Category: Transport

  • MIL-Evening Report: Vitamin B6 is essential – but too much can be toxic. Here’s what to know to stay safe

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Vasso Apostolopoulos, Distinguished Professor, Professor of Immunology, RMIT University

    Kim Kuperkova/Shutterstock

    In recent weeks, reports have been circulating about severe reactions in people who’ve taken over-the-counter vitamin B6 supplements.

    Vitamin B6 poisoning can injure nerves and lead to symptoms including numbness, tingling and even trouble walking and moving.

    In some cases, those affected didn’t know the product contained any vitamin B6.

    So what is vitamin B6, where is it found and how much is too much? Here’s what you need to know about this essential nutrient.

    What is vitamin B6?

    Vitamin B6 (also known as pyridoxine) is a group of six compounds that share a similar chemical structure.

    It is an essential nutrient, meaning we need it for normal body functions, but we can’t produce it ourselves.

    Adults aged 19–50 need 1.3mg of vitamin B6 per day. The recommended dose is lower for teens and children, and higher for those aged 51 and over (1.7mg for men and 1.5mg for women) and people who are breastfeeding or pregnant (1.9mg).

    Most of us get this in our diet – largely from animal products, including meat, dairy and eggs.

    The vitamin is also available in a range of different plant foods, including spinach, kale, bananas and potatoes, so deficiency is rare, even for vegetarians and vegans.

    The vitamin B6 we consume in the diet is inactive, meaning the body can’t use it. To activate B6, the liver transforms it into a compound called pyridoxal-5’-phosphate (PLP).

    In this form, vitamin B6 helps the body with more than 140 cellular functions, including building and breaking down proteins, producing red blood cells, regulating blood sugar and supporting brain function.

    Vitamin B6 is important for overall health and has also been associated with reduced cancer risk and inflammation.

    Despite being readily available in the diet, vitamin B6 is also widely included in various supplements, multivitamins and other products, such as Berocca and energy drinks.

    Most people get enough vitamin B6 from their diet.
    Tatjana Baibakova/Shutterstock

    Should we be worried about toxicity?

    Vitamin B6 toxicity is extremely rare. It almost never occurs from dietary intake alone, unless there is a genetic disorders or disease that stops nutrient absorption (such as coeliac disease).

    This is because all eight vitamins in the B group are water-soluble. If you consume more of the vitamin than your body needs, it can be excreted readily and harmlessly in your urine.

    However, in some rare cases, excessive vitamin B6 accumulates in the blood, resulting in a condition called peripheral neuropathy. We’re still not sure why this occurs in some people but not others.

    Peripheral neuropathy occurs when the sensory nerves – those outside our brain and spinal cord that send information to the central nervous system – are damaged and unable to function. This can be caused by a wide range of diseases (and is most well known in type 2 diabetes).

    The most common symptoms are numbness and tingling, though in some cases patients may experience difficulty with balance or walking.

    We don’t know exactly how excess vitamin B6 causes peripheral neuropathy, but it is thought to interfere with how the neurotransmitter GABA sends signals to the sensory nerves.

    Vitamin B6 can cause permanent damage to nerves. Studies have shown symptoms improved when the person stopped taking the supplement, although they didn’t completely resolve.

    What is considered excessive? And has this changed?

    Toxicity usually occurs only when people take supplements with high doses of B6.

    Until 2022, only products with more than 50mg of vitamin B6 were required to display a warning about peripheral neuropathy. But the Therapeutic Goods Administration lowered this and now requires any product containing more than 10mg of vitamin B6 to carry a warning.

    The Therapeutic Goods Administration has also halved the daily upper limit of vitamin B6 a product can provide – from 200mg to 100mg.

    These changes followed a review by the administration, after receiving 32 reports of peripheral neuropathy in people taking supplements. Two thirds of these people were taking less than 50mg of vitamin B6.

    The Therapeutic Goods Administration acknowledges the risk varies between individuals and a lot is unknown. Its review could not identify a minimum dose, duration of use or patient risk factors.

    But I thought B vitamins were good for me?

    Too much of anything can cause problems.

    The updated guidelines are likely to significantly lower the risk of toxicity. They also make consumers more aware of which products contain B6, and the risks.

    The Therapeutic Goods Administration will continue to monitor evidence and revise guidelines if necessary.

    While vitamin B6 toxicity remains very rare, there are still many questions about why some people get peripheral neuropathy with lower dose supplements.

    It could be that some specific vitamin B compounds have a stronger effect, or some people may have genetic vulnerabilities or diseases which put them at higher risk.

    So what should I do?

    Most people don’t need to actively seek vitamin B6 in supplements.

    However, many reports to the Therapeutic Goods Administration were of vitamin B6 being added to supplements labelled as magnesium or zinc – and some weren’t aware they were consuming it.

    It is important to always check the label if you are taking a new medicine or supplement, especially if it hasn’t been explicitly prescribed by a health-care professional.

    Be particularly cautious if you are taking multiple supplements. While one multivitamin is unlikely to cause an issue, adding a magnesium supplement for cramping, or a zinc supplement for cold and flu symptoms, may cause an excessive vitamin B6 dose over time, and increase your risk.

    Importantly, pay attention to symptoms that may indicate peripheral neuropathy, such as pins and needles, numbness, or pain in the feet or hands, if you do change or add a supplement.

    Most importantly, if you need advice, you should talk to your doctor, dietitian or pharmacist.

    The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. Vitamin B6 is essential – but too much can be toxic. Here’s what to know to stay safe – https://theconversation.com/vitamin-b6-is-essential-but-too-much-can-be-toxic-heres-what-to-know-to-stay-safe-248443

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Thyroid Awareness Month highlights importance of early detection and treatment, says GlobalData

    Source: GlobalData

    Thyroid Awareness Month highlights importance of early detection and treatment, says GlobalData

    Posted in Medical Devices

    Thyroid Awareness Month emphasizes the importance of early detection and effective management of thyroid disorders, which affect millions of people worldwide. By raising awareness and encouraging proactive care, this initiative seeks to improve patient outcomes and foster a better understanding of thyroid health, says GlobalData, a leading data and analytics company.

    The thyroid, a butterfly-shaped gland in the neck, produces hormones critical for regulating metabolism, energy levels, heart function, and more. Disorders such as hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism often go unnoticed until symptoms become severe. Early detection through routine screenings can significantly enhance treatment outcomes and improve quality of life.

    GlobalData estimates that the market for thyroid function tests will grow steadily, with a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 1.00% from 2023 to 2024. This reflects the rising demand for diagnostic tools and therapies tailored to endocrine health.

    Cynthia Stinchcombe, Medical Devices Analyst at GlobalData, comments: “Thyroid disorders are more common than many realize, yet millions remain undiagnosed. Awareness initiatives like Thyroid Awareness Month play a crucial role in promoting early screening and intervention, ultimately transforming patient care and outcomes.”

    Hypothyroidism leads to fatigue, weight gain, and sensitivity to cold, while hyperthyroidism causes weight loss, anxiety, and heat sensitivity. Other conditions include thyroiditis, nodules, goiters, and thyroid cancer. Women are five to eight times more likely to develop thyroid-related issues, underscoring the need for targeted education and awareness.

    Stinchcombe adds: “As more individuals become aware of the symptoms and risks associated with thyroid disorders, healthcare providers are better equipped to address these conditions early. Routine blood tests, such as TSH screenings, enable early diagnosis, facilitating timely and effective treatment.”

    GlobalData highlights that advancements in diagnostic tools and therapies, combined with increased awareness, create an ecosystem that empowers patients to take control of their thyroid health. By encouraging routine screenings and addressing the symptoms early, thyroid disorders can be managed more effectively, reducing the long-term burden on patients and healthcare systems alike.

    Stinchcombe concludes: “Thyroid health is a vital yet often overlooked aspect of overall well-being. Awareness initiatives are crucial in ensuring that individuals receive the care they need. By prioritizing early detection and education, we can improve outcomes for millions worldwide affected by thyroid disorders.”

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI Banking: UK retailers prepare for a buoyant Valentine’s Day as more shoppers intend to spend, says GlobalData

    Source: GlobalData

    UK retailers prepare for a buoyant Valentine’s Day as more shoppers intend to spend, says GlobalData

    Posted in Retail

    Almost half of UK consumers intend to spend on Valentine’s Day this year or have already started to spend on it. This is an uplift on 2024 and has been driven by those aged 25-34. With this age group more likely to have young families, consumers plan to buy for partners and significant loved ones such as children and friends. Retailers have the opportunity to utilise the popularity of this occasion among these shoppers to encourage larger basket sizes and boost average spending, according to GlobalData, a leading data and analytics company.

    GlobalData’s latest report, “Retail Occasions: Valentine’s Day Intentions 2025,” reveals 69.3% of UK 25–34-year-olds intend to spend on this occasion, marking a 7.8 percentage points (ppts) uplift on 2024 intentions. This age group will account for almost a quarter of Valentine’s Day shoppers in 2025, meaning this is a core target demographic for retailers.

    Zoe Mills, Lead Retail Analyst at GlobalData, comments: “Intention to spend on Valentine’s Day is high, but few consumers have started to spend on this occasion so far in January, meaning retailers still have plenty of time to entice shoppers to purchase. The grocers are in the best position, with the intention to spend the highest among the food & drink and gifting categories. Romance-themed meal deals including prosecco/champagne, should be promoted at the front of stores.

    “However, with the target audience likely to have children, retailers should also include Valentine’s Day-themed products that appeal to a much younger audience. Retailers should emulate Marks & Spencer’s range, including items like Love Hearts Biscuit Kits, enabling adults and children to decorate heart-themed biscuits.”

    While partners are the main recipients among Valentine’s Day gift shoppers, more consumers intend to spend on their children for the event, highlighting that this occasion is not just about romantic love but also familial love, coupled with self-love and the appreciation of one’s friends.

    Mills continues: “There is ample opportunity for retailers to broaden their reach with this occasion and ensuring a variety of more generic love-themed designs will enable their products to be gifted to a broad range of recipients. 11.9% of Valentine’s shoppers intend to purchase gifts for friends, up 3.2ppts on 2024. This trend is driven by Gen Z consumers, with 59% of this generation stating that Valentine’s Day is not just an occasion to treat their partner and that they like to buy gifts or cards for other loved ones. Events such as Galentine’s Day parties, celebrating friendship, may still be niche but must not be ignored by retailers.”

    GlobalData expects that food & drink gifts will be the most popular among Valentine’s Day shoppers, and retailers must ensure plenty of food & drink gift sets to appeal to shoppers, focusing on confectionery and alcoholic drink gift sets.

    Mills concludes: “Retailers must focus on food & drink gifts, where the intention to spend is high. The higher intention to spend on these items also implies that Valentine’s Day gifts are more of a token than an excuse to splurge on premium options such as fine jewellery, and retailers must ensure a broad pricing architecture to appeal. Flowers are also an accessible option for male Valentine’s Day shoppers, and providing a broad range to cater to different colour preferences is crucial. Red roses or red & pink bouquets should not be the only options; fun and colourful bouquets could appeal to those looking for something less traditional and more generally to those seeking these gifts for friends.”

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Press conference, Whyalla

    Source: Australian Executive Government Ministers

    PHILL STONE (MAYOR, WHYALLA COUNCIL): Well, perhaps I can just thank everybody for being here. Today is a fantastic day. The start of what I would like to think is quite a few good announcements coming up, but we are able to move forward thanks to the Minister being here with a special announcement that our community is hanging out for. Minister. 

    CATHERINE KING: Well, thanks, it’s lovely to be here with you, Mayor Stone. It’s terrific– or Phill, I have to call you. 

    PHILL STONE: Yes, Phill.

    CATHERINE KING: To really announce– we’re announcing today South Australia’s successful Growing Regions Round 2 projects. And here, of course, in Whyalla, we’re announcing $3.14 million for the play and splash park at the foreshore. 

    What I do want to say is congratulations to the council staff and councillors for working closely with your community on this project. These grants are very competitive, and you’ve got this on absolutely and utterly your merits. I know that place is really important for people. And as towns change what we want to do in our recreation time changes as well. Often the council facilities have not been able to keep up to date, and it’s really hard to get and attract the sort of money needed to do these big scale projects. 

    So, we’re really delighted, as the Albanese Labor Government, to partner with councils as a really trusted delivery partner, to really make sure we’re improving the places that people live. I know this is just one part of the foreshore redevelopment overall, but it is really the cornerstone of it, providing that first possibility of having a meeting space, a gathering space for families, improving accessibility, making sure you can actually use this amazing foreshore. Whether it’s wind, hopefully not hail, but certainly when the sun is shining as well. So delighted to make that announcement, alongside over $11 million that were announcing under Round 2, which of course builds here in this local community on our recent announcement around the Whyalla Airport. Investing some $16.3 million, knowing that you are going to need a longer and stronger runway for all of the development that is to come here in this community. 

    So, Mayor Stone, it’s lovely to be here to make that announcement. And as I said, congratulations to the local community for the work and effort that you’ve put in to get this project to this point. 

    PHILL STONE: Thank you very much, Minister. And do I say, you are experiencing just one of our 301 days of beautiful sunshine here in Whyalla. Welcome. 

    CATHERINE KING: Beautiful. Happy to take some questions.

    UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Jack, do you want to start? 

    JOURNALIST: Yeah. So, Funding for this project has sort of been in the works for quite a while. It was not approved in May of last year. Has anything changed for the Federal Government to allow it to come to fruition this time?

    CATHERINE KING: Yeah. Well, what happens with these projects is we have a– you know, I’ve really cleaned up the grants process because what we saw previously, frankly, were colour coded spreadsheets. And you may have not always seen projects of the most merit getting up. What we’ve done now is there’s a panel that assesses the first applic– sorry, so the Business Grant Hub assesses applications, and this initially determines whether they’re eligible or not eligible. I then have a panel of politicians from National Party, Liberal Party, Labor Party, independents having a look at those applications and making a recommendation to my department about how the merit rankings should be done. And then my department will then make recommendations to me. And that’s what’s happened, and I’ve gone down the list. 

    On this occasion, I think what’s happened is the council has listened. They weren’t successful in that first application. Listened, got feedback from the Grants Hub about what they could do to strengthen their application. And that’s what they’ve done. 

    JOURNALIST: This is probably more for Phill. Will council be targeting local contractors and businesses to take up the works for the development project? 

    PHILL STONE: They will certainly have the opportunity. Whatever works fall within the capabilities of our locals. We keep saying this: we will always favour local contractors. If they can come up with the goods, they come up with the price, and we can all move forward. And this will certainly be taken into account. No question about that at all. 

    CATHERINE KING: And I think you’ve estimated around 42 people will be employed in the construction of this project. And I always like to hear that as many locals as possible get those jobs, but they’ve got tender processes they’ll have to go through. Thank you.

    JOURNALIST: That’s it from me. 

    CATHERINE KING: Yep. ABC?

    UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Dan. You’re up.

    JOURNALIST: Hello? Yes. Sorry, thanks so much for having me via the phone. One for Phill first. Is this something that– sorry, this specific splash and play plaza, is this something that the community have been yearning for? 

    PHILL STONE: Yes. It was one of the features in the original master plan put together by the community. Very much wanted a focus on water activities, sport. We always told the community it would take time. We would need extra funding to top up what council could provide. This funding now allows us to proceed. But the water feature was what the community wanted, and they’re now going to be able to get it. 

    JOURNALIST: Fantastic. Thanks very much Phill. Just a couple for the Minister. The question for you, Minister, you’re the Minister for Regional Development. How much is Whyalla on your radar in terms of regional cities [Indistinct]?

    CATHERINE KING: Well, certainly the council has made sure Whyalla is on my radar. I think they were one of the first council groups to reach out to me when I became a new minister almost two and a half years ago now, so that is part of the job of council. We have lots and lots of local governments come to Canberra regularly, contact my office and talk about their projects. All regions are on my radar. Whyalla is incredibly important, not just to the state of South Australia but, obviously, in terms of the nation as a whole. The steel you produce here goes into many of my infrastructure projects that are right the way around the country, incredibly important for the entire community.

    But I also care deeply. I live in a regional town myself and it’s got a long and deep history. I really love regional communities. I want to see them thrive. I want to see– they’re changing all the time; their economies are changing all the time. And part of my role as Regional Development Minister is trying to help make sure that they continue to become great places for people to live, to grow, to raise their families, as well as providing opportunities for tourism and bringing more money into the economy from other sources.

    JOURNALIST: Minister, you did touch on it but, obviously, Whyalla’s industries kind of hinges on the steelworks. You guys have made a commitment of $63 million for a new green steel production system in Whyalla. Can you tell us how much of that you have already delivered? And what thresholds are we waiting to see the rest of the $63 million going to GFG?

    CATHERINE KING: Yeah. Look, that will be questions for Minister Ed Husic, the Industry Minister. But the commitment that we have made is that we want to see the steelworks continue. We want to see it thrive. We know how important it is as I said, not just for South Australia but for the entire country. We know there are challenges as we head to net zero, in steel in particular – how we produce steel, how we make sure we reduce the energy intensity, the emissions intensity from a whole range of manufacturing, and steel is a really important component of that. 

    So, the questions in terms of the grant and thresholds really are for Minister Husic. But I know from the Albanese Labor Government’s point of view, we treat this very seriously. We want to make sure this is successful, and we’ll continue to work with council and our partners in the South Australian Labor Government to deliver for Whyalla.

    JOURNALIST: I appreciate that. You have mentioned this is Minister Husic’s portfolio but, within Cabinet, how concerned is the Cabinet and the government about the situation at the steelworks at the moment and GFG’s ownership of that?

    CATHERINE KING: Yeah. Well, obviously the commitment we’ve made is to that $63 million and we will continue to work very closely with the Malinauskas Labor Government. As the steelworks continue and the future of the steelworks continues we’ll continue talking to the South Australian Government about those matters.

    JOURNALIST: No worries. Thanks very much, Minister. Appreciate your time.

    CATHERINE KING: You are most welcome.

    [Unrelated content – casual conversation]

    PHILL STONE: Look, I just want to emphasise, I see today, as a result of a lot of hard work and negotiation, collaboration, sitting down, talking, Federal Government and particularly the funding we’ve already got for the airport, today’s announcement, other announcements that might just be around the corner, they’ve resulted through collaboration, through three parties sitting down, working together. And while we do that we can do nothing but succeed. And that is the crux. 

    There are some people that think we should go in, thumping on tables. While I’m Mayor that’s not my style and it’s not my team’s style. And I think you see the results of a whole team effort and we thank you so much for giving us this kick-start to get this underway. The community will certainly be waiting for that news. They’ll want us to start probably by yesterday. 

    CATHERINE KING: [Laughs] I’m sure they do.

    PHILL STONE: I will now say, why have–

    CATHERINE KING: [Interrupts] Where is it? 

    PHILL STONE: Yes. A week’s gone by, why haven’t you started? Obviously, there’s still a lot of work now behind the scenes, but you’ve really given us a good start. And while we continue to collaborate, work with both governments, we can’t do anything but succeed. And I thank you again very much for what you’ve done.

    CATHERINE KING: You’re most welcome. Thanks, everybody.

    [Applause]

    [Unrelated content – casual conversation]

    CATHERINE KING: Sorry, Dan*.

    JOURNALIST: Sorry, one more very quick question. I’m told the Premier’s heading up to Whyalla tomorrow. Do you have any plans to meet with him or anyone from the State Government tomorrow?

    CATHERINE KING: I think there will be someone else here with the Premier, as I understand it not from the Federal Government. But I’m heading to Katherine straight after this.

    JOURNALIST: No worries. Enjoy the trip.

    CATHERINE KING: Thank you. 

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Six territories with a total area of over 153 hectares will be reorganized according to the KRT projects approved in December

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    As part of the six decisions adopted by the city in December under the program for integrated development of territories (KRT), it is planned to reorganize over 153 hectares of land. This was reported by the Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Urban Development Policy and Construction Vladimir Efimov.

    “In December 2024, the city adopted six decisions on the comprehensive development of inefficiently used territories. About 2.4 million square meters of various real estate are planned to be built on them. Five territories will be reorganized by KRT operators, and another one by an investor who will be determined by the results of the auction. Investments in the implementation of the projects are estimated at 76 billion rubles, and the annual budget effect is 1.4 billion rubles. As a result, about two thousand jobs will be created,” said Vladimir Efimov.

    Currently, the territories contain objects that do not benefit the capital and its citizens, and some areas are free from development. In their place, new neighborhoods will be created with high-tech production facilities, modern residential buildings and the necessary infrastructure, as well as spaces with landscaped areas for walking and recreation.

    “One example of reorganization of depressed areas will be the comprehensive development of areas in the Silino and Matushkino districts, which will be carried out by an operator appointed by the city. According to the project, 2.5 thousand square meters of public utility facilities will be built here, as well as a building for the terminal station of ground passenger transport with a parking and turning area. The area will be landscaped and new roads will be laid. As a result, 120 jobs will be created,” noted the Minister of the Moscow Government, Head of the Department of City Property

    Maxim Gaman.

    According to the KRT program, multifunctional city blocks are created, where roads, comfortable housing and all the necessary infrastructure are designed on the site of former industrial zones and inefficiently used areas. Currently, 302 KRT projects with a total area of more than 4.2 thousand hectares are at various stages of development and implementation in Moscow. The work is underway on behalf of Sergei Sobyanin.

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

    Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect

    https: //vv.mos.ru/nevs/ite/149425073/

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Press conference, Commonwealth Parliament Offices, Melbourne

    Source: Australian Treasurer

    Jim Chalmers:

    Headline inflation is now in the mid‑twos and underlying inflation is in the low‑threes. These numbers are better than expected and better than forecasts. What they show is we are making very meaningful, very substantial, and now sustained progress in the fight against inflation. It means that headline inflation is now at an almost four‑year low, and now sits in the middle of the Reserve Bank’s target band, and underlying inflation is now at its lowest in 3 years. These are very welcome developments.

    We don’t pretend that it’s mission accomplished on inflation, but we are making very substantial progress. On every measure, we have now made substantial and sustained progress in this fight against inflation. Inflation was much higher and rising fast under the Liberals when we came to office, and we’ve been able to get on top of this inflation challenge and to get it down in a very meaningful way. Inflation is now almost a third of the 6.1 per cent that we inherited when we came to office.

    Now, if you look at the numbers, headline inflation was just 0.2 per cent in the December quarter. That makes it 2.4 per cent higher through the year, which is around a quarter of its peak, and in the bottom half of the Reserve Bank’s target band. It means our headline inflation is now lower than most major advanced economies, including the US, the UK, and Germany. And if you look at the underlying measure, the trimmed mean measure, it was 3.2 per cent through the year to the December quarter, down from a revised 3.6 per cent. If you look at the trimmed mean number in the quarter, it almost halved. It’s now 0.5 per cent and that makes it around a third of what it was at the time of the election.

    If you look at the big drivers of this moderation in inflation, the big drivers were construction costs, rents, and insurance, and that, I think, is quite an encouraging sign that inflation is moderating more quickly than anticipated, even as recently as the forecast that we released in December. These numbers are better than the market expected, and they are lower than the forecasts for inflation, and both of those developments are very welcome.

    Australians collectively can be really proud of the combination of developments that we have seen in our economy in recent times. Inflation is down, wages are up, unemployment is low, and 1.1 million jobs have been created during the course of this Albanese Labor government. Now the soft landing that we have been planning for and preparing for is now looking more and more likely.

    Many countries around the world have paid for this kind of progress on inflation with much higher unemployment, or with negative quarters of economic growth. What Australians have been able to achieve is an economy where growth has continued to tick over, albeit slowly, where unemployment has stayed incredibly low, jobs are being created, wages are up, but inflation is down considerably and we see that in the numbers again today.

    Our cost‑of‑living pressures aren’t disappearing, but they are easing. We know that the fight against inflation is not yet over, but these are incredibly encouraging signs that we are getting on top of this challenge in our economy. The worst of the inflation challenge is now well and truly behind us, and that’s one of the reasons why we are confident but not complacent about the economy in the year ahead.

    We know that our political opponents will try and dismiss and diminish what Australians have been able to achieve together in their economy. We know that Australians are doing it tough. We know how important our cost‑of‑living help is, and we know that the best thing we can do, the most important focus that we can maintain is on the cost of living and that is the government’s approach.

    The Albanese Labor government is focused on beating inflation and helping with the cost of living and building Australia’s future. Our political opponents, Peter Dutton and the Coalition, are focused on conflict and culture wars, and they would make people worse off and take Australia backwards.

    If we look at the impact of the cost‑of‑living measures over recent years on the pressures that people face right around Australia, it’s worth reminding people that Peter Dutton did not support cost‑of‑living help for Australians doing it tough. If Peter Dutton had his way, Australians would have been thousands of dollars worse off and they would be worse off still if he wins the election and that’s because when he was the Health Minister, he went after Medicare. Coalition governments want lower wages, not higher wages, and he will push up electricity bills with his nuclear insanity that he has been trying to foist on the Australian people.

    So the choice and the contrast is very clear. The biggest risk to inflation and the cost of living and the economy in 2025 is Peter Dutton and a Coalition government. For our part, the Albanese Labor government is focused on getting inflation down, getting wages up, rolling out this cost‑of‑living relief, keeping unemployment low because that is the best way that we can make a meaningful difference to the cost‑of‑living pressures that we know Australians are still confronting. Happy to take a few questions.

    Journalist:

    You talked about, Treasurer, it not being mission accomplished yet, but started off this press conference pretty smiley, talking about an incredibly positive, optimistic set of numbers. Do you see there being an argument, a legitimate argument not to cut rates at this point? Are there pressure points pushing in the other direction still?

    Chalmers:

    I’m not going to make any sort of commentary which can be confused with giving free advice to the independent Reserve Bank, or making predictions about the decision that they will take when they meet on the [18th] of February. I respect the independence of the Reserve Bank too much to try and make predictions or to give them free advice, or to try and colour in for them the decision that they will make independently and announce towards the middle of February.

    I have always seen our responsibility as a government to be the focus on the areas that we can influence, getting inflation down, getting wages up, keeping unemployment low, those have been our objectives and we leave the decision on interest rates to the independent Reserve Bank.

    We’ve had a lot of free advice over the last couple of years from our political opponents and others, who say that we should have cut much harder or we should have done things differently. What these numbers show is we’ve been able to achieve something that other countries cannot, which is to make this remarkable progress on inflation at the same time as we maintain the gains we’ve made in the labour market and keep the economy ticking over.

    Now, the economic and often the political orthodoxy, and what we’ve seen play out in other countries, is that you have to pay for much lower inflation with much higher unemployment. Australia has shown that there is a better way to go about it and we’re seeing the fruits of some of those efforts in the inflation numbers today.

    Journalist:

    Has the government done everything it can to provide the environment for rates to come down?

    Chalmers:

    We take no outcome for granted when it comes to interest rates, and again, it’s not for me to give free advice to the independent Reserve Bank. I respect their independence. They will weigh up these numbers and other numbers that we’ve seen in the economy since they last met. They will come to a decision and communicate that decision in February, and I’m not going to get in the way of that. I’m not going to predict it or pre‑empt it or give them free advice. I’m focused on my job and my job is to roll out this cost‑of‑living help in the most responsible way, get inflation down and wages up, and keep unemployment low. We are encouraged by the numbers that we have seen today, but we take no outcome on interest rates for granted.

    Journalist:

    Are you relatively comfortable, given how much data that we’ve seen now, that the numbers are in or around the band at a sustainable level, or do you think we might see some bumpiness over the next few months?

    Chalmers:

    I think inevitably when you see the inflation numbers here or in other countries, inflation rarely moderates in a perfectly straight line. For example, inflation in the US is higher than it is in Australia and it’s rising in the US again, and that reminds us, I think helpfully, that inflation doesn’t moderate in a perfectly straight line around the world and that’s been the experience here as well. I think that’s an important thing to remember. But the facts of the matter are laid out by these new numbers today. Headline inflation is now in the bottom half of the Reserve Bank’s target band. Underlying inflation is in the low‑threes, both of those outcomes are better than expected and lower than the official forecasts.

    The Reserve Bank will weigh up all of those considerations, they will come to a decision independently, but I think what we’re seeing here is a reminder that the soft landing that we have been planning for and preparing for is looking more and more likely.

    Journalist:

    Would a rate cut influence the Prime Minister’s thinking around election time, and can you actually commit to doing a budget on March 25? We’ve heard language from your Finance Minister about being a budget update. Can you commit now to doing a Budget on March 25?

    Chalmers:

    We’re working towards a Budget on March 25th.

    Journalist:

    Towards or actually doing one?

    Chalmers:

    The reason I put it like that is because it’s a decision for the Prime Minister. It’s not a decision that I take alone. The Prime Minister takes that decision. Our expectation, and all of our work, is heading towards a March 25 Budget. The reality is that the Prime Minister will make that decision, no doubt he will confer with his colleagues about it, but our expectation is that there will be a Budget on the 25th.

    Journalist:

    Would you like – sorry Treasurer, would you like to do a Budget on March 25 and if so, are you aiming as much as possible to find a third surplus?

    Chalmers:

    There’s 2 parts to that question. I hand down budgets when the Prime Minister asks us to, and we’ve handed down 3 already and the fourth one is due on March 25. I’ve seen speculation about a third surplus, and I would urge caution on that front. We are deliberately cautious and conservative when it comes to budgets. We were in the first 3 and we will be in the fourth. But I think there’s cause for additional caution and conservatism because there hasn’t been anything yet that we have seen which would make us think that there would be a substantial difference to the budget bottom line than what we forecast in December in the mid‑year budget update. I know that there’s speculation to the contrary. I know that there’s a lot of global economic uncertainty which can impact the budget bottom line in both directions, but nothing we’ve seen yet has materially changed our expectations.

    Journalist:

    Is the rate decision on February 17–18 the primary factor in the Prime Minister’s decision around when to go with the election?

    Chalmers:

    I wouldn’t have thought so. I wouldn’t have thought so, but you’d have to ask the Prime Minister. You know, an election is due –

    Journalist:

    Surely he’d know that, though?

    Chalmers:

    Well, you’d have to ask him. An election is due by May, so the election will be on us before long and there will be a number of considerations when it comes to timing, and you will have to – it’s not for me to decide on my own.

    Journalist:

    Would a rate cut be – would you feel that it would be personal vindication for your fiscal strategy in the face of a lot of criticism from the media and other politicians?

    Chalmers:

    First of all, I don’t see it in personal terms. The most important thing here is to see some of the price pain that Australians have endured now since before the last election, that that continues to ease, and that we get inflation down at the same time as we get wages growing again in a more meaningful way and we keep that unemployment rate low. Those are the things that I’m focused on. You asked me about the free advice that we get from time to time. You know, there’s been some very strange commentary, you know, people –

    Journalist:

    Such as?

    Chalmers:

    People saying that there were going to be 3 rate hikes last year and there were none. There hasn’t been a rate hike since November in 2023.

    Journalist:

    Warren Hogan?

    Chalmers:

    Well, he’s not the only one. There’s been a lot of strange commentary, and we get a lot of free advice. One of the things that I’m proudest of is we have maintained a focus on the key elements of a soft landing in our economy – inflation coming down, not sacrificing people’s jobs, keeping the economy ticking over. We’ve still got an economy which is soft, softer than is normal. We’ve still got people under pretty extreme pressure. But the sorts of things that we are preparing for and planning for are now unfolding.

    This very substantial and now sustained moderation in inflation is probably the most important part of that, but to be able to do that, while maintaining unemployment at 4.0 per cent, is a pretty remarkable achievement for which all Australians can share in the credit.

    If you think about if you’d said a few years ago that it would be possible for a government, in this case our government, to maintain average unemployment rates, the lowest of any government in 50 years, at the same time as we get inflation from its peak of 7.8 now down to 2.4, I think Australians can be proud of that progress that has been made, and not because cost‑of‑living pressures have disappeared, but because they are easing at the same time as we satisfy some of these other economic objectives.

    Journalist:

    Should Australian tech companies be concerned about this rise in Chinese AI?

    Chalmers:

    Obviously this is a very fast‑moving and volatile part of the economy. It’s one of the reasons why Ed Husic, to his credit, and other colleagues are putting a lot of time and effort and thought into the appropriate guardrails when it comes to AI. We are forward leaning about AI. We think it can be revolutionary in our economy, that it has the capacity to boost productivity and deliver a whole range of economic gains, but we know that there needs to be guardrails as well.

    If you look at DeepSeek, and what we’ve seen in the last couple of days, which have been some pretty extraordinary developments that the market has reacted to in a pretty remarkable way, the advice that Ed has provided, which I would echo now, is we would urge Australians to be cautious about this new technology.

    Obviously we are constantly receiving advice on it. You wouldn’t expect me to go into all of the detail of that here. But what we try to and what our agencies try to, is to work closely with the sector, the private sector, updating the advice when it’s appropriate.

    Journalist:

    National security advice?

    Chalmers:

    All kinds of advice. When there’s a big development in our economy, particularly when it relates to technology, of course we have a look at it. Of course we monitor it closely. Of course we try and get our head around and understand the consequences for our own industries and our own economy. That’s pretty standard for a diligent government and that’s what we will do in this case.

    Journalist:

    But technology that is refusing to provide information about the Tiananmen Square massacre, not answering question the about the state of Chinese politics, potentially gathering data from Western accounts and feeding it back to the Chinese system, does that trouble you? Before receiving national security advice, does that trouble you at a general level?

    Chalmers:

    I don’t want to engage in a hypothetical or pre‑empt the sorts of discussions that we would have as a government. I’d echo Ed’s very wise advice, and Ed’s very wise advice is to be cautious. From a government point of view, we stay across all these kinds of developments, not just this one, and we provide an updated advice as it’s appropriate.

    Journalist:

    Just one very Victorian question given we’re in Melbourne. Airport Rail, it’s been reported by News Corp there’s $2 billion more on the table for that project. Can you explain why you see that as a city‑shaping project and why the federal government appears to be putting priority on that project rather than the Suburban Rail Loop?

    Chalmers:

    I’m not sure I perfectly share your assessment of it. What we’ve said about those 2 projects is that we consider them to be separate. You know, we don’t see a link between funding for one over the other. And all I would do beyond that is to remind you of what I said on Saturday, which is my wonderful colleague, Catherine King, she’s in discussions with States and Territories all the time about the best combination of projects in the infrastructure pipelines, and that’s the case here as well.

    I would also say that I’m looking forward to spending some time this afternoon with the Victorian Treasurer. I had an opportunity to speak with her by phone already, but we will be catching up this afternoon. No doubt some of these sorts of issues will come up.

    Journalist:

    Do you think –

    Chalmers:

    I’m just conscious that we haven’t really perfectly shared the questions. Do you want to go?

    Journalist:

    I’ve just got one that hasn’t been answered already.

    Chalmers:

    Okay, thanks.

    Journalist:

    Your government’s announced –

    Chalmers:

    These 2 are very selfish, mate.

    Journalist:

    One of your government’s measures is about energy bill relief assistance, you spoke about cost‑of‑living assistance for voters. Can people expect that to continue beyond July this year?

    Chalmers:

    Our focus is on rolling out the cost‑of‑living help that we’ve already announced and that we’ve already budgeted for, including the cost‑of‑living help that comes in the form of those electricity rebates. And if you look at the numbers today, when it comes to electricity prices, they fell in – the year to the December quarter – they fell by 25.2 per cent, and they still would have fallen without the energy rebates and so energy rebates are part of the story but not the whole story. We’ve seen electricity prices fall by more than a quarter in the year to December. They still would have fallen 1.6 per cent without the energy rebates that we’re rolling out in conjunction with the states. What that says is our cost‑of‑living help is helping, but electricity prices would have moderated without it as well.

    Journalist:

    So the help isn’t quite as strong then?

    Chalmers:

    What we do from budget to budget is we consider the pressures that people are under, the budget constraints that we’re dealing with, and the economic conditions, and we come to a decision about what, if any, further cost‑of‑living help is appropriate and affordable and responsible. We did that in our first 3 budgets, and we’ll do that in the fourth.

    Journalist:

    Do you expect Jaclyn Symes is going to ask you for a fairer share of the GST for Victoria?

    Chalmers:

    I don’t know. I think that treasurers in every State and Territory are typically interested in more support from the Commonwealth. That wouldn’t make her unique if she did. But I’m looking forward to a discussion with her. I think she’s going to be a wonderful Treasurer here in Victoria and I try and maintain open lines of communications with all of my State and Territory colleagues, and that’s because I believe you get more done when you work together than when you work at cross‑purposes.

    Journalist:

    Absolute last one from me. There’s some good numbers at the start of inflation, but some really dire numbers in a Deloitte report on living standards and real wages. Do you expect to announce more between now and the election on how you will get the economy to grow, how to get productivity up and living standards up?

    Chalmers:

    Yes. And one of the things that we’ve tried to be very disciplined about is at the same time as we manage these near‑term pressures on people, that we don’t drop the ball when it comes to the longer‑term agenda. The productivity agenda around human capital, the energy transformation, adapting and adopting technology, our competition policy agenda, making our economy more dynamic and more productive, we have maintained a focus on these things throughout. We’ll have more to say between now and the election on those important policy areas.

    I also remind you that I’ve tasked the Productivity Commission with some important work on what the next agenda beyond our current agenda would look like when it comes to boosting productivity in our economy.

    We’ve made it really clear that coming out of these 3 economic shocks in the last 15 years, that in more normal times ideally growth in the economy would be private sector led, that remains my view, and in order for that to be the case, we have all got to work together to make our economy more productive and dynamic and competitive. We have done a bunch of things on that front but there will be more to do.

    Thanks very much.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: How Moscow Research Companies Saved Thanks to the National Project “Labor Productivity”

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    22 Moscow companies in the field of scientific research and development (R&D) took part in the national project “Labor Productivity”. During the pilot stage, they were able to optimize business processes and obtain a total economic effect of more than 660 million rubles. This was reported by Maria Bagreeva, Deputy Mayor of Moscow, Head of the Moscow Department of Economic Policy and Development.

    “Increasing labor productivity at research and development enterprises is a strategically important task. With the help of the tools of the national project “Labor Productivity”, companies learn to effectively use existing resources and improve their production indicators without additional costs. Over two years, 22 organizations engaged in scientific research and development have become participants in the national project. All of them completed the pilot part and, with the help of lean technologies, were able to improve the production management system and refine the technologies used. Thanks to lean technologies, R&D companies increased the volume of work performed by an average of 40 percent, accelerated key processes by 34 percent and reduced losses that arose due to violation of project implementation deadlines by 39 percent. The total economic effect of R&D companies from participating in the national project amounted to almost 667 million rubles,” said Maria Bagreeva.

    Moscow pays special attention to the development of high-tech production in areas without which the development of domestic industry is impossible – these are microelectronics and photonics, pharmaceuticals, electric vehicle manufacturing, unmanned aircraft systems, the space industry, and machine tool manufacturing.

    “On the instructions of Sergei Sobyanin, the capital’s industrialists receive significant support from the city, including significant tax breaks. The companies invest the saved funds in increasing production volumes, research and development of innovative products, as well as in obtaining patents for them. Today, in the R

    Maxim Liksutov.

    Thus, the joint-stock company “Zelenograd Nanotechnology Center”, a resident of the special economic zone “Technopolis Moscow”, has introduced an innovative approach to managing the processes of creating and assembling microcircuits. At each stage of work – from development and conducting a full range of tests to the release of finished products – intermediate control was introduced, which allows for the prompt identification and elimination of possible deviations and contributes to increasing the reliability of the implementation of scientific and design projects. The company increased the speed of assembling microcircuits by 42 percent, and their production volume – by 10 percent (from 4.8 to 5.3 microcircuits per person per hour).

    Another resident of the Technopolis Moscow SEZ, the Nanotechnology Center for Composites Limited Liability Company, has successfully implemented a comprehensive production analysis aimed at optimizing all stages of development and manufacturing of carbon and fiberglass products. As a result, the time of the full work cycle — from the receipt of components and materials for production to the transfer of finished products to the warehouse — was reduced by 34 percent, and labor productivity at the enterprise increased by 18 percent. In the future, the company plans to replicate the experience gained in other business processes, including those related to the development of new technologies.

    The Joint-Stock Company “G.S. Petrov Institute of Plastics” has improved the processes of development, research and production of polysulfone, a thermoplastic polymer used in the manufacture of electronics, household and medical equipment, and in instrument making, thanks to lean technologies. The company has organized targeted storage of raw materials and finished products and introduced autonomous equipment maintenance. This helped to speed up research and production processes at the pilot stage by 44 percent and increase polymer production by 50 percent.

    The experience gained by the enterprise will be used in other business processes to improve their efficiency.

    The national project “Labor Productivity” was implemented in Moscow in 2022-2024 using funds from the city budget. How reported Sergei Sobyanin, all 419 capital companies participating in the national project have completed the pilot stage and are now independently implementing a culture of continuous improvement.

    Since 2025, Moscow enterprises will continue to increase labor productivity within the framework of the national project “Efficient and competitive economy” (federal project “Labor Productivity”). It is being implemented in the capital at the expense of the city budget. Applications for participation are accepted on the website operator of the federal project.

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    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: New ground transport stops will appear in 11 districts of the capital from February 1

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    From February 1, a number of public transport routes in several districts of the capital will be adjusted. For the convenience of passengers, new stops will be added, and some will have their locations changed. This was reported by the Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Transport and Industry Maxim Liksutov.

    “Starting February 1, we will add new stops for buses and electric buses in 11 districts of the capital. Transport will come closer to residential buildings, social facilities and rail frame stations, and in Novye Vatutinki in TiNAO we will extend the express route. We continue to develop the network of ground transport routes of the capital on the instructions of Sergei Sobyanin,” said Maxim Liksutov.

    Thus, the express route E151 in Novye Vatutinki will be adjusted. Now the buses will go clockwise through their eastern part. This will allow them to cover more residential buildings. Thus, city residents will be able to get to the nearest metro stations faster.

    Buses E151 will go towards the metro station “Teply Stan” along 3rd and 1st Novovatutinsky streets. Residents of the Central microdistrict will find it more convenient to get to the metro.

    A stop called “Women’s Health Center” will be added to route #48 in both directions, as well as for buses #291 and 294 heading towards Salyam Adilya Street.

    Buses #172 going in both directions will have a stop called “Institute of Polymer Materials”. In addition, a stop will be added at exit #2 of the General Tyuleneva metro station for route #188, and a stop called “KPP” towards the stop “Promzona Kuryanovo” for route #438.

    Buses #570 will stop at exit #2 of the Vodny Stadion metro station, and #587 will stop at exit #3 of the Bibirevo metro station (the same place where buses #282, 284, 353, 618, 705 and H9 stop).

    At exit No. 4 of the Sokolniki metro station, a stop will also be added for routes E66, No. 78, 265 and 975 – where buses M60, T32, No. 604, H15 and 1716 stop. And for route C17, the stop “Ulitsa Obrucheva” will start operating in both directions.

    In addition, the location of the public transport stop on Aviamotornaya Street will change. Thus, for routes M6, C679, No. 690 and 695, the stop “3-ya Kabelnaya Street” in the direction of the metro station “Aviamotornaya” will be moved behind the intersection with Prud-Klyuchiki Street. On route No. 624, a stop “3-ya Kabelnaya Street” will appear in the direction of “Aviamotornaya”. And buses M6, C679, No. 624, 690 and 695 will start stopping at exit No. 8 of this metro station in the direction of Shosse Entuziastov.

    Buses C949, No. 925, 940, 956 and 998 (towards Stepana Erzya Street), as well as No. 969 and 969k (both ways) will pick up and drop off passengers at the new stop – “Novostroevskaya Street”.

    And for buses M6, C679, No. 690, 695 the stop “8th Taxi Park” will be replaced with a new one – “Institute of Radio Electronics”.

    In addition, in connection with the completion of the improvement works, the stops at the Ukhtomskaya station of the third Moscow Central Diameter will be changed.

    You can quickly find out about all route changes in telegram channel.

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    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Additional services to support entrepreneurs will appear in the My Work center on Shabolovka

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    The Moscow Employment Service and the State Budgetary Institution “Small Business of Moscow” (MBM) signed a partnership agreement. Now, in the “My Work” center on Shabolovka Street (48), employees of both organizations will conduct consultations on the development of entrepreneurial activity, solving financial and tax issues.

    “Today, the capital offers city residents several options for developing a personal career track. Choosing an entrepreneurial path is one of the most relevant and popular scenarios for professional self-realization among Muscovites. Together with the State Budgetary Institution “Small Business of Moscow”, we have expanded the package of services for future and current entrepreneurs and strengthened our work in this area. Additional consultations, assistance in solving financial and tax issues, participation in specialized events – support that will allow us to fully assist city residents in opening and running their own business,” said Deputy Head of the Moscow Employment Service and the Professions of the Future Center Yan Kortel.

    The capital offers great opportunities not only for those who work for hire, but also for aspiring entrepreneurs. New services will be available to city residents who have already registered their self-employment or individual entrepreneurship, as well as those who are just planning to start a career in business.

    “State Budgetary Institution “Small Business of Moscow” actively supports Muscovites who are just thinking about starting their own business or taking their first steps in this direction. The Business Services Center in the flagship center “My Work” is another opportunity to get answers to questions about starting your own business and feel more confident on the way to your goal,” said Stanislav Ivanov, General Director of State Budgetary Institution “Small Business of Moscow”.

    The flagship center “My Work” on Shabolovka Street has created a unique full-cycle ecosystem “Self-Employment in Hands”. It includes consultations on starting your own business, career guidance classes and developing entrepreneurial skills. Here you can take a test that helps determine your level of preparation for running your own business, get individual consultations and learn important knowledge in trainings and webinars. In addition, the center helps register self-employment and formalize the status of an individual entrepreneur or a limited liability company.

    Moscow offers a modern educational infrastructure to anyone who plans to develop their career, including as an entrepreneur. Thus, in the new center “Professions of the Future” On Shchepkina Street (house 38, building 1) you can master one of 75 in-demand professions in various sectors of the economy in a short time – a maximum of three and a half months.

    Industry and IT sector: the most sought-after sectors for employment in Moscow have been namedSergei Sobyanin summed up the results of the first year of work of the Professions of the Future center

    The Moscow City Employment Service is the largest state personnel operator that helps people find work. Its structure includes employment offices, many of which are located in the My Documents government service centers. The flagship centers are open at the following addresses: Kuusinen Street, Building 2, Block 1, and Shabolovka Street, Building 48. The specialized My Career employment center is located on Sergiya Radonezhskogo Street (Building 1, Bldg. 1).

    At the Professions of the Future center (38 Shchepkina Street, Building 1), you can master one of 75 in-demand professions in various sectors of the economy in a maximum of 3.5 months. Career mentors will help you find a job after completing your training. The center’s partners include more than three thousand employers.

    State Budgetary Institution “Small Business of Moscow”, subordinate to the capital Department of Entrepreneurship and Innovative Development, helps people open and develop their business in the capital. In business service centers, everyone can learn about financial and non-financial measures of state support. Free educational and business events are held for entrepreneurs: forums, seminars, trainings and conferences. They help improve professional competencies and find like-minded people.

    You can get advice on opening and running a business and learn more about current measures to support entrepreneurs in Moscow atMBM website and by phone: 7 495 225-14-14.

    Support for entrepreneurs in the capital is provided within the framework of the federal project “Small and medium entrepreneurship and support for individual entrepreneurial initiative”, which is part of the national project “Efficient and competitive economy”.

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    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI: ASML reports €28.3 billion total net sales and €7.6 billion net income in 2024

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    ASML reports €28.3 billion total net sales and €7.6 billion net income in 2024
    2025 total net sales expected to be between €30 billion and €35 billion

    VELDHOVEN, the Netherlands, January 29, 2025 – Today, ASML Holding NV (ASML) has published its 2024 fourth-quarter and full-year results.  

    • Q4 total net sales of €9.3 billion, gross margin of 51.7%, net income of €2.7 billion
    • Quarterly net bookings in Q4 of €7.1 billion2 of which €3.0 billion is EUV
    • 2024 total net sales of €28.3 billion, gross margin of 51.3%, net income of €7.6 billion
    • ASML expects Q1 2025 total net sales between €7.5 billion and €8.0 billion, and a gross margin between 52% and 53%
    • ASML expects 2025 total net sales to be between €30 billion and €35 billion, with a gross margin between 51% and 53%
    (Figures in millions of euros unless otherwise indicated) Q3 2024   Q4 2024   FY 2023   FY 2024  
    Total net sales 7,467   9,263   27,559   28,263  
    …of which Installed Base Management sales1 1,541   2,147   5,620   6,494  
                     
    New lithography systems sold (units) 106   119   421   380  
    Used lithography systems sold (units) 10   13   28   38  
                     
    Net bookings2 2,633   7,088   20,040 3 18,899 3
                     
    Gross profit 3,793   4,790   14,136   14,492  
    Gross margin (%) 50.8   51.7   51.3   51.3  
                     
    Net income 2,077   2,693   7,839   7,572  
    EPS (basic; in euros) 5.28   6.85   19.91   19.25  
                     
    End-quarter cash and cash equivalents and short-term investments 4,985   12,741   7,010   12,741  

    (1) Installed Base Management sales equals our net service and field option sales.
    (2) Net bookings include all system sales orders and inflation-related adjustments, for which written authorizations have been accepted.
    (3) The sum of quarterly net bookings over the full year.

    Numbers have been rounded for readers’ convenience. A complete summary of US GAAP Consolidated Statements of Operations is published on www.asml.com.

    CEO statement and outlook
    “Our fourth-quarter was a record in terms of revenue, with total net sales coming in at €9.3 billion, and a gross margin of 51.7%, both above our guidance. This was primarily driven by additional upgrades. We also recognized revenue on two High NA EUV systems. We shipped a third High NA EUV system to a customer in the fourth quarter.

    “ASML achieved another record year, ending with total net sales for 2024 of €28.3 billion, and a gross margin of 51.3%.

    “We expect first-quarter total net sales between €7.5 billion and €8.0 billion, with a gross margin between 52% and 53%. ASML expects R&D costs of around €1,140 million and SG&A costs of around €290 million. As we communicated last October, we expect total net sales for the year between €30 billion and €35 billion, with a gross margin between 51% and 53%.

    “Consistent with our view from the last quarter, the growth in artificial intelligence is the key driver for growth in our industry. It has created a shift in the market dynamics that is not benefiting all of our customers equally, which creates both opportunities and risks as reflected in our 2025 revenue range,” said ASML President and Chief Executive Officer Christophe Fouquet.

      
    Update dividend and share buyback program
    ASML intends to declare a total dividend for the year 2024 of €6.40 per ordinary share, which is a 4.9% increase compared to 2023. An interim dividend of €1.52 per ordinary share will be made payable on February 19, 2025. Recognizing this interim dividend and the two interim dividends of €1.52 per ordinary share paid in 2024, this leads to a final dividend proposal to the General Meeting of €1.84 per ordinary share.

    In the fourth quarter, we did not purchase any shares under the current 2022-2025 share buyback program.

    Details of the share buyback program as well as transactions pursuant thereto, and details of the dividend are published on ASML’s website (www.asml.com/investors).

    Media Relations contacts Investor Relations contacts
    Monique Mols +31 6 5284 4418 Jim Kavanagh +31 6 1524 9925
    Sarah de Crescenzo +1 925 899 8985 Pete Convertito +1 203 919 1714
    Karen Lo +886 9 397 88635 Peter Cheang +886 3 659 6771

    Quarterly video interview, annual press conference and investor call
    With this press release, ASML is publishing a video interview in which CEO Christophe Fouquet and CFO Roger Dassen discuss the 2024 fourth-quarter and full-year results and outlook for 2025. This video and the video transcript can be viewed on www.asml.com shortly after the publication of this press release.

    CEO Christophe Fouquet and CFO Roger Dassen will host a press conference in Veldhoven on January 29, 2025, at 11:00 Central European Time, which will also be accessible via a live webcast on www.asml.com.

    An investor call for both investors and the media will be hosted by CEO Christophe Fouquet and CFO Roger Dassen on January 29, 2025 at 15:00 Central European Time / 09:00 US Eastern Time. Details can be found on our website.

    About ASML
    ASML is a leading supplier to the semiconductor industry. The company provides chipmakers with hardware, software and services to mass produce the patterns of integrated circuits (microchips). Together with its partners, ASML drives the advancement of more affordable, more powerful, more energy-efficient microchips. ASML enables groundbreaking technology to solve some of humanity’s toughest challenges, such as in healthcare, energy use and conservation, mobility and agriculture. ASML is a multinational company headquartered in Veldhoven, the Netherlands, with offices across EMEA, the US and Asia. Every day, ASML’s more than 44,000 employees (FTE) challenge the status quo and push technology to new limits. ASML is traded on Euronext Amsterdam and NASDAQ under the symbol ASML. Discover ASML – our products, technology and career opportunities – at www.asml.com.

    US GAAP and IFRS Financial Reporting
    ASML’s primary accounting standard for quarterly earnings releases and annual reports is US GAAP, the accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. Quarterly Summary US GAAP consolidated statements of operations, consolidated statements of cash flows and consolidated balance sheets are available on www.asml.com.

    The consolidated balance sheets of ASML Holding N.V. as of December 31, 2024, the related consolidated statements of operations and consolidated statements of cash flows for the quarter and twelve months ended December 31, 2024 as presented in this press release are unaudited.

    In addition to reporting financial figures in accordance with US GAAP, ASML also reports financial figures in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards as adopted by the European Union (‘IFRS’) for statutory purposes. The most significant recurring differences between US GAAP and IFRS that affect ASML concerns the capitalization of certain product development costs and accounting for income taxes.

    2024 Annual Reports
    ASML will publish its 2024 Annual Report based on US GAAP and its 2024 Annual Report based on IFRS on March 5, 2025. Both reports will include sustainability statements in accordance with the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive. The reports and introductory video with CFO Roger Dassen will be published on our website, www.asml.com.

    Regulated information
    This press release contains inside information within the meaning of Article 7(1) of the EU Market Abuse Regulation.

    Forward Looking Statements
    This document and related discussions contain statements that are forward-looking within the meaning of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including statements with respect to plans, strategies, expected trends, including trends in the semiconductor industry and end markets and business environment trends, expected growth in the semiconductor industry by 2030, our expectation that AI will be the key driver for the industry and the expected impact of AI demand on our business, our expectation that lithography will remain at the heart of customer innovation, expected demand, bookings, backlog, outlook of market segments, outlook and expected financial results including expected results for Q1 2025, including net sales, Installed Base Management sales, gross margin, R&D costs, SG&A costs, outlook for full year 2025, including expected full year 2025 total net sales, gross margin and estimated annualized effective tax rate, statements made at our 2024 Investor Day, including revenue and gross margin opportunity for 2030, our expectation to continue to return significant amounts of cash to shareholders through growing dividends and share buybacks, statements with respect to our share buyback program, including the amount of shares that may be repurchased thereunder and statements with respect to dividends, statements with respect to expected performance and capabilities of our systems and customer plans and other non- historical statements. You can generally identify these statements by the use of words like “may”, “will”, “could”, “should”, “project”, “believe”, “anticipate”, “expect”, “plan”, “estimate”, “forecast”, “potential”, “intend”, “continue”, “target”, “future”, “progress”, “goal”, “model”, “opportunity” and variations of these words or comparable words. These statements are not historical facts, but rather are based on current expectations, estimates, assumptions, plans and projections about our business and our future financial results and readers should not place undue reliance on them. Forward- looking statements do not guarantee future performance and involve a number of substantial known and unknown risks and uncertainties. These risks and uncertainties include, without limitation, risks relating to customer demand, semiconductor equipment industry capacity, worldwide demand for semiconductors and semiconductor manufacturing capacity, lithography tool utilization and semiconductor inventory levels, general trends and consumer confidence in the semiconductor industry, the impact of general economic conditions, including the impact of the current macroeconomic environment on the semiconductor industry, uncertainty around a market recovery including the timing thereof, the ultimate impact of AI on our industry and business, the impact of inflation, interest rates, wars and geopolitical developments, the impact of pandemics, the performance of our systems, the success of technology advances and the pace of new product development and customer acceptance of and demand for new products, our production capacity and ability to adjust capacity to meet demand, supply chain capacity, timely availability of parts and components, raw materials, critical manufacturing equipment and qualified employees, our ability to produce systems to meet demand, the number and timing of systems ordered, shipped and recognized in revenue, risks relating to fluctuations in net bookings and our ability to convert bookings into sales, the risk of order cancellation or push outs and restrictions on shipments of ordered systems under export controls, risks relating to the trade environment, import/export and national security regulations and orders and their impact on us, including the impact of changes in export regulations and the impact of such regulations on our ability to obtain necessary licenses and to sell our systems and provide services to certain customers, exchange rate fluctuations, changes in tax rates, available liquidity and free cash flow and liquidity requirements, our ability to refinance our indebtedness, available cash and distributable reserves for, and other factors impacting, dividend payments and share repurchases, the number of shares that we repurchase under our share repurchase program, our ability to enforce patents and protect intellectual property rights and the outcome of intellectual property disputes and litigation, our ability to meet ESG goals and execute our ESG strategy, other factors that may impact ASML’s business or financial results, and other risks indicated in the risk factors included in ASML’s Annual Report on Form 20-F for the year ended December 31, 2023 and other filings with and submissions to the US Securities and Exchange Commission. These forward-looking statements are made only as of the date of this document. We undertake no obligation to update any forward-looking statements after the date of this report or to conform such statements to actual results or revised expectations, except as required by law.

    Attachments

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-Evening Report: A marine heatwave in northwest Australia is killing huge numbers of fish. It’s heading south

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sina Pinter, PhD Candidate in Ocean Dynamics, The University of Western Australia

    Ningaloo Reef is facing the heat James C. Farr/Shutterstock

    Tens of thousands of fish have died off northwestern Australia, as a large and long-lasting marine heatwave intensifies.

    The fish kill at Gnoorea Beach near Karratha is concerning our team of scientists, as the hot mass of water heads south towards Ningaloo Reef and the seagrass gardens in Shark Bay. That’s because we’ve seen this before. An enormous marine heatwave in 2010-11 devastated fisheries and ecosystems further down the WA coast.

    This marine heatwave began in September, with temperatures up to 3°C warmer than usual off Broome. There’s no end in sight.

    The heatwave comes as oceans worldwide experience recordbreaking heat, driven by climate change. More than 90% of all heat trapped by greenhouse gases goes into the oceans.

    The fish kill is a visible way to glimpse a disaster often out of sight and out of mind. But these marine heatwaves do much more, from wiping out seagrass meadows and kelp beds to trashing fisheries.

    Up to 30,000 dead fish have washed up around Gnoorea Beach near Karratha.
    WA Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development

    How bad is this marine heatwave?

    Marine heatwaves are periods of at least five consecutive days when ocean temperatures are significantly higher than the long-term average for the region and season.

    Since September 2024, temperatures off Australia’s northwest coast have been high enough to be considered a heatwave.

    In late December, the area of hotter water expanded southward along the Pilbara coast and became more intense. Temperatures hit 4–5°C above normal at the surface. Our research group has gathered data from satellite measurements, which tells us it’s hotter than usual. Data from autonomous ocean gliders also show unusual levels of heat as far down as 200 metres.

    In January, this heatwave has become bad enough to be classified in some areas as a severe marine heatwave.

    There’s no relief in sight yet. The Bureau of Meteorology forecasts marine heatwave conditions to continue through February.

    figure showing intensity of marine heatwave in northwest Western Australia
    On the left, the marine heatwave on the Northwest Shelf is visible in dark red. On the right, the intensity of the heatwave is shown over time on the Northwest Shelf and further south in Central Western Australia.
    Author provided, CC BY

    Will it be worse than the 2010 heatwave?

    The current marine heatwave is, so far, the second-worst in Western Australia’s recorded history.

    Over the 2010–11 summer, a severe marine heatwave devastated seas off the state. Temperatures hit up to 5°C above average, peaking in February and March.

    The worst-hit areas were seas off the central West Australian coastline, leaving those to the north largely unaffected. But the heatwave stretched 2,000 kilometres, from the Pilbara all the way down to Denmark in the southwest.

    The reason the 2010 heatwave spread so far south was due to the Leeuwin Current, which was stronger than usual due to weak southerly winds linked to a low pressure system off the coast.

    figure showing the 2010-11 marine heatwave in Western Australia
    The 2010-11 marine heatwave hit Central West Australian waters hardest. The Leeuwin Current ferried heat southward.
    Author provided, CC BY

    The heat led to local extinction of kelp species along a 100km stretch of coastline. Scallop and blue swimmer crab fisheries had to close. Seagrass meadows in Shark Bay collapsed. Tropical species were sighted in new areas. And coral bleached at Ningaloo.

    By contrast, this current marine heatwave has concentrated on the northern coastline, but may spread south in coming weeks.

    Unfortunately, there are strong similarities between the 2010–11 heatwave and this one. Both occurred during a La Niña year.

    A similar low pressure system in December 2024 weakened southerly winds during this heatwave, though not as pronounced as in 2010-11. We can expect to see the Leeuwin Current intensify and carry more warm water than usual south, but perhaps not as far as in 2010–11.

    Weather systems at present are developing slightly differently to 2010–11, but they could still lead to weaker southerly winds and produce a stronger current channelling heat.

    What does this mean for ocean life?

    Marine heatwaves at this size and intensity can profoundly damage marine ecosystems and fisheries. The Karratha fish kill is the most visible sign of ecosystem distress.

    We have already seen signs of bleaching in the coral reefs of the Kimberley region, while corals are experiencing heat stress at world-famous Ningaloo Reef.

    The heat is now affecting the Gascoyne region between Carnarvon and Exmouth, and is likely to head further south.

    Damage from the heatwave could threaten valuable industries such as the rock lobster fishery and marine tourism on the Coral Coast.

    bleached coral linked to marine heatwave.
    Bleached corals in Cygnet Bay north of Broome. Photo taken on 16th January.
    Kayleigh Foste, CC BY

    More heatwaves will come

    As the climate changes, modelling indicates marine heatwaves will hit more often and to intensify.

    Worldwide, marine heatwaves have devastated ecosystems. One of the worst, the Pacific “blob” heatwave of 2014-2016, killed an estimated 100 million Pacific cod and four million birds from a single seabird species, as well as contributing to the starvation of about 7,000 humpback whales. The intense heat killed off cold-loving species and paved the way for tropical species to enter and even thrive.

    Right now, 28% of the world’s oceans are in heatwave conditions, based on surface temperatures.

    While there is a clear link between the 2010-11 marine heatwave and climate change, we cannot conclusively say this current heatwave off Western Australia is linked to climate change.

    That’s because we don’t have enough data about what’s happening under the surface. Temperatures in the ocean vary greatly by depth, and a hot surface doesn’t always mean heat has reached deeper water.

    So while we know a marine heatwave is in progress, we don’t know how bad it is or how far down the heat has reached in different regions. We need better ways to measure temperatures at depth, to be able to gauge how bad a heatwave is. Installing more temperature sensors along the WA coastline would allow us to better monitor and respond to temperature extremes.

    The earlier we know about a heatwave, the more we can do to prepare. The 2010-2011 heatwave made many people aware of what damage heat can do to an ocean, as fishing boats sat idle and tourists steered clear of dying coral.

    More, and worse, is likely to come. Better conservation and management of our oceans can help. But tackling the root cause of intensifying heat – unchecked greenhouse gas emissions – is still far and away the most important challenge.

    The Conversation

    Matt Rayson receives funding from the Australian Research Council and the Western Australian government. .

    Nicole L. Jones receives funding from Australian Research Council and the Western Australian government.

    Sina Pinter 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. A marine heatwave in northwest Australia is killing huge numbers of fish. It’s heading south – https://theconversation.com/a-marine-heatwave-in-northwest-australia-is-killing-huge-numbers-of-fish-its-heading-south-248139

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Sobyanin: Six more Russian regions to join Moscow’s AI platform for medical services

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    More than 75 percent of the country’s regions are already working withmedical services on the platform “MosMedia”. This year, six more subjects of the Russian Federation will join it. Sergei Sobyanin said this in his telegram channel.

    “The platform offers 17 services to speed up and improve the accuracy of analysis of computer tomography, radiography, mammography and fluorography. AI algorithms draw the doctor’s attention to pathologies using color markings on medical images and prepare conclusions. These solutions have undergone a full cycle of testing and have been used in Moscow hospitals and clinics for five years,” the Moscow Mayor wrote.

    Source: Sergei Sobyanin’s Telegram channel @Mos_Sobyanin

    The regions joining the capital’s AI services platform is another step towards the digitalization of healthcare throughout the country.

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

    Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect

    https: //vv.mos.ru/mayor/tkhemes/12324050/

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Development Asia: From Guesswork to Precision: Enhancing Agricultural Mapping with Geospatial Tech

    Source: Asia Development Bank

    The growing accessibility of geospatial technologies is reshaping how agricultural statistics are gathered, processed, and disseminated. Advanced technologies like remote sensing using satellite imagery, GPS, and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) offer the potential for more efficient methods to monitor changes in agriculture with greater precision and frequency.

    When considering the most suitable method for GPS land measurement, several critical factors—such as the size, shape, and terrain of the parcel—must be considered, along with available resources.

    Walking method: The common method involves an enumerator, usually guided by the farmer, physically walking the perimeter of a parcel while carrying a GPS device, which automatically tracks and calculates the area. This approach reduces the need for multiple pieces of surveying equipment and extensive training for field staff. Furthermore, the time required for measurement is limited to the duration of walking the parcel’s perimeter, significantly streamlining the overall process. It is recommended when the highest positional accuracy and measurement precision are required.

    Moreover, GPS measurement methods integrated into tablets can be advantageous in certain cases, particularly due to their convenience and potential integration with other data collection tools.

    The walking method, whether using a dedicated handheld GPS device or an on-tablet GPS sensor, is particularly effective for smaller parcels with complex shapes and easily navigable terrain. It allows for precise boundary capture but can be time-consuming for larger parcels, potentially taking up to one hour for areas exceeding 10,000 m².

    Digitization method: Conversely, the digitization method is more suitable for large, monocropped areas. This method involves the farmer tracing the boundary of their parcel directly over a satellite image, negating the need for the farmer and enumerator to walk the boundary physically. Key to the success of this approach is the ability of the farmer to accurately recognize their land from an aerial perspective and the assumption that the satellite imagery is up-to-date and reflects the current agricultural season.

    Parcel corner GPS: The parcel corner GPS method involves an enumerator identifying and marking only the corners of the parcel using the Survey Solutions geometry multi-point question type to speed up the data input process. The goal is to capture the essential boundaries of the parcel more easily. The key challenge in using this method is the difficulty in accurately identifying corner points, particularly in irregularly shaped parcels. Significant inaccuracies in area measurement may also occur if enumerators are not properly trained and well-versed in using the field instruments.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Key considerations for renewable energy developers seeking private capital to fund expansion

    Source: Allens Insights

    Establishing renewable energy platforms and capital partnerships 8 min read

    As renewable energy developers look to expand their project pipelines and operational portfolios, many are turning to private capital sources to help fund their expansion plans. Increasingly, that capital is being sought through newly established platforms between developers and investors that jointly own the renewable projects through a legal ownership structure separate from the developer’s remaining business.

    Establishing renewable energy platforms and capital partnerships requires a strategic balance of risk mitigation and the optimisation of growth opportunities in an increasingly competitive environment. Each platform and capital partnership is unique, necessitating customisation based on the objectives and risk tolerance levels of the parties involved. With robust planning and transparent communication from day one, these capital partnerships can help drive the energy transition while delivering attractive returns for investors.

    In this Insight, we explore the key issues for developers and investors to consider when establishing a capital partnership for a new renewable energy platform.

    Key takeaways

    • Commitment to the platform: each party should seek a form of commitment to the platform from the other. We are increasingly seeing both developers and investors be willing to provide that commitment in the form of an exclusivity undertaking, pursuant to which the parties are prohibited from developing or funding projects outside of the platform (subject to certain carveouts).
    • Operational model: new platforms are typically structured as either a standalone business or a simple ownership vehicle where operational functionality is outsourced back to the developer. Alignment between the parties on the preferred approach, and how it impacts key issues such as revenue strategy and exit, is a key to success.
    • Funding obligations: the parties’ funding obligations to the platform should be designed to ensure the platform receives sufficient funding to develop, acquire and operate projects. However, while certainty of funding is important, the parties should avoid rigid frameworks (which set out precise financial and operational criteria for investment in new projects), which run the risk of stifling growth (particularly when dealing with seasoned developers with a track record of bringing projects to market).
    • Governance and regulatory considerations: when evaluating potential investors/platform partners, developers should consider the regulatory implications relevant to each investor (in particular in relation to tax, FIRB, AFSL and ACCC requirements), and how those implications may affect the day-to-day operation of the platform.
    • Debt financing strategy: the platform’s debt financing structure must be adaptable to accommodate new projects and multiple funding sources, ensuring room for future growth without excessive lender restrictions.
    • Funding and compensation: any platform must be structured in a way that recognises the different initial and ongoing contributions from both the developer and the investor. In particular, developers should ensure they are properly compensated for the seed assets vended into the platform.

    Key considerations

    Commitment to the platform

    Notwithstanding the specific technology focus of the platform, such as solar, wind, BESS, other forms of generation and storage, or all of the above, each party should seek a form of commitment to the platform from the other with respect to the relevant technology focus. While it might be expected that the developer provides a stronger form of commitment, limiting their ability to develop projects of the applicable technology outside the platform, investors are increasingly also willing to ‘put all their eggs in one basket’ and accept a form of exclusive commitment. This is often based on the understanding that, through diligence and alignment with the developer on key principles, the platform is their best means of investing in that technology in Australia. If an investor is willing to make such a commitment, establishing carveouts to ensure they are not inappropriately constrained is essential. Investors will often seek to ensure the commitment does not cover existing investments, projects outside the geography, investments via other funds and projects beyond a specific capacity range.

    Structuring your operating model

    When establishing a new platform, developers have two primary operational model options to consider: standalone platforms and ownership vehicles. Each model has distinct characteristics, benefits and challenges that can significantly impact the platform’s success.

    Standalone platforms operate as independent businesses with their own management teams and operational autonomy. For standalone platforms, a key focus should be on selecting the right management team. This process typically takes time, so it’s important to establish a robust transition plan in which the developer provides the necessary support until the management team is fully onboarded.

    Ownership vehicles function through a network of development and service agreements where operational functionality is outsourced back to the developer. This model leverages existing capabilities within the developer’s organisation but operates under a separate legal structure.

    Whatever the operational structure, a key to success is ensuring alignment between the developer and investor from the outset—particularly on headline issues such as revenue strategy (especially important for BESS assets, which offer a variety of potential revenue options, eg tolling agreements, Capacity Investment Scheme agreements, system support agreements, merchant operations, etc) and exit strategy.

    Certainty of funding

    As a vehicle designed to fund both seed and future projects, funding obligations are often the most heavily negotiated elements of platform arrangements. In an ideal scenario for developers, they would retain full control over financial investment decisions (FID) and funding decisions, allowing them to call for capital as needed. Meanwhile, in a perfect world for investors, they would have complete discretion over which projects their capital is used to fund.

    To avoid potential deadlocks with respect to funding decisions, including through the exercise of veto rights, one approach is for the investor to make an upfront capital commitment. This requires them to fund a pre-agreed amount (at a pre-agreed valuation) for a set of seed and pipeline assets, which they diligence at the outset. Once this initial capital is provided, future funding can be provided on a pre-emptive basis, potentially tied to target return criteria and procedural milestones that must be met before a project is onboarded to the platform or funded via FID.

    While this strategy helps prevent deadlocks that could hinder platform growth, it’s important to recognise that a one-size-fits-all approach may not be ideal. In our experience, rigid procedures around project onboarding and funding may not serve the platform’s best interests, particularly when developers have a proven track record of managing development and construction risks in a more flexible manner. Retaining flexibility with regards to milestone requirements to take FID may enable the platform to reprioritise projects in response to shifting market demands and opportunities.

    Managing governance and regulatory requirements

    When evaluating potential investors, developers should consider a range of factors beyond simply choosing the one with the deepest pockets. Issues such as Foreign Investment Review Board (FIRB) implications (particularly whether an investor’s involvement will characterise the platform as a ‘foreign government investor’ or FGI), Australian Financial Services Licence (AFSL) requirements and complex competition law concerns can create significant challenges for the platform if not addressed and managed at the outset.

    Tax implications must also be considered. For example, upcoming changes to the foreign resident capital gains tax regime in Australia—specifically how ‘taxable Australian real property’ is defined in the context of renewable energy assets—may affect after-tax returns for foreign developers and investors.

    These changes, expected to come into effect on 1 July 2025, could have substantial impacts on renewable energy platforms and should be closely monitored.

    Implementing your debt financing strategy

    The initial debt financing required to establish the platform and transition seed and early-stage assets to the platform will depend on the number and characteristics of those assets, including the technology type and whether the assets are operational or under construction, merchant or contracted, etc.

    Whatever the makeup of that initial financing, flexibility for growth is key. In particular, the debt financing structure must be flexible enough to accommodate:

    • the inclusion of new greenfield and operating assets (with a focus on minimising lender consent rights);
    • construction financing for greenfield projects, either within the portfolio financing structure or separately financed outside the portfolio through an excluded subsidiary mechanism and brought in once the project is operational (subject to risk tolerance on a case-by-case basis); and
    • multisource financing options (including bank debt, private long-term credit and note issuance) with the necessary intercreditor mechanics.

    Funding structure

    The platform will need to be structured in a way that recognises the different initial contributions from both the developer and the investor. In most platforms, the developer provides seed and pipeline assets, while the investor supplies capital for the development and construction of those assets.

    An investor’s capital contribution typically needs to be structured so that the platform can draw down the capital over time, on an as-needed basis to fund project capex. This can be achieved through various methods, such as partly paid shares or equity ‘catch up’ or ‘farm-in’ regimes, with the optimum approach usually driven by the investor’s requirement regarding governance rights from day one, FIRB considerations and any potential requirement to ‘return’ capital commitments in the future.

    From the developer’s perspective, it is essential to ensure that they are properly compensated for the seed assets transferred into the platform. Whether that compensation takes the form of equity in the platform or proceeds from the transfer of assets, it would typically reflect (for each asset/project) all devex spent on the project, fees for the origination and development services provided and, where applicable, a development premium.

    Key questions to ask

    • Asset strategy: what technology should the platform focus on? Solar, wind, BESS, other forms of generation and storage, or all of the above? Whatever the technology, what level of commitment is each party willing to give to the platform and what carve outs to the commitment are needed?
    • Operational model: should the platform be structured as a standalone business with its own management team and operational autonomy, or as an ownership vehicle that, through a network of development and services agreements, outsources operational functionality to the developer?
    • Funding obligations: what level of capital commitment is required from both parties at the outset? How will future funding needs be determined and agreed upon? Are there predefined criteria or milestones that need to be met for additional funding to be provided?
    • Governance and regulatory: are FIRB, AFSL, ACCC and tax requirements fully understood and planned for?
    • Debt financing strategy: how flexible is the debt financing structure in accommodating new assets and various stages of project development? Are there multisource financing options (ie bank debt, private long-term credit or note issuance) and how will the necessary intercreditor mechanics be managed?
    • Funding structure: how will initial contributions from both developer and investor be recognised within the platform structure? What methods (eg partly paid shares, equity ‘catch up’, farm-in regimes) will facilitate drawdown of capital over time? How will developers be compensated for seed assets transferred into the platform?

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI China: Macao SAR eyes new progress in Year of Snake

    Source: China State Council Information Office 2

    The chief executive of the Macao Special Administrative Region (SAR) Sam Hou Fai said on Tuesday that in the Year of the Snake, Macao will strive to enhance governance capacity, promote economic diversification, and proactively integrate into the national development paradigm.
    Sam made the remarks in his Spring Festival message, extending New Year wishes to the residents of Macao.
    Noting that the snake symbolizes wisdom, sensitivity, flexibility, and auspiciousness in Chinese culture, Sam said that while there may be uncertainties on the path toward the future and rapid changes may occur in the international landscape, the motherland “will always be our staunch supporter.”
    The chief executive noted that this new year marks the first year of the inauguration of the sixth-term SAR government, adding, “We will continue to strengthen the implementation of the ‘one country, two systems’ principle and uphold national security with a greater sense of responsibility.”
    In constructing the Guangdong-Macao In-depth Cooperation Zone in Hengqin, Sam underlined that he and his team will make achievements in implementing innovative policies and integrating regulations, bolster advancements in industry development and foundation building, and expedite a new stage of Macao-Hengqin integration in the areas of systems, mechanisms, policies, and others.
    Zheng Xincong, director of the Liaison Office of the Central People’s Government in the Macao SAR, said on Tuesday that with the care of the central government, strong support of the motherland, and joint efforts of the SAR government and all sectors of society, the “one country, two systems” policy will certainly take new steps and present a new outlook.
    Standing at a new historic starting point, he added, it is believed that Macao will make the path toward appropriate economic diversification broader and more solid.
    Liu Xianfa, commissioner of China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs in the Macao SAR, said in his message that in the new year, the foreign affairs office will further strengthen safeguarding national security, fully support the chief executive and the SAR government in governing by law, and assist the SAR in expanding foreign exchanges and cooperation.
    Liu added that the office will also promote the introduction of more measures to facilitate the movement of people between China and foreign countries, increase efforts to attract international investment to the in-depth cooperation zone in Hengqin, and better protect the rights and interests of Macao compatriots overseas. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI USA: On the Senate Floor, Cortez Masto Calls Out Trump’s Anti-Law Enforcement Pardons

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Nevada Cortez Masto

    “Earlier today, my Democratic colleagues and I co-sponsored a resolution to condemn these pardons. One would think that my Republican colleagues who claim to be pro-law enforcement would sign onto this resolution and stand against any action that harms our police.”
    Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senator Cortez Masto (D-Nev.) blasted President Trump on the Senate floor for pardoning a drug trafficking kingpin and the violent criminals who assaulted police officers on January 6, 2021. A former prosecutor and Nevada attorney general, Cortez Masto urged her supposedly pro-law enforcement Republican colleagues to join her resolution condemning these pardons.
    Below are her remarks as prepared for delivery:
    Mr. President, I’m so appreciative of my colleagues coming down here to talk about not only the January 6 pardons that President Trump has done but to stand with the men and women in law enforcement.
    When I’m home, quite often I will hear at times that “well, Democrats don’t support law enforcement, they don’t support the men and women who keep our communities safe.” And that’s just not true, as you can see today.
    But here’s what I know, and this is why this was devastating to so many men and women who not only are Capitol Police officers right here, who defended our Capitol on January 6, who stand to protect us, but for all of the men and women in law enforcement across this country who are paying attention and watching what this president does.
    Will he have their back when the time comes? Will he be there to truly support them in their time of need when they’re doing their job like he says he will?
    Now, we’ve spent the last decade hearing Donald Trump talk about “law and order” and cracking down on crime. Last fall, on a national podcast, he called for giving our law enforcement their “dignity back”. Just last week at a White House press conference, he claimed to be a friend of the police.
    Well, Donald Trump has been in office for just one week, and already his actions are making it clear that he doesn’t mean what he says. In fact, from his actions we’ve seen so far, he’s actively working against our men and women in law enforcement – not only here who work at this Capitol, but across this country.
    Let me put this in starker terms that I think my Republican colleagues will understand. Mr. President, Nevada families across my state have been torn apart by dangerous drugs like methamphetamines and opioids. And that’s true for so many families across the country.
    It doesn’t matter if they’re Democrats, Republicans, Libertarians, or independents – illicit drug trafficking is impacting everyone in this country.
    But last week, Donald Trump pardoned the founder of Silk Road, an underground internet site that oversaw the trafficking of $200 million in illegal drugs and other illicit trade.
    The founder was convicted by a jury of his peers and sentenced to life in prison for participating in a criminal organization and distributing narcotics on the internet.
    Americans died after purchasing illicit drugs on his website. A website that was specifically designed to skirt the law and support criminal activity.
    But now, this founder is walking free because of Donald Trump.
    Donald Trump giving a full, unconditional pardon to this drug dealer and criminal profiteer is a slap in the face to the victims of this crisis, and to law enforcement who work to protect our communities and to take drug traffickers like him off our streets.
    What Donald Trump has done is not law and order, it’s chaos.
    And it’s not just with this one pardon.
    Donald Trump has also pardoned more than 130 individuals who were convicted of assaulting police officers right here at the Capitol on January 6, 2021.
    I was here that day. I remember running into a Capitol Police officer who was pepper-sprayed by a rioter in Donald Trump’s mob. And at the same time that he was washing out his eyes, he was saying to us senators, “Don’t worry. I’ve got your back, and I am standing guard.” And he ran back out to the front of the Capitol. He was doing his job.
    That day, those rioters and insurrectionists brought weapons and zip ties to the Capitol, they used WD-40 and bear spray on our officers, and they assaulted Capitol Police with American flags.
    This isn’t some political conspiracy – these insurrectionists posted videos online of themselves shoving, punching, and attacking our law enforcement.
    And now, instead of serving their time and facing the consequences for the dangerous actions they committed against our police officers, Donald Trump is telling them that not only were they wrongfully punished, but in fact, their behavior on that day is encouraged – as long as they’re doing his bidding.
    Criminals convicted of attacking law enforcement are giving TV interviews saying that President Trump’s pardons have vindicated their actions.
    This is an endorsement of political violence, and it’s an insult to the men and women who risk their lives every day to keep our families safe.
    I know many law enforcement officers personally. As a former prosecutor and attorney general of the state of Nevada, I’ve spent most of my life working with some great men and women in law enforcement.
    And by the way, I’m married to one. My husband worked in federal law enforcement his entire career. His priority was doing his job and keeping people safe, because that’s what our law enforcement is trained to do. To put their lives on the line every single time to keep our communities safe.
    And it’s not just about the officers – it’s about their families. When you are the spouse or the loved one of an officer who gets that call, sometimes in the middle of the night, and they leave to address some crime or issue and keep your community safe, you don’t know if they’re coming back.
    There are two calls that are the worst kind you can get as the spouse of a law enforcement officer. The first one is from your spouse saying “I’m in the hospital, but don’t worry, everything’s okay.” The second one is not from your spouse, but it’s from another law enforcement officer telling you that your husband or wife went out on a call and didn’t come back.
    The sacrifices of not only our officers but their loved ones need to be considered. And if we truly believe in law and order and we truly believe that we should support them because they put their lives on the line every single day, then we should have their backs. No matter your politics, we should always be there to support them.
    I will always stand up for law enforcement.
    I’ve passed legislation to support public safety under administrations of both parties. And I will always speak out when our leaders act against law enforcement, whether they’re a Democrat or a Republican.
    I disagreed with President Biden granting pardons to his family, I disagreed when he granted clemency for Leonard Peltier, who was convicted of murdering two FBI agents. And I disagree with President Biden in commuting the sentence of Adrian Peeler, who was convicted of drug trafficking and murder.
    I also spoke out when President Biden nominated Adeel Mangi to be a federal judge. I did not support him because of his affiliation with a group that wanted to let cop killers out of prison.
    That was me standing up for law enforcement.
    So believe me when I say, this is not partisan; this is about standing up for the men and women who put their lives on the line for us every day.
    This shouldn’t be hard. You commit a violent crime in our community, you should face the consequences.
    Don’t take my word for it – the Fraternal Order of Police, which is the largest organization of sworn law enforcement officers in the world, has condemned Trump’s pardoning of those who assaulted Capitol Police officers on January 6.
    But there are too many members of this body, who had the benefit of those Capitol Police officers on January 6 protecting their lives, who have been oddly silent.
    Earlier today, my Democratic colleagues and I co-sponsored a resolution to condemn these pardons. One would think that my Republican colleagues who claim to be pro-law enforcement would sign onto this resolution and stand against any action that harms our police.
    If we truly believe in law and order and we want to work together to keep our communities safe, we have to not only talk about it, we have to act.
    Because the American people deserve better. The American people deserve a president who isn’t going to release violent criminals back into our communities. The American people deserve safety – and our law enforcement, who maintain that safety, deserve to know we have their backs.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Man arrested following unprovoked assault in Palmerston North

    Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

    Attributable to Detective Sergeant Shelley Ross:

    A man has been arrested following an assault at a Palmerston North Park this afternoon, Wednesday 29 January.

    About 1pm, Police responded to a park on Dogwood Way following reports one person had received injuries consistent with a stab wound following an unprovoked assault.

    One person was transported to Palmerston North Hospital in a serious condition where they are receiving medical treatment.

    Police would like to thank the members of the public who were delayed while Police responded to the incident.

    A 25-year-old man is due to appear in the Palmerston North District Court tomorrow, Thursday 29 January, on charges of wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm.

    This was a callous and unprovoked attack which we will not tolerate in our community.

    If you witness any unlawful activity, please contact Police on 111 if it is happening now or 105 either online or over the phone if it is after the fact.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Leader of Jackson Gang Admits to Conspiracy to Traffic Unique Form of Fentanyl

    Source: United States Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco Firearms and Explosives (ATF)

    DETROIT – A Houston, Texas resident and leader of the violent Jackson street gang the “Thorough Bread Family,” Tamarious “Poogi” Faulkner, pleaded guilty today to conspiracy to distribute over 400 grams of fentanyl, Acting United States Attorney Julie A. Beck announced today.

    Beck was joined in the announcement by James Deir, Special Agent in Charge of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, Detroit Field Division, Colonel James F. Grady, II, Michigan State Police, Director Elmer J. Hitt, Jackson Police and Fire Services, and Sheriff Gary Schuette, Jackson County Sheriff’s Department. 

    Tamarious Faulkner, 28, of Houston, Texas, was the leader of the Thorough Bread Family (TBF), a violent street gang that primarily operated in Jackson, Michigan. In his plea, Faulkner admitted that he was the leader of the conspiracy and that he and his co-conspirators distributed large amounts of fentanyl in Jackson. According to court documents, the fentanyl sold by the gang had a unique texture and coloring. Unlike most fentanyl, typically sold in powder form, TBF’s fentanyl was sold in a rock-like crystalline form, and was often colored yellow, purple, or blue, rather than the usual white. Faulkner and his fellow gang members also possessed firearms and machineguns in furtherance of the fentanyl trafficking conspiracy.

    Six other co-conspirators have already been sentenced as follows:

    • Demond Johns, age 27 of Jackson: 128 months’ prison
    • Dominque Faulkner, age 33 of Jackson: 126 months’ prison
    • Zaire Faulkner, age 26 of Jackson: 120 months’ prison
    • Demarquan Smith, age 23 of Jackson: 120 months’ prison
    • Tommy Owens, age 33 of Jackson: 87 months’ prison
    • Mario Murguia, age 24 of Jackson: 60 months’ prison

    “As is so often the case when drugs and gangs intersect, TBF wreaked havoc on a community by peddling poison and protecting their drug business with violence. The United States Attorney’s Office, in coordination with our federal, state, and local partners, will aggressively investigate and prosecute individuals, groups, and gangs like TBF who do so much to corrode public safety and the well-being of a community,” Acting U.S. Attorney Beck said.

    “Today’s guilty plea is a huge win for the Jackson community. The Thorough Bred gang and Dominque Faulkner let their greed and desire for power guide their violent pathway straight into prison like a yellow brick road,” said James Deir ATF Special Agent in Charge of the Detroit Field Division.  Like Dorothy and Toto, they are not in Kansas anymore; their cyclone of gun violence has blown them straight into federal prison for an extended period of time. To be clear: There is no place in our community for people who use illegal firearms to carry out fear, intimidate others, or facilitate drug dealing. Our community deserves better than Mr. Faulkner and his merry gang of thugs.”

    Tamarious Faulkner is scheduled to be sentenced on April 29, 2025, before Judge Stephen J. Murphy, III. Faulkner faces a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years in prison with a maximum sentence of life imprisonment.

    This case was investigated by the Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives with the Michigan State Police, Jackson Police Department, and the Jackson County Sheriff’s Office. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Andrew R. Picek, Matthew Roth, and Craig Welkener.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: CS celebrates Chinese New Year with community (with photos)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    CS celebrates Chinese New Year with community (with photos)
    CS celebrates Chinese New Year with community (with photos)
    ***********************************************************

         The Chief Secretary for Administration, Mr Chan Kwok-ki, today (January 29), on the Chinese New Year’s Day, wishes the country to thrive vigorously, for Hong Kong to have harmony and prosperity, and every success to the community. He paid a visit to the Lo Wu Control Point this morning to learn about the various arrangements and operations of relevant departments to cope with the increase in inbound and outbound passenger traffic during the Chinese New Year period. During the visit, he extended his New Year greetings to the staff on duty, and expressed his gratitude to them for performing their duties with dedication during the holidays. Along the way, he took the opportunity to extend his Chinese New Year greetings to the citizens and travellers he met.           Accompanied by the Secretary for Security, Mr Tang Ping-keung; the Director of Immigration, Mr Benson Kwok; and the Commissioner of Customs and Excise, Mr Chan Tsz-tat, Mr Chan inspected the Lo Wu Control Point and met the frontline staff of the Immigration Department (ImmD), the Customs and Excise Department (C&ED) and the Hong Kong Police Force on duty. He learned about the arrangements and operation conditions for customs clearance, diverting passenger movements, public order maintenance, etc at the control point during the Chinese New Year period.            Mr Chan was pleased to note that the relevant government departments have been in close co-ordination and liaison with stakeholders of transport, tourism and other sectors for making good preparation for receiving visitors during the Chinese New Year Golden Week of the Mainland, and ensuring the orderly operation of boundary control points. Relevant departments have minimised leave for frontline officers during the Chinese New Year period, to enable flexible deployment of manpower, and operation of additional counters and channels with a view to diverting passenger and vehicular flow. The Inter-departmental Joint Command Centre set up by the Police, the ImmD, the C&ED, and other relevant departments; and the Emergency Transport Co-ordination Centre of the Transport Department will both operate 24 hours a dayduring the Golden Week, to closely monitor the situation of various control points and traffic conditions, and take prompt measures to ensure the smooth operation of various aspects in receiving visitors. Mr Chan expressed his heartfelt gratitude to colleagues of the Government and practitioners of various industries for their hard work during the Chinese New Year period.           Mr Chan also appealed to visitors arriving in Hong Kong during the Chinese New Year holidays to plan ahead for their itineraries. He encouraged them to stay overnight after participating in various local celebratory activities for the Chinese New Year and to make reference to the ultimate guide to Chinese New Year in Hong Kong launched by the Hong Kong Tourism Board to fully enjoy the rich and diverse celebratory activities to be held across various districts in the city and experience Hong Kong’s unique city charm. At the same time, he instructed relevant departments to collaborate with various stakeholders, including public transport operators, to strengthen information dissemination including the situation at various boundary control points, details of celebration events and transport arrangements to enable residents and visitors to plan their itineraries according to the latest situation.           On January 27, Mr Chan participated in year-end caring visits in 18 districts co-ordinated by the Home Affairs Department. He visited elderly singleton and elderly doubleton grassroots families living in Po Lam Estate, Tseung Kwan O, and distributed blessing bags to them to express the Government’s heartfelt wishes. He engaged in warm exchanges with the residents to let them feel the care and support of the community. He also attended the Yau Tsim Mong Presents – The Year of The Snake: Countdown Celebration at the Yau Ma Tei Community Centre Rest Garden yesterday (January 28) to share with the public the joys and blessings of the festive season and welcome the Year of the Snake. 

     
    Ends/Wednesday, January 29, 2025Issued at HKT 12:15

    NNNN

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Panasonic Leaps “Well into the future” with AI and Data-Driven Innovations at CES 2025 Exhibition Space

    Source: Panasonic

    Headline: Panasonic Leaps “Well into the future” with AI and Data-Driven Innovations at CES 2025 Exhibition Space

    Marking a 58th consecutive year as an exhibitor at one of the world’s most influential consumer electronics events, Panasonic Group was on hand at CES 2025 (January 7–10 in Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S.A.) to engage with audiences about its strategic shift toward AI and data-driven businesses. This year’s CES was host to more than 141,000 visitors and 4,500 exhibitors from more than 150 countries and regions, but not everyone had the opportunity to attend. If you missed out, here are some key highlights from the Panasonic Group exhibition space. 

    Theme Signals Strategic Shift toward AI, Data-Driven Solutions

    The theme for Panasonic Group’s exhibition space was “Well into the future.” Announced by Panasonic Holdings Corporation Co., Ltd. (Panasonic HD) Group CEO Yuki Kusumi during his opening keynote, this year’s theme signified the organization’s strategic shift toward AI and data-driven businesses in pursuit of an ideal society with affluence both in matter and mind.
    “Well into the future” embodies the idea that, through innovations and a commitment to addressing social issues, Panasonic will lead the development of cutting-edge solutions to help achieve its core mission to inspire a healthy society and enrich the lives of people around the world. 
    “This year’s theme is a reference to Panasonic founder Konosuke Matsushita’s vision of contributing to the well-being of people and the progress of society,” said Mike King, Director, Brand Marketing & Creative Services, Marketing & Communications, Panasonic Operational Excellence of North America. “And you can see that theme throughout the exhibit—with technologies that support the well-being of individuals, of families and all of society, with our focus on green energy transformation and decarbonization, but also the use of AI-powered solutions to help families to experience greater connection, connectivity, comfort, and well-being.”

    [embedded content]

    Located in Las Vegas Convention Center (LVCC)’s Central Hall, the exhibition space was an enclosed environment divided into four areas: Panasonic Go, Home, Carbon Neutral, and Circular Economy. The design was a departure from the open layouts of previous years, allowing visitors to experience the complete Panasonic story—from its history and vision for the future to technologies they can use today and solutions that will contribute to a sustainable tomorrow.

    Growth Initiative Links Past and Future under “Panasonic Go”

    Panasonic Go is a global corporate growth initiative that will drive transformation through AI-powered, software-led investments across Panasonic Group and create new experiences for customers and partners.
    This area of the exhibition space welcomed visitors with a look back over the storied history of the Panasonic Group, illustrating historical milestones and introducing home appliances that have enriched lives since the company’s founding in 1918. Moving further into the exhibition space, a video explained Matsushita’s ambitious 10-stage, 250-year plan to contribute to solving social issues and improving people’s lives through technology and the role that Panasonic Go will play in driving the transformation to an AI-powered business model towards the plan’s fifth stage (2032–2056).
    * The name Panasonic Go was also inspired by the Japanese word for “five”
    Panasonic Group products have already changed the lives of more than one billion people. Looking ahead, the Group will leverage AI and data platforms—from Blue Yonder’s supply chain management solutions to Panasonic Well’s family wellness platform—to make new contributions for current and future generations.  
    Speaking of wellness, the final section of the Panasonic Go area gave visitors a chance to get a sneak peek of Umi, a new consumer offering from the Panasonic Well portfolio that will be available in the United States market in 2025. Umi is an innovative digital wellness platform and personalized family wellness coach that uses AI and a community of experts to help people build healthy habits and routines. Umi will be the first Panasonic Well consumer brand to use Claude, Anthropic’s AI assistant known for its reasoning capabilities, deep understanding of complex topics, and ability to engage in natural conversations. Claude excels at analyzing data, writing and editing content, and helping solve complex problems—all while maintaining the highest standards of safety and security.

    Carbon Neutral & Circular Economy Exhibits Highlight Sustainability Efforts

    Panasonic HD took the stage at CES 2022 to announce its long-term environmental vision, Panasonic GREEN IMPACT (PGI), and since then the Group has been engaged in a variety of activities to expand its impact toward achieving carbon neutrality and a circular economy. These areas in the exhibition space, Carbon Neutral and Circular Economy, introduced solutions and technologies that will be contributing to achieving the goals established under PGI.

    Visitors also had the opportunity to learn more about how the Panasonic Group is tackling Carbon Neutral challenges and promoting Circular Economy initiatives in its products and solutions as it advances toward the broader goal of contributing to realizing sustainable lifestyles and society. 
    The Carbon Neutral display was organized into three main technologies/approaches: “Updating,” “Electrifying,” and “Harnessing.”
    “Updating” means replacing existing methods with low environmental impact alternatives to reduce energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions. Hussmann display cases for refrigerated and frozen goods use natural refrigerant R290 to greatly reduce environmental impact compared to traditional CFC refrigerant alternatives currently in use.
    “Electrifying” represents the transition from fossil fuels to electric power and making the most of renewable energy. Panasonic Group is a leader in automotive battery cells, having delivered more than 15 billion units to date—enough to power three million EVs worldwide. Visitors were able to check out the Panasonic 2170 cell, which features the world’s highest energy density, as well as the new Panasonic 4680 cell, which has a capacity around five times greater than the 2170 cell. The company’s efforts with Redwood Materials, Inc. and Nouveau Monde Graphite, Inc. to reduce its carbon footprint and achieve a sustainable society were also available for visitors to explore. Finally, they could learn more about Panasonic HX, an advanced energy management system that coordinates pure hydrogen fuel cells, solar cells, and storage batteries to efficiently supply renewable energy in response to changes in electricity demand and weather conditions.
    “Harnessing” is an approach that uses natural resources to produce cleaner resources, leading to CO2 reduction and absorption. One technology aiding the approach is the anion exchange membrane water electrolysis, a device enabling highly efficient and low-cost green hydrogen production. A fully developed anion exchange membrane (AEM) electrode made of iron and nickel was on display in the area. Visitors could also see a life-size mockup of window-mounted perovskite solar cells which demonstrated the transparency and design flexibility of this unique power-generating technology. Also on display was the growth stimulant Novitek®, a technology that uses ambient CO2 in combination with cyanobacteria, a type of photosynthetic microorganism, to increase food productivity.

    The Panasonic Group is committed to the Circular Economy under the three principles of “Maximizing,” “Minimizing,” and “Partnering.” In this area, the Group introduced its efforts to efficiently use resources and reduce consumption of the Earth’s limited natural resources.
    Extending the effective use period while maintaining and improving the value of resources across a product’s lifecycle is known as “Maximizing.” Panasonic displayed a concept model based on the principle of Design for Circular Economy (DfCE); DfCE products are easy to assemble/disassemble (ease of repair), have fewer connectors/fasteners (ease of assembly), and can be grouped for reuse and recycling (ease of recycling).
    “Minimizing” means using fewer new materials and more recycled and renewable materials. For example, approximately 45 percent of the plastic used in the Technics EAH-AZ80 earphones and charging case is made of plant-derived DURABIO , while the Lamdash Palm In ES-PV6A shaver uses NAGORI®, an innovative composite material derived from minerals extracted from seawater, reducing plastic use by approximately 40%1. A second exhibit showcased lighting that incorporates kinari , a sustainable material composed primarily of plant fibers that offers the moldability of conventional petroleum-based resins.
    Designing products and systems for a circular economy is a challenge that Panasonic Group cannot tackle alone, so it emphasizes “Partnering” with customers and partners promote a new style of recycling-oriented management, information sharing, and product use. One outcome of these collaborative efforts is Tracephere , a traceability solution for product recycling and recycled resource processes based on blockchain technology.

    OASYS and Home Appliances Supporting People’s Health, Comfort, and Safety

    The center of the space introduced the Group’s next generation of residential solutions for comfortable, healthy, economical, sustainable, and secure living. Grabbing center stage was the new OASYS solution—a residential central air conditioning system being introduced in the U.S. market that uses a combination of existing products to heat, cool, and ventilate the home while reducing energy consumption by over 50% compared to conventional systems in the U.S.2 In addition to maximizing air volume while minimizing temperature differences and noise, OASYS paves the way for homes powered by 100 percent renewable energy based on high-efficiency water heaters and a lifestyle-adaptive home energy management system.
    Complementing OASYS were displays for home appliances that enrich people’s lives. These included the Technics EAH-AZ100 true wireless earbuds, the Panasonic TV lineup, SoundSlayer Wireless Wearable Gaming Speaker System SC-GNW10, CV88QS multi-oven, LUMIX Full Frame and Micro Four Thirds cameras and lenses, ARC5 PALM-sized 5-Blade Electric Luxury Razor, Panasonic MultiShape, and nanoe hair dryers.

    New Technologies Strengthen Commitment to a Better Tomorrow

    “Our hope is that people will understand that Panasonic’s commitment has not changed in over 100 years—it has always been about making people’s lives better and making the world a better place. The only difference is that today we are doing it with new technologies like AI and software,” said King. “From the individual to all of society, our hope is that people understand our commitment to helping people live healthier, happier lives.”
    King continued: “We hope that people were surprised and excited about some of the new technologies that Panasonic is introducing. A lot of people are concerned about the environment, and we remain committed to sustainability, to green energy transformation, and to new initiatives that will be important for the health of the planet overall.” 

    [embedded content]

    1: Compared to Lamdash PRO 5-blade ES-LV9W released in 2023
    2: Conventional home air conditioning system using a heat pump cooling system (14.2 SEER2) and gas furnace (80% AFUE) compliant with IECC 2015; OASYS system using Panasonic Mini Split AC and transfer fans for both cooling and heating functions in houses compliant with OASYS-required specifications. (Estimate based on the conversion of gas energy consumption to electricity)

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    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Russia: The virtual game “Winter in Moscow” now features a symbol of the Chinese New Year

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    In a game with augmented reality “Winter in Moscow”, available in the application of the digital tourist service Russpass, a new cartoon has appeared. The red and gold patterned snake has become the personification of the festival “Chinese New Year in Moscow”. It is the official symbol of 2025, created by the Ministry of Culture and Tourism of the People’s Republic of China.

    Explore Moscow with your smartphone

    According to the lunar calendar, the Chinese New Year, or the Spring Festival of Chunjie, which signifies the renewal of nature and life’s opportunities, begins on January 29. According to the eastern calendar, 2025 is the year of the Green Wooden Snake, but the emblem was made in festive shades. In Chinese tradition, red (hong) brings good luck and protects from evil spirits, gold (jin) is associated with wealth and prosperity. The snake symbolizes wisdom, mystery and flexibility.

    The patterned snake can be caught at the sites of the festival “Chinese New Year in Moscow” and get the maximum amount of game currency for it – 800 snowflakes. The cartoon is on Tverskaya Square, Novy Arbat, VDNKh, Kamergersky Lane, the amusement park “Dream Island”, the Moscow Zoo and other places.

    Since the start of the augmented reality game “Winter in Moscow” Russpass app downloaded and updated more than 98 thousand times. After registration, users are given a map with cartoons that they need to catch using their smartphone while traveling around the city.

    Muscovites and tourists are catching the characters from the Soyuzmultfilm studio: Matroskin the cat from the animated series Prostokvashino, Gromozeka from The Secret of the Third Planet, Rooster from The Bremen Town Musicians, and hockey players from the Vympel and Meteor teams from Puck! Puck!

    For example, you can get 800 snowflakes for the parrot Kesha, who lives in the Museum of Moscow and the Ostafyevo Museum Estate. For Umka at the Worker and Kolkhoz Woman monument at VDNKh and the Lesnaya Skazka eco-center – 400. For Carlson at the Southern River Terminal and Vnukovo Airport – 200.

    Accumulated snowflakes open up promo codes for participants to exchange for points in the city loyalty program “A Million Prizes”.

    Chinese Lanterns and Dragon Dances

    The capital is once again celebrating the Chinese New Year on a grand scale as part of the cross-cultural years of 2024–2025.

    From January 28 to February 9, you can experience the atmosphere of China without leaving the capital: watch performances of national theaters on Manezhnaya Square and dragon dances on Tverskaya Square, attend a Chinese-style ice party at VDNKh, make paper dragons and master calligraphy on Bolotnaya Square. In addition, you can take many original photos on sites decorated with Chinese lanterns, air dragons, fans and coins.

    The Winter in Moscow project is the main event of the season, which until February 28 brings together various events in the capital. Citizens and tourists are invited to remember traditions and history, warm up with tea and hot buns, go skating, skiing and tubing, watch ice shows, give gifts to people who find themselves in a difficult life situation, and show concern for those who need it.

    Muscovites and guests of the capital are offered a huge selection of events in the open air and in cultural and sports institutions. The atmosphere of winter traditions has engulfed the entire city: more than 1.9 thousand sites are open. The project organically intertwined with the largest festivals of the capital “Moscow Estates”, “Moscow Tea Party”, “City of Light”, “Snow and Ice in Moscow” and many others. All information about the project and the events of the winter season can be found in a special section of mos.ru.

    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.

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  • MIL-OSI Russia: What services of the flagship My Documents in the South-East Administrative District are most in demand

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    Over the four years of operation, city residents have contacted the flagship office of “My Documents” of the South-Eastern Administrative District more than a million times. It opened in January 2021 on the first floor of the shopping and entertainment center “Gorod” at the address: Ryazansky Prospekt, Building 2, Building 3 and became the fifth flagship in Moscow.

    During this time, the most popular service was the registration of vehicles (TS) and trailers to them – more than 110 thousand requests were recorded. The second most popular service is cadastral registration and (or) registration of rights to real estate objects, more than 70 thousand applications were received for it. The third place in the rating was taken by the service of registration of citizens of the Russian Federation – over 60 thousand requests.

    The flagship offices of My Documents offer unique services that are not available in district centers, such as out-of-court bankruptcy. Young Muscovites can receive their first passport in a ceremonial setting, and Moscow entrepreneurs can use the services of the state budgetary institution Small Business of Moscow, as well as register a legal entity, a peasant (farming) enterprise, and the status of an individual entrepreneur. City residents also have access to vehicle registration services, making changes to registration data, or deregistering a vehicle. This can be done conveniently by prior appointment on the portal Mos.ru or Internet portal of public services.

    At the flagship of the South-Eastern Administrative District, Muscovites can apply for a foreign passport for children under 14 years of age, submit a birth certificate or marriage registration certificate, extracts from the register of legal entities and other documents for legalization, and also enter information about foreign certificates of registration of civil status acts into the Unified State Register of Civil Registry Offices within 24 hours.

    In addition, residents of the capital are provided with two of the most popular services of the guardianship service, related to the issuance of permission for transactions with property and the management of money in the accounts of minors, incapacitated or partially incapacitated citizens.

    On the territory of the flagship office of the South-East Administrative District, newlyweds can register their marriage in a separate hall equipped with a bright photo zone.

    Muscovites are also offered additional services, such as booking a tour in the “My Travels” zone, visiting the “My Photo” photo studio, or visiting the “Moscow – Caring for History” exhibition. The current exhibition is dedicated to the dynasties of Moscow confectioners. In addition, the flagship has a “My Notary” legal bureau, which has become the most popular additional service. Over four years, residents have contacted this bureau more than 40 thousand times.

    The flagship centers are equipped with everything necessary for the convenience and comfort of visitors and are decorated in a modern design. There are spacious waiting areas with soft sofas, USB ports for charging phones and portable lamps, a large children’s area with interactive games and modern cartoons, a mother and child room. You can also charge your mobile device using a portable power bank. All My Documents flagship offices host exhibitions about outstanding cultural figures. The current exhibition is dedicated to Arkady Gaidar.

    The flagship office of “My Documents” in the South-East Administrative District is open daily from 10:00 to 22:00.

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  • MIL-OSI Russia: How Technopolis Moscow SEZ Enterprises Support People in the SVO Zone

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    Students and staff of the National Research University of Electronic Technology (MIET), the flagship university of the Technopolis Moscow special economic zone (SEZ), collected more than 150 kilograms of humanitarian aid for the participants of the special military operation (SMO).

    “The enterprises of the Technopolis Moscow special economic zone actively participate in humanitarian actions. Assistance and support are provided not only to participants in the special military operation and residents of border regions, but also to children’s shelters and centers for keeping homeless animals. Another action to collect humanitarian aid was held at the National Research University of Electronic Technology. In two weeks, employees and students collected 150 kilograms of warm clothes, various household chemicals and special equipment, which have already been transferred to the front lines,” said Gennady Degtyarev, CEO of the SEZ.

    The university staff and students collected sets of thermal underwear, tools, catalytic heaters, fleece clothing and much more. The students wove camouflage nets, which are so necessary for the fighters, themselves. This is not the first such action of the university – in August 2024, the institution’s employees handed over 250 kilograms of humanitarian aid to residents of the Kursk region, and in September they collected things for residents of the Donetsk and Lugansk People’s Republics.

    Collections of humanitarian aid for residents of border regions were held at the sites of the special economic zone “Technopolis Moscow”. Employees of the management company and workers of over 50 enterprises brought more than 2.5 tons of various products.

    Other capital enterprises also provide support to the SVO participants and residents of border territories. For example, a manufacturer of ATMs and other high-tech products donated a number of devices it made to help the military. Among them are metal storage boxes, entrenching hooks, heating stoves, and transport equipment.

    The capital’s coffee and sweets factory has shipped more than one ton of its products since 2022. In addition, the company delivered 4.5 thousand coffee bean bags to the special military operation zone, which are used by military personnel to equip flooring.

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  • MIL-OSI Russia: “Chinese New Year”: what awaits guests of “Winter in Moscow” on Tverskoy Boulevard

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    The Chinese New Year festival, which is taking place in the capital from January 28 to February 9 as part of the Winter in Moscow project, awaits guests at the venues on Tverskoy Boulevard. There are two chalets there, where master classes, lectures and creative activities are held under the guidance of experts in Eastern culture, including representatives of China and masters studying centuries-old traditions. Admission to all events is free.

    The festival was a continuation of the events dedicated to the Cross Years of Culture of Russia and China, and is timed to coincide with the 75th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between the countries.

    “Russia and China are the largest neighbors, they have been developing friendly and partnership relations for many decades. In order to strengthen mutual understanding between the peoples of our countries, it is necessary to talk about traditions and customs. The festival movement in Moscow unites and brings together the cultures of Russians and Chinese in holidays, games, master classes, theatrical performances,” said Olga Dolgikh, one of the organizers of the master classes within the framework of the festival, a teacher of the Chinese language, director of the Center for International Education and Professional Training.

    Spring Festival in a Chalet at the Monument to K.A. Timiryazev

    In the chalet, located near the monument to K.A. Timiryazev, guests will become acquainted with the world of Chinese art.

    On January 29 from 12:00 to 15:00 there will be a master class on traditional paper cutting – jianzhi. This activity as an element of the spring festival symbolizes happiness and prosperity, and the patterns created become a bright decoration of houses.

    On January 30, from 12:00 to 14:00, participants of the master class will create a composition called “Wild Orchid and Fry”, and from 19:00 to 19:45, they will create a snowflake, which is associated with spring in China.

    On January 31, from 12:00 to 14:00, guests will learn how to depict geranium, a flower that in Chinese art often symbolizes renewal and harmony.

    From 3 to 7 February, from 12:00 to 15:00, the chalet will host painting and calligraphy classes.

    On February 9 at 19:00 there will be a master class on drawing a meihua plum – a spring symbol of resilience, joy and the awakening of nature.

    Calligraphy, woodcut and tea ceremony in a chalet near the monument to S.A. Yesenin

    In the chalet near the monument to S.A. Yesenin, guests will discover Chinese calligraphy, woodcuts and tea drinking traditions.

    From January 29 to 31, from 12:00 to 15:00, calligraphy classes will be held here. Participants will learn how the elegant lines of hieroglyphs reflect the philosophy and aesthetics of China.

    On January 31 from 19:00 to 19:45, guests are invited to a lecture with a demonstration about the clothing of the main nationality of China, the Han. They will also demonstrate the traditional Chinese costume, Hanfu.

    On February 2, from 12:00 to 15:00, there will be a master class on Chinese xylography – printing from wooden boards, the ancient art of creating illustrations.

    On February 3 at 19:00, the chalet will host a master class on creating an image of a meihua plum. Participants will learn to work in the realistic Chinese painting technique of gongbi. It involves precise drawing of details and the use of delicate gradations of colors.

    On February 5 and 6, from 12:00 to 14:00, guests of the chalet will be immersed in the culture of Chinese tea drinking. Participants will learn how this drink became part of the culture of the Celestial Empire, and will also enjoy its taste and aroma.

    Project “Winter in Moscow”— the main event of the season, which until February 28 unites various events of the capital. Citizens and tourists are invited to remember traditions and history, warm up with tea and hot buns, go skating, skiing and tubing, watch ice shows, give gifts to people who find themselves in a difficult life situation, show care for those who need it.

    Muscovites and guests of the capital are offered a huge selection of events in the open air and in cultural and sports institutions. The atmosphere of winter traditions has engulfed the entire city – more than 1.9 thousand sites are open. The project organically intertwined with the largest festivals of the capital “Moscow Estates”, “Moscow Tea Party”, “City of Light”, “Snow and Ice in Moscow” and many others. All information about the project and winter season events can be found in a special section Mos.ru.

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    https: //vv.mos.ru/nevs/ite/149437073/

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Burning Hearts: Stories of Those Who Received the Moscow Volunteer Badge

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    These people represent different generations: some have recently graduated from school, while others have already retired. But they are united by a common cause – volunteering. They help organize and hold the Victory Parade, are on duty at major events and collect humanitarian aid, and Resource center “Mosvolonter” — preparation and coordination of concerned Muscovites. The unofficial motto of such enthusiasts is “No other way!” On January 21, Sergei Sobyanin presented the “Volunteer of Moscow” badge of distinction 30 residents of the capital.

    About what merits can lead to receiving an honorary award, how kindness leads to the profession of dreams and helps to create a family – in the material mos.ru.

    A smile as a reward

    One of the youngest volunteers to earn the badge was 18-year-old Yuri Potolokov. He studies at the Moscow City Pedagogical University and plans to teach geography in the future. But even after graduating and getting a job, Yuri plans to participate in public events.

    The young man joined the volunteer movement in 2022, while still at school. “One day I went to a concert at VDNKh and saw guys handing out raincoats to the audience because it was raining. That’s when I noticed that people were smiling at the volunteers. And I realized that I wanted to receive such smiles too. After all, this is the best gratitude for your work! After the concert, I told my mother: “I’m going to volunteer!” She happily accepted my choice,” our interlocutor recalls.

    Yuri Potolokov is a graduate of a cadet school and has been interested in Russian history since childhood. That is why patriotic events are closest to him, for example, meeting veterans who came to Moscow from different cities for Victory Day at train stations. However, over the past two years, the young man has had the opportunity to volunteer at other events. For example, he helped participants National Championship “Abilympics”in 2022 and 2023, navigate the site and get to the competitions on time, coordinated guests at the World Youth Festival in 2024. And recently, I sorted out New Year’s decorations at the N.N. Blokhin National Medical Research Center of Oncology: I twisted the branches of artificial trees with insulating tape, packed the toys and sent them to the warehouse. Moreover, I was already performing the duties of a team leader, managing a team of five people.

    In total, he has over three thousand volunteer hours to his credit. Nevertheless, the mos.ru interviewee did not expect to be among those awarded.

    “I can imagine how many people applied for the badge! And they chose me. Now I want to try even harder than before. In the near future, I hope to hold a master class on creating eco-paintings from recycled materials in the “Good Place” space in the South-Eastern Administrative District,” says Yuri Potolokov, holder of the “Volunteer of Moscow” badge.

    From the veterans’ meeting to the registry office

    Kirill Kononaev is 21 years old. The volunteer is a final-year student at the Moscow Institute of Economics. He joined the “club of caring people” three years ago: first, he headed the student council, and soon he wanted to do good deeds outside the university. “The opportunity presented itself: the pandemic began, and I went to deliver food to the elderly,” recalls the mos.ru source.

    Then there were other events, for example the International Forum of Civic Participation “Moscow helps”The young man devoted more than 1,700 hours to volunteer work. He personally liked patriotic events.

    “Once I was distributing water in the center of the capital during the Immortal Regiment march. It was an amazing feeling: we were met by participants carrying portraits of their fathers and grandfathers who fought for their country in the Great Patriotic War. And it was in our power to make sure that they did not feel thirsty. Another time I was processing applications for the “Faces of Victory” campaign: relatives sent touching stories about their ancestors, battle heroes,” says Kirill Kononaev, holder of the “Moscow Volunteer” badge.

    At one of these events at the headquarters, organized to meet veterans, our interlocutor met his future wife: Taisiya Borisova, a student at the Moscow State Pedagogical University, also a volunteer. They got married in February 2024 and now come to help together.

    “It was very nice to receive a badge of distinction this year. And although I have less and less free time, I will continue to volunteer. So, soon it will be time to distribute St. George ribbons to Moscow residents. Even when I feel tired, helping people and the city allows me to switch off, charges me with positive energy,” smiles Kirill Kononaev.

    Dream job

    Margarita Buchina teaches English at school #2075In 2018, when the capital hosted the World Cup, her students enthusiastically and delightedly told how they rooted for the teams and interacted with foreign guests on the city streets.

    “I thought it was good language practice and a new experience. And soon I signed up through the website Mosvolonter.ruto her first large-scale event — the Moscow Urban Forum — 2019, where guests from different countries came. She successfully passed the interview and became part of the team of volunteers with knowledge of foreign languages, who help at the information desks,” recalls the mos.ru interlocutor.

    Already at the event, Margarita Buchina realized that applying her knowledge for the benefit of the city is her calling. In addition to her teaching profession, she is also a photographer and journalist. Therefore, she offered her help as a media volunteer.

    “Every year on June 22, I go to the Krymskaya Embankment to collect material for a report on the “Candle of Memory” campaign: I get amazing emotional portraits of volunteers in military uniform from the Great Patriotic War, who came to light the lights in honor of those who died in 1941-1945. I was the manager of the volunteer corps at the International Exhibition and Forum “Russia” at VDNKh and supervised media volunteers, photographed Christmas trees decorated with balls with children’s wishes, as part of the “Kind Christmas Tree” charity campaign at festival venues, photographed artists performing at the International Military Music Festival “Spasskaya Tower”. In addition, I am a volunteer editor of the “Good News” magazine, which tells about the lives of active and caring city residents,” says Margarita Buchina, holder of the “Volunteer of Moscow” badge.

    Now she is trying to find her dream job and realize herself as a journalist. But she does not plan to leave volunteering.

    “When I was awarded the “Moscow Volunteer” badge for my services, I once again realized how important and useful my good deeds are for the city. And you can do them in different ways, for example, by helping to collect humanitarian aid. If you were born with a kind heart, then it is not difficult for you to share kindness with others, volunteering is forever!” our interlocutor believes.

    Six thousand hours of good deeds

    Elena Akhtyrskaia is a “silver” volunteer, she is 56 years old. “In 2015, I began to actively attend excursions organized Department of Cultural Heritage of Moscow. Once I was asked to help a guide gather a group and make sure no one was left behind during a walk around the capital. It turned out to be much more interesting than just listening! So I joined the ranks of cultural volunteers. Now I also help organize events for Mosconcert,” she says.

    During the winter holidays, Elena Akhtyrskaya was on duty at the New Year’s game-journey through Russian fairy tales in the Petrovsky Travel Palace, and after the performance she gave gifts to the young spectators.

    However, our interlocutor participates not only in cultural programs. For example, she had the opportunity to accompany the Victory Parade in 2024. “This is the highest honor for a volunteer!” she admits. Elena Akhtyrskaya met visitors at the entrance to Red Square and explained where to go next, and then seated veterans in the stands and watched the procession from a place of honor.

    “I have dedicated almost six thousand hours to good deeds. But when I was awarded the “Volunteer of Moscow” badge, I was surprised. After all, there are many worthy candidates, including “silver” ones, and they are older than me. Of course, it is very nice to receive such an award. However, something else is more important to me: the emotional response of those whom I helped, eyes full of joy and gratitude!” – summarizes the holder of the “Volunteer of Moscow” badge Elena Akhtyrskaya.

    A Holiday for Everyone: How the Mosconcert Cultural Brigade Congratulated Soldiers and Children on the New Year“Moscow Helps”: Sobyanin Told How Muscovites Support SVO ParticipantsOver a thousand events were held in 2024 in the Dobroe Mesto centers in MoscowThe number of events in Moscow involving cultural heritage volunteers has almost doubledWhat dreams does the “Kind Tree” of the “Winter in Moscow” project fulfill?

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

    Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect

    https: //vv.mos.ru/nevs/ite/149440073/

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: SH15 to remain closed overnight

    Source: New Zealand Transport Agency

    |

    NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi (NZTA) advises State Highway 15 between Maungatapere and Otaika will remain closed overnight as NZ Police investigations into the unexplained death of a motorcyclist continue.

    Detours remain in place via State Highway 14 and State Highway 1 for those traveling between Maungatapere and Otaika. Those traveling from Otaika to Maungatapere should take the same route, in reverse.

    Motorists are asked to drive with care along the detour route, with increased traffic volumes and students having returned to schools in the area this week.

    Locals who need to access their properties along the stretch of State Highway 15 between Maungatapere and Otaika should approach uniformed staff at the cordon.

    The road is expected to remain closed into tomorrow afternoon and people are encouraged to visit the Journey Planner website (journeys.nzta.govt.nz(external link)) for up to date information on the closure and detour route before they travel.

    NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi thanks everyone for their patience.

    Tags

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Green light for community projects in regional South Australia

    Source: Australian Executive Government Ministers

    The Albanese Government is helping South Australia’s regions to thrive by investing almost $11.5 million in community infrastructure that promotes social cohesion and boosts local economies. 

    Five projects will be allocated funding through the Growing Regions Program to build or upgrade social infrastructure – such as sporting clubs, playgrounds and art centres – that improves the lives of locals. 

    The City of Whyalla will receive $3.14 million to deliver the Whyalla Beach Splash & Play Plaza – a destination adventure playground for families and visitors alike. 

    The project will include the construction of an adventure play facility for children and adults, designed for obstacle play with water, nature and accessibility features.  

    The project will also include shelter and seating to create a destination by the Whyalla foreshore for all ages, support 42 jobs during construction and 12 ongoing per annum jobs once open; and provide around $1.2 million visitor spend to the economy. 

    Other successful South Australian projects, which went through a competitive, merits-based assessment process, include: 

    • $3.5 million to the Kingston District Council to deliver a new childcare centre in Kingston including a nature-based outdoor play space, indoor education environment and consultation offices for child allied health services. 
    • $2.5 million to deliver men’s multidisciplinary art studios at four established Indigenous Art Centres across South Australia including Mimili Maku Arts, Kaltjiti Arts, Tjala Arts, and Umoona Community Arts. This will allow these successful studios to introduce better men’s cultural learning and knowledge with an emphasis on employment and training pathways.
    • $1.4 million to redevelop the Penola Football Club and Community Sports Hub to be more accessible, flexible, sustainable, and able to continue into the future. 
    • $900,000 to the District Council of Orroroo Carrieton to upgrade the Orroroo Main Street and revitalise the town’s CBD. This includes wider footpaths to support outdoor dining and pedestrian access, improved disability access, traffic upgrades to enhance safety, tree planting and more. 

    This funding follows $23 million already allocated to South Australia under the first round of the Growing Regions Program. 
     
    The Growing Regions Program is one of four federal funding programs established by the Albanese Government to ensure that all areas of Australia have access to a funding opportunity for programs to support wider community benefit. 

    For more information, including a full list of successful projects in the state, visit: www.infrastructure.gov.au/territories-regions-cities/regional-australia/regional-and-community-programs/growing-regions-program.

    Quote attributable to Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Local Government Minister Catherine King:

    “Whether sports clubs or community hubs, parks or pools, social infrastructure is the backbone of connected societies.

    “From the Limestone Coast to the APY Lands, the Albanese Government is delivering the infrastructure our regions need, investing millions into South Australia to ensure it can thrive.”

    Quotes attributable to Senator for South Australia Karen Grogan:

    “Funding for these much-needed projects across South Australia will deliver infrastructure that increases community cohesion, liveability and accessibility.

    “The Growing Regions Program is making local priority projects a reality, and I look forward to seeing the significant benefits this funding will provide for South Australian communities.

    “Labor knows that regional South Australia is unique and community-driven, and requires unique and community-driven solutions – and that is exactly what we are delivering”

    Quotes attributable to City of Whyalla Mayor Phill Stone:

    “I’d like to sincerely thank Minister King and the Albanese Government for recognising the significant importance of this project to our community. This first-class project will make Whyalla a more attractive place to live, while expecting to increase visitor spend by more than $1 million per year.

    “It will not only benefit those who already call Whyalla home, but also be a major drawcard in helping attract new residents that are needed over the coming years to service the major industrial projects in the pipeline.”

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Reed Rebukes Trump’s Disruptive Blanket Suspension of Federal Funds for RI

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Rhode Island Jack Reed
    WASHINGTON, DC – Today, U.S. Senator Jack Reed, who, along with his colleagues in the Rhode Island Congressional delegation, was among the first lawmakers to sound the alarm about President Donald Trump unilaterally directing a halt to federal grant funding for Rhode Island and states nationwide, issued the following statement as the fallout from Trump’s freeze metastasizes:
    “President Trump’s disruptive blanket suspension of these federal funds threatens real harm to Americans everywhere.  Trump’s directive is already sewing confusion and chaos with respect to health care, education, housing, disaster aid, and more.  Legal action by organizations and several states, including Rhode Island, is being initiated.  But there is a much quicker, less costly solution here: President Trump should immediately rescind this reckless and unconstitutional directive.  He needs to do it fast because every day this drags on the impacts grow worse.  He should stop wasting taxpayers’ money and putting people, communities, and essential services at risk.
    “I will continue working to halt this irresponsible freeze and ensure federal resources are administered in accordance with the law.”

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Global: Global wildlife trade is an enormous market – the US imports billions of animals from nearly 30,000 species

    Source: The Conversation – USA – By Michael Tlusty, Professor of Sustainability and Food Solutions, UMass Boston

    U.S. Fish and Wildlife agents inspect a shipment of reptiles at the Port of Miami. U.S. GAO

    When people think of wildlife trade, they often picture smugglers sneaking in rare and endangered species from far-off countries. Yet most wildlife trade is actually legal, and the United States is one of the world’s biggest wildlife importers.

    New research that we and a team of colleagues published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences shows that, over the last 22 years, people in the U.S. legally imported nearly 2.85 billion individual animals representing almost 30,000 species.

    Some of these wild animals become pets, such as reptiles, spiders, clownfish, chimpanzees and even tigers. Thousands end up in zoos and aquariums, where many species on display come directly from the wild.

    Medical research uses macaque monkeys and imports up to 39,000 of them every year. The fashion trade imports around 1 million to 2 million crocodile skins every year. Hunting trophies are also included in wildlife.

    How many species are legally traded worldwide?
    Benjamin Marshall, et al., 2024, PNAS, CC BY-SA

    The largest number of imported species are birds – 4,985 different species are imported each year, led by Muscovy ducks, with over 6 million imported. Reptiles are next, with 3,048 species, led by iguanas and royal pythons. These largely become pets.

    Not all wildlife are wild

    We found that just over half of the animals imported into the U.S. come from the wild.

    Capturing wildlife to sell to exporters can be an important income source for rural communities around the world, especially in Africa. However, wild imported species can also spread diseases or parasites or become invasive. In fact, these risks are so worrying that many imported animals are classed as “injurious wildlife” due to their potential role in transmitting diseases to native species.

    Captive breeding has played an increasingly dominant role in recent years as a way to limit the impact on wild populations and to try to reduce disease spread.

    However over half the individual animals from most groups of species, such as amphibians or mammals, still come from the wild, and there is no data on the impact of the wildlife trade on most wild populations.

    Trade may pose a particular risk when species are already rare or have small ranges. Where studies have been done, the wild populations of traded species decreased by an average of 62% across the periods monitored.

    Sustainable wildlife trade is possible, but it relies on careful monitoring to balance wild harvest and captive breeding.

    Data is thin in many ways

    For most species in the wildlife trade, there is still a lot that remains unknown, including even the number of species traded.

    With so many species and shipments, wildlife inspectors are overwhelmed. Trade data may not include the full species name for groups like butterflies or fish. The values in many customs databases are reported by companies but never verified.

    Macaques, used in medical research, are the most-traded primates globally, according to an analysis of U.S. Fish and Wildlife data.
    Davidvraju, CC BY-SA

    In our study, we relied on the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Law Enforcement Management Information System, a wildlife import-export data collection system. However, few countries collate and release data in such a standardized way; meaning that for the majority of species legally traded around the world there is no available data.

    For example, millions of Tokay geckos are imported as pets and for medicine, and are often reported to be bred in captivity. However, investigators cannot confirm that they weren’t actually caught in the wild.

    Why tracking the wildlife trade is important

    Biodiversity has a great number of economic and ecological benefits. There are also risks to importing wildlife. Understanding the many species and number of animals entering the country, and whether they were once wild or farmed, is important, because imported wildlife can cause health and ecological problems.

    Wildlife can spread diseases to humans and to other animals. Wild-caught monkeys imported for medical research may carry diseases, including ones of particular risk to humans. Those with diseases are more likely to be wild than captive-bred.

    The most-traded mammals worldwide are minks, which are valued for their fur but can spread viruses to humans and other species. About 48 million minks are legally traded annually, about 2.8% wild-caught and the majority raised, according to U.S. Fish and Wildlife data.
    Colin Canterbury/USFWS

    Species that aren’t native to the U.S. may also escape or be released into the wild. Invasive species can cause billions of dollars in damage by consuming and outcompeting native wildlife and spreading diseases.

    We believe better data on the wildlife trade could be used to set management goals, such as harvest quotas or no-take policies for those species in their country of origin.

    What’s next

    The researchers involved in this study come from institutes around the world and are all interested in improving data systems for wildlife trade.

    Some of us focus on how e-commerce platforms such as Etsy and Instagram have become hotspots of wildlife trade and can be challenging to monitor without automation. Esty announced in 2024 that it would remove listings of endangered or threatened species. Others build tools to help wildlife inspectors process the large number of shipments in real time. Many of us examine the problems imported species cause when they become invasive.

    In the age of machine learning, artificial intelligence and big data, it’s possible to better understand the wildlife trade. Consumers can help by buying less, and making informed decisions.

    Michael Tlusty is a founding member of the Wildlife Detection Partnership and co-developed the Nature Intelligence System, which assists governments in collecting more accurate wildlife data..

    Andrew Rhyne is currently on sabbatical funded by the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA), focused on the wildlife trade data. He is a founding member of the Wildlife Detection Partnership and co-developed the Nature Intelligence System, which assists governments in collecting more accurate wildlife data.

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

    ref. Global wildlife trade is an enormous market – the US imports billions of animals from nearly 30,000 species – https://theconversation.com/global-wildlife-trade-is-an-enormous-market-the-us-imports-billions-of-animals-from-nearly-30-000-species-247197

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Skoltech and NSU discussed cooperation in the development of new functional materials

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Novosibirsk State University – Novosibirsk State University –

    Representatives of the Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology visited Novosibirsk State University to discuss cooperation on R&D carried out by Skoltech on behalf of the NTI Competence Center for New Functional Materials based at NSU. The delegation included Ivan Sergeichev, Director of the Center for Materials Technology at the Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology, Dmitry Krasovsky, Deputy Director of the Center for Relations with Industry, participants in joint projects with NSU, as well as specialists in building interactions between stakeholders.

    The purpose of the visit was to get acquainted with the structure of the Competence Center of the National Technology Initiative in the direction of “Technologies for modeling and developing new functional materials with specified properties”, which was created at NSU in 2021 with the financial support of the NTI Foundation, as well as with its capabilities and industrial partners.

    — At the end of last year, we signed agreements with Skoltech to implement three large-scale projects: “Design of Materials for Thermal Barrier Coatings”, “Development of Additive Manufacturing Technology for Complex-Geometry Ceramic Rods for Casting Gas Turbine Blades”, and “Metal Oxide Nanoparticles for Protecting Products and Materials from Counterfeiting”. Our task is to create samples of new materials and software products in a short period of time in order to begin introducing new materials and products made from them to the market as soon as possible through interaction with potential industrial partners. These could be manufacturers of engines, gas turbine units and their parts, polymer-composite materials and various products made from them, the authenticity of which, among other things, must be protected from counterfeiting, — explained Alexander Kvashnin, Director of the NTI Center for New Functional Materials at NSU.

    Following the meeting, the parties developed mutually beneficial forms of cooperation. One of them involves Skoltech’s participation in the work of three distributed centers created by the Center for New Functional Materials and its partners at the end of last year – the Distributed Center for Modeling, Calculations and Design, the Distributed Center for Research and Development of Materials and Technologies for Their Production, as well as the Distributed Production Site for Small Batch Products, where it is possible to produce small batches of new materials and products made from them using NSU technologies for further delivery for testing at industrial enterprises. The software developed by the partners will be used in the distributed center for modeling, calculations and design.

    Meanwhile, in Skolkovo, during the implementation of these three projects, the necessary innovative equipment will be created, including a new 3D printer for complex printing of ceramic rods for gas turbine units and a reactor for the production of metal oxide nanoparticles to protect materials and products from counterfeiting. This equipment will be used as part of distributed centers.

    “Our cooperation with Skoltech will allow the university to expand the circle of its Moscow partners and potential customers, which may include the state corporation for assistance in the development, production and export of high-tech industrial products Rostec, United Engine Corporation, Gazpromneft and other large Russian corporations interested in the development and implementation of advanced technologies,” commented Alexander Kvashnin.

    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