Category: Transport

  • MIL-OSI Russia: The site on Marshal Proshlyakov Street will be reorganized under the KRT program

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    The site on Marshal Proshlyakov Street will be reorganized under the integrated territorial development program (ITD). Draft decision published on the mos.ru portal. This was reported by the Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Urban Development Policy and Construction Vladimir Efimov.

    “In the northwest of the capital, as part of the redevelopment of a 69.74-hectare area located at 9 Marshal Proshlyakov Street, it is planned to build a new comfortable microdistrict with housing and related infrastructure. In particular, educational and sports complexes will appear here. As a result of the project, it is planned to create over 11.7 thousand jobs. Investments in the reorganization of the site are estimated at 218.4 billion rubles, and the annual budget effect is 5.6 billion rubles,” said Vladimir Efimov.

    The area allocated for redevelopment is located next to the Strogino metro station and close to the Moscow Ring Road.

    “As part of the reorganization of the site, it is planned to build more than 950 thousand square meters of various real estate, including residential, public, business and social facilities. Thus, an educational complex will be built here, consisting of a school for a thousand students and a kindergarten for 600 pupils, as well as a sports and recreation complex with a hotel with 250 rooms. In addition, the project plans to build a technology park,” said the Minister of the Moscow Government, head of the capital’s Department of City Property Maxim Gaman.

    According to the program of integrated development of territories, multifunctional city blocks are being created, where roads, comfortable housing and all necessary infrastructure are being designed on the site of former industrial zones and inefficiently used areas. Currently, 302 KRT projects with a total area of about 4.2 thousand hectares are at various stages of development and implementation in Moscow. This work is being 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 access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect

    https: //vv.mos.ru/nevs/ite/152310073/

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Sobyanin: Petrovsko-Razumovskaya MCD-1 City Station to Open This Year

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    The construction of the Moscow city station Petrovsko-Razumovskaya of the first Moscow Central Diameter (MCD-1) is proceeding according to schedule. The facility is already about 78 percent complete. Sergei Sobyanin reported this in his telegram channel.

    “It will provide a convenient transfer between the first and third diameters, two metro lines and ground transport. In the future, we will move the MCD-3 stop to the metro and MCD-1, and the transfer time between all types of transport will be reduced several times. By 2030, up to 11 thousand passengers will be able to use the Petrovsko-Razumovskaya MCD-1 city station every day,” the Moscow Mayor said.

    Source: Sergei Sobyanin’s Telegram channel @Mos_Sobyanin

    Currently, the builders are installing engineering systems, finishing the premises, installing a glass mosaic façade with an area of almost five thousand square meters, and commissioning elevators and escalators.

    Particular attention is paid to the organization of work. Anything that can affect the movement of trains is carried out at night during technological windows. In April, their duration was reduced from eight to four and a half hours.

    The Petrovsko-Razumovskaya city railway station will become the largest hub in the north of Moscow and will improve transport accessibility for residents of the Butyrsky, Timiryazevsky and Marfino districts – almost 200 thousand people.

    Sobyanin: Seven Moscow city railway stations will open in Moscow in 2025–2026Sobyanin and Belozerov opened the Moscow city station Shcherbinka MCD-2

    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 access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect

    https: //vv.mos.ru/mayor/tkhemes/12594050/

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Muscovites are now monitoring their health indicators more often thanks to an electronic medical card

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    The popularity of the electronic medical record (EMR) in Moscow continues to grow: in 2024, residents used the service over 400 million times. This is 35 percent more than in 2023. Thanks to the EMR, residents of the capital have become more active in monitoring their health and have access to test results, examinations, and doctor recommendations at any time. This was reported by Anastasia Rakova, Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Social Development.

    “Five years ago, we opened access to an electronic medical record for Moscow patients, which has already become an integral part of the Moscow healthcare system. Thanks to the EHR, patients can see their medical data – tests, examinations and doctor’s appointments – at any time and in any place. In 2024, residents of the capital accessed the service over 400 million times, which is 35 percent more than last year. Since the opening of access to the electronic medical record, Muscovites have used it more than one billion times. This growth in popularity indicates that digital solutions are becoming useful and familiar tools in everyday life. More and more Muscovites are actively monitoring their health: more than 300 million records of pulse, pressure, sugar, oxygen in the blood and other important parameters have already been entered into the “Health Diary”, – noted Anastasia Rakova.

    The most active users of the electronic medical record are city residents aged 35 to 54 years. In second place are Muscovites over 55 years old, and in third place are residents of the capital from 18 to 34 years old. It is noted that most patients most often view their EMRs between 12:00 and 15:00.

    The electronic medical record contains the results of analyses and instrumental examinations, such as CT, MRI, ultrasound and fluorography, including images of medical images. The service provides access to medical examination protocols, information on dispensary observation and medical examination, data on ambulance calls, vaccination information, received prescriptions, hospital discharge summaries and a number of medical certificates. In addition, the EHR provides access to the hospital treatment history and other information online.

    One of the sections of the EHR popular with the capital’s residents is the “Health Diary”. It can contain various parameters: pulse and its rhythm, weight and height, body temperature, blood sugar and oxygen levels, blood pressure and information about angina attacks. Since last year, city residents can add health data to the electronic medical record through the mobile application “EMIAS. INFO” not only in text, but also by voice or using a photo. This option significantly reduces time costs and makes interaction with the service more convenient. In addition, Muscovites can independently add and download medical documents from the electronic medical record, as well as enter information about personal and family history in the sections “My data” and “My family history”.

    Muscovites can now enter data into their electronic medical records using voice and photo

    Last year, a new function became available in the electronic medical record for parents of newborns in intensive care and neonatology departments of children’s hospitals, maternity hospitals and perinatal centers – 24-hour video surveillance. Now parents can remotely monitor the condition of their babies. Moreover, they will be given access to the children’s EMR if the relationship is confirmed in their personal account on the mos.ru portal.

    All Moscow residents who have reached the age of 15 and have a compulsory medical insurance policy can use the electronic medical record. To do this, you need to register on the mos.ru portal. For those with a full account, the electronic medical record is available automatically, and those with a standard account will need to wait up to five working days after submitting an application. If the personal account of a parent with a full account contains confirmed data on minor children or wards, access to their EMR will be provided automatically.

    Moscow has been digitalizing its healthcare system for over 10 years. The basis of this process is now a single digital platform, which is supervised by the Moscow Social Development Complex and the capital Department of Information Technology. It provides personalized management of each patient at all stages – from diagnosis and treatment to follow-up. Thanks to the platform, all data on the health of city residents is available online to both doctors and patients.

    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 access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect

    https: //vv.mos.ru/nevs/ite/152304073/

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI China: China’s robot caregivers provide companionship for seniors

    Source: China State Council Information Office 2

    A new type of robot just landed a job at an eldercare service center in southwest China’s Chongqing Municipality, thanks to its knack for handling the complex emotional needs of seniors.
    The First Social Welfare Home of Chongqing explained that Peipei, the robot, is identified as a female employee. They described her as gentle, patient and good at listening and an eloquent caregiver.
    “If you have any questions, just ask ‘Peipei.’ She can answer anything,” said an 86-year-old senior in the home, who gave her surname as Wang.
    The resident has often interacted with the robot, from chatting to playing e-games, or even asking Peipei to take photos of her and remove any signs of aging in them.
    Wang said Peipei was emotionally exquisite, not only answering questions, but also taking the initiative to care about her. For example, the robot can notice when she hasn’t been sleeping well or is in a bad mood.
    The robot gently comforts her, reminding that her granddaughter, who is studying abroad, might not be able to visit often, but she makes a video call every week.
    Peipei’s name is a homophone of companionship, said Xiang Guohui, a senior algorithm engineer with Mashang Consumer Finance Co., Ltd., the developer of the robot.
    He said the company integrates cutting-edge technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI) and AI psychology and uses a multi-modal emotional large model to build the robot system giving her the ability of intelligent emotional companionship, health and safety protection, entertainment and leisure services, and life assistance management.
    Xiang said that the company’s research team found that the demand for emotional companionship ranks the top for people in senior homes.
    Should elderly residents struggle with memory and repeat themselves, Peipei tirelessly provides feedback.
    “For the elderly who enter care institutions, loneliness could lead to isolation. Appropriate intervention is needed in such cases,” said Liu Min, vice president of the institute.
    She said it was impossible for nursing staff to meet the emotional and psychological needs of every elderly person all the time. While the robot can provide companionship for the elderly 24 hours a day.
    “The value of elderly care robots is not just to assist the elderly in their lives, but also to provide a window for them to get in touch with new technologies and keep up with the development of digital society,” said Liu, adding that many elderly people took the initiative to learn more about humanoid robots and AI technology after Peipei appeared in their life.
    “The elderly care robot technology is still in its infancy. With the comprehensive breakthrough of humanoid robots, they can work in all scenarios in the field of elderly care,” Xiang said.
    By the end of 2024, there were more than 6 million people aged 65 and above in Chongqing, accounting for 18.9 percent of the city’s permanent population. The municipal government has actively explored measures to develop an “intelligent system for senior care services” and make up for the nursing service gap through technical means.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: The proof is in the process: an update on how the new merger regime will work

    Source: Allens Insights (legal sector)

    Thresholds and process guidelines released for consultation 12 min read

    March was a busy month for merger reform. With Treasury’s release of the Ministerial instrument containing the notification thresholds and the ACCC’s release of various process guidelines, we now have some long-awaited clarity on how the new merger regime will work. However, as we move closer to implementation, many key details remain under consultation.

    In this Insight, we review the new notification thresholds and process guidelines, considering guidance from the Ministerial instrument as well as the following ACCC publications:

    1. Transition Guidance (updated 4 March 2025)
    2. Frequently Asked Questions about merger reform (updated 17 March 2025)
    3. Merger process guidelines (released for public consultation on 27 March 2025)
    4. Provisional guidance on criteria for long form notifications (updated 28 March 2025)

    (together, ACCC Process Guidelines).

    Key takeaways

    • On 28 March 2025, Treasury released the Exposure Draft Competition and Consumer (Notification of Acquisitions) Determination 2025 (Draft Instrument) with submissions open until 2 May 2025. The Draft Instrument provides the criteria for when a transaction will require notification—it sets out the monetary and control thresholds, the meaning of an acquisition having a ‘connection’ to Australia, notification exemptions and the proposed form of notification.
    • While the notification threshold values are largely as foreshadowed, there are new details about how the thresholds will apply (eg how to calculate turnover and in respect of which parties).
    • Key details about when the ACCC will be able to grant a waiver are not yet available. The ACCC will consider the object of the CCA, the interests of consumers, the likelihood that the acquisition would meet the notification thresholds and the likelihood that the acquisition would, or would be likely to, substantially lessen competition. The ACCC will likely grant notification waivers within 20 business days.
    • Pre-notification with the ACCC is encouraged at least two weeks before filing. Parties involved in acquisitions in concentrated markets, part of global transactions or that may require a remedy are encouraged to engage in early pre-notification.
    • There will be a short-form and long-form notification, depending on the nature of the transaction. Both forms require parties to include organisational charts, financial information and transaction information. Long-form notifications will be required for horizontal, vertical or conglomerate acquisitions. Long-form notifications also require the production of a broader range of documents, including board documents and those relating to transaction rationale, the acquisition itself, the value of the target, competitive or market conditions and relevant product or service business plans.

    How will the notification thresholds work?

    An acquisition will require notification where:

    • it meets the monetary thresholds;
    • it involves an acquisition of control; and
    • the target is ‘connected with Australia’,

    unless an exemption to notification applies. Certain types of acquisitions must be notified regardless of the thresholds and, as the prohibition on transactions that substantially lessen competition will continue to apply, parties will still need to consider whether an acquisition raises competition concerns even if it is not notified.

    The primary thresholds

    As noted in the Draft Instrument, an acquisition in a target ‘connected with Australia’ (discussed further below), will be notifiable if it meets either of the following monetary notification thresholds:

    • ‘acquisitions resulting in large or larger corporate groups’; or
    • ‘acquisitions by very large corporate groups’.
    ACQUISITIONS ‘RESULTING’ IN LARGE OR LARGER CORPORATE GROUPS ACQUISITIONS ‘BY’ VERY LARGE CORPORATE GROUPS 
    1. Combined Australian turnover of merger parties is at least $200 million (Combined Acquirer/Target Turnover Test); AND
    2. Either: 
      1. the target has turnover of at least $50 million OR
      2. the transaction value is at least $250 million.
    1. Acquirer group has Australian turnover of at least $500 million (Very Large Corporate Groups Turnover Test)AND
    2. the target has turnover of at least $10 million.

    Turnover will be calculated by reference to ‘GST turnover’ on the date of signing and should consider the GST turnover of any ‘connected entities‘.

    There are two tests to determine whether an entity is a connected entity:

    • an entity is a connected entity of another entity if the second entity is an associated entity of the first entity for the purposes of s50AAA of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) (the Act); and
    • an entity is a connected entity of another entity if the first entity ‘controls’ the second entity for the purposes of s50AA of the Act (as modified by s51ABS(2) of the Act).

    In addition, it has been clarified that the $50 million / $10 million turnover aspect of the thresholds now only relates to the target (rather than to at least two of the merger parties, as foreshadowed previously).

    Creeping or serial acquisitions thresholds

    The thresholds for creeping or serial acquisitions are largely as foreshadowed, but there are some new details.

    ACCUMULATED THRESHOLD BASED ON THE COMBINED AUSTRALIAN TURNOVER OF THE MERGER PARTIES ACCUMULATED THRESHOLD BASED ON VERY LARGE CORPORATE GROUPS
    1. Combined Australian turnover of the merger parties is at least $200 million (Combined Acquirer/Target Turnover Test); and
    2. the accumulated target turnover in the last three years in relation to the same or substitutable goods or services exceeds $50 million on the signing date.
    1. the Very Large Corporate Groups Turnover Test is satisfied, ie acquirer has turnover of at least $500 million; and
    2. the accumulated target turnover in the last three years in relation to the same or substitutable goods or services exceeds $10 million on the signing date.

    In essence, these thresholds require an aggregation of current turnover of the proposed target with the current turnover of ‘previous’ targets acquired over the last three years in the same industry. This includes previous targets acquired by a connected entity of the acquirer. Previous acquisitions that have been notified, where target turnover is less than $2 million or where the target is not connected with Australia, are excluded from the calculation of accumulated turnover. There is also an exemption to the serial or creeping acquisition threshold where the proposed target turnover is less than $2 million.

    While the notification threshold takes into account only past acquisitions of the acquirer, the ACCC will consider previous acquisitions by both the acquirer and target as part of its substantive assessment. Both the proposed short- and long-form notifications request details about the merger parties’ relevant past acquisitions.

    Acquisition of shares in ‘Chapter 6’ entities, defined in s51ABJ of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth) (CCA) as listed companies, unlisted companies of more than 50 members or a listed registered scheme, are not required to be notified unless the acquisition results in someone’s voting power in the entity:

    • increasing from 20% or below to more than 20%; or
    • increasing further from a starting point that is above 20%.

    Acquisition of shares in non-Chapter 6 entities (ie private companies, private managed investment schemes and unlisted companies with fewer than 50 members) are not required to be notified unless the acquisition results in the acquirer gaining ‘control’ of the target (and the monetary thresholds are met). ‘Control’ is defined in s50AA of the Act as having the capacity to determine the outcome of decisions about another company’s financial and operating policies.

    Treasury previously alluded to a potential requirement that acquisitions of 20% or more in an unlisted or private company (which met the monetary notification thresholds) be notified, however this is not contained in the Draft Instrument.

    A share or asset is connected with Australia if the share is in a body corporate that carries on business in Australia, or the asset is used in, or forms part of, a business carried on in Australia.  

    Treasury is considering whether the ‘connected with Australia’ test should be expanded to include shares or assets in an entity that ‘intends to carry on a business in Australia’. If it is expanded, this definition may capture transactions without a current nexus in Australia, eg where neither the acquirer nor target group has current market presence.

    The merger legislation empowers the Minister to determine (for a period of five years) a class of acquisitions required to be notified. These determinations apply even if the acquisition does not meet the monetary thresholds or result in control. The Draft Instrument makes certain acquisitions of businesses and land by major supermarkets subject to notification in this way.

    If a merger falls below the notification thresholds, the current ‘substantial lessening of competition’ test (under s50 of the CCA) will continue to apply. The ACCC encourages parties to notify mergers that are likely to substantially lessen competition even if they do not meet the notification thresholds.

    The Draft Instrument includes exemptions to the notification thresholds, namely:

    • acquisitions in insolvency processes by administrators, receivers, managers or liquidators, transfers of control due to inheritance, acquisitions by trustees or nominees and routine trading in financial securities are exempt from notification.
    • however, any acquisitions from administrators, receivers, managers or liquidators are still subject to notification requirements.
    • certain classes of land acquisitions are exempt, namely:
      • acquisitions made for the purposes of developing residential premises;
      • certain commercial property acquisitions by businesses primarily engaged in buying, selling or leasing land, where the acquisition is for a purpose other than operating a commercial business on the land; and
      • extensions or renewals of a lease for land upon which a commercial business is currently being operated.

    In relation to the land acquisitions exemption, the explanatory memorandum for the Draft Instrument clarifies that the exemption does not extend to any merger where land acquisition is a key component of the broader transaction, or where the land acquired is to be used and operated for commercial reasons.

    What are the key aspects of the ACCC’s process?

    The ACCC envisions the pre-notification process can be used to raise any issues and discuss possible areas of focus to reduce the likelihood of extensive information requests and delay of the determination period. Parties involved in concentrated markets, global transactions or that may be required to provide a remedy are encouraged to engage in early pre-notification. As in overseas administrative regimes, we anticipate the ACCC will use this period to identify any possible areas of focus or points of concern and identify additional information that should be covered by the notification before it is formally filed.

    Requests for pre-notification engagement will be made via the ACCC’s online merger portal. Once submitted, the ACCC will endeavour to contact parties within five business days.

    Parties can voluntarily seek a waiver from notification. If granted, notification will not be required. This provides some certainty to parties as to whether or not they need to notify.

    In assessing waiver applications, the ACCC will consider the object of the CCA (ie to enhance the welfare of Australians through the promotion of competition and fair trading and provision for consumer protection), the interests of consumers, the likelihood that the acquisition would meet the notification thresholds and the likelihood that the acquisition would, or would be likely to, substantially lessen competition.

    Waiver applications will not be kept confidential and will be available on the ACCC’s Acquisition Register to allow interested third parties to make submissions. The ACCC expects to make most waiver determinations within 20 business days of receiving a waiver application.

    Additionally, if the parties notify the ACCC of the merger, there is an option for fast-track review under Phase 1, whereby the ACCC can approve acquisitions after 15 business days. The ACCC expects to approve approximately 80% of mergers in 15 to 20 business days via either Phase 1 or the notification waiver process.

    Acquisitions that ‘are notified’ (including voluntarily) or ‘required to be notified’ will be ‘stayed’. This means parties will contravene the CCA if the acquisition is ‘put into effect’ prior to the ACCC’s merger determination.

    The Draft Process Guidelines indicate that putting an acquisition ‘into effect’ does not necessarily require the full transfer of legal ownership. For instance, putting the acquisition ‘into effect’ may include pre-completion activities such as terminating employment of key employees, closing key facilities or integrating IT systems.

    A party will not put the acquisition ‘into effect’ by merely entering into conditional acquisition agreements, such as those with condition precedents, including obtaining regulatory approval, until they become binding.

    FIRB will continue to notify the ACCC of any foreign transactions that may raise competition concerns, as under the current regime.

    There will be short and long notification forms (with the former to be used for acquisitions unlikely to raise competition concerns). Both forms will require the provision of certain documents up front, such as transaction documents, financial reports and organisational charts.

    In addition, long-form notifications will also require the disclosure of additional documents, which may include board documents and those pertaining to transaction rationale, the acquisition itself, the value of the target, competitive or market conditions and relevant product or service business plans.

    The ACCC has provided provisional guidance in relation to when parties should use the long-form notification:

    • Horizontal acquisitions: where parties supply or potentially supply products or services in the same market, and the combined market share post-acquisition is:
      • equal to or greater than 40% and the increment resulting from the acquisition is equal to or greater than 2%; or
      • equal to or greater than 20% but less than 40% and the increment resulting from the acquisition is equal to or greater than 5%.
    • Vertical acquisitions: where a party supplies products or services in a market that is upstream or downstream from a market in which another party to the acquisition supplies products or services; and
      • the party active in the upstream market has an estimated market share equal to or greater than 30% and the other party has a downstream market share of equal to or greater than 5%; or
      • the party active in the downstream market has an estimated market share equal to or greater than 30% and the other party has an upstream market share of equal to or greater than 5%.
    • Conglomerate acquisitions: where the parties supply ‘adjacent’ products or services and one of the parties to the acquisition has an estimated market share equal to or greater than 30%.
    • Other circumstances: the ACCC has suggested that use of the long form may be appropriate even where the above criteria are not met, particularly where:
      • the merger involved a ‘vigorous and effective competitor’.
      • the merger involves the acquisition of a firm developing a significant product in a market where the parties potentially overlap.
      • there is an acquisition of a firm that supplies or controls access to a significant input or asset, eg raw materials or intellectual property, or a firm with a significant user base.

    Merger parties should be aware that, following ACCC approval, a transaction must not be completed until at least 14 calendar days have passed since the approval. This is to allow any interested parties to apply to the Competition Tribunal to review the ACCC’s merger determination.

    Given this, the earliest parties can complete an acquisition is around 29 days after an effective notification is made (noting the ACCC cannot make a decision earlier than 15 business days). Approvals will only be valid for 12 months.

    A notifying party or third party may apply to the Tribunal for a limited merits review of an ACCC merger determination. An application for review must be made within 14 calendar days after the ACCC’s reasons for determination are published on the Acquisitions Register.

    The Tribunal must make its determination within 90 days after the later of the last day on which an application for review could have been made, or the day the applicant gives the Tribunal further information. The Tribunal may extend this period by 60 days once, for no reason, or by another 90 days once, if it is satisfied it will need more time to review relevant materials to the matter.

    What are the transitional arrangements, and which regime should you use?

    Key dates

    The current informal regime will close on 31 December 2025

    If your transaction is not cleared by the ACCC before 31 December 2025, the ACCC will discontinue its review and list the transaction on the public register as having ‘no decision.’ If parties do not receive ACCC informal clearance by 31 December 2025, they will need to re-notify under the new regime if the notification thresholds are satisfied, or if there is a potential competition concern per s50 of the CCA.

    Informal review applications should be submitted by 30 September

    ACCC guidance on transitional arrangements have indicated that any informal review applications submitted after 1 October 2025 are unlikely to be completed before the new regime takes effect.

    Even then, there may be a risk that such a review is not concluded by 31 December 2025 when the informal regime ceases to operate, and parties may have to file again under the new regime.

    Acquisitions approved between 1 July and 31 December 2025

    Acquisitions approved under the informal regime between 1 July and 31 December 2025 will be exempt from filing under the new regime, provided completion occurs within 12 months. Otherwise, parties will need to lodge a new application under the mandatory regime if notification thresholds are satisfied. In such circumstances, the ACCC will rely upon information received under the informal regime to consider an application under the new regime more quickly.

    Informal reviews cleared before 1 July 2025

    Parties whose informal review applications are approved prior to 1 July 2025 must re-apply to the ACCC for an exemption letter from the new regime between 1 July 2025 and 31 December 2025 with updated market shares and information. The ACCC recommends that such a request be made between 1 July and 1 October 2025.

    Filing voluntarily under the new regime from 1 July 2025 is encouraged

    Due to the uncertainty that surrounds the volume of applications the ACCC will receive prior to the closure of the informal merger clearance regime, the ACCC is encouraging parties to voluntarily notify under the new regime from 1 July 2025.

    Depending on when parties are contemplating an ACCC filing or engaging with the ACCC, the following chart may assist with decisions about which regime to use during the transitional period.

    Which regime to use

    Next steps

    Treasury’s consultation on the Draft Instrument is open until 2 May 2025.

    The ACCC’s public consultation on the Draft Process Guidelines is open until 17 April 2025. If you would like to discuss the Draft Guidelines, the impact they may have on your business and the steps you can take to prepare for the new merger regime, please get in touch with us.

    We are preparing for the future of mergers in Australia. You can read our previous Insight for a detailed overview of the legal framework and key elements of the new merger regime, or download our practical summary here.

    For more information on the ACCC’s Draft Analytical Guidelines, please see our Insight.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: “I am a happy person – my work was and remains my main passion in life”

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Novosibirsk State University – Novosibirsk State University –

    Today, the outstanding scientist and teacher, head of the Department of Solid State Chemistry, celebrates his birthday Faculty of Natural Sciences, Novosibirsk State University, Academician Vladimir Vyacheslavovich Boldyrev. He turns 98 years old.

    One of the founding fathers of mechanochemistry, the founder of the first department of solid state chemistry in the USSR, a man of amazingly sharp mind – these are just a few strokes to his portrait. Vladimir Vyacheslavovich himself tells about how his childhood passion for chemistry grew into a life’s work, what real research should be like, how to find your way in science.

    — When did you first become interested in chemistry and who was your first teacher?

    — I started studying chemistry in the 4th grade of school. My first teacher was my father. He was not a chemist himself, but he knew well what books I needed to start with. He turned out to be a good teacher, he knew how to direct a child in the right direction, support, teach the general principles of studying any science. This is much more important than giving specific knowledge.

    — Who do you consider your main teachers?

    — First of all, Professor Alexander Pavlovich Buntin of Tomsk State University. He was one of the first in our country to study the reactivity of solids; in 1941 he defended his doctoral dissertation “Reactivity of Solids and Kinetics of Topochemical Reactions.” It was he who introduced me to this field of science. Initially, I wanted to study coal chemistry, and I had never even heard of topochemical reactions. Then, of course, Corresponding Member of the USSR Academy of Sciences Simon Zalmanovich Roginsky, the creator of the electron theory of catalysis and the theory of active states.

    — Why did you decide to go into science?

    — My childhood coincided with the time when the country sang: “Hello, country of heroes, country of dreamers, country of scientists.” Many people dreamed of going into science, and in our family this also coincided with our parents’ ideas about what the most wonderful occupation in life was. Since childhood, I was surrounded by books, I saw my father looking at minerals through a microscope right at home in our common room crowded with people, the children’s technical station was actively working, which I actively visited. At the age of 13, as a fifth-grader, I participated in the All-Union Chemistry Olympiad for grades 8-10 and, as a winner, was awarded a trip to Artek, where I celebrated the New Year of 1941.

    — What teaching difficulties did you encounter when you came to work at the university?

    — At Tomsk State University, my work involved both teaching and research. From my first days as a student, I worked in the lab at the same time. I started teaching right after finishing my postgraduate studies at TSU — I was assigned to teach a general chemistry course to the streams of geologists, biologists, physicists, and students from the special departments. I also taught a practical course for chemists on inorganic synthesis. My workload was the same as that of university teachers: 1-2 pairs of lectures and 6 hours of practical training every day. So the hardest part was finding time not only to teach classes and prepare for them, but also to do my own research and supervise the research work of students and postgraduates. But it was even harder for my wife — she also worked at the university, and no less than I did, but she also had a small child on her hands, and she also took on all the everyday problems, which were immeasurably more difficult than today. If it weren’t for my wife, I would never have succeeded as a scientist. She, being no less capable of scientific work, loving science and teaching no less than me, having at our meeting no less “initial achievements”, sacrificed her scientific career for her family. Of course, she herself achieved a lot in science, and educated many students, but this was far from her “ceiling” in terms of her abilities.

    — Have you ever experienced fear of public speaking? If so, how did you cope with it?

    – No, I didn’t. I had no time for that. I needed to convey the subject to the audience, and there was no time for self-reflection.

    — What techniques for activating students’ cognitive activity do you use during lectures, seminars or practical classes?

    — I always tried to talk to the audience, to have a dialogue, not to avoid difficult questions, on the contrary — I provoked them myself. I always started classes by getting to know the audience, to understand what background and expectations the students brought to my classes. The assignments for practical classes were selected in such a way that as a result of their completion, joint scientific articles were obtained, many of which are still relevant. It is a great joy for me that I still meet very old people who tell me that they listened to and remember my lectures. I guess I really managed to read interestingly.

    — Have you had any “difficult” students? How did you deal with them?

    — Over more than 70 years of teaching, of course, there were. Whenever possible, I tried to part with them. I didn’t part with some in time, felt sorry for them, for which I later had to pay dearly.

    — Do you have a teaching motto? If so, what is it?

    — You can’t say it better than Academician Budker: “Teacher, educate a student so that he has someone to learn from.”

    — What advice would you give to a beginning teacher?

    – Never stop learning yourself and don’t give up when faced with difficulties.

    — How, in your opinion, should one approach the choice of topic for scientific work?

    — And again, you couldn’t say it better than Academician Budker: “Choose not what to do, but who to work with.”

    — What should real scientific research be like?

    — Unpredictable in advance in terms of the result. A real researcher will not pass by a strange observation, an unexpected result, and will not rest until he finds an explanation for them, perhaps by setting up a whole series of new experiments for this purpose.

    — What advice could you give to a chemistry student who is just choosing his path in science?

    — As the creator of the first department of solid state chemistry in the USSR and still its head, of course, I consider it the best, and our science the most interesting. But seriously, when choosing a path in science, as with any other choice, I advise you to try, analyze and, most importantly, think with your own head.

    — Do you have a hobby?

    “I am a happy person – my work was and remains my main hobby in life.

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

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Polytechnic invites you to the festival “Graduates to students”

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

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

    On April 16, the traditional festival “Graduates to Students” will be held in the “Polytech Tower” space.

    You will hear speeches from Polytechnic University graduates from well-known companies and organizations.

    JSC Positive Technologies (IT) LLC Gazpromneft Information Technology Operator (IT and communications) JSC Kronstadt Marine Plant (shipbuilding) The State Hermitage Museum LLC Setl Group (development) PJSC Severnaya Verf Shipyard (shipbuilding) LLC Titan-Project (design and construction of nuclear power facilities) LLC BorisHof Holding (car dealerships) LLC Volts Group (production of energy storage devices)

    There will also be entrepreneurs at the meeting who will tell you about the most striking aspects of their professional activities, share their experience, secrets and non-obvious patterns of career growth in a specific field of activity, and invite you to practice and internships.

    The festival consists of short speeches by graduates with presentations and answers to questions from the audience. The most active participants of the festival will receive gifts from graduates and the Polytechnic University.

    Starts at 18:00.

    To participate in the festival registration is required.

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

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Portsmouth’s teaching assistant charter set to launch at jobs fair

    Source: City of Portsmouth

    An event to find Portsmouth’s top teaching assistants for schools and academies will launch a charter designed to retain them.

    The Teach Portsmouth Support and Teaching Assistant Jobs Fair on Thursday 1 May from 10am – 2pm at Central Library will showcase employment and training opportunities in education.

    The teaching assistant charter has been created using feedback from a survey and focus group. Teaching assistants shared their views which helped shape the charter into themed areas.

    Councillor Nick Dorrington, Cabinet Member for Children, Families and Education at Portsmouth City Council said:

    “After the success of dedicated jobs fairs and taster sessions for recruiting staff in primary and secondary schools, we now need to tackle retention.

    “While there are national challenges around retaining staff in education, we must respond on a local level by working together with different partners. The charter is a first step and sets out a series of principles, developed in conjunction with school staff.”

    Teach Portsmouth has successfully recruited 18 school staff since launching these events. Others have started training with the Community Learning Service, completing functional skills in maths and English.

    Hannah Chalmers, recruitment adviser at Thinking Schools Academy Trust joined teaching assistants and a head teacher to develop the charter.

    Thinking Schools Academy Trust has six schools in the city and are exhibiting at the fair in May. Hannah said:

    “The teaching assistant charter is based on what staff want when it comes to working in education.

    “I was part of the focus group that developed the charter. It was clear that attendees wanted their voices heard. The charter allows schools the freedom to adopt initiatives that will improve staff retention, ensuring those affected by the charter feel valued.”

    An action plan has been developed alongside the charter, using seven different themes that came from the survey. These themes include access to accredited training, being recognised and career development opportunities.

    Using these themes, specific initiatives have been identified within the action plan to support retention.

    Examples include rewarding and recognising staff through the Teach Portsmouth Awards, developing an online training directory and sharing best practice with schools.

    Nisha Chacko, a teaching assistant at St Edmund’s Catholic School said:

    “I am proud to work as a teaching assistant in Portsmouth supporting pupils in my school. I was involved in the creation of the charter. This is a fantastic opportunity for schools who sign up to make a difference.

    “I love my job and believe this charter will help schools recruit and retain the very best professionals in the city.”

    Councillor Nick Dorrington will sign the charter in an official unveiling at the Teach Portsmouth Support and Teaching Assistant Jobs Fair.

    For more information about the event and to get your ticket, visit www.teachportsmouth.co.uk/TA.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI: Nokia and Fibrus announce five-year deal for Nokia Deepfield solution

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Press Release
    Nokia and Fibrus announce five-year deal for Nokia Deepfield solution

    • 100,000 customers already connected to the network, with plans for further expansion.
    • The scalability of Nokia Deepfield applications will allow Fibrus to control and expand its network cost-effectively.

    8 April 2025
    Espoo, Finland – Nokia and Fibrus, a leading provider of broadband services across Northern Ireland and Cumbria, have signed a five-year agreement to deploy the Nokia Deepfield solution across its growing network following a successful trial. This partnership will enhance Fibrus’ ability to protect its network from cyber threats like DDoS attacks and manage the increasing demand for high-quality broadband services.

    As Fibrus expands its network, which has already connected over 100,000 customers and delivered connectivity to almost 400,000 premises, the Nokia Deepfield solution will provide critical network analytics capabilities, giving Fibrus greater insight into the nature of the traffic flowing through its infrastructure. This will allow Fibrus to optimize network resources, ensuring that customers continue to receive reliable, high-performance broadband.

    “Our commitment to guarantee exceptional service for our customers means that we’re always looking for ways to innovate and improve our network. The Deepfield solution from Nokia gives us the tools to understand our traffic better, protect against potential threats, and reduce operational costs. This partnership allows us to futureproof the digital infrastructure in the areas we serve, maintaining the highest level of service and security for our 100,000-strong customer base,” said Shane Haslem, COO at Fibrus.

    Fibrus will proactively manage the rapid growth of its network, driven by a 50% take-up rate of FTTH services, including 2 Gbps products. Additionally, the scalability of the Nokia Deepfield solution will enable Fibrus to cost-effectively manage future service expansions, such as 25/50/100G PON technologies.

    “The Nokia Deepfield solution brings advanced network analytics, ensuring that Fibrus can maintain a secure and reliable network. As a full-solution provider for FTTH operators, Nokia delivers high-performance, purpose-built technologies that integrate seamlessly into existing infrastructure, offering long-term support for smart, scalable operations. This successful rollout with Fibrus demonstrates the reliability and robustness of Nokia’s technology in supporting the company’s goal of delivering an enhanced customer experience,” added Paul Alexander, Vice President and Country General Manager of UK&I at Nokia.

    In 2020, Nokia was selected by Fibrus to support the delivery of high-speed broadband services to underserved rural and regional homes and businesses in some of the hardest to reach areas of Northern Ireland. The company has been a key provider of Access Technology and resources to deliver future-proofed and industry-leading connectivity, which underpins Fibrus’ service offering.

    Multimedia, technical information and related news 
    Product Page: Nokia Deepfield
    Product Page: Deepfield Cloud Intelligence
    Product Page: Deepfield Defender

    About Nokia 
    At Nokia, we create technology that helps the world act together. 

    As a B2B technology innovation leader, we are pioneering networks that sense, think and act by leveraging our work across mobile, fixed and cloud networks. In addition, we create value with intellectual property and long-term research, led by the award-winning Nokia Bell Labs, which is celebrating 100 years of innovation. 

    With truly open architectures that seamlessly integrate into any ecosystem, our high-performance networks create new opportunities for monetization and scale. Service providers, enterprises and partners worldwide trust Nokia to deliver secure, reliable and sustainable networks today – and work with us to create the digital services and applications of the future.

    About Fibrus
    https://fibrus.com/

    Media inquiries
    Nokia Press Office
    Email: Press.Services@nokia.com

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    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Panasonic Connect to Participate in Trial Experiment of Facial Recognition to Enable Walk-through Ticket Gates at East Japan Railway Company Shinkansen Station

    Source: Panasonic

    Headline: Panasonic Connect to Participate in Trial Experiment of Facial Recognition to Enable Walk-through Ticket Gates at East Japan Railway Company Shinkansen Station

    Panasonic Connect’s facial recognition technology has been developed through more than 40 years of experience in camera image processing and deep learning technology to learn facial features, and has received the world’s highest rating* in the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) facial recognition benchmark test (NIST FRVT 1:1). The system is not easily affected by facial orientation, changes over time, glasses, masks, etc., and can be used comfortably. So far, Panasonic Connect has deployed systems that apply facial recognition technology in such applications as rigorous and smooth identification at airports, ticketless entry at amusement parks, cashless payment at stores, and IC cardless entry/exit at offices, and have performed unique facial recognitions more than 300,000 times a day (according to our own research). The company will continue to contribute to the safe, secure, and efficient operation of various authentication sites by combining the world’s most advanced facial recognition technology with user experience (UX) design, which it has achieved through a series of verification experiments with client companies and other organizations.
    About Panasonic Connect’s facial recognition solution (Japanese site)https://connect.panasonic.com/jp-ja/products-services/facial-recognition/top
    * On November 6, 2022, it was published that Panasonic Connect ranked number 1 in the NIST FRVT 1:1 Report using “Mugshot” Front Facial data including racial and ageing which False acceptance rate (FAR) of 1/100,000. Also, On March 26, 2024 Panasonic Connect ranked number 1 in the NIST FRVT 1:N in the 2 category using “Mugshot” Front Facial data including ageing, 1.6 million registered users, and “Border” with face data from various angle of the face and deterioration in image quality. 1.6 million registered users.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Panasonic Energy Enters into Off-site Corporate PPA for Geothermal Power Generation

    Source: Panasonic

    Headline: Panasonic Energy Enters into Off-site Corporate PPA for Geothermal Power Generation

    Osaka, Japan – April 8, 2025 Panasonic Energy Co., Ltd. (“Panasonic Energy”) (https://www.panasonic.com/global/energy/), a Panasonic Group Company, commenced the use of renewable energy power from geothermal power generation on April 1, 2025, having concluded an off-site corporate PPA1 with Kyuden Mirai Energy Co. Through retail electricity supplier Panasonic Operational Excellence Co., Ltd. Panasonic Energy expects to receive approximately 50 GWh of electricity per year, which will reduce CO2 emissions by approximately 22,000 tons per year.
    Since its establishment in 2022, Panasonic Energy has actively promoted its decarbonization efforts in line with its mission of “Achieving a society in which the pursuit of happiness and a sustainable environment are harmonized free of conflict.” Accordingly, by September 2024, all nine of its sites in Japan achieved zero-CO2 factories2 through efforts such as the use of non-fossil fuel energy certificates. At the same time, Panasonic Energy has also been striving to improve its Corporate Renewable Energy Self-sufficiency Rate,3 and in addition to solar power generation (including on-site PPAs) at its sites, it has introduced off-site corporate PPAs for solar power and onshore wind power. By introducing geothermal power generation, which allows for stable power generation unaffected by weather conditions, Panasonic Energy will be able to increase its renewable energy self-sufficiency rate for its electricity consumption in Japan from the current approximately 15% to approximately 30%,4 and the total CO2 emission reduction effect will be approximately 50,000 tons per year. This is equivalent to the annual CO2 absorption of approximately 56 square kilometers of forest. 5
    Panasonic Energy has set the target of a 50% reduction in its carbon footprint6 by fiscal 20317 compared to fiscal 2022 and is promoting the reduction of CO2 emissions throughout its entire supply chain. In particular, it aims to achieve zero CO2 emissions at all of its global factories by fiscal 2029 and will continue to accelerate decarbonization, including by expanding the introduction of renewable energy, in order to reduce its environmental impact and contribute to the realization of a sustainable society.

    1: Off-site corporate PPAA contract method in which a power generation company (or a developer, investor, or the like) who owns renewable energy sources and a power purchaser (e.g., consumer) enter into a purchase and sale contract for renewable energy power at a pre-agreed price and period, and renewable energy power generated by the renewable energy source installed off-site, not in the demand area, is supplied to the power purchaser via the general power grid. (Source: Ministry of the Environment/Mizuho Research & Technologies, About Off-site Corporate PPA)
    2: Zero-CO2 factoryFactories that have achieved virtually zero CO2 emissions by conserving energy, introducing renewable energy, and using carbon credits, etc.
    3: Corporate Renewable Energy Self-sufficiency RateAn indicator showing the proportion of renewable energy supplied from a company’s own dedicated power generation facilities. This rate does not take certificate-only procurement into account.
    4: Basis of calculationCalculations based on actual electricity consumption at all of the company’s sites in Japan in 2024.
    5: Basis of calculationWell-maintained 36 to 40-year-old artificial cedar forests. (Data source: Forestry Agency of Japan’s website)
    6: Carbon footprintThe amount of greenhouse gas emissions in terms of CO2 equivalent throughout the entire life cycle, from raw material procurement to disposal and recycling.
    7: Fiscal XXXXThe fiscal year ending in that specific year. For example, fiscal 2031 refers to the fiscal year ending in March 2031.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-Evening Report: Politics aside, new research shows there are good financial reasons to back working from home

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Dorina Pojani, Associate Professor in Urban Planning, The University of Queensland

    Fizkes/Shutterstock

    In the pre-industrial era, people often lived and worked in the same building. This removed the need to travel to work.

    The separation of home and work occurred much later, during the Industrial Revolution. Factories and offices were grouped in designated areas and residential zoning was invented.

    Even then, people typically spent about 60 to 90 minutes travelling each day, no matter how technology or urban layouts changed. This is known as Marchetti’s constant.

    The rise of the internet in the 1990s – and more recently, the COVID-19 pandemic – sparked a rethink of commuting. As we head towards the polls in Australia’s largest federal election, working from home has become a hot-button issue.

    Labor and the Coalition have been polarised for and against working from home, citing research and even anecdotes backing their positions.

    That was until this week. Opposition Leader Peter Dutton swung from insisting all public servants would have to return to the office five days a week under the Coalition to saying current arrangements would remain unchanged.

    But beyond political squabbles, what does the latest research – including our own on workers in Brisbane – show?

    Impacts of working from home

    Working from home impacts multiple areas including transport, housing, business and health. A systematic literature review on working from home – covering international studies between 2000 and 2022 – shows it:

    • reduces traffic congestion and saves commuting time. However, it financially strains public transport operators due to lower demand.

    • boosts regional growth as workers relocate in search of larger homes with home-office space. But this raises regional housing demand and prices.

    • helps employers cut costs and increase productivity and job satisfaction rates. It can, however, limit promotion opportunities for remote workers.

    • cuts traffic pollution and improves work-life balance. But it may cause social isolation, overwork, strained family relationships and musculoskeletal problems if ergonomic furniture isn’t used.

    These are short-term effects, which may eventually disappear as society adjusts. The long-term effects are harder to predict because government and workplace policies change, as do economic conditions.

    While working from home reduces the need for daily commuting, people may reallocate this saved time to off-peak trips for shopping or recreation.

    As households move from urban cores, urban sprawl increases, resulting in less frequent but longer trips. This may lead to increased overall travel, offsetting environmental benefits. Marchetti’s constant may no longer hold.

    The redistribution of activity zones may create new economic dynamics. Suburbs and regional centres may gain from more local spending, while areas with fewer shops may rely more on online shopping. Traditional CBDs could decline, needing new uses for office spaces.

    New research on Brisbane workers

    Our new research – to be published in a forthcoming book in Elsevier’s series “Advances in Transport Policy and Planning” – assesses the short-term costs and benefits of working from home for individuals, the private and the public sectors in Brisbane.

    Here, a big shift to working from home occurred during the pandemic. We’ve used secondary and proxy data from 2020-2021 when working from home peaked. During that time, Brisbane was in and out of lockdowns.

    We’ve created an accounting tool that lists the costs and benefits of working from home. The net impact is calculated by subtracting total costs from total benefits, allowing us to measure tangible and, when possible, intangible effects.



    We found individuals and the private sector gained the most, while the public sector has felt the greatest losses. Employees have enjoyed more benefits from working from home than expected, while employers have cut spending in CBDs and seen increased revenues in suburbs.

    In Brisbane the total annual working from home (for individuals, the private and public sector) costs amounted to A$557.5 million, while the total benefits reached $4.1 billion. These benefits outweigh costs by a factor of seven.

    However, this is a preliminary look, rather than a comprehensive account. It is important to remember the cost-benefit balance may evolve over time, depending on technological advances, corporate culture and generational preferences.

    Should Australia continue to support working from home?

    Based on our findings and assuming other state capitals perform like Brisbane, we recommend keeping work from home arrangements. But what about public sector losses?

    While public transport revenues have been lower due to working from home, it doesn’t seem to be a major issue for South East Queensland. Here, 50 cent fares were introduced before the last state election and have since become permanent.

    However, the budgets of public transport operators in other states might be different. In those cases, more proactive measures might be needed. This might involve shifting from peak-hour services to frequent all-day routes and adjusting fares for vulnerable customers.

    Some agencies might offer demand-responsive services, like ride-sharing. If all public transport becomes financially unsustainable, community-based cooperatives could step in.

    These shifts in transport patterns may prompt land-use changes. For instance, businesses relying on daily commuters, like restaurants and shops in city centres, may move to the suburbs or pivot to delivery, take-out or meal-prep kits.

    In any case, not all jobs can be done remotely. Certain sectors, such as manufacturing, healthcare, justice and hospitality will continue to require employees to be physically present.

    Dorina Pojani has received funding from the Australian Research Council, the Australian Urban Research Infrastructure Network (AURIN), the Queensland Department of Transport and Main Roads (TMR), and iMOVE Australia Cooperative Research Centre.

    Neil G Sipe has received funding from the Australian Research Foundation.

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

    ref. Politics aside, new research shows there are good financial reasons to back working from home – https://theconversation.com/politics-aside-new-research-shows-there-are-good-financial-reasons-to-back-working-from-home-253629

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI USA: Padilla, Cassidy Introduce Bipartisan Bill to Increase Access to Digital Health Services, Modernize Health Care System

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Alex Padilla (D-Calif.)

    Padilla, Cassidy Introduce Bipartisan Bill to Increase Access to Digital Health Services, Modernize Health Care System

    WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. Senators Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) and Bill Cassidy, M.D. (R-La.) introduced bipartisan legislation to improve digital health services by allowing patients to easily search for and book health care appointments online while protecting personal health information. The Health Accelerating Consumers’ Care by Expediting Self-Scheduling (ACCESS) Act would increase patients’ access to modernized health care, safeguard patients’ personal health information, and ensure certainty for patients seeking digital health services.

    “Every American deserves easy access to physical and mental health care,” said Senator Padilla. “As provider wait times increase, integrating digital health programs into our health care system is essential to efficiently administering care. We cannot let scheduling obstacles prevent Americans in crisis from receiving care when they need it most.”

    “It’s enough to struggle with an illness. Patients should have easy access to the care they need,” said Dr. Cassidy. “There are plenty of tools to provide affordable, quality care. As a doctor, I’m focused on using them.”

    The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated the demand for digital health services and other innovative practices. Under current law, however, there is no distinction between illegal referral practices and scheduling services that reduce the barriers associated with accessing necessary and appropriate care.

    The Health ACCESS Act would remove the regulatory ambiguity, allowing digital health and appointment booking platforms to work together to better serve patients. Doing so would improve access to care via user-friendly services, expand provider choice and scheduling availability, and enhance the overall health care experience and ecosystem. 

    The Health ACCESS Act is supported by Advanced Dermatology and Cosmetic Surgery, Boston Medical Center, Brownsville Community Health Center (FQHC), California Children’s Hospital Association, California Hospital Association, Circle Medical, Chronic Care Policy Alliance, Corewell Health, Digital Health New York (DHNY), GoHealth Urgent Care, Grow Therapy, HANYS (Health Assoc of NYS), Healthcare Leadership Council (HLC), Housing Works Community Healthcare (FQHC), Illinois Hospital Association, Indiana University Health, Intermountain Health, LabFinder, Main Line Health, Manhattan Cardiology, Medical Offices of Manhattan, Memorial Hermann Health System, Octave, SohoMD, Spring Branch Community Health Center (FQHC), Stanford Children’s Hospital, and The Dermatology Specialists.

    Senator Padilla has long been a leader in the fight to make health care more equitable in the United States. Last week, Senator Padilla joined Senators Markwayne Mullin (R-Okla.) and Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) in introducing bipartisan legislation that would increase access to specialty care for rural and underserved Medicare, Medicaid, and Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) patients. Last year, Padilla, Senator Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii) and Senator Cory Booker (D-N.J.) introduced the Health Equity and Accountability Act (HEAA) of 2024 to address health disparities among racial and ethnic minorities as well as women, the LGBTQ+ community, rural populations, and socioeconomically disadvantaged communities across the United States. Additionally, Padilla and Booker introduced the Equal Health Care for All Act, bicameral legislation that would make equal access to medical care a protected civil right to help address the racial inequities and structural failures in America’s health care system.

    Full text of the bill is available here.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Reed Statement on Trump Dismissal of U.S. NATO Representative Vice Admiral Chatfield

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Rhode Island Jack Reed

    WASHINGTON, DC – Today, President Trump dismissed Vice Admiral Shoshana Chatfield, the U.S. Military Representative to NATO, without explanation.

    U.S. Senator Jack Reed (D-RI), the Ranking Member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, issued the following statement:

    “President Trump’s unjustified dismissal of Vice Admiral Chatfield is disgraceful. Admiral Chatfield is among the finest military officers our nation has to offer, and she has distinguished herself as the U.S. Military Representative to NATO. Her 38-year career as a Navy pilot, foreign policy expert, and preeminent military educator—including as President of the Naval War College—will leave a lasting legacy on the Navy and throughout the military. Admiral Chatfield’s record of selfless service is unblemished by President Trump’s behavior.

    “The silence from my Republican colleagues is deeply troubling. In less than three months, President Trump has fired 10 generals and admirals without explanation, including our most experienced combat leaders. I cannot fathom how anyone could stand silently by while the President causes great harm to our military and our nation.

    “I will continue to call out this unconscionable behavior and sound the alarm about the dangers of firing military officers as a political loyalty test. I urge my Republican colleagues to join me in demanding an explanation from President Trump and Secretary Hegseth.”

    The U.S. Senate unanimously confirmed Vice Admiral Chatfield to her post in December 2023.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-Evening Report: We’re hardwired to laugh – this is why watching comedians try to be the ‘Last One Laughing’ is so funny

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Fergus Edwards, Lecturer in English, University of Tasmania

    Amazon MGM Studios

    Last One Laughing is a battle royale for stand-ups. Ten comedians, one room, surrounded by cameras. Laugh once and they’re warned. Laugh again, and they’re out. Last comic left wins.

    It is an international TV phenomenon, in 29 countries from Australia to Iran.

    The latest season is from the United Kingdom, hosted by Jimmy Carr and featuring comedians like Bob Mortimer, Sara Pascoe and Joe Lycett.

    But why do we, whatever our linguistic or cultural background, love watching comedians trying desperately hard not to laugh at each other?

    It works because it’s funny – but it’s not about comedy. It’s about laughter. Philosophers and psychologists have spent hundreds of years thinking about what makes us laugh.

    Here’s what they’ve had to say about laughter – and what they, perhaps, would have to say about Last One Laughing.

    What makes us laugh?

    Comedy takes time, but laughter can take less than a moment. Last One Laughing shows us the three major theories of humour that try to explain moments of spontaneous laughter.

    The oldest is “superiority theory”. English philosopher Thomas Hobbes explained in is 1651 book Leviathan we “maketh those Grimaces called LAUGHTER” when we realise we’re better off than someone else. We “suddenly applaud” ourselves when we recognise our superiority.

    In the new Last One Laughing series, Richard Ayoade nearly catches out two players when, asked what his childhood hobbies were, he replies: “I don’t know. I cried a lot?”

    Irish philosopher Francis Hutcheson disagreed with Hobbes and suggested an alternative: “incongruity theory”.

    In Reflections Upon Laughter (1750) he maintains we laugh in surprise at “bringing resemblances from subjects of a quite different kind from the subject to which they are compared”.

    This happens when we meet one word with two meanings, like in every Christmas cracker joke, or Rob Beckett asking “What did one plate say to the other plate?” and answering “Dinner’s on me”.

    In Jokes and Their Relation to the Unconscious (1905), Austrian founder of psychoanalysis Sigmund Freud suggests our subconscious works to stop us from consciously understanding something that might be socially unacceptable. If we allow ourselves to acknowledge what we think we’re seeing, the energy we had been using to repress ourselves is then “discharged by laughter”.

    Last One Laughing has many, mostly unprintable, moments that illustrate Freud’s relief theory of humour. No-one is at ease when Bob Mortimer’s magic act features a napkin rising into the air at groin height.

    The art of not laughing

    In Anatomy of the Gag (1963), the Czech playwright – and politician – Václav Havel suggests a gag has two phases. We see something and think we know what it is. Then, we see the same thing again – but we recognise it as something different. But the two interpretations can’t both be true! So we know we’ve made a mistake.

    We laugh because of a “surprising quality” that “stems not from the revelation of the unknown, but from the unexpected look at the known”. We laugh because now we know we’re properly seeing the world as it is.

    Comedians laugh at their own jokes because they experience this fresh look at the world before they’ve put it into words. This explains why Mortimer laughs at his own teeth, and Lou Sanders is laughing before she reaches her own punchline. Or, indeed, her own set-up.

    But Last One Laughing doubles our laughs. We watch the actual joke, we get it, we laugh. And then we see comedians desperately trying not to laugh – but we know that they get the joke too! And so we get an unexpected second look at the joke.

    Comedians not laughing when it’s expected is, in itself, a second gag. Our doubled laugh lets us express our understanding of this rather odd thing that’s happening. We’re reassuring ourselves, and anyone with us, that we know what’s going on.

    Understanding the world

    Douglas Robinson’s work in linguistics and Antonio Damasio’s work in neuropsychology suggests our brain and our body learn to respond to the world before our mind has kicked in. We’re physically laughing before we’ve mentally processed what’s funny. We see this response in babies, and it stays with us throughout our lives.

    The feedback that tells us that we’ve understood the world correctly comes from other human beings. So it’s unsurprising we are 30 times more likely to laugh in company. It’s unsurprising that laughter is infectious. And it should be unsurprising that the winning moment of Last One Laughing comes from a game we play with newborns: “peek-a-boo”.

    Last One Laughing helps us understand why we laugh at our own jokes, why we can’t always explain what’s funny, and why gags don’t need words. We’re watching professional comedians get the joke (as we do!) without laughing (as we expect?) but we know that it’s all OK. And, however briefly, we glimpse the world anew.

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

    ref. We’re hardwired to laugh – this is why watching comedians try to be the ‘Last One Laughing’ is so funny – https://theconversation.com/were-hardwired-to-laugh-this-is-why-watching-comedians-try-to-be-the-last-one-laughing-is-so-funny-253935

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: Labor’s $1 billion for mental health is good news for young people in particular – but leaves some gaps

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sebastian Rosenberg, Associate Professor, Health Research Institute, University of Canberra, and Brain and Mind Centre, University of Sydney

    mooremedia/Shutterstock

    The Labor government has announced it would invest A$1 billion in mental health if re-elected to provide more Australians – particularly young people – with “free, public mental health care”.

    The package includes:

    • $225 million to either build or upgrade 31 Medicare mental health centres

    • more than $200 million to build or upgrade 58 headspace services for young people

    • $500 million to establish 20 youth specialist centres for young people with complex needs

    • $90 million to support more than 1,200 training places for mental health professionals and peer workers.

    This is good news – but there are some important things that are left out.

    A focus on youth

    Some 75% of severe mental health problems develop before a person turns 25. We know intervening early improves clinical outcomes as well as prospects for completing education and maintaining employment in the future.

    So this focus on youth mental health is really welcome and needed. If we can execute it properly, it represents an investment not just in young people and their families, but will also see longer-term benefits for communities and the economy.

    Australia’s continued investment in a network of youth mental health services, headspace, is unique and positive. That said, multiple reviews have found there are often issues finding enough staff to provide appropriate care for the young people accessing these services.

    It’s crucial to ensure existing and new headspace centres have properly trained staff to deliver the required services. The new training places are welcome in this regard but will of course will take time to come on stream.

    The youth specialist centres would be new, and could fill an important gap.

    At present, we have federally funded Medicare services for mental health, such as GPs and psychologists. At the other end of the spectrum there are state-funded hospital inpatient and outpatient services for people with more severe problems.

    What has been missing is much in the middle, in the way of community mental health services. The new specialist centres for young people with complex needs may go some way to filling this gap, but we need more detail about how they’ll operate.

    The importance of holistic care

    This funding package has focused on new provisions for clinical and medical mental health care. While this is important, it neglects psychosocial care.

    Psychosocial services help keep people in stable housing, in employment, at school and enjoying some quality of life. This is what really matters to most people.

    The psychosocial workforce can be found in some of the non-government and charitable organisations providing mental health and community services. It includes people with a range of qualifications, with staff such as social workers, peer workers and others, who can help young people stay connected across these social determinants of health, while they receive treatment from clinical staff for their mental illness.

    Of those needing help for their mental health, a large proportion of young people face multiple concerns, including drugs and alcohol, sexual health or other issues such as unstable housing. So rather than simply seeing one clinician, someone with an eating disorder, for example, may need a team including a psychologist, a GP, a social worker, a dietitian, a nurse and others.

    It’s unclear whether the youth specialist centres would bring together multidisciplinary teams such as this, but it’s important they do, including professionals who can provide psychosocial care.

    A young person with a mental illness may also need help with everyday issues.
    ultramansk/Shutterstock

    Psychosocial support services have traditionally been very poorly funded in Australia. One option could be to set up new Medicare mental health centres to be managed by community sector organisations already using team-based service delivery models.

    Ultimately, while having more services is great, we need to think imaginatively and flexibly about who has the skills to best respond to young people’s needs. A heavy reliance on clinical and medical care, without psychosocial care, is a bit like trying to fight with one arm behind our back.

    A national analysis found that in 2022–23, 335,800 people aged 12–64 with severe mental illness would benefit from 21.9 million hours of psychosocial support services. A further 311,500 people with moderate mental illness would benefit from 3.3 million hours.

    Other questions we need answered

    Different groups face different levels of need and different barriers to accessing mental health care. So if we’re establishing new centres, we need to understand clearly things such as where the highest levels of psychological distress are, and what services will need to look like in areas where a high proportion of young people speak English as a second language.

    What’s more, young women are more likely to seek mental health care than young men. We need to ask what’s making accessing services less appealing to young men and address these issues.

    In a nutshell, we need to develop models of care tailored to local circumstances. This should involve working with local communities, rather than looking to impose centralised, one-size-fits-all solutions.

    We also need to know how well new services will be linked to existing services, such as hospitals, GPs, and non-government organisations providing psychosocial care. If we don’t invest properly in coordination, these changes could risk perpetuating the fragmentation which often hampers our current mental health system.

    Finally, we need a new level of accountability so we can tell whether what we’re doing is helping or not. We need regularly reported outcomes – such as hospital admissions among young people with mental illness – so we can understand system quality and performance, address any issues, and build our collective confidence that we’re meeting the needs of Australia’s young people.

    Without this, we risk well-intentioned investments failing to deliver better support.

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

    ref. Labor’s $1 billion for mental health is good news for young people in particular – but leaves some gaps – https://theconversation.com/labors-1-billion-for-mental-health-is-good-news-for-young-people-in-particular-but-leaves-some-gaps-254054

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI China: General strike staged across West Bank

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    A Palestinian man walks past closed stores during a general strike in the West Bank city of Nablus, on April 7, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]

    A general strike took place across the West Bank on Monday against ongoing Israeli assaults on the Gaza Strip.

    Shops, markets, schools, universities, banks, and public offices have been closed, and transportation lines have been stopped due to the strike called by Palestinian factions.

    In the central West Bank city of Ramallah, hundreds of Palestinians took to the streets to condemn the Israeli “crimes” in Gaza, waving the Palestinian flag and chanting slogans demanding an end to the Israeli assaults as they marched through the streets of the city center.

    The strike aims to condemn the Israeli assaults on the Palestinian enclave, which have “killed and destroyed Gaza, with American complicity and support,” and to urge the international community to fulfill its obligations, Issam Bakr, coordinator of the Palestinian National and Islamic Forces in Ramallah, told Xinhua.

    Protests against Israel have also been staged outside the West Bank by those in solidarity with the Palestinians, Bakr said. According to the Palestinian official news agency WAFA, such protests were organized in Tunisia, Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon.

    According to Gaza-based health authorities, 56 people were killed and 137 others injured in the past 24 hours, bringing the total number of fatalities and injuries to 1,391 and 3,434, respectively, since Israel ended the January ceasefire and resumed strikes across Gaza on March 18.

    The overall death toll in Gaza has reached 50,752, with 115,475 others injured since the very beginning of the Israeli military operations in the enclave on Oct. 7, 2023, the health authorities reported.

    In addition, the Israeli strikes further strained Gaza’s health system. According to a statement by Gaza health authorities on Monday, 37 percent of medicines and 59 percent of medical supplies are out of stock in the strip.

    It said vital departments in hospitals are running on generators, which are threatened with shutdown due to fuel and spare parts shortages, adding that over half of cancer and blood disease medications are at zero stock, putting patients’ lives at risk.

    Meanwhile, Philippe Lazzarini, commissioner-general of the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East, warned on social media, “Two million people (in Gaza) are scarred for life with trauma and shock, battling with the invisible wounds of mental health.”

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Trump administration revokes hundreds of visas for foreign students

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    The Trump administration has revoked visas for more than 300 international students across the United States, a move confirmed by universities and U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio as part of a nationwide effort targeting foreign students.

    “Maybe more than 300 at this point. We do it every day. Every time I find one of these lunatics, I take away their visas,” Rubio said during a press conference in Guyana on March 27.

    Over the weekend, the visa revocations were reported by dozens of universities nationwide, including prestigious ones like Columbia, Cornell, Harvard and Stanford.

    Many affected students had participated in pro-Palestinian campus protests. But university officials said that others with no connection to protests had also suffered visa revocations without explanation.

    At Tufts University, Turkish doctoral student Rumeysa Ozturk was arrested by masked immigration agents on March 25 while walking near her home. Video of the arrest showed plainclothes officers taking the 30-year-old into custody as she was heading to break her Ramadan fast with friends, according to her attorney.

    The Department of Homeland Security claimed Ozturk “engaged in activities in support of Hamas,” though they provided no evidence for this allegation. Ozturk co-authored an opinion piece in the student newspaper criticizing Tufts’ response to the Israel-Gaza conflict.

    The Turkish embassy said it was working with U.S. authorities regarding Ozturk’s detention. “Every effort is being made to provide the necessary consular services and legal support to protect the rights of our citizen,” the embassy stated.

    At Columbia University, graduate student Mahmoud Khalil, who has legal permanent residency, was detained by immigration authorities last month.

    Khalil said in his Columbia Daily Spectator opinion piece that the school “laid the groundwork for my abduction” and urged the students not to “abdicate their responsibility to resist repression.”

    “Since my abduction on March 8, the intimidation and kidnapping of international students who stand for Palestine has only accelerated,” Khalil wrote in Friday’s piece.

    The actions extend beyond East Coast schools. The University of Colorado and Colorado State University reported a combined total of 10 students with revoked visas this weekend. Meanwhile, Minnesota State University identified five students whose visas were canceled for unclear reasons.

    In California, the situation is equally concerning so far.

    University of California, Los Angeles reported nine affected international students, while UC Berkeley confirmed six visa revocations — four for current students and two for recent graduates.

    UC Davis officials stated seven students and five recent graduates had their visas terminated, and Stanford University confirmed six visa revocations.

    “The federal government has not explained the reasons behind these terminations,” UC Davis said in a statement as reported by NBC News.

    Universities are scrambling to support affected students.

    “We are focused on supporting the success of all of our students, including international students. Each one of our students is seeking to advance their careers and the lives of their families, and we understand the anxieties that visa revocations cause to impacted students,” reported NBC News, citing University of Colorado.

    The Council of University of California Faculty Associations issued a statement Sunday, urgently calling upon the University of California to address the revocation of visas and deportation of international students.

    “It has been reported that in the past week alone, at least 44 students across the UC system have had their I-20 Student and Exchange Visitor Information System record terminated by the Department of Homeland Security, with at least one deportation occurring,” the statement noted.

    Civil rights organizations have condemned the administration’s actions. The American Civil Liberties Union issued an open letter to universities warning: “The federal government cannot mandate student expulsions or threaten funding cuts to suppress constitutionally protected speech.”

    College officials worry this crackdown will deter international students from studying in the United States in the future.

    The situation is “a far different, unprecedented intrusion by the executive branch” involving “revoking student visas for different reasons than we have seen previously and at higher rates than we have ever seen,” said Violeta Chapin, a University of Colorado Boulder law professor and immigration expert. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Panasonic Group provides monetary and in-kind donations to support earthquake victims in Myanmar

    Source: Panasonic

    Headline: Panasonic Group provides monetary and in-kind donations to support earthquake victims in Myanmar

    Osaka, Japan, April 8, 2025 - The Panasonic Group would like to express its heartfelt condolences to the families and relatives of those who lost their lives in the earthquake that struck central Myanmar on March 28, 2025, and extends its deepest sympathies to everyone who has been affected by it.
    The Panasonic Group has decided to donate a total of approximately 12 million yen (approximately US$80,000) to Japan Platform, a specified nonprofit corporation, and the Myanmar Red Cross Society to aid the relief efforts for the victims.
    Additionally, the Panasonic Group has provided emergency support to Myanmar, which continues to suffer from severe power outages, by supplying essential items such as approximately 900 LED lights and lanterns, as well as about 5,800 dry batteries produced by Panasonic Group companies.
    The above donations and contributions are provided by Panasonic Holdings Corporation Co., Ltd., Panasonic Asia Pacific Pte. Ltd., Panasonic Singapore, and Panasonic Energy Thailand Co., Ltd.
    The Panasonic Group sincerely prays for the swift recovery of the affected areas.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Charges laid in relation to three Bay of Plenty fatal crashes

    Source: New Zealand Police (National News)

    Please attribute to Sergeant Shane Tailby

    Bay of Plenty Police have laid charges in relation to three fatal crashes in the region over the summer period.

    A 47-year-old woman is due to appear In the Opotiki District Court on 10 April, facing charges relating to a crash on State Highway 2, Waiotahe on 23 November 2024.

    She has been charged with driving under the influence of drugs causing death, and driving under the influence of drugs causing injury.

    A 20-year-old man is due to appear in the Whakatane District Court on 6 May in relation to a crash on White Pine Bush Road, Whakatane, on 4 October 2024.

    He faces one charge of careless driving while under the influence of alcohol or drugs causing death, and one charge of careless driving while under the influence of alcohol or drugs causing injury.

    The third person charged is a 70-year-old female, who will appear in the Whakatāne District Court on 20 May in relation to a crash on State Highway 30, Coastlands on 23 January 2025.

    She faces a charge of careless driving causing death.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-Evening Report: If Australia switched to EVs, we’d be more reliant on China’s car factories – but wean ourselves off foreign oil

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Hussein Dia, Professor of Future Urban Mobility, Swinburne University of Technology

    Prapat Aowsakorn/Shutterstock

    Australia has huge reserves of coal and gas – but very little oil. Before the 20th century, this didn’t matter – trains ran on local coal. But as cars and trucks have come to dominate, Australia has become more and more reliant on imported oil.

    Imports now account for around 80% of total refined fuel consumption, the highest level on record.

    If the flow of oil stopped due to war or economic instability, Australia would have about 54 days worth in storage before we ran out. That would be a huge problem.

    But as more drivers switch from petrol and diesel to electric cars, this equation will change. We can already see this in China, where a rapid uptake of electric vehicles has seen oil demand begin to fall.

    On one level, ending Australia’s dependence on foreign oil makes sense at a time of great geopolitical uncertainty. But on the other, going electric would lead to more reliance on China, now the world’s largest manufacturer of EVs.

    Reducing reliance on oil makes clear sense for climate and national security reasons. But going electric has to be done carefully, to ensure Australia isn’t reliant on just one country.

    If the oil tankers stopped, Australia would have just one month of fuel.
    Ryan Fletcher/Shutterstock

    Importing oil makes us vulnerable

    In recent years, almost all of Australia’s refineries have closed. The government spent billions keeping the Geelong and Brisbane refineries open, as well as other fuel security measures, such as boosting domestic fuel reserves and building more storage.

    The last two refineries rely on imported crude oil, as Australian oil from the North-West Shelf largely isn’t suitable for local refining.

    As a result, Australia is more reliant than ever on importing fuels from large refineries in Asia such as South Korea, Singapore and Malaysia. In 2023, around 45,000 megalitres of fuel were imported from these nations.

    Almost three-quarters (74%) of these liquid fuels are used in transport, across road, rail, shipping and air transport. But road transport is the big one – our cars, trucks and other road vehicles use more than half (54%) of all liquid fuels.

    This reliance presents clear energy security risks. If war, geopolitical tension, economic turmoil or price volatility slows or stops the flow of oil, Australia’s cities and towns would grind to a halt.

    In January, Australia had 30 days worth of petrol. Our stores of all types of oil are a bit higher, at 54 days worth. But that’s still well short of the 90 days the International Energy Agency (IEA) requires of member nations.

    Electricity made locally

    Shifting to electric vehicles promises cleaner air and far lower ongoing costs for drivers, as electricity is much cheaper than petrol or diesel and maintenance is far less.

    But there’s another factor – the energy source. Australia’s electricity is all produced and consumed inside its borders, using local resources (sun, wind, water, coal and gas).

    In this respect, electric vehicles offer much greater energy security. A war in the Middle East or a trade war over tariffs would not bring Australia to a halt. This is one reason why China has so aggressively gone electric – to end its soaring dependence on foreign oil.

    Mainstreaming EVs in Australia will mean accelerating production of renewable electricity further so we can power not just homes and industry but charge cars, trucks and buses, too.

    Doing this would boost our energy security, break our dependency on imported oil and drive down emissions.

    EV manufacturing is expanding rapidly with more models, lower purchase prices, improved battery charging times and increasing consumer adoption.

    Globally, over 17 million EVs (battery and plug-in hybrids) were sold in 2024, including 91,000 battery and 23,000 plug-in hybrids in Australia.

    IEA data shows electric vehicles are already reducing oil demand globally, as are electric bikes and mopeds.

    Ending our dependence on oil will be slow. Australia Institute research estimates 8% of imported fuels could be replaced by local electricity once EVs make up 25% of the passenger car fleet. At 100% EVs, we would reduce oil demand by 33%.

    The other two-thirds of demand is largely from trucks, planes and ships. Electric trucks are coming, but the sector isn’t as mature as electric cars. It’s a similar story for planes and cargo ships.

    All electricity in Australia is produced locally. For transport, that’s a boon to energy security.
    Marian Weyo

    Energy security and EVs

    Australia doesn’t manufacture EVs at scale. As a result, we import EVs from the top manufacturing nations. China is far and away the leader, building 80% of Australia’s new EVs.

    Australia is a major producer of critical minerals essential to the manufacture of EVs, as well as other green technologies such as lithium, cobalt and nickel. But China dominates much of the global supply chain for refining these minerals and manufacturing batteries.

    There’s a risk in relying largely on one country for EVs, especially given the present geopolitical instability.

    Australia’s EVs are imported from the top EV nation China and other suppliers.
    Rangsarit Chaiyakun/Shutterstock

    Balancing security and sustainability

    EVs unquestionably offer large benefits for Australia’s energy security by steadily reducing our reliance on imports from volatile global oil markets.

    But this has to be balanced with other security concerns, such as a heightened reliance on China, as well as the privacy and security risks linked to data collection from digitally connected EVs.

    A balanced approach would see authorities emphasise energy independence through renewables and strong support for vehicle electrification through legislative and regulatory frameworks.

    Under this approach, policymakers would work to diversify supply chains, strengthen cybersecurity and encourage local manufacturing of EV components.

    This approach would reduce new security risks while unlocking the environmental and economic benefits of widespread EV adoption.

    Hussein Dia receives funding from the Australian Research Council, the iMOVE Australia Cooperative Research Centre, Transport for New South Wales, Queensland Department of Transport and Main Roads, Victorian Department of Transport and Planning, and Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development, Communications and the Arts.

    ref. If Australia switched to EVs, we’d be more reliant on China’s car factories – but wean ourselves off foreign oil – https://theconversation.com/if-australia-switched-to-evs-wed-be-more-reliant-on-chinas-car-factories-but-wean-ourselves-off-foreign-oil-252388

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: Here’s a simple, science-backed way to sharpen your thinking and improve your memory

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ben Singh, Research Fellow, Allied Health & Human Performance, University of South Australia

    Centre for Ageing Better/Unsplash

    Many of us turn to Sudoku, Wordle or brain-training apps to sharpen our minds. But research is increasingly showing one of the best ways to boost memory, focus and brain health is exercise.

    Our new research reviewed data from more than 250,000 participants across 2,700 studies. We found exercise helps boost brain function – whether it’s walking, cycling, yoga, dancing, or even playing active video games such as Pokémon GO.

    Moving your body improves how we think, make decisions, remember things and stay focused – no matter your age.

    What the science says

    Our review adds to a growing body of research that shows regular physical activity improves three key areas of brain function:

    • cognition, which is your overall ability to think clearly, learn and make decisions

    • memory, especially short-term memory and the ability to remember personal experiences

    • executive function, which includes focus, planning, problem-solving and managing emotions.

    We conducted an umbrella review, which means we looked at the results of more than 130 high-quality research reviews that had already combined findings from many exercise studies. These studies usually involved people starting a new, structured exercise program, not just tracking the exercise they were already doing.

    To assess the effects on cognition, memory and executive function, the original studies used a range of brain function tests. These included things like remembering word lists, solving puzzles, or quickly switching between tasks – simple activities designed to reliably measure how well the brain is working.

    The improvements were small to moderate. On average, exercise led to a noticeable boost in cognition, with slightly smaller but still meaningful gains in memory and executive function.

    The benefits showed up across all age groups, though children and teens saw major gains in memory.

    People with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) showed greater improvements in executive function after physical activity than other population groups.

    The brain started responding fairly quickly – many people experienced improvements after just 12 weeks of starting regular exercise.

    Generally, the greatest benefits were seen in those doing at least 30 minutes of exercise on most days of the week, aiming for a total of about 150 minutes per week.

    Many people notice the difference after 12 weeks.
    Isaac Takeu/Unsplash

    What’s happening in the brain?

    Activities such as walking or cycling can increase the size of the hippocampus, the part of the brain responsible for memory and learning.

    In one study, older adults who did aerobic exercise for a year grew their hippocampus by 2%, effectively reversing one to two years of age-related brain shrinkage.

    More intense workouts, such as running or high-intensity interval training, can further boost neuroplasticity – the brain’s ability to adapt and rewire itself. This helps you learn more quickly, think more clearly and stay mentally sharp with age.

    Another reason to get moving

    The world’s population is ageing. By 2030, one in six of people will be aged over 60. With that comes a rising risk of dementia, Alzheimer’s disease and cognitive decline.

    At the same time, many adults aren’t moving enough. One in three adults aren’t meeting the recommended levels of physical activity.

    Adults should aim for at least 150 of moderate exercise – such as brisk walking – each week, or at least 75 minutes of more vigorous activity, like running.

    It’s also important to incorporate muscle-strengthening exercises, such as lifting weights, into workouts at least twice a week.

    Adults need 75 minutes of vigorous activity a week, or 150 minutes of moderate exercise – plus two sessions of strength training.
    Centre for Ageing Better/Unsplash

    Everyday movement counts

    You don’t need to run marathons or lift heavy weights to benefit. Our study showed lower-intensity activities such as yoga, tai chi and “exergames” (active video games) can be just as effective – sometimes even more so.

    These activities engage both the brain and body. Tai chi, for instance, requires focus, coordination and memorising sequences.

    Exergames often include real-time decision-making and rapid response to cues. This trains attention and memory.

    Importantly, these forms of movement are inclusive. They can be done at home, outdoors, or with friends, making them a great option for people of all fitness levels or those with limited mobility.

    Although you may already be doing a lot through daily life – like walking instead of driving or carrying shopping bags home – it’s still important to find time for structured exercise, such as lifting weights at the gym or doing a regular yoga class, to get the full benefits for your brain and body.

    Real-life applications

    If you’re a grandparent, consider playing Wii Sports virtual tennis or bowling with your grandchild. If you’re a teenager with signs of ADHD, try a dance class, and see if it impacts your concentration in class. If you’re a busy parent, you might be more clear-headed if you can squeeze a 20-minute yoga video session between meetings.

    In each of these cases, you’re not just being active, you’re giving your brain a valuable tune-up. And unlike most brain-training apps or supplements, exercise delivers far reaching benefits, including improved sleep and mental health.

    Workplaces and schools are starting to take note. Short movement breaks are being introduced during the workday to improve employee focus.

    Schools that incorporate physical activity into the classroom are seeing improvements in students’ attention and academic performance.

    Exercise is one of the most powerful and accessible tools we have for supporting brain health. Best of all, it’s free, widely available and it’s never too late to start.

    Ashleigh E. Smith receives grant funding from the National Health and Medical Research Council, the Medical Research Future Fund and is a Henry Brodaty mid-career fellow awarded from Dementia Australia Research Foundation.

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

    ref. Here’s a simple, science-backed way to sharpen your thinking and improve your memory – https://theconversation.com/heres-a-simple-science-backed-way-to-sharpen-your-thinking-and-improve-your-memory-253751

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Police target illegal 3D printing operation

    Source: New Zealand Police (National News)

    – Police shut down illegal 3D printed firearm operation
    – Five warrants across Auckland; five arrested on serious charges
    – Significant seizure of firearms, 3D printed parts and 3D printers
    – Police targeting criminal distribution of firearms on multiple fronts
    – Prevalence of 3D printed firearms in community still low

    Police are sending a strong message to criminal groups, shutting down an Auckland syndicate attempting to illegally manufacture 3D printed firearms.

    Five search warrants were executed across central and west Auckland yesterday, resulting in five arrests and a significant haul of firearms parts.

    Police even came across two 3D printers in operation at one address.

    On Monday, Auckland City’s Gang Disruption Unit executed search warrants in Mt Eden, Lynfield, Te Atatū South and Onehunga.

    “We have recovered a significant amount of illegally manufactured firearm parts and firearms under Operation Bismark,” Detective Senior Sergeant Scott Armstrong, of Auckland City CIB says. 

    “Police have put a stop to this syndicate’s operation and our enquiries into their exploits continues.”

    Four 3D printers have been recovered in the terminations.

    “Two of these printers were still in operation when our staff entered the addresses yesterday,” Detective Senior Sergeant Armstrong says.

    Amongst other items seized include dozens of firearms parts and two assembled firearms.

    Those include: 23 pistol lower receivers, 12 pistol slides, four rifle uppers and four rifle lowers.

    Detective Senior Sergeant Armstrong says there were also dozens of failed prints of parts found at these addresses.

    Ammunition was also seized.

    “This is a significant seizure and I have no doubt it has disrupted a source of lethal weaponry for criminal groups.

    “It is likely we have prevented a significant amount of harm from being inflicted on the community as a result.”

    Police continue to target the source of firearms getting into the hands of criminal groups.

    “This is work being carried out on multiple fronts, which includes our Firearms Investigation Teams and the work of the Firearms Safety Authority.

    “The prevalence of 3D printed firearms is still relatively low, but Police are continuing to stay ahead of the issue.”

    Four men, aged 35, 40, 41 and 54, and a 29-year-old woman have appeared in the Auckland District Court.

    Each have been jointly charged with participating in an organised criminal group and conspiring to manufacture firearms using illegal parts produced by a 3D printer.

    Other charges include a raft of methamphetamine and firearms offences.

    Operation Bismark continues, and further arrests or charges cannot be ruled out, Detective Senior Sergeant Armstrong says.

    ENDS.

    Jarred Williamson/NZ Police

    • Important notes for editors:

    – In 2024, 3D printed firearms only accounted for 0.6% of all firearms seized (42 out of 6,531).
    – The prevalence of 3D firearms seized is still relatively low
    – While seizure numbers indicate that manufacture of 3D firearms may be slowly increasing, seizures of 3D firearms are still less common than standard rifles and shotguns (‘A’ category firearms).

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Waking up from a greenwashed corporate welfare nightmare

    Source: ACT Party

    ACT is celebrating the Government’s decision to wind down New Zealand Green Investment Finance.

    “NZGIF has poured nearly $400 million down the drain with next to nothing to show for it. It’s the kind of greenwashed corporate welfare ACT has railed against for years,” says ACT Finance spokesperson Todd Stephenson.

    In 2018 when Labour and the Greens set up the Green Investment Finance Fund, David Seymour warned:

    “This kind of policy inevitably leads to government waste and corruption. The Fund will be picking technologies that can’t attract capital in an open market. It will pick them precisely because they fit the Government’s own particular political preferences.”

    “If these green investment schemes made economic sense, private investors would have jumped in without taxpayers help,” says Stephenson. “Instead, we had Wellington picking winners. The failure of this approach was epitomised by the collapse of the NZGIF-backed SolarZero, which left taxpayers $115 million in the hole and left livelihoods in the lurch for the venture’s employees.

    “Shutting it down is a win for economic sense. The market can sort out green innovation while politicians focus on removing barriers to growth and innovation. That’s what ACT is doing in government.”

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Delays expected following crash, Dome Valley

    Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

    Emergency services are in attendance at a four vehicle crash in Dome Valley.

    The crash, reported to Police at 3.45pm, happened on State Highway 1 and is causing congestion.

    Early indications suggest one person has suffered injuries and will be transported to hospital.

    Both southbound and northbound traffic will be impacted and motorists are advised to expect delays.

    ENDS.

    Holly McKay/NZ Police

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Government to wind down Green Investment Finance

    Source: New Zealand Government

    The Government has announced the New Zealand Green Investment Finance (NZGIF) will stop making new investments and will wind down its existing portfolio, Climate Change Minister Simon Watts says.

    “Almost $400 million has been invested with very limited results and there are more than 20 other government funds operating with similar objectives to the NZGIF,” Mr Watts says.

    “Alongside this, the market for low emission investments has grown, there are more funding and financing products, and we have a more robust Emissions Trading Scheme, reducing the need for government involvement.

    “This Government is serious about climate change, that’s why we have committed to doubling renewable energy, investing in technology to lower emissions while boosting productivity, and cutting barriers to green investment.

    “We will prioritise actions that have the greatest impact on emissions and growth and will provide real value for money. In the current economic environment New Zealanders want assurance that taxpayer money is being well spent and delivering results. We believe NZGIF is no longer aligned to that vision.”

    The transition will be carried out in a structured and responsible manner, ensuring that all stakeholders are kept informed.

    Within 90 days NZGIF will develop a plan for Ministers outlining how changes at the company will be implemented.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Urban resurfacing work coming for State Highway 1 Wellington City

    Source: New Zealand Transport Agency

    Drivers travelling on sections of State Highway 1 on Vivian Street and Kent Terrace can expect smoother journeys ahead, with resurfacing works planned next week.

    Three nights of work are planned for Sunday, 13 April, Tuesday, 15 April, and Wednesday, 16 April. Weather permitting, work crews will be on site between 9 pm and 4:30 am each night.

    Roxanne Hilliard, Wellington Alliance Manager, says these central city sections of State Highway 1 are heavily used.

    “Heavy traffic causes damage over time, and these areas need resurfacing. It will make travel  through the CBD smoother and safer for drivers.”

    Ms Hilliard says the aim is to get the work done as quickly as possible.

    “Work crews will work at night when traffic volumes are lower. Vivian Street and Kent Terrace are busy during the day, and we do not want to disrupt traffic in peak periods because of the delays this would cause.”

    She says the work will require altered lane layouts, a one-night closure of SH1/Vivian Street between Tory Street and Kent Terrace, and a two-night closure of the Kent Terrace/Pirie Street intersection.

    “Unfortunately, we cannot do this sort of work without affecting traffic. However, there are alternative routes on local roads drivers can use.”

    “People will still be able to get through the central city, they will just need to allow for a little more travel time,” Ms Hilliard says.

    Work crews will do their best to control noise and its impact on inner-city residents. Residents can expect to hear noise on nights when work is underway near their properties. We aim to complete the noisiest part of the work between 9 pm and 11 pm.

    Works Schedule and Detour Maps

    • Sunday, 13 April, 9 pm – 4:30 am
      • SH1/Vivian Street closed between Tory Street and Kent Terrace for resurfacing.
      • Traffic detour via Taranaki Street, Cable Street, Oriental Parade, and Kent Terrace.
    • Tuesday, 15 April, 9 pm – 4:30 am
      • Resurfacing the Vivian Street/Kent Terrace intersection and Kent Terrace approach to Basin Reserve
      • Altered lane layout for traffic
      • Vivian Street traffic wanting to turn right onto Kent Terrace will need to turn left and use Elizabeth Street turn-around (see map below).
      • No access to Pirie Street from Kent Terrace/Cambridge Terrace.
    • Works location:
    • Detour Route:
    • Wednesday, 16 April, 9 pm – 4:30 am
      • Resurfacing the Kent Terrace/Pirie Street intersection and Kent Terrace approach to Basin Reserve
      • Altered lane layout for traffic
      • No access to Pirie Street from Kent Terrace/Cambridge Terrace.
    • Works location:

    More Information

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Call to end discrimination against disabled migrant children in New Zealand

    Source: IHC

    Joint Statement – Disability advocates, including IHC and New Zealand Down Syndrome Association, are calling on the New Zealand Government to reverse a deeply discriminatory immigration policy that targets children with intellectual disabilities.

    A six-year-old boy with Down syndrome, the child of a South African couple living in Waikato, is facing deportation following new immigration rules introduced by Minister of Immigration Erica Stanford. Under changes announced in March, children of temporary visa holders who have a “severe cognitive or development disorder that requires significant support” are no longer eligible for student or visitor visas.

    “This policy sends a chilling message: that children with intellectual disabilities are not welcome here,” said Tania Thomas, Director of Advocacy at IHC. “We work with many talented people with intellectual disabilities who bring enormous value to our workplaces and communities. These changes are shameful.”

    Zandra Vaccarino, National Executive Officer for the New Zealand Down Syndrome Association (NZDSA), says this is not an isolated case.

    “Just last week, I spoke to another family with a four-year-old son who was declined a visa. These decisions are devastating, and the process is not only unjust, it’s traumatic,” says Zandra.

    “Such refusals reflect systemic discrimination and are driven by policies that perpetuate ableist assumptions, which ignore the value and potential of people with Down syndrome and violate their fundamental rights — including those protected under the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD), to which New Zealand is a signatory.”

    Advocates say the new policy compounds an already discriminatory immigration system, which bars many disabled people from becoming permanent residents due to the so-called “acceptable standard of health” criteria.

    The new policy also appears to fly in the face of international human rights obligations. In 2022, the (UNCRPD) criticised New Zealand’s immigration rules, saying the health criteria allowed for discrimination against disabled people in practice.

    Rather than acting on those recommendations, the Government has introduced stricter visa settings for families with disabled children. Disability advocates say this signals a worrying trend: instead of addressing underfunding in the education system, the Government is pushing the burden onto migrant families.

    “The education system is stretched – that’s not in dispute. But punishing disabled children and their families for systemic underfunding is not the solution,” says Tania. “This move effectively blames vulnerable children for the state’s failure to invest in inclusive education.”

    Minister Stanford has said the new rules will improve transparency, preventing situations where a child is granted a temporary visa but later denied residency due to high support needs. However, advocates argue that “transparency” is being used to justify unfair and exclusionary treatment.

    The United Nations has urged New Zealand to remove discriminatory provisions from its immigration policy, yet there has been no substantive change. When questioned by media, Minister Stanford declined to comment on individual cases. Her spokesperson reiterated that support for children with additional needs is “significantly oversubscribed” and that it is “entirely appropriate” to ensure the education system can respond to New Zealand children first.

    But Tania says blaming underfunding in the education system is no excuse for targeting children with disabilities.

    “This isn’t a funding issue. It’s a values issue,” she said. “New Zealand must decide whether it sees disabled children as a burden or as equal members of our society.”

    About IHC New Zealand

    IHC New Zealand advocates for the rights, inclusion and welfare of all people with intellectual disabilities and supports them to live satisfying lives in the community. IHC provides advocacy, volunteering, events, membership associations and fundraising. It is part of the IHC Group, which also includes IDEA Services, Choices NZ and Accessible Properties.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: ‘It Just Adds Another Layer of Stress’: Rainbow people’s experiences of abortion services in Aotearoa New Zealand

    Source: New Zealand Ministry of Health

    View all formats

    This research report was commissioned by the Ministry to help inform the Review of Certain Matters under the Contraception, Sterilisation, and Abortion Act 1977. It was one of three reports commissioned for three different consumer groups.

    The research report focuses on the experiences of rainbow people and provides insights into how abortion health care services are perceived and accessed by this group since changes to the law in 2020.

    This publication was prepared under contract to the Ministry of Health. The copyright in this article is owned by the Crown and administered by the Ministry. The views of the authors do not necessarily represent the views or policy of the Ministry of Health. The Ministry makes no warranty, express or implied, nor assumes any liability or responsibility for use of or reliance on the contents of this publication.

    Individual themes from the report for rainbow people

    The overarching theme from the report of rainbow people involved the structural heteronormative discrimination of the health system against the rainbow community. A central component of this discrimination was a lack of recognition of the reproductive potential, ability and needs of the rainbow population.

    Common themes from the three reports

    Three reports were commissioned of three different consumer groups, and a brief summary of the reports below outlines some common themes about abortion health care services since law change.

    Changes to the Contraception, Sterilisation, and Abortion Act 1977 have improved access to and quality of care in abortion services

    Where comparisons are made to abortion services prior to law change, these changes have improved the experience of the people involved in these reports. The ability to use telehealth, self-refer, and improvements in timeliness are particularly noted across the reports. The use of telehealth appears to be a useful option for some, while others had issues with the technology.

    The experience of abortion services is intersectionally dependant

    Intersecting layers of societal discrimination and inequity were described as key drivers of experience for rainbow and disabled people.

    Abortion is associated with social stigma

    Abortion remains a sensitive topic, particularly for rainbow and disabled people. However, providers of abortion services were overwhelmingly perceived to be accepting and non-judgmental, suggesting that the concerns expressed by some people interviewed reflected biases outside of the abortion services.

    The availability of information regarding abortion is variable

    All groups reported some difficulties in accessing information regarding abortion despite information being available through multiple mechanisms. However, once individuals were engaged with abortion services the quality and availability of information was reported as being adequate.

    The needs of individuals regarding contraception advice and abortion counselling is varied and complex

    The reports identified a potential issue regarding the availability and timing of abortion counselling. Regarding contraception, ongoing contraception appears to be discussed routinely as standard practice, although some individuals felt they were provided with limited options or not provided with a full explanation of the risks and benefits of the range of options offered.

    The other two reports, for Māori and Pacific peoples and disabled people are available here:

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Abortion Is a Human Right and Health Issue: Disabled people’s experiences of abortion services in Aotearoa New Zealand

    Source: New Zealand Ministry of Health

    View all formats

    This research report was commissioned by the Ministry to help inform the Review of Certain Matters under the Contraception, Sterilisation, and Abortion Act 1977. It was one of three reports commissioned for three different consumer groups.

    The research report focuses on the experiences of disabled people and provides insights into how abortion health care services are perceived and accessed by this group since changes to the law in 2020.

    This publication was prepared under contract to the Ministry of Health. The copyright in this article is owned by the Crown and administered by the Ministry. The views of the authors do not necessarily represent the views or policy of the Ministry of Health. The Ministry makes no warranty, express or implied, nor assumes any liability or responsibility for use of or reliance on the contents of this publication.

    Individual themes from the report for disabled people

    The over-arching themes from the report for disabled people was that provision of abortion services for people with disabilities is positioned within a wider societal attitude to disability and eugenics. The issue of abortion services for disabled people is presented as a human rights issue which is highlighted within the group of disabled people because of the association with inheritable disease. 

    Common themes from the three reports

    Three reports were commissioned of three different consumer groups, and a brief summary of the reports below outlines some common themes about abortion health care services since law change.

    Changes to the Contraception, Sterilisation, and Abortion Act 1977 have improved access to and quality of care in abortion services

    Where comparisons are made to abortion services prior to law change, these changes have improved the experience of the people involved in these reports. The ability to use telehealth, self-refer, and improvements in timeliness are particularly noted across the reports. The use of telehealth appears to be a useful option for some, while others had issues with the technology.

    The experience of abortion services is intersectionally dependant

    Intersecting layers of societal discrimination and inequity were described as key drivers of experience for rainbow and disabled people.

    Abortion is associated with social stigma

    Abortion remains a sensitive topic, particularly for rainbow and disabled people. However, providers of abortion services were overwhelmingly perceived to be accepting and non-judgmental, suggesting that the concerns expressed by some people interviewed reflected biases outside of the abortion services.

    The availability of information regarding abortion is variable

    All groups reported some difficulties in accessing information regarding abortion despite information being available through multiple mechanisms. However, once individuals were engaged with abortion services the quality and availability of information was reported as being adequate.

    The needs of individuals regarding contraception advice and abortion counselling is varied and complex

    The reports identified a potential issue regarding the availability and timing of abortion counselling. Regarding contraception, ongoing contraception appears to be discussed routinely as standard practice, although some individuals felt they were provided with limited options or not provided with a full explanation of the risks and benefits of the range of options offered.

    The other two reports, for Māori and Pacific peoples and rainbow people are available here:

    MIL OSI New Zealand News