Category: Transport

  • MIL-OSI: Cority Integrates Arcadia’s Platform to Automate Utility Data for ESG Compliance

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    TORONTO, Feb. 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Cority, the global leader in enterprise Environmental, Health, and Safety (EHS) and Sustainability software, has announced a strategic partnership with Arcadia, the industry leader in utility data and energy management solutions. This collaboration enables Cority customers to leverage Arcadia’s expansive data platform, reducing manual processes and enhancing the quality of sustainability reporting across large enterprises.

    The integration aligns Arcadia’s utility data platform with CorityOne, the company’s comprehensive and integrated EHS and sustainability SaaS-based ecosystem, creating a powerful solution for organizations managing complex energy portfolios. By automating data acquisition, cleansing, and standardization, the partnership empowers sustainability, energy management, and compliance teams to focus on strategic initiatives rather than labor-intensive manual data entry processes.

    Simplifying sustainability reporting: Accurate energy data at scale
    The Arcadia partnership unlocks easy access to accurate global energy data for Cority customers. Arcadia’s platform leverages AI-driven processes to clean and fill data gaps and draws on insights from a database of over three million utility accounts. The company’s global data coverage encompasses more than 9,500 utility data providers — including electric, gas, water, and more — in 52 countries, and over 95% of residential and commercial accounts in the US.

    The breadth of utility data from Arcadia and ease of integration with Cority ensures companies can meet complex and ever-changing regulatory requirements seamlessly, including reasonable assurance standards under the EU’s CSRD regulation and the IFRS-S2 climate-related disclosures.

    “Large organizations often struggle with fragmented data collection, whether it’s keyed in manually or pulled from inconsistent spreadsheets,” said Alex Hardwick, director of sustainability, planning and enablement at Cority. “With Arcadia, our customers now have access to a scalable, automated solution that ensures reliable, traceable data for sustainability reporting and energy management. It’s a game changer for companies with extensive site networks.”

    CorityOne: A unified ecosystem for sustainability data management
    CorityOne’s unified ecosystem is built on the principles of interoperability and integration, allowing organizations to consolidate their sustainability and EHS data in one platform. By partnering with Arcadia, Cority strengthens its ability to deliver a comprehensive data management solution that streamlines processes, improves accuracy, and eliminates silos.

    “Organizations are under growing pressure to deliver accurate sustainability reports, but many are still relying on manual data collection processes that are time-intensive, prone to error, and often limited to a one-time annual exercise,” said Curtis Snyder, SVP & GM at Arcadia. “Cority’s focus on EHS and sustainability provides the perfect foundation for a single source of truth. By combining Arcadia’s automated utility data capabilities with Cority’s unified ecosystem, we’re helping enterprises move beyond static reporting to ongoing visibility into their resource usage and carbon impact—enabling smarter decision-making and streamlined reporting.”

    With this partnership, Cority customers gain access to a scalable and automated approach for managing utility data. Arcadia’s robust platform seamlessly integrates with CorityOne, enabling customers to link utility accounts across thousands of locations and directly feed standardized data into the system. This eliminates time-consuming manual data entry and provides organizations with a centralized, actionable view of their energy consumption and emissions, further streamlining the reporting process.

    About Cority
    Cority gives every employee from the field to the boardroom the power to make a difference, reducing risks and creating a safer, healthier, and more sustainable world. For over 35 years, Cority’s people-first software solutions have been built by EHS and sustainability experts who know the pressures businesses face. Time-tested, scalable, and configurable, CorityOne is the responsible business platform that combines datasets from across the organization to enable improved efficiencies, actionable insights, data-driven decisions, and more accurate reporting on performance. Trusted by over 1,500 organizations worldwide, Cority deeply cares about helping people work toward a better future for everyone. To learn more, visit www.cority.com

    About Arcadia
    Arcadia is the global utility data and energy solutions platform. With our leading data platform, AI-powered analytics, industry expertise, and expansive partner network, we deliver solutions for every stage of the enterprise energy management lifecycle across carbon, cost, and reliability. Arcadia also manages the nation’s leading community solar program.

    For media inquiries, contact:
    Natalie Rizk
    RiotMind
    natalier@theriotmind.agency

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: STMicroelectronics releases innovative satellite navigation receiver to democratize precise positioning for automotive and industrial applications

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    STMicroelectronics releases innovative satellite navigation receiver to democratize precise positioning for automotive and industrial applications

    • ST first to put quad-band, multi-constellation design, needed for precise GNSS positioning accurate to a few centimeters, on a single die
    • Innovative design ensures cost-effective precise positioning for road users and for new industrial applications, to increase the areas where autonomous vehicles can operate

    Geneva, Switzerland, February 26, 2025 – STMicroelectronics (NYSE: STM), a global semiconductor leader serving customers across the spectrum of electronics applications, has introduced the Teseo VI family of global navigation satellite system (GNSS) receivers aimed at high-volume precise positioning use cases. For the automotive industry, Teseo VI chips and modules will be core building blocks of advanced driving systems (ADAS), smart in-vehicle systems, and safety-critical applications such as autonomous driving. They have also been designed to improve positioning capabilities in multiple industrial applications including asset trackers, mobile robots for home deliveries, managing machinery and crop monitoring in smart agriculture, timing systems such as base stations, and many more.

    Our new Teseo VI receivers represent a real breakthrough among positioning engines for several reasons: they are the first to integrate multi-constellation and quad-band signal processing in a single die; they are the first to embed a dual-Arm®-core architecture enabling both very high performance and ASIL-level safety for assisted and autonomous driving applications. Last but not least, they embed ST’s proprietary embedded Non-Volatile-Memory (PCM), thus delivering a very integrated, cost-effective, and reliable platform for new precise-positioning solutions,” said Luca Celant, Digital Audio and Signal Solutions General Manager, STMicroelectronics. “ST’s new satellite-navigation receivers will support exciting, advanced capabilities in automotive ADAS applications and enable many new use cases being implemented by industrial companies.

    Teseo VI is the first in the market to integrate all the necessary system elements for centimeter accuracy into one die, supporting simultaneous multi-constellation and quad-band operations. This innovation simplifies the development of end-user navigation and positioning products, enhances reliability even in challenging conditions like urban canyons, and reduces bill-of-materials costs. Additionally, the single chip accelerates time to market and allows for compact and lightweight form factors.

    The new Teseo VI family of precise positioning receiver chips leverages decades of experience and integrates multiple ST proprietary technologies, including precise positioning and advanced embedded memory.

    Technical Notes for Editors

    ST’s new GNSS device family includes the Teseo VI STA8600A and Teseo VI+, STA8610A, each with dual independent Arm® Cortex®-M7 processing cores for local control of all the IC’s (integrated circuit) functions. The Cortex-M7 brings powerful 32-bit processing and helps enable concurrent multi-constellation and multi-band operation on a single die.

    Teseo VI+ can also host various enhanced positioning engines, developed independently by third ST Authorized Partner companies, to provide complete real-time kinematics for centimeter position accuracy.

    Completing the family, the Teseo APP2 STA9200MA operates dual cores in lockstep, providing hardware redundancy for applications such as road vehicle guidance meeting ISO 26262 ASIL-B functional safety. Pin-compatibility between Teseo APP2 and other Teseo VI ICs simplifies PCB design for companies producing ASIL-certified and non-ASIL applications.

    All variants feature ST’s innovative RF architecture and GNSS baseband design provides quad-band GNSS support (L1, L2, L5 and E6) with the unique ability to acquire and track only L5. This is highly effective in reducing outliers and increasing robustness in difficult conditions such as urban canyons and in the presence of jammers.

    In addition, the proprietary phase-change memory (PCM) technology removes external memory needs, thereby minimizing the system bill of materials (BOM) and simplifying the manufacturing supply chain. Proprietary PCM is robust to withstand challenging environments such as automotive, non-volatile like Flash, and has a small cell architecture suited to space-efficient on-chip integration.

    The ICs all contain a full set of hardware cyber security features including secure boot, over-the-air firmware update, and output-data protection. In addition, ST’s hardware security module (HSM) provides robust protection against online hacking. The devices comply with the latest UNECE R155 and ISO 21434 specifications that mandate cybersecurity by design.

    The Teseo VI product family is supported by an established ecosystem of suppliers and partners for algorithms, reference designs, and compatible complementary hardware.

    The Teseo VI product family includes also two new GNSS automotive modules: the Teseo-VIC6A in a 16mm x 12mm form factor (embedding Teseo VI), and the Teseo-ELE6A in a 17mm x 22mm form factor (embedding Teseo VI+). These new modules simplify the integration of Teseo VI/VI+ ICs on the customer platform and ensure optimum performance. 

    The Teseo VI samples are available on request.

    For more information, please go to www.st.com/teseo6

    You can also read our blogpost at https://blog.st.com/teseovi/

    About STMicroelectronics
    At ST, we are over 50,000 creators and makers of semiconductor technologies mastering the semiconductor supply chain with state-of-the-art manufacturing facilities. An integrated device manufacturer, we work with more than 200,000 customers and thousands of partners to design and build products, solutions, and ecosystems that address their challenges and opportunities, and the need to support a more sustainable world. Our technologies enable smarter mobility, more efficient power and energy management, and the wide-scale deployment of cloud-connected autonomous things. We are committed to achieving our goal to become carbon neutral on scope 1 and 2 and partially scope 3 by 2027. Further information can be found at www.st.com.

    INVESTOR RELATIONS
    Jérôme Ramel
    EVP Corporate Development & Integrated External Communication
    Tel: +41.22.929.59.20
    jerome.ramel@st.com

    MEDIA RELATIONS
    Alexis Breton
    Corporate External Communications
    Tel: +33.6.59.16.79.08
    alexis.breton@st.com

    Attachments

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  • MIL-OSI: Relm Insurance and Liva Group Empower Innovation and Entrepreneurship in Web3 and AI Through Strategic Insurance Partnership

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    • Liva and Relm focus on businesses in high-growth innovative sectors often not covered by traditional insurance products.
    • From digital asset insurance to AI-related risk management and solutions, the partnership ensures businesses operating in these industries can secure the coverage they need to thrive.
    • Partnership will initially support companies in the UAE and Bahrain, with plans to extend services to Oman, Saudi Arabia, and other key markets in MENA.

    Dubai, UAE, Feb. 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Liva Group, a leading insurance group operating across the GCC, and Relm Insurance — the only insurer dedicated to dedicated to emerging sectors — today signed a strategic partnership aimed at empowering innovation and entrepreneurship in emerging sectors such as digital assets, biotech, and AI.

    The union will deliver tailored insurance solutions that address the unique and complex needs of tech companies.

    The partnership was formally signed by Martin Rueegg, CEO of Liva Group, and Joseph Ziolkowski, Global CEO and Founder of Relm Insurance, at DIFC AI Campus as part of DFS Dialogues. DFS Dialogues are exclusive strategic conversations that take place in invite-only gatherings in the lead-up to the Dubai FinTech Summit.

    Whether they’re start-ups or established players, firms in emerging sectors often struggle to get the right insurance due to a lack of understanding of their industries’ rapidly evolving landscape, which stifles innovation and deters investment. By combining Liva Group’s deep market knowledge with Relm’s deep expertise in specialised insurance, the partnership will provide unparalleled support to these companies, empowering them to tackle complex challenges and seize new opportunities.

    The alliance will initially support companies in the UAE and Bahrain, with plans to extend services to Oman, Saudi Arabia, and other key markets in MENA, supporting the region’s development as a leader in digital transformation, AI innovation, and blockchain technology.

    Martin Rueegg, Group CEO of Liva Group, said: “Sectors such as digital assets and AI are critical to the next phase of growth in this region. We believe that unlocking their full potential requires fostering an environment where creativity, collaboration, and innovation can thrive. At Liva, we recognise that technology is a key enabler of this transformation. By leveraging data-driven insights and digital solutions, we are not only improving customer experiences but also enhancing our ability to anticipate and respond to evolving market needs. A key aspect of this is providing entrepreneurs and investors with the confidence to embrace new challenges and explore fresh ideas. This mission is at the heart of our partnership with Relm.”

    Joseph Ziolkowski, Global CEO & Founder of Relm Insurance, added: “Our priority is to support clients and brokers by providing the insurance solutions tailored for innovative businesses in this region. This collaboration enables brokers to offer their clients the security they need to thrive in complex and dynamic sectors.”

    Operating through its Dubai-based affiliate, Relm Insurance holds a Category 4 licence issued by the Dubai Financial Services Authority (DFSA). With its new headquarters in DIFC and regulation under the Bermuda Monetary Authority, Relm is well-positioned to provide its specialised insurance solutions in the region.

    -ENDS-

    About Liva Group

    Liva is an insurance group operating across the GCC, founded on the belief that insurance is a pillar that supports both personal and professional lives. As one of the pioneering insurance players in the region, Liva’s team of 1,200 employees is dedicated to offering products and services centred on customer needs, empowering individuals, businesses, and communities to thrive. Serving more than 1.5 million customers, Liva has a strong and growing presence in the United Arab Emirates, Oman, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Bahrain across motor, home travel, health, life, and commercial insurance, as well owning subsidiaries such as NSSPL (India) and Inayah TPA (UAE), supporting its long-term strategy to scale and diversify the business. The word “Liva” signifies “protection” or “life”, reflecting the Group’s commitment to protecting what matters most to its people, its partners, and, most of all, its customers.

    About Relm Insurance

    Relm Insurance Ltd. (Relm) is a Bermuda-domiciled specialty insurance carrier that supports emerging industries driving innovation and next-generation technologies. Launched in 2019, Relm offers a wide range of insurance products to high-growth markets, including digital assets, blockchain, AI, biotech, and the space economy. With a Financial Stability Rating of ‘A, Exceptional’ from Demotech, Relm is widely recognised for its industry expertise and solutions-driven approach, making it a trusted risk partner for businesses operating at the frontier of technological innovation.

    Media Contacts

    Sarah Abdelbary
    Brunswick Group
    sabdelbary@brunswickgroup.com

    Reannah Smith  
    Luna PR  
    reannah@lunapr.io

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Advocus Strengthens Leadership Team, Marking 60 Years of Advocacy

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    CHICAGO, Feb. 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Chicago-based title insurance underwriter Advocus, celebrating its 60th anniversary, announced today a series of strategic leadership additions that will enable the company to continue driving growth and advancing its mission in 2025 and beyond.

    Peter J. Birnbaum moves from CEO to Executive Chairman, where he will support both local and national markets while mentoring and guiding the organization into the future. Since its founding, Advocus (formerly Attorneys’ Title Guaranty Fund, Inc. or ATG) has championed the role of attorneys in the title industry, ensuring legal professionals remain integral to real estate transactions.

    Jill Cadwell joins Advocus as national President following 39 years in the title industry, including leadership roles at ServiceLink, PCN Network, and Radian. At Radian, she led a 400+ person team, scaled revenue over 200% in two years, and spearheaded the implementation of a digital processing platform that set a new industry standard. Recognized as a HousingWire Woman of Influence, Cadwell’s track record of fostering growth and modernization makes her a key figure in Advocus’ national expansion.

    “As the industry continues to evolve, I’m excited to help shape the future of title services by blending technology, operational expertise, and a commitment to attorney-driven advocacy,” Cadwell said. “Advocus is uniquely positioned to redefine excellence in the market, and I look forward to building on its legacy while driving forward-looking solutions for our partners and clients.”

    Lynne Crotty, has been named Chief Operating Officer at Advocus, bringing a wealth of expertise in national expansion, operational efficiency, and team development. Her career trajectory, from the mailroom to the boardroom, is a testament to her industry knowledge and dedication.

    “Advocus has a long-standing commitment to excellence and attorney-driven advocacy, and I’m eager to build on that foundation,” Crotty said. “As we expand our reach and enhance our operational capabilities, my focus will be on streamlining efficiencies, fostering a strong team culture, and ensuring we deliver best-in-class service to our partners and clients nationwide.”

    Birnbaum added, “This new leadership team brings fresh energy and strategic vision to propel Advocus forward while staying true to our mission. Together, we will continue advocating for attorneys and ensuring consumers receive the trusted guidance they need in their most significant financial transactions.”

    Advocus’ 2022 merger with Rate, Inc. (formerly Guaranteed Rate) provided a national platform for growth, accelerating its expansion into Arizona, Connecticut, Georgia, Massachusetts, and Washington, D.C., alongside its existing presence in Florida, Illinois, Michigan, South Carolina, Texas, and Wisconsin. As Advocus celebrates this milestone anniversary, the company remains committed to innovation, attorney advocacy, and delivering best-in-class title services nationwide.

    About Advocus National Title Insurance Company
    Advocus is a national provider of title insurance and settlement services. Founded in 1964 on the belief that every consumer deserves legal representation and advocacy, Advocus is dedicated to preserving the attorney’s role in real estate transactions and offering attorney-led underwriting expertise. With a growing presence in markets across the United States, Advocus continues to set the standard for excellence in the title insurance industry. For more information, visit www.advocus.com.

    Media Contact:
    Aimee Miller
    aimee@broadsheetcomms.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Introducing Lineos, AI Powered by insightsoftware: Transforming Finance Workflows With Actionable Insights

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    RALEIGH, N.C., Feb. 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — insightsoftware, the most comprehensive provider of solutions for the Office of the CFO, today announced the launch of Lineos, a suite of AI-driven capabilities designed to enhance insightsoftware’s financial planning and analysis (FP&A), accounting, and operations products. Lineos supports finance professionals by simplifying complex data into actionable insights, addressing real-world challenges, and enabling confident decision-making.

    Manual processes and repetitive tasks continue to burden finance teams, consuming time and increasing the risk of errors. Many organizations spend more than 30 hours monthly on top-level reporting. According to Gartner, 81% of CFOs plan to increase AI investments in 2025—a sign of growing confidence in AI’s ability to transform financial operations. Lineos helps navigate this shift by automating tasks, uncovering trends, and delivering actionable insights—all within the systems teams already trust.

    “While finance teams recognize the potential of AI, many struggle to make it meaningful,” said Lee An Schommer, Chief Product Officer and General Manager, ERP Reporting & BI at insightsoftware. “CFOs are challenging their teams to boost productivity with AI, but finding a starting point can be difficult. At insightsoftware, we are dedicated to the Office of the CFO, delivering AI solutions that tackle real-world challenges like report generation. With Lineos, we empower finance teams with an AI-powered ‘line of sight’ into their data, enabling confident, data-driven decision-making.”

    How Lineos Empowers Finance Professionals:

    • Saves Time: Lineos takes care of tedious, manual tasks, such as summarizing comments, building and refining complex reports, and recommending pre-built content, so finance teams can focus on the big picture.
    • Reveals Patterns: Lineos uncovers hidden trends like spending patterns from general ledger data to help identify cost-saving opportunities, surfaces actionable insights from ESG data to boost sustainability ratings, and simplifies month-end close by consolidating comments across subsidiaries and departments, enabling faster, smarter decision-making.
    • Simplifies Workflows: Lineos uses Natural Language Query (NLQ) to enable effortless report creation, seamlessly integrates with existing systems, and reduces the need for heavy IT involvement, driving greater productivity and innovation.

    Lineos features work together to simplify processes, enabling finance teams to shift focus from managing data to driving insights and delivering value. Built on the insightsoftware Platform, Lineos capabilities fit into the workflows that finance teams already use, meaning there’s no steep learning curve or added complexity. Prioritizing security and privacy, it ensures data is protected at every step, enabling organizations to maintain reliable and secure business operations.

    Find out more about how Lineos can help finance teams bypass time-consuming manual processes and deliver insights sooner here.

    About insightsoftware
    insightsoftware is a global provider of comprehensive solutions for the Office of the CFO. We believe an actionable business strategy begins and ends with accessible financial data. With solutions across financial planning and analysis (FP&A), accounting, and operations, we transform how teams operate, empowering leaders to make timely and informed decisions. With data at the heart of everything we do, insightsoftware enables automated processes, delivers trusted insights, boosts predictability, and increases productivity. Learn more at insightsoftware.com.

    Media Contacts
    Inkhouse for insightsoftware
    insightsoftware@inkhouse.com

    Daniel Tummeley
    Corporate Communications Manager
    PR@insightsoftware.com

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  • MIL-OSI: Bridgetown Research raises $19M from Lightspeed and Accel to deploy AI business research agents

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Seattle, Feb. 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Strategic business decisions have traditionally been expensive and slow for a fundamental reason: they don’t happen enough. This means companies lack both historical data to learn from and experts who have seen enough similar cases. Bridgetown Research is changing that. Today, the AI decision science startup announced $19 million in Series A funding led by Lightspeed and Accel, with participation from a leading research university.

    Bridgetown Research has developed AI agents that autonomously execute research. Most notable amongst these agents are voice bots trained to recruit and interview industry experts, gathering primary data that can be analyzed alongside alternative data sourced from their partners. 

    Bridgetown Research founder Harsh Sahai.

    Founded by Harsh Sahai, who previously led machine learning teams at Amazon before leading strategy engagements at McKinsey & Co., Bridgetown Research was born from a simple observation: the majority of business analyses are a permutation of a small number of automatable tasks. The founding team, comprising former professionals from McKinsey, Bain, Amazon, and leading tech startups, brings together extensive experience across strategy consulting and technology.

    “We are excited to be a catalyst for change. We are working with multiple private equity firms, management consulting firms, and corporate teams to help make strategic decisions better and faster. This in turn is driving up demand for advisory and information services downstream. We enable $10+ of advisory and information services revenue for every $1 we make. Together with leading institutions, we’re building something bigger than ourselves—an ecosystem where everyone thrives,” commented Harsh Sahai, CEO & founder of Bridgetown Research.

    While many AI solutions focus on searching and summarizing information using LLMs, real world business decisions require much more than synthesising the open web. They need proprietary data such as primary data from experts and customer surveys, along with frameworks to understand markets, what Harsh Sahai calls “ontologies”. Moreover, outputs need to be repeatable and auditable for a business to use them to make decisions with tens of millions of dollars at stake. Bridgetown Research is the only player using agents to gather primary data and systematically find patterns in it to generate original insights. 

    Bridgetown Research: (L to R) Founder Harsh Sahai with Director of Engineering Mohak Singh. 

    “AI is causing widespread disruptions across many enterprise functions, and Bridgetown Research is riding that wave by assisting executives in making important strategic decisions. We are pleased to see Bridgetown serving several marquee customers, with users likening its platform to having a team of top-tier consultants at their fingertips. We are excited to partner with Harsh, who, with his background as an ace AI research scientist turned management consultant, blends a unique combination of skills and insight needed to imagine this whole new category of applied AI,” said Anagh Prasad, Investor at Accel.

    Bridgetown Research started with a focus on private equity deal screening diligence. Multiple top-tier PE & VC firms already use Bridgetown Research for deal screening and deeper commercial diligence. They’re able to screen their pipeline much faster with initial analysis taking 24 hours instead of weeks without Bridgetown enabling teams to focus on actual decision making instead of research and analysis. For other customers Bridgetown has enabled voice of customer conversations that cover hundreds of respondents in parallel, and within days. 

    Ishaan Preet Singh, Investor at Lightspeed added “Companies are built on the quality of strategic decisions, and the research and analysis behind it. Bridgetown Research enables the smartest executives and investors to make these decisions with an order of magnitude more information, and at a pace that was earlier impossible. Harsh and Bridgetown are already creating immense value for their customers, but are still just scratching the surface of the leverage that AI can create.”

    As global markets become increasingly complex, the demand for efficient and effective decision-making tools continues to rise. With this funding round, Bridgetown Research plans to invest further in training its AI agents to perform a broader set of analyses across a broader range of domains, and deepening industry partnerships to enhance access to domain-specific intelligence.

    Ends

    Media images can be found here

    About Bridgetown Research
    Bridgetown Research builds AI agents for decision research. Its voice agents and web crawlers find and clean data, while its analyses agents produce repeatable, auditable, and reliable analyses. The team consists of computer scientists, econometricians, software engineers, investors and business consultants, working across geographies. For more information please visit https://www.bridgetownresearch.com/ 

    About Accel 
    Accel is a global venture capital firm that aims to be the first partner to exceptional teams everywhere (Facebook, Flipkart, etc.), from inception through all phases of private company growth. Accel has been operating in India since 2008, and its investments include companies like BookMyShow, Browserstack, Flipkart, Freshworks, FalconX, Infra.Market, Chargebee, Clevertap, Cure Fit, Musigma, Moneyview, Mensa Brands, Myntra, Moglix, Ninjacart, Swiggy, Stanza Living, Urban Company, Zetwerk, and Zenoti, among many others. We help ambitious entrepreneurs build iconic global businesses. For more, visit: www.accel.com

    About Lightspeed
    Lightspeed is a global multi-stage venture capital firm focused on accelerating disruptive innovations and trends in the Enterprise, Consumer, Health, and Fintech sectors. Over the past two decades, the Lightspeed team has backed hundreds of entrepreneurs and helped build more than 500 companies globally including Affirm, Acceldata, Carta, Cato Networks, Darwinbox, Epic Games, Faire, Innovaccer, Guardant Health, Mulesoft, Navan, Netskope, Nutanix, Physics Wallah, Razorpay, Rubrik, Sharechat, Snap, OYO Rooms, Ultima Genomics, Zepto and more. Lightspeed and its global team currently manage $25B in AUM across the Lightspeed platform, with investment professionals and advisors in the U.S., Europe, India, Israel, and Southeast Asia. www.lsip.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Michael S Barr: Managing financial crises

    Source: Bank for International Settlements

    Thank you for the opportunity to speak to you today. I note that the objectives of the Program on Financial Stability include “supporting the world’s financial authorities in refining proven crises management tools and strategies.” Speaking as a representative of one of those authorities, I thought I would further the program’s goals by focusing these remarks on the principles and practice of crisis management. I am favored in that task with what one might call the luck of having been regularly confronted with crises in each of my three stints as a public servant, over a career divided between government and academia. In noting how often my arrival in government was accompanied by crisis, it might be reasonable to wonder if this is correlation or causation.

    Kidding aside, crisis management is central to all management because it demands the very best from managers when it is most needed. Anyone who spends time in government can expect that some of the most memorable and challenging experiences will be managing through tough situations, when the answers to problems are unclear but the mission of the organization comes into acute focus. The financial system is in a perpetual state balancing risk and reward. Sometimes the system falls out of balance, and vulnerabilities turn into stress or even crisis. This moment is when it is crucial to mitigate spillovers from the financial system that can hurt businesses and households and wreak havoc on the economy at large.

    Some of the most important features of modern economies were developed to prevent and mitigate financial crises. The first central banks, and eventually the Federal Reserve, were created to provide stable currencies and banking systems in support of the long-term stability of the provision of credit necessary to foster growth and rising living standards. Regulation of financial markets, regulation and supervision of banks, federal deposit insurance, and laws to protect investors, consumers, and businesses were developed over time to promote both financial stability and durable economic growth. I have spoken previously about how monetary policy and financial stability are inextricably linked and how the tools we use to conduct monetary policy and support financial stability work together.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Abdul Rasheed Ghaffour: Transforming banking and advancing sustainability

    Source: Bank for International Settlements

    Since its inception 58 years ago, ASEAN has evolved to become a significant force in global trade, investment and diplomacy. ASEAN now stands as the world’s fourth-largest economic bloc, with an estimated GDP of USD4.13 trillion.1 Looking ahead to 2025, ASEAN is poised for another strong year. GDP is expected to grow by 4.7%,2 significantly outperforming the global average. Much has been said about ASEAN’s pivotal role in global supply chains, our geopolitical neutrality and our strategic location for global trade. However, ASEAN’s driver for sustainable economic growth also comes from within: robust domestic consumption from a youthful demographic, strong growth of individual member states and increasing regional integration. In 2023, for example, intra-ASEAN trade accounted for 21.5% of the region’s total trade in goods.

    Let me touch briefly on Malaysia’s growth outlook. After a strong performance last year, Malaysia is expected to record steady growth going into 2025 despite the challenging global environment. The diversified export structure will help cushion against external demand shocks. But, more importantly, key factors within the economy, particularly the robust expansion in investment activity and resilient household spending, will be important to drive growth this year. Exports are also expected to continue expanding with support from tech upcycle and forthcoming tourist arrivals. We acknowledge that the growth outlook is highly subject to risks from trade and investment restrictions. However, growth could potentially be higher from greater spillovers from the tech upcycle, more robust tourism activities and faster implementation of investment projects in the country.

    The financial sector lies at the core of ASEAN’s progress over the years. The sector acts as the central engine to our economy, facilitating financial flows within ASEAN. Indeed, over the last few decades, we have made progress in facilitating regional capital flows, connecting our payment infrastructure and introducing a framework to support the integration of our banking system through the ASEAN Banking Integration Framework (ABIF). However, the potential for intra-ASEAN investments remains untapped, and there is still much to be done to achieve regional regulatory coherence. My vision is for the financial sector to become the critical enabler for the next phase of economic integration under the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) 2045. This would require the sector to strategically harness the three driving forces: funding, technology and talent.

    Mobilising funds to unlock new growth sectors, bridge financing gap and drive sustainable growth for ASEAN

    Let’s start with funding, which is a crucial driver of ASEAN economic growth. ASEAN is facing significant funding gaps that demand our urgent attention. Let me share a few examples. The Asian Development Bank reports that ASEAN economies will need infrastructure investments of at least USD2.8 trillion from 2023 to 2030 to sustain economic growth, reduce poverty and respond to climate change. Key projects in the region that require large financing include the ASEAN Power Grid, which is pivotal to advancing the region’s climate and energy security agenda, and various ASEAN highway and railway projects, such as the Asian Highway Network, which are cornerstones of regional economic development and integration. Our micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) also face a daunting financing gap, exceeding USD300 billion annually.3

    These figures underscore the urgent need for strategic investments and collaborative efforts to secure a resilient and sustainable future for ASEAN. This need is even more pressing in a region where over 90% of all social infrastructure development has traditionally relied on public resources,4 and public funding faces increasing constraints. How, then, can the financial sector step in as a catalyst to crowd in diverse sources of funding and facilitate long-term investments to ensure sustainable economic expansion and build more resilient supply chains and communities?

    This is where blended finance, the strategic use of public, private, and philanthropic finance sources and development finance, can be a critical tool to mobilise additional private capital flows toward sustainable development in ASEAN. The financial sector is pivotal in advancing blended finance to meet funding gaps in ASEAN, by enabling acceptable risk-taking levels based on various funding sources. This approach leverages the willingness of development finance and philanthropic funders, including sovereign funds within ASEAN to assume greater risk exposure, utilising tools like partial credit guarantees to attract additional investors. Multilateral development banks and development finance institutions play a critical role by offering concessional financing and technical assistance, which supports local companies in accessing capital markets and structuring deals, thereby encouraging participation by private financial institutions through co-funding arrangements.

    I also believe that this is an opportunity for Islamic finance to demonstrate its unique role and impact. In recent years, Islamic finance has gained momentum within the ASEAN region. It offers alternative solutions to conventional financial structures through the use of risk sharing and social finance instruments that can be mobilised towards the development of productive economic sectors such as healthcare, transportation and green sectors. Notably, the deployment of blended capital using instruments such as waqf and zakat in Malaysia and a few neighbouring countries such as Indonesia and Brunei have significantly contributed to financial inclusion for the underserved and strengthened support for the MSMEs. An example of this is Malaysia’s iTEKAD initiative, a social blended finance programme for low-income microentrepreneurs that provides social and commercial funding, which comes together with training and mentorship to empower them in generating sustainable income. In the capital market structure, Islamic finance has also been mobilised for infrastructure, climate and green projects. In Malaysia, for example, a total of USD56 billion of sukuk was issued in 2023 to fund real economic sectors with a high concentration in renewable energy and green real estate.

    Embracing innovative financing structures will involve navigating various complexities that demand careful consideration, collaboration and adaptation. Hence, advancing capacity building within the financial sector is very crucial. In Malaysia, the Joint Committee on Climate Change (JC3) continues to serve as a key focal point in supporting the financial preparedness for climate change. As part of Malaysia’s ASEAN Chairmanship in 2025, Bank Negara Malaysia is committed to supporting the region’s transition efforts. During the ASEAN Finance Ministers and Governors Meeting week from 7 to 10 April this year in Kuala Lumpur, we will host several side events to advance these discussions. These events include a closed-door investor roundtable focused on innovative financing solutions for sizeable ASEAN green and transition projects, as well as pitching sessions on sustainable ASEAN Projects. We invite the financial industry to contribute and participate in these events.

    Responsible deployment of technology in financial services is key to maximise its potential while minimising risk

    Ladies and gentlemen,

    There is an immense potential for ASEAN to also leverage technology. This is the second point. With a median age of about 30 and a substantial portion under 35,5 ASEAN’s population is digitally proficient. Indeed, the adoption of digital financial services can be a game-changer in addressing challenges within the region, which include to better serve the needs of large unbanked and underbanked populations in our region.

    The outlook for digital financial services in ASEAN is very bright. Through innovations such as mobile wallets, digital payments and micro-lending, digital finance is expanding access to financial services for individuals who previously had limited options. These services are not just filling gaps – they are creating new pathways to financial inclusion, thereby allowing individuals to save, invest and access credit with unprecedented ease.

    While digital financial services hold tremendous promise, it comes with its own set of risks. Today’s technological advances are progressing at an unprecedented pace, making our response to these developments very crucial. For financial institutions, deployment of technology must be done thoughtfully and responsibly with holistic consideration of the impacts and value to the broader environment and community. This unwavering commitment to enhance financial services and preserve consumer confidence includes addressing cybersecurity risks, strengthening climate resilience, promoting financial literacy and ensuring that digital financial services are secure and accessible to all segments of society.

    As regulators, our commitment is for our policies to strike a balance between embracing technological innovation and, at the same time, preserving financial stability. Our Regulatory Sandbox allows for experimentation and contributes to the recalibration of regulatory policies such as eKYC. We also adapt our regulations to welcome new players into the market, those that have strong value propositions on inclusion, as demonstrated by the issuance of our licensing and regulatory framework for digital banks and digital insurers and takaful operators.

    Investing in talent strategies that not only creates a more agile and adaptive workforce, but also paves the way for regional talent mobility

    Let me move on to the third point. At the heart of economic growth and development lies talent. ASEAN is blessed with a vibrant, young and dynamic workforce. To capitalise on this potential, the financial sector will need to create an environment that nurtures the next generation of leaders and innovators in finance who carry a unique ASEAN identity – one that is not only tech-savvy, but also adept at navigating the complexities of regional regulations and global economic shifts while championing social equity and environmental sustainability.

    I would like to also take this opportunity to share Malaysia’s efforts in developing talent in our financial sector. In July last year, the industry launched the Financial Sector Future Skills Framework, and this is to empower individuals to take charge of their professional development, while creating new talent pipelines and succession pools. I reiterate the call I made during the launch of the framework for the industry to work closely with training institutes, professional bodies and industry associations to ensure that training programmes meet the established quality assurance standards and set high standards in new skill areas.

    Complementing this is a dynamic talent development hub, offering tailored learning programmes and certifications. For example, the Financial Sector Talent Enrichment Programme (FSTEP) targets fresh graduates interested in launching their career in financial services, while globally recognised financial certifications are available for seasoned professionals.

    Malaysia is also home to regional research and learning hubs such as the SEACEN Centre and is recognised globally as a leader in Islamic finance. With a multitude of well-established talent development institutions and capacity-building providers in Islamic finance, we offer a fertile ground for nurturing specialised skills and thought leadership in this field.

    To truly capitalise on the large working-age population in ASEAN, we need to go beyond domestic efforts. Financial institutions across the region should pursue collaborative initiatives that enhance talent mobility, such as through mutual recognition of qualifications and expertise sharing. ABIF can also be leveraged to intensify efforts to promote greater regulatory coherence through capacity-building initiatives. By doing so, we can improve connectivity across ASEAN markets, paving the way for a more integrated and resilient future for the region.

    In closing, today’s discourse reaffirms the financial sector’s commitment to turning AEC 2045 into a reality. The challenge lies in ensuring that the ASEAN financial sector has the capacity to do so by mobilising funds, leveraging technology, and developing regional talent.

    As I conclude my speech, I leave you with a thought from Peter Drucker: ‘The best way to predict the future is to create it.’ Together, let’s create a future where the financial sector empowers ASEAN’s growth and integration. On that note, I wish you all productive discussions during the rest of the Summit.


    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Global: How tourism and fish farming can thrive together

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Mausam Budhathoki, Postdoctoral Researcher, Institute of Aquaculture, University of Stirling

    The tourism and aquaculture sectors have been working together in Oban, on Scotland’s west coast. Rab Woods/Shutterstock

    In many coastal regions, tourism and fish farms are vital industries that drive economic growth. Yet, they often compete for space, raising concerns about how to balance these two sectors without compromising the environment or local livelihoods.

    In Oban, on the west coast of Scotland, the twin industries of tourism and aquaculture are learning to coexist – and even thrive together. Coastal communities can face economic challenges due to the seasonal nature of tourism as well as often limited job options. Their reliance on coastal resources, which are increasingly affected by environmental changes, can heighten the difficulties.

    Aquaculture in high-income countries hasn’t always had the best reputation. Public perception can be negative due to concerns about the environmental impact and resource use. But when it’s practised sustainably, aquaculture can in fact help meet global food demands and contribute to the UN’s sustainable development goals, a blueprint for economic growth that’s equitable and environmentally aware.

    Our recent study explored how tourists perceive aquaculture during their holiday and whether exposure to fish farms influences their willingness to consume locally farmed seafood. The results suggest that integrating aquaculture and tourism can increase awareness of sustainable seafood and create economic opportunities.

    Oban’s coastline is home to salmon farms, shellfish cultivation, including mussels and oysters, and new seaweed farms. All of these sit in waters popular for marine tours. The tours attract visitors eager to learn more about local wildlife and history. But, aquaculture often faces criticism due to its impact on the landscape and marine ecosystems.

    This tension is not unique to Oban. Across Europe, aquaculture growth has stagnated despite its potential to improve food security and sustainability. Regulatory challenges and conflicts over space are significant hurdles. This is especially true in coastal communities where the acceptance and support of the community – known as a “social licence to operate” – is crucial.

    But our study offers a promising solution: aquaculture–tourism integration. By showcasing aquaculture as part of the tourism experience, Oban can educate visitors, encourage greater acceptance of sustainable farming practices and boost the local economy.

    What tourists think about aquaculture

    We surveyed 200 tourists on marine tours in Oban to understand how they view aquaculture. The responses revealed three main types of tourists. These are those with multiple motivations (visitors drawn by nature, socialising and learning); “relaxers” (tourists seeking rest and relaxation, often with little previous knowledge of aquaculture); and outgoing nature enthusiasts (active travellers who value wildlife and environmental conservation).

    Despite their different motivations, most tourists responded positively to seeing fish farms during their tours. The most notable shift was among the “relaxers”, who were more interested in eating locally farmed seafood after learning about sustainable farming practices. This shows how education and direct experience can reshape the way seafood production is perceived.

    Aquaculture sites are often viewed as eyesores, but our findings show that when framed as part of local culture, they can actually enrich the tourist experience. Tourists appreciated learning about sustainable seafood production as the boats approached floating net cages and began to view aquaculture as a positive part of the community.

    Marine tours could include stops at aquaculture sites to let visitors see the operation, hear from farmers and even sample the products. This would present an opportunity to engage tourists and encourage a connection with the industry – potentially building trust with the public.

    A successful hybrid venture in the seas around Rhodes, Greece.

    This kind of integration offers several advantages. First, it can drive economic growth by attracting tourists interested in sustainable food and environmental practices. This can create a new revenue stream for both the aquaculture and tourism sectors. For example, a small farm on the Greek island of Rhodes partners with a diving centre to offer marine biology tours and dives around its site. Visitors learn about sustainable aquaculture and swim with sea bream in net pens, exploring how these practices support environmental conservation.

    Beyond the economic benefits, it can also raise environmental awareness. As tourists learn about sustainable seafood farming, they are more likely to support more environmentally friendly food production in general.

    By understanding how aquaculture contributes to food security, public perceptions could shift, leading to broader acceptance of aquaculture as a solution for global food challenges. And positive experiences of aquaculture not only shift perceptions but also make it easier for operators to win support from the community and encourage a more responsible approach to farming practices. However, it’s important that these efforts are honest and truly focused on environmental and social responsibility.

    While many of the benefits are clear, there are challenges. Both aquaculture and tourism can damage the environment. Tourism can lead to habitat disruption and pollution, while poorly managed aquaculture can affect water quality and marine biodiversity.

    But when farms are regularly visited as part of tourism activities such as boat tours or guided farm visits, there is a greater incentive to maintain high environmental standards. Nonetheless, careful planning and regulation are essential to ensure both sectors operate sustainably without harming ecosystems.

    Another challenge is the aesthetic impact of aquaculture, a common issue with industrial food production. Fish farms inevitably alter coastal landscapes, but operators can choose design solutions that balance production needs with preserving the outlook.

    Finally, competition for resources and space can lead to conflicts between tourism and aquaculture. Coastal communities must manage these demands carefully to ensure both sectors can thrive. This requires collaboration between tourism operators and aquaculture farmers to prevent clashes over infrastructure and resources.

    Oban’s successful integration of aquaculture and tourism offers a model that can could be replicated by coastal communities globally. But barriers, such as the remoteness of some farms or regulatory requirements, may limit feasibility. However, by transforming fish farms into educational attractions, Oban demonstrates how sustainable practices can benefit both sectors.

    With a focus on cooperation, education and responsible farming, an integrated approach between tourism operators and aquaculture companies could strengthen the reputation of local seafood. Ultimately, it offers a sustainable model for coastal communities.

    Mausam Budhathoki receives funding from the EATFISH project, funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme (Grant 956697).

    Dave Little receives funding from EATFISH project, funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme (Grant 956697).

    ref. How tourism and fish farming can thrive together – https://theconversation.com/how-tourism-and-fish-farming-can-thrive-together-249835

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: How poetry can help us understand mass extinction events

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Kate Simpson, PhD Candidate, Extinction Studies, University of Leeds

    Photo by Bea Vallejo on Unsplash.

    Extinction is inevitable. Expected. Almost all (99%) species that have ever existed have died out. Those disappearances have largely occurred at consistent background rates. But in the context of mass extinctions, ecosystems are placed under immense pressure, at above-average speeds. Here, the language changes from the commonplace to the exceptional.

    The most recent of these events occurred at the end of the Cretaceous period, 66 million years ago, following an asteroid collision off the shore of Mexico. And 252 million years ago, at the Permian-Triassic boundary, Earth experienced its most severe loss of animal species to date when mass volcanisms pumped carbon into the air, suffocating life and acidifying oceans, killing off up to 96% of all marine species.

    It is widely accepted that we are currently witnessing the start of a sixth mass extinction. Humans are dramatic ecosystem engineers – irrevocably altering environments and habitats. Past extinction events offer clues about how the Earth has previously responded to being placed under such severe pressure.

    But how can we better understand this extinction? How does this knowledge reach us, as humans, readers, engineers?

    In my anthology Out of Time: Poetry from the Climate Emergency (2021), I argued that poetry has a unique power to explore the stakes and potential of a sixth mass extinction event. In poetry, each mechanism is part of a larger conceptual machine designed to evoke and provoke in boundless, generous ways. As I wrote, poetry “distils ideas … into their most refined and impacting state”. It’s “synaesthetic, with the freedom to join the senses and activate our understanding of a given subject in innate, unsettling, and inexplicable ways”. And it’s “economical … a compressed world ready to be opened up and expanded by the reader”.

    However, poetry is also a space of necessary complication and conflict, being both expansive and limited, affective and affected by human bias. As the poet Ben Lerner notes in The Hatred of Poetry (2016) “you’re moved to write … but as soon as you move from that impulse to the actual poem, the song of the infinite is compromised by the finitude of its terms … you’re back in the human world with its inflexible laws and logic”. This inflexible logic is invaluable, given that it shapes, defines and influences our actions on the planet.

    The geologist Marcia Bjornerud has attributed rapid anthropogenic destruction, and its role in triggering a sixth mass extinction event, to narrow perspectives and shallow, linear thinking. The solution, she suggests, is in attending to the layers of an ancient Earth, contextualising differing rates of change (or tempos) with a “polytemporal” worldview.

    In 2022, I joined the UK’s first Extinction Studies doctoral training programme. I sought to explore how, and to what extent, I could cultivate a “polytemporal” perspective through palaeontological study and poetic practice.

    I set out to understand how words can help us to develop a deeper frame of reference that not only acknowledges but attempts to conceive of immense timescales. This work has taken me from Iceland’s melting glaciers to the ancient geological formations of the Scottish small isles, exploring chronostratigraphic boundaries – sites where eras are thought to start and end.

    Engineering intersections

    Poetry and palaeontology both work with strata. Strata is both literal and literary, sedimentary and metaphoric: it is to be read, to be interpreted, to be imagined around. In poetry, lines function as units of meaning: they can be categorised and contained, but they are part of a larger whole. And in poems (unlike most prose) words offer as much meaning as the silence that surrounds them; the page is not blank, but a negative space through which words resonate, into which meaning is made, or borne from.

    As the poet Don Paterson writes: “Silence is the poet’s ground. Silence delineates the formal borders of the poem, and the formal arrangement of silences puts language under pressure … underwrites the status of the poem as significant mark”. Likewise, fossils offer as much meaning as the negative space that surrounds them, the sediment from which they are excavated. Absence is evidential. It may denote where species moved from extant to extinct. It may denote the environmental pressures that caused this.

    The poet Jorie Graham states that silence “is the sound of the earth … [it] does not need you to interrupt it”. It’s true. Earth, and its ecosystems, do not require us to write, do not require us to make meaning of the past: to name and categorise epochs, eras and events as they layer and compress into strata. However, if we are to alter ecosystems so exceptionally, it is required that we understand the deep time context of our actions, as well as how context provides meaning; how meaning provides emotional value; how emotions drive action.

    Poems are ecosystems that we engineer. They are not spaces where images are created, but where images are transformed from pre-existing vocabularies, cast into meaning against the blank space. Poems may not be so sufficiently affective or effective that they can bring an end to anthropogenic destruction. But, they do demonstrate, on a small scale, how nothing can be made, read, or understood in isolation. That human thinking is bound by certain margins: spatial, temporal, conceptual.

    To comprehend extinction requires us to know how imagination works; where it reaches its limits. Poetry, as an anthropogenic art and process, shows us how to read. Poetry shows us how to recognise connections that occur on both visible and invisible levels.


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

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


    Kate Simpson receives funding from the Leverhulme Trust.

    ref. How poetry can help us understand mass extinction events – https://theconversation.com/how-poetry-can-help-us-understand-mass-extinction-events-238813

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Starmer announces aid cuts to fund defence – but Britain’s days as an aid superpower are already long over

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Balazs Szent-Ivanyi, Reader in Politics and International Relations and Deputy Director Aston Centre for Europe, Aston University

    Keir Starmer’s announcement that the UK will cut foreign aid in order to fund more defence spending seems like smart politics. With the US’s commitment to European security in question, it is clear that European countries, including the UK, need to spend more on defence.

    The US president, Donald Trump, with whom the prime minister is meeting on Thursday, has long called out Europeans for free-riding on America’s security guarantee. Credible promises of more British defence spending (including on American kit) may also deter Trump from introducing tariffs on UK imports.

    Building up the UK’s and Europe’s defence capabilities comes with a hefty price tag, and finding the money is tricky. The UK economy has weak growth prospects, and Labour has made a pledge not to increase taxes “on working people”. This leaves budget cuts in other areas as the only approach. The government seems to have decided that cutting foreign aid may be the least painful option for voters.


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    Foreign aid has generally been seen as an area of government spending which has relatively weak groups of domestic supporters. Charities and companies that directly benefit from aid spending through government contracts are a smallish group, and many receive funding from several sources.

    Hostility to aid among the general public is relatively high. According to a 2024 survey by the British Foreign Policy Group, 46% of Britons surveyed thought that UK aid should not return to its previous high of 0.7% of gross national income (GNI), or should be cut even further below the 0.5% at the time of that survey.

    A frequent argument made by successive British governments is that aid, by targeting poverty and conflict, can address the root causes of migration. The public, however, is sceptical about aid’s ability to reduce irregular migration or make the UK safer.




    Read more:
    Why many policies to lower migration actually increase it


    Although Labour voters are more positive about aid’s benefits, it is unlikely that the government would see any major electoral harm from reductions to the aid budget.

    Where aid is really used

    While cutting aid may be a smart move politically, it will have longer-term consequences for the UK’s global influence and its ability to achieve positive change in the world. Many charities were quick to point this out, arguing that it will hurt the lives of the poorest across the world.

    Aid is now set to shrink from 0.5% of GNI to 0.3%, which implies the UK will still have a substantial aid programme. On average, rich countries spent 0.37% of their GNI on aid in 2023 – not much more than what the UK will spend now.

    In practice, however, 23% of the British aid budget in 2023 was made up by Home Office spending on housing refugees in the UK. This is unlikely to decline quickly, even though the government has said it aims to reduce it. A further 34% consisted of contributions to multilateral organisations like the United Nations and World Bank. While there is scope to cut some of this, large savings are difficult without the UK leaving some organisations.

    Given these two fixed items, very little will remain for “genuine” development programmes in partner countries – the kind of funding that is actually visible as UK aid.




    Read more:
    The UK spent a third of its international aid budget on refugees in the UK – what it’s paying for, and why it’s a problem


    Such a small genuine aid programme will undoubtedly mean lower development impact and lower British influence. But the UK’s standing and soft power, particularly in poorer countries, was already in tatters well before Starmer’s announcement.

    The merger between the Foreign Office and Department for International Development in 2020, followed by budget cuts and the re-allocation of aid to the Home Office, has destroyed the UK’s reputation as an “aid superpower” and champion of the global poor.

    Across-the-board cuts have even devastated programmes which the UK has declared as priority areas, such as support for women and girls. Some would argue that after these cuts, the UK did not have much of a reputation left to lose.

    But this story of UK aid is not unique. Indeed, the world has entered a new era of aid fatigue. The populist right portrays aid as wasteful and ineffective, as shown by the Trump administration’s dismantling of the US Agency for International Development.




    Read more:
    USAID’s freeze has thrust the entire global aid system into uncertainty


    Many Africans see aid as a neocolonial enterprise aimed at spreading western ideologies, a sentiment often echoed by the progressive left. Western countries themselves are increasingly open about their selfish reasons for providing aid, such as boosting business, while many non-western donors have emerged as alternatives.

    It is not a surprise that the west’s influence in the world has waned, as evidenced by its failure to build a global anti-Russia coalition following the invasion of Ukraine.

    The UK will need to adapt to these realities. Designing a smarter and highly targeted aid programme, perhaps from the ground up, is now more important than ever to rebuild Britain’s reputation.

    Balazs Szent-Ivanyi 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. Starmer announces aid cuts to fund defence – but Britain’s days as an aid superpower are already long over – https://theconversation.com/starmer-announces-aid-cuts-to-fund-defence-but-britains-days-as-an-aid-superpower-are-already-long-over-250873

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI USA: Improving Workers’ Access to Medical Treatment

    Source: US State of New York

    Governor Kathy Hochul today announced growing support for a significant element of her 2025 State of the State proposals to markedly improve access to health care for injured workers. The four legislative proposals and one regulatory change are designed to give injured workers more options for timely, high-quality medical treatment.

    “New Yorkers who are injured or become ill on the job need more options for care,” Governor Hochul said. “My proposals do just that, giving injured workers freedom to see the providers they want, including their own primary care providers whom they already know and trust. Injured workers will no longer need to travel long distances or seek treatment from an unfamiliar provider just because their medical issue is work-related.”

    First among these proposals is universally authorizing all eligible licensed health care providers to treat workers’ compensation claimants. Currently, only providers who are authorized by the NYS Workers’ Compensation Board may treat injured workers. While there are thousands of eligible medical providers in New York State, only about 10 percent have taken the additional steps required to become Board-authorized. Now they wouldn’t have to; authorization would be automatic as part of their licensing.

    A second proposal allows resident and fellow physicians to treat injured workers, under a supervising provider, the same way they do for regular health insurance. This expansion could significantly increase provider participation at academic hospitals and health care systems.

    Today, 40 percent of injured workers travel to a different county to receive care from a Board-authorized provider. On average, those in rural or suburban counties travel 35 miles or more to their workers’ compensation-related medical appointment. This proposal would allow for more, and closer, options for care.

    While the first two proposals make it so more providers can treat injured workers, a third is aimed at making it more compelling to do so, and the remaining proposals will reduce delays in getting injured workers prompt medical treatment. These include:

    • A proposed increase to workers’ compensation fee schedules (the amounts paid to health care providers for services in treating injured workers), to ensure that high quality providers in our system are paid at rates comparable to private health insurance.
    • Legislation amending the Insurance Law to direct health care insurers to pay for medical treatment for workers’ compensation claimants when and while a workers’ compensation claim is disputed. Providers will be prohibited from collecting copays or coinsurance from the patient while the claim is under dispute. This ensures workers are no longer caught in the crosshairs of a dispute and can get the timely treatment they need, while also ensuring providers will get paid.
    • Legislation amending the workers’ compensation law to permit workers’ compensation insurers to pay for medical treatment, without accepting liability, for up to one year. In addition to helping injured workers get timely medical care, the provision provides more transparency, requiring insurers to notify injured workers that such payments are being made and that their claim will automatically be accepted by the insurer at the one-year mark, unless the claim is controverted.

    Governor Hochul’s latest proposals complement the many recent actions the Board has taken to increase provider participation. This includes eliminating custom forms and transitioning to a universal billing form to reduce administrative burden, use of an online system for prior authorization and requests to review medical billing disputes, quicker resolution of billing disputes and a significantly reduced need for provider depositions, among other improvements.

    New York State Workers’ Compensation Board Chair Clarissa Rodriguez said, “The proposals put forth by the Governor are a win-win-win — great for workers, great for providers, and great for employers. Workers will have far more options for care, providers can expand their practices and provide continuity of care to their existing patients, and employers will benefit from injured workers getting timely treatment so they can recover and return to work.”

    Board Certified Occupational Medicine Physician Dr. Marc Wilkenfeld said, “It’s critically important that injured and ill workers get prompt medical care by professionals who understand their needs. The universal authorization that Governor Hochul has proposed will drastically increase the number of health care providers who can treat injured and ill workers in the workers’ compensation system. Additionally, New York State has top-notch teaching hospitals, so the Governor’s proposal to allow fellow and resident physicians to treat, under the supervision of a faculty physician, will further enhance the quality of care. Combined, these proposals will enable workers to get treated faster, increasing the likelihood that they will recover sooner and more fully.”

    Worker Justice Center of New York Executive Director Alaina Evelyn Varvaloucas said, “Hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers labor in the state’s most dangerous industries and then find it nearly impossible to access adequate care for workplace injuries. In many cases, left untreated, these injuries lead to lifetime problems and can limit workers’ ability to continue working and supporting their families. These proposals enhance access for workers, particularly those in our upstate communities, as well as compensate our medical providers at a rate far more attuned to the reality of providing care. They are a critical step on the road toward real access to Workers’ Compensation benefits for all injured workers in New York.”

    Occupational Medicine and Workers’ Compensation Expert Warren Silverman, MD, FACOEM, FACPM said, “Having a worker remain out of work due to a lack of sufficient healthcare providers when they might otherwise be rehabilitated rapidly and return to work is an unnecessary burden on the patient, cost to the system and to all parties, and a disruption to commerce in general. Opening up workers’ compensation to all physicians and providing a better reimbursement rate will benefit the injured or ill employee, the employer, the provider, the carrier and in general New York State. It is most clearly a win-win situation for all.”

    The new workers’ compensation proposals are detailed in Governor Hochul’s 2025 State of the State Book, as part of an ambitious agenda to make New York safer, healthier, cleaner and more affordable for New York families.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: Correction: Form 8.3 – Assura Plc

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    AMENDED DISCLOSURE – PLEASE REFER TO SECTIONS 2(a) AND 3(a)

    8.3

    PUBLIC OPENING POSITION DISCLOSURE/DEALING DISCLOSURE BY
    A PERSON WITH INTERESTS IN RELEVANT SECURITIES REPRESENTING 1% OR MORE
    Rule 8.3 of the Takeover Code (the “Code”)

    1.        KEY INFORMATION

    (a)   Full name of discloser: Rathbones Group Plc
    (b)   Owner or controller of interests and short positions disclosed, if different from 1(a):
            The naming of nominee or vehicle companies is insufficient. For a trust, the trustee(s), settlor and beneficiaries must be named.
     
    (c)   Name of offeror/offeree in relation to whose relevant securities this form relates:
            Use a separate form for each offeror/offeree
    Assura Plc
    (d)   If an exempt fund manager connected with an offeror/offeree, state this and specify identity of offeror/offeree:  
    (e)   Date position held/dealing undertaken:
            For an opening position disclosure, state the latest practicable date prior to the disclosure
    24/02/2024
    (f)   In addition to the company in 1(c) above, is the discloser making disclosures in respect of any other party to the offer?
            If it is a cash offer or possible cash offer, state “N/A”
    No

    2.        POSITIONS OF THE PERSON MAKING THE DISCLOSURE

    If there are positions or rights to subscribe to disclose in more than one class of relevant securities of the offeror or offeree named in 1(c), copy table 2(a) or (b) (as appropriate) for each additional class of relevant security.

    (a)      Interests and short positions in the relevant securities of the offeror or offeree to which the disclosure relates following the dealing (if any)

    Class of relevant security: 10p Ord
      Interests Short positions
      Number % Number %
    (1)   Relevant securities owned and/or controlled: 179,035,513 5.50%    
    (2)   Cash-settled derivatives:        
    (3)   Stock-settled derivatives (including options) and agreements to purchase/sell:        

            TOTAL:

    179,035,513 5.50%    

    All interests and all short positions should be disclosed.

    Details of any open stock-settled derivative positions (including traded options), or agreements to purchase or sell relevant securities, should be given on a Supplemental Form 8 (Open Positions).

    (b)      Rights to subscribe for new securities (including directors’ and other employee options)

    Class of relevant security in relation to which subscription right exists:  
    Details, including nature of the rights concerned and relevant percentages:  

    3.        DEALINGS (IF ANY) BY THE PERSON MAKING THE DISCLOSURE

    Where there have been dealings in more than one class of relevant securities of the offeror or offeree named in 1(c), copy table 3(a), (b), (c) or (d) (as appropriate) for each additional class of relevant security dealt in.

    The currency of all prices and other monetary amounts should be stated.

    (a)        Purchases and sales

    Class of relevant security Purchase/sale Number of securities Price per unit
    10p Ordinary Shares Sale 20,957 44.4592p
    10p Ordinary Shares Sale 25,016 44.2315p
    10p Ordinary Shares Sale 10,000 44.2914p
    10p Ordinary Shares Sale 5,000 44.3156p
    10p Ordinary Shares Sale* 7,491,247 43.056p
    10p Ordinary Shares Purchase 30,000 44.5975p

    *7,491,247 shares warehoused on 24/02/2025.

    (b)        Cash-settled derivative transactions

    Class of relevant security Product description
    e.g. CFD
    Nature of dealing
    e.g. opening/closing a long/short position, increasing/reducing a long/short position
    Number of reference securities Price per unit
             

    (c)        Stock-settled derivative transactions (including options)

    (i)        Writing, selling, purchasing or varying

    Class of relevant security Product description e.g. call option Writing, purchasing, selling, varying etc. Number of securities to which option relates Exercise price per unit Type
    e.g. American, European etc.
    Expiry date Option money paid/ received per unit
                   

    (ii)        Exercise

    Class of relevant security Product description
    e.g. call option
    Exercising/ exercised against Number of securities Exercise price per unit
             

    (d)        Other dealings (including subscribing for new securities)

    Class of relevant security Nature of dealing
    e.g. subscription, conversion
    Details Price per unit (if applicable)
    10p Ordinary Shares Transfer out 14,000  

    4.        OTHER INFORMATION

    (a)        Indemnity and other dealing arrangements

    Details of any indemnity or option arrangement, or any agreement or understanding, formal or informal, relating to relevant securities which may be an inducement to deal or refrain from dealing entered into by the person making the disclosure and any party to the offer or any person acting in concert with a party to the offer:
    Irrevocable commitments and letters of intent should not be included. If there are no such agreements, arrangements or understandings, state “none”
    None

    (b)        Agreements, arrangements or understandings relating to options or derivatives

    Details of any agreement, arrangement or understanding, formal or informal, between the person making the disclosure and any other person relating to:
    (i)   the voting rights of any relevant securities under any option; or
    (ii)   the voting rights or future acquisition or disposal of any relevant securities to which any derivative is referenced:
    If there are no such agreements, arrangements or understandings, state “none”
    None

    (c)        Attachments

    Is a Supplemental Form 8 (Open Positions) attached? No
    Date of disclosure: 26/02/2025
    Contact name: Chinwe Enyi – Compliance Department
    Telephone number: 0151 243 7053

    Public disclosures under Rule 8 of the Code must be made to a Regulatory Information Service.

    The Panel’s Market Surveillance Unit is available for consultation in relation to the Code’s disclosure requirements on +44 (0)20 7638 0129.

    The Code can be viewed on the Panel’s website at.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Marat Khusnullin: 39 bypasses built and reconstructed thanks to the national project “Safe High-Quality Roads”

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

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

    Previous news Next news

    Lobnya Bypass, Moscow Region

    Construction and reconstruction of bypasses of populated areas allow to create alternative routes for transit transport. Over the six years of the national project “Safe High-Quality Roads”, 39 bypasses have been built and reconstructed. This was reported by Deputy Prime Minister Marat Khusnullin.

    “In road activities, we pay great attention to the construction of bypasses around populated areas. Such roads help to significantly relieve cities and towns from transit transport, and also improve the environmental situation there. This undoubtedly has a positive effect on the quality of life of people and increases the efficiency of transport communications in the regions. From 2019 to 2024 inclusive, 39 bypasses were built and reconstructed under the national project “Safe High-Quality Roads”. This work will continue, including under the new national project “Infrastructure for Life”. By 2030, on the instructions of the President of Russia, it is planned to build more than 50 bypasses around populated areas,” said Marat Khusnullin.

    Bypass roads solve a number of important social and economic problems.

    “In 2024, eight bypass sections were put into operation on the federal road network of Rosavtodor, their total length was 367.7 km. In particular, a bypass was built around five settlements (Isametovo, Verkhneyarkeevo, Layashty, Ishkarovo and Asyanovo) on the M-7 Volga highway in the Republic of Bashkortostan. Thanks to such facilities, a number of important tasks are solved: they allow transit transport to leave the boundaries of the settlement, and drivers can get to their destination faster. Bypass roads help reduce the risk of accidents and, importantly, improve the environmental situation in the settlement itself. In addition, the construction of such facilities can stimulate the development of adjacent territories, creating new opportunities for business,” said Transport Minister Roman Starovoit.

    A great deal of work on the construction and reconstruction of bypasses around populated areas is also being carried out on the regional road network.

    “In 2024, four sections of bypass roads around populated areas were put into operation, which is almost 135 km. In addition, construction and installation work has been completed on several more bypass roads: traffic on them has already opened, the facilities will be put into operation this year. The implementation of such large-scale projects became possible thanks to the effective work of the road workers’ team, as well as the constructive interaction of federal and regional authorities. It is this approach that allows us to successfully solve problems of improving the quality of life of people,” said Igor Kostyuchenko, Deputy Head of the Federal Road Agency.

    In 2024, the construction of the third stage of the northern bypass of Lobnya – a roundabout on Rogachevskoye Highway – was completed in the Moscow Region. The length of the facility is 1.5 km, the total length of the northern bypass of Lobnya is 16.5 km. There are six traffic lanes, the capacity of the highway is over 120 thousand cars per day.

    In 2024, the Republic of Mordovia opened traffic on the second stage of the Ruzayevka bypass (4.1 km). It became one of the connecting links to ensure non-stop high-speed communication in the advanced development area. The road allows connecting two important transport arteries of the republic – the federal highway R-158 and the regional Saransk – Ruzayevka. The bypass significantly reduces the travel time of residents, and also takes the transit freight flow outside the city.

    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: Marat Khusnullin: More than 94 thousand people have moved from dilapidated housing in the Central Federal District since 2019

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

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

    Work to reduce the emergency housing stock is being carried out in all federal districts of Russia. In the regions of the Central Federal District, since 2019, when the implementation of the national project “Housing and Urban Environment” began, houses unfit for habitation with an area of 1.6 million square meters have been resettled. This was reported by Deputy Prime Minister Marat Khusnullin.

    “Resettlement of people from dilapidated housing, improving their quality of life is the task that the President of the country set for the construction complex of Russia. Deterioration of houses is a constant and, unfortunately, irreversible process. Therefore, work continues to solve this problem through joint efforts of the federal center and regions. For example, in the Central Federal District since 2019, more than 94 thousand citizens have been resettled from dilapidated houses. The unsuitable housing stock has decreased by 1.6 million square meters. Since 2025, these tasks are being addressed within the framework of the new national project “Infrastructure for Life”, – said the Deputy Prime Minister.

    According to Marat Khusnullin, in the Central Federal District the largest number of citizens who moved from dilapidated houses are in the Moscow region (26 thousand people), Vladimir region (9.14 thousand people), Tula region (7.6 thousand people) and Lipetsk region (7.3 thousand people).

    The General Director of the Territorial Development Fund, Ilshat Shagiakhmetov, recalled that the regions also launched their own mechanisms, which accelerated the implementation of the resettlement program.

    “Among the first subjects to complete the task of resettling citizens from emergency housing recognized as such before January 2017 are Voronezh, Ivanovo, Smolensk and Tula regions. Last year, they already began resettling houses recognized as unsuitable after 2017. Together, they resettled 36.2 thousand square meters of such housing. In January of this year, Kursk Region also completed the program of resettling citizens from emergency housing identified before 2017,” said Ilshat Shagiakhmetov.

    The program for resettling citizens from emergency housing stock is supervised by the Russian Ministry of Construction. Its operator is the Territorial Development Fund.

    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: Discover the future in transport with the new bachelor’s degree program at GUU!

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

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

    The State University of Management announces the launch of a new bachelor’s degree program “Transport Systems Management” to train a new generation of management engineers.

    This engineering and management program is implemented within the framework of the direction 23.03.01 “Technology of transport processes”. The main goal is to train qualified engineers-managers who will understand the functioning of enterprises in the transport sector, improve their efficiency and implement innovative solutions.

    It should be noted that the training of specialists in the field of transport education has been carried out at our university since 1940 on the basis of our own unique system.

    The new program was carefully developed by specialists from the Department of Transport Complex Management and was announced back in the spring of last year.

    “Transport Systems Management” is a unique educational product that combines engineering knowledge, industry expertise in the field of transport, management training, end-to-end digital competencies and project-based learning.

    Engineering training is implemented on the basis of the modern and developing infrastructure of the State University of Management, including the Center for Engineering Project Management and the Center for Intellectual Property and Technology Transfer.

    Why choose the Transport Systems Management program at the State University of Management?

    1. Integrated approach: the program combines engineering knowledge with the management skills necessary for a successful career in the modern transport industry. 2. Relevant expertise: the curricula are developed taking into account market requirements and are built on the basis of a process approach to the activities of transport organizations. 3. Practical focus: training is closely related to the real tasks facing transport companies. 4. Partnership with industry leaders: the program is implemented with the active participation of leading employers: Avtostruktura LLC, Tekhnotrade LLC, and Mostransagentstvo JSC. 5. Employment opportunities: successful students can receive job offers from leading companies in the automotive business, such as GUP MO Mostransavto, GUP Mosgortrans, OAO Mostransagentstvo, GC Rolf, OOO Avtostruktura, OOO Klyuchavto, OOO GLT, OOO Tekhnotrade, OOO PEK, Automobile Group Avilon, Transport Association of the Moscow Agglomeration (Association TAMA), OOO Torg-Koms, OOO Hussmann, OOO Ecolife, GUP Moscow Metropolitan, AO IERT, AO Central Suburban Passenger Company, MAZ Moskvich and others.

    What will students learn by pursuing the Transportation Systems Management program?

    The program will cover a wide range of disciplines covering key aspects of transport systems management: 1. Transportation organization: freight, international transportation, leasing of transport equipment, transportation insurance. 2. MAAS (Mobility Management): passenger transportation, navigation services. 3. Analytics and transport consulting: digital transport technologies, transport telematics, intelligent transport systems. 4. Public sector: transport supervision, vehicle evacuation, transportation of hazardous goods, regional transport departments. 5. Green transport: collection, transportation, sorting and disposal of solid municipal waste. 6. Transport engineering: supply chain management of manufacturing companies, engineering graphics, design of transport equipment.

    Take the first step towards a successful career in the dynamic and promising field of transport, enroll in the Transport Systems Management program at the State University of Management!

    Details of the educational program can be found on the official website.

    Subscribe to the TG channel “Our GUU” Date of publication: 02/26/2025

    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 Australia: Mental Health Australia calls for free mental health care for all children and young people in Australia

    Source: Mental Health Australia

    Peak mental health body Mental Health Australia (MHA) is urging all political parties to commit to free mental health care for everyone under the age of 25 as part of their federal election platforms. MHA Director of Policy and Advocacy, Emma Greeney, said that with two-thirds of mental health to guarantee all children and young people the chance to thrive.

    See full media release at the PDF attached below. 

    For further information and references see: Mental Health Australia’s website and Federal Election Platform: Case for Change – Free mental health support for children and young people  

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: MHA’s Federal Election Platform

    Source: Mental Health Australia

    Mental Health Australia is urging all political parties to commit to implement pathways to free mental health care for everyone under the age of 25 as part of their election platforms. This ambitious move could change the trajectory for mental health in Australia, by investing in accessible care, earlier in life, during the most critical phase of growth and development. 

    We need further investment to ensure availability of mental health supports in the community that GPs can refer people to, as well as appropriate alternate pathways online, through schools and walk-in community hubs, so that all children and young people can access the mental health supports they need. 

    This targeted call to action forms the third component of Mental Health Australia’s Federal Election platform, building on our Vision Statement released in December, and Sector Sustainability Statement (link to PDF below) also released today.  

    Mental Health Australia’s Sector Sustainability Statement outlines seven key actions to improve funding and contracting arrangements to ensure certainty for the community and sector providing mental health support. We will call on Federal Election candidates to pledge to support the Statement to and deliver these changes if elected for the next term of government. 

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Lake Charles Man Sentenced to 12 Years in Prison for Drug Trafficking

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    LAFAYETTE, La. – Acting United States Attorney Alexander C. Van Hook announced that Jeremy Wade Denegall, 45, of Lake Charles, Louisiana, has been sentenced by United States District Judge David C. Joseph to 144 months (12 years) in prison, followed by 5 years of supervised release, on drug trafficking charges.

    On February 22, 2022, law enforcement officers conducted a traffic stop of Denegall’s vehicle for a traffic violation on Interstate 10. Denegall was the sole occupant and driver of the vehicle. When officers approached the vehicle, they detected the odor of marijuana coming from inside and a search was conducted. Inside the vehicle they found a plastic baggie with a substance consistent with crack cocaine, a plastic bag containing a large amount of a crystal-like substance determined to be methamphetamine and also fentanyl. In addition, two firearms and a magazine with 19 rounds of ammunition and two digital scales were found.

    Denegall was charged and pleaded guilty on November 15, 2024, to one count of possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine and one count of possession with intent to distribute fentanyl. 

    The case was investigated by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, Calcasieu Parish Sheriff’s Office and Lafayette Parish Sheriff’s Office, and prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney LaDonte A. Murphy.

    # # #

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Berkeley County Man Admits to Role in Drug Trafficking Organization

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    MARTINSBURG, WEST VIRGINIA – James Reyes, age 55, of Martinsburg, West Virginia, has admitted to working with others in a large-scale drug operation in the Eastern Panhandle. 

    Reyes pled guilty to the distribution of cocaine. According to court documents and statements made in court, Reyes was selling drugs for the drug trafficking organization

    Reyes is facing 20 years to life in federal prison. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

    Assistant U.S. Attorney Lara Omps-Botteicher is prosecuting the case on behalf of the government.

    The Eastern Panhandle Drug Task Force was the lead investigative unit. Other investigative agencies that assisted include the Federal Bureau of Investigation, including the Pittsburgh, San Francisco, San Juan, and Philadelphia Field Offices; United States Marshals Service; Homeland Security Investigations; United States Postal Service; Drug Enforcement Administration, the Louisville and Chicago Divisions; Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives; West Virginia State Police; Martinsburg Police Department; Ranson Police Department; Charles Town Police Department; Berkeley County Sheriff’s Office; Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office; West Virginia Air National Guard; Mineral County Sheriff’s Office; Grant County Sheriff’s Office; Hampshire County Sheriff’s Department; Keyser Police Department; Northwest Regional Drug Task Force, Virginia; Pennsylvania State Police; Franklin County Sheriff’s Office, Pennsylvania; Winchester Police Department, Virginia; Frederick County Sheriff’s Office, Virginia; Virginia State Police; Sunnyvale Police Department, California. 

    U.S. Magistrate Judge Robert W. Trumble presided.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Jefferson County Man Sentenced for Cocaine Charge

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    MARTINSBURG, WEST VIRGINIA – Jamie Green, age 47, of Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, was sentenced to 70 months in prison for conspiracy to possess with the intent to distribute and to distribute cocaine.

    According to court documents and statements made in court, the United States Postal Service Office of Inspector General intercepted a package containing more than two pounds of cocaine mailed from Los Angeles, California, to Green’s address in Jefferson County, West Virginia. Investigators arrested Green at his home. He has prior convictions for drugs, aggravated assault by a vehicle while under the influence of alcohol, and firearms convictions.

    Green will serve three years of supervised release following his prison sentence.

    Assistant U.S. Attorney Kyle Kane prosecuted the case on behalf of the government.

    Investigative agencies include the United States Postal Service Office of Inspector General, the West Virginia State Police, and the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office.

    U.S. District Judge Gina M. Groh presided.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI: Scality sees record channel partner and revenue growth as demand for cyber-resilient storage soars

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Scality, a global leader in cyber-resilient storage software for the AI era, today announced significant growth of its global partner ecosystem, which has doubled in size year-over-year. A channel-first strategy fueled Scality’s exceptional growth rate, with Q4 2024 alone seeing a record breaking 60% of sales driven by the VAR community. Scality’s VAR channel is now the top driver of sales for the ARTESCA product line, augmenting the continued strong business growth seen through its strategic alliance with HPE. Coinciding with this impressive channel growth, Scality also announced winners of its second annual 2024 Partner Awards Program (listed below) that recognizes partners in global regions that have demonstrated outstanding promise and customer engagement.

    The Scality global partner ecosystem includes a range of VARs, Cloud and Service Providers, hardware alliance, application solution providers and strategic distributors committed to delivering industry-leading, cyber-resilient storage backup solutions to customers worldwide. The unprecedented growth of the company is 100% directly driven by its partner go-to-market strategy, which includes strategic partners such as HPE and Veeam Software, and now sees the VAR ecosystem playing a more prominent role in the company’s growth.

    “Our partners are essential to our success, and we’re committed to helping them grow by unlocking new revenue streams,” said Eric LeBlanc, Channel Chief & GM of Scality’s ARTESCA Business. “With 400+ channel partners and over 1,000 Scality certified partner personnel worldwide, we empower them through innovation, simplicity, and partner-focused solutions. Partners can sell both RING and ARTESCA, with ARTESCA specifically driving a high-velocity sales model for simple ransomware protection through industry leaders like Veeam, making it easier to drive incremental revenue and pipeline growth.”

    Scality partner milestones that contributed to doubling the company’s qualified pipeline which resulted in record sales in 2024 include:

    • The number of certified partners doubled in EMEA and APAC, significantly expanding the company’s global reach.
    • Signed 3 of the top worldwide distribution partners, including Ingram Micro, TD SYNNEX, and Arrow Electronics to bolster market presence.
    • The launch of the ARTESCA hardware appliance and the introduction of a Pay-As-You-Go pricing model through distribution created new revenue stream opportunities for partners. The Scality Cloud and Service Provider (SCSP) program allows partners to submit monthly consumption reports to Scality, enabling automated invoicing and streamlined agreements. Distribution partners operate this model seamlessly, ensuring efficiency.

    Scality expands ‘channel partner of the year’ honors in 2024
    To showcase the exceptional results achieved by partners, Scality also announced winners of its second annual global partner awards program. Building on last year’s initiative that honored 10 global partners, this year’s winners showcase 22 out of more than 400 worldwide partners as either a Top Performer or Rising Star Award winner this year. The expanded list of partner winners this year reflects the explosive growth of the company’s partner network. Ten partners were named as 2024 Top Performers, demonstrating their strategic alignment to Scality’s go-to-market objectives and resulted in direct contribution to revenue growth through successful sales engagements. These partners also helped customers go beyond immutability to achieve end-to-end cyber resilience with their backup storage solution. Twelve partners received the 2024 Rising Star nod, showcasing an exceptional commitment to growth and innovation. These partners also implemented effective marketing campaigns that drove growth in sales engagement. Please see the full list of Scality’s 2024 Partner Award winners below and here on LinkedIn.

    Scality is the only 100% software-defined storage company leading the Gartner Magic Quadrant for distributed file systems and object storage for nine consecutive years. Scality RING was recently ranked as #1 on the 2024 GigaOm Radar for Enterprise Object Storage — achieving the highest scores across Key Features, Emerging Features and Business Criteria categories, well ahead of 17 competing vendors. This market validation, coupled with Scality’s disruptive product innovation and partner-first growth strategy, has accelerated Scality solutions’ deployment, anchored by a growing list of global distribution partners and across a variety of industries, including banking, healthcare and government entities to name a few.

    Scality Partner of the Year Award Winners

    Top Performers
            ACP Gruppe
            ATK (Kazakhstan)
            Bechtle Schweiz AG
            C-DATA
            CONVERGE S.r.l.
            DTP Group
            MONT Azerbaijan
            M2 Technology Inc.
            Perfekt Pty Ltd
            Trustteam Belgium

    Rising Stars
            Autodata
            Infinitum S.A.
            Infradax
            IT Global
            NetPlans GmbH
            Novulutions, Inc.
            ODB Trade
            Roseware Corp.
            Savaco
            TeraSky
            Thein Digital s.r.o
            Virtualflex Solutions Limited

    https://www.scality.com/find-a-channel-partner/

    About Scality
    Scality solves organizations’ biggest data storage challenges for the new AI-era — security, performance, and cost. Designed to provide the strongest form of immutability plus end-to-end cyber resilience, Scality solutions safeguard data at five core levels for unbreakable ransomware protection. Delivering utmost resilience, Scality makes storage infrastructures limitlessly scalable in all critical dimensions. The world’s most discerning companies trust Scality so they can grow faster and execute AI data-driven ideas quicker — while increasing efficiency and avoiding lock-in. Scality S3 object storage software is reliable, secure and sustainable. Follow us on LinkedIn. Visit www.scality.com and our blog.

    Media Contact:
    Lisa Williams
    A3 Communications
    +1 339-788-0067
    lisa.williams@a3communicationspr.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Health trainers launch weekly drop-ins across city

    Source: City of York

    City of York Council’s Health Trainer team have launched new weekly drop-ins at 3 Explore libraries across the city.

    They’re offering help and advice for anyone wanting to stop smoking, lose weight, lower their drinking or get more active.

    The team already provide residents with programmes of one-to-one confidential support, as well as working with groups in the community, providing training and attending events. Residents can self-refer for the CYC Health Trainers service online, or by calling telephone: 01904 553377.

    Now they hope the weekly face-to-face drop-ins at Explore libraries will enable people to find out more about the service at easy-to-reach locations:

    Visitors to the drop-ins can find out York’s Swap2Stop offer, and smokers can try a simple breath test to find out how much carbon monoxide is in their blood.

    The Swap2Stop offer provides York residents aged over 18 with either:

    • a free, 4-week vape starter kit that will be posted out to them
    • or a 10-week programme of one-to-one support with free vapes or nicotine replacement products

    Recent figures showed the team were providing the most effective stop smoking service in the country, with 82% of people who set a quit date with the service having successfully stopped smoking 4 weeks after that date.

    Since the Swap2Stop offer was launched, aimed at encouraging smokers to make the switch from smoking to vaping to improve their health, referrals to the service have more than doubled.

    Glyn Newberry, Health Trainer Service Manager, at City of York Council, said:

    Anyone interested in finding out more about our service or who needs general advice about improving their health can now drop in and speak to one of our friendly and experienced health trainers in an informal setting.

    “Hundreds of clients across the city have already benefited from the service we provide and we want to reach even more people to help them live healthier lives. Come and find out about our Swap2Stop offer and all the other ways in which we can support you – for free!”

    Jenny Layfield, Chief Executive of York Libraries and Archives, said:

    We’re delighted to be working in partnership with the Health Trainer team. We hope that by offering these drop-ins in our busy and welcoming spaces, even more York residents will take advantage of this supportive and valuable free service.

    Residents can find out more about the CYC Health Trainers service online, or by calling telephone: 01904 553377.

    Find out more about the Swap2Stop offer.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: HSBC Leader Encourages York Businesses to embrace ‘Fourth Industrial Revolution’

    Source: City of York

    HSBC UK’s Head of Technology Sector has encouraged York businesses to adapt to thrive in the climate of ‘functional disruptive change’ represented by the rapid development of AI.

    In his keynote address to over 60 businesses at the first York Tech Forum on 13 February, Roland Emmans from HSBC UK explored the fast-moving tech landscape and underlined the importance for businesses of all shapes and sizes of keeping pace with rapid technological change.

    Roland Emmans said:

    AI has vast potential to help businesses solve challenges and serve their customers better. The pace of change is increasing day by day, we need to embrace this change, its impact on technology, our teams and consumer demands.

    “A combination of great technology and great people is key – leveraging complementary strengths like AI’s processing power alongside expert human judgement.”

    The event, held at City of York Council’s West Offices headquarters on Thursday 13 February, began with a welcome from Cllr Pete Kilbane, the council’s portfolio holder for Economy and Culture, who reflected on how York’s tech sector has thrived in recent years.

    Cllr Kilbane highlighted major local developments, from the Institute for Safe Autonomy, a £45 million purpose-built facility which launched at the University of York in 2023, to the 6G Lab of the North, which works with the next generation of innovative telecommunications systems.

    Attendees also heard from Doug Winters, Founder and CTO of Isotoma Ltd, a York-based software development agency. Doug shared challenges and lessons from his business’ 20 year-journey, advising businesses that AI technologies, while useful for businesses, need to be used according to the situation, and are not a ‘silver bullet’ Doug also shared tips on the value of continuous planning throughout a project. 

    Cllr Pete Kilbane, Executive Member for Economy and Culture at City of York Council, said:

    We have big ambitions for York as a vibrant tech hub. Tech sector investment will bring well-paid jobs and marked economic benefits.

    “To truly embrace the benefits of rapid technological change, we need to help businesses in all sectors, from retail to rail, adapt to using technology to become more efficient, innovative, resilient and sustainable. This event is part of a series which includes our upcoming AI skills training for retail and hospitality businesses, delivered by our partners at the Coders Guild, and the Reignite events which have bolstered York’s status as a UNESCO City of Media Arts.

    “I’d like to thank all of our speakers and everyone who joined us for this inspiring and thought-provoking session. To find out more about how we can support businesses to grow and adapt to technological change, start a conversation with our Business Growth Managers at economicgrowth@york.gov.uk.”

    This event was funded by the UK government through the UK Shared Prosperity Fund.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Enforcement cameras brought in to combat illegal cycle lane parking in South Manchester

    Source: City of Manchester

    Portable enforcement cameras are being brought in to combat inconsiderate motorists who park illegally in cycle lanes.

    The Chorlton to Manchester Cycleway is one of the Council’s flagship cycling schemes. Providing a segregated cycling experience from a district centre to the heart of Manchester has been a key example of the Council’s commitment to providing people additional ways of travelling.

    Unfortunately since the scheme’s completion it has been noted that a small minority of motorists have chosen to park across the cycle lane, blocking its intended purpose.

    Not only is this illegal, but it is dangerous as it forces cyclists into the road to get around. For anyone in a wheelchair, with mobility issues or a pram this is especially hazardous, and something we want to avoid wherever possible.

    In response to concerns raised by residents this is why from March 3, enforcement cameras will be in operation around the cycle route to monitor and penalise anyone caught breaking the law. This will be on top of the usual enforcement officers which patrol on foot.

    Motorists who are caught parking in a cycle lane may be liable to pay a £70 penalty charge notice (PCN).

    A driver issued with a PCN who believes it was incorrectly issued has the right to appeal the charge via the Council’s website.

    Councillor Tracey Rawlins, Executive Member for Clean Air, Environment and Transport said: “After the completion of any major scheme we listen to feedback around how it’s working, and sadly people have reported frequent problems with vehicles being parked in the cycle lanes.

    “These lanes are intended to be a quick and safe way for people wanting to cycle to and from the city centre. However, if people are confronted with cars and vans parked on the lanes, they are rendered totally useless.

    “It’s not only inconsiderate to those trying to use them, but incredibly dangerous forcing people into the main road to go around an obstacle. Hopefully this period of additional enforcement will encourage people to think twice before parking illegally and plan their journeys ahead.

    “In Manchester we are working to improve opportunities to walk and cycle and over time we hope to encourage a ‘people first’ mindset, rather than vehicles. Ultimately and most importantly we want Manchester to be clean, safe and attractive for everyone.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: Pipeline companies deliver most of the U.S. electric power sector’s natural gas

    Source: US Energy Information Administration

    In-brief analysis

    February 26, 2025


    According to our Natural Gas Annual Respondent Query System, 1,653 natural gas delivery companies delivered natural gas to end-use customers in 2023 in the United States. A delivery company is defined as any entity that delivers natural gas directly to end users. Natural gas deliveries by pipeline companies to the electric power sector made up the largest share of deliveries to end-use consumers, accounting for 33% of all natural gas delivered to end-use consumers in 2023.

    Pipeline companies generally deliver large volumes of natural gas to high-volume end users, accounting for most of the deliveries to industrial facilities and electric power plants. The electric power sector and industrial sector are the largest and second-largest consuming sectors, respectively. Pipeline companies delivered 75%, or 27.1 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d), of the natural gas used to generate electric power in the United States, and 51%, or 11.9 Bcf/d, of the natural gas used in the industrial sector in 2023.

    Conversely, local distribution companies (LDCs) are the primary providers of natural gas to homes and businesses, delivering 94% (20.3 Bcf/d) of end-use natural gas to the residential and commercial sectors. LDCs often operate networks of small pipelines that connect to homes and businesses; however, they are distinct from pipeline companies, which operate wide-diameter, high-pressure pipelines that transport large volumes of natural gas to predominantly industrial and electric facilities. Natural gas distributors operated by municipalities, referred to here as municipals, are the most common type of natural gas distributor in the United States, but they deliver relatively small volumes of end-use natural gas, accounting for only 4% of all end use.

    Natural gas consumption to generate U.S. electric power has increased significantly in recent years. Warmer weather has increased the demand for electricity for space cooling in the summer, increasing natural gas use by electricity providers. Low natural gas prices and improving efficiency from combined-cycle plants have also contributed to increased natural gas-fired power generation. As natural gas consumption in the electric power sector has increased, natural gas deliveries via pipeline companies to electric power plants have also increased, rising by 17% (3.9 Bcf/d) since 2018 and accounting for 75% of the total increase in deliveries to the electric power sector between 2018 and 2023. Pipeline companies do not typically sell natural gas to end users, but instead they deliver the natural gas on behalf of the end user in exchange for a transportation fee.

    LDCs deliver most of the natural gas consumed in the U.S. residential and commercial sectors. However, nearly half of their deliveries (47%, or 15.2 Bcf/d) go to the industrial and electric power sectors. LDCs are typically regulated by state public utility commissions, which ensure that the LDCs maintain reliability of service and stable prices for customers. LDCs receive natural gas from a pipeline near their service area and then transport it through their own network to end users.

    LDCs with interstate pipelines, the least common type of distributor, deliver the most natural gas to end users per facility, at an average of 0.5 Bcf/d per facility. An LDC with interstate pipelines can have a large distribution area that sometimes spans several states and may serve millions of customers in a region.

    Municipals typically serve one specific city or town and, as a result, deliver comparatively small volumes of natural gas to end users, averaging less than 3 Bcf/d of deliveries in 2023. Despite delivering relatively small volumes of natural gas, municipals accounted for more than half of all delivery companies, numbering 886 in 2023.

    More information on company-level data on natural gas distributors is available in EIA’s Natural Gas Annual Respondent Query System.

    Principal contributors: Mike Kopalek, Grace Wheaton

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 26 February 2025 UHC-Partnership: Namibia tackles antimicrobial resistance

    Source: World Health Organisation

    In June 2024, a 66-year-old woman was admitted to the Medical Intensive Care Unit at Intermediate Hospital Katutura in Windhoek, Namibia. She was diagnosed with pneumonia, and tests showed that the organism responsible for her severe illness was resistant to all antibiotics except tigecycline. At the hospital, the pharmacy department had to obtain a compassionate clearance permit to procure and import tigecycline for the patient.

    “The patient completed the course, stabilized, and was discharged from the intensive care unit to a general ward. Unfortunately, due to various complicated comorbidities, the patient eventually passed away”, said Ms Taimi Ipinge, a Chief Pharmacist at Intermediate Hospital Katutura.

    Tragically, this type of resistance to antibiotics is all too common in Namibia, as with elsewhere in the world.

    Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) occurs when bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites change over time and no longer respond to medicines, making infections harder to treat and increasing the risk of disease spread, severe illness, and death. As a result, the medicines become ineffective and infections persist in the body, increasing the risk of spread to others.

    AMR is one of the top global public health and development threats. It is estimated that bacterial AMR was directly responsible for 1.27 million global deaths in 2019 and contributed to 4.95 million deaths.

    In 2019, Namibia recorded 451 deaths attributable to AMR and 1,900 deaths were associated with AMR.

    Acting to stop AMR

    The Government of Namibia recognizes that AMR is a threat to health security across the country and region and that a range of health system interventions are necessary to protect the population’s health and ensure good progress towards universal health coverage (UHC).

    The Ministry of Health and Social Services (MoHSS), with support from WHO through the UHC Partnership and others, is implementing various activities in line with the AMR National Action Plan in compliance with the Global Action Plan to address AMR.

    The Government responded to the overuse of antibiotics by setting up a national multi-sectoral AMR governance to guide, oversee, coordinate, and monitor AMR-related activities in all sectors to ensure a systematic and comprehensive implementation of Namibia’s National Action Plan on AMR.

    In November 2021, Namibia commemorated its first World Antimicrobial Awareness Week (WAAW). In 2023, MoHSS in collaboration with AMR quadripartite organizations, commemorated the week under the theme of ‘Preventing antimicrobial resistance together’ with the slogan ‘Antimicrobials: handle with care’. The event brought together the Ministry of Health and Social Services, the Ministry of Agriculture, Water and Land Reform, and the Ministry of Environment, Forestry and Tourism.

    Namibia launched its infection prevention and control action plan and national guidelines. WHO provided support to a range of activities for this including distribution of information, education and communication materials around infection prevention and control, regional orientation on quality standards, in-service training focal points, and training on water, sanitation, and hygiene for hospital quality improvement plans. Thanks to capacity-building support from WHO, Namibia also reached a significant milestone for the first submission of data on AMR to GLASS in December 2023.

    “AMR is extremely serious. If left unchecked it means we are heading to a world where medical treatment of routine ailments or operations is life threatening and a greater number of people might stop responding to drugs. It challenges all our efforts to strengthen health systems and achieve universal health coverage. WHO commends the Namibian Government for the strategic and multiple approaches taken through collaboration between sectors and work across the region to raise awareness amongst the public,” said Dr Richard Banda, WHO Representative to Namibia.

    Strengthening health security

    Namibia’s response to antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is part of the broader effort to strengthen health security across the country. By integrating a One Health approach and engaging key sectors, Namibia is actively working to strengthen its health systems, improve surveillance, and ensure that it is prepared to respond to emerging health threats. The launch of the National Tripartite One Health Strategy 2024-2028 further underlines the government’s commitment to safeguarding public health, both within the country and in collaboration with regional and international partners.

    The UHC Partnership operates in over 125 countries, representing over 3 billion people. It is supported and funded by Belgium, Canada, the European Union, France, Germany, Ireland, Luxembourg, Japan, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, and WHO.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI USA: UConn Senior’s Organization Takes Aim at Food Insecurity

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    A UConn senior is battling food insecurity on both sides of the Atlantic with a program he started to provide meals for low-income families in New Haven and in Ghana.

    Anthony Mensah ‘25 (CAHNR) started AJANO Cooperative in 2021 with his friends Akosua Asante, John Mensah, and Nee Ashitey Boateng, with a mission to provide people with high-quality food.

    “We want to prioritize finding a way to help these people get access to healthy proteins,” says Mensah, an Economics of Sustainable Development and Management (ESDM) major. “A diet full of just carbs and unhealthy food limits your life’s potential, and that’s something we want to help.”

    Mensah grew up in Ghana, and his family moved to New Haven in 2017. He said the idea to start AJANO was sparked by a friend who came from a lower-income background. She showed Mensah the need for greater access to high-quality proteins, and then they started the program together.

    AJANO held its first food drive in Accra, the capital of Ghana. Mensah and his colleagues reached out to the principal of a high school in a low-income area of the city. The principal was able to conduct an anonymous survey of students facing food insecurity. “We made sure it was anonymous so that there would be no shame in making sure that these people had access to the food that they needed,” says Mensah.

    The second food drive was in New Haven in the summer of 2024. “It was a little bit bigger in scale,” says Mensah.

    That might be an understatement: the group partnered with three food banks in New Haven and was able to source and give out a whopping 6,000 pounds of chicken and 1,000 pounds of beef.

    “It was one of the best experiences in the world, just being able to see the numbers. There’s something that people really care about,” says Mensah.

    AJANO has plans to host a food drive every two years, with expectations of growth each time. Putting together a food drive specifically to provide high-quality protein, though, isn’t easy.

    Anthony Mensa ’25 has plans to make future food drives even more successful (courtesy of Anthony Mensah)

    “Most food banks don’t have access to meat, and if they do, it’s very processed, which just defeats the whole purpose,” Mensah says.

    Adding to the challenge was finding foods low in sodium, and finding people willing to work with the young organization. Luckily, Mensah and his colleagues were able to connect with Ashitey Owusu, a food economist who recommended specific combinations to maximize the nutritional value of the food packages AJANO distributed.

    And AJANO isn’t limiting the help it provides young Ghanaians to food drives. The organization’s Think Deeper Writing Competition “was created to promote critical literacy and inspire Ghanaian high school students to engage with philosophical texts and think critically about our role in the world,” according to the AJANO website. Winners receive cash prizes.

    As far as his own studies, Mensah says UConn has helped grow AJANO. Courses like Food Policy (ARE 2260) helped him understand the processes and complexities of food as an industry, and shaped his goals for the organization. Associate Professor Tatiana Andreyeva, who taught the class and is also director of economic initiatives at the UConn Rudd Center for Food Policy and Health, provided context for the kinds of institutions that run food banks, Mensah says, and helped him connect with resources and organizations to help AJANO source 6,000 pounds of chicken.

    Mensah says his advisor, Associate Professor Nathan Fiala, has also helped him stay motivated with AJANO while taking high-level courses at UConn. He considered taking a break from the food drives while in school. “He gave me the motivation to keep doing it,” says Mensah.

    “It’s kind of sad to see the people coming up and then seeing them be a little bit shy,” Mensah says, reflecting on the first two successful food drives. “But then when they get the high-quality meat that they need, seeing the relief on their face because you know this is going to feed someone’s family, that’s just that feeling – just knowing that you’re helping someone out there. It’s just priceless.”

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Influence of Technology, Science Shapes Latest Show at Contemporary Art Galleries

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    While it’s true John Simon Jr. has a daily drawing practice, one he describes as meditative not just for clarity but also creativity, the artist might be best known for the digital art he’s produced, pieces sold in cyberspace and displayed on LED screens instead of canvas in places like the Whitney and Guggenheim.

    Among the first pieces of art sold as NFTs came from Simon, the 1997 work he titled “Every Icon,” because, as the squares in a grid of 32 by 32 change from black to white in a pattern shift that will take trillions of years to cycle through, the full image eventually will form the outline of any and all familiar pictures.

    Simon also is known for other pieces like “ComplexCity,” a series of digital works in which the street grid, traffic pattern, and height of skyscrapers continually shape shift, a representation of the constant change of a city.

    But Simon might not be as well known for his undergraduate degree in geology, his master’s in earth and planetary science, and an MFA in computer art.

    Artist John F. Simon Jr.’s “Traffic Jam” is part of “ComplexCity,” a digital work that explores contemporary urbanism through animated visual outputs containing abstract elevators, clogged intersections, and other interactive and dynamic forms. It hangs as part of the exhibition, “Data Infused,” at the Contemporary Art Galleries in UConn’s Fine Arts Complex. (Contributed photo)

    The place between art and science, that’s where early in his career Simon says he thought he’d be – “where art and science would kind of meld, where you’d see some sculpture, a painting, and things that are kind of like art done with a scientific concept that’s output in an artistic way.

    “But that was never deeply satisfying enough for me,” he says, “and I felt eventually that the categorization of science and art, this kind of academic categorization, was made to separate the two. My approach [now] is creativity.”

    And that’s something both scientists and artists must have in abundant supply.

    “If we look back to the Renaissance period especially, science and art weren’t as separate as they are now,” says Wendy Wischer, visiting director of UConn’s Contemporary Art Galleries, where a reimagined version of Simon’s “ComplexCity” is on display as part of the exhibition, “Data Infused.”

    “Artists and scientists do the same thing,” she says, summarizing a sentiment from writer K.C. Cole. “They start by observation and then recognize patterns that are often overlooked by others. That kind of imagination, seeking out of patterns, connecting threads of what may initially seem like separate entities is one of the things that artists and scientists do all the time.”

    “Data Infused” is Wischer’s first curation at the Galleries, after coming to UConn in the fall. In it, she’s included works from artists like Simon who’ve each studied subjects including computer science, architecture, graphic design, and artificial intelligence, all of which have influenced their creative outputs.

    Take Nettrice Gaskins, for instance, whose piece “Afro-Generative Tableaux Variations” uses AI to remix the colorful swirls that dance around the side profile of a Black woman who remains stationary in the center.

    “Variations,” Wischer explains, shows how AI moves through the variations of color and shape to help an artist, or an observer as in this case, assess the infinite options. Gaskins made the piece specifically for this show to give people a look at how AI aids in art making.

    Richard Garet used bits of sound in his two pieces, “Perceptual; Star” and “Perceptual; Glowing Wedge,” to create images of pulsing colors, then stripped away the auditory component, leaving only the moving image.

    The act of using what many would call scientific data for such artistic inspiration is what links the pieces, Wischer says, along with the fact that all the artists, as with Simon, maintain a traditional art practice that includes drawing and painting despite producing work that hinges on technology.

    That’s something, she says, that UConn graduate students asked for when she surveyed them about what they’d like to see in the gallery. AI, data visualization, and Afrofuturism topped the list. They also wanted to see novel ways artists make art and viewers consume it, such as those pieces sold as NFTs, or non-fungible tokens that live on the blockchain.

    “Scientists are great at data visualization. But their role is to be removed from any kind of emotional or personal attachment,” Wischer says about the art-science connection. “Artists can come in and ask questions without having an answer. Art can provoke emotions. It can link personal experience with the scientific in a way that makes it more digestible.”

    Ira Greenburg – whose “CyberStructures” depicts a bird’s eye view of a computer’s architecture, its chips and cards and CPU rising and falling like the towers and low-rises of a city – not only writes the computer code needed to generate his work but uses AI to influence it as he processes the thousands of iterations technology provides.

    Wischer says all the artists in the show are at the forefront of using technology like AI in the development of their work. It’s one reason she hopes people from other departments at UConn outside Art and Art History visit the show.

    “I’m hoping there’s something for everyone and that it evokes a curiosity to learn more,” she says. “Whether someone is attracted to the digital and they find something new in the physical, or someone who is attracted to the physical finds something in the digital, one of my goals was to bring together these various communities.”

    And she means that literally.

    She’s arranged a series of artist talks to be held throughout the semester, starting with Simon in late January who drew about two dozen people to the Galleries for the show’s opening.

    Garet will visit Feb. 27, Gaskins on March 13, and Courtney Starrett and Susan Reiser wrap the series on April 3. The full exhibition closes April 25.

    Artist Ira Greenburg used creative coding and artificial intelligence to create “Cyberstructures,” a piece that considers computer architecture as a landscape. It hangs as part of the exhibition, “Data Infused,” at the Contemporary Art Galleries in UConn’s Fine Arts Complex. (Contributed photo)

    “I see the Contemporary Art Galleries as a place to bring together different ideas and be a little more experimental than it has in the past,” Wischer says. “This exhibition is a very traditional, polished exhibition. But we might have a rotating schedule that allows for a variety of experimentation that moves away from just a traditional gallery space.”

    That may include becoming home for the annual BFA show or serving as a place for graduate students to practice their own curation skills. It might be possible to host a show that coordinates with a specific class or have a visiting artist use the space as their workshop, in a sort of messy exhibition that gets revealed over time, she suggests.

    Though not all future shows will emphasize the use of technology as strongly as “Data Infused,” this semester the focus is on its influence.

    “We know that data doesn’t move people. Facts don’t move people, but there are other ways that people can be moved. Artwork is a way that somebody can enter at a more personal level and discover why this is important to them or the meaning behind it,” Wischer says.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: Diamond Equity Research Initiates Coverage on ConnectM Technology Solutions, Inc. (NASDAQ: CNTM)

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    New York, NY, Feb. 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Diamond Equity Research, a leading equity research firm with a focus on small capitalization public companies has initiated coverage of ConnectM Technology Solutions, Inc. (NASDAQ: CNTM). The in-depth 32-page initiation report includes detailed information on the ConnectM Technology Solutions’ business model, services, industry overview, financials, valuation, management profile, and risks.

    The full research report is available below.

    ConnectM Technologies Inc. Initiation Report

    Highlights from the report include:            

                                      
    •    Diversified Innovative AI-Powered Platform Driving Scalable and Recurring Revenue Streams: At the core of ConnectM’s strategy lies its proprietary Energy Intelligence Network (EIN), which integrates AI-powered heat pumps, EV solutions, and distributed energy systems. The platform enables efficient cross-selling across diverse verticals, thereby enhancing customer lifetime value and lowering acquisition costs. This results in predictable, high-margin revenue streams derived from product sales, software subscriptions, and managed services agreements.

    •    Pioneering Leadership in the $2 Trillion Electrification Transformation: ConnectM is strategically positioned at the forefront of the global shift from fossil fuels to renewable energy, tapping into a $2 trillion electrification market. Its early mover advantage is strengthened by a robust 10-patent IP portfolio and over 120,000 connected assets that drive powerful network effects and data intelligence. This pioneering stance not only differentiates ConnectM but also establishes a solid foundation for sustainable long-term growth.

    •    Robust, Vertically Integrated Business Model Fueling Consistent High Growth: ConnectM has achieved 20 consecutive quarters of revenue growth, with a current run rate projected at $26 million and break-even cash flow expected by 2025. Its vertically integrated approach, encompassing product design, AI technology, and owned service networks, minimizes dependence on third-party providers. Moreover, a shared revenue model with service partners further amplifies potential profitability while mitigating operational risks.

    •    Strategic Acquisitions Accelerating Synergistic Market Expansion: The company has strategically augmented its market presence through targeted acquisitions, including MHz Invensys, projected to contribute $15 million in revenue by 2027. Additional acquisitions, such as DeliveryCircle and Green Energy Gains, have significantly strengthened its foothold in last-mile logistics and building electrification. This well-defined M&A pipeline is potentially set to unlock further synergistic growth opportunities across the smart energy solutions landscape.

    •    Solid Financial Foundations Supported by Strong Institutional Backing: ConnectM benefits from robust institutional support, with shareholders as of recent filings including Cowen, Geode Capital, Polar Asset, and Jane Street, while insiders hold a significant 33% stake. The company’s de-leveraged balance sheet, achieved by a recent conversion of $13.7 million in debt to equity, reinforces its financial resilience. Furthermore, the secured $25 million in strategic financing positions ConnectM for continued expansion and technological innovation.

    •    Capturing Exponential Growth Prospects Amid Robust Market Tailwinds: The electrification of buildings, transportation, and distributed energy systems is still in its early stages, offering substantial exponential growth potential. AI-powered heat pumps, a key component of the EIN, represent an opportunity comparable to the EV market but with superior potential margins of 30–40% and lower competition. These favorable market tailwinds are expected to drive sustained demand and accelerate ConnectM’s expansion trajectory.

    •    Valuation: ConnectM is targeting the $2 trillion energy transition with its AI-powered Energy Intelligence Network (EIN), optimizing electrification, distributed energy networks, and smart mobility. Its platform-driven strategy positions it for accelerated growth, operational efficiency, and sustained profitability. We have assessed ConnectM’s valuation using a blended approach, incorporating discounted cash flow (DCF) and comparable company analyses. Under our DCF approach, we assumed a 12.5% discount rate and a terminal growth rate of 1.5% to estimate the present value of projected free cash flows. For the comparable company analysis, we utilized the EV/Revenue multiple of similar renewable energy products and technology companies to establish a market-based valuation benchmark. By integrating both these approaches, we have arrived at a valuation of $3.25 per share contingent on successful execution by the company.

    About ConnectM Technology Solutions, Inc.  

    ConnectM Technology Solutions, Inc. is a vertically integrated holding company based in Marlborough, MA that provides digital platforms and services for electrification and decarbonization across the U.S., offering solutions for solar energy, HVAC, EV integration, and smart energy management.  

    About Diamond Equity Research

    Diamond Equity Research is a leading equity research and corporate access firm focused on small capitalization companies. Diamond Equity Research is an approved sell-side provider on major institutional investor platforms.

    For more information, visit https://www.diamondequityresearch.com

    Disclosures:

    Diamond Equity Research LLC is being compensated by ConnectM Technology Solutions, Inc. for producing research materials regarding ConnectM Technology Solutions, Inc. and its securities, which is meant to subsidize the high cost of creating the report and monitoring the security, however the views in the report reflect that of Diamond Equity Research. All payments are received upfront and are billed for research engagement. As of 02/26/25 the issuer had paid us $17,500 (as part of $35,000 annual contract payable in three upfront installment payments for the first year of coverage), which commenced on 01/30/25 with the second and third installment of $8,750 due in the following two three-months period. Diamond Equity Research LLC may be compensated for non-research related services, including presenting at Diamond Equity Research investment conferences, press releases and other additional services. The non-research related service cost is dependent on the company, but usually does not exceed $5,000. The issuer has not paid us for non-research related services as of 02/26/2025. Issuers are not required to engage us for these additional services. Additional fees may have accrued since then. Although Diamond Equity Research company sponsored reports are based on publicly available information and although no investment recommendations are made within our company sponsored research reports, given the small capitalization nature of the companies we cover we have adopted an internal trading procedure around the public companies by whom we are engaged, with investors able to find such policy on our website public disclosures page. This report and press release do not consider individual circumstances and does not take into consideration individual investor preferences. Statements within this report may constitute forward-looking statements, these statements involve many risk factors and general uncertainties around the business, industry, and macroeconomic environment. Investors need to be aware of the high degree of risk in small capitalization equities including the complete loss of their investment. Investors can find various risk factors in the initiation report and in the respective financial filings for ConnectM Technology Solutions, Inc. Please review initiation report attached for full disclosure page.  

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