May 19, 2025 at 9:00 AM ET. Please call 1-833-470-1428, access code number 818188 to participate. A recording of the conference call will be available for replay for approximately 30 days following the call. The replay number is 1-866-813-9403, and the replay passcode is 138532.  

    A presentation containing additional details regarding our quarterly results of operations has been posted under the Investor Relations section of our website at www.oxfordlanecapital.com

    About Oxford Lane Capital Corp. 

    Oxford Lane Capital Corp. is a publicly-traded registered closed-end management investment company principally investing in debt and equity tranches of CLO vehicles. CLO investments may also include warehouse facilities, which are financing structures intended to aggregate loans that may be used to form the basis of a CLO vehicle.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This press release contains forward-looking statements subject to the inherent uncertainties in predicting future results and conditions. Any statements that are not statements of historical fact (including statements containing the words “believes,” “plans,” “anticipates,” “expects,” “estimates” and similar expressions) should also be considered to be forward-looking statements. These statements are not guarantees of future performance, conditions or results and involve a number of risks and uncertainties.  Certain factors could cause actual results and conditions to differ materially from those projected in these forward-looking statements. These factors are identified from time to time in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. We undertake no obligation to update such statements to reflect subsequent events, except as may be required by law.

    Contact:
    Bruce Rubin
    203-983-5280

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Global: Introducing The Conversation and the BBC’s Secrets of the Sea – my journey to meet six marine scientists pioneering ocean solutions

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Anna Turns, Senior Environment Editor

    Senior environment editor Anna Turns with BBC radio producer Jo Loosemore CC BY-NC-ND

    After a long drive to Godrevy lighthouse near St Ives in Cornwall, the wind is blowing and the waves are crashing. I’m here with BBC radio producer Jo Loosemore, on a roadtrip to meet some of the marine scientists researching how ocean health is vital to our future.

    As we squeeze between crevices in the cliffs to shelter from the elements at Godrevy beach, I interview Ed Gasson, a glaciologist at the University of Exeter. His story is full of surprises.

    Jo Loosemore with Anna Turns on Godrevy beach.
    Ed Gasson, CC BY-NC-ND

    This corner of north Cornwall is one I have visited many times, usually on bright, sunny days during weekend getaways or family holidays. I’ve gazed at the lighthouse, enjoyed spotting seals on the rocks beneath, and sat with both icecream and binoculars in hand on the benches by the coast path.

    But I had never looked closely at these cliffs below, until now. And I could never have guessed that this coastline had any connections to the ice age, the Antarctic or sea-level rise.

    In a collaboration between The Conversation and BBC South West, Secrets of the Sea is a new series that showcases local stories with global significance. World experts based across Devon and Cornwall are at the forefront of marine research into seaweeds and seagrass, seabed restoration and offshore shellfish farming.

    Prepping to record inside the National Maritime Museum of Cornwall.
    Jo Loosemore, CC BY-NC-ND

    From the rocky foreshore in Torquay to the mussel-covered pontoons of Plymouth harbour, I’ve been speaking to scientists about their work, their passions and the potential for our oceans to hold the key to climate resilience. Healthier seas mean our planet will be much better able to weather the stormy seas of the climate crisis.

    Each of the six radio programmes and accompanying articles delves into a different aspect of our oceans. Through 19th-century archives, in tiny test tubes on a lab bench, or inside a walk-in fridge full of marine fungi, this series explores creative ways to study ocean health. So, join me on BBC Sounds and here at The Conversation to go beneath the waves with a sense of wonder – and optimism.

    Listen to a mini-series of four short episodes on BBC Radio Devon from May 20-23 here. The full six-part series will air weekly from May 23 at 8.30pm on BBC Radio Devon and BBC Radio Cornwall.



    Local science, global stories.

    In collaboration with the BBC, Anna Turns travels around the West Country coastline to meet ocean experts making exciting discoveries beneath the waves.

    This article is part of a series, Secrets of the Sea, exploring how marine scientists are developing climate solutions.


    ref. Introducing The Conversation and the BBC’s Secrets of the Sea – my journey to meet six marine scientists pioneering ocean solutions – https://theconversation.com/introducing-the-conversation-and-the-bbcs-secrets-of-the-sea-my-journey-to-meet-six-marine-scientists-pioneering-ocean-solutions-249981

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI: LanzaTech Announces First Quarter 2025 Financial Results

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    CHICAGO, May 19, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — LanzaTech Global, Inc. (NASDAQ: LNZA) (“LanzaTech” or the “Company”), a carbon management solutions company, today reported its financial and operating results for the first quarter of 2025.

    Key Takeaways:

    • Reported total revenue of $9.5 million for the first quarter of 2025 as compared to $10.2 million for the first quarter of 2024. The year-over-year decrease was driven primarily by lower revenues in the biorefining and Joint Development Agreement (“JDA”) & Contract Research businesses, which was largely offset by a significant increase in CarbonSmart™ revenue.
    • Continued to shift the Company’s core operations from research and development to the global deployment of LanzaTech’s commercially proven technology, with incremental actions being taken to sharpen the business focus, streamline operations, and improve the Company’s cost structure.
    • Closed $40 million of preferred equity capital in May of 2025; however, after completing its assessment as required by Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (“GAAP”), management has concluded that its continuing actions such as ongoing liquidity initiatives, together with the terms of the preferred capital, and the execution of cost reduction plans, do not alleviate substantial doubt about the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern.

    First Quarter 2025 Financial Results
    The table below outlines key results for the first quarter of 2025:

    All amounts in millions ($) Three Months Ended March 31,
        2025       2024  
    Revenue $ 9.5     $ 10.2  
    Cost of revenue   7.5       6.8  
    Gross Profit   2.0       3.4  
    Operating expenses   33.0       29.6  
    Net loss   (19.2 )     (25.5 )
    Adjusted EBITDA loss (1) $ (30.5 )   $ (22.1 )
                   

    (1)   See “Non-GAAP Financial Measures” and “Reconciliations of GAAP Net Loss to Adjusted EBITDA” sections herein for an explanation and reconciliations of non-GAAP measures used throughout this release.

    Revenue

    • Reported total revenue of $9.5 million for the first quarter of 2025 as compared to total revenue of $10.2 million for the first quarter of 2024. The decrease was driven primarily by lower biorefining and JDA & Contract Research revenues year-over-year, which were offset by a significant increase in CarbonSmart revenue:
      • Biorefining revenue for the first quarter of 2025 was $2.9 million as compared to $5.0 million for the first quarter of 2024. The year-over-year decrease was driven primarily by the first quarter of 2024 benefiting from engineering and other services contracts with existing customers which have since reached the completion of their current development phase.
      • JDA & Contract Research revenue for the first quarter of 2025 was $2.4 million as compared to $4.3 million for the first quarter of 2024. The year-over-year decline was attributable to the completion of certain government projects during 2024, compounded by a period of downtime prior to new projects commencing.
      • CarbonSmart revenue for the first quarter of 2025 was $4.2 million as compared to $0.9 million for the first quarter of 2024. The year-over-year increase was attributable to incremental direct fuel sales as a result of establishing licensing arrangements, identifying partners, and developing supply chain infrastructure during the third quarter of 2024.

    Cost of Revenue

    • For the first quarter of 2025, the cost of revenue was $7.5 million as compared to $6.8 million for the first quarter of 2024. The year-over-year increase was driven in part by a change in revenue mix related to a rise in revenue generated by CarbonSmart, which is a lower margin business as compared to biorefining and JDA & Contract Research. Additionally, the biorefining business experienced margin contraction during the first quarter of 2025 as compared to the same period in 2024 as a result of customer mix.

    Operating Expenses

    • For the first quarter of 2025, operating expenses were $33.0 million as compared to $29.6 million for the first quarter of 2024. The year-over-year increase was primarily driven by incremental costs associated with sharpening the business focus, streamlining operations, and evaluating strategic options.

    Net Loss

    • For the first quarter of 2025, net losses were $19.2 million as compared $25.5 million for the first quarter of 2024. Net loss decreased year-over-year primarily as a result of a $17.9 million non-cash gain on financial instruments being recorded in the first quarter of 2025, that was partially offset by expenses incurred associated with evaluating strategic options and a $6.5 million non-cash loss recorded related to equity method investees.

    Adjusted EBITDA Loss

    • For the first quarter of 2025, adjusted EBITDA loss was $30.5 million as compared to $22.1 million for the first quarter of 2024. The increase in adjusted EBITDA loss year-over-year was primarily attributable to higher selling, general and administrative expenses as a result of evaluating strategic options, along with lower revenue and higher cost of sales period-over-period.

    Balance Sheet and Liquidity
    As of March 31, 2025, LanzaTech had $23.4 million in total cash, restricted cash, and investments, compared to total cash of $58.1 million at the end of December 31, 2024. The Company subsequently closed $40 million of preferred equity capital in May of 2025.

    About LanzaTech
    LanzaTech Global, Inc. (NASDAQ: LNZA) is the carbon recycling company transforming waste carbon into sustainable fuels, chemicals, materials, and protein. Using its biorecycling technology, LanzaTech captures carbon generated by energy-intensive industries at the source, preventing it from being emitted into the air. LanzaTech then gives that captured carbon a new life as a clean replacement for virgin fossil carbon in everything from household cleaners and clothing fibers to packaging and fuels. For more information about LanzaTech, please visit https://lanzatech.com.

    Forward Looking Statements
    This press release includes forward-looking statements regarding, among other things, the plans, strategies and prospects, both business and financial, of LanzaTech. These statements are based on the beliefs and assumptions of LanzaTech’s management. Although LanzaTech believes that its plans, intentions and expectations reflected in or suggested by these forward-looking statements are reasonable, LanzaTech cannot assure you that it will achieve or realize these plans, intentions or expectations. Forward-looking statements are inherently subject to risks, uncertainties and assumptions. Generally, statements that are not historical facts, including statements concerning possible or assumed future actions, business strategies, events or results of operations, are forward-looking statements. These statements may be preceded by, followed by or include the words “believes,” “estimates,” “expects,” “projects,” “forecasts,” “may,” “will,” “should,” “seeks,” “plans,” “scheduled,” “anticipates,” “intends” or similar expressions. The forward-looking statements are based on projections prepared by, and are the responsibility of, LanzaTech’s management. These forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance, conditions or results, and involve a number of known and unknown risks, uncertainties, assumptions and other important factors, many of which are outside LanzaTech’s control, that could cause actual results or outcomes to differ materially from those discussed in the forward-looking statements, including the Company’s ability to continue operations as a going concern; the Company’s ability to obtain the stockholder approvals necessary to consummate the subsequent equity financing contemplated by the Series A Convertible Senior Preferred Stock Purchase Agreement, dated May 7, 2025; the Company’s ability to attract new investors and raise substantial additional financing to fund its operations and/or execute on its other strategic options; the Company’s ability to regain compliance with the listing rules of Nasdaq and maintain the listing of its securities on Nasdaq; and the Company’s ability to achieve profitability. LanzaTech may be adversely affected by other economic, business, or competitive factors, and other risks and uncertainties, including those described under the header “Risk Factors” in its Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024, its Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 and in future SEC filings. New risk factors that may affect actual results or outcomes emerge from time to time and it is not possible to predict all such risk factors, nor can LanzaTech assess the impact of all such risk factors on its business, or the extent to which any factor or combination of factors may cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in any forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of performance. You should not put undue reliance on these statements, which speak only as of the date hereof. All forward-looking statements attributable to LanzaTech or persons acting on its behalf are expressly qualified in their entirety by the foregoing cautionary statements. LanzaTech undertakes no obligations to update or revise publicly any forward-looking statements.

    Non-GAAP Financial Measures
    To supplement our financial statements presented in accordance with US GAAP and to provide investors with additional information regarding our financial results, we have presented adjusted EBITDA, a non-GAAP financial measure. Adjusted EBITDA is not based on any standardized methodology prescribed by US GAAP and is not necessarily comparable to similarly titled measures presented by other companies.

    We define adjusted EBITDA as our net loss, excluding the impact of depreciation, interest income, net, stock-based compensation expense, change in fair value of warrant liabilities, change in fair value of Brookfield SAFE liabilities, loss on Brookfield SAFE extinguishment, change in fair value of the FPA Put Option and Fixed Maturity Consideration liabilities, change in fair value of our outstanding convertible note and related transaction costs, change in fair value of Brookfield Loan and(loss) gain from equity method investees. We monitor adjusted EBITDA because it is a key measure used by our management and Board of Directors to understand and evaluate our operating performance, to establish budgets, and to develop operational goals for managing our business. We believe adjusted EBITDA helps identify underlying trends in our business that could otherwise be masked by the effect of certain expenses that we include in net loss. Accordingly, we believe adjusted EBITDA provides useful information to investors, analysts, and others in understanding and evaluating our operating results and enhancing the overall understanding of our past performance and future prospects.

    Adjusted EBITDA is not prepared in accordance with US GAAP and should not be considered in isolation of, or as an alternative to, measures prepared in accordance with US GAAP. There are a number of limitations related to the use of adjusted EBITDA rather than net loss, which is the most directly comparable financial measure calculated and presented in accordance with US GAAP. For example, adjusted EBITDA: (i) excludes stock-based compensation expense because it is a significant non-cash expense that is not directly related to our operating performance; (ii) excludes depreciation expense and, although this is a non-cash expense, the assets being depreciated and amortized may have to be replaced in the future; (iii) excludes gain or losses on equity method investee; and (iv) excludes certain income or expense items that do not provide a comparable measure of our business performance. In addition, the expenses and other items that we exclude in our calculations of adjusted EBITDA may differ from the expenses and other items, if any, that other companies may exclude from adjusted EBITDA when they report their operating results. In addition, other companies may use other measures to evaluate their performance, all of which could reduce the usefulness of our non-GAAP financial measures as tools for comparison.

     
    LANZATECH GLOBAL INC.
    CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
    (Unaudited, in thousands, except share and per share data)
     
      March 31,   December 31,
        2025       2024  
    Assets      
    Current assets:      
    Cash and cash equivalents $ 13,778     $ 43,499  
    Held-to-maturity investment securities   7,411       12,374  
    Trade and other receivables, net of allowance   9,058       9,456  
    Contract assets   13,267       18,975  
    Other current assets   14,157       15,030  
    Total current assets   57,671       99,334  
    Property, plant and equipment, net   20,225       22,333  
    Right-of-use assets   28,482       26,790  
    Equity method investment         4,363  
    Equity security investment   14,990       14,990  
    Other non-current assets   4,467       6,873  
    Total assets $ 125,835     $ 174,683  
    Liabilities and Shareholders’ Equity      
    Current liabilities:      
    Accounts payable $ 6,434     $ 5,289  
    Other accrued liabilities   7,506       8,876  
    Warrants   549       3,531  
    Fixed Maturity Consideration and current FPA Put Option liability   4,123       4,123  
    Contract liabilities   5,291       6,168  
    Accrued salaries and wages   2,451       2,302  
    Current lease liabilities   166       158  
    Total current liabilities   26,520       30,447  
    Non-current lease liabilities   30,144       30,619  
    Non-current contract liabilities   5,433       5,233  
    FPA Put Option liability   30,015       30,015  
    Brookfield SAFE liability         13,223  
    Brookfield Loan liability   18,416        
    Convertible Note   15,969       51,112  
    Other long-term liabilities   512       587  
    Total liabilities   127,009       161,236  
           
    Shareholders’ Equity      
    Common stock, $0.0001 par value, 600,000,000 and 600,000,000 shares authorized; 197,897,580 and 194,915,711 shares issued and outstanding as of March 31, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively   19       19  
    Additional paid-in capital   983,991       981,638  
    Accumulated other comprehensive income   3,648       1,393  
    Accumulated deficit   (988,832 )     (969,603 )
    Total shareholders’ equity   (1,174 )     13,447  
    Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity $ 125,835     $ 174,683  
     
    LANZATECH GLOBAL INC.
    CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
    (Unaudited, in thousands, except share and per share data)
     
      Three Months Ended March 31,
        2025       2024  
    Revenues:      
    Contracts with customers and grants $ 3,057     $ 6,250  
    CarbonSmart product sales   4,204       863  
    Collaborative arrangements   1,050       2,223  
    Related party transactions   1,172       908  
    Total revenues   9,483       10,244  
    Costs and operating expenses:      
    Contracts with customers and grants(1)   2,902       4,998  
    CarbonSmart product sales(1)   4,136       919  
    Collaborative arrangements(1)   461       796  
    Related party transactions(1)   14       57  
    Research and development expense   16,494       17,061  
    Depreciation expense   781       1,530  
    Selling, general and administrative expense   15,748       11,037  
    Total cost and operating expenses   40,536       36,398  
    Loss from operations   (31,053 )     (26,154 )
    Other income (expense):      
    Interest income, net   438       1,148  
    Other income, net   17,918       179  
    Total other income, net   18,356       1,327  
    Loss before income taxes   (12,697 )     (24,827 )
    Income tax expense          
    Loss from equity method investees, net   (6,532 )     (681 )
    Net loss $ (19,229 )   $ (25,508 )
           
    Other comprehensive loss:      
    Changes in credit risk of fair value instruments   2,696        
    Foreign currency translation adjustments   (441 )     42  
    Comprehensive loss $ (16,974 )   $ (25,466 )
           
    Net loss per common share – basic and diluted $ (0.10 )   $ (0.13 )
    Weighted-average number of common shares outstanding – basic and diluted   196,514,267       196,974,508  
                   
    (1)   exclusive of depreciation              
     
    LANZATECH GLOBAL INC.
    CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
    (Unaudited, in thousands)
     
      Three Months Ended March 31,
        2025       2024  
    Cash Flows From Operating Activities:      
    Net loss $ (19,229 )   $ (25,508 )
    Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash used in operating activities:      
    Share-based compensation expense   2,280       2,529  
    Gain on change in fair value of SAFE and warrant liabilities   (2,932 )     (13,277 )
    Loss on Brookfield SAFE extinguishment   6,216        
    Loss on change in fair value of the Brookfield Loan   11,426        
    Loss on change in fair value of the FPA Put Option and the Fixed Maturity Consideration liabilities         13,045  
    Gain on change in fair value of Convertible Note   (35,143 )      
    Provisions for losses on trade and other receivables, net of recoveries   126        
    Depreciation of property, plant and equipment   781       1,530  
    Amortization of discount on debt security investment   (37 )     (360 )
    Non-cash lease expense   490       496  
    Non-cash recognition of licensing revenue   (1,108 )     (641 )
    Loss from equity method investees, net   6,532       681  
    Unrealized (Gain)/Loss on net foreign exchange   275       (224 )
    Changes in operating assets and liabilities:      
    Accounts receivable, net   240       645  
    Contract assets   5,837       (1,029 )
    Accrued interest on debt investment   32       (177 )
    Other assets   895       (3,012 )
    Accounts payable and accrued salaries and wages   1,171       (2,207 )
    Contract liabilities   463       616  
    Operating lease liabilities   (467 )     (485 )
    Other liabilities   1,051       (911 )
    Net cash used in operating activities   (21,101 )     (28,289 )
    Cash Flows From Investing Activities:      
    Purchase of property, plant and equipment   (713 )     (1,480 )
    Proceeds from maturity of debt securities   5,000       10,700  
    Net cash provided by investing activities   4,287       9,220  
    Cash Flows From Financing Activities:      
    Proceeds from issue of equity instruments of the Company         234  
    Repurchase of equity instruments of the Company         (48 )
    Partial settlement of the Brookfield Loan   (12,500 )      
    Net cash (used in)/provided by financing activities   (12,500 )     186  
    Effects of currency translation on cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash   (389 )     48  
    Net decrease in cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash   (29,703 )     (18,835 )
    Cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash at beginning of period   45,737       76,284  
    Cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash at end of period $ 16,034     $ 57,449  
    Supplemental disclosure of non-cash investing and financing activities:      
    Acquisition of property, plant and equipment under accounts payable   255       141  
    Extinguishment of the Brookfield SAFE   13,274        
    Issuance of the Brookfield Loan   (19,490 )      
     
    LANZATECH GLOBAL INC.
    Reconciliation of GAAP Net Loss to Adjusted EBITDA
    (Unaudited, in thousands)
     
      Three Months Ended March 31,
        2025       2024  
    Net Loss $ (19,229 )   $ (25,508 )
    Depreciation   781       1,530  
    Interest income, net   (438 )     (1,148 )
    Stock-based compensation expense and change in fair value of Brookfield SAFE and warrant liabilities (1)   (652 )     (10,748 )
    Loss on Brookfield SAFE extinguishment   6,216        
    Change in fair value of the FPA Put Option and Fixed Maturity Consideration liabilities (net of interest accretion reversal)         13,045  
    Change in fair value of Convertible Note and related transaction costs   (35,143 )      
    Change in fair value of Brookfield Loan   11,426        
    Loss from equity method investees, net   6,532       681  
    Adjusted EBITDA $ (30,507 )   $ (22,148 )
     
    (1)   Stock-based compensation expense represents expense related to equity compensation plans.

    Investor Relations Contact
    Kate Walsh
    VP, Investor Relations & Tax
    Investor.Relations@lanzatech.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Vigilance urged as potato industry faces Colorado beetle threat

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Vigilance urged as potato industry faces Colorado beetle threat

    Animal and Plant Health Agency calls for Colorado beetle vigilance from home gardeners, allotmenteers and farmers who grow potatoes

    Home gardeners, allotmenteers and farmers have been urged today (Monday 19 May) to be vigilant for the presence of Colorado beetle, a major threat to potato crops, following recent sightings.

    The Colorado beetle has the potential to have a significant economic impact on the potato industry without action being taken. Adult beetles and larvae feed on the foliage of potatoes and several other plants, including tomatoes, aubergines and peppers, and can completely strip them of their leaves if they are left uncontrolled.

    Colorado beetle larvae were confirmed in a potato field in Kent following laboratory diagnosis of samples in 2023. There were outbreaks in the 1930s, 1950s and 1970s but the pest was swiftly eradicated due to inspections and public vigilance.

    The beetles have been known to be imported into the UK as ‘hitchhikers’ on plants, such as leafy vegetables, salad leaves, fresh herbs, grain and frozen vegetables, and APHA is urging people to keep an eye out when handling these items.

    Professor Nicola Spence, Defra’s Chief Plant Health Officer, said:

    “The Colorado beetle poses a significant threat to plants and the wider potato industry.

    “The public have an important role to play in helping us take swift and effective action to protect UK biosecurity. The public are urged to be vigilant and report suspected sightings to the Animal and Plant Health Agency with a photo and location details.”

    APHA Interim Chief Executive Dr Jenny Stewart said:

    “Public vigilance was key to eradicating the beetle in the 1970s, and we really need home gardeners, allotmenteers and farmers to step up again, and identify and report suspected sightings to protect potato crops.

    “Our surveillance capabilities protect UK borders from a wide range of plant pests and diseases, including the Colorado beetle, but we cannot do this without the help of the public.”

    How to spot a Colorado beetle:

    • The beetle’s body is yellow or cream with 10 black stripes and it has an orange head with irregular black spots.
    • It is usually between 6 to 11mm in length and 3mm in width. Its larvae are a pinkish red or orange colour, with black spots along each side and a black head and are up to 15mm in length. 
    • They are distinctive in appearance, however, there are several beetles that are frequently mistaken for them.

    APHA is exhibiting at this year’s RHS Chelsea Flower Show to raise awareness of the impact this pest can have on UK food security and the potato industry

    Visitors to APHA’s Chelsea Flower Show exhibit can engage with interactive graphics and a multimedia experience highlighting how the beetle attacks plants and how to identify signs of the pest.
    The exhibit (location GPA004) will also showcase how to report suspected findings to APHA in an effort to protect the British potato industry.

    Additional information:

    • If you find a Colorado beetle in England and Wales, please do not let it go – capture it in a secure container and report any suspected sightings to APHA as soon as possible by telephoning 0300 1000 313 or by emailing the planthealth.info@apha.gov.uk mailbox. All sightings should include a photograph and location details.
    • For Scotland, contact the Scottish Government’s Horticulture and Marketing Unit: Agricultural crops contact the local RPID officer: http://www.gov.scot/Topics/farmingrural/Agriculture/AOcontacts/contacts For non-agricultural crops, email: hort.marketing@gov.scot 
    • For Northern Ireland, contact the DAERA Plant Health Inspection Branch: Tel: 0300 200 7847 Email: planthealth@daera-ni.gov.uk Web:  [https://www.daera-ni.gov.uk/topics/plant-and-tree-health] 
    • The Colorado beetle does not represent a risk to human health.
    • The Colorado potato beetle plant pest factsheet provides more information about the beetle’s life cycle and provides information on how to differentiate it from some of our native beetle species.

    Updates to this page

    Published 19 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: PM secures new agreement with EU to benefit British people

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    PM secures new agreement with EU to benefit British people

    UK secures new agreement with the European Union to support British businesses, back British jobs, and put more money in people’s pockets.

    • UK secures new agreement with the European Union to support British businesses, back British jobs, and put more money in people’s pockets.
    • Package will help make food cheaper, slash red tape, open up access to the EU market and add nearly £9 billion to the UK economy by 2040.
    • Prime Minister hails agreement as ‘good for jobs, good for bills, and good for our borders’.

    The Prime Minister has today confirmed a new agreement with the European Union which will deliver on his core mission to grow the economy, back British jobs and put more money in people’s pockets.

    Extensive negotiations over the last six months have led to the third major deal struck by the government in as many weeks, following the US and India – which the Prime Minister says will be “good for jobs, good for bills and good for our borders”.

    As part of the deal, a new SPS agreement will make it easier for food and drink to be imported and exported by reducing the red tape that placed burdens on businesses and led to lengthy lorry queues at the border. This agreement will have no time limit, giving vital certainty to businesses.

    Some routine checks on animal and plant products will be removed completely, allowing goods to flow freely again, including between Great Britain and Northern Ireland. Ultimately this could lower food prices and increase choice on supermarket shelves – meaning more money in people’s pockets. 

    The EU is the UK’s largest trading partner. After the 21% drop in exports and 7% drop in imports seen since Brexit, the UK will also be able to sell various products, such as burgers and sausages, back into the EU again, supporting these vital British industries.

    Closer co-operation on emissions through linking our respective Emissions Trading Systems will improve the UK’s energy security and avoid businesses being hit by the EU’s carbon tax due to come in next year – which would have sent £800 million directly to the EU’s budget.

    Combined, the SPS and Emissions Trading Systems linking measures alone are set to add nearly £9 billion to the UK economy by 2040, in a huge boost for growth.

    British steel exports are protected from new EU rules and restrictive tariffs, through a bespoke arrangement for the UK that will save UK steel £25 million per year.  

    The UK will enter talks about access to EU facial images data for the first time, on top of the existing arrangements for DNA, fingerprint and vehicle registration data. This will enhance our ability to catch dangerous criminals and ensure they face justice more quickly. 

    British holidaymakers will be able to use more eGates in Europe, ending the dreaded queues at border control. Pets will also be able to travel more easily, with the introduction of ‘pet passports’ for UK cats and dogs – eliminating the need for animal health certificates for every trip.

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer will say:

    It’s time to look forward. To move on from the stale old debates and political fights to find common sense, practical solutions which get the best for the British people.

    We’re ready to work with partners if it means we can improve people’s lives here at home.

    So that’s what this deal is all about – facing out into the world once again, in the great tradition of this nation. Building the relationships we choose, with the partners we choose, and closing deals in the national interest. Because that is what independent, sovereign nations do.

    Today will also see the agreement of the new Security and Defence Partnership, which will pave the way for the UK defence industry to participate in the EU’s proposed new £150 billion Security Action for Europe (SAFE) defence fund – supporting thousands of British jobs and boosting growth.

    At a time of increasing global uncertainty and volatility, this will formalise UK-EU co-operation on defence to ensure Europe’s safety and security.

    Minister for European Union Relations and lead Government negotiator, Nick Thomas-Symonds said:

    Today is a historic day, marking the opening of a new chapter in our relationship with the EU that delivers for working people across the UK.

    Since the start of these negotiations, we have worked for a deal to make the British people safer, more secure and more prosperous. Our new UK-EU Strategic Partnership achieves all three objectives. It delivers on jobs, bills and borders. Today is a day of delivery. Britain is back on the world stage with a Government in the service of working people.

    The UK and the EU have also agreed to co-operate further on a youth experience scheme – which could see young people able to work and travel freely in Europe again. The scheme, which would be capped and time-limited, would mirror existing schemes the UK has with countries such as Australia and New Zealand.

    The Prime Minister is clear that bringing down migration remains an absolute priority for him, which is why today’s agreement also majors on further work on finding solutions to tackle illegal migration – including on returns and a joint commitment to tackle channel crossings.

    The UK and EU have also reached a new twelve year agreement that protects Britain’s fishing access, fishing rights and fishing areas with no increase in the amount of fish EU vessels can catch in British waters, providing stability and certainty for the sector. The UK will also back coastal communities by investing £360 million into our fishing industry to go towards new technology and equipment to modernise the fleet, training to help upskill the workforce, and funding to help revitalise coastal communities, support tourism and boost seafood exports. The British fleet will also benefit from the SPS agreement which slashes costs and red tape to help exports.

    This agreement meets the red lines set out in the government’s manifesto – no return to the single market, no return to the customs union, and no return to freedom of movement.

    The UK will continue to hold talks with the European Union on the details of each commitment.

    Updates to this page

    Published 19 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: Charting Our Galaxy’s Extreme Center

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    Earth – our tiny blue dot in the galaxy – is approximately 26,000 light years away from a fascinating and active region of the Milky Way called the Central Molecular Zone (CMZ). This region holds clues about how stars are born, how energy moves through our galaxy, and maybe even some details about dark matter. 

    However, analyzing this area is challenging, because we do not have a clear top-down view of the Milky Way. UConn’s Milky Way Laboratory, headed by the Department of Physics Associate Professor Cara Battersby, present their comprehensive analysis and 3-dimensional top-down model of the CMZ in a series of four papers in the Astrophysical Journal 

    The CMZ is a region of extremes and complexity, but it is also the only CMZ we can study in detail.

    “We like to call the CMZ the way station of the galaxy: between gas that’s flowing in from the disc of the galaxy along dust lanes into the CMZ,” Battersby says. “That gas either remains in the CMZ and orbits around the center of the galaxy, where it sometimes forms stars, or it can travel onwards to the supermassive black hole at the center of the galaxy.”  

    One question Battersby is interested in learning more about is when the Milky Way’s supermassive black hole, called Sagittarius A, “feeds” or actively accretes material. As a galactic way station, the CMZ controls when and if those materials travel to the black hole. Making direct observations to answer this question is tricky because the CMZ is home to lots of gas, dust, and stars, along with the fact that we are very far away and can only see it from the side.

    “To understand how our own CMZ regulates this gas inflow, we need a top-down picture,” Battersby says. “We probably have hundreds of thousands of images of our galactic center, all in this sideways perspective. We can learn everything we want about these clouds, but if you don’t know which ones are flowing toward the black hole or which ones are orbiting, then you can’t really say anything about how the CMZ regulates this gas flow. We can do a better job of modeling the three-dimensional gas distribution.”  

    In this series of papers, Battersby’s research group takes all available evidence to measure and catalog aspects of the clouds in this region of the galaxy to create the best possible top-down three-dimensional view of the CMZ.  

    The first step was to compile a comprehensive catalog of structures in the CMZ and to measure their physical and kinematic properties, such as mass, radii, temperature, and velocity dispersion, described in papers one and two.

    With these comprehensive catalogs, the next two papers focus on the small-scale structures within the catalog, which are thought to be individual molecular clouds that may be the birthplaces of clusters of stars, says Battersby. The third paper was led by former post-doctoral fellow Daniel Walker and the fourth paper was led by current Ph.D. student Dani Lipman.

    The galactic center is very bright and emits light at many wavelengths, therefore, the properties of the molecular clouds give clues about their location within it. The researchers used different approaches to measure and determine which clouds are in front of or behind the galactic center.

    “These molecular clouds are places where stars form only when the gas is very dense and very cold, and much of the gas in the galactic center is hot and diffuse,” Battersby says. “These cocoons of cool, dense gas mean that when they’re in front of the galactic center, they absorb the bright light from the galactic center, and they look like shadows. On the other hand, if those clouds are behind the galactic center, then this light passes through, and the clouds don’t block that light at all.”

    The researchers developed new techniques to measure how much light is blocked by the molecular clouds with the assumption that if a lot of light is blocked, it is likely that the cloud is in front of the galactic center.

    “Papers three and four use two different techniques. Paper three focuses on radio wavelengths of light, and it focuses on the molecular clouds absorbing the radio wavelengths. Paper four focuses on infrared dust extinction and details a careful technique to measure the “shadow” based on the properties of the cloud, thereby quantifying the likelihood that it’s either in front of or behind the Galactic Center,” says Battersby.

    A far-infrared Herschel image of our Galaxy’s Central Molecular Zone (CMZ) reveals a bright and dense ring of molecular gas and dust encircling our supermassive black hole, SgrA*. This image reveals our view of the Galaxy’s Center as seen from Earth. Researchers in the 3-D CMZ project used these data, plus radio, infrared, and submilleter data to quantify the likelihood of each cloud being either in front of or behind SgrA*. Researchers then used these likelihoods to test current theories of the 3-D structure of our Galaxies center and to present a new model of the 3-D structure of the CMZ. This image shows Herschel data of the inner 7 degrees of the Galaxy, with red showing 350 micron emission, green 160 micron, and blue 70 micron emission. At the approximate distance of the Galactic Center, this image shows approximately the inner 1 kpc (or about 3,200 light years) while the CMZ itself is about the inner 550 pc (or about 1,800 light years). (Contributed image)

    Next, the researchers modeled what their data suggested was happening in the CMZ and compared that to existing models of what the galactic center may look like from the top down.

    There were three predominant models of what our galactic center may look like, and Battersby says the locations of the molecular clouds the group mapped vary quite a bit across the different existing models. By accounting for the dynamic movements of various clouds, the researchers found existing models lacked this complexity and more work is needed to study the flow of gas in the CMZ.

    “Paper three presented a new simple ellipse model that is a slightly better fit than the previous models. Dani Lipman is currently drafting paper five that presents a quantitative best-fit model of the top-down view of our Galaxy’s CMZ, which includes the release of public code so future researchers can continue to improve our top-down model of the CMZ as new data arrives.”

    Lipman says that paper five aims to combine any available data to determine the most likely position of a given cloud in front of or behind Sagittarius A*. These positions are then used to find a best fitting top-down model for the CMZ. The model is continually updated and improved as more data becomes available,

    “Modern science is wonderfully collaborative, so releasing our code is a huge part of engaging in the community and offering resources to new scientists and students who are eager to join in answering these questions,” says Lipman.

    This series of papers is a major step forward in understanding the 3-D structure of our Galaxy’s CMZ and enables researchers, like Battersby’s Milky Way Lab, to start answering pressing questions about our galaxy,

    “The CMZ provides ‘close’ access to extreme phenomena seen throughout the Universe, such as an accreting supermassive black hole, and star formation in a highly turbulent environment,” says Battersby. “Knowing the 3-D structure is essential to tracing flows towards the black hole as well as testing theories of star formation in an extreme environment, because you need to know where everything is in this dynamic environment.”

    This work is supported by the National Science Foundation through Award Nos. 1816715, 2206510, and CAREER 2145689. Further details, including a narrated guided tour of the CMZ, can be found on the 3-D CMZ project website

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Education Secretary gives keynote speech at Education World Forum

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Speech

    Education Secretary gives keynote speech at Education World Forum

    Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson’s speech on the use of EdTech to improve opportunity in education at the Education World Forum.

    Hello everyone, and thank you all for being here.

    It’s wonderful to see everyone together in the same place – the biggest gathering of education ministers anywhere in the world!

    And what a fitting location. Just next door is the Methodist Central Hall, where almost 80 years ago the United Nations General Assembly met for the first time.

    And we also sit in the shadow of Westminster Abbey, a place which marks the memories of so many inspirational figures, men and women who still light up our classrooms centuries on.

    Isaac Newton, Stephen Hawking, and Charles Darwin are all buried there.

    Jane Austen and the three Brontë sisters each have a plaque – next to the statue of William Shakespeare.

    And close by lies the grave of Charles Dickens, whose stories I grew up reading, whose characters I loved.

    Oliver Twist, David Copperfield, Pip and his great expectations.

    The abandoned children of Victorian London, held back, time and again, by the tough luck of a bad start.

    I was always drawn to Dickens because he was never afraid to confront social injustice.

    The daily, grinding poverty that kept opportunity out of the reach of millions.

    There’s been plenty of progress since those darker days.

    And thankfully, London looks very different today.

    But much of the inequality, the injustice remains.

    Opportunity still lies beyond the grasp of too many people – here in this country and around the world too.

    We have so far to go on our journey to cut the link between background and success.

    That’s our job as education leaders, to give not just some children but all children the opportunity to succeed, regardless of background, to make that old dream new again for each generation.

    There are well over a hundred countries and territories represented here today. Well over a hundred different education systems. Well over a hundred different sets of challenges.

    But we can come together around one common cause. Opportunity.

    That’s what education is all about. Opportunity for all children – to learn, to discover, to go on and live a good life.

    So that every child knows, deep down in their bones, that success belongs to them.

    That’s my mission for the children of this country, it’s the mission of our government. Because background shouldn’t mean destiny.

    But the barriers we face are huge – here in the UK and across the globe.

    250 million children still out of school around the world.

    70% of children in low- and middle-income countries unable to read at the end of their basic education.

    A pandemic that saw schools all over the world close their gates, classrooms empty, playgrounds silent, a global generation of children falling behind.

    Challenges of this scale demand the fresh solutions of the future, not the stale systems of the past.

    We must squeeze every last drop of value out of every last pound of funding.

    And technology will lead the way.

    The opportunities of EdTech are huge. It’s a wave of innovation that can lift the learning of billions.

    But to be clear about what technology can do, first we need to be clear what it cannot do.

    It can’t replace great teachers.

    They are the heart, they are the soul of every school.

    That was true 500 years ago. It’ll be true in 500 more.

    Education is a deeply human gift, given by one generation to the next.

    Opportunity passed from one generation to the next.

    But EdTech can take that gift and make it stronger, spread it further, share it with more children.

    It can be the radical force that brings the very best education into every city, every town, every village, every school, every classroom in the world.

    It can help us to reach learners who might otherwise be left out – because they have a disability, their parents are poor, they don’t speak a certain language, or simply because they’re a girl.

    EdTech can help us tear down those barriers.

    Here in this country, we’re using it to free up teachers time to spend more time teaching.

    For children that means more attention, higher standards, better life chances.

    For teachers – less paperwork, lower stress, fewer drains on their valuable time. 

    My department is continuing to support Oak National Academy, an online hub of resources for teachers, whose AI lesson assistant is helping teachers to plan personalised lessons in minutes.

    Making the most of teacher time is one of the challenges we all face.

    Another is attendance – getting children back in the classroom, especially since covid.

    Our response is rooted in our world-class data, where schools can use an interactive dashboard to drive early intervention.

    And it’s working. We’ve lost 3 million fewer days to absence this year than last.

    And now we’re using AI to go further and faster.

    Just last week we launched a brand new AI-powered tool, which we think is amongst the first of its kind in the world.

    Every mainstream school in the country can access reports right now to benchmark their attendance against 20 similar schools.

    They highlight what schools are doing well, and where they need targeted intervention and support.

    That’s the kind of cutting-edge insight schools need to get attendance moving.

    But, despite its huge power, we know that AI isn’t a magic wand.

    EdTech can light up the next century of education – and I believe it will – but there are no guarantees.

    So getting AI on the right track now is the most important challenge for global education in a generation.

    And we have far to go to deliver the scale of progress that I know is possible.

    Our evidence-base is too narrow, too shallow, too concentrated in certain parts of the world, too focused on certain parts of the system.

    More research is needed; better research is needed.

    On impact.

    On value.

    On sustainability.

    And on safety.

    We need to come together to grow a global, collective consensus – a suite of effective tools, built on top-class evidence.

    That’s how, together, we can make sure EdTech and AI deliver the very best learning for children.

    And on this the UK will lead the way.

    This government’s EdTech hub – led by our Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office – brings together research and policy organisations working to bridge the EdTech evidence gap.

    The Hub is here to support and empower government leaders, giving you the evidence that you need to roll out and scale up EdTech effectively and responsibly.

    The Hub is leading, and the UK is funding, the AI Observatory and Action Lab – supporting leaders in low- and middle-income countries to use AI in education.

    And we are continuing the change here at home with our new Content Store Project.

    We’re pooling a vast range of high-quality content – from curriculum guidance to teaching resources, from lessons plans to anonymised pupil work.

    And we’re making it available to AI companies to train their tools – so that they can generate top quality content for use in our classrooms.

    And we’re putting AI to work in a way that’s most useful for teachers, and most beneficial for students.

    But now we want to go further, to share our expertise, to work with our partners around the world to grow that collective consensus.

    So I am delighted to announce today that we are funding the development of global guidelines for generative AI in education.

    Working closely with partners at the OECD, we are shaping the global consensus on how generative AI can be deployed safely and effectively to boost education around the world.

    But everyone here today will know that guidelines are only ever as good as their implementation.

    Because what really matters is firm action in our classrooms, not abstract promises on a page.

    That’s why today I can announce that the UK will host an international summit on generative AI in education in 2026.

    Education leaders from around the world will come together to implement these guidelines – for the benefit of our children, young people and learners the world over.

    And we’ll continue to build the evidence base at home too.

    So I’m pleased to announce today that my department is investing more than a million pounds to test the Edtech we’re using in schools and colleges.

    Working with the Open Innovation Team, we’ll be engaging the sector to understand what works.

    We’ll look at how tools, including AI, can improve things like staff workload, pupil outcomes and inclusivity.

    Evidence must be at the heart of all we do, on EdTech and right across education.

    Here in the UK, we’re lucky to have the Education Endowment Foundation.

    The Foundation is at the forefront of research on how children learn.

    And my officials work hand in hand with their experts to make sure all our policies and programmes are driven by the very best evidence.

    We need to be at the top of our game.

    We’ve spoken about the challenges specific to education, but there are wider global challenges, that spill into our schools and colleges.

    Growing economic uncertainty, shifting labour markets, the flood of disinformation around social media.

    These are shared challenges that demand shared solutions.

    Solutions powered by technology, backed by evidence.

    But collaboration is key. We can’t do this alone.

    Learning from each other, sharing evidence, sharing data.

    The UK is here to convene, to accelerate and to celebrate all that is best in global education.

    And in the coming months we’ll publish our refreshed International Education Strategy.

    At its heart will be collaboration.

    Building partnerships that are meaningful, partnerships that matter, partnerships that, above all else, make a difference in the lives of the people we serve.

    That’s what sets apart those men and women whom we remember in Westminster Abbey. They made a difference in people’s lives.

    The scientists and engineers, the poets and playwrights, the doctors and nurses.

    Most of their deeds were done and dusted centuries ago. But their legacy lives on.

    EdTech is now bringing the wonders of the Abbey to a whole new generation of children.

    From the Anglo-Saxons to the Tudors, from the majesty of coronations to the drudgery of everyday medieval life.

    Abbey experts run virtual classrooms and virtual tours for schools unable to visit in person – so that every child can learn about this building which has been at the heart of our national life for a thousand years.

    So that no child has to miss out.

    That’s what EdTech is all about, what education is all about, opportunity for all of our children.

    Because let’s not forget, this is for them.

    For every child, for every young person, for every adult around the world who deserves the opportunity to learn.

    That’s why we have to get this right.

    That’s why so many of you have come here today from so far away.

    And that’s why I am so thankful that you have.

    Because together I know that we can make a difference.

    So it gives me great pleasure to welcome you to the Education World Forum 2025.

    And I look forward to working together with you as we build stronger, bolder, better education together.

    Thank you.

    DfE media enquiries

    Central newsdesk – for journalists 020 7783 8300

    Updates to this page

    Published 19 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Former Chinese takeaway owner sentenced after spending money on Apple and Burberry products instead of paying VAT bill

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Former Chinese takeaway owner sentenced after spending money on Apple and Burberry products instead of paying VAT bill

    Suspended sentence for bankrupt who defrauded HMRC

    • Former Chinese takeaway owner Zhang Jin Chen sold his house in Portsmouth and spent money from the sale in shops such as Apple and Burberry 

    • Chen knew he owed HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) more than £43,000 in VAT at the time he made the purchases and other cash withdrawals 

    • The 51-year-old then filed for bankruptcy, claiming he only had £20 in his bank account

    A former Chinese takeaway owner who withdrew thousands of pounds from his bank account and bought items from shops such as Apple and Burberry instead of settling his tax bill has been sentenced. 

    Zhang Jin Chen owed HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) more than £43,000 in VAT when he sold the house he owned with his then wife in Portsmouth in the autumn of 2020. 

    However, Chen disposed of £107,550 of his proceeds from the house sale without paying HMRC back. 

    The 51-year-old then applied for his own bankruptcy the following summer, claiming he only had £20 in his bank account, and £100 in cash. 

    Chen, of Havant Road, Portsmouth, was found guilty of fraudulently disposing of property as a bankrupt under the Insolvency Act 1986. 

    He was sentenced to 12 months in prison, suspended for 18 months, at Portsmouth Crown Court on Friday 16 May.  

    He was also ordered to complete 150 hours of unpaid work and 10 days of rehabilitation activity. 

    Mark Stephens, Chief Investigator at the Insolvency Service, said: 

    Zhang Jin Chen had the money available to pay the VAT he owed to HMRC twice over following the sale of his house but chose not to do so. Instead, he withdrew huge sums of money in cash and made purchases from the likes of Burberry and Apple. 

    Individuals who are declared bankrupt commit a criminal offence when they put assets out of the reach of creditors in the five years leading up to their bankruptcy. 

    Chen clearly intended to conceal his affairs and defraud HMRC so he could be more than £100,000 better off, instead of little over £60,000 if he had paid his debts.

    Chen ran a Chinese takeaway called Fortune House from an address on Albert Road in Portsmouth. He registered Fortune House as a business with HMRC in February 2012 but did not register it for VAT. 

    HMRC officials visited the takeaway in February 2020, finding evidence that Fortune House should have been VAT registered since December 2012. 

    Chen applied for bankruptcy in July 2021, stating that he knew he owed HMRC £43,876 in VAT but that he could not repay the debts. 

    However, in October 2020, Chen and his ex-wife sold their jointly owned house on Garnier Street in Portsmouth. 

    Over the next two months, Chen withdrew his proceeds of the sale in cash, the largest of which were two withdrawals of £30,000 in November 2020. 

    He also spent more than £3,500 on Apple products in November and December 2020 and a further £880 on a purchase from Burberry nine days before Christmas. 

    Chen signed a five-year Bankruptcy Restrictions Undertaking in March 2022 restricting him from being able to borrow more than £500 without disclosing his bankrupt status.  

    The restrictions also prevent him holding certain roles in public organisations. 

    The Insolvency Service is seeking to recover the funds under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002.

    Further information

    Updates to this page

    Published 19 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Mayor Welcomes The Worshipful Company of Educators to City for Engagement on Regional Growth and Edu

    Source: Northern Ireland – City of Derry

    Mayor Welcomes The Worshipful Company of Educators to City for Engagement on Regional Growth and Edu

    19 May 2025

    The Mayor of Derry City and Strabane District Council welcomed The Worshipful Company of Educators into the Guildhall for a special meeting as part of their weekend-long trip to the city.

    The delegation of 36 from The Worshipful Company of Educators visited the city region, stopping off at The Guildhall for a meeting with Mayor Lilian Seenoi-Barr on Friday evening, hearing all about the city and district and enjoying a tour of the Guildhall’s various exhibitions.

    Mayor Barr said she was delighted to welcome the group and hoped they enjoyed their overall trip to the city and wider North-West Region.

    “It was fantastic to meet with The Worshipful Company of Educators and hear all about the work they do, and advocate for. It gave us an amazing opportunity to create connections with the group and raise awareness of all the amazing projects and programmes that are going on in this part of the world. It was also great to highlight the transformative work that is ongoing within the city and increase our own profile on a wider scale.”

    Catherine McGuiness CBE, Master, Worshipful Company of Educators stated, “I’m delighted to be back in Derry, and to bring a delegation from the Educators to see some of the exciting educational and cultural initiatives in the city, hear plans for the future, and visit some of the amazing local sights. As ever, we’ve received a very warm welcome and feel honoured to have been greeted by the mayor”

    During their time in the city, the delegation visited Foyle College, Ulster University and The Playhouse Theatre. The aim of the visit was to learn more about the City Region Growth Deal projects, the North West Tertiary Education Cluster (NWTEC) and the work the Playhouse is doing to deliver creative, innovative, and accessible arts, education and peacebuilding programmes that enrich the lives of many people within the city and district.

    The Worshipful Company of Educators is the 109th livery company of the City of London. Established to raise awareness of and promote the education profession, the Company upholds standards of excellence and integrity within the field. Its membership comprises professionals from all sectors of education, including teachers, trainers, and administrators, providing a forum for members to discuss and exchange views on matters of topical interest.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: McGlynn and McCauley lead home over 1,000 runners in searing Strabane Lifford heat

    Source: Northern Ireland – City of Derry

    McGlynn and McCauley lead home over 1,000 runners in searing Strabane Lifford heat

    19 May 2025

    Strabane’s Ann Marie McGlynn had a homecoming run to remember this morning as she claimed the senior ladies title at the 2025 Strabane Lifford Half Marathon.

    The reigning Dublin Marathon Women’s Domestic Champion defied the energy sapping conditions, where temperatures out on the course rose to over 20 degrees Celsius, to lead home the women’s field in a time of 1:15.04.

    In the men’s race Letterkenny AC’s Stephen McAuley and reigning champion Kyle Doherty of City of Derry Spartans enjoyed a real ding dong battle with the Donegal club man edging it by just ten seconds in a lightning fast time of 1:10.18 with Omagh Harriers Eoin Mullan finishing in third.

    McGlynn was representing Strabane AC at the event for the first time and it was a one two for the newly formed club as another former winner Claire McGuigan finished in second place followed by former winner, Derry’s Catherine Whoriskey, in third. 

    In total a record field of over 1,000 runners crossed the finish line in the Melvin Running Track sunshine after taking on a revised 13.1 mile course that incorporated more of Strabane town centre as well as the pedestrian bridge.

    Thousands more lined the streets of Strabane, Lifford and Clady village for the 10th edition of the popular cross border event.

    Mayor of Derry City and Strabane District Council, Councillor Lilian Seenoi-Barr, officially started the race and she congratulated everyone involved in another successful event.
    “Sincerest congratulations

     to everyone who completed the 2025 Strabane Lifford Half Marathon,” she said.
    “The warm conditions out there were challenging but runners dug deep to complete it and I loved seeing their elation as they crossed the finish line at the Melvin Running Track.
    “There are a lot of logistics involved in organising an event of this scale, particularly when there is a new route to manage, so I want to give a special word of thanks to Council’s Festivals and Events team and all their partners for delivering a brilliant event.
    “Well done to all those who completed the relay element too and good look to all the runners as they pursue their next running goals!”
    Festival and Events Manager at Derry City and Strabane District Council, Jacqueline Whoriskey, thanked all those who contributed to the event’s success.   
    “Thank you so much to all our partners and volunteers who helped stage another successful Strabane Lifford Half,” she said.
    “Thanks to the PSNI, the Gardai, the Department for Infrastructure and Donegal County Council for their guidance and expertise.
    “Most of all thanks to the spectators and runners who created an unbelievable atmosphere around the route in tough conditions and made it a day that so many people will never forget.
    “Initial feedback about the new course has been positive and we look forward to hosting an even bigger and better event in 2026.”
    Full race results are available at http://www.myrunresults.com/.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Two Years on: Progress continues with 112 affordable homes at Oxford North

    Source: City of Oxford

    Press release on behalf of The Hill Group, OX Place and Oxford City Council.

    Two years after announcing the delivery of affordable homes in Oxford, senior members of Oxford City Council met with award-winning housebuilder, The Hill Group, to celebrate a key construction milestone at Oxford North’s Canalside development. 

    Regional Managing Director at the Hill Group, Rob Jacks, staff and elected members from Oxford City Council, along with other colleagues, gathered to mark this halfway point in the project and view the impressive progress.   

    The development is on track to provide 112 much-needed affordable homes, including 90 council homes let at social rent for people on the housing register, and 22 shared-ownership homes, helping a range of people onto the housing ladder in the UK’s most unaffordable city. Completion is scheduled for 2026.  

    To commemorate this milestone, Hill and Oxford City Council joined forces to pour concrete into the final base slab of the apartment block, marking a pivotal moment in the construction journey. 

    Rob Jacks, Regional Managing Director West for The Hill Group, comments: “Canalside at Oxford North is a landmark residential development for Oxford.  We’re delighted to reach this important milestone in partnership with the council.  We are looking forward to handing over these sustainable, well-designed homes next year.” 

    The affordable homes being delivered by Hill are the first of 317 energy-efficient new homes being built by Hill at Canalside.  This initiative is crucial for addressing the housing crisis in Oxford, one of the most unaffordable places to live in the UK.  

    Councillor Linda Smith, Cabinet Member for for Housing and Communities at Oxford City Council, said: “We are proud to join our partners at The Hill Group to recognise this achievement and witness the significant progress on site.  Providing sustainable, affordable homes is a key priority for the council, and these homes are a shining example of what can be accomplished.” 

    Homes at Canalside are designed with a strong emphasis on sustainability, surpassing Oxford City Council’s ambitious environmental targets with a range of low-carbon features. These include air-source heat pumps, photovoltaic panels, and living green roofs. The development also includes water-saving measures, electric car charging points, and ample cycle storage. 

    As part of the broader Oxford North development, Canalside is set to deliver a minimum 5% biodiversity net gain, ensuring both residents and wildlife can thrive in harmony. The homes are thoughtfully designed around a large landscaped communal park, complete with play areas, meadow grassland, and an activity lawn. The site will feature extensive tree planting with over 200 species planned, along with the introduction of a new orchard. Additionally, a comprehensive network of pedestrian and cycle paths will be integrated throughout the development, encouraging active lifestyles and sustainable transportation choices.  

    Homes designated for social rent will be open for bidding through the choice-based lettings scheme for individuals on the Oxford City Council housing register. For those interested in the shared ownership homes and to receive more information, please visit the OX Place website to register interest. 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Green theme for family event in Abbey Park

    Source: City of Leicester

    THERE’S a green theme for a free family event in Abbey Park this half-term that will give local people the chance to discover more about Leicester’s trees, parks and open spaces.

    The Go Green, Get Growing! event on Friday 30 May will feature tree climbing demonstrations by the city council’s arborists, a guess-the-circumference-of-the-tree competition, a display of the winning entries in a tree-themed school art challenge, and a treasure hunt for young children.

    Storytellers from the city’s BookBus will entertain youngsters with environmental tales, told from an ornate throne that’s been carved from a tree trunk (pictured), while visitors of all ages can follow the tree trail in Abbey Park and track down all 21 featured species.

    Visitors will also be able to find out how an allotment or a community growing hub could help them to grow their own food – and discover how Leicester’s ‘bee roads’ are protecting natural grassland habitats and supporting biodiversity.

    And to mark the publication of the city’s new tree strategy, those attending the event will receive free packets of seeds to plant at home, with a free potted sapling for the first 50 visitors.

    Assistant city mayor responsible for parks, trees & woodlands Cllr Vi Dempster said: “This event is a great opportunity for us to show young people and their families some of the work that we do to care for the city’s trees, manage our open spaces and enhance the local environment.

    “There’ll be lots of green-themed activities, as well as stories from the BookBus, so I hope that people will drop by and join in the fun if they’re visiting Abbey Park this half-term.”

    Go Green, Get Growing! runs from 12 noon until 3pm on Friday 30 May in Abbey Park. The precise location can be found using pounds.filled.shade in the what3words app.

     

    Picture caption: A close-up of the tree-trunk throne in Abbey Park, carved by the city council’s trees and woodlands team

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: Yellowstone’s thermal areas, by the numbers

    Source: US Geological Survey

    Yellowstone Caldera Chronicles is a weekly column written by scientists and collaborators of the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory. This week’s contribution is from R. Greg Vaughan, research scientist with the U.S. Geological Survey.

    In Yellowstone, it is often stated that there are more than 10,000 thermal features, including hot springs, geysers, mud pots, and fumaroles.  How do we know that?  Did someone count them?  Well, yes, but making a perfectly accurate count of unique thermal features is nearly impossible, partly because they are changing so frequently.  In the time it would take to map all of them, some would have died out and many new ones would have appeared.  For example, a newly formed fumarole was observed in the Roadside Springs Thermal Area in August 2024, and a newly emerging thermal area with multiple fumaroles was discovered near the Tern Lake thermal area in 2018.  There are also many thermal features that are located under Yellowstone’s lakes that are not included in any inventory. 

    Map of Yellowstone’s thermal areas. Inset commercial satellite images highlight thermal areas that are mentioned below: Sulphur Hills (©2022, Maxar, USG), Turbid Lake (©2022, Maxar, USG), and Lower Geyser Basin (©2015, Maxar, USG).  This work utilized data made available through the NASA Commercial SmallSat Data Acquisition Program.  We acknowledge the use of imagery from the SmallSat Data Explorer application (https://csdap.earthdata.nasa.gov), and Maxar’s NEXTVIEW End User License Agreement. 

    Geysers are a specific type of hot spring where an underground hot water reservoir and the characteristics of the plumbing system allow discrete, episodic eruptions of hot water at the surface.  There are only about 1,000 active geysers on Earth; about half of them are in Yellowstone!  According to Scott Bryan, in the 2008 edition of his book The Geysers of Yellowstone, there are at least 700 geysers in Yellowstone, with at least 500 that actively erupt; the remainder are dormant. 

    Most of Yellowstone’s more than 10,000 thermal features are clustered into about 120 distinct thermal areas and thermal water bodies.  A thermal area is a nearly continuous geologic unit that contains multiple thermal features; hydrothermally altered rocks and/or hydrothermal mineral deposits; heated ground and/or geothermal gas emissions; and that is generally barren of vegetation or has stressed/dying vegetation. A thermal water body is usually a lake, pond, or wetland area, that receives heated water from a nearby thermal area, nearshore thermal springs, or from underwater vents. 

    Assessment of Yellowstone’s thermal areas and thermal features comes from field observations, measurements from high-resolution airborne and commercial satellite images, and from quantitative analysis of Landsat 8 and 9 nighttime thermal infrared images. 

    Despite the impressive size of Yellowstone National Park (about 8,992 km2, or 2.2 million acres), the total surface area covered by thermal areas is only about 70 km2 (17,300 acres)—less than 1% of the park’s area. If you closed your eyes and randomly threw a dart at a map of Yellowstone, you are very unlikely to hit a thermal area!  The distribution of thermal areas can be seen in an updated map of Yellowstone’s thermal areas that was recently published after careful analysis of satellite remote sensing data and ground-based observations. 

    The Sulphur Hills Thermal Area, north of Yellowstone Lake, is the hottest thermal area in Yellowstone, with pixel temperatures in satellite images up to 46 °C (83 °F) above the background.  At Sulphur Hills, there is a large area of diffusely venting warm ground that is dotted with dozens of small, isolated fumaroles that are venting gases at 93 °C (200 °F, the boiling temperature at that elevation) right at the surface.  Thermal infrared images from satellite instruments like Landsat 8 and 9 have pixels that are about the size of a football field, which means they measure thermally mixed pixels that represent the average temperature of sub-pixel-scale features.  So, 46 °C (83 °F) above background is pretty hot.  Given the size of the area (0.69 km2, or 171 acres), its geothermal radiant power output is 40–70 MW (megawatts = 1 million watts). 

    View of Lower Geyser Basin. Note active thermal pools (Great Fountain Geyser) in the foreground with thermal grasslands—kept treeless by hot soils—and lodgepole pine forest in the distance. Photo by George Marler, 1959.

    Turbid Lake, also just north of Yellowstone Lake, is the largest lake in Yellowstone where a significant portion of the surface remains ice free even during the coldest winters.  This is due to thermal input from nearby springs and underwater vents. The lake is the remnant of a large hydrothermal explosion crater that is about 1 km (0.6 mi) across, and it has pixel temperatures up to 28 °C (50 °F) above background and a geothermal radiant power output of about 40–74 MW. 

    Lower Geyser Basin is the largest thermal area in the park—at 15.6 km2 (3,855 acres) it is slightly larger than the town of Gardiner, MT. Its hottest features have pixel temperatures up to 32 °C (58 °F) above background, and its geothermal radiant power output ranges from around 200 to more than 500 MW.

    Summing the estimated geothermal radiant power output for all the thermal areas in Yellowstone yields values that range from 1,500 to 3,100 MW.  To put this into context, 1 MW could power the average home in the U.S for about 1.2 months, or power an electric car for about 3,600 miles.  Scale this up by 1,500 or 3,100 times and you can appreciate the immensity of the Yellowstone geothermal system.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Toyooka City (Hyogo Prefecture)

    Source: UNISDR Disaster Risk Reduction

    Mission Toyooka City is a city located in the northern part of Hyogo Prefecture (Tajima region). It is under the jurisdiction of the Tajima Prefectural Bureau. It is the central city of the northern part of the prefecture and the Tajima region that forms the Toyooka metropolitan area, and is the largest city in Hyogo Prefecture in terms of area.

    May 23, 1925 (Taisho 14) – The Kita-Tajima earthquake (Kita-Tajima Great Earthquake) caused damage to Toyooka Town, Kinosaki Town, Kinosaki Town, and Minato Village in Kinosaki County. In particular, about 1,500 houses on the main street of Toyooka Town were completely burned down.

    The 1925 North Tajima earthquake created severe damage in Toyooka, with official government reports, indicating that there were 428 fatalities, 1,016 injuries, 7,863 buildings destroyed, and 45,659 houses damaged by collapse or fire.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Lagos slum evictions don’t work: 6 ways city planners can actually help the poor

    Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Oluwaseyi Omowunmi Popogbe, Lecturer I, Crawford University

    Millions of people in Lagos live in slums. Slums typically have poor housing infrastructure and sanitation, and limited access to education, health facilities and clean drinking water.

    These challenges make the people who live in slums vulnerable to health crises, high illiteracy rates and poor standards of living.

    A central element of the city authorities’ efforts to address the issue has been to evict people. Over the past decade, more than 50,000 people have been evicted from their homes in Lagos slums.

    As a development economist who has carried out studies on urban poverty in Lagos State and social exclusion of slum dwellers from full communal participation, I have observed some notable patterns.

    Despite their efforts to contribute to national productivity, these low-income communities are often marginalised and denied access to basic public amenities and a dignified living environment. Instead of addressing their needs, policy and development priorities tend to focus on displacing them. Thereafter, provisions are made for affluent groups, replacing informal settlements with high-rise buildings.

    Sadly, survivors of forced eviction usually move to other slum communities as they cannot afford the high cost of living in the city. This shows that forced eviction is not a solution to slum proliferation.

    I argue that if Lagos wants to solve the problems faced by the city’s vast population of slum dwellers, it should focus on six things. These are:

    • community-led regeneration processes

    • communal engagement

    • upgrading communities without displacement

    • obeying court orders

    • inclusivity in regeneration

    • adequate compensation to the displaced.

    This would help restore trust that the city has all its people’s interests at heart, not just those of the super rich.

    Forced evictions are seen as benefiting the rich

    In March 2025, a demolition exercise was carried out in the Otumara slum, displacing over 10,000 residents at short notice.

    Despite a 2017 Lagos State High Court ruling which condemned forced evictions carried out without due consultation, they have continued.

    Known cases are the Otodo-Gbame waterfront eviction (shortly before the court ruling), where over 30,000 residents were displaced, Ilubirin waterfront community, Orisunmibare in Apapa, Otto communities, Ayetoro, and Oko Baba communities.

    Mid-April 2025, the Lagos State government revealed plans to regenerate the Otumara slum. Lagos State Urban Renewal Agency (Lasura) then met with community leaders and other stakeholders to discuss how it would be done. That step should have been taken before the demolition.

    The idea behind the meeting was to ensure inclusiveness and reduce any challenge to the project. Lasura assured the community representatives of a fair hearing throughout the implementation process. They were told the benefits of the regeneration would extend to the entire community.

    As a development economist who has carried out a number of studies on urban vulnerability and inclusion, I’ve found that slum dwellers don’t always trust the government. This lack of trust stems from experiences other slum dwellers have had.

    Urban regeneration does not always favour slum dwellers. So government interventions are not seen as a genuine effort to improve their living conditions, but as a mechanism to displace them to make way for the elite.

    For instance, Maroko slum residents were forcefully evicted under the guise of improving infrastructural amenities and because the area was below sea level. Now the Oniru Estate, Lekki Phase 1 and other notable residential and commercial buildings are located there.

    Luxury apartments on the Lagos lagoon have replaced the former Ilubirin waterfront slum. Lekki foreshore development continues at the former Otodo-Gbame waterfront community.

    Survivors of forced eviction usually move to other slum communities as they can’t afford to live in the city.

    The attainment of Lagos as a “fair shared city” has been proposed by the Fabulous Urban Foundation in partnership with Heinrich Böll Foundation. These organisations advocate urban inclusiveness and community-driven initiatives. They envision Lagos as an inclusive place where everyone (irrespective of social class or status) has equitable access to amenities and decision-making processes.

    The pattern of forced displacement under the guise of urban regeneration, without adequate compensation or resettlement, contradicts the principle of fairness.

    Development plans in Lagos follow western ideas and keep widening the gap between the rich and the poor, as amenities are often developed to be accessible by the middle and upper classes.

    Specifically, the Lagos State Development Plan (LSDP 2052) contains many lofty ideas and opportunities to make Lagos “Africa’s Model Mega City”. But it’s not clear how the city’s multidimensionally poor population fits into the plan.

    Solutions

    To include residents of slums marked for regeneration, a more proactive approach would be:

    1. Continuous communal engagement, to reaffirm that government and other stakeholders are committed to including all residents.

    2. Community-led redesign and regeneration processes. Slum conditions are deplorable and dehumanising, but evicting residents to make way for the high class is unacceptable. The redesign should aim to favour the community.

    3. Abiding by court rulings which warn against forced eviction. Lagos courts have often ruled against forced evictions, especially when carried out without due process or resettlement arrangements. The Lagos State government ought to uphold human rights by ceasing all forced eviction procedures, as they are unlawful.

    4. Upgrading instead of displacement. Regeneration within existing settlements should be encouraged where feasible, so that livelihoods and social cohesion are not disrupted.

    5. Regeneration should include all income groups. It should not only focus on physical infrastructure, but also social and economic issues. It would make affordable housing and basic amenities available for all income groups.

    6. Adequate compensation. Where relocation cannot be avoided, a resettlement plan must be in place that will ensure fair treatment and avoid disruption to livelihood.

    – Lagos slum evictions don’t work: 6 ways city planners can actually help the poor
    – https://theconversation.com/lagos-slum-evictions-dont-work-6-ways-city-planners-can-actually-help-the-poor-255341

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI: CBAK Energy Reports First Quater 2025 Unaudited Financial Results

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    DALIAN, China, May 19, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — CBAK Energy Technology, Inc. (NASDAQ: CBAT) (“CBAK Energy,” or the “Company”) a leading lithium-ion battery manufacturer and electric energy solution provider in China, today reported its unaudited financial results for the first quarter ended March 31, 2025.

    First Quater of 2025 Financial Results

    Net revenues1 were $34.9 million, representing a decrease of 41% compared to $58.8 million in the same period of 2024. The substantial decline primarily stems from our Dalian facilities, where a major portion of customers are in the residential energy supply sector. These facilities are currently undergoing a product portfolio upgrade, transitioning from Model 26650 to Model 40135. Customers who previously purchased Model 26650 are now in a transitional phase of testing and validating the new Model 40135. We anticipate a gradual recovery as both existing and potential customers complete the validation of Model 40135.

    Among these revenues, detailed revenues from our battery business are:

    Battery Business   2024
    First Quater
        2025
    First Quater
        % Change
    YoY
    Net Revenues ($)   44,837,869     20,363,338     -54.6
    Gross Profits ($)   18,458,522     4,720,102     -74.4
    Gross Margin   41.2 %   23.2 %  
    Net Income ($)   11,682,429     336,861     -97.1
    Net Revenues from Battery Business on Applications ($)                
    Electric Vehicles   480,181     537,507     11.9
    Light Electric Vehicles   1,510,292     2,844,874     88.4
    Residential Energy Supply & Uninterruptable supplies   42,847,396     16,980,957     -60.4
    Total   44,837,869     20,363,338     -54.6
    1 Net revenues consist of the Company’s self-operated battery business and Hitrans, which was acquired in 2021, an independently managed raw materials business.


    Cost of revenues
    was $30.14 million, representing a decrease of 24.7% from $40.0 million in the same period of 2024.

    Gross profit was $4.8 million, representing an decrease of 74.43% from $18.78 million in the same period of 2024. Gross margin was 13.7%, compared to 31.9% in the same period of 2024.

    Operating loss amounted to $2.86 million, compared to an operating income of $10.3 million in the same period of 2024.

    Net loss attributable to shareholders of CBAK Energy was $1.58 million, compared to net income attributable to shareholders of CBAK Energy of $9.8 million in the same period of 2024.

    Basic and diluted loss per share were both $0.02, compared to basic and diluted income per share of $0.11 in 2024.

    Zhiguang Hu, Chief Executive Officer of the Company, commented, “As anticipated, we experienced a significant 41% year-over-year decline in net revenues. This decrease was expected, as Model 26650 — a cell developed in 2006 and still produced at our Dalian facilities — has become largely outdated. Both existing and potential customers are currently transitioning from Model 26650 to the more advanced Model 40135. We are confident that, upon completing the construction of new manufacturing lines for Model 40135 in the second half of this year, and as customers finalize product validation, our revenues will begin to recover gradually.”

    Jiewei Li, Chief Financial Officer and Secretary of the Board, added, “As Mr. Hu emphasized, we expect to recover once the product portfolio upgrade at our Dalian facilities is completed. Meanwhile, our Nanjing facilities continue to experience strong growth momentum, driven by robust market demand for Model 32140, our most advanced and flagship product to date. Additionally, we are in the final stages of securing a long-term order from one of our key customers, which we hope to finalize and share with our shareholders in the near future.”

    Conference Call

    CBAK Energy’s management will host an earnings conference call at 9:00 AM U.S. Eastern Time on Monday, May 19, 2025 (9:00 PM Beijing/Hong Kong Time on May 19, 2025).

    For participants who wish to join our call online, please visit:
    https://edge.media-server.com/mmc/p/wfu5unoh

    Participants who plan to ask questions during the call will need to register at least 15 minutes prior to the scheduled call start time using the link provided below. Upon registration, participants will receive the conference call access information, including dial-in numbers, a unique pin, and an email with detailed instructions.

    Participant Online Registration:
    https://register-conf.media-server.com/register/BIb49b754e574a43e68068965ba0234966

    Once completing the registration, please dial-in at least 10 minutes before the scheduled start time of the conference call and enter the personal pin as instructed to connect to the call.

    A replay of the conference call may be accessed within seven days after the conclusion of the live call at the following website: https://edge.media-server.com/mmc/p/wfu5unoh

    The earnings release and the link for the replay are available at ir.cbak.com.cn

    About CBAK Energy

    CBAK Energy Technology, Inc. (NASDAQ: CBAT) is a leading high-tech enterprise in China engaged in the development, manufacturing, and sales of new energy high power lithium and sodium batteries, as well as the production of raw materials for use in manufacturing high power lithium batteries. The applications of the Company’s products and solutions include electric vehicles, light electric vehicles, energy storage and other high-power applications. In January 2006, CBAK Energy became the first lithium battery manufacturer in China listed on the Nasdaq Stock Market. CBAK Energy has multiple operating subsidiaries in Dalian, Nanjing, Shaoxing and Shangqiu, as well as a large-scale R&D and production base in Dalian.

    For more information, please visit ir.cbak.com.cn

    Safe Harbor Statement

    This press release contains “forward-looking statements” that involve substantial risks and uncertainties. All statements other than statements of historical facts contained in this press release, including statements regarding our future results of operations and financial position, strategy and plans, and our expectations for future operations, are forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. We have attempted to identify forward-looking statements by terminology including “anticipates,” “believes,” “can,” “continue,” “could,” “estimates,” “expects,” “intends,” “may,” “plans,” “potential,” “predicts,” “should,” or “will” or the negative of these terms or other comparable terminology. Our actual results may differ materially or perhaps significantly from those discussed herein, or implied by, these forward-looking statements.

    Any forward-looking statements contained in this press release are only estimates or predictions of future events based on information currently available to our management and management’s current beliefs about the potential outcome of future events. Whether these future events will occur as management anticipates, whether we will achieve our business objectives, and whether our revenues, operating results, or financial condition will improve in future periods are subject to numerous risks. There are a significant number of factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from statements made in this press release, including: significant legal and operational risks associated with having substantially all of our business operations in China, that the Chinese government may exercise significant oversight and discretion over the conduct of our business and may intervene in or influence our operations at any time, which could result in a material change in our operations and/or the value of our securities or could significantly limit or completely hinder our ability to offer or continue to offer securities to investors and could cause the value of such securities to significantly decline or be worthless, the effects of the global Covid-19 pandemic or other health epidemics, changes in domestic and foreign laws, regulations and taxes, the volatility of the securities markets; and other risks including, but not limited to, the ability of the Company to meet its contractual obligations, the uncertain markets for the Company’s products and business, macroeconomic, technological, regulatory, or other factors affecting the profitability of our products and solutions that we discussed or referred to in the Company’s disclosure documents filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) available on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov, including the Company’s most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K as well as in our other reports filed or furnished from time to time with the SEC. You should read these factors and the other cautionary statements made in this press release. If one or more of these factors materialize, or if any underlying assumptions prove incorrect, our actual results, performance or achievements may vary materially from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements. The forward-looking statements included in this press release are made as of the date of this press release and the Company undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements, other than as required by applicable law.

    For further inquiries, please contact:

    In China:

    CBAK Energy Technology, Inc.
    Investor Relations Department
    Email: ir@cbak.com.cn

    CBAK Energy Technology, Inc. and Subsidiaries
    Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets
    As of December 31, 2024 and March 31, 2025
    (Unaudited)
    (In US$ except for number of shares)
     
      December 31,
    2024
        March 31,
    2025
     
    Assets          
    Current assets          
    Cash and cash equivalents $ 6,724,360     $ 4,052,010  
    Pledged deposits   54,061,642       43,482,693  
    Term deposits   4,237,090       5,530,030  
    Trade and bills receivable, net   32,938,918       40,835,093  
    Inventories   22,851,027       30,803,486  
    Prepayments and other receivables   20,004,966       17,991,265  
    Receivables from former subsidiary   12,399       9,011  
    Income tax recoverable   566,458       455,342  
    Total current assets   141,396,860       143,158,930  
                   
    Property, plant and equipment, net   85,486,829       84,283,683  
    Construction in progress   42,526,859       51,527,443  
    Long-term investments, net   2,246,494       2,313,725  
    Prepaid land use rights   11,075,973       11,056,715  
    Intangible assets, net   382,962       268,398  
    Deposit paid for acquisition of long-term investments   15,864,318       15,949,095  
    Operating lease right-of-use assets, net   3,237,849       2,906,652  
    Total assets $ 302,218,144     $ 311,464,641  
                   
    Liabilities              
    Current liabilities              
    Trade and bills payable   84,724,386       93,398,948  
    Short-term bank borrowings   26,087,350       29,301,628  
    Other short-term loans   335,715       335,905  
    Accrued expenses and other payables   58,285,635       50,305,373  
    Payable to a former subsidiary, net   419,849       418,211  
    Deferred government grants, current   556,214       559,186  
    Product warranty provisions   23,426       23,000  
    Operating lease liability, current   1,268,405       1,159,373  
    Total current liabilities   171,700,980       175,501,624  
                   
    Long-term bank borrowings         4,131,890  
    Deferred government grants, non-current   7,580,255       10,272,610  
    Product warranty provisions   420,688       417,565  
    Operating lease liability, non-current   2,449,056       2,397,859  
    Total liabilities   182,150,979       192,721,548  
                   
    Commitments and contingencies              
                   
    Shareholders’ equity              
    Common stock $0.001 par value; 500,000,000 authorized; 90,083,396 issued and 89,939,190 outstanding as of December 31, 2024; and 90,083,868 issued and 89,939,662 outstanding as of March 31, 2025   90,083       90,083  
    Donated shares   14,101,689       14,101,689  
    Additional paid-in capital   247,842,445       247,869,511  
    Statutory reserves   1,230,511       3,042,602  
    Accumulated deficit   (122,605,730 )     (125,997,055 )
    Accumulated other comprehensive loss   (14,919,345 )     (14,248,434 )
        125,739,653       124,858,396  
                   
    Less: Treasury shares   (4,066,610 )     (4,066,610 )
                   
    Total shareholders’ equity   121,673,043       120,791,786  
    Non-controlling interests   (1,605,878 )     (2,048,693 )
    Total equity   120,067,165       118,743,093  
                   
    Total liabilities and shareholder’s equity $ 302,218,144     $ 311,464,641  

     

    CBAK Energy Technology, Inc. and Subsidiaries
    Condensed Consolidated Statements of Operations and Comprehensive Income (Loss)
    For the three months ended March 31, 2024 and 2025
    (Unaudited)
    (In US$ except for number of shares)
     
      Three months ended
    March 31,
     
      2024     2025  
    Net revenues $ 58,822,432     $ 34,938,901  
    Cost of revenues   (40,041,385 )     (30,137,167 )
    Gross profit   18,781,047       4,801,734  
    Operating expenses:              
    Research and development expenses   (2,815,518 )     (3,023,961 )
    Sales and marketing expenses   (1,724,032 )     (896,050 )
    General and administrative expenses   (4,092,527 )     (3,804,137 )
    Allowance of credit losses and bad debts written off, net   114,013       58,395  
    Total operating expenses   (8,518,064 )     (7,665,753 )
    Operating income (loss)   10,262,983       (2,864,019 )
    Finance income, net   9,663       45,120  
    Other income, net   367,438       712,792  
    Share of (loss) income of equity investee   (18,824 )     55,125  
    Income (loss) before income tax   10,621,260       (2, 050,982 )
    Income tax expenses   (1,048,786 )      
    Net income (loss)   9,572,474       (2, 050,982 )
    Less: Net loss attributable to non-controlling interests   263,976       471,748  
    Net income (loss) attributable to shareholders of CBAK Energy Technology, Inc. $ 9,836,450     $ (1,579,234 )
                   
    Net income (loss)   9,572,474       (2,050,982 )
    Other comprehensive income (loss)              
    – Foreign currency translation adjustment   (1,906,048 )     699,844  
    Comprehensive income (loss)   7,666,426       (1,315,138 )
    Less: Comprehensive loss attributable to non-controlling interests   274,223       442,816  
    Comprehensive income (loss) attributable to CBAK Energy Technology, Inc. $ 7,940,649     $ (908,322 )
                   
    Income (loss) per share              
    – Basic $ 0.11     $ (0.02 )
    – Diluted $ 0.11     $ (0.02 )
                   
    Weighted average number of shares of common stock:              
    – Basic   89,925,024       89,938,690  
    – Diluted   90,123,965       89,938,690  

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Fast Payout Online Casinos: JACKBIT Rated Top Casino For Same Day Withdrawals & Wager-Free Bonuses!

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    TUPELO, Miss., May 19, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The online casino industry is booming, captivating players worldwide with its thrilling mix of entertainment and real-money rewards, solidifying its dominance in the gaming sector. As players seek platforms that combine excitement with instant access to winnings, fast payout online casinos have become essential.

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    In the fast-paced casino industry, the fastest paying online casinos stand out by eliminating the frustration of long waiting periods, which can diminish the thrill of a big win.

    Fast payout casinos also emphasize secure transactions and transparent processes, making them a trusted choice for real cash payout online casino gaming. By choosing a fast withdrawal online casino, players gain a seamless, rewarding experience that aligns with the modern demand for convenience and reliability. This focus on speed and trust is why fast payout online casinos are shaping the future of online gaming.

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    Pros and Cons of JACKBIT

    Pros Cons
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    Welcome bonus of 100 wager-free spins Some bonuses have high wagering requirements
    Instant crypto withdrawals  
    Supports crypto and fiat payments  
    24/7 customer support  
    Mobile-optimized platform  
    Provably fair games  
    No KYC for crypto users  


    Top Casino Games at JACKBIT

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    Fiat Currency Methods Type
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    Conclusive Thoughts on JACKBIT – The Best Fast Payout Online Casino

    JACKBIT sets the gold standard for fast payout online casinos in 2025, combining a massive game library, generous bonuses, robust security, and instant withdrawals. Its mobile compatibility, diverse payment options, and 24/7 support make it a fast payout casino for players of all levels.

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    FAQs About JACKBIT

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    JACKBIT’s instant crypto withdrawals and a vast game library make it a top fast payout casino.

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    JACKBIT’s mobile platform offers seamless access to all games and features.

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    JACKBIT supports Bitcoin, Ethereum, Visa, Skrill, and more for secure transactions.

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    Email: support@JACKBIT.com

    Disclaimer

    This article doesn’t claim to be financial or legal advice; in fact, it is strictly informational. Gambling carries risks and may be addictive; please play responsibly. Check if gambling on the internet is allowed in that region. Information is accurate as of May 2025, but terms may change; check JACKBIT for updates.

    This article is for informational and promotional purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or professional advice. While efforts have been made to ensure accuracy at the time of publication, no warranties are made regarding completeness or timeliness. Readers should verify information independently. The publisher, affiliates, and contributors are not liable for errors, omissions, or losses arising from this content.

    This content may contain affiliate links, which may earn a commission at no additional cost to you if you make a purchase or deposit. These links do not affect editorial integrity, and evaluations are based on independent research.

    Photos accompanying this announcement are available at:

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/3ba1e4f0-857d-4a64-9692-7951057deec1

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/62ba5bee-0981-4b3a-a947-f6b34db15405

    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/bc5992a1-52cb-48ec-8a64-95bf4c5f6119

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Russia: “REcathon: Rough Code”: Polytechnic students modified robots

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University – Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University –

    The Polytechnic Tower hosted the engineering and robotics hackathon “REcathon: Draft Code”, organized by the Higher School of Automation and Robotics of the Institute of Mechanical Engineering, Materials and Transport together with the student engineering association “PoliRoboTech” and PROF.IMMiT. The general partner of the event was the company “Ingriatech”.

    Opening the hackathon, Denis Kozlikin, Deputy Director for Research at IMMiT, wished the participants good luck and thanked the organizers for holding this important and necessary event, the fourth in a row.

    This year, 10 student teams competed. The jury included associate professors of the Higher School of Architecture and Rural Affairs Svetlana Kerpeleva, Mikhail Ananyevsky, Dmitry Polyakhov, Dmitry Tretyakov and Dmitry Shabanov, as well as an invited expert from the Almaz-Antey Air Defense Concern Alexey Saibel.

    This time, the hackathon became a platform for testing a new idea that was planned to be implemented. Participants had to work not with fully finished robots, but with unfinished designs. They had to not only program, but also analyze, correct errors in mechanics and electronics, and modify the product for an unknown task. This solution brought the hackathon conditions closer to real engineering practice, where specialists often have to deal with someone else’s code and unstable technical solutions.

    Another innovation was the new platforms with two drive wheels instead of four — this increased the maneuverability of the robots, but complicated the control and required more fine-tuning of the algorithms for movement and balancing. The final task was kept secret, which forced the teams to work in conditions of uncertainty and adapt to rapidly changing requirements. Two weeks were allocated for all preparation and debugging.

    The task for the hackathon was developed by the student engineering association “PoliRoboTech”. Its leader Andrey Klinovitsky noted that it is precisely such formats that teach students flexibility, engineering thinking and the ability to combine programming with mechanics, which is especially in demand in modern technological projects.

    According to the results of the tests, the winner was the Error404: Bots Not Found team consisting of: Egor Meshkov, Sofia Sokolova, Vladimir Yulik, Amir Sharif’yanov and Elizaveta Skornyakova. The second place was taken by the Termistor team: Artem Tabunshchik, Vadim Berko, Alexander Timofeev, Alexander Travin and Mikhail Orlov. The third place went to the Skrepyshi team, which included Alina Arifullina, Aidar Ibragimov, Violetta Khomenko, Ilnaz Abitov and Kirill Sultanov. All the winners are third-year students of the Higher School of Architecture and R&D.

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Two killed, two injured in knife attack in South Korea

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

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

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

    SEOUL, May 19 (Xinhua) — Two people were killed and two others injured in a knife attack in South Korea, and the suspect is on the run, Renhap News Agency reported Monday.

    The suspect fled after stabbing a woman in her 60s at a convenience store in Siheung City, 30 km southwest of Seoul, at around 9:34 a.m. local time. The woman was taken to hospital with serious stab wounds to her stomach and face.

    The unidentified body of a man in his 50s was found in the suspect’s home after police established his car number, home address and identity. The body had likely been there for several days.

    The suspect stabbed another man in his 70s at a sports park 2km from the store at around 1:21pm local time. The man was seriously wounded in the stomach and taken to hospital for treatment.

    Police found another unidentified body in a house opposite the store at around 2 p.m. local time. –0–

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • Over 3,000 Election Staff Now Trained Nationwide as New Jharkhand Batch Starts in Delhi

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) Gyanesh Kumar on Monday inaugurated a two-day capacity-building programme for Booth Level Officers (BLOs), Supervisors, and other election officials from Jharkhand at the India International Institute of Democracy and Election Management (IIIDEM), New Delhi.

    According to an official statement from the Election Commission of India (ECI), a total of 402 participants—including District Election Officers (DEOs), Electoral Registration Officers (EROs), BLOs, and BLO Supervisors—are attending the training. Over the past three months, the Commission has trained more than 3,000 such election functionaries from across the country at IIIDEM.

    In his address, CEC Gyanesh Kumar lauded the dedication and grassroots-level efforts of Jharkhand’s electoral officials, particularly in the area of voter enrolment. He also urged participants to enhance public awareness about the appellate provisions under Sections 24(a) and 24(b) of the Representation of the People Act, 1950.

    These provisions allow electors to file first appeals with the District Magistrate, District Collector, or Executive Magistrate, and second appeals with the Chief Electoral Officer (CEO) of the respective State or Union Territory. Notably, no appeals were filed from Jharkhand following the Special Summary Revision (SSR) exercise held between January 6 and 10, reflecting the effectiveness of the preparatory work.

    The training programme focuses on equipping participants with comprehensive knowledge of electoral laws, including the Representation of the People Acts of 1950 and 1951, the Registration of Electors Rules, 1960, the Conduct of Election Rules, 1961, and updated instructions issued by the ECI.

    The curriculum features interactive sessions, role plays, simulations of house-to-house surveys, and hands-on exercises for accurately filling Forms 6, 7, and 8. In addition, participants will receive practical training on the Voter Helpline App (VHA) and various IT tools used in electoral management. Demonstrations on Electronic Voting Machines (EVMs), Voter Verifiable Paper Audit Trails (VVPATs), and mock poll procedures are also part of the programme.

  • MIL-OSI NGOs: UK: Government urged to disclose genocide risk assessments on Gaza – MP letter

    Source: Amnesty International –

    65 signatories from nine different political parties and independent parliamentarians sign open letter demanding transparency amid escalating mass atrocities in Gaza

    Letter also expresses alarm at the Government’s position in the London High Court hearing on UK arms exports to Israel

    Amnesty International’s research has found sufficient basis to conclude that Israel has committed and is continuing to commit genocide against Palestinians in the occupied Gaza Strip

    ‘If these subsequent assessments have not led you to conclude that there is a serious risk of genocide in Gaza, triggering your obligation to prevent, we must ask how adequate your assessments are’ – MPs

    Over sixty parliamentarians including Baroness Kennedy, Kit Malthouse, Baroness Warsi, Jeremy Corbyn, Alistair Carmichael, Carla Denyer are issuing an open letter to Prime Minister Keir Starmer, calling for the immediate release of the UK government’s assessments on the risk of genocide in Gaza.

    The letter follows a statement by the Minister for the Middle East on 6 May, confirming in parliament that the Government is conducting “ongoing assessments” of the risk of genocide. Yet, the only assessment disclosed to date – made public during the London High Court hearing [Al-Haq v Secretary of State] on UK arms exports to Israel – concluded in September 2024 that there was “no serious risk of genocide occurring.”

    Since then, as Amnesty International reports, the situation in Gaza has deteriorated dramatically. On 2 March, Israel launched a new phase of its military campaign, imposing a total siege that has blocked humanitarian aid and fuelled mass starvation. Tens of thousands of civilians, including an unprecedented number of children, have been killed or injured. Entire neighbourhoods have been destroyed, and Gaza’s population faces famine and displacement on a devastating scale.

    Government response raises legal and ethical alarms

    The letter challenges the Government to explain why, despite this worsening crisis, it has not revised its previous conclusion. It calls for the immediate release of:

    • The findings of all genocide risk assessments conducted since March 2025
    • The criteria, methodology, and evidence used in making those assessments
    • The most recent assessment date and outcome
    • A clear statement on whether the UK now recognises a serious risk of genocide in Gaza

    “If these subsequent assessments have not led you to conclude that there is a serious risk of genocide in Gaza, triggering your obligation to prevent, we must ask how adequate your assessments are,” the letter states.

    Under the Genocide Convention, the UK has a binding duty to act to prevent where there is a serious risk of genocide. The signatories argue that the government should explain how it has not assessed that threshold as having been met.

    F-35 fighter jet exports: a dangerous legal position

    The letter also expresses alarm at the Government’s position in Al-Haq v Secretary of State, in which it defended the continued supply of F-35 fighter jet components to Israel. In its legal submission, the Government argued:

    “It is entirely unrealistic to suppose… any possibility of genocide would have been altered by any such curtailment on the use of F-35s.”

    Parliamentarians state in the letter:

    “It appears that the position of the UK government is that it is legitimate to provide weapons to states committing genocide if the assessment is that the impact of doing so would be minor. That is an abhorrent position to hold. If that is not the government’s position, then you must urgently correct the record.”  

    Transparency, accountability, and action needed

    The letter concludes by demanding full transparency from the Government, both to parliament and the public, regarding its assessments, decision-making, and continued arms exports to Israel.

    “Parliament must know the nature of the government’s assessments and recent assessments and their conclusions should be made public. It is imperative that it is explained to the House how your government has failed to recognise the serious risk of genocide based on current evidence.”

    The signatories are calling for an immediate response and the full publication of all relevant assessments.

     List of signatories [65 in total]

    • Brendan O’Hara MP 
    • Chris Law MP 
    • Stephen Gethins MP 
    • Stephen Flynn MP 
    • Dave Doogan MP 
    • Kirsty Blackman MP 
    • Pete Wishart MP 
    • Seamus Logan MP 
    • Graham Leadbitter MP 
    • The Baroness Mobarik CBE 
    • Kit Malthouse MP 
    • Kim Johnson MP 
    • Yasmin Qureshi MP 
    • Ian Byrne MP 
    • Andy McDonald MP 
    • Richard Burgon MP 
    • Imran Hussain MP 
    • Lord Hendy of Richmond Hill 
    • Nadia Whittome MP 
    • Steve Witherden MP 
    • Apsana Begum MP 
    • Jon Trickett MP 
    • Abtisam Mohammed MP 
    • Bell Ribeiro-Addy MP 
    • Neil Duncan Jordan MP 
    • Chris Hinchcliff MP 
    • Brian Leishman MP 
    • Rachael Maskell MP 
    • Clive Lewis MP 
    • Baroness Helena Kennedy LT KC 
    • Grahame Morris MP 
    • Ruth Cadbury MP 
    • Ben Lake MP 
    • Liz Saville Roberts MP 
    • Ann Davies MP 
    • Llinos Medi MP 
    • Alistair Carmichael MP 
    • Andrew George MP 
    • Angus Macdonald MP 
    • Colum Eastwood MP 
    • Claire Hanna MP 
    • Sorcha Eastwood MP 
    • Sian Berry MP 
    • Carla Denyer MP 
    • Ellie Chowns MP 
    • Adrian Ramsay MP 
    • Baroness Jenny Jones 
    • Baroness Natalie Bennett 
    • John Finucane MP 
    • Pat Cullen MP 
    • Órfhlaith Begley MP 
    • Dáire Hughes MP 
    • Chris Hazzard MP 
    • Cathal Mallaghan MP 
    • Paul Maskey MP 
    • Shockat Adam MP 
    • Adnan Hussain MP 
    • Ayoub Khan MP 
    • Zarah Sultana MP 
    • Iqbal Mohamed MP 
    • Rosie Duffield MP 
    • Jeremy Corbyn MP 
    • Lord Indarjit Singh
    • Baroness Gohir
    • The Rt Hon the Baroness Warsi 

    MIL OSI NGO

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – Compliance of Slovenia’s Hospitality Act (ZGos-1) with European law and notification to the Commission – E-001802/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    Question for written answer  E-001802/2025
    to the Commission
    Rule 144
    Matej Tonin (PPE), Romana Tomc (PPE), Milan Zver (PPE), Zala Tomašič (PPE), Branko Grims (PPE)

    On 14 March 2025, the Slovenian Government tabled a draft Hospitality Act (ZGos-1), which introduces excessively restrictive measures for providers of short-term rental accommodation nationwide. A number of stakeholders and academics have already expressed serious concerns to the Slovenian Government about whether the measures are proportional, justified and non-discriminatory, as well as about a possible interference with the freedom to provide services in the EU.

    I would therefore be grateful if the following points could be clarified:

    • 1.Notification to the Commission: Have the Slovenian authorities complied with their obligation to notify the draft Hospitality Act to the Commission as required by EU law (TRIS notification procedure), and what would be the consequences of the Slovenian authorities failing to notify the draft law to the Commission?
    • 2.Compliance with European law: Are the measures on short-term letting proposed in the Hospitality Act in line with the provisions of the Services Directive, in particular with regard to the principles of proportionality, non-discrimination and necessity? Has the Commission already carried out an assessment of whether the proposed restrictions are justified and appropriate for achieving public interest objectives such as accessibility of housing and restricting excessive tourism, without unduly affecting providers of short-term rentals?

    These questions are key to ensuring and implementing EU law, respecting fundamental freedoms within the EU and to the functioning of the Slovenian state in accordance with the applicable EU legal framework. Thank you for a timely reply and for any clarifications that may be provided on this matter.

    Submitted: 5.5.2025

    Last updated: 19 May 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News