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Category: Russian Federation

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Another house will appear in Sviblovo under the renovation program

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    A house will be built on Sedova Street (land plot No. 9/1) under the renovation program. The corresponding urban development plan for the land plot has already been released. This was reported by Juliana Knyazhevskaya, Chairman of the Committee for Architecture and Urban Development of Moscow.

    “A residential building with a maximum area of 40.1 thousand square meters will appear on a 0.55 hectare plot of land within the framework of block development. Recreation areas with landscaping elements will be created on the adjacent territory, as well as children’s playgrounds and sports areas will be set up,” added Yuliana Knyazhevskaya.

    Earlier Sergei Sobyanin told, that since the beginning of the year 23 new buildings erected under the renovation program have been put into operation. 44 residential complexes have been handed over for occupancy.

    Renovation program approved in August 2017. It concerns about a million Muscovites and provides for the resettlement of 5,176 houses. Last year alone, 59 new buildings were handed over for settlement in the capital and the resettlement of over 47 thousand people was ensured.

    Moscow is one of the leaders among regions in terms of construction rates and volumes. In recent years, within the framework of the federal project “Housing” of the national project “Housing and Urban Environment” the volume of construction and commissioning of residential properties in the capital has doubled – from three to five to seven million square meters per year. More information about this and other national projects being implemented in Moscow can be found Here.

    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.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    http://vvv.mos.ru/nevs/item/145095073/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: An architectural concept is being developed for the first integrated development project for an undeveloped area

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    A modern city block will appear in the west of the capital. It will be built as part of the implementation of the first project for the integrated development of undeveloped territory (KRNT). The development of the architectural concept of the future block has already begun. This was reported by the Minister of the Moscow Government, head of the capital’s Department of City Property Maxim Gaman.

    KRNT projects are implemented on land plots owned by the city, as well as those where state ownership is not delimited. In this case, the plots must be free from the rights of third parties.

    “Under the agreement with the city, the developer will reorganize an undeveloped area of 7.94 hectares on Starovolynskaya Street in the Fili-Davydkovo area. It is planned to build 150 thousand square meters of housing and the same number of public and business facilities. All the necessary infrastructure for residents will appear on the site, including an educational complex for 315 students and pupils with an area of at least nine thousand square meters,” said Maxim Gaman.

    The auction for the right to implement the first project for the integrated development of undeveloped territory was held in April. The winner was BMS Development Group.

    According to the developer, it is planned to build a modern ecopolis on the site. When choosing a site for the implementation of projects, attention is paid to their surroundings, the presence of natural areas and waterways nearby. The site near the Minskaya metro station meets these requirements.

    Residents and guests of the complex will be able to walk in the Matveevsky forest, which is part of the Setun River Valley nature reserve. The Mosfilmovsky pond is also located nearby.

    The architectural concept for the future city block will be developed by the Apex bureau, with which the investor signed a corresponding agreement.

    It is planned that in the designed quarter such values as environmental friendliness, modern technologies in terms of equipment and energy efficiency, sports, health and culture will become the norm of life.

    The KRNT project involves the creation of a full-fledged quarter with developed infrastructure. Cafes and restaurants will appear in the stylobate part of the office buildings, and recreation areas in the residential part. In the sports core, the investor will place choreography classes, gyms, yoga and meditation rooms, as well as a spa complex, saunas and swimming pools. Green spaces are planned for outdoor activities.

    According to the program of integrated development of territories (IDT), multifunctional city blocks are created, where roads, comfortable housing and all necessary infrastructure are designed on the site of former industrial zones and inefficiently used areas. Currently, 236 IID projects with a total area of more than 3.1 thousand hectares are at various stages of implementation in Moscow. Their development is carried out on behalf of Sergei Sobyanin.

    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.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    http://vvv.mos.ru/nevs/item/145103073/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: 13 electric buses have started operating on two more city routes

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    Electric buses have been launched on two more city routes – the night H8 and No. 293. This was reported by the Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Transport and Industry Maxim Liksutov.

    “Today, more than two thousand electric buses provide operation of 154 routes of ground city transport, including six night ones. This is a reliable and comfortable way to get to different points of the capital at any time of the day. We continue to develop the network of electric bus routes on the instructions of Sergei Sobyanin,” said Maxim Liksutov.

    Now, after the metro closure, trips for residents of 15 districts have become even more comfortable. Eco-friendly transport runs on the night route H8 from the stop “Ostafevskaya Street” to the metro station “Kitai-Gorod”, and on route No. 293 – from the stop “Ostafevskaya Street” to the station Butovo of the second Moscow Central Diameter. In total, 13 Russian-made electric buses operate on both lines.

    Moscow is one of the world leaders in the development and use of electric transport. Eco-friendly Russian-made equipment has been on the capital’s routes since 2018. Today, two thousand electric buses provide comfortable travel for city residents to important social facilities, as well as metro and railway stations.

    Replacing one bus with an electric bus reduces carbon dioxide emissions by more than 60 tons per year. In addition, a smooth ride and the absence of noise and vibrations provide a high level of passenger comfort. The cabins are equipped with charging ports for gadgets and media screens with route information. In addition, electric buses are equipped with folding ramps for people with limited mobility, platforms for strollers and bicycles.

    Since 2022, improved equipment has been delivered to the capital. Such vehicles have adaptive interior lighting, which changes from a cold shade to a warm one at 14:00 for the comfort of passengers. The front route indicator, increased by 18 percent, allows you to see the number from afar. The interior is heated by an electric heater, which does not affect the environment and maintains an optimal temperature. The power reserve has increased from 40-50 kilometers to 80 kilometers. At the same time, the weight of the vehicle remains the same. This year, KAMAZ and LiAZ vehicles with an updated design are entering the line.

    Innovative transport is serviced at 11 Mosgortrans sites. Moscow was the first in Russia to start building modern electric bus depots. Thus, in 2022, an electric bus depot opened in TiNAO “Red Pakhra”— the largest in Europe. Eco-friendly vehicles went on routes in the Novomoskovsk and Troitsk administrative districts. A year later, a park was built in the northwest “Mitino”. With its appearance, electric buses began to run on routes in almost 20 districts of the capital and two nearby cities of the Moscow region. At the end of 2023, the third innovative fleet of electric buses began operating “Saltykovka”It serves routes in the east of the city.

    New equipment deliveries and development of charging infrastructure will allow to put even more electric buses on the line and replace buses. They will make the trips of Muscovites and guests of the capital more comfortable and reduce the impact of transport on the environment.

    Sobyanin: Moscow is a world leader in terms of the dynamics of transport infrastructure development

    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.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    http://vvv.mos.ru/nevs/item/145023073/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Muscovites are invited to walk along the routes of the “City of Tasks” and receive “Million Prizes” points

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    Project “City of Tasks” offers to Muscovites follow 11 routes autumn capital and get points of the city loyalty program “Million Prizes”. For example, you can walk from Zaryadye Park to Tverskoy Boulevard, visit VDNKh and walk along the aerial eco-trail, stroll along the embankment from Gorky Park to Vorobyovy Gory.

    The user needs to log in to the application on the smartphone and select one of 11 tasks with a suitable route. Then you need to arrive at the starting point and start completing the task. You need to walk at least 10 thousand steps along the selected route. A pedometer will help you count them – it is available in the task itself.

    At the start, participants need to determine the coordinates, take a photo of the area and add them to the report form in the “Progress” section. Here, you should also mark the location and leave a photo of the final point of the route, then click the “Finish task” button.

    For successfully completing the route and walking at least 10,000 steps, Muscovites will receive 200 points of the city loyalty program “A Million Prizes”. They can be exchanged for discounts in stores, cafes and restaurants, donated to charity, or used to top up a Troika transport card or a parking account in the Parking Russia app, and much more.

    The “City of Tasks” project appeared in January 2022. With its help, residents of the capital can control the work of the capital’s services, participate in environmental, cultural and sports events. Muscovites have already completed more than 2.3 million tasks. The project is being developed by the State Institution “New Management Technologies” and the capital Department of Information Technology.

    “City of tasks” is developing and constantly offers Muscovites interesting formats. In particular, it gives the opportunity to use audio guide in parks, and also test your knowledge about redevelopment and re-planning in an apartment building and much more.

    The use of digital technologies to improve the quality of life of city residents corresponds to the objectives of the national program “Digital Economy of the Russian Federation” and the regional project of the city of Moscow “Digital Public Administration”. More information about the national projects implemented in the capital can be found Here.

    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.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    http://vvv.mos.ru/nevs/item/145092073/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Polytechnic University Strengthens Ties with Belarusian Universities

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

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

    Last week, a planned working trip of representatives of the Institute of Industrial Management, Economics and Trade of SPbPU to the capital of Belarus, Minsk, took place. The delegation included Professor, Deputy Director of the Higher School of Service and Trade for Research Sergey Barykin and Associate Professor, Deputy Director of the Higher School of Industrial Management for International Activities Natalia Alekseyeva. The trip included visits to four Belarusian universities.

    Sergey Barykin visited the Belarusian State University of Economics (BSEU) under the state program of the Republic of Belarus “Education and Youth Policy” at the invitation of the Dean of the Faculty of Marketing and Logistics Svetlana Lapina. He held open lectures for students on the topic “Logistics and Digitalization of Logistics”. The Polytechnic University staff also discussed issues of joint academic mobility with the Vice-Rector for Academic Affairs Olga Morozevich. At a meeting with the Vice-Rector for Ideological and Educational Work Sergey Skriba, the Polytechnicians outlined plans for joint scientific cooperation aimed at students of universities in Belarus and Russia.

    Communication with students was positive, in an atmosphere of mutual dialogue. Working meetings with colleagues allowed us to find new opportunities for interaction in various areas, – said Sergey Barykin.

    At the Belarusian National Technical University (BNTU), IPMET representatives took part in the plenary session of the XX international scientific and practical seminar. The event was held by the Faculty of Marketing, Management, and Entrepreneurship of BNTU under the auspices of the XXII international scientific and technical conference “Science for Education, Production, and Economy”, where a joint work with polytechnics “Network-centric organizations as a new basis for managing scientific and technical cooperation” was presented.

    IPMET representatives met with the dean of the faculty Alexey Danilchenko, deputy dean for research and development Irina Ustinovich and head of the department of “Economics and management of innovative projects in industry” Natalia Ponomareva. The participants summed up the results of the faculty’s performance in the international scientific conference “GDTM-2024: Global Challenges of Digital Transformation of Markets”, which took place at IPMET at the end of September.

    It is pleasant to note that over several years of cooperation with universities of the Republic of Belarus, we are met here not only as colleagues, but also as friends. In the corridors of universities we see familiar students, which came to the Polytechnic University. This gives us a sense of unity, despite the distance between our cities, shared Natalia Alekseeva.

    At the Belarusian State University (BSU), the polytechnics visited the Department of Logistics of the Institute of Business. Together with the head of the Department of Logistics Nikolai Zenchuk, they discussed promising areas of cooperation related to modeling the behavior of logistics systems and academic mobility.

    IPMET maintains strong friendly ties withFaculty of Engineering and Economics Belarusian State University of Informatics and Radioelectronics (BSUIR). This year, the collective monograph, which is being published as part of the GDTM-2024 conference, included the work of Vladimir Parkhimenko, Head of the Department of Economics and Marketing at BSUIR, and Daria Frolova, Senior Lecturer of the Department.

    Natalia Alekseeva told BSUIR students about the IPMEiT student scientific society and the annual scientific conference “Youth Week of Science IPMET”. In addition, at a meeting with the Deputy Dean of the Faculty of Engineering and Economics, Veronika Vernyakhovskaya, colleagues discussed Internship plan Belarusian teachers and students.

    Representatives of IPMET also attended a festive concert dedicated to Teacher’s Day.

    Our institute has started actively develop cooperation with Belarusian universities since 2022. And over these years we have achieved tangible results in academic mobility of teachers and students, joint scientific and congress activities. We regularly We accept students from Minsk and send our students to events organized by Belarusian universities. For several years now, teachers from partner universities have been participating in IPMEiT conferences and forums and working on joint scientific research. I would like to note that after our colleagues’ trip to Minsk, we plan to sign a cooperation agreement with the Institute of Business of the Belarusian State University and are already working on a roadmap. The Higher School of Industrial Management and the Higher School of Service and Trade are jointly developing a program for the admission of Belarusian students scheduled for the period of the annual conference “Youth Science Week of IPMEiT,” noted Vladimir Shchepinin, Director of IPMEiT.

    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.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    https://vvv.spbstu.ru/media/nevs/partnership/polytech-strengthens-ties-with-Belarusian-universities/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Students of the State University of Management visited the Russian Ecological Forum

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

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

    Students of the State University of Management attended the main event in the field of circular economy – the Youth Day of the Russian Environmental Forum (REF).

    Representatives of the government apparatus, industry specialists and entrepreneurs gathered at one site.

    The main topics of the forum in 2024 are extended producer responsibility (EPR) and new mechanisms for regulating the industry, investment projects, green financing, rule-making in the field of solid municipal waste management, digitalization of the industry and building a closed-loop economy.

    At the Youth Day of the REF-2024, GUU was represented by 4th-year students of the IOM and IM Danila Yakovlev and Sergey Zvonarev. As part of the project-based learning at GUU, the students are developing their environmental project ECOGROUP|Voskresensk, which is aimed at developing and implementing innovative technologies in the procedure for collecting and processing solid municipal waste. The project involves the creation of a network of micro-enterprises using methods of sorting, recycling and reusing solid municipal waste.

    “Participation in the forum from the Russian Environmental Operator is an excellent opportunity to meet industry representatives and understand what opportunities there are for business projects in the environmental agenda,” the students noted.

    The Russian Environmental Forum is the largest industry event that brings together the main players in the field of municipal solid waste management. The REF was first held in 2021. This fall, the forum opened its doors for the fourth time.

    Subscribe to the TG channel “Our GUU” Date of publication: 11.10.2024

    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.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    Students of the State University of Management visited the Russian Ecological Forum

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Marat Khusnullin: Restoration of the famous Rimsky-Korsakov Conservatory in St. Petersburg is completed a year early

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Government of the Russian Federation – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Rimsky-Korsakov Conservatory in St. Petersburg

    October 11, 2024

    Restoration of the famous Rimsky-Korsakov Conservatory in St. Petersburg is completed a year early

    October 11, 2024

    Restoration of the famous Rimsky-Korsakov Conservatory in St. Petersburg is completed a year early

    October 11, 2024

    Restoration of the famous Rimsky-Korsakov Conservatory in St. Petersburg is completed a year early

    October 11, 2024

    Restoration of the famous Rimsky-Korsakov Conservatory in St. Petersburg is completed a year early

    October 11, 2024

    Previous news Next news

    Rimsky-Korsakov Conservatory in St. Petersburg

    The large-scale restoration of the St. Petersburg State Conservatory named after N.A. Rimsky-Korsakov under the supervision of the Single Customer in the Sphere of Construction PPC is in its final stage. This was reported by Deputy Prime Minister Marat Khusnullin.

    “The facades of the first higher musical educational institution have already been restored and presented to city residents in the same historical light beige color as when it opened at the end of the 19th century. The building of the N.A. Rimsky-Korsakov Conservatory is a cultural heritage site of federal significance. That is why the return of its historical appearance has become one of the key tasks of the reconstruction. Specialists were able to recreate as much as possible what was built more than 150 years ago. And today, the long-awaited restoration has been completed a year ahead of schedule,” said the Deputy Prime Minister.

    The engineering systems have already been fully installed at the site, interior finishing is nearing completion, and builders have already begun commissioning. Currently, more than 2,000 specialists are working in the historic building around the clock to successfully complete all construction, installation, and restoration work by the end of 2024.

    Also last year, builders installed translucent domes in the inner courtyards of the conservatory, and today new public spaces have appeared in the country’s music university. Thanks to this solution, the useful area of the building has increased by more than 600 sq. m.

    According to the general director of the Unified Customer Production and Construction Company, Karen Oganesyan, specialists restored more than 300 square meters of stucco decoration and 170 square meters of wooden balustrades on the walls and interior vault of the building.

    “Highly qualified specialists took and are taking part in this work. It was extremely important that all elements – tiles, stucco, finishing, facades, windows, doors strictly corresponded to the solutions that were initially laid down. Therefore, the most experienced builders and restorers of our country are working on this site,” noted Karen Oganesyan.

    Very soon, visitors to Russia’s first music university will be able to see the main staircase in its original light color, the recreated paintings of the House Church, the interiors of the Glazunov Small Hall, the Rubinstein Large Hall, and other rooms.

    The main objective of the reconstruction project of the Rubinstein Great Hall was to equip it with modern acoustic and theatrical technologies, as well as to recreate the interiors lost in Soviet times in the Renaissance style. By now, most of the work has already been completed: the frame of the room has been reinforced with 1 thousand tons of metal structures, and for better acoustics, the hall has changed its shape from rectangular to horseshoe-shaped. Finishing and delivery of high-tech equipment are currently being completed.

    “The result of the large-scale reconstruction of the Rimsky-Korsakov Conservatory will be the emergence of one of the largest theater venues in Russia with variable acoustics technologies, where each of the 1.1 thousand spectators at any point will be able to equally well hear the performance of music with electrical amplification or classical music. At the moment, the work has entered the final stage: the installation of 190 tons of mechanical equipment for stage and acoustics control is being completed, and 70 tons of lighting and sound equipment is being installed,” noted Alexey Borodin, General Director of AO Politekhstroy-Svargo.

    One of the main challenges for the team of restorers was the House Church. At the end of the 19th century, artists Andrei Ryabushkin and Vasily Belyaev created paintings for the conservatory church based on the paintings of churches built in the 16th–17th centuries. After the October Revolution in the 1920s, these works of art ended up under numerous layers of plaster and wallpaper as a result of church reconstructions.

    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.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    http://government.ru/nevs/52965/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: GUU and Profit Service will launch production of new unmanned systems

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

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

    GUU and Profit Service presented a joint project for the production of small-sized drones intended for use in anti-drone systems.

    The basis for the development was a model of an unmanned aerial vehicle, previously created and patented by one of the members of the project team formed at the State University of Management.

    A joint team of the university and the company, which included GUU postgraduate student Vladimir Kutkov, performed at the in-person stage of the competitive selection of projects, organized by the National Technological Initiative Foundation, which took place at the site of the Federal Center for Unmanned Aircraft Systems in the Rudnevo Industrial Park.

    The industrial partner plans to launch production of a new type of aircraft, developed by engineers of the Engineering Project Management Center of the State University of Management together with specialists from the Profit Service company based on the presented scientific and technical background, in the first quarter of 2025.

    In addition, specialists from the Engineering Project Management Center of the State University of Management took part in a strategic session on the application of various types of radio-technical means and systems to solve problems in developing the unmanned aircraft systems industry, organized by the Department for Coordination of Educational Organizations of the Ministry of Education and Science of Russia. The event was held at MIREA.

    Representatives of the State University of Management outlined a number of promising areas based on the integrated use of diverse unmanned systems, as well as complexes that combine unmanned aircraft with ground robots and other technical means and systems.

    The outcome of the meeting was a list of areas in which various universities are ready and have the opportunity to develop new technologies of radio engineering, communication and navigation equipment for unmanned aviation.

    Subscribe to the TG channel “Our GUU” Date of publication: 11.10.2024

    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.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    GUU and Profit Service will launch production of new unmanned systems

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Financial news: Ilya Kochetkov’s interview with the Izvestia newspaper

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Central Bank of Russia –

    MFIs will have to eliminate practices that lead to citizens becoming over-indebted

    Director of the Central Bank Department Ilya Kochetkov talks about how people are drawn into a chain of endless borrowing and what measures the regulator will use to combat this.

    About 20% of loans issued by microfinance organizations are spent by so-called dependent clients of organizations on sports betting, online casinos, etc. — this estimate was given in an interview with Izvestia by the head of the non-bank lending department of the Central Bank, Ilya Kochetkov. He also reported that a third of expensive loans — with an overpayment of 100% or more — can be classified as usurious, when organizations bypass regulations and drag people into a debt hole. In order to stop this vicious practice, the Central Bank proposes to introduce a number of measures, in particular, the mechanism of “one loan in one hand.” However, as Ilya Kochetkov stated, this restriction will only apply to expensive loans. It is also planned to establish a three-day “cooling-off period” after the repayment of obligations to microfinance organizations.

    “First of all, measures will be taken to protect citizens”

    — In August, the Central Bank published a report for public discussion describing what was effectively a reform of the microfinance market. The changes proposed by the regulator are indeed serious, which is why they caused a strong reaction from the market. How is the discussion going with industry participants?

    — The main goal of the changes proposed in the report is to create conditions for the development of companies that provide loans to businesses, but at the same time it is necessary to eliminate practices that lead to an increase in the indebtedness of citizens on consumer loans.

    Indeed, the market has responded actively to our proposals. We have received feedback from self-regulatory organizations (SROs) and most of the largest industry participants. Several stages of discussion have already taken place. In early September, we held a meeting with representatives of microfinance organizations, SROs, infrastructure and public organizations, and the scientific and expert community. Last week, the proposals described in the report were conceptually supported at a meeting of the Financial Market Committee in the State Duma. And on October 14, we plan to discuss the feedback received with market representatives.

    — Did any of the proposals from market representatives interest the Central Bank and will they be taken into account when preparing amendments to the legislation?

    — Speaking about preliminary results, among the comments received there are proposals that we are ready to listen to. For example, the market suggests reducing the period for providing information to credit history bureaus. Currently, it is two days. We support this initiative. This will allow companies to track the receipt and repayment of loans in real time.

    Also, a number of MFIs pointed out excessively strict requirements for capital and investment attraction. We are ready to take these proposals into account and adjust individual prudential requirements (aimed at avoiding risks and ensuring stability. — Izvestia) taking into account the opinions of companies.

    — As I understood from the discussion of your proposals in the State Duma, the deputies are extremely determined and are ready to prepare and adopt a bill in the near future, almost in the autumn session. Will this be a separate law or will amendments be made to existing ones? When can we expect the bill to be adopted?

    — Changing the configuration of the MFI market will require a comprehensive revision of legislation and regulations. They will be introduced into the law on microfinance activities and microfinance organizations, the law on consumer credit (loan), the law on the Bank of Russia and about 20 more laws. It is assumed that this will take place in several stages over three years.

    First of all, measures aimed at protecting citizens will be implemented: the introduction of the “one loan per hand until repayment” rule, the establishment of a “cooling-off period” and a reduction in the maximum overpayment on consumer loans.

    “The ban will only apply to the most expensive loans”

    — Has the Central Bank already decided how the “one loan per person” rule will work? Will the restriction apply to all MFIs and will liabilities in banks, many of which now offer the “money until payday” product, be taken into account?

    — It is planned that the ban will apply only to the most expensive MFI loans, for which the total cost of credit (TCC) exceeds 100% per annum. A person will not be able to have two such obligations. The purpose of this measure is to protect citizens from excessive indebtedness. If a person already has one such loan, then until it is repaid, no MFI will have the right to issue him a second expensive loan. At the same time, if a person has a bank loan or a loan with TCC up to 100%, the ban will not apply.

    In addition, it is planned to establish a “cooling-off period” between receiving loans. This is done so that the borrower has the opportunity to take a more thoughtful and balanced approach to their obligations, and companies cannot issue new loans to pay off current debts.

    — What kind of “cooling off period” will this be?

    — We plan for it to be three days.

    — Recently, in a review of retail lending trends, the Central Bank indicated that many borrowers have both a bank loan and a loan from an MFI. The regulator has consistently tightened macroprudential measures for borrowers with a high debt burden, who, having been refused by a bank, went to refinance in an MFI, where money is more expensive. Doesn’t it make sense to also take into account obligations to banks when imposing restrictions?

    — Requirements for calculating the debt burden ratio (DBR) and macroprudential limits (MPL) for issuing loans to the most indebted borrowers are established not only for banks, but also for microfinance organizations. Yes, the limits were initially different — they were more lenient for microfinance organizations. But since the fourth quarter of this year, the same MPL values for loans with a high DBR have been in effect for microfinance organizations. This allows us to avoid regulatory arbitrage and limit the growth of indebtedness.

    When calculating the borrower’s DTI, MFIs are required to include in his monthly expenses all payments on existing loans and credits. If the DTI is more than 50%, MFIs will be able to issue such a person a loan only within the limits established by the MPL.

    — You recently said that restrictions on the maximum daily interest rate for microfinance organizations may be introduced. To what extent?

    — For several years, we have been systematically working to reduce the cost of loans for individuals. During this time, the APR has been reduced from more than 1000% to 292% per annum, and the maximum overpayment has been reduced from four times the loan amount to 130%. But even now, MFI loans remain quite expensive for individuals, since most of them are issued at the maximum possible rate. We see potential for further reduction of the daily interest rate; specific values are currently being worked out. We are also considering various options for prudential regulation to encourage MFIs to differentiate rates and provide more favorable conditions for quality clients.

    According to our estimates, a more effective measure to reduce debt load could be to limit the maximum amount of borrower overpayment. Currently, it is 130% of the loan amount. As an operational measure to reduce the cost of loans for citizens, we propose reducing the borrower overpayment to 100% of the amount. That is, conditionally: if you took a loan from an MFO for 1,000 rubles, then taking into account all interest, penalties, etc., you will still return no more than 2,000 rubles.

    — SRO “Mir” proposes to review the criteria for “loans until payday”, reducing them to 15 thousand rubles and shortening the term of issue, and only then introduce a limit on them. Do you agree with this proposal?

    — Indeed, the criteria for a payday loan — up to 30 thousand rubles and up to 30 days — are outdated. MFIs artificially extend loan terms or increase their amounts in order to circumvent regulatory restrictions. That is why a comprehensive review of consumer loan regulation is required, and restrictions should be introduced based not on formal criteria, but on the cost of the product. Therefore, we propose introducing stricter regulation for loans with an APR greater than 100%.

    “Companies that do not accept the new rules of the game will have to leave the market”

    — The head of the Central Bank Elvira Nabiullina has repeatedly said that usurious microfinance organizations should leave the market. What kind of organizations are these and what is their share?

    — In a number of cases, consumer loans from microfinance organizations remain quite burdensome for citizens. High-quality, conscientious borrowers receive money on the same terms as less reliable clients. Although, based on the risks, the conditions for the former should be more favorable. The current model creates an excessive burden on solvent citizens and does not encourage companies to more carefully select borrowers.

    Moreover, there is a practice of hidden loan refinancing on the market. Instead of stopping the accrual of interest when the overpayment reaches 130%, MFIs issue a new loan to a person and include previously accrued interest in its body. So-called loan chains are formed. As a result, the MFI client’s debt grows like a snowball.

    According to our estimates, about a third of all expensive consumer loans issued by MFIs are part of such “chains” that lead to an increase in the indebtedness of citizens. The introduction of a limit on one loan per person and a cooling-off period is aimed at curbing such practices. Companies that do not accept the new rules of the game will have to leave the market.

    — In your report, you indicated that many people have developed an “addiction to microfinance organization loans”; they borrow money to bet on sports or in online casinos. Are there any estimates of how much is borrowed for these purposes?

    — Based on the analysis of actual spending on bank cards of several million MFI clients, we conclude that up to 20% of the amount of issued loans is spent on these purposes. At the same time, for some companies, the share of such loans may significantly exceed the average value, and individual clients spend all the funds they borrowed from the MFI on these purposes.

    — Won’t it turn out that by squeezing unscrupulous players out of the market, you will simultaneously push MFIs and their clients into the “gray” and even “black” zone?

    — This question is asked every time there is a plan to strengthen regulation in the MFI sector. We expect that the market will hear our arguments and respond to them by changing approaches and eliminating negative practices. We expect that this will be a change in the essence of business models, product lines, approaches to assessing the quality of borrowers, and not a search for various options to bypass regulation. This is important both for the image of the market and for its future, given the constantly emerging initiatives to ban MFIs.

    As for “going into the shadows”, it is very important that citizens understand all the risks of turning to “black” creditors. Such companies operate outside the legal field and do not comply with the requirements established by law. Citizens are threatened with high rates, incorrect collection methods and other risks.

    The Bank of Russia is working to combat the activities of illegal lenders. Last year, almost 2,000 illegal lenders were identified, and in the first nine months of this year, more than 1,300. We publish information about them on our website, where there is a special section. This helps promptly warn citizens about the risks.

    We work closely with law enforcement agencies — we pass on all the data on the identified illegals. The organizers are brought to administrative responsibility. There are facts of initiating criminal cases. Together with the Prosecutor General’s Office and Roskomnadzor, we block the websites of illegal companies. Now this happens very quickly — within a few days.

    — Since you yourself mentioned the ban on microfinance organizations… A corresponding bill has been introduced for many years, but as far as I understand, it has not been seriously considered. Why can’t the idea of closing the microfinance organization market be realized?

    — We understand that MFIs are often associated with something dubious and semi-criminal. This image is largely formed by illegal lenders operating outside the legal field, as well as high rates and negative practices on the market, which I have already mentioned. But let’s look at the market as a whole. MFIs are an important part of the country’s financial market; they allow people to quickly and easily get money for a short period. It is also important to note that the MFI market is not only expensive loans, but also money for business, POS lending for large purchases. The rates on them are comparable to those of banks.

    We proposed a concept for changing this market to eliminate negative aspects, make it more transparent and regulated. MFIs will have to adapt to new restrictions, eliminate practices that lead to citizens becoming over-indebted.

    Anna Kaledina, News

    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.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    http://vvv.kbr.ru/press/event/?id=21075

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Financial news: 11.10.2024 will be held the deposit auction of the MFI Fund of Financing

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Moscow Exchange – Moscow Exchange –

    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.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    https://www.moex.com/n73908

    Category24-7, MIL-AXIS, Moscow, Moskov Stotsk Exchange, Russians Savings, Russian Federation, Russians Language, Russian economy

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    Parameters
    Date of the deposit auction 10/11/2024
    Placement currency RUB
    Maximum amount of funds placed (in placement currency) 1,000,000.00
    Placement period, days 7
    Date of deposit 10/11/2024
    Refund date 10/18/2024
    Minimum placement interest rate, % per annum 17.00
    Conditions of imprisonment, urgent or special Urgent
    Minimum amount of funds placed for one application (in placement currency) 1,000,000.00
    Maximum number of applications from one Participant, pcs. 1
    Auction form, open or closed Open
    Basis of the Agreement General Agreement
     
    Schedule (Moscow time)
    Preliminary applications from 12:45 to 13:00
    Applications in competition mode from 13:00 to 13:10
    Setting a cut-off percentage or declaring the auction invalid until 13:40
       
    Additional terms  

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Congratulations to Otari Didmanidze on being awarded the honorary title of “Honored Scientist of the Russian Federation”

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

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

    On October 11, 2024, at the 26th Russian agro-industrial exhibition “Golden Autumn”, a solemn ceremony of presenting state awards was held, timed to coincide with the Day of Agricultural and Processing Industry Workers. The ceremony was attended by the Chairman of the Government of the Russian Federation Mikhail Mishustin.

    “It is you who, with your hard work, are solving issues of food security, which are the most important issues for the development of the entire society and the achievement of national development goals that the head of state sets for us,” Mikhail Mishustin addressed the laureates and congratulated them on the upcoming holiday.

    For merits in scientific and pedagogical activity, training of qualified specialists and many years of conscientious work, the honorary title “Honored Scientist of the Russian Federation” was awarded to Academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Head of the Department of Tractors and Automobiles of the Russian State Agrarian University named after K.A. Timiryazev, Doctor of Technical Sciences, Professor Otari Didmanidze.

    The State University of Management has long and fruitfully cooperated with Otari Nazirovich in the field of training a personnel reserve for subordinate organizations of the Russian Academy of Sciences. In addition, Otari Didmanidze is the scientific director of a large project “Ensuring food security of the country based on the creation of software and hardware systems and intelligent platform digital solutions in the field of development of agro-industrial technologies of the full life cycle”, carried out by the State University of Management together with the Omsk Agrarian Scientific Center and the Udmurt State University.

    Let us recall that within the framework of this project, a team of young scientists from the State University of Management is developing a high-tech system for managing agricultural enterprises, and this week a working meeting was held between the management of the State University of Management and the Omsk Scientific and Technical Center, where the process of implementing the project was discussed.

    The State University of Management congratulates Otari Nazimovich on being awarded the honorary title of “Honored Scientist of the Russian Federation”, wishes him further success in science and work, and also expresses hope for the continuation of fruitful cooperation.

    Subscribe to the TG channel “Our GUU” Date of publication: 11.10.2024

    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.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    Congratulations to Otari Didmanidze on being awarded the honorary title of “Honored Scientist of the Russian Federation”

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Warsaw Human Dimension Conference 2024: UK closing statement

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Deputy Ambassador Brown says that progress on democracy and fundamental freedoms cannot be taken for granted at this time of shrinking civil space and growing authoritarianism.

    Location:
    Warsaw
    Delivered on:
    11 October 2024 (Transcript of the speech, exactly as it was delivered)

    Thank you, Madam Chair. Good morning, everyone.

    As we reach the end of the third Chair’s Warsaw Human Dimension Conference in three years, I would like to thank Malta as our Chair in Office for holding this meeting and enabling government officials, civil society, international experts and human rights activists to come together to take stock of how participating States are implementing their human dimension commitments.  

    The opportunity to take stock is why all participating States agreed to an annual meeting in this format in the early 1990s. We again condemn Russia’s decision to block the mandated Human Dimension Implementation Meeting and call on the Russian Federation to stop their illegal war; withdraw their troops from Ukraine; cease their malign activities, including disinformation; and, respect OSCE principles and commitments.

    Thank you, Tea, and your teams at ODIHR for preparing and delivering this meeting and for the work you do throughout the year to help us all in the implementation of our commitments. That ODIHR has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize is recognition of your vital daily work.  Like others I am waiting in excited anticipation to hear the news from Oslo.  

    I salute those of you who have spoken in plenary sessions and side events over the past fortnight. We have heard about the impact of Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine and systematic dismantling of rights and freedoms at home too. We have also heard about challenges to human rights and democracy in other parts of our region, reminding us that work to uphold our shared human dimension commitments is always required, and that progress cannot be taken for granted at this time of shrinking civil space and growing authoritarianism.     

    We have again been struck by the expertise and bravery of civil society organisations during this meeting. It is they who represent citizens and they that record and report violations at grassroots level. It is no exaggeration to say that without civil society, governments understanding of the extent of human rights violations on the ground would be sharply reduced. As we approach next year’s 50th anniversary of the Helsinki Final Act, we hope that civil society’s important role will receive the prominence that it deserves. As my Ambassador said in his opening statement, they truly are the spirit of Helsinki.

    Updates to this page

    Published 11 October 2024

    Invasion of Ukraine

    • UK visa support for Ukrainian nationals
    • Move to the UK if you’re coming from Ukraine
    • Homes for Ukraine: record your interest
    • Find out about the UK’s response

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: Text adopted – Strengthening Moldova’s resilience against Russian interference ahead of the upcoming presidential elections and a constitutional referendum on EU integration – P10_TA(2024)0016 – Wednesday, 9 October 2024 – Strasbourg

    Source: European Parliament

    The European Parliament,

    –  having regard to its previous resolutions on the Republic of Moldova,

    –  having regard to the Association Agreement between the European Union and the European Atomic Energy Community and their Member States, of the one part, and the Republic of Moldova, of the other part(1), which includes a Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Area,

    –  having regard to the Republic of Moldova’s application for EU membership of 3 March 2022, and the European Council’s consequent granting of candidate country status on 23 June 2022,

    –  having regard to the convening of the first Intergovernmental Conference on Moldova’s accession to the EU, held in June 2024,

    –  having regard to Articles 2 and 49 of the Treaty on European Union,

    –  having regard to the joint statement of 13 June 2024 by the US, Canada and the UK on exposing Russia’s subversive activity and electoral interference targeting Moldova,

    –  having regard to Rules 136(2) and (4) of its Rules of Procedure,

    A.  whereas on 20 October 2024, the Republic of Moldova is scheduled to hold a presidential election and a constitutional referendum on EU integration, amid ongoing Russian interference and attempts to destabilise the political situation and electoral process in the country;

    B.  whereas the Russian Federation has been using economic blackmail, provocation, disinformation, illegal funding of political parties, cyberattacks and other hybrid means to undermine the stability, sovereignty, constitutional order and democratic institutions of the Republic of Moldova; whereas Russia’s subversive activities in Moldova seek to undermine popular support for the European path chosen by the people of Moldova and to incite destabilisation; whereas the active measures envisaged include establishing and promoting front organisations disguised as non-governmental organisations and ‘cultural centres’, disseminating online and offline disinformation, establishing strong pro-Russian political and societal constituencies and returning the Republic of Moldova to a state of dependency on Russian hydrocarbons;

    C.  whereas in 2023, the EU imposed sanctions on key Moldovan oligarchs and pro-Russian actors, such as Ilan Shor, Vladimir Plahotniuc, Igor Ceaika, Gheorghe Cavaliuc and Marina Tauber, on the basis of a recently established sanctions regime targeting persons responsible for actions aimed at destabilising, undermining or threatening the sovereignty and independence of the Republic of Moldova; whereas allies of Mr Shor have reportedly actively recruited, arranged logistics for and provided financial compensation to individuals to join their protests; whereas on 3 October 2024, a large-scale electoral fraud operation was uncovered, financed by pro-Russian oligarch Ilan Shor, revealing that over USD 15 million had been transferred in September 2024 to over 130 000 Moldovan citizens involved in this voter bribery scheme; whereas on 18 September 2024, two close allies of Ilan Shor – deputy Marina Tauber and the Governor (Bashkan) of Gagauzia, Evghenia Guțul – met with the spokesperson of the Russian Foreign Ministry, Maria Zakharova, and subsequently gave false information about the EU and the Republic of Moldova’s future within it;

    D.  whereas one of the tools used by the Russian state is the state-funded RT network (formerly Russia Today), which has moved beyond media activities, becoming actively involved in cyber operations, covert influence, military procurement and information warfare across various regions; whereas in June 2024, the US, together with the UK and Canada, exposed Russia’s efforts to engage in subversive activities and electoral interference targeting the Republic of Moldova;

    E.  whereas in September 2024, the US imposed sanctions on three entities and two individuals for their involvement in Russia’s destabilising actions abroad, including in the Republic of Moldova; whereas these covert efforts have included RT personnel providing direct support to fugitive Moldovan oligarch Ilan Shor, the key perpetrator of the 2014 USD 1 billion bank fraud scandal; whereas, according to the US State Department, RT and its employees, including editor-in-chief Margarita Simonyan, have directly coordinated with the Kremlin to support Russian Government efforts to influence the Moldovan presidential election of October 2024, with the apparent aim of inciting unrest in the Republic of Moldova;

    F.  whereas the Security and Intelligence Service of the Republic of Moldova has reported an unprecedented level of intensity in Russia’s actions aimed at anchoring Moldova within its sphere of influence; whereas this hybrid threat is targeted at democratic processes and undermines European integration by amplifying radical separatist tendencies in the south of the country, particularly in Gagauzia (UTAG), using propaganda, manipulating the information space, interfering in the electoral process and conducting subversive operations; whereas Moldova’s national security services have stated that Russia is funding the ‘no’ campaign, with around EUR 100 million for pro-Russian political groups, and spreading disinformation on social media to sow doubt about the legitimacy of the electoral process; whereas in 2023, Ukrainian intelligence reported that it had intercepted a plan by Russia to stage a coup and oust Moldovan President Maia Sandu;

    G.  whereas the Republic of Moldova has taken steps to combat Russian interference, including by banning pro-Russian political parties that are operating outside the law, sanctioning oligarchs, suspending media outlets that spread disinformation, and increasing customs controls; whereas Moldova’s updated national security strategy attributes disinformation campaigns and other hybrid attacks to Russia;

    H.  whereas the unprovoked, unjustified and illegal war of aggression launched by the Russian Federation against Ukraine profoundly affects regional security and stability, endangering the Republic of Moldova’s macroeconomic situation, financial stability, democratic development and social cohesion, while further increasing the incidence and severity of poverty, inflation and emigration; whereas the Russian Federation, in cooperation with domestic Russia-sponsored actors, galvanises and uses the resultant widespread economic, geopolitical and security uncertainty to delegitimise and foster opposition to the Moldovan Government’s pro-European policies;

    I.  whereas despite the dramatic effects of the war on Ukraine and these destabilisation attempts, the Republic of Moldova has managed to significantly consolidate its democracy, continue its reform trajectory and develop its relations with the EU; whereas the improvements in the country’s democratic system have been reflected in its progress on various international indexes; whereas the Moldovan Government’s enhanced implementation of current agreements demonstrates its commitment to closer cooperation with and integration into the EU;

    J.  whereas the Republic of Moldova is a close and valued partner of the EU; whereas its application for EU membership, and the European Council’s decision to grant candidate country status to the Republic of Moldova on the understanding that nine steps are taken, demonstrates a strong joint ambition for swift EU integration; whereas through the Association Agreement and the Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Area, in force since 2016, the EU and Moldova have committed to promoting political association and achieving economic integration;

    K.  whereas on 3 March 2022, the Republic of Moldova applied for EU membership, and on 23 June 2022, was granted candidate country status by unanimous agreement of all 27 EU Member States; whereas the EU opened accession negotiations with the Republic of Moldova during the first accession conference at ministerial level, held in Luxembourg on 25 June 2024, following the European Council’s decision of 14-15 December 2023 to open accession negotiations with Moldova, and the Council’s approval of the negotiating framework for these negotiations on 21 June 2024; whereas EU accession remains a merit-based process that requires the fulfilment of the EU membership criteria;

    L.  whereas every sovereign state has the inherent right to defend itself and to invest in its defence and resilience capabilities, and such actions are consistent with the Republic of Moldova’s status of neutrality;

    M.  whereas the Council has adopted assistance measures worth EUR 137 million for the benefit of the Armed Forces of the Republic of Moldova under the European Peace Facility since 2021;

    N.  whereas on 24 April 2023, the EU set up the Partnership Mission in the Republic of Moldova (EUPM Moldova) under the common security and defence policy, with the objective of enhancing the security sector’s resilience in the areas of crisis management, hybrid threats, including cybersecurity and countering foreign information manipulation and interference; whereas on 21 May 2024, Moldova became the first country to sign a Security and Defence Partnership with the EU, which will help strengthen cooperation on security and defence policy between the EU and Moldova;

    O.  whereas, according to several reports, many priests from the Metropolis of Chișinău and All Moldova have travelled to Russia, where they received funds with the intention of using them for electoral purposes in the Republic of Moldova;

    1.  Stands in solidarity with the people of the Republic of Moldova and reiterates its unwavering support for the independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Republic of Moldova within its internationally recognised borders;

    2.  Strongly condemns the escalating malicious activities, interference and hybrid operations by the Russian Federation, pro-Russian oligarchs and Russian-sponsored local actors aimed at undermining the electoral processes, security, sovereignty and democratic foundations of the Republic of Moldova, fostering divisions within Moldovan society and derailing the country’s pro-European trajectory, ahead of the upcoming presidential election and the constitutional referendum on EU integration;

    3.  Reiterates its call on the Russian authorities to respect the Republic of Moldova’s independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity, and to cease its provocations and attempts to destabilise the country and undermine its constitutional order and democratic institutions; reiterates its calls on Russia to withdraw its military forces and equipment from the territory of the Republic of Moldova, to ensure the full destruction of all ammunition and equipment in the Cobasna depot under international oversight and to support a peaceful resolution to the Transnistrian conflict, in line with the principles of international law and the 1999 Istanbul Summit Declaration of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe;

    4.  Calls for the EU and its Member States to ensure that all necessary assistance is provided to the Republic of Moldova to strengthen its institutional mechanisms and its ability to respond to hybrid threats; calls for increased EU support for Moldova in countering disinformation, hybrid threats and cyberattacks; underlines that this should entail boosting Moldova’s capacity to combat disinformation, strengthen its cybersecurity infrastructure and enhance resilience against external malign influences; emphasises the particular importance of countering false Russian narratives, while underscoring their malign interference in the Republic of Moldova and the ways in which they are used to justify Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine;

    5.  Calls on the Council to adopt additional targeted sanctions listings against individuals and entities responsible for supporting or carrying out actions which undermine or threaten the Republic of Moldova’s sovereignty and independence, as well as the country’s democracy, stability or security, and the rule of law; calls for the EU and national authorities to make sure those sanctions are duly implemented; reiterates its call on the respective hosting states and territories to extradite Ilan Shor, Vladimir Plahotniuc and other individuals sought for trial in the Republic of Moldova;

    6.  Highlights the important role played by EUPM Moldova; calls for the EU and its Member States to ensure that EUPM Moldova performs to the best of its ability, taking stock of progress and adapting its operations if necessary to make it as efficient as possible, while proposing to further extend its mandate beyond May 2025, adapt its scope and increase the mission’s resources; calls for the EU and its Member States to increase their support for Moldova’s Center for Strategic Communication and Combating Disinformation; calls on the Commission to report on the results of the EU support package for Moldova of June 2023, particularly the stated aim of countering foreign information manipulation and interference, and building capacity for independent media, civil society and youth;

    7.  Applauds the Republic of Moldova’s steadfast support for Ukraine since the start of Russia’s war of aggression; commends the Republic of Moldova for welcoming 1,5 million Ukrainian refugees throughout the war, of which an estimated 125 000 remain in the country; calls for the EU and its Member States to ensure continued support for Moldova and its people in addressing the challenges facing the country as a consequence of Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine, including large numbers of refugees, inflation, threats to its energy supplies and violations of its airspace;

    8.  Reaffirms its commitment to the Republic of Moldova’s future membership of the EU; believes that its membership in the EU would constitute a mutually beneficial investment in a united and strong Europe; welcomes the widespread support in the Republic of Moldova for its European integration; stresses that the Republic of Moldova’s European integration represents not only a path towards greater economic prosperity, but also a safeguard for political stability and security in the face of external threats;

    9.  Calls for the acceleration of the screening process and the timely organisation of subsequent intergovernmental conferences, where negotiations on Cluster 1 on Fundamentals should be initiated; calls for the EU to adequately support accession-related reforms by developing robust and adaptable financial instruments tailored to the Republic of Moldova’s specific needs with a view to effectively addressing its economic and structural challenges, and ensuring the country remains resilient and capable of implementing the necessary reforms throughout its EU accession process; urges the acceleration of Moldova’s gradual integration into the EU and the single market by allowing participation in new initiatives and EU programmes, which will deliver tangible socio-economic benefits in specific areas even before the country formally joins the EU; reiterates its call, in this regard, for the EU to take swift and significant steps towards the permanent liberalisation of its tariff-rate quotas;

    10.  Calls for more consistent support for the Republic of Moldova in its EU accession process, including increased technical assistance by sending additional EU advisors to the Moldovan authorities, as a contribution to strengthening capacity-building;

    11.  Calls for the adoption of a new growth plan for the Republic of Moldova so as to adequately finance and support Moldova in achieving economic convergence with the EU; believes that this plan should finance investments in infrastructure, human capital and the digital and green transitions, facilitating sustainable economic growth; calls for the full integration of the Republic of Moldova into the ‘Roam Like at Home’ initiative by the end of 2025;

    12.  Calls on the Commission, in this regard, to include the Republic of Moldova in the Instrument for Pre-accession Assistance and to prioritise funding for candidate countries in its proposal for the next multiannual financial framework (2028-2034), ensuring the path towards EU membership;

    13.  Welcomes the Republic of Moldova’s significant progress in implementing EU accession-related reforms and encourages the Moldovan authorities to continue the ambitious reforms on democracy and the rule of law; calls for the EU and its Member States to prioritise and allocate additional resources to efforts to support the rule of law and anti-corruption reforms in the Republic of Moldova in order to address vulnerabilities, including those related to corruption in the security sector, justice system, public administration and media, which could enable Russian interference and disinformation; encourages the Moldovan Government to continue working with all stakeholders towards a sustainable and comprehensive justice and anti-corruption reform, in line with EU and Venice Commission recommendations;

    14.  Underlines the importance of advancing the country’s reform process in order to improve living standards, particularly for vulnerable groups, and to provide the younger generations with attractive prospects for life and work in the country, thereby increasing societal resilience to hybrid attacks and reducing the number of citizens seeking better living conditions elsewhere in Europe; highlights the need for the social acquis to be better represented in the Commission’s assessments and recommendations;

    15.  Reiterates its support for stronger cooperation on security and defence policy between the EU and the Republic of Moldova; commends the Republic of Moldova for becoming the first country to sign a security and defence partnership with the EU and calls for this partnership to be put into practical action; calls for the EU to progressively include the Republic of Moldova in upcoming legislative initiatives and programmes relating to European security and defence; supports the continued work under the High-Level Political and Security Dialogue between the EU and the Republic of Moldova to enhance cooperation on foreign and security policy;

    16.  Calls on the Member States to increase the European Peace Facility’s funding for the Republic of Moldova to further enhance the country’s defence capabilities;

    17.  Reiterates its call for the EU and its Member States to continue supporting the efforts of the Moldovan authorities to maintain macroeconomic stability and enhance its energy security by supporting the construction of new electricity interconnections with neighbouring countries; calls for the EU and its Member States to financially support energy efficiency and renewable energy projects as a clean and sustainable way of reducing Moldova’s energy demand and diversifying its supply, while ensuring energy affordability, in particular for the most vulnerable groups;

    18.  Urges the EU and its Member States to further strengthen cooperation with Moldova through targeted measures in order to enhance the country’s resilience to hybrid threats, including by improving strategic communications about the EU, supporting journalists and civil society in countering disinformation, promoting independent Russian-language media content and enhancing public information literacy; calls for additional resources and technical know-how to assist the Moldovan Government’s strategic communications, internal coordination and capacity-building against hybrid attacks and disinformation; commends the efforts of Moldovan civil society in supporting the Moldovan Government’s fight against disinformation and promoting democratic values; calls on the Commission and the Member States to continue supporting media literacy and media independence, as well as the strengthening of Moldova’s critical digital infrastructure, including through the replacement of Russian-origin information and communications technology systems; calls for the EU and its Member States to expand and intensify their direct engagement with Moldovan citizens by including them in various EU and bilateral programmes and projects, such as citizen consultations, and to foster people-to-people connections;

    19.  Calls on the Commission to assist the Moldovan Government in putting pressure on social media platforms to address disinformation effectively;

    20.  Instructs its President to forward this resolution to the Council, the Commission, the Vice-President of the Commission / High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, the governments and parliaments of the Member States, the President, Government and Parliament of the Republic of Moldova, the United Nations, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, the Council of Europe and the Russian authorities.

    (1) OJ L 260, 30.8.2014, p. 4.

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: Text adopted – The democratic backsliding and threats to political pluralism in Georgia – P10_TA(2024)0017 – Wednesday, 9 October 2024 – Strasbourg

    Source: European Parliament

    The European Parliament,

    –  having regard to its previous resolutions on Georgia,

    –  having regard to the statement by the High Representative and the Commissioner for Neighbourhood and Enlargement of 17 April 2024 on the adoption of the ‘transparency of foreign influence’ law,

    –  having regard to the statement by the High Representative of 18 September 2024 on the Georgian law on ‘family values and protection of minors’,

    –  having regard to the statement by the European External Action Service Spokesperson of 4 April 2024 on the draft law on ‘transparency of foreign influence’,

    –  having regard to the European Council conclusions of 14 and 15 December 2023 and of 27 June 2024,

    –  having regard to the Commission communication of 8 November 2023 entitled ‘2023 Communication on EU Enlargement Policy’ (COM(2023)0690),

    –  having regard to Resolution 2561 (2024) of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe entitled ‘Challenges to democracy in Georgia’,

    –  having regard to the Bucharest Declaration adopted by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) at the thirty-first annual session from 29 June to 3 July 2024,

    –  having regard to the Association Agreement between the European Union and the European Atomic Energy Community and their Member States, of the one part, and Georgia, of the other part(1),

    –  having regard to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,

    –  having regard to the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR),

    –  having regard to the joint statement by the Chair of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, the Chair of the Delegation for relations with the South Caucasus and the European Parliament’s Standing Rapporteur on Georgia of 18 April 2024 on the reintroduction of the draft law on ‘transparency of foreign influence’ in Georgia,

    –  having regard to Rule 136(2) and (4) of its Rules of Procedure,

    A.  whereas the past months have seen significant attacks on democracy in Georgia, which have been characterised by the hasty adoption of anti-democratic legislation criticised by the UN, the Venice Commission and the EU, concurrent with attacks on civil society and independent media, prolonged mass protests and the subsequent violent suppression of those peaceful protests, and deep political and societal tensions and polarisation;

    B.  whereas the exercise of freedom of opinion, expression, association and peaceful assembly is a fundamental right enshrined in the Georgian Constitution;

    C.  whereas Georgia, as a signatory to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the European Convention on Human Rights, as well as a member of the Council of Europe and the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, has committed itself to the principles of democracy, the rule of law and respect for fundamental freedoms and human rights;

    D.  whereas Article 78 of the Georgian Constitution provides that ‘the constitutional bodies shall take all measures within the scope of their competence to ensure the full integration of Georgia into the European Union and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization’;

    E.  whereas the EU expects Georgia, a candidate country for EU accession, to abide fully by the Association Agreement and other international commitments it has made and, in particular, to fulfil the conditions and take the steps set out in the Commission’s recommendation of 8 November 2023; whereas the European Council decided to grant candidate status to Georgia solely on the understanding that these steps would be taken, including combating disinformation and interference against the EU and its values, engaging opposition parties and civil society in governance, and ensuring freedom of assembly and expression, as well as meaningfully consulting civil society and involving it in legislative and policymaking processes and ensuring that it can operate freely;

    F.  whereas civil society in Georgia has traditionally been very vibrant and active and played a pivotal role in soliciting and promoting democratic changes in the country, as well as in safeguarding and watching over their implementation;

    G.  whereas on 20 February 2024, the Parliament of Georgia passed amendments to the Electoral Code changing the procedure for the election of chair and so-called professional members of the Central Election Commission and abolishing the post of deputy chair, which is filled by a representative of the opposition;

    H.  whereas on 4 April 2024, less than a year before the elections, the Georgian Parliament adopted amendments to the country’s Electoral Code that modified fundamental aspects of the country’s electoral legislation, abolishing mandatory parliamentary quotas for women, which required that at least one out of four candidates on a party list be of a different gender than the majority;

    I.  whereas on 28 May 2024, the Georgian Parliament adopted the so-called transparency of foreign influence law, after overriding the veto of President Salome Zourabishvili and despite mass protests by Georgian citizens and repeated calls from Georgia’s European partners to withdraw the draft law which, in spirit and content, contradicts EU norms and values; whereas adopting this law has effectively frozen Georgia’s accession process and led to the suspension of EU financial assistance for Georgia;

    J.  whereas the law was adopted in a procedure which, according to the Venice Commission, left no space for genuine discussion and meaningful consultation, in open disregard for the concerns of large parts of the Georgian population; whereas the restrictions set by that law to the rights to freedom of expression and freedom of association and the right to privacy are incompatible with the strict test set out in Articles 8(2), 10(2), and 11(2) of the ECHR and Article 17(2), 19(2) and 22(2) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights as they do not meet the requirements of legality, legitimacy, necessity and proportionality in a democratic society, and they are also incompatible with the principle of non-discrimination set out in Article 14 of the ECHR;

    K.  whereas this legislation comes at a time of increasing and ongoing attacks against civil society in Georgia in a seeming effort to narrow civic space by starving independent groups of funds; whereas this legislation is modelled on the foreign agent legislation in Russia;

    L.  whereas on 6 June 2024, the US imposed visa restrictions on dozens of Georgian officials over the adoption of the ‘foreign agents law’;

    M.  whereas the European Council, in its conclusions of 27 June 2024, called on Georgia’s authorities to ‘clarify their intentions by reversing the current course of action which jeopardises Georgia’s EU path, de facto leading to a halt of the accession process’;

    N.  whereas on 11 July 2024, the US Congress Committee on Foreign Affairs adopted Georgia sanctions legislation known as the Megobari Act, which imposes sanctions against Georgian officials responsible for undermining the country’s democratic system;

    O.  whereas on 17 September 2024, the Georgian Parliament passed a law on ‘family values and the protection of minors’, which aims to ban reliable information about sexual orientation and gender identity;

    P.  whereas the Georgian authorities have not taken into account a single recommendation of the Venice Commission regarding the annulment or modification of the above-mentioned laws on ‘transparency of foreign influence’ and ‘family values and the protection of minors’, the abolition of gender quotas in local and parliamentary elections, and the formation of the Central Election Commission;

    Q.  whereas there is growing anti-Western and hostile rhetoric from the ruling Georgian Dream party against Georgia’s democratic partners, as well as promotion of Russian disinformation, manipulation and conspiracy theories; whereas that hostile rhetoric also targets Ukraine, as the ruling party uses despicable political banners depicting Ukrainian cities destroyed by Russia, thus capitalising on the suffering of brave Ukrainians; whereas the Georgian Dream party is pursuing a narrative of the West as a ‘global war party’ which is trying to push Georgia back into a war with Russia;

    R.  whereas an increasing number of incidents indicate that Georgia is experiencing an insecure media environment, which poses a threat to its democracy; whereas Reporters Without Borders’ annual index on press freedom ranks Georgia 103rd out of 180 countries, a drop of 26 places from the previous year;

    S.  whereas on 28 August 2024, the leader of Georgian Dream, Bidzina Ivanishvili, at the inauguration of his party’s electoral campaign, spoke of his intention to ban democratic opposition parties; whereas he was seconded by the Prime Minister, Irakli Kobakhidze, who stated that, if the party received a majority in the Georgian Parliament, it would ban certain opposition parties, and referred to the opposition as a ‘criminal political force’;

    T.  whereas the Russian Foreign Minister’s statement expressing his readiness to help Georgia normalise its relations with ‘the neighbouring … states of Abkhazia and South Ossetia’ was praised by the leaders of the ruling party, demonstrating the Georgian Government’s departure from its policy of non-recognition of the occupied regions of Georgia;

    U.  whereas parliamentary elections will take place in Georgia on 26 October 2024; whereas the law on ‘transparency of foreign influence’ has effectively blocked the requirement to have domestic observers, whose presence, according to OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights principles, would contribute to an increase in the transparency of and trust in the electoral process;

    1.  Expresses its deep concern about the democratic backsliding in Georgia, which has occurred exponentially throughout this year and especially ahead of the parliamentary elections on 26 October 2024; strongly condemns the adoption of the law on ‘transparency of foreign influence’ and the law on ‘family values and protection of minors’, as well as the changes to the Electoral Code; considers that the above are tools used by the government to violate freedom of expression, censor media, impose restrictions on critical voices in civil society and the NGO sector or to discriminate against vulnerable people; underscores that the foregoing are also incompatible with EU values and democratic principles, run against Georgia’s ambitions for EU membership, damage Georgia’s international reputation and endanger the country’s Euro-Atlantic integration; strongly underlines that unless the above-mentioned legislation is rescinded, progress cannot be made in Georgia’s relations with the EU; regrets that Georgia, once a champion of democratic progress with Euro-Atlantic aspirations, has been in a democratic backsliding free fall for a considerable period;

    2.  Calls on the Commission and the Member States to investigate the consequences of the democratic backsliding that these laws represent for their donor role in Georgia and to communicate this possible impact to the Government and Parliament of Georgia; calls for all EU funding provided to the Georgian Government to be frozen until the above-mentioned undemocratic laws are repealed and for strict conditions to be placed on the disbursement of any future funding to the Georgian Government;

    3.  Expresses its concern about the climate of hatred and intimidation fuelled by statements by Georgian Government representatives and political leaders, as well as by the government’s attacks on political pluralism; condemns comments by oligarch Bidzina Ivanishvili and leading figures of the government threatening to ban opposition parties and referring to the opposition as a ‘criminal political force’; notes that such intimidation seriously undermines the political process and the freedom of expression, and contributes to an environment of fear;

    4.  Calls for a thorough investigation of police brutality against peaceful protestors during the spring protests against the law on ‘transparency of foreign influence’ in Georgia;

    5.  Reiterates its calls on the Commission to promptly assess how Georgia’s ‘transparency of foreign influence’ and ‘family values and protection of minors’ laws, its abolition of gender quotas and other changes in its electoral legislation, the implementation of the Venice Commission’s recommendations in general and the conduct of the elections in line with accepted international standards, affect Georgia’s continuous fulfilment of the visa liberalisation benchmarks, in particular the fundamental rights benchmark, which is a crucial component of the EU visa liberalisation policy;

    6.  Reiterates its unwavering support for the Georgian people’s legitimate European aspirations and their wish to live in a prosperous country, free from corruption, that fully respects fundamental freedoms, protects human rights and guarantees an open society and independent media; underlines that the decision to grant Georgia EU candidate country status was motivated by the wish to acknowledge the achievements and democratic efforts of Georgia’s civil society, as well as the overwhelming support for EU accession among its citizens, with over 80 % of the Georgian people consistently in favour; appreciates the efforts made by Georgia’s President Salome Zourabishvili to return Georgia to the democratic and pro-European path of development and strongly condemns the Georgian Dream party’s effort to silence her through impeachment procedures on unwarranted grounds;

    7.  Deplores the personal role played by Georgia’s oligarch Bidzina Ivanishvili, who returned to active politics on 30 December 2023 when he became ‘honorary chairman’ of the Georgian Dream party, in the current political crisis and in yet another attempt to undermine the Euro-Atlantic orientation of the country in favour of pivoting towards Russia; reiterates its call on the Council and the EU’s democratic partners to impose immediate and targeted personal sanctions on Ivanishvili for his role in the deterioration of the political process in Georgia as well as other activities benefiting the Russian Federation;

    8.  Calls for the EU and its Member States to hold to account and impose personal sanctions on all those responsible for undermining democracy in Georgia, who are complicit in the violence committed against political opponents and peaceful protesters and who spread anti-Western disinformation; welcomes the personal sanctions imposed by the US on Georgian Dream officials;

    9.  Expresses concern about the fact that many recent legislative proposals adopted by the Georgian Dream majority in the Georgian Parliament betray the aspirations of the large majority of the Georgian people to live in a democratic society, continue democratic and rule of law reforms, pursue close cooperation with Euro-Atlantic partners and commit to a path towards EU membership;

    10.  Emphasises that the rights to freedom of expression and assembly and to peaceful protest are fundamental freedoms and must be respected under all circumstances, particularly in a country aspiring to join the EU;

    11.  Underlines that the public watchdog role exercised by civil society and independent media is essential to a democratic society and crucial in advancing EU accession-related reforms and therefore calls on the Georgian authorities to do their utmost to guarantee an enabling environment in which civil society and independent media can thrive;

    12.  Recalls that the European Council of 14 and 15 December 2023 granted Georgia candidate country status on the understanding that the relevant steps set out in the Commission recommendation of 8 November 2023 would be taken; stresses that recently adopted legislation clearly goes against this ambition and has effectively put on hold Georgia’s integration into the EU;

    13.  Reiterates its call on the Vice-President of the Commission / High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, the Commissioner for Neighbourhood and Enlargement and the President of the Commission to remind the Georgian Government of the commitments it made and the values and principles it subscribed to when it applied for EU membership;

    14.  Reiterates the tangible opportunities that Georgia would take advantage of once the accession negotiations begin, such as pre-accession assistance that would improve the standard of living of Georgian citizens, as well as support the institutions, infrastructure and social services;

    15.  Urges the Georgian authorities to ensure that the upcoming parliamentary elections in October 2024 adhere to the highest international standards, guaranteeing a transparent, free and fair process that reflects the democratic will of the people; presses for the abolition of the ingrained practice of misusing public resources and administrative capacity for the benefit of the ruling party; urges the Georgian authorities to take all necessary measures to ensure that all respected civil society organisations involved in election observation can observe these elections without hindrance or interference in their work;

    16.  Shares the concerns raised by the Venice Commission about the adoption of amendments to the legal framework for elections in Georgia and the Electoral Code, agreeing that these changes to the Electoral Code will have a major impact on the stakeholders’ perceptions of and trust in the impartiality and fairness of the election administration;

    17.  Expresses alarm at the decision to open only a limited number of polling stations abroad, despite numerous requests from the Georgian diaspora, thereby depriving the majority of Georgians living abroad of the right to vote; is deeply concerned by reports that the Government of Georgia is creating obstacles for the coalition of 30 NGOs and Transparency International Georgia in their efforts to conduct the ‘Go Out and Vote’ campaign; considers these obstacles to be an attempt to undermine democracy in the country;

    18.  Notes that, amid significant international backlash questioning the legitimacy of the upcoming elections, the Prime Minister of Georgia ‘recommended’ that the Anti-Corruption Bureau (ACB) revoke its decision of 24 September 2024 designating Transparency International Georgia as having ‘declared electoral goals’, and the ACB did revoke it on 2 October 2024; recalls that the initial decision, if enforced and not revoked, would deprive one of Georgia’s leading civil society organisations of access to foreign funding, severely hindering its ability to continue operations, including election observation, as well as raise concerns about the political neutrality of the ACB;

    19.  Deplores the use by Georgian Dream of violent images of the war in Ukraine as a means of manipulating opinions and spreading disinformation and pro-Russian and anti-Ukrainian sentiment in its campaign ahead of the October 2024 elections;

    20.  Expects Georgian Dream to respect the will and free choice of the Georgian people in the upcoming parliamentary elections and ensure a peaceful transfer of power; demands that Georgian Dream and its leaders immediately stop the violence, intimidation, hate speech, persecution and repression that it is committing against the opposition, civil society and independent media;

    21.  Strongly believes that the upcoming elections will be decisive in determining Georgia’s future democratic development and geopolitical choice, as well its ability to make progress with its EU member state candidacy; recognises that it is still possible to consolidate Georgia’s democratic future as an EU candidate country with a young, engaged generation of leaders, which was exemplified by the spontaneous protests against the foreign agent law that took place during 2024;

    22.  Expresses deep concern about the increased influence of Russia in Georgia, including increased immigration from Russia, increased trade ties with Russia and Georgia’s willingness to pursue reconciliation with Russia despite Russia’s war in Ukraine and its occupation of a fifth of Georgian sovereign territory; calls on the Government of Georgia to impose sanctions against Russia in response to its war of aggression against Ukraine, continue its previous policy of non-recognition of the occupied territories and honour its commitment to enforce effective measures to avoid the circumvention of European sanctions; encourages the Government of Georgia to align fully with the EU’s foreign policy and the EU’s strategy towards Russia;

    23.  Strongly reiterates its urgent demand for the immediate and unconditional release of former President Mikheil Saakashvili on humanitarian grounds for the purpose of seeking medical treatment abroad; emphasises that the Georgian Government bears full and undeniable responsibility for the life, health, safety and well-being of former President Mikheil Saakashvili and must be held fully accountable for any harm that befalls him;

    24.  Notes that the Georgian Government has further worsened access to public information, including Soviet-era archives, using the EU General Data Protection Regulation to falsely justify draconian restrictions to archive access, and that some of Georgia’s most important Soviet-era archives (including the archives of the former KGB and the former Central Committee of the Communist Party) have been completely closed since October 2023 without any explanation; highlights Russia’s manipulation and falsification of history, including Soviet history, as part of its war of aggression against Ukraine and its military threats against other countries; regrets the growing cult of Stalin and the related increase in Soviet nostalgia in Georgia, supported by the ruling government, which underscores its closer alignment with Russia;

    25.  Instructs its President to forward this resolution to the Vice-President of the Commission / High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, the Council, the Commission, the governments and parliaments of the Member States, the Council of Europe, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe and the President, Government and Parliament of Georgia.

    (1) OJ L 261, 30.8.2014, p. 4, ELI: http://data.europa.eu/eli/agree_internation/2014/494/oj.

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Students and staff will be vaccinated against influenza at the State University of Management

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

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

    On October 16, 2024, in order to prevent the occurrence and spread of acute respiratory viral infections and influenza among employees and students during the 2024/2025 epidemic season, work was organized at the State University of Management to vaccinate students and employees against influenza.

    Flu vaccination is carried out in the medical office (hostel #2, 1st floor). Starts at 12:00.

    Please bring your compulsory medical insurance policy with you.

    Subscribe to the tg channel “Our State University” Announcement date: 10/11/2024

    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.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    Students and staff will be vaccinated against influenza at the State University of Management

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Alexander Novak held the 35th meeting of the Federal Headquarters for Gasification

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Government of the Russian Federation – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Alexander Novak held the 35th meeting of the Federal Headquarters for Gasification

    October 11, 2024

    Alexander Novak held the 35th meeting of the Federal Headquarters for Gasification

    October 11, 2024

    Alexander Novak held the 35th meeting of the Federal Headquarters for Gasification

    October 11, 2024

    Previous news Next news

    Alexander Novak held the 35th meeting of the Federal Headquarters for Gasification

    Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak held the 35th meeting of the Federal Headquarters for Gasification. The event was attended by representatives of the Ministry of Energy, Gazprom Mezhregiongaz LLC, the Federal Antimonopoly Service, the Federal State Budgetary Institution REA of the Ministry of Energy, regional headquarters for gasification and the Government Coordination Center.

    According to the Ministry of Energy, since the start of the pre-gasification program, more than 1.85 million applications have been submitted from households for gas supply. 1.32 million contracts have been concluded, which is 96% of the number of applications accepted. The rate of contract conclusion in the third quarter increased by 6% compared to the second quarter, and compared to the first quarter, the growth was 37.4%. Under more than 1 million contracts (81% of those concluded), gas has been supplied to the boundaries of plots, 656 thousand households have received gas in their homes, with 174 thousand of them since the beginning of 2024.

    In addition, work is being systematically carried out to connect gas to social, educational and medical institutions. 944 applications have been received from them, 820 contracts have been concluded. According to 459 of them, gas has been brought to the boundaries of the site.

    In Russia, according to Gazprom Mezhregiongaz, as of October 3, 10,810 garden non-profit partnerships (SNT) were identified during the inventory that meet the criteria for additional gasification. This work continues. In these SNT, more than 932 thousand households are not gasified, more than 340 thousand houses are defined as residential. Additional gasification will be carried out by 2030 in those SNTs where technical conditions will allow gas pipelines to be connected and where the owners of residential buildings at general meetings give consent to the work on public lands.

    Aleksandr Novak drew the special attention of the headquarters participants to the need to speed up the work on bringing gas both to the boundaries of the plots and to residential buildings. And he asked to intensify the work on informing citizens about the possibilities of receiving a comprehensive gas connection service by gas distribution organizations, and not by private companies, where the service may cost more. The Deputy Prime Minister instructed to consider the advisability of changing part of the regulatory documentation on gasification based on the proposals of Gazprom Mezhregiongaz.

    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.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    http://government.ru/nevs/52966/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: Sweden’s development assistance for global health and SRHR makes a difference and saves lives

    Source: Government of Sweden

    Sweden’s development assistance for global health and SRHR makes a difference and saves lives – Government.se

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    Press release from Ministry for Foreign Affairs

    Published 11 October 2024

    Sweden is an active force for child and maternal care, sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) and other health care around the world. Support to health care in Ukraine, access to SRHR, and fundamental health and vaccination campaigns are important focus areas. Cooperation with civil society is also being strengthened. The annual development assistance for health report, published today, 11 October, outlines all of this and much more.

    “Investments in global health lead to a safer and healthier world, in which more people are given the conditions to live and shape their own prosperity. Sweden’s broad efforts for global health and SRHR are often critical – not least operations to get vaccines and medicines to those most in need, but also our efforts to strengthen health and medical care in low- and middle-income countries,” says Minister for International Development Cooperation and Foreign Trade Benjamin Dousa.

    Last year, Sweden’s development assistance for health totalled approximately SEK 5.7 billion. The annual development assistance for health report outlines Sweden’s overall support to global health and SRHR. It has been published every year since 2012 and is based on statistics from the Ministry for Foreign Affairs and the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (Sida). 

    In 2023, bilateral health assistance to Ukraine increased, helping to ensure access to basic and life-saving care – an area that has been hard-hit following Russia’s full-scale invasion. The Government’s drive to support civil society organisations has contributed to preventive measures in low- and middle-income countries, including against sexual and gender-based violence. 

    Press contact

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: Switzerland and US sign new agreement on the exchange of trainees and young professionals

    Source: Switzerland – Department of Foreign Affairs in English

    State Secretariat for Migration

    Bern-Wabern, 11.10.2024 – Switzerland and the US today signed a new agreement in Bern on the exchange of trainees and young professionals. The agreement will make it easier for young Swiss people to receive training in the US, and for Americans to do the same in Switzerland, for short periods. This new agreement replaces the agreement from 1980.

    State Secretary for Migration Christine Schraner Burgener signed the new agreement in Bern today. It will take effect from 30 November, and is aimed at young Swiss people between 18 and 35 years old. Those wishing to participate must either be in training or have a vocational diploma or higher education qualification. People who do not meet these requirements may still be eligible if they have some professional experience. In particular, they must be seeking to complete their studies or to improve their skills in their specialisation.

    For both Swiss and American participants, residence and work permits are issued for up to 12 months, with the possibility of a 6-month extension.

    Purpose of the agreement

    The new agreement makes it easier for young professionals from both countries to obtain visas, and opens up the exchange programme to a wider range of people than under the 1980 agreement. The immersive experience of training abroad allows participants to improve their language, cultural and social skills.

    Under the old programme, more than 100 people each year from Switzerland and as many from the United States benefited from an exchange in the 1980s and early 1990s. This number has fallen steadily since the 2000s, mainly because of changes in the requirements for obtaining a US visa.

    Switzerland also has trainee exchange agreements in place with Argentina, Australia, Chile, Canada, Japan, Monaco, New Zealand, the Philippines, Russia, South Africa, Ukraine, Tunisia and Indonesia. Switzerland also has individual agreements with the member states of the European Union; however, these are no longer applied because the Agreement on the Free Movement of Persons between Switzerland and the EU offers more favourable conditions.

    Since the first trainee agreement was concluded (with Belgium in 1936), almost 40,000 Swiss trainees have been able to work temporarily abroad. Conversely, more than 58,000 foreign trainees have had the opportunity to experience the Swiss work environment.


    Address for enquiries

    SEM Information and Communication, medien@sem.admin.ch


    Publisher

    State Secretariat for Migration
    https://www.sem.admin.ch/sem/en/home.html

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Rosneft enterprises released more than 3 million fry into Russian waters

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Rosneft – Rosneft – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Rosneft’s production and processing enterprises released more than 3.3 million fish fry of various species into their natural habitat in August–October.

    Preservation of biological diversity in the regions of presence, including replenishment of water resources with valuable fish species, is one of the main priorities of Rosneft’s environmental activities. At the request of oil workers, young fish are grown in nurseries, where optimal conditions for development are created: appropriate temperature conditions, high-quality nutrition and optimal water composition, which increases the chances of survival of the fry in the natural environment.

    In the Khanty-Mansiysk Autonomous Okrug, RN-Yuganskneftegaz employees released more than 1.5 million young Siberian sturgeon into water bodies. Tyumenneftegaz specialists released more than 200,000 young muksun, a valuable species of the whitefish family, into the Baibalakovskaya channel, from where the grown fish migrate to the Ob River. Kondaneft also replenished the rivers of the Ob-Irtysh basin with 440,000 sturgeon young, and Sibneftegaz with 140,000 young broad whitefish.

    Employees of the Slavneft-Krasnoyarskneftegaz and RN-Vankor enterprises released more than 650 thousand young sterlet of the Yenisei population into the Yenisei River in the Sukhobuzimsky District of the Krasnoyarsk Territory. The release site was determined by ichthyologists taking into account the hydrological conditions of the water body, temperature, chemical composition of the water, as well as the natural food base necessary for this type of fish. Together with young specialists of RN-Vankor, schoolchildren from the Movement of the First took part in the release.

    Employees of the East Siberian Oil and Gas Company released more than 17,000 grayling fry into the Yenisei River in the Republic of Khakassia. The Yenisei waters were also replenished by RN-Shelf-Arktika – the company’s ecologists released almost 110,000 fry of the endangered Siberian sturgeon into the river. Thanks to the systematic work on artificial stocking, which is carried out by the Company’s subsidiaries, the population of valuable fish species in Siberian reservoirs has grown significantly in recent years.

    During the summer-autumn period, Bashneft released more than 100,000 sterlet, muksun, and salmon fry into the reservoirs of the Republic of Bashkortostan and the Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug, which helps restore the ecosystems of the rivers and lakes of these regions. In September, a batch of 100,000 sterlet fry bred in specialized fish farms of the Holy Mother of God Kazan Monastery was released into the Belaya River in Bashkortostan, as well as into the Nizhnekamsk Reservoir in the Republic of Tatarstan. The sterlet was carefully transported to the release site in vehicles equipped with special devices for supplying and regulating oxygen levels and monitoring water temperature. Activists from the children’s and youth organization “Movement of the First” took part in the release of the fry.

    Workers of the Novokuibyshevsk Oil Refinery, together with their children and activists of the “Movement of the First”, released 13 thousand sterlet fry into the Volga near the village of Vinnovka in the Samara Region. The enterprise has been systematically engaged in the reproduction of the Volga’s bioresources for 10 years.

    Employees of the Syzran Oil Refinery, together with members of the Movement of the First, released more than 40,000 sterlet fry into the Saratov Reservoir. The sterlet is a native Volga fish that, due to a number of unfavorable factors, is on the verge of extinction. Thanks to a special program, in which Rosneft enterprises are also participating, the sterlet population in the Volga is gradually growing.

    The Company’s subsidiaries located in the Irkutsk Region took part in the fish stocking campaign. Verkhnechonskneftegaz released 19,000 carp fry (each fry weighs 0.5 g) into the Belaya River. Under favorable conditions, the carp fry reaches a weight of 1-1.5 kg in a year. Employees of the Angarsk Petrochemical Company released 1,500 fry of the Baikal population of Siberian sturgeon, listed in the Red Book of Russia, into Lake Baikal. This is the second year in a row that ANHK has released this valuable representative of cartilaginous fish. In natural spawning conditions, the survival rate of Baikal sturgeon is low, so breeding fish in an artificial environment and subsequent stocking is an effective way to maintain the population of fish species valuable to the region.

    Department of Information and Advertising of PJSC NK Rosneft October 11, 2024

    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.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    http://vvv.rosneft.ru/press/nevs/item/220890/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Tatyana Nam: “In “Harmony” pure leadership qualities are developed, without any admixture of ambition”

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

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

    As a child, she played “Timurovtsy” and helped her neighbors, and when she grew up, she headed a volunteer organization at the Polytechnic. Director of the Center for Volunteer Projects “Harmony”, Deputy Director of the Humanitarian Institute, Associate Professor of the Higher School of Linguistics and Pedagogy Tatyana Nam became the winner of the St. Petersburg volunteer community award “FORM OF GOOD – TOP25 Kindest People of St. Petersburg” in early September.

    Tatyana Anatolyevna has been running Harmony since 2015, supervising dozens of projects and events. Combining teaching with volunteer work, she has become a mentor for many students, helped them find their place in life, choose the path that their soul lies in. We often see Tatyana Nam surrounded by young people at various events, we know about the volunteers she has trained, but we don’t know much about her.

    So what is Tatyana Nam like? What in life helps her “to be, and not to seem?” Read intoday’s episode of the special project “Persona”.

    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.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    http://vvv.spbstu.ru/media/nevs/polytech-media/Tatyana-we-are-in-harmony-developing-pure-leadership-qualities-without-admixture-of-ambition/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI China: China’s Beibu Gulf Port welcomes first China-Europe freight train

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

    The Beibu Gulf Port in south China’s Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region welcomed its first-ever China-Europe freight train from Minsk in Belarus on Tuesday. Loaded with 3,240 tonnes of imported potash fertilizer, the train covered a distance of 11,341 kilometers on its 20-day journey through Belarus, Russia, and Kazakhstan before crossing into China via Alashankou, a land port located in the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.

    MIL OSI China News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: Iceland hosts Arctic Allies

    Source: Government of Iceland

    On 9 October, the Chiefs of Defence of Iceland, Canada, Denmark, Norway, Finland, Sweden and the United States met in Keflavík, Iceland, to discuss priorities and perspectives in relation to the security situation in the Arctic.

    As the strategic importance of the Arctic continues to grow, the Chiefs of Defence discussed opportunities for increased regional cooperation, including in response to challenges brought about by climate change, economic activities and increased maritime traffic. Two and a half years following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, they also discussed increased Russian military build-up and the importance of maintaining situational awareness in the region.

    These key annual meetings between close Allies serve to coordinate and deepen partnerships and strengthen shared situational awareness. Iceland hosted the meeting, chaired by the Director General of Iceland’s Directorate for Defence, which is part of the Ministry for Foreign Affairs. 

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: IMF Staff Concludes Visit to The Gambia

    Source: IMF – News in Russian

    October 11, 2024

    End-of-Mission press releases include statements of IMF staff teams that convey preliminary findings after a visit to a country. The views expressed in this statement are those of the IMF staff and do not necessarily represent the views of the IMF’s Executive Board. Based on the preliminary findings of this mission, staff will prepare a report that, subject to management approval, will be presented to the IMF’s Executive Board for discussion and decision.

    • IMF staff and the Gambian authorities conducted productive discussions on economic policies to conclude the second review of the program under the Extended Credit Facility (ECF) arrangement.
    • Economic recovery is strengthening while inflation has decelerated to single digits.
    • The Gambia’s reform agenda is advancing despite challenges to fiscal policy.
    • The IMF remains committed to supporting The Gambia and discussions will continue remotely and in Washington D.C. over the coming weeks to finalize agreement.

    Washington, DC: An International Monetary Fund (IMF) team, led by Ms. Eva Jenkner, conducted productive discussions with the Gambian authorities in Banjul from September 30 to October 11, 2024, on the second review of the program supported under the 36-month Extended Credit Facility (ECF) arrangement, which was approved in January 2024 for total access of SDR 74.64 million (about US$99.5 million). Discussions will continue remotely and in Washington D.C. over the coming weeks to finalize agreement. Subject to later approval by the IMF’s Executive Board, the completion of the review will enable a disbursement of SDR 8.29 million (about US$11.05 million), bringing the total disbursement under the arrangement to about US$33.2 million.

    At the conclusion of the discussions, Ms. Jenkner issued the following statement:

    “The authorities remain committed to their reform agenda and program objectives. Despite significant revenue collection efforts, fiscal outturns of the first half of 2004 were weaker than expected, mainly reflecting strong spending pressures stemming from the OIC Summit, accelerated infrastructure projects and emergency support to the national utility NAWEC. Regardless, ten out of eleven quantitative performance criteria and indicative targets under the ECF-supported program were met. Also, progress was made on significant structural benchmarks, such as audits of large taxpayers and improvements in public financial management, and the public debt-to-GDP ratio remains on a downward trajectory.

    “Economic activity is strengthening. Economic growth is estimated at 5.8 percent for 2024, supported by agriculture, services, telecom, and construction sectors. Tourist arrivals continued to recover, reaching a level closer to the pre-pandemic peak levels. Remittance inflows also strengthened. Inflation declined to 9.8 percent at end-August 2024, from a peak of 18.5 percent at end-2022.

    “Policy discussions focused on the implementation of the National Development Strategy for 2023-27 and further support for the structural transformation of the economy.

    “The Central Bank of The Gambia is committed to maintaining a monetary policy stance consistent with a convergence of the inflation rate towards its medium-term objective of 5 percent. It will also remain vigilant to ensure a market-determined exchange rate, a smooth functioning of the foreign exchange market, as well as a strong financial position.

    “While fiscal policy in 2024 remains largely anchored on the parameters of the budget approved by the National Assembly, the strong spending pressures from the OIC Summit and emergency support to NAWEC entailed major reallocations across budget lines, putting pressure on social spending. Staff advised the authorities to maintain fiscal responsibility and vigorously pursue their domestic resource mobilization and reform of state-owned enterprises (SOEs) to increase the room for responding to large social and developmental needs and protecting the most vulnerable. Structural reforms under the program cover domestic revenue mobilization, public financial management, governance and transparency, management of SOEs, the business environment, and addressing climate-related risks and vulnerabilities. The medium-term fiscal framework aims to further reduce debt vulnerabilities.

    “We reaffirm our commitment to supporting The Gambia and the IMF team and the Gambian authorities will continue their constructive dialogue to conclude the second review of the ECF in time for the expected Board approval at end-December.

    “The mission would like to thank the Gambian authorities for their kind hospitality and candid discussions.”

    The mission met with His Excellency President of the Republic Barrow; His Excellency Vice-President Jallow; Minister of Finance and Economic Affairs, Seedy Keita; Minister of Public Service, Administrative Reforms and Policy, Baboucarr Bouy; Governor of the Central Bank of The Gambia, Buah Saidy; Commissioner General of the Gambia Revenue Authority, Yankuba Darboe; National Auditor General, Modou Ceesay; and senior government and central bank officials. The mission team also had fruitful discussions with representatives of the private sector, civil society, and development partners.

    IMF Communications Department
    MEDIA RELATIONS

    PRESS OFFICER: Julie Ziegler

    Phone: +1 202 623-7100Email: MEDIA@IMF.org

    @IMFSpokesperson

    https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2024/10/11/pr-24367-the-gambia-imf-staff-concludes-visit-to-the-gambia

    MIL OSI

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Yandex Museum x HSE Design School: “New Life for Everyday Things” Opens in St. Petersburg

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: State University Higher School of Economics – State University Higher School of Economics –

    Project curators: Sasha Puchkova and Maria Stepanova.

    Participants of the exhibition: Sofia Kucheryavaya, Anastasia Vokina, Darius Nazarov, Ksenia Chepanova, Maria Kostyukova, Natalia Ozhereleva, Pavel Vasiliev, Alexandra Pokotilova, Valeria Tsaregorodtseva, Victoria Lunina, Egor Ugrimov, Sofia Perova, Sofia Bakhtina, Anastasia Kogteva, Boris Gladyshev, Vasilina Kovalenko, Vladislav Khegai, Maxim Tatarintsev, Maria Kaznacheeva, Polina Braginets, Tatyana Pichugina, Darius Ryapolova, Kirill Ostanin, Ekaterina Shupik, Ksenia Vinogradova, Polina Pribludova.

    The exhibition “New Life of Ordinary Things” will be held from October 11 to November 30 at the address: St. Petersburg, Nevsky Prospekt, 68a. Admission is free.

    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.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    http://desizhn.hse.ru/nevs/4308

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Canada: Creating good-paying jobs and growing the economy alongside ASEAN partners

    Source: Government of Canada – Prime Minister

    Canada is investing in progress, prosperity, and fairness for every generation. At home, we are attracting billions of dollars in manufacturing to our communities and putting Canadians at the forefront of opportunity. But in the global economy, shared challenges require shared solutions. That’s where Canada’s partnership with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) comes in.

    For over half a century, ASEAN has worked with Dialogue Partners, like Canada, to make life better for people on both sides of the Pacific. Our relationship is built on shared priorities – from climate action to peace and security to good-paying jobs. Since 2015, Canada’s trade with ASEAN has nearly doubled. Last year, ASEAN Member States represented Canada’s fourth largest merchandise trading partner, with increased partnerships in agriculture, agrifood, and digital trade. With Canada’s Indo-Pacific Strategy, we are building on this partnership with closer ties and shared prosperity.

    The Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, today concluded his participation at the ASEAN Summit in Vientiane, Laos. As the first Canadian Prime Minister to visit Laos, the Prime Minister strengthened ties with ASEAN partners and expanded Canada’s footprint in one of the world’s fastest growing economic regions.

    In Vientiane, Prime Minister Trudeau announced that Canada will be upgrading its offices in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, and Vientiane, Laos, to embassies with resident ambassadors, meaning that Canada will be represented by full embassies in all 10 ASEAN Member States. He also noted the upcoming Team Canada Trade Mission to Indonesia and the Philippines later this year and announced new missions to Thailand and Cambodia in 2025. Building on our Indo-Pacific Strategy, these efforts will help forge even stronger ties between Canada and ASEAN, create good jobs for Canadians and peoples of ASEAN countries, and expand Canada’s presence in the Indo-Pacific.

    In a joint statement, Canada and ASEAN partners reaffirmed their commitment to enhancing dialogue on global challenges, advancing efforts on shared priorities, and building a people-centred ASEAN region that is connected, inclusive, and resilient. The Prime Minister emphasized that Canada will continue to be a partner in promoting peace, security, and prosperity in the region.

    In support of these efforts, the Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, highlighted an over $128 million package of measures to deepen ties with ASEAN.

    The effects of climate change are being felt more than ever, and this is having a devastating impact on countries around the world, including ASEAN Member States. That’s why the federal government is investing over $84 million in the region to fight climate change, support innovation, and protect the environment. Our investments aim to:

    • Advance clean growth and conservation initiatives, such as Laos’ Monsoon Wind Power Project, the Lao Landscapes and Livelihoods Project, and the Mekong River Commission.
    • Reduce greenhouse gas emissions in some of the world’s highest-emitting developing countries.
    • Improve resilience to natural disasters through enhanced disaster preparation and management.

    The challenges posed by transnational organized crime and international terrorism affect citizens of ASEAN Members States and Canadians alike. The federal government is investing $21.3 million in initiatives to:

    • Strengthen partnerships between Canadian and Indo-Pacific law enforcement agencies.
    • Crack down on human and drug trafficking, including synthetic drugs, smuggling, and money laundering.
    • Counter international terrorist threats, including terrorist financing and terrorist fighter travel, and address the impacts on children.
    • Help local governments prevent illegal logging and deforestation.
    • Address online cyber scams.
    • Bolster aviation and border security.

    Stability in the Indo-Pacific is a key priority for Canada. We are bolstering peace and security efforts in the region, including by investing $11.9 million in various initiatives to:

    • Build up critical nuclear regulatory infrastructure.
    • Fight malicious cyber actors and strengthen cyber resilience.
    • Support demining and arms control efforts.

    In support of the rights of women and children in ASEAN countries, Canada is investing over $9 million to:

    • Uphold women’s labour rights and improve their participation in underrepresented sectors.
    • Help eliminate forced and child labour.
    • Increase access to prosthetic, orthotic, and rehabilitation services for women and girls with physical disabilities.

    At the ASEAN Summit, the Prime Minister announced an additional $2 million for scholarships and educational exchanges with ASEAN countries, as well as Canada’s intention to seek participation in the ASEAN Digital Track, which will help ensure that Canada has a seat at the table on regional matters ranging from artificial intelligence and cybersecurity to democratic and online rights.

    As work toward a Canada-ASEAN free trade agreement continues, the Prime Minister noted progress on last year’s ASEAN-Canada Strategic Partnership and emphasized his commitment to further strengthen Canada-ASEAN trade and investment.

    The ASEAN region offers unparalleled economic opportunity for Canada. Together, the 10 ASEAN member states represent the fifth largest economy in the world and the third largest population in the world. With the measures announced today, Canadians and Canadian businesses can capitalize on the rapid industrialization and growth of this region. Greater Canadian investment in the region and greater investment from the region into Canada will mean more jobs, more innovation, and more growth. As we create good-paying jobs, fight climate change, and grow our economies, Canada and ASEAN stand united to make life better for people in the Indo-Pacific region and beyond.

    Prime Minister Trudeau thanked the Prime Minister of Laos, Sonexay Siphandone, for hosting a very productive ASEAN Summit. He reaffirmed Canada’s commitment to further strengthening ties between our countries – and with all ASEAN partners. As Canada hosts the G7 Presidency in 2025, ASEAN will be a central part of our work ahead.

    Quote

    “Canada is a proud Indo-Pacific nation. During my visit to this year’s ASEAN Summit, we increased our footprint in this dynamic region – securing trade, investment, and good-paying jobs. As we fight climate change, defend peace and security, and grow our economies, we are putting Canadians at the forefront of global opportunity.”

    Quick Facts

    • ASEAN is a regional intergovernmental organization comprising 10 member states. The objectives of ASEAN are to:
      • Speed up economic growth, social progress, and cultural development.
      • Promote regional peace and stability and respect for justice and the rule of law.
      • Increase collaboration across a range of economic, social, cultural, technical, scientific, and administrative spheres.
    • Together, ASEAN as a regional bloc represents Canada’s fourth-largest trading partner, with over $38.8 billion in bilateral trade in 2023.
    • Last year, Canada and ASEAN launched a strategic partnership to further advance collaboration in strategic areas of mutual interest, including peace and security and economic and socio-cultural co-operation.
    • Canada became an ASEAN dialogue partner in 1977 and is one of 11 partners with this designation.
    • ASEAN Dialogue Partners co-operate on political and security issues, regional integration, economic interests, inter-faith dialogue, transnational crime and counterterrorism, disaster risk reduction, and other areas. Other Dialogue Partners include: Australia, China, the European Union, India, Japan, New Zealand, the Republic of Korea, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States of America.
    • Canada’s Indo-Pacific Strategy advances and defends Canada’s interests by supporting a more secure, prosperous, inclusive, and sustainable Indo-Pacific region while protecting Canada’s national and economic security at home and abroad.

    Related Products

    Associated Links

    MIL OSI Canada News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: Meeting of 11-12 September 2024

    Source: European Central Bank

    Account of the monetary policy meeting of the Governing Council of the European Central Bank held in Frankfurt am Main on Wednesday and Thursday, 11-12 September 2024

    10 October 2024

    1. Review of financial, economic and monetary developments and policy options

    Financial market developments

    Ms Schnabel noted that since the Governing Council’s previous monetary policy meeting on 17-18 July 2024 there had been repeated periods of elevated market volatility, as growth concerns had become the dominant market theme. The volatility in risk asset markets had left a more persistent imprint on broader financial markets associated with shifting expectations for the policy path of the Federal Reserve System.

    The reappraisal of expectations for US monetary policy had spilled over into euro area rate expectations, supported by somewhat weaker economic data and a notable decline in headline inflation in the euro area. Overnight index swap (OIS) markets were currently pricing in a steeper and more frontloaded rate-cutting cycle than had been anticipated at the time of the Governing Council’s previous monetary policy meeting. At the same time, survey expectations had hardly changed relative to July.

    Volatility in US equity markets had shot up to levels last seen in October 2020, following the August US non-farm payroll employment report and the unwinding of yen carry trades. Similarly, both the implied volatility in the euro area stock market and the Composite Indicator of Systemic Stress had spiked. However, the turbulence had proved short-lived, and indicators of volatility and systemic stress had come down quickly.

    The sharp swings in risk aversion among global investors had been mirrored in equity prices, with the weaker growth outlook having also been reflected in the sectoral performance of global equity markets. In both the euro area and the United States, defensive sectors had recently outperformed cyclical ones, suggesting that equity investors were positioning themselves for weaker economic growth.

    Two factors could have amplified stock market dynamics. One was that the sensitivity of US equity prices to US macroeconomic shocks can depend on prevailing valuations. Another was the greater role of speculative market instruments, including short volatility equity funds.

    The pronounced reappraisal of the expected path of US monetary policy had spilled over into rate expectations across major advanced economies, including the euro area. The euro area OIS forward curve had shifted noticeably lower compared with expectations prevailing at the time of the Governing Council’s July meeting. In contrast to market expectations, surveys had proven much more stable. The expectations reported in the most recent Survey of Monetary Analysts (SMA) had been unchanged versus the previous round and pointed towards a more gradual rate path.

    The dynamics of market-based and survey-based policy rate expectations over the year – as illustrated by the total rate cuts expected by the end of 2024 and the end of 2025 in the markets and in the SMA – showed that the higher volatility in market expectations relative to surveys had been a pervasive feature. Since the start of 2024 market-based expectations had oscillated around stable SMA expectations. The dominant drivers of interest rate markets in the inter-meeting period and for most of 2024 had in fact been US rather than domestic euro area factors, which could partly explain the more muted sensitivity of analysts’ expectations to recent incoming data.

    At the same time, the expected policy divergence between the euro area and the United States had changed signs, with markets currently expecting a steeper easing cycle for the Federal Reserve.

    The decline in US nominal rates across maturities since the Governing Council’s last meeting could be explained mainly by a decline in expected real rates, as shown by a breakdown of OIS rates across different maturities into inflation compensation and real rates. By contrast, the decline in euro area nominal rates had largely related to a decline in inflation compensation.

    The market’s reassessment of the outlook for inflation in the euro area and the United States had led to the one-year inflation-linked swap (ILS) rates one year ahead declining broadly in tandem on both sides of the Atlantic. The global shift in investor focus from inflation to growth concerns may have lowered investors’ required compensation for upside inflation risks. A second driver of inflation compensation had been the marked decline in energy prices since the Governing Council’s July meeting. Over the past few years the market’s near-term inflation outlook had been closely correlated with energy prices.

    Market-based inflation expectations had again been oscillating around broadly stable survey-based expectations, as shown by a comparison of the year-to-date developments in SMA expectations and market pricing for inflation rates at the 2024 and 2025 year-ends.

    The dominance of US factors in recent financial market developments and the divergence in policy rate expectations between the euro area and the United States had also been reflected in exchange rate developments. The euro had been pushed higher against the US dollar owing to the repricing of US monetary policy expectations and the deterioration in the US macroeconomic outlook. In nominal effective terms, however, the euro exchange rate had depreciated mildly, as the appreciation against the US dollar and other currencies had been more than offset by a weakening against the Swiss franc and the Japanese yen.

    Sovereign bond markets had once again proven resilient to the volatility in riskier asset market segments. Ten-year sovereign spreads over German Bunds had widened modestly after the turbulence but had retreated shortly afterwards. As regards corporate borrowing, the costs of rolling over euro area and US corporate debt had eased measurably across rating buckets relative to their peak.

    Finally, there had been muted take-up in the first three-month lending operation extending into the period of the new pricing for the main refinancing operations. As announced in March, the spread to the deposit facility rate would be reduced from 50 to 15 basis points as of 18 September 2024. Moreover, markets currently expected only a slow increase in take-up and no money market reaction to this adjustment.

    The global environment and economic and monetary developments in the euro area

    Mr Lane started by reviewing inflation developments in the euro area. Headline inflation had decreased to 2.2% in August (flash release), which was 0.4 percentage points lower than in July. This mainly reflected a sharp decline in energy inflation, from 1.2% in July to -3.0% in August, on account of downward base effects. Food inflation had been 2.4% in August, marginally up from 2.3% in July. Core inflation – as measured by the Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices (HICP) excluding energy and food – had decreased by 0.1 percentage points to 2.8% in August, as the decline in goods inflation to 0.4% had outweighed the rise in services inflation to 4.2%.

    Most measures of underlying inflation had been broadly unchanged in July. However, domestic inflation remained high, as wages were still rising at an elevated pace. But labour cost pressures were moderating, and lower profits were partially buffering the impact of higher wages on inflation. Growth in compensation per employee had fallen further, to 4.3%, in the second quarter of 2024. And despite weak productivity unit labour costs had grown less strongly, by 4.6%, after 5.2% in the first quarter. Annual growth in unit profits had continued to fall, coming in at -0.6%, after -0.2% in the first quarter and +2.5% in the last quarter of 2023. Negotiated wage growth would remain high and volatile over the remainder of the year, given the significant role of one-off payments in some countries and the staggered nature of wage adjustments. The forward-looking wage tracker also signalled that wage growth would be strong in the near term but moderate in 2025.

    Headline inflation was expected to rise again in the latter part of this year, partly because previous falls in energy prices would drop out of the annual rates. According to the latest ECB staff projections, headline inflation was expected to average 2.5% in 2024, 2.2% in 2025 and 1.9% in 2026, notably reaching 2.0% during the second half of next year. Compared with the June projections, the profile for headline inflation was unchanged. Inflation projections including owner-occupied housing costs were a helpful cross-check. However, in the September projections these did not imply any substantial difference, as inflation both in rents and in the owner-occupied housing cost index had shown a very similar profile to the overall HICP inflation projection. For core inflation, the projections for 2024 and 2025 had been revised up slightly, as services inflation had been higher than expected. Staff continued to expect a rapid decline in core inflation, from 2.9% this year to 2.3% in 2025 and 2.0% in 2026. Owing to a weaker economy and lower wage pressures, the projections now saw faster disinflation in the course of 2025, resulting in the projection for core inflation in the fourth quarter of that year being marked down from 2.2% to 2.1%.

    Turning to the global economy, Mr Lane stressed that global activity excluding the euro area remained resilient and that global trade had strengthened in the second quarter of 2024, as companies frontloaded their orders in anticipation of shipping delays ahead of the Christmas season. At the same time downside risks were rising, with indicators signalling a slowdown in manufacturing. The frontloading of trade in the first half of the year meant that trade performance in the second half could be weaker.

    The euro had been appreciating against the US dollar (+1.0%) since the July Governing Council meeting but had been broadly stable in effective terms. As for the energy markets, Brent crude oil prices had decreased by 14%, to around USD 75 per barrel, since the July meeting. European natural gas prices had increased by 16%, to stand at around €37 per megawatt-hour amid ongoing geopolitical concerns.

    Euro area real GDP had expanded by 0.2% in the second quarter of this year, after being revised down. This followed 0.3% in the first quarter and fell short of the latest staff projections for real GDP. It was important not to exaggerate the slowdown in the second quarter of 2024. This was less pronounced when excluding a small euro area economy with a large and volatile contribution from intangible investment. However, while the euro area economy was continuing to grow, the expansion was being driven not by private domestic demand, but mainly by net exports and government spending. Private domestic demand had weakened, as households were consuming less, firms had cut business investment and housing investment had dropped sharply. The euro area flash composite output Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) had risen to 51.2 in August from 50.2 in July. While the services sector continued to expand, the more interest-sensitive manufacturing sector continued to contract, as it had done for most of the past two years. The flash PMI for services business activity for August had risen to 53.3, while the manufacturing output PMI remained deeply in contractionary territory at 45.7. The overall picture raised concerns: as developments were very similar for both activity and new orders, there was no indication that the manufacturing sector would recover anytime soon. Consumer confidence remained subdued and industrial production continued to face strong headwinds, with the highly interconnected industrial sector in the euro area’s largest economy suffering from a prolonged slump. On trade, it was also a concern that the improvements in the PMIs for new export orders for both services and manufacturing had again slipped in the last month or two.

    After expanding by 3.5% in 2023, global real GDP was expected to grow by 3.4% in 2024 and 2025, and 3.3% in 2026, according to the September ECB staff macroeconomic projections. Compared to the June projections, global real GDP growth had been revised up by 0.1 percentage points in each year of the projection horizon. Even though the outlook for the world economy had been upgraded slightly, there had been a downgrade in terms of the export prices of the euro area’s competitors, which was expected to fuel disinflationary pressures in the euro area, particularly in 2025.

    The euro area labour market remained resilient. The unemployment rate had been broadly unchanged in July, at 6.4%. Employment had grown by 0.2% in the second quarter. At the same time, the growth in the labour force had slowed. Recent survey indicators pointed to a further moderation in the demand for labour, with the job vacancy rate falling from 2.9% in the first quarter to 2.6% in the second quarter, close to its pre-pandemic peak of 2.4%. Early indicators of labour market dynamics suggested a further deceleration of labour market momentum in the third quarter. The employment PMI had stood at the broadly neutral level of 49.9 in August.

    In the staff projections output growth was expected to be 0.8% in 2024 and to strengthen to 1.3% in 2025 and 1.5% in 2026. Compared with the June projections, the outlook for growth had been revised down by 0.1 percentage points in each year of the projection horizon. For 2024, the downward revision reflected lower than expected GDP data and subdued short-term activity indicators. For 2025 and 2026 the downward revisions to the average annual growth rates were the result of slightly weaker contributions from net trade and domestic demand.

    Concerning fiscal policies, the euro area budget balance was projected to improve progressively, though less strongly than in the previous projection round, from -3.6% in 2023 to -3.3% in 2024, -3.2% in 2025 and -3.0% in 2026.

    Turning to monetary and financial analysis, risk-free market interest rates had decreased markedly since the last monetary policy meeting, mostly owing to a weaker outlook for global growth and reduced concerns about inflation pressures. Tensions in global markets over the summer had led to a temporary tightening of financial conditions in the riskier market segments. But in the euro area and elsewhere forward rates had fallen across maturities. Financing conditions for firms and households remained restrictive, as the past policy rate increases continued to work their way through the transmission chain. The average interest rates on new loans to firms and on new mortgages had stayed high in July, at 5.1% and 3.8% respectively. Monetary dynamics were broadly stable amid marked volatility in monthly flows, with net external assets remaining the main driver of money creation. The annual growth rate of M3 had stood at 2.3% in July, unchanged from June but up from 1.5% in May. Credit growth remained sluggish amid weak demand.

    Monetary policy considerations and policy options

    Regarding the assessment of the inflation outlook, the dynamics of underlying inflation and the strength of monetary policy transmission, Mr Lane concluded that confidence in a timely return of inflation to target was supported by both declining uncertainty around the projections, including their stability across projection rounds, and also by inflation expectations across a range of indicators that remained aligned with a timely convergence to target. The incoming data on wages and profits had been in line with expectations. The baseline scenario foresaw a demand-led economic recovery that boosted labour productivity, allowing firms to absorb the expected growth in labour costs without denting their profitability too much. This should buffer the cost pressures stemming from higher wages, dampening price increases. Most measures of underlying inflation, including those with a high predictive content for future inflation, were stable at levels consistent with inflation returning to target in a sufficiently timely manner. While domestic inflation was still being kept elevated by pay rises, the projected slowdown in wage growth next year was expected to make a major contribution to the final phase of disinflation towards the target.

    Based on this assessment, it was now appropriate to take another step in moderating the degree of monetary policy restriction. Accordingly, Mr Lane proposed lowering the deposit facility rate – the rate through which the Governing Council steered the monetary policy stance – by 25 basis points. This decision was robust across a wide range of scenarios. At a still clearly restrictive level of 3.50% for the deposit facility rate, upside shocks to inflation calling into question the timely return of inflation to target could be addressed with a slower pace of rate reductions in the coming quarters compared with the baseline rate path embedded in the projections. At the same time, compared with holding the deposit facility rate at 3.75%, this level also offered greater protection against downside risks that could lead to an undershooting of the target further out in the projection horizon, including the risks associated with an excessively slow unwinding of the rate tightening cycle.

    Looking ahead, a gradual approach to dialling back restrictiveness would be appropriate if the incoming data were in line with the baseline projection. At the same time, optionality should be retained as regards the speed of adjustment. In one direction, if the incoming data indicated a sustained acceleration in the speed of disinflation or a material shortfall in the speed of economic recovery (with its implications for medium-term inflation), a faster pace of rate adjustment could be warranted; in the other direction, if the incoming data indicated slower than expected disinflation or a faster pace of economic recovery, a slower pace of rate adjustment could be warranted. These considerations reinforced the value of a meeting-by-meeting and data-dependent approach that maintained two-way optionality and flexibility for future rate decisions. This implied reiterating (i) the commitment to keep policy rates sufficiently restrictive for as long as necessary to achieve a timely return of inflation to target; (ii) the emphasis on a data-dependent and meeting-by-meeting approach in setting policy; and (iii) the retention of the three-pronged reaction function, based on the Governing Council’s assessment of the inflation outlook, the dynamics of underlying inflation and the strength of monetary policy transmission.

    As announced in March, some changes to the operational framework for implementing monetary policy were to come into effect at the start of the next maintenance period on 18 September. The spread between the rate on the main refinancing operations and the deposit facility rate would be reduced to 15 basis points. The spread between the rate on the marginal lending facility and the rate on the main refinancing operations would remain unchanged at 25 basis points. These technical adjustments implied that the main refinancing operations and marginal lending facility rates would be reduced by 60 basis points the following week, to 3.65% and 3.90% respectively. In view of these changes, the Governing Council should emphasise in its communication that it steered the monetary policy stance by adjusting the deposit facility rate.

    2. Governing Council’s discussion and monetary policy decisions

    Economic, monetary and financial analyses

    Looking at the external environment, members took note of the assessment provided by Mr Lane. Incoming data confirmed growth in global activity had been resilient, although recent negative surprises in PMI manufacturing output indicated potential headwinds to the near-term outlook. While the services sector was growing robustly, the manufacturing sector was contracting. Goods inflation was declining sharply, in contrast to persistent services inflation. Global trade had surprised on the upside in the second quarter, likely owing to frontloaded restocking. However, it was set to decelerate again in the third quarter and then projected to recover and grow in line with global activity over the rest of the projection horizon. Euro area foreign demand followed a path similar to global trade and had been revised up for 2024 (owing mainly to strong data). Net exports had been the main demand component supporting euro area activity in the past two quarters. Looking ahead, though, foreign demand was showing signs of weakness, with falling export orders and PMIs.

    Overall, the September projections had shown a slightly improved growth outlook relative to the June projections, both globally and for the major economies, which suggested that fears of a major global slowdown might be exaggerated. US activity remained robust, despite signs of rebalancing in the labour market. The recent rise in unemployment was due primarily to an increasing labour force, driven by higher participation rates and strong immigration, rather than to weakening labour demand or increased slack. China’s growth had slowed significantly in the second quarter as the persistent downturn in the property market continued to dampen household demand. Exports remained the primary driver of growth. Falling Chinese export prices highlighted the persisting overcapacity in the construction and high-tech manufacturing sectors.

    Turning to commodities, oil prices had fallen significantly since the Governing Council’s previous monetary policy meeting. The decline reflected positive supply news, dampened risk sentiment and the slowdown in economic activity, especially in China. The futures curve suggested a downward trend for oil prices. In contrast, European gas prices had increased in the wake of geopolitical concerns and localised supply disruptions. International prices for both metal and food commodities had declined slightly. Food prices had fallen owing to favourable wheat crop conditions in Canada and the United States. In this context, it was argued that the decline in commodity prices could be interpreted as a barometer of sentiment on the strength of global activity.

    With regard to economic activity in the euro area, members concurred with the assessment presented by Mr Lane and acknowledged the weaker than expected growth outcome in the second quarter. While broad agreement was expressed with the latest macroeconomic projections, it was emphasised that incoming data implied a downward revision to the growth outlook relative to the previous projection round. Moreover, the remark was made that the private domestic economy had contributed negatively to GDP growth for the second quarter in a row and had been broadly stagnating since the middle of 2022.

    It was noted that, since the cut-off for the projections, Eurostat had revised data for the latest quarters, with notable changes to the composition of growth. Moreover, in earlier national account releases, there had already been sizeable revisions to backdata, with upward revisions to the level of activity, which had been broadly taken into account in the September projections. With respect to the latest release, the demand components for the second quarter pointed to an even less favourable contribution from consumption and investment and therefore presented a more pessimistic picture than in the September staff projections. The euro area current account surplus also suggested that domestic demand remained weak. Reference was made to potential adverse non-linear dynamics resulting from the current economic weakness, for example from weaker balance sheets of households and firms, or originating in the labour market, as in some countries large firms had recently moved to lay off staff.

    It was underlined that the long-anticipated consumption-led recovery in the euro area had so far not materialised. This raised the question of whether the projections relied too much on consumption driving the recovery. The latest data showed that households had continued to be very cautious in their spending. The saving rate was elevated and had rebounded in recent quarters in spite of already high accumulated savings, albeit from a lower level following the national accounts revisions to the backdata. This might suggest that consumers were worried about their economic prospects and had little confidence in a robust recovery, even if this was not fully in line with the observed trend increase in consumer confidence. In this context, several factors that could be behind households’ increased caution were mentioned. These included uncertainty about the geopolitical situation, fiscal policy, the economic impact of climate change and transition policies, demographic developments as well as the outcome of elections. In such an uncertain environment, businesses and households could be more cautious and wait to see how the situation would evolve.

    At the same time, it was argued that an important factor boosting the saving ratio was the high interest rate environment. While the elasticity of savings to interest rates was typically relatively low in models, the increase in interest rates since early 2022 had been very significant, coming after a long period of low or negative rates. Against this background, even a small elasticity implied a significant impact on consumption and savings. Reference was also made to the European Commission’s consumer sentiment indicators. They had been showing a gradual recovery in consumer confidence for some time (in step with lower inflation), while perceived consumer uncertainty had been retreating. Therefore, the high saving rate was unlikely to be explained by mainly precautionary motives. It rather reflected ongoing monetary policy transmission, which could, however, be expected to gradually weaken over time, with deposit and loan rates starting to fall. Surveys were already pointing to an increase in household spending. In this context, the lags in monetary policy transmission were recalled. For example, households that had not yet seen any increase in their mortgage payments would be confronted with a higher mortgage rate if their rate fixation period expired. This might be an additional factor encouraging a build-up of savings.

    Reference was also made to the concept of permanent income as an important determinant of consumer spending. If households feared that their permanent income had not increased by as much as their current disposable income, owing to structural developments in the economy, then it was not surprising that they were limiting their spending.

    Overall, it was generally considered that a recession in the euro area remained unlikely. The projected recovery relied on a pick-up in consumption and investment, which remained plausible and in line with standard economics, as the fundamentals for that dynamic to set in were largely in place. Sluggish spending was reflecting a lagged response to higher real incomes materialising over time. In addition, the rise in household savings implied a buffer that might support higher spending later, as had been the case in the United States, although consumption and savings behaviour clearly differed on opposite sides of the Atlantic.

    Particular concerns were expressed about the weakness in investment this year and in 2025, given the importance of investment for both the demand and the supply side of the economy. It was observed that the economic recovery was not expected to receive much support from capital accumulation, in part owing to the continued tightness of financial conditions, as well as to high uncertainty and structural weaknesses. Moreover, it was underlined that one of the main economic drivers of investment was profits, which had weakened in recent quarters, with firms’ liquidity buffers dissipating at the same time. In addition, in the staff projections, the investment outlook had been revised down and remained subdued. This was atypical for an economic recovery and contrasted strongly with the very significant investment needs that had been highlighted in Mario Draghi’s report on the future of European competitiveness.

    Turning to the labour market, its resilience was still remarkable. The unemployment rate remained at a historical low amid continued robust – albeit slowing – employment growth. At the same time, productivity growth had remained low and had surprised to the downside, implying that the increase in labour productivity might not materialise as projected. However, a declining vacancy rate was seen as reflecting weakening labour demand, although it remained above its pre-pandemic peak. It was noted that a decline in vacancies usually coincided with higher job destruction and therefore constituted a downside risk to employment and activity more generally. The decline in vacancies also coincided with a decline in the growth of compensation per employee, which was perceived as a sign that the labour market was cooling.

    Members underlined that it was still unclear to what extent low productivity was cyclical or might reflect structural changes with an impact on growth potential. If labour productivity was low owing to cyclical factors, it was argued that the projected increase in labour productivity did not require a change in European firms’ assumed rate of innovation or in total factor productivity. The projected increase in labour productivity could simply come from higher capacity utilisation (in the presence of remaining slack) in response to higher demand. From a cyclical perspective, in a scenario where aggregate demand did not pick up, this would sooner or later affect the labour market. Finally, even if demand were eventually to recover, there could still be a structural problem and labour productivity growth could remain subdued over the medium term. On the one hand, it was contended that in such a case potential output growth would be lower, with higher unit labour costs and price pressures. Such structural problems could not be solved by lower interest rates and had to be addressed by other policy domains. On the other hand, the view was taken that structural weakness could be amplified by high interest rates. Such structural challenges could therefore be a concern for monetary policy in the future if they lowered the natural rate of interest, potentially making recourse to unconventional policies more frequent.

    Reference was also made to the disparities in the growth outlook for different countries, which were perceived as an additional challenge for monetary policy. Since the share of manufacturing in gross value added (as well as trade openness) differed across economies, some countries in the euro area were suffering more than others from the slowdown in industrial activity. Weak growth in the largest euro area economy, in particular, was dragging down euro area growth. While part of the weakness was likely to be cyclical, this economy was facing significant structural challenges. By contrast, many other euro area countries had shown robust growth, including strong contributions from domestic demand. It was also highlighted that the course of national fiscal policies remained very uncertain, as national budgetary plans would have to be negotiated during a transition at the European Commission. In this context, the gradual improvement in the aggregated fiscal position of the euro area embedded in the projections was masking considerable differences across countries. Implementing the EU’s revised economic governance framework fully, transparently and without delay would help governments bring down budget deficits and debt ratios on a sustained basis. The effect of an expansionary fiscal policy on the economy was perceived as particularly uncertain in the current environment, possibly contributing to higher savings rather than higher spending by households (exerting “Ricardian” rather than “Keynesian” effects).

    Against this background, members called for fiscal and structural policies aimed at making the economy more productive and competitive, which would help to raise potential growth and reduce price pressures in the medium term. Mario Draghi’s report on the future of European competitiveness and Enrico Letta’s report on empowering the Single Market stressed the urgent need for reform and provided concrete proposals on how to make this happen. Governments should now make a strong start in this direction in their medium-term plans for fiscal and structural policies.

    In particular, it was argued that Mario Draghi’s report had very clearly identified the structural factors explaining Europe’s growth and industrial competitiveness gap with the United States. The report was seen as taking a long-term view on the challenges facing Europe, with the basic underlying question of how Europeans could remain in control of their own destiny. If Europe did not heed the call to invest more, the European economy would increasingly fall behind the United States and China.

    Against this background, members assessed that the risks to economic growth remained tilted to the downside. Lower demand for euro area exports, owing for instance to a weaker world economy or an escalation in trade tensions between major economies, would weigh on euro area growth. Russia’s unjustified war against Ukraine and the tragic conflict in the Middle East were major sources of geopolitical risk. This could result in firms and households becoming less confident about the future and global trade being disrupted. Growth could also be lower if the lagged effects of monetary policy tightening turned out stronger than expected. Growth could be higher if inflation came down more quickly than expected and rising confidence and real incomes meant that spending increased by more than anticipated, or if the world economy grew more strongly than expected.

    With regard to price developments, members concurred with the assessment presented by Mr Lane in his introduction and underlined the fact that the recent declines in inflation had delivered good news. The incoming data had bolstered confidence that inflation would return to target by the end of 2025. Falling inflation, slowing wage growth and unit labour costs, as well as higher costs being increasingly absorbed by profits, suggested that the disinflationary process was on track. The unchanged baseline path for headline inflation in the staff projections gave reassurance that inflation would be back to target by the end of 2025.

    However, it was emphasised that core inflation was very persistent. In particular, services inflation had continued to come in stronger than projected and had moved sideways since November of last year. Recent declines in headline inflation had been strongly influenced by lower energy prices, which were known to be very volatile. Moreover, the baseline path to 2% depended critically on lower wage growth as well as on an acceleration of productivity growth towards rates not seen for many years and above historical averages.

    Conversely, it was stressed that inflation had recently been declining somewhat faster than expected, and the risk of undershooting the target was now becoming non-negligible. With Eurostat’s August HICP flash release, the projections were already too pessimistic on the pace of disinflation in the near term. Moreover, commodity prices had declined further since the cut-off date, adding downward pressure to inflation. Prices for raw materials, energy costs and competitors’ export prices had all fallen, while the euro had been appreciating against the US dollar. In addition, lower international prices not only had a short-term impact on headline euro area inflation but would ultimately also have an indirect effect on core inflation, through the price of services such as transportation (e.g. airfares). However, in that particular case, the size of the downward effect depended on how persistent the drop in energy prices was expected to be. From a longer perspective, it was underlined that for a number of consecutive rounds the projections had pointed to inflation reaching the 2% target by the end of 2025.

    At the same time, it was pointed out that the current level of headline inflation understated the challenges that monetary policy was still facing, which called for caution. Given the current high volatility in energy prices, headline inflation numbers were not very informative about medium-term price pressures. Overall, it was felt that core inflation required continued attention. Upward revisions to projected quarterly core inflation until the third quarter of 2025, which for some quarters amounted to as much as 0.3 percentage points, showed that the battle against inflation was not yet won. Moreover, domestic inflation remained high, at 4.4%. It reflected persistent price pressures in the services sector, where progress with disinflation had effectively stalled since last November. Services inflation had risen to 4.2% in August, above the levels of the previous nine months.

    The outlook for services inflation called for caution, as its stickiness might be driven by several structural factors. First, in some services sectors there was a global shortage of labour, which might be structural. Second, leisure services might also be confronted with a structural change in preferences, which warranted further monitoring. It was remarked that the projection for industrial goods inflation indicated that the sectoral rate would essentially settle at 1%, where it had been during the period of strong globalisation before the pandemic. However, in a world of fragmentation, deglobalisation and negative supply shocks, it was legitimate to expect higher price increases for non-energy industrial goods. Even if inflation was currently low in this category, this was not necessarily set to last.

    Members stressed that wage pressures were an important driver of the persistence of services inflation. While wage growth appeared to be easing gradually, it remained high and bumpy. The forward-looking wage tracker was still on an upward trajectory, and it was argued that stronger than expected wage pressures remained one of the major upside risks to inflation, in particular through services inflation. This supported the view that focus should be on a risk scenario where wage growth did not slow down as expected, productivity growth remained low and profits absorbed higher costs to a lesser degree than anticipated. Therefore, while incoming data had supported the baseline scenario, there were upside risks to inflation over the medium term, as the path back to price stability hinged on a number of critical assumptions that still needed to materialise.

    However, it was also pointed out that the trend in overall wage growth was mostly downwards, especially when focusing on growth in compensation per employee. Nominal wage growth for the first half of the year had been below the June projections. While negotiated wage growth might be more volatile, in part owing to one-off payments, the difference between it and compensation per employee – the wage drift – was more sensitive to the currently weak state of the economy. Moreover, despite the ongoing catching-up of real wages, the currently observed faster than expected disinflation could ultimately also be expected to put further downward pressure on wage claims – with second-round effects having remained contained during the latest inflation surge – and no sign of wage-price spirals taking root.

    As regards longer-term inflation expectations, market-based measures had come down notably and remained broadly anchored at 2%, reflecting the market view that inflation would fall rapidly. A sharp decline in oil prices, driven mainly by benign supply conditions and lower risk sentiment, had pushed down inflation expectations in the United States and the euro area to levels not seen for a long time. In this context it was mentioned that, owing to the weakness in economic activity and faster and broader than anticipated disinflation, risks of a downward unanchoring of inflation expectations had increased. Reference was made, in particular, to the prices of inflation fixings (swap contracts linked to specific monthly releases for euro area year-on-year HICP inflation excluding tobacco), which pointed to inflation well below 2% in the very near term – and falling below 2% much earlier than foreseen in the September projections. The view was expressed that, even if such prices were not entirely comparable with measured HICP inflation and were partly contaminated by negative inflation risk premia, their low readings suggested that the risks surrounding inflation were at least balanced or might even be on the downside, at least in the short term. However, it was pointed out that inflation fixings were highly correlated with oil prices and had limited forecasting power beyond short horizons.

    Against this background, members assessed that inflation could turn out higher than anticipated if wages or profits increased by more than expected. Upside risks to inflation also stemmed from the heightened geopolitical tensions, which could push energy prices and freight costs higher in the near term and disrupt global trade. Moreover, extreme weather events, and the unfolding climate crisis more broadly, could drive up food prices. By contrast, inflation might surprise on the downside if monetary policy dampened demand more than expected or if the economic environment in the rest of the world worsened unexpectedly.

    Turning to the monetary and financial analysis, members largely concurred with the assessment provided by Ms Schnabel and Mr Lane in their introductions. Market interest rates had declined significantly since the Governing Council’s previous monetary policy meeting in July. Market participants were now fully pricing in a 25 basis point cut in the deposit facility rate for the September meeting and attached a 35% probability to a further rate cut in October. In total, between two and three rate cuts were now priced in by the end of the year, up from two cuts immediately after the June meeting. The two-year OIS rate had also decreased by over 40 basis points since the July meeting. More generally it was noted that, because financial markets were anticipating the full easing cycle, this had already implied an additional and immediate easing of the monetary policy stance, which was reflected in looser financial conditions.

    The decline in market interest rates in the euro area and globally was mostly attributable to a weaker outlook for global growth and the anticipation of monetary policy easing due to reduced concerns about inflation pressures. Spillovers from the United States had played a significant role in the development of euro area market rates, while changes in euro area data – notably the domestic inflation outlook – had been limited, as could be seen from the staff projections. In addition, it was noted that, while a lower interest rate path in the United States reflected the Federal Reserve’s assessment of prospects for inflation and employment under its dual mandate, lower rates would normally be expected to stimulate the world economy, including in the euro area. However, the concurrent major decline in global oil prices suggested that this spillover effect could be counteracted by concerns about a weaker global economy, which would naturally reverberate in the euro area.

    Tensions in global markets in August had led to a temporary tightening of conditions in some riskier market segments, which had mostly and swiftly been reversed. Compared with earlier in the year, market participants had generally now switched from being concerned about inflation remaining higher for longer in a context of robust growth to being concerned about too little growth, which could be a prelude to a hard landing, amid receding inflation pressures. While there were as yet no indications of a hard landing in either the United States or the euro area, it was argued that the events of early August had shown that financial markets were highly sensitive to disappointing growth readings in major economies. This was seen to represent a source of instability and downside risks, although market developments at that time indicated that investors were still willing to take on risk. However, the view was also expressed that the high volatility and market turbulence in August partly reflected the unwinding of carry trades in wake of Bank of Japan’s policy tightening following an extended period of monetary policy accommodation. Moreover, the correction had been short-lived amid continued high valuations in equity markets and low risk premia across a range of assets.

    Financing costs in the euro area, measured by the interest rates on market debt instruments and bank loans, had remained restrictive as past policy rate increases continued to work their way through the transmission chain. The average interest rates on new loans to firms and on new mortgages had stayed high in July, at 5.1 and 3.8% respectively. It was suggested that other elements of broader financing conditions were not as tight as the level of the lending rates or broader indicators of financial conditions might suggest. Equity financing, for example, had been abundant during the entire period of disinflation and credit spreads had been very compressed. At the same time, it was argued that this could simply reflect weak investment demand, whereby firms did not need or want to borrow and so were not prepared to issue debt securities at high rates.

    Against this background, credit growth had remained sluggish amid weak demand. The growth of bank lending to firms and households had remained at levels not far from zero in July, with the former slightly down from June and the latter slightly up. The annual growth in broad money – as measured by M3 – had in July remained relatively subdued at 2.3%, the same rate as in June.

    It was suggested that the weakness in credit dynamics also reflected the still restrictive financing conditions, which were likely to keep credit growth weak through 2025. It was also argued that banks faced challenges, with their price-to-book ratios, while being higher than in earlier years, remaining generally below one. Moreover, it was argued that higher credit risk, with deteriorating loan books, had the potential to constrain credit supply. At the same time, the June rate cut and the anticipation of future cuts had already slightly lowered bank funding costs. In addition, banks remained highly profitable, with robust valuations. It was also not unusual for price-to-book ratios to be below one and banks had no difficulty raising capital. Credit demand was considered the main factor holding back loan growth, since investment remained especially weak. On the household side, it was suggested that the demand for mortgages was likely to increase with the pick-up in housing markets.

    Monetary policy stance and policy considerations

    Turning to the monetary policy stance, members assessed the data that had become available since the last monetary policy meeting in accordance with the three main elements of the Governing Council’s reaction function.

    Starting with the inflation outlook, the latest ECB staff projections had confirmed the inflation outlook from the June projections. Inflation was expected to rise again in the latter part of this year, partly because previous sharp falls in energy prices would drop out of the annual rates. It was then expected to decline towards the target over the second half of next year, with the disinflation process supported by receding labour cost pressures and the past monetary policy tightening gradually feeding through to consumer prices. Inflation was subsequently expected to remain close to the target on a sustained basis. Most measures of longer-term inflation expectations stood at around 2%, and the market-based measures had fallen closer to that level since the Governing Council’s previous monetary policy meeting.

    Members agreed that recent economic developments had broadly confirmed the baseline outlook, as reflected in the unchanged staff projections for headline inflation, and indicated that the disinflationary path was progressing well and becoming more robust. Inflation was on the right trajectory and broadly on track to return to the target of 2% by the end of 2025, even if headline inflation was expected to remain volatile for the remainder of 2024. But this bumpy inflation profile also meant that the final phase of disinflation back to 2% was only expected to start in 2025 and rested on a number of assumptions. It therefore needed to be carefully monitored whether inflation would settle sustainably at the target in a timely manner. The risk of delays in reaching the ECB’s target was seen to warrant some caution to avoid dialling back policy restriction prematurely. At the same time, it was also argued that monetary policy had to remain oriented to the medium term even in the presence of shocks and that the risk of the target being undershot further out in the projection horizon was becoming more significant.

    Turning to underlying inflation, members noted that most measures had been broadly unchanged in July. Domestic inflation had remained high, with strong price pressures coming especially from wages. Core inflation was still relatively high, had been sticky since the beginning of the year and was continuing to surprise to the upside. Moreover, the projections for core inflation in 2024 and 2025 had been revised up slightly, as services inflation had been higher than expected. Labour cost dynamics would continue to be a central concern, with the projected decline in core and services inflation next year reliant on key assumptions for wages, productivity and profits, for which the actual data remained patchy. In particular, productivity was low and had not yet picked up, while wage growth, despite gradual easing, remained high and bumpy. A disappointment in productivity growth could be a concern, as the capacity of profits to absorb increases in unit labour costs might be reaching its limits. Wage growth would then have to decline even further for inflation to return sustainably to the target. These factors could mean that core inflation and services inflation might be stickier and not decline as much as currently expected.

    These risks notwithstanding, comfort could be drawn from the gradual decline in the momentum of services inflation, albeit from high levels, and the expectation that it would fall further, partly as a result of significant base effects. The catching-up process for wages was advanced, with wage growth already slowing down by more than had previously been projected and expected to weaken even faster next year, with no signs of a wage-price spiral. If lower energy prices or other factors reduced the cost of living now, this should put downward pressure on wage claims next year.

    Finally, members generally agreed that monetary policy transmission from the past tightening continued to dampen economic activity, even if it had likely passed its peak. Financing conditions remained restrictive. This was reflected in weak credit dynamics, which had dampened consumption and investment, and thereby economic activity more broadly. The past monetary policy tightening had gradually been feeding through to consumer prices, thereby supporting the disinflation process. There were many other reasons why monetary policy was still working its way through the economy, with research suggesting that there could be years of lagged effects before the full impact dissipated completely. For example, as firms’ and households’ liquidity buffers had diminished, they were now more exposed to higher interest rates than previously, and banks could, in turn, also be facing more credit risk. At the same time, with the last interest rate hike already a year in the past, the transmission of monetary policy was expected to weaken progressively from its peak, also as loan and deposit rates had been falling, albeit very moderately, for almost a year. The gradually fading effects of restrictive monetary policy were thus expected to support consumption and investment in the future. Nonetheless, ongoing uncertainty about the transmission mechanism, in terms of both efficacy and timing, underscored the continuing importance of monitoring the strength of monetary policy transmission.

    Monetary policy decisions and communication

    Against this background, members considered the proposal by Mr Lane to lower the deposit facility rate – the rate through which the Governing Council steered the monetary policy stance – by 25 basis points. As had been previously announced on 13 March 2024, some changes to the operational framework for implementing monetary policy would also take effect from 18 September. In particular, the spread between the interest rate on the main refinancing operations and the deposit facility rate would be set at 15 basis points. The spread between the rate on the marginal lending facility and the rate on the main refinancing operations would remain unchanged at 25 basis points. Accordingly, the deposit facility rate would be decreased to 3.50% and the interest rates on the main refinancing operations and the marginal lending facility would be decreased to 3.65% and 3.90% respectively.

    Based on the updated assessment of the inflation outlook, the dynamics of underlying inflation and the strength of monetary policy transmission, it was now appropriate to take another step in moderating the degree of monetary policy restriction. The recent incoming data and the virtually unchanged staff projections had increased members’ confidence that disinflation was proceeding steadily and inflation was on track to return towards the 2% target in a sustainable and timely manner. Headline inflation had fallen in August to levels previously seen in the summer of 2021 before the inflation surge, and there were signs of easing pressures in the labour market, with wage growth and unit labour costs both slowing. Despite some bumpy data expected in the coming months, the big picture remained one of a continuing disinflationary trend progressing at a firm pace and more or less to plan. In particular, the Governing Council’s expectation that significant wage growth would be buffered by lower profits had been confirmed in the recent data. Both survey and market-based measures of inflation expectations remained well anchored, and longer-term expectations had remained close to 2% for a long period which included times of heightened uncertainty. Confidence in the staff projections had been bolstered by their recent stability and increased accuracy, and the projections had shown inflation to be on track to reach the target by the end of 2025 for at least the last three rounds.

    It was also noted that the overall economic outlook for the euro area was more concerning and the projected recovery was fragile. Economic activity remained subdued, with risks to economic growth tilted to the downside and near-term risks to growth on the rise. These concerns were also reflected in the lower growth projections for 2024 and 2025 compared with June. A remark was made that, with inflation increasingly close to the target, real economic activity should become more relevant for calibrating monetary policy.

    Against this background, all members supported the proposal by Mr Lane to reduce the degree of monetary policy restriction through a second 25 basis point rate cut, which was seen as robust across a wide range of scenarios in offering two-sided optionality for the future.

    Looking ahead, members emphasised that they remained determined to ensure that inflation would return to the 2% medium-term target in a timely manner and that they would keep policy rates sufficiently restrictive for as long as necessary to achieve this aim. They would also continue to follow a data-dependent and meeting-by-meeting approach to determining the appropriate level and duration of restriction. There should be no pre-commitment to a particular rate path. Accordingly, it was better to maintain full optionality for the period ahead to be free to respond to all of the incoming data.

    It was underlined that the speed at which the degree of restrictiveness should be reduced depended on the evolution of incoming data, with the three elements of the stated reaction function as a solid anchor for the monitoring and decision-making process. However, such data-dependence did not amount to data point-dependence, and no mechanical weights could be attached to near-term developments in headline inflation or core inflation or any other single statistic. Rather, it was necessary to assess the implications of the totality of data for the medium-term inflation outlook. For example, it would sometimes be appropriate to ignore volatility in oil prices, but at other times, if oil price moves were likely to create material spillovers across the economy, it would be important to respond.

    Members broadly concurred that a gradual approach to dialling back restrictiveness would be appropriate if future data were in line with the baseline projections. This was also seen to be consistent with the anticipation that a gradual easing of financial conditions would support economic activity, including much-needed investment to boost labour productivity and total factor productivity.

    It was mentioned that a gradual and cautious approach currently seemed appropriate because it was not fully certain that the inflation problem was solved. It was therefore too early to declare victory, also given the upward revisions in the quarterly projections for core inflation and the recent upside surprises to services inflation. Although uncertainty had declined, it remained high, and some of the key factors and assumptions underlying the baseline outlook, including those related to wages, productivity, profits and core and services inflation, still needed to materialise and would move only slowly. These factors warranted close monitoring. The real test would come in 2025, when it would become clearer whether wage growth had come down, productivity growth had picked up as projected and the pass-through of higher labour costs had been moderate enough to keep price pressures contained.

    At the same time, it was argued that continuing uncertainty meant that there were two-sided risks to the baseline outlook. As well as emphasising the value of maintaining a data-dependent approach, this also highlighted important risk management considerations. In particular, it was underlined that there were alternative scenarios on either side. For example, a faster pace of rate cuts would likely be appropriate if the downside risks to domestic demand and the growth outlook materialised or if, for example, lower than expected services inflation increased the risk of the target being undershot. It was therefore important to maintain a meeting-by-meeting approach.

    Conversely, there were scenarios in which it might be necessary to suspend the cutting cycle for a while, perhaps because of a structural decline in activity or other factors leading to higher than expected core inflation.

    Turning to communication, members agreed that it was important to convey that recent inflation data had come in broadly as expected, and that the latest ECB staff projections had confirmed the previous inflation outlook. At the same time, to reduce the risk of near-term inflation data being misinterpreted, it should be explained that inflation was expected to rise again in the latter part of this year, partly as a result of base effects, before declining towards the target over the second half of next year. It should be reiterated that the Governing Council would continue to follow a data-dependent and meeting-by-meeting approach, would not pre-commit to a particular rate path and would continue to set policy based on the established elements of the reaction function. In view of the previously announced change to the spread between the interest rate on the main refinancing operations and the deposit facility rate, it was also important to make clear at the beginning of the communication that the Governing Council steered the monetary policy stance through the deposit facility rate.

    Members also agreed with the Executive Board proposal to continue applying flexibility in the partial reinvestment of redemptions falling due in the pandemic emergency purchase programme portfolio.

    Taking into account the foregoing discussion among the members, upon a proposal by the President, the Governing Council took the monetary policy decisions as set out in the monetary policy press release. The members of the Governing Council subsequently finalised the monetary policy statement, which the President and the Vice-President would, as usual, deliver at the press conference following the Governing Council meeting.

    Monetary policy statement

    Monetary policy statement for the press conference of 12 September 2024

    Press release

    Monetary policy decisions

    Meeting of the ECB’s Governing Council, 11-12 September 2024

    Members

    • Ms Lagarde, President
    • Mr de Guindos, Vice-President
    • Mr Centeno*
    • Mr Cipollone
    • Mr Demarco, temporarily replacing Mr Scicluna*
    • Mr Elderson
    • Mr Escrivá
    • Mr Holzmann*
    • Mr Kazāks
    • Mr Kažimír
    • Mr Knot
    • Mr Lane
    • Mr Makhlouf
    • Mr Müller
    • Mr Nagel
    • Mr Panetta
    • Mr Patsalides
    • Mr Rehn
    • Mr Reinesch
    • Ms Schnabel
    • Mr Šimkus
    • Mr Stournaras
    • Mr Vasle*
    • Mr Villeroy de Galhau*
    • Mr Vujčić
    • Mr Wunsch

    * Members not holding a voting right in September 2024 under Article 10.2 of the ESCB Statute.

    Other attendees

    • Mr Dombrovskis, Commission Executive Vice-President**
    • Ms Senkovic, Secretary, Director General Secretariat
    • Mr Rostagno, Secretary for monetary policy, Director General Monetary Policy
    • Mr Winkler, Deputy Secretary for monetary policy, Senior Adviser, DG Economics

    ** In accordance with Article 284 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union.

    Accompanying persons

    • Ms Bénassy-Quéré
    • Mr Gavilán
    • Mr Haber
    • Mr Horváth
    • Mr Kroes
    • Mr Luikmel
    • Mr Lünnemann
    • Mr Madouros
    • Mr Nicoletti Altimari
    • Mr Novo
    • Ms Papageorghiou
    • Mr Rutkaste
    • Ms Schembri
    • Mr Šiaudinis
    • Mr Šošić
    • Mr Tavlas
    • Mr Ulbrich
    • Mr Välimäki
    • Mr Vanackere
    • Ms Žumer Šujica

    Other ECB staff

    • Mr Proissl, Director General Communications
    • Mr Straub, Counsellor to the President
    • Ms Rahmouni-Rousseau, Director General Market Operations
    • Mr Arce, Director General Economics
    • Mr Sousa, Deputy Director General Economics

    Release of the next monetary policy account foreseen on 14 November 2024.

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Rosneft has implemented the technology for reloading isomerization catalyst without losing its activity for the first time in Russia

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Rosneft – Rosneft – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Syzran Oil Refinery (part of Rosneft’s oil refining unit) has implemented for the first time in Russia a technology for reloading chlorinated platinum-containing isomerization catalyst without losing its activity. The potential economic effect of the proprietary technology developed and implemented will be about 1 billion rubles.

    Development of technological potential is one of the key elements of the Rosneft-2030 strategy. The company prioritizes innovation activities, defining technological leadership as a key factor in competitiveness in the oil market.

    The isomerization catalyst ensures the conversion of low-octane oil fractions into high-octane gasoline. To conduct an internal inspection of the reactors of the low-temperature isomerization unit, it is periodically necessary to unload and then load the catalyst. When unloaded, the catalyst irreversibly loses its activity when in contact with air. Specialists at the Syzran Oil Refinery have developed a technology in which the catalyst does not lose its activity when reloaded.

    High catalyst activity and absence of its deactivation were confirmed by the results of the isomerization unit operation for 10 months. After the unit entered the process mode, an isomerate with an octane number corresponding to the initial specification was obtained.

    Reference:

    JSC Syzran Oil Refinery produces a wide range of high-quality petroleum products – motor gasoline and diesel fuel of the highest ecological class, environmentally friendly low-sulfur marine fuel, liquefied hydrocarbon gases, etc.

    The enterprise is implementing a modernization program with the aim of increasing the depth of processing and maximizing the efficient use of secondary processes to increase the output of high-margin petroleum products.

    At 70% of the Syzran Oil Refinery’s process units, imported protective layer catalysts have been replaced with corporate products – manufactured by the Angarsk Plant of Catalysts and Organic Synthesis, the Novokuibyshevsk Plant of Catalysts, and RN-Kat. The project for the transition to Russian-made protective layer catalysts was developed by the All-Russian Research Institute for Oil Refining (VNII NP), which is also part of Rosneft’s perimeter.

    Department of Information and Advertising of PJSC NK Rosneft October 10, 2024

    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.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    http://vvv.rosneft.ru/press/nevs/item/220854/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: St. Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering (SPbGASU) Graduates – Winners of the International Competition “ArkhGeneration 2024”

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

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

    The results of the International Competition of Graduation Qualification Works (Projects) of Bachelors, Specialists, and Masters in Urban Planning, Architecture, Reconstruction and Restoration of Architectural Heritage, Design, and Decorative and Applied Arts “Archgeneration 2024” have been announced. St. Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering graduates are among the winners.

    The competition was held from August 26 to September 8, 2024. It was organized by the Siberian Federal University, Vitebsk State University named after P. M. Masherov (Republic of Belarus), the Union of Architects of Russia, the Union of Designers of Russia, the Union of Restorers of Russia and the Service for the State Protection of Cultural Heritage Sites of the Krasnoyarsk Territory.

    351 diploma projects participated in the competition. SPbGASU presented 16 projects in the nominations “Urban development of territories. Bachelor’s degree”, “Urban development of territories. Master’s degree”, “Landscape organization of public spaces. Master’s degree”. All of them were awarded first and second degree diplomas, two received the Grand Prix.

    In the nomination “Urban development of territories. Master’s degree” the Grand Prix was won by Anna Baranova with the topic “Urban development organization of the system of placement of sports infrastructure in St. Petersburg” (supervised by Mikhail Vilensky). In the nomination “Urban development of territories. Bachelor’s degree” the Grand Prix was won by Maxim Kolosov with the work “Refunctionalization of the territory of the Kirov plant in St. Petersburg” (supervised by Mikhail Vilensky, Ksenia Veretennikova, Elena Karpenko).

    Project by Maxim Kolosov. Open full size image

    The graduates’ supervisors and teachers of the Department of Urban Planning were also awarded laureate diplomas: Head of the Department Yulia Yankovskaya, Associate Professors Ksenia Veretennikova, Mikhail Vilensky, Oksana Peslyak, Assistant Elena Karpenko.

    “It was not easy to choose a direction for the research, but I settled on the topic of sports, since it is an integral part of people’s lives, regardless of whether we are talking about regular sports activities or recreational shooting at a shooting range on a weekend. Today, mass sports are not only leisure, but also a way of life for many city dwellers; it has a direct impact on the general condition of a person, as well as the urban environment in which sports facilities are located. Therefore, the issue of providing the population with the necessary quantity and quality of sports infrastructure for mass sports is very relevant, and its placement and regulation in the city is a problem that requires attention,” said Anna Baranova.

    Project by Anna Baranova. Open full size image

    According to the author of the project, the study of the evolution in the regulation of sports facilities and the assessment of modern urban planning standards for a number of major cities showed that the shortage of sports infrastructure facilities is largely due to the loss of the binding of the regulation system to territorial planning and urban zoning documents. As a possible solution, Anna proposed a territorial model of placement and a model of regulation of sports infrastructure based on the placement and regulation of sports areas.

    “Work on the study was constantly accompanied by curiosity, which was “ignited” by newly discovered facts or random observations of people playing sports in various places in St. Petersburg. My curiosity in this topic has not exhausted itself, so I intend to continue the study,” shared Anna Baranova.

    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.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    https://vvv.spbgasu.ru/nevs-and-events/nevs/graduates-spbgasu-winners-of-the-international-competition-archgeneration-2024/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Rosneft opened comfortable filling stations on the tourist route of the North-West region

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Rosneft – Rosneft – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    The RN-North-West company, which manages the Rosneft retail network in five northwestern regions of the country, opened two new-format Zerno filling stations after reconstruction. The filling stations on the federal highway R-21 Kola with spacious parking lots have become significant road infrastructure facilities for travelers. The parking area will comfortably accommodate not only several tourist buses, but also campers, which makes the complexes an attractive stopping place for auto tourists.

    Rosneft actively supports initiatives to expand domestic automobile tourism and aims to create comfortable conditions for travelers. Developing roadside service and improving the level of customer service provided at Rosneft filling stations is one of the Company’s priority areas of activity.

    The new complexes are located on the popular automobile tourist route from St. Petersburg to Karelia. Recently, the Company, together with the Information Tourist Center of the Republic, launched the project “Autoroutes of Karelia”.

    The new petrol stations on the Kola highway are comfortable, created using modern technologies and equipment. The 24-hour cafes have coffee complexes, which have expanded the range of hot drinks to 40 types. Customers can independently select options on the order tablet – add alternative milk, sugar or syrup with different flavors, for example, macadamia or mango. The cafe’s offer also includes fresh pastries, hot dogs, sandwiches and desserts. The sales areas of the petrol stations offer more than a thousand products for the road. Customers have access to digital services for remote refueling of the car, and the loyalty program “Family Team” is in effect.

    The territory and the main premises of the filling complexes are divided into functional zones, which increases the speed and level of customer service. The premises also have a barrier-free environment for people with disabilities. The complexes meet all environmental and industrial safety requirements.

    The capabilities of the new gas stations have made it possible to create conditions for the most comfortable long-distance trips. Rosneft is implementing a large-scale program to update retail stations, which is aimed at increasing the comfort of travelers, expanding and improving the offers in the cafes under the Zerno brand. During this year, eight gas stations were updated in the Northwestern Federal District and the work will continue.

    Reference:

    The retail network of NK Rosneft is the largest in the Russian Federation in terms of geographic coverage and number of stations. It covers 61 regions of Russia. The Company’s network of petrol stations includes about 3,000 stations. The Rosneft petrol station brand is one of the leaders in Russia in terms of recognition and fuel quality.

    Earlier, Rosneft signed memorandums of cooperation in the development of domestic tourism with the Moscow Tourism Committee, the Krasnoyarsk, Stavropol and Altai Territories, the Republic of Bashkortostan and the Udmurt Republic, as well as the Arkhangelsk, Samara, Voronezh and Ulyanovsk Regions.

    RN-Severo-Zapad LLC is a sales enterprise of Rosneft Oil Company in the fuel market of St. Petersburg, Leningrad, Novgorod, Pskov and Arkhangelsk regions, with a network of petrol stations/gas stations, oil depots and a fleet of petrol tankers.

    Department of Information and Advertising of PJSC NK Rosneft October 10, 2024

    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.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    http://vvv.rosneft.ru/press/nevs/item/220853/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: About two thousand engineering structures will be washed in the capital by winter

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    Specialists from the city’s municipal services complex will wash engineering structures during preparation for winter. This was reported by the Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Housing and Public Utilities and Improvement Petr Biryukov.

    “Before the onset of stable negative air temperatures, we will carry out large-scale work to flush engineering structures. In total, we will put in order about two thousand objects – bridges, tunnels, underground and overground pedestrian crossings, embankments, piers, fountains and monuments,” noted Pyotr Biryukov.

    Specialists will clean and wash structural elements, concrete, metal and glass surfaces, railings and stairways.

    Each structure is washed using a special technology with neutral solutions that do not damage the surface. Particular attention is paid to small parts of monuments and fountains, which are cleaned manually. Alkaline solutions are used to wash tunnels and bridges.

    The head of the city services complex emphasized that about two thousand workers and over 250 units of equipment (including aerial platforms, watering and tunnel washing machines) will be involved in the work.

    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.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    https://vvv.mos.ru/nevs/item/145076073/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    January 23, 2025
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