Category: Transport

  • MIL-OSI USA: 2024 SARP West Atmospheric Aerosols Group

    Source: NASA

    Faculty Advisors: Dr. Andreas Beyersdorf, California State University, San Bernardino & Dr. Ann Marie Carlton, University of California
    Graduate Mentor: Madison Landi, University of California, Irvine

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    Madison Landi, graduate student mentor for the 2024 SARP Aerosols group, provides an introduction for each of the group members and shares behind-the scenes moments from the internship.

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    A Comparative Analysis of Tropospheric NO2: Evaluating TEMPO Satellite Data Against Airborne Measurements
    Maya Niyogi, Johns Hopkins University
    Nitrogen dioxide (NO2) plays a major role in atmospheric chemical reactions; the inorganic compound both contributes to tropospheric ozone production and reacts with volatile organic compounds to create health-hazardous particulate matter. The presence of NO2 in the atmosphere is largely due to anthropogenic activity, making NO2 at the forefront of policy decisions and scientific monitoring. The Tropospheric Emissions: Monitoring of Pollution (TEMPO) satellite launched in 2023 with the goal of monitoring pollution across North America. The publicly-accessible data became available for use in May 2024, however parts of the data remain unvalidated and in beta, creating a need for an in situ validation of its data products. Here we analyze TEMPO’s tropospheric NO2 measurements and compare them to aloft NO2 measurements collected during the NASA Student Airborne Research Project (SARP) 2024 airborne campaign. Six of the campaign flights recording NO2 performed a vertical spiral, providing vertical column data that was adjusted to ambient conditions for comparison against the corresponding TEMPO values. Statistical analyses indicate we have reasonable evidence to conclude that TEMPO satellite data and the flight-collected data record similar values. This research fills a critical knowledge gap through the utilization of aloft NO2 measurements to validate NASA’s newly-launched TEMPO satellite. It is expected that future users of TEMPO data can apply these results to better inform project creation and research.

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    Investigating the Atmospheric Burden of Black Carbon Over the Past Decade in the Los Angeles Basin
    Benjamin Wells, San Diego State University
    Black Carbon is a primary aerosol emitted directly into the atmosphere as a result of biomass burning and incomplete combustion of fossil fuels. During the pre-industrial revolution, the main source of black carbon was natural sources whereas currently, the main source is anthropogenic activities. When black carbon is released into the atmosphere, it is a dominant absorber of solar radiation and leads to a significant warming effect on Earth’s climate. In addition to its harmful effects associated with climate change, ambient black carbon inhalation is correlated with adverse health effects such as respiratory and cardiovascular disease, cancer, and premature mortality. In this study, we analyze aloft black carbon measurements in 2016 and 2024 acquired on NASA SARP research flights and compare these concentrations to black carbon measurements taken during the 2010 CalNex field campaign. Both field campaigns flew similar flight paths over the Los Angeles basin allowing us to conduct a critical comparative analysis on vertical and spatial profiles of the atmospheric burden of black carbon over the past 14 years. During the CalNEX study, mass concentrations of black carbon ranged from 0.02 μg/m3 to 0.531 μg/m3, meanwhile 2024 SARP measurements demonstrate concentrations as elevated as 7.83 μg/m3 within the same region. Moreover, similar flight paths conducted during SARP 2024 and 2016 allow for further analysis of aloft black carbon concentrations over a period of time. The results of this study examines and analyzes the changing spatial and temporal characteristics of black carbon throughout the years, leading to an increase of adverse effects on both the climate and public health.

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    Tracking Methane and Aerosols in relation to Health Effects in the San Joaquin Valley
    Devin Keith, Mount Holyoke College
    The San Joaquin Valley (SJV) is located in central California and is one of the most productive agricultural regions in the country for dairy, nuts, and berries, producing more than half of California’s $42 billion output. Due to the SJV’s close proximity to the Sierra Nevada Mountain Range to the East and predominantly Easterly winds, air pollution often accumulates because it is trapped by the geography. Significant chemical constituents of trapped particulate matter are ammonium (NH4), chloride (Cl), sulfate (SO4), nitrate (NO3), black carbon, and organic carbon. The particle size measured in this study is less than 1 micron in diameter, and due to their size, can easily penetrate the respiratory tract leading to adverse health effects such as: asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and cardiovascular disease. We employ airborne data collected during the SARP 2024 mission onboard NASA’s P-3 research plane to observe spatial and temporal trends of NH4, Cl, SO4, NO3, and black carbon. Further, we analyze measurements from SARP 2016 flights and compare the atmospheric burden of pollution in the SJV across time. To investigate observations in the context of the public health impacts, we utilize data collected by the California Office of Environmental Health Hazards Assessment and find asthma and cardiovascular disease rates are higher in the SJV hotspots identified here. Per capita health impacts are greater than other California regions such as Los Angeles and San Francisco. The SJV exhibits higher rates of poverty than other communities, which may reveal an environmental justice issue that is difficult to explicitly quantify especially where measurements are sparse.

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    Investigating the Effects of Aerosols on Photosynthesis Using Satellite Imaging
    Lily Lyons, Brandeis University
    Aerosols in the atmosphere can affect the way sunlight travels to the ground by absorbing or scattering light. Sunlight is a critical component in plant photosynthesis, and the way light scatters affects productivity for vegetation and plant growth. When plants absorb sunlight, the chlorophyll in their leaves releases the excess energy as infrared light, which can be measured from space via satellite. To better understand how aerosol loading in the atmosphere affects plant photosynthesis, this study examines locations in Yosemite, Sequoia, Garrett, and Talladega national forests, and compares aerosol optical depth (AOD), normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI), and solar induced fluorescence (SIF) in these areas. Yosemite and Sequoia act as proxies for the old growth sequoia grove ecosystems, and Talladega and Garrett act as proxies for the Appalachian mixed mesophytic forest ecosystem. Our results show that within 2015-2020 during July, SIF and NDVI levels are significantly greater in mixed mesophytic forests than in sequoia groves. Using linear regression plots, we determined the correlation between SIF, NDVI and AOD to be weak in the given locations. Greater SIF in mixed mesophytic forests could suggest that the presence of a prominent and biodiverse understory is positive for the overall primary productivity of an ecosystem. This study is a good starting point for analyzing diverse ecosystems using SIF, NDVI and satellite data as proxies for photosynthesis, and broadening the scope of biomes examined for their SIF. Furthermore, it highlights the need for further investigation of aerosol impact on the trajectory and amount of sunlight that reaches certain plants.

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    Validating the Performance of CMAQ in Simulating the Vertical Distribution of Trace Gases
    Ryleigh Czajkowski, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology
    Air quality modeling simulates atmospheric processes and air pollutant transport to better understand gas-and particle-phase interactions in the atmosphere. The Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Community Multiscale Air Quality (CMAQ) model couples meteorological, emission, and chemical transport predictions to simulate air pollution from local to hemispheric scales. CMAQ provides scientists and regulatory agencies with important assistance in air quality management, policy enactment, atmospheric research, and creating public health advisories. Recently, a new update to CMAQ (v5.4) was released, utilizing new chemistry mechanisms and incorporating a new atmospheric chemistry model. This study evaluates the performance of the latest model update by analyzing multiple time series of vertical distributions of formaldehyde (CH2O) and methane (CH4) in the Los Angeles Basin and Central Valley regions of California. It compares data from aloft measurements taken during NASA SARP 2017 flights with model predictions to evaluate accuracy. Our study analyzes CMAQ’s capabilities in capturing the vertical dispersion of CH2O and CH4 in different regions, offering insights into the effectiveness of CMAQ for air quality management and the analysis of trace and greenhouse gas dynamics. Using NASA airborne data, this research utilizes a diversified data set to validate the model, providing a more comprehensive evaluation of its capabilities, and thus providing valuable insight into future developments of CMAQ.

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    Estimating Aerosol Optical Properties Using Mie Theory and Analyzing Their Impact on Radiative Forcing in California
    Alison Thieberg, Emory University
    Anthropogenic aerosols, unlike greenhouse gasses, provide a net cooling effect to the Earth’s surface. Particles suspended in the atmosphere have the ability to scatter incoming solar radiation, preventing that radiation from heating up the surface. These aerosols like black carbon, ammonium nitrate, ammonium sulfate, and organics are byproducts of both natural and anthropogenic activities. Measuring radiative forcing as a result of these aerosols over time can provide insight on how anthropogenic industries are altering our Earth’s temperature. This study analyzes the changes in radiative forcing from aerosols in central and southern California using data collected from NASA SARP flights from 2016-2024. Aerosol size, composition, and single scattering albedo were used to estimate the aerosol characteristics and to calculate the aerosols’ radiative forcing efficiency. Our results show that aerosols are found to have less of a cooling effect over time when looking at the change in radiative forcing in California from 2016 to 2024. When narrowing in on specific geographic regions, we observe the same trends in the Central Valley with the area becoming warmer as a result of aerosols. However, more southern regions like Los Angeles and the Inland Empire have become cooler from aerosols during this time period. The overall decrease in the cooling effect of California’s aerosols could indicate that the average size of particulates is changing or that the aerosol composition could be shifting to a greater concentration of absorbing aerosols rather than scattering aerosols. This study shows how aerosols influence radiative forcing and their subsequent impacts across regions in California from multiple years.
    Click here watch the Terrestrial Ecology Group presentations.
    Click here watch the Ocean Group presentations.
    Click here watch the Whole Air Sampling (WAS) Group presentations.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Biden-Harris administration awards $71M in grants to improve job quality, prepare workers, expand access to good jobs in critical sectors

    Source: US Department of Labor

    WASHINGTON – The Biden-Harris administration announced the award of approximately $71 million in grants to improve job quality, expand access to good jobs in critical sectors and prepare workers for good-paying jobs being created by the administration’s Investing in America agenda. 

    Funding from the U.S. Department of Labor’s Building Pathways to Infrastructure Jobs Grant ProgramCritical Sectors Job Quality Grants Program and Workforce Pathways for Youth program will support 27 organizations serving 14 states and the District of Columbia. 

    “The funding we’re announcing today advances the Biden-Harris administration’s goal of promoting worker-focused training programs that incorporate industry and worker voices,” said Acting Labor Secretary Julie Su. “The grants will help enhance access to quality jobs for care workers and people in other critical sectors, broaden high-quality job training and career opportunities for youth and strengthen public-private partnerships that prepare workers for high-quality infrastructure jobs.”

    The department awarded nearly $38 million through the second round of the Building Pathways to Infrastructure Jobs Grant Program to enable 13 public-private partnerships across nine states to prepare workers for the good-paying infrastructure jobs the Biden-Harris administration is creating. The funding announced today – with the $94 million the department announced in September 2023 – is a combined investment of more than $130 million to support the growing demand for a skilled infrastructure workforce. 

    Through the Critical Sectors Job Quality grants, totaling $13 million, eight organizations will design and deploy programs in 10 states to improve job quality and increase the availability of good jobs in the care, climate resilience and hospitality industries. The round of funding announced today aligns with the Good Jobs Principles developed by the departments of Labor and Commerce and emphasizes improving job quality within the care sector. Three recipients, representing half the total funding, will specifically focus on care occupations, including childcare and direct care workers.

    The department also awarded nearly $20 million in Workforce Pathways for Youth demonstration grants to six national organizations that provide workforce development and training programs to youth after school and over the summer. The grants will help the organizations partner with state and local organizations that serve marginalized and underserved youth, ages 14 to 21, including Native American youth. Through the partnerships, these out-of-school-time organizations will provide workforce readiness programming to expand job training and workforce pathways for youth, including soft skill development, career exploration, job readiness, work-based learning opportunities and work experiences.

    As the Investing in America agenda continues to create good-paying jobs nationwide, recipients of the Workforce Pathways for Youth, Building Pathways to Infrastructure and Critical Sectors grants will help build an “opportunity infrastructure” in which workers understand what skills they need, have access to the training to develop those skills – without roadblocks or barriers – and are connected to those jobs early. 

    The recipients of Building Pathways to Infrastructure Jobs grants are as follows:

    Recipient

    City

    State

    Amount

    UNITE-LA Inc. Los Angeles CA

    $2,000,000

    Contra Costa County Martinez CA

    $5,000,000

    Humanmade San Francisco CA

    $2,000,000

    City and County of Denver Denver CO

    $5,000,000

    City of Refuge Inc. Atlanta GA

    $1,944,883

    Jane Addams Resource Corporation Chicago IL

    $4,789,579

    Revolution Workshop Chicago IL

    $2,000,000

    Goodwill Industries International Inc. Rockville MD

    $5,000,000

    Governor’s Office of Workforce Innovation Las Vegas NV

    $1,998,841

    Pursuit Transformation Company Inc Long Island City NY

    $2,000,000

    Philadelphia Works Inc. Philadelphia PA

    $1,999,973

    Texas A&M University College Station TX

    $1,997,570

    Workforce Solutions Alamo San Antonio TX

    $2,000,000

    Total Awarded    

    $37,730,846

    The recipients of the Critical Sectors Job Quality grants are as follows:

    Recipient City State

    Amount

    Alaska Southcentral/Southeastern Sheet Metal Workers Local Union 23 Joint Apprenticeship Training Committee Anchorage AK

    $2,415,709

    SEIU United Healthcare Workers-West Local 2005 Oakland CA

    $3,000,000

    National Restaurant Association Educational Foundation Washington DC

    $499,890

    Charles Stewart Mott Community College Flint MI

    $2,971,060

    Workforce Development Board of Herkimer Madison and Oneida Counties Inc. Utica NY

    $398,657

    Seattle-King County Workforce Development Council Seattle WA 

    $3,000,000

    Washington State Labor Council, AFL-CIO Seattle WA 

    $500,000

    United Way of Dane County Inc. Madison WI

    $147,384

    Total Awarded    

    $12,932,700

    The recipients of the Workforce Pathways for Youth grants are as follows:

    Recipient City

    State

    Amount

    After-School All-Stars Los Angeles

    CA

    $3,159,034 

    STEM Next Opportunity Fund San Diego

    CA

    $3,299,928 

    Bridges From School to Work Inc. Bethesda

    MD

    $3,294,240 

    National Urban League Inc. New York

    NY

    $3,300,000 

    Jobs for America’s Graduates Alexandria

    VA

    $3,300,000 

    Phi Delta Kappa International Inc Arlington

    VA

    $3,299,998 

    Total Awarded    

    $19,653,200 

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Sep 25, 2024 ATU: FTA’s General Directive Regarding Assaults on Transit Workers is Long Overdue and Needs to Quickly Lead to Meaningful Changes to Save Lives

    Source: US Amalgamated Transit Union

    Silver Spring, MD – Calling the Federal Transit Administration’s (FTA) General Directive on transit worker assault an encouraging first step, the Amalgamated Transit Union (ATU), the largest union representing transit workers in the U.S., calls on the agency to do more to ensure the safety of transit workers and riders. This is the first-ever General Directive issued by the agency.

    “Each day, hundreds of transit workers are assaulted on the job. ATU members have been shot, stabbed, and struck with canes, fire extinguishers, screwdrivers, hammers, and garbage cans. They have been attacked with pepper spray, burned with hot coffee, and doused in urine and spit. Bus drivers have been robbed for pocket change and operators are regularly sexually assaulted. This constitutes a regular day on the job in the transit industry,” says ATU International President John Costa. “We applaud the FTA for acknowledging for the first time that transit workers are facing hazards on a ‘national level.’ However, in order to keep operators safe, transit systems need to begin immediately the process of retrofitting all fixed route buses with quality floor-to-ceiling-to-windshield barriers to protect transit bus operators from continual vicious attacks.”

    FTA’s directive requiring transit agencies to conduct a safety risk assessment related to assaults on transit workers and to identify safety risk mitigations or strategies to improve transit worker safety using joint labor-management Safety Committees is great news for transit workers.

    The FTA’s action is a welcome contrast to the Trump Administration, which in 2019 issued a notice in the Federal Register disgracefully stating that it was “not necessary” to take any further actions to address transit worker assaults.

    “The ATU is grateful for the FTA’s step forward today,” said Costa. “The agency will soon learn what we have known for years: transit agencies across the country are not doing nearly enough to stop the constant attacks on our members.”

    “Once this information is collected, we hope the agency will then pivot immediately to requiring minimum vehicle safety standards for transit buses, as authorized by the FAST Act nine years ago,” Costa continued.

    “Since the 9/11 terrorist attacks, airplane pilots have been protected in the cockpit by barriers. Now, it is time to provide bus drivers with the same level of protections. Like planes, all unauthorized persons should be blocked from gaining access to the bus operator workstation,” said Costa. “Until such infrastructure is mandated by federal regulations, we will continue to see bus operators get hijacked, punched, slapped, shot, stabbed, sexually assaulted, and spit upon. Minimum vehicle safety standards for U.S. buses are needed right now! Not One More operator needs to go through this horror!”

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Retirement and Economy – UP TO 25% OF RETIRED HOUSEHOLDS COULD USE HOME EQUITY TO MAKE ENDS MEET

    Source: Te Ara Ahunga Ora Retirement Commission

    New research delving into home equity release products shows they could be a better alternative for older New Zealanders struggling to make ends meet instead of taking on higher-cost consumer debt.  

    Te Ara Ahunga Ora Retirement Commission commissioned Motu Research to consider whether home equity release schemes provide value for money and how they might provide a suitable form of retirement income for some people.

    The research highlighted that for approximately 25% of older households who have low retirement income and savings, but high levels of equity in their home, equity release products could be more beneficial for them to use instead of high-cost personal loans or credit cards.  

    In New Zealand home equity release products are not well understood due to the complexity and costs involved. The two main products available here are reverse mortgages and home reversion (selling a stake in your house in exchange for income).

    Te Ara Ahunga Ora Retirement Commission Policy Lead, Dr Michelle Reyers says while New Zealand home equity release products appear to be costlier than in larger markets, they can provide an alternative source of income less costly than other forms of consumption-based lending.

    “The key to using home equity release products is understanding the costs and benefits and seeking financial advice to see if they are right for you,” she says.

    “It’s important to understand that home equity release products have relatively high costs. For reverse mortgages it’s the interest cost. Loan balances on reverse mortgages can grow to a large amount within a short period due to the compounding effect of interest.

    “People opting for a reverse mortgage should consider only using the minimum they need to supplement their monthly income rather than larger lump sum withdrawals, as this will slow the rate at which the interest owing builds up over time.”

    An alternative for those who want to access an income stream from their home, and at the same time preserve a specific amount of equity in their home, is a home reversion scheme. In this case the main cost is that you are selling a stake in your house for a discounted amount.  

    However, despite the costs involved, home equity release products used strategically can provide an option for those that have no income beyond New Zealand Superannuation and struggle to pay larger bills but wish to remain in their homes while they can manage independently.

    “For the group of retirees relying primarily on New Zealand Super for income who have home equity but no other assets (such as KiwiSaver) to draw down, it is something to consider,” says Dr Reyers.

    She recommends:

    Thinking about retirement in stages – could you continue in paid work beyond age 65? Do you have access to other assets, such as KiwiSaver that you can draw down to help fund your expenses?

    Once these assets are depleted do you want to access the equity in your home with a home equity release product to supplement your retirement income while you continue to live independently at home? At the same time consider whether releasing the equity in your home might impact at a later stage if you want to move into a retirement village or need care.

    It is important to consider how home equity release products can affect people’s financial position in the future. Balancing whether you can afford to use some equity now but maintain the required level of equity in your home for another stage of retirement should your health or life circumstances change may require professional advice. One final consideration is if people want to preserve their home equity for future generations through bequests, home equity release products will reduce the amount that they will be able to provide.

    Notes:

    Reverse mortgages are more suited to people who do not need to preserve the equity in their home for future uses, including bequests. The no negative equity guarantee ensures that the homeowner, or their estate, will not be required to meet any shortfall that the lender incurs if the loan value exceeds the eventual sale price of the house

    The key cost of a reverse mortgage is the interest cost which is higher than the cost of a normal mortgage loan due to the added risks of this product and a less competitive market in New Zealand.

    Reverse mortgages are less costly in low interest rate environments. When house price growth is high it can partially offset the impact of interest rates on the erosion of equity.

    Home reversion avoids the compounding of interest and provides certainty to the homeowner that they will retain a specific percentage of equity in their home, so it might be more suitable in a high interest rate environment or for people who have a specific bequest motive.

    However, the cost involved is that homeowners will be selling 35% of their house at a discount as they only receive income equivalent to 25% of the initial valuation (taking into account annual fees reduces this to 22.7%).

    The purchasing power of the income received decreases over time due to inflation since the income received per year is fixed.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI USA: US Department of Labor, Albany State University launch partnership to support veterans, enhance employment opportunities at HBCUs

    Source: US Department of Labor

    WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department of Labor’s Veterans’ Employment and Training Service today signed a memorandum of understanding with Albany State University designed to enhance career readiness and employment opportunities for veterans and military-affiliated students at historically Black colleges and universities.

    The memorandum of understanding marks the beginning of this unique collaboration, which will give veterans – including Albany State alumni who have served, ROTC cadets, military spouses and servicemembers currently on active duty, in the reserves or the National Guard – access to career resources and support from VETS job training programs. They also will gain access to apprenticeships, internships and employment placement services aimed at easing the transition into the civilian workforce.

    The memorandum was signed by Assistant Secretary for Veterans’ Employment and Training James D. Rodriguez and Albany State University Interim President Dr. Lawrence M. Drake II.

    “Veterans bring a wealth of experience, leadership and skill to the workforce, and we are excited to partner with Albany State University to support their students as they matriculate and move toward civilian careers,” said Assistant Secretary Rodriguez. “This memorandum of understanding formalizes a partnership that will open doors to career development, job training and employment opportunities for veterans and military students at Albany State University and more HBCUs.” 

    The partnership is part of a larger initiative to connect the department with HBCUs nationwide, enhancing opportunities for veteran students, alumni and military-affiliated individuals. It also aligns with the Biden-Harris Administration’s broader efforts to support HBCUs and veterans, building on executive orders focused on workforce development, education and expanding career pathways for underrepresented groups.

    For more information on the services provided to veterans through VETS please visit dol.gov/vets.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Save the Children – Two-thirds of children interact daily online with people they don’t know despite grooming fears – report

    Source: Save the Children

    Over six in 10 children with access to the internet interact with “unknown others” daily despite concerns about online grooming, according to new research released by Save the Children and Western Sydney University that highlighted children’s demands for better online protection.
    The research team held in-depth consultations with about 600 children and young people aged 8 to 18 from Australia, Finland, the Philippines, Cambodia, Colombia, Kenya, and South Africa, who shared their views and experiences of facing inappropriate requests online for personal information or images.
    The report, ‘Protecting Children from Online Grooming’, was written by the Young & Resilient Research Centre at Western Sydney University, and funded by the global child online safety investment vehicle Safe Online as part of the Tech Coalition Safe Online Research Fund.
    Since the COVID-19 pandemic, incidents of online grooming and child sexual and financial exploitation have reached an all-time high [1], with an 82% rise in online grooming crimes against children reported in that period [2]. Online grooming practices have also transformed, with the fastest growing form of online grooming targeting young men for financial extortion [3].
    The report revealed children were more inclined to connect with strangers – or “unknown others” – online as they matured and became more social, motivated by a desire for friendship, fun and play, followed by a wish to stay informed about trends and events, and to connect over shared interests.
    The findings also showed that while children across all cultures and age groups were more suspicious of people they didn’t know online than people they knew in person, most (66%) of the study participants still interacted with “unknown others” daily online.
    Children in high-income settings were twice as likely to use privacy settings to protect themselves from unwanted contacts, compared to children from some low-income settings, but the potential to derive financial benefits was an incentive for children in middle-income countries to connect with strangers online, potentially compromising their safety.
    While children have come up with numerous ways to protect themselves, they are calling for widespread, accessible and targeted online safety education for themselves and their caregivers. In the discussions the children also made concrete suggestions about how technology platforms and governments can implement changes that will keep them safer online.
    Sonisay-, a girl aged 11-12 from rural Cambodia, said:
    “Adults should know that children interact with strangers, monitor them, and read their chats.”
    Angel- aged 15-17 from a city in the Philippines said:
    “Adults need to know about the children of today who are highly computer-savvy… To be able to support and protect the children, adults need to understand that children are comfortable with using the internet which pushes to interact with strangers.”
    Charlie- aged 14 from Australia emphasised the need to start online safety education earlier:
    “Having young children educated about the safety of technology and the dangers … adults only start this education for older kids on social media when the problem can be on video games played by young kids.”
    Children reported that it was very difficult to ascertain the intentions of strangers online. Children were also particularly worried about being asked for personal information or nude pictures, being drawn into inappropriate sexually-oriented exchanges, or exposure to criminal activities.
    The report found that children want and need better online protection, with children primarily using intuition and background checks rather than seeking help from trusted adults to manage their online interactions with people they don’t know.
    The data also showed that children distinguish people they know well both online and in person from those they only know online, with 86% approaching the latter with caution. Yet despite this wariness, children were still three times more likely to ignore or decline an inappropriate or unwanted request than they are to report or block it.
    Steve Miller, Save the Children’s Global Director of Child Protection, said:
    “Children deserve to thrive in a safe and nurturing environment – both online and offline. As the digital landscape evolves, so do the challenges and threats, including the threat of online grooming and exploitation. We need to foster a digital environment that is not only safe but also enriching, allowing children to explore, learn, and grow without fear. Policymakers need to listen to the voices and experiences of children when developing policies that protect them.”
    Professor Amanda Third, Co-Director of the Young and Resilient Research Centre, Western Sydney University, said:
    “Keeping children safe from online grooming requires a whole-of-community approach. Governments, NGOs, technology platforms, teachers, parents, caregivers, and children themselves all have an important role to play. However, to most effectively address this issue it is crucial that we listen to the views and experiences of children and young people and engage them as active partners in the research and policy design process. Children and young people are finding their own ways to tackle this issue and devise solutions but they are also calling on us to help equip them and their caregivers with the skills and knowledge needed to be able to safely navigate these rapidly evolving digital environments.”
    Save the Children has launched a major global effort to support digital inclusion and empower the next generation of resilient digital citizens. Save the Children’s Safe Digital Childhood initiative is includes partnering with schools, communities and tech leaders to break down barriers to digital inclusion by making sure the children with the fewest resources can access devices and connectivity; offering targeted digital literacy and citizenship programs; helping technology industry partners embed child-centric safeguards into their platforms; and empowering children to advocate for their rights in the digital world.
    The Young & Resilient Research Centre at Western Sydney University is an Australian-based, international research centre that unites young people with researchers, practitioners, innovators, and policymakers to explore the role of technology in children’s and young people’s lives and how it can be used to improve individual and community resilience across generations.
    Safe Online is the only global investment vehicle dedicated to keeping children safe in the digital world. Through investing in innovation and bringing key actors together, Safe Online helps shape a digital world that is safe and empowering for all children and young people, everywhere. The Tech Coalition Safe Online Research Fund, which funded the research, is a groundbreaking collaboration fuelling actionable research and bringing together the tech industry with academia and civil society in a bold alliance to end online child sexual exploitation and abuse.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Privacy Commissioner – Ignoring a privacy breach only makes it worse

    Source: Office of the Privacy Commissioner

    Privacy Commissioner, Michael Webster says it’s always better to notify his office about a privacy breach than ignore it.
    His message comes as he names Ultimate Care Group Limited as consistently ignoring their notification requirements, after it was found that they’d lost part of a patient’s medical records.
    Mr Webster said, “My recommendation is for agencies to notify us and do it early, even if they’re not 100 percent sure a privacy breach has occurred, or don’t yet have all the details.
    “It’s always better to talk to us than ignore the problem.”
    The decision to name Ultimate Care Group was made so they could become an example for others.
    Ultimate Care had several instances where they should have made an earlier notification. They were also advised by the Capital and Coast District Health Board to report a privacy breach, but in the end, it took two years for them to formally notify OPC.
    “It is disappointing they did not identify the breach to be notifiable as required under the Privacy Act.
    “Ultimate Care is a large provider serving a vulnerable group in our population and holds a significant volume of sensitive information about the individuals in its care. A key element of providing care to these individuals is looking after their personal information, and health information in particular,” said Mr Webster.
    Mr Webster says following engagement with OPC, Ultimate Care has taken actions to strengthen privacy policies, increase privacy awareness, and improve document management practices.
    “While these changes are good and have resulted in an improvement in privacy capability in Ultimate Care, I consider the impact of the loss of the clinical file on the resident and the wider systemic issues of poor information management practices at Ultimate Care at that time to be significant,” said Mr Webster.
    Notes

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Employment Surveys – Cost-of-living concerns drive Kiwi workers to seek a second job

    Source: Robert Half

    • 49% of Kiwi workers are considering taking on a second job in the next 12 months 
    • 42% say a second job is necessary for them to meet their financial needs, while a further 32% say they would do so to have extra funds for discretionary spend 
    • 56% believe their employer would be supportive of them taking on a second job elsewhere.

    Auckland, 26 September 2024 – The number of New Zealand workers wanting an extra source of income amid cost-of-living concerns is on the rise, as 49% are considering taking on a second job in the next 12 months, new independent research by specialised recruiter Robert Half finds.  

    The rise of working two jobs

    Independent Robert Half research on 49% of Kiwi workers considering a second job is a bellwether for this rising trend, where data from Stats NZ shows the number of multiple job holders in New Zealand has risen from 187,600 in Q1 2019 to 220,900 in Q2 2024 across all industries1.  

    With 57%, Gen X are the most likely to seek an additional source of income, followed by Gen Z (56%), and Millennials (51%). Baby Boomers (33%) are the least likely generation to be considering an extra job to meet the increased cost of living.

    The reasons why workers want a second job

    The overwhelming majority (84%) of workers who have or would consider a second job do so solely for financial reasons.  

    Those who are considering or who already have a second job cite the following reasons:

    • Necessary to meet financial needs (42%)
    • Provide extra funds for discretionary spend (32%)
    • Pursuit of a personal passion (7%)
    • A back-up job in case of layoff from the primary job (10%) 
    • To build skills in a different field/to test a new career (9%)
    • To fulfil personal goals (7%).

    “In the current economic climate with rising cost of living, more New Zealand workers are seeking additional employment to boost their earnings and strengthen their financial wellbeing,” says Megan Alexander, Managing Director at Robert Half. “However, taking on a second job requires careful consideration to balance financial needs with personal wellbeing.”

    Workers feel employers understand their needs

    When asked about how employers might react to their staff taking on a second job, more than half (56%) of workers feel their current employer would support them. One quarter (25%) believe their employer would be against them taking on an extra job.

    “Before taking on a second job, it’s vital for workers to honestly evaluate if they can manage the extra workload without jeopardising both their health and performance at their main job,” says Alexander.

    “For those considering a second job, they should opt for one that aligns with their skills and interests, while ensuing it doesn’t create a conflict of interest with their primary employer. Before committing, workers need to check what (if any) obligations they have with their current employer. A failure to comply with an employer’s policy or contractual obligations in this space could have serious implications for workers. Transparency is key.

    “As more employees seek second jobs, employers need to proactively understand their motivations and ensure their workplace culture and compensation packages are competitive enough to retain valuable talent,” concludes Alexander.

    1 StatsNZ, Infoshare, Group: Household Labour Force Survey – HLF, Table: Multiple Job Holders by Industry (Qrtly-Mar/Jun/Sep/Dec), September 2024

    Notes

    About the research

    The study is developed by Robert Half and was conducted online in June 2024 by an independent research company, surveying 501 full-time office workers across New Zealand. This survey is part of the international workplace survey, a questionnaire about job trends, talent management and trends in the workplace.

    About Robert Half

    Robert Half is the global, specialised talent solutions provider that helps employers find their next great hire and jobseekers uncover their next opportunity. Robert Half offers both contract and permanent placement services, and is the parent company of Protiviti, a global consulting firm.  Robert Half New Zealand has an office in Auckland. More information on roberthalf.com/nz

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Universities – ‘Remarkable’ marine animal forests found around Wellington’s coast

    Source: Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington

    Marine animal forests rich in sea life have been found in the shallow waters around Te Whanganui-a-Tara Wellington.

    “Marine animal forests are habitats formed by big groups of invertebrates—creatures such as sponges, horse mussels, and brachiopods, which look a bit like clams. These remarkable communities are increasingly being recognised as biodiversity hotspots and we’ve got them on our doorstep,” said Professor James Bell, a marine biologist at Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington.

    The forests were located by Professor Bell and colleagues Dr Valerio Micaroni and Dr Francesca Strano while studying life in the region’s shallow waters.

    The researchers identified numerous animal forests in Wellington Harbour, many at depths of less than 15 metres. Sites were located at Eastbourne, Evans Bay, Kaiwharawhara, the Miramar Peninsula, and Petone.

    Rich animal forests were also found in shallow waters at other areas including the Kāpiti Coast and Mana Island.

    “Finding animal-dominated ecosystems in such shallow waters is surprising as these are areas that are usually dominated by seaweeds,” said lead researcher Dr Micaroni.

    Sponges were one of the common species found in the forests. They included a massive potato-shaped sponge (Suberites australiensis) that grows up to 40 centimetres in diameter and forms dense sponge beds.

    “These beds were home to a range of species, including molluscs, cnidarians, and red algae, as well as other sponges and fish. We also discovered what we think is a previously undescribed sponge species,” Dr Strano said.

    The sponge beds in the harbour comprised a total area of 120,000 m2. Researchers estimate the beds can filter between 500 million to 1 billion litres of water daily. This filtering plays an important role in transferring nutrients and food from the water column to the sea-floor, influencing overall water quality and supporting the sea-floor food chain.

    Despite the ecological importance of these shallow-water forests, they are largely unprotected and face increasing threats from climate change, fishing, sedimentation, and pollution, Professor Bell said.

    At most of the sites in Wellington Harbour, the researchers found litter on the sea-floor.

    “There was a lot of plastic items—such as bottles, packaging, and cups—as well as aluminium cans. Car parts and tyres were found at half the sites, and fishing gear was found at three locations. Concrete blocks were also common,” Professor Bell said.

    Evans Bay was the worst site for marine litter, followed by Kaiwharawhara where large amounts of gravel had been dumped on areas of the seabed. The gravel dramatically altered the habitat with animal communities significantly reduced and limited evidence they had been able to recover since the gravel was dumped.

    “This example highlights the significant effects human activities can have on marine animal forests. It also highlights the need to protect these fragile ecosystems to avoid further biodiversity loss,” said Dr Megan Melidonis, senior coastal scientist at the Greater Wellington Regional Council. The council helped fund the research as part of work to explore and map the region’s marine biodiversity.

    “These forest communities play such a key role in marine food chains and in maintaining water quality. It is incredible to find them in a harbour adjacent to a major urban area,” Dr Melidonis said.

    Results of the study are published in the journal Global Ecology and Conservation. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gecco.2024.e03140

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Amata Welcomes $4.8 Million in LWCF Grants for Four Projects

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Aumua Amata (Western Samoa)

    Washington, D.C. Congresswoman Uifa’atali Amata is welcoming congressional notice from the National Park Service of federal grant funding totaling $4.8 million ($4,782,160.96) from the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF) for four projects in American Samoa.

    “Congratulations to American Samoa Government and our Department of Parks and Recreation for these substantial federal funds, and thank you to everyone in the Department involved in the local work to qualify for and fulfill these grants,” said Congresswoman Aumua Amata. “Thank you to the National Park Service for this focus on supporting American Samoa’s parks and recreational facilities.”

    Congresswoman Amata received notices of the following four grants, and their described projects:

    $3,285,886 for Onesosopo Park Football Field. The project entails a new football field to serve the east side of the territory, to include restrooms, locker rooms, bleachers, a snack bar, and an observation booth.

    $712,030 for Lions Park Multi Courts to include netball, pickleball, and beach volleyball to promote physical activity, fitness and health in one of the territory’s most-used park sites.

    $500,000 for Vaitogi Park Recreation and Picnic Area, to include eight traditional fale providing shade and shelter for picnics and gatherings.

    $284,244.96 LWCF Administrative Grants for implementation of the LWCF program, including grant applications and projects, site inspections, travel and trainings, vehicle, signs and supplies.

    On August 4, 2020, the landmark Great American Outdoors Act was signed into law, which Amata supported in the Natural Resources Committee, and now supplies $900 million annually for LWCF. Amata has also supported the program’s congressional reauthorization.

    The LWCF was established by Congress in 1964 to fulfill a bipartisan commitment to safeguard natural areas, water resources, and cultural heritage, and to provide recreational opportunities, while strengthening communities, preserving history, and protecting the national resource of lands and waters. This flagship conservation program is funded by royalty payments from offshore oil and gas drilling in federal waters, putting that financial support back into conservation.

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Amodei Votes in Favor of Continuing Resolution to Avert Government Shutdown

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Mark Amodei (NV-02)

    WASHINGTON, D.C. — Rep. Mark Amodei (NV-02) issued the following statement after voting in favor of the Continuing Appropriations and Extensions Act, 2025 which extends government funding at current levels through December 20, 2024:

    “I have learned from experience over the years that shutting the federal government down not only fails to force a given policy result, but also results in a significant amount of financial and operational destruction at the federal agency level,” said Rep. Mark Amodei.

    “While it may sound sexy or tough to talk of shut down, without out a plan for what specifically that policy objective is, and a plan for how reopen the shuttered federal government, it looks like a political temper tantrum. So, on balance a shutdown that negatively impacts border patrol agents from handling the crisis at our southern borders, servicemen and women from receiving the care they deserve, and communities devastated by natural disasters from receiving the relief they need to name a few, and which further would occur on the eve of a significant federal election, hardly sounds like a good idea.

    “Everyone knows there is plenty of room for improvement, but a shutdown at this point brings nothing resembling improvement.

    “On the continuing resolution — I voted yes.”

    Background

    This legislation delivers funds to strengthen Secret Service’s Presidential protection efforts, allows respective federal agencies to continue addressing the needs of our veterans and seniors, and keeps the doors open of programs that support communities who have been devastated by natural disasters:

    • Provides an additional $231 million for the Secret Service for protective operations for National Special Security Events and subjects additional money to existing funding caps.
    • Extends the National Flood Insurance Program through the duration of the CR.
    • Allows the Department of Health and Human Services to continue providing Temporary Assistance for Needy Families benefits during the duration of the CR.
    • Extends programs at the Department of Veterans Affairs to ensure our veterans continue to receive the care and benefits they have earned.
    • Extends expiring health care programs, including priority review vouchers for rare pediatric diseases, autism support activities, and Medicaid funding for the Northern Mariana Islands

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Carter, Burgess bill reforming CBO health care scores passes House Budget Committee

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Earl L Buddy Carter (GA-01)

    Headline: Carter, Burgess bill reforming CBO health care scores passes House Budget Committee

    WASHINGTON, D.C. – The House Budget Committee today passed the HEALTH Panel Act, led by Reps. Earl L. “Buddy” Carter (R-GA) and Dr. Michael Burgess (R-TX), a bill strengthening congressional oversight of and statutory authority for the Congressional Budget Office’s (CBO) Panel of Health Advisors.


    The bill will help improve the accuracy of CBO’s scores on bills related to health care by codifying the Panel of Health Advisors, establishing congressional appointment authority, and requiring an annual report to the Budget Committees detailing the panel’s work and recommendations.


    “It’s no secret that health care is expensive. As one of the primary drivers of our nation’s runaway $35 trillion in debt, it is critical that CBO have the authority required to accurately project the budgetary impact new health care policies will have. The HEALTH Panel Act is a necessary, common-sense step to improve both cost estimates and congressional oversight of this key panel, and I hope to see it on the House floor soon,” said Rep. Carter.


    “The passage of the HEALTH Panel Act through the House Budget Committee is a major win for American patients, physicians, and the U.S. health care system,” said Congressman Burgess. “Unelected officials in the Congressional Budget Office should not have the power to influence the legislative process as it pertains to health care policies. This commonsense legislation will grant congressional authority to codify a bipartisan Panel of Health Advisors within the CBO that prioritize the needs of the patient and not their own partisan agenda. Thank you to Congressman Carter for joining me in revitalizing this panel with statutory authority.”


    Read the full bill text here.


    BACKGROUND

    The CBO Panel of Health Advisors consists of health care experts and stakeholders that advise CBO on issues pertaining to health care policy.


    The core purpose of the panel is to provide technical and functional expertise and recommendations to CBO to improve its studies, analyses, and cost estimates related to health care issues and policies.

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Alberta tourism soars to new heights

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    Tourism is Alberta’s number one service export sector, bringing jobs, dollars and prosperity into the province’s economy. The 2023 tourism indicators make it clear: investments made by Alberta’s government in the province’s tourism sector are paying off. According to the latest data from Statistics Canada, in 2023 visitors spent $12.7 billion in Alberta, surpassing 2022’s record-setting $10.7 billion by nearly 20 per cent.

    In addition, international visitor spending surpassed pre-pandemic levels, injecting $2.9 billion into Alberta’s economy in 2023. This is an increase of more than 25 per cent from the previous high of $2.3 billion in 2019.

    “This past February, Alberta’s government launched a long-term tourism strategy, setting the bold and ambitious goal of growing Alberta’s visitor economy from $10 billion in annual visitor expenditure to $25 billion annually by 2035. The strength of Alberta’s tourism industry—as demonstrated by our record-breaking year—show that the strategy is working. We are well on our way to reaching our goal.”

    Joseph Schow, Minister of Tourism and Sport

    Alberta’s tourism strategy focuses on the five key pillars of leadership and alignment, competitive product, people and careers, expansion of access and Indigenous tourism to drive the province’s visitor economy to new heights. Travel Alberta, the province’s destination management organization, is key to the tourism strategy.

    Notably, Travel Alberta’s investments in growth projects drove $155 million in total economic impact, creating jobs across the province. The organization also secured more than 300,000 direct airline seats to Alberta from international and transborder target markets, yielding nearly $11 in visitor spending for every dollar invested.  

    “This continued growth demonstrates that our strategies to develop and promote Alberta’s tourism sector are yielding strong results. Together, in partnership with the thousands of hardworking Albertans that make up the tourism industry, we’re building world-class destinations that support long-term prosperity for communities across the province.”

    Jon Mamela, chief commercial officer, Travel Alberta

    Quick facts

    • Statistics Canada determines spending from people travelling from international countries through their Visitor Travel Survey.
    • International expenditures in Alberta grew by 91 per cent year-over-year—faster than in other major provinces such as British Columbia (81 per cent), Ontario (77 per cent) and Quebec (63 per cent).
    • Travel Alberta is the destination management organization of the Government of Alberta. It operates under the Travel Alberta Act within the Ministry of Tourism and Sport.

    Related information

    • Travel Alberta visitor spend data
    • Higher ground: a tourism sector strategy
    • Travel Alberta Annual Report 2023-24

    Multimedia

    • Video message from Minister of Tourism and Sport Joseph Schow

    Related news

    • En route to Alberta (Apr. 15, 2024)
    • Supporting new adventures in Alberta (Jan. 23, 2024)
    • Tourism spending recovers two years ahead of schedule (Nov. 17, 2023)

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: His Majesty’s Canadian Ships Edmonton and Yellowknife Return from Successful Operation CARIBBE

    Source: Government of Canada News

    Today, His Majesty’s Canadian Ships (HMCS) Edmonton and Yellowknife returned to their home port of Esquimalt, British Columbia, after a successful seven-week deployment on Operation CARIBBE.

    September 25, 2024 – Esquimalt, B.C. – Department of National Defence / Canadian Armed Forces

    Today, His Majesty’s Canadian Ships (HMCS) Edmonton and Yellowknife returned to their home port of Esquimalt, British Columbia, after a successful seven-week deployment on Operation CARIBBE.

    During this deployment, on September 5, 2024, HMCS Yellowknife intercepted a drug smuggling vessel, in close partnership with the embarked United States Coast Guard Law Enforcement Detachment. This interdiction, approximately 430 nautical miles southwest of Acapulco, Mexico, resulted in the seizure approximately 1,400 kilograms of cocaine, with an estimated street value of $60 million (Canadian).

    Operation CARIBBE is Canada’s contribution to the U.S.-led Enhanced Counternarcotics Operations under Joint Interagency Task Force – South, which is responsible for conducting interagency and international detection, monitoring operations, and facilitating the interdiction of illicit trafficking. This Operation is one of the many activities undertaken by the Government of Canada to suppress transnational criminal activity at sea and help keep drugs off Canadian streets.

    “The performance of HMCS Edmonton and Yellowknife on Operation CARIBBE was outstanding, bringing great credit to Canada’s Pacific Fleet. The skill and professionalism of both crews, in joint operations with our American allies, enabled the seizure of tens of millions of dollars’ worth of dangerous narcotics. This impressive seizure demonstrably showcases how Canada’s Navy contributes to the overall safety of Canadians. Welcome home and congratulations— you’ve earned it.”

    – Rear-Admiral Christopher Robinson, Commander Maritime Forces Pacific 

     “I would like to thank the crews of HMCS Edmonton and Yellowknife, as well as the embarked U.S. Coast Guard Law Enforcement Detachment team who deployed with us. We are proud of our contribution to multinational efforts impeding the flow of illicit narcotics into North America. Through our collaborative efforts, we helped improve the safety and security of Canada.”

    – Lieutenant-Commander Tyson Babcock, Commanding Officer of HMCS Yellowknife

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: PM tells US investors “Britain is open for business” as he secured major £10 billion deal to drive growth and create jobs

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    A major £10 billion investment which will create thousands of jobs in the North East of England has been announced by the Prime Minister in New York today.

    • Major U.S. company Blackstone has confirmed a £10 billion investment in the North East of England to create one of the largest artificial intelligence data centres in Europe 
    • Move will create 4,000 jobs for British people and benefit the local community in Blyth  
    • Prime Minister continues his international drive to boost the UK’s reputation on the global stage, unlock new opportunities to drive growth at home and improve the lives of British people

    A major £10 billion investment which will create thousands of jobs in the North East of England has been announced by the Prime Minister in New York today.  

    The deal with US investment company Blackstone, facilitated by the Office for Investment, will create the biggest AI data centre in Europe, boosting the UK’s world leading capabilities in the AI sector and driving growth in the local community. 

    Over 4,000 jobs will be created as a result, including 1,200 roles dedicated to the construction of the site in Blyth, Northumberland. Construction on the site is expected to begin next year, with the data centres set to store the vast amount of data needed to power AI, and to store the information generated by AI systems.  

    The Prime Minister’s number one mission for government is economic growth, and foreign investment will be a key part of driving it – by creating jobs which will put money into the pockets of hard-working British people.  

    The local community in Blyth – which suffered as a result of the failure of BritishVolt – will also directly benefit from the investment, with Blackstone confirming it will invest £110 million into a fund – supporting further skills training and transport infrastructure in the area.  

    The UK is already home to the highest number of data centres in Western Europe and just last month, the government classed data centres as ‘Critical National Infrastructure’ in the first designation in almost a decade to provide greater reassurance to businesses that the UK is a secure place to invest in and develop data centres.   

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer said:  

    The number one mission of my government is to grow our economy, so that hard-working British people reap the benefits – and more foreign investment is a crucial part of that plan.

    New investment such as the one we’ve announced with Blackstone today is a huge vote of confidence in the UK and it proves that Britain is back as a major player on the global stage and we’re open for business.

    Jon Gray, President and Chief Operating Officer of Blackstone, said: 

    The UK is a top investment market for Blackstone because of its powerful combination of talent and innovation along with a highly transparent legal system.  We are making significant commitments to building social housing, facilitating the energy transition, growing life sciences companies and developing critical infrastructure needed to fuel the digital economy. This includes a projected £10 billion investment to build one of Europe’s largest hyperscale data centres supporting 4,000 jobs. Blackstone is committed to Britain.

    The Prime Minister will meet Blackstone President Jon Gray in New York this morning, as he seeks to rebuild Britain’s reputation as an investment destination in order to drive growth and create opportunities for British people.  

    This comes ahead of the UK’s International Investment Summit in October, which is set to bring together hundreds of leading CEOs and investors set to attend representing the best of business across the globe, with an ambitious programme to showcase the UK’s economic strengths. 

    The summit will rebuild Britain’s reputation as an investment destination to drive growth and create opportunities for British people and cement the government’s enduring partnership with businesses to give them the certainty they need to invest and grow in the UK.

    Today’s investment also bolsters the UK’s bilateral trading relationship with the US which is already worth over £340 billion – making the US our largest single trading partner.  

    Every day, 1.2 million Americans go to work for UK-owned businesses and 1.3 million Brits work for US owned companies. Just last year the UK and US together invested over $1.2 trillion in each other’s economies, across key sectors like financial services, green infrastructure, real estate and technology.

    Updates to this page

    Published 25 September 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Experts of the Committee on Enforced Disappearances Commend Morocco on its Transitional Justice Process, Ask Questions on Cases of Disappeared Migrants and on Criminal Investigations into Cases of Enforced Disappearances

    Source: United Nations – Geneva

    The Committee on Enforced Disappearances today concluded its consideration of the initial report of Morocco, with Committee Experts commending the State on its transitional justice process, while raising questions on recent cases of disappeared migrants and criminal investigations into cases of enforced disappearances.

    Matar Diop, Committee Vice Chair and Country Rapporteur for Morocco, said the transitional justice process in Morocco was a unique experience, which allowed the State to revisit its past.  This commendable initiative had achieved tangible results. 

    Juan Pablo Alban Alencastro, Committee Rapporteur and Country Rapporteur for Morocco, said worrying information had been received about an event in 2022 regarding migrants who left Morocco trying to reach the Spanish coast and disappeared, and two other recent cases.  Had the State party begun investigations into these events?  Had they carried out search operations?  Had relatives of the victims been able to participate in those search processes? 

    Mr. Alban Alencastro also asked if there had there been any criminal prosecutions resulting from the transitional justice process?  How was it ensured that victims could be involved in these search activities and receive updates, as part of the right to truth?  The Committee would welcome information on efforts taken to excavate mass graves.  What measures were taken to ensure criminal investigations into the disappearances which took place between 1956 and 1999? 

    Regarding the cases of migrants, the delegation said autopsies of 23 victims had been carried out and it was found that one had died of asphyxiation.  The individuals had clustered together, and some managed to get out while others did not, and they died.  There were also hearings with those involved in the operation. Criminal operators had been seeking to push 2,000 people through the crossing point and had used forceful means to try and push them through.  Security forces had sought to respond properly to what was happening. 

    The delegation said the Equity and Reconciliation Commission had dealt with 25,000 cases and treated them all on an equal footing.  Wherever a death had occurred, the family was notified.  Thirteen regions had benefited from the community reparations programmes.  Authorities had been requested to carry out the exhumation of remains in burial sites. After exhumations were carried out, bone analysis was conducted to try to find out who the individuals were. This was one of the key tasks of the Equity and Reconciliation Commission.  It was clear that many violations had occurred between 1956 and 1999. The remains of victims found in these mass graves showed excessive use of force was used against them. Notifying relatives was critical and the State also sought to provide updates through the media. 

    Introducing the report, Abdellatif Ouahbi, Minister of Justice of Morocco and head of the delegation, said Morocco was one of the first contributors to the compilation of the Convention and one of the first States to sign it.  The Equity and Reconciliation Commission adopted the concept of enforced disappearance, as outlined in the Convention.  The Commission was able to fulfil its mission within five years and was able to expand its competence to include all types of violations, including enforced disappearance, arbitrary detention and torture, among others.  Over 27,000 victims or their families received around $212 million in compensation, more than 20,000 people gained health coverage, and 13 regions were covered by the communal reparations programme and received more than $16 million. 

    In concluding remarks, Mr. Ouahbi said Morocco had come a long way and aspired to the best rule of law.  The State had paid more than 200 million dollars in compensation to ensure human dignity.  Mr. Ouahbi thanked the Committee members for their comments and advice.  When the Committee next reviewed Morocco, it was hoped that Morocco’s new Penal Code would be completely adopted.  The Minister thanked the delegation and civil society for their support. 

    Olivier De Frouville, Committee Chair, in his concluding remarks, said the dialogue had been an important first step to pursue cooperation.  The Committee would draw up concluding observations which would pay particular attention to the developing situation in the country and the issues raised in the constructive dialogue.  The State party could count on the Committee’s support in its efforts to implement the Convention.

    The delegation of Morocco consisted of representatives of the House of Representatives; the Chamber of Advisors; the Interministerial Delegation for Human Rights; the Ministry of Justice; the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, African Cooperation and Moroccans living abroad; the Ministry of Health and Social Protection; the General Delegation to Penitentiary, Administration and Reintegration; the Presidency of the Public Ministry; the General Directorate of National Security; and the Permanent Mission of Morocco to the United Nations Office at Geneva.

    The Committee will issue its concluding observations on the report of Morrocco at the end of its twenty-seventh session, which concludes on 4 October.  Summaries of the public meetings of the Committee can be found here, while webcasts of the public meetings can be found here. The programme of work of the Committee’s twenty-seventh session and other documents related to the session can be found here.

    The Committee will next meet in public this afternoon, Wednesday 25 September, at 3 p.m. to begin its consideration of the initial report of Norway (CED/NOR/1).

    Report

    The Committee has before it the initial report of Morocco (CED/MAR/1).

    Presentation of Report

    ABDELLATIF OUAHBI, Minister of Justice of Morocco and head of the delegation, said Morocco was one of the first contributors to the compilation of the Convention and one of the first States to sign it.  It had also supported its international engagement, becoming a member of the Global Initiative for the Convention, which led to a joint action plan to advance universal ratification and implementation.  Morocco was also one of the first States to establish the national mechanism for implementation, reporting, and follow-up, which contributed to the enhancement of interaction with the United Nations human rights mechanisms. 

    During the reporting period, Morocco became a party to the Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture, the first Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and the Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women.  Morocco also welcomed the visit of the Working Group on Enforced Disappearances in 2009, which was the first visit to a State in the region.  The country then hosted the one hundred and eighth session of the Working Group in 2016 and facilitated its successful conduct. 

    Morocco had turned the protection and promotion of human rights into the foundation of the modern State, emphasising the transitional justice workshop to achieve national reconciliation.  In Morocco, there was a limited number of enforced disappearances; most of the victims remained alive and were able to contribute to revealing the truth and participating in the transitional justice process.  Victims also benefited from various measures and procedures aimed at redressing and rehabilitating damages.

    The Equity and Reconciliation Commission adopted the concept of enforced disappearance, as outlined in the Convention.  The files of the persons whose fate was unknown, relating to death during social events, were the most significant files processed.  The Commission adopted the criteria for compensation and reparation, and the principle of not enforcing time limits for cases submitted after the legal period. 

    Detention centres were known to civil society organizations and the press.  The Commission was able to fulfil its mission within five years (September 1999 to November 2005), which included completing investigations, preparing arbitration decisions, holding public hearings, and the issuance of a final report.  The Commission was able to expand its competence to include all types of violations, including enforced disappearance, arbitrary detention and torture, among others.  The concept of the victim was also expanded.  Over 27,000 victims or their families received around $212 million in compensation, more than 20,000 people gained health coverage, and 13 regions were covered by the communal reparations programme and received more than $16 million. In addition, the Commission adopted regional development programmes and launched a programme to rehabilitate detention centres and preserve the memory associated with them.

    The positive dynamics led to the adoption of a new Constitution in 2011, which enabled the prohibition of enforced disappearance, torture and other gross human rights violations.  Morocco also engaged in a comprehensive reform of the justice system through the adoption of the Code of Military Justice and through the establishment of an independent judicial power and institutional mechanisms.  The State issued laws relating to the Supreme Council of the Judicial Power.  Mr. Ouahbi assured the Committee of Morocco’s close cooperation during the dialogue. The State was helping with the organisation of the first world conference on enforced disappearances in January 2025.

    Questions by Committee Experts

    MATAR DIOP, Committee Vice Chair and Country Rapporteur for Morocco, said the large delegation from Morocco testified to the extent to which the State valued human rights and human dignity.  It also demonstrated the State’s determination to effectively implement the provisions of the Convention.  Morocco had ratified the Convention in May 2013.  Since its ratification, no national court had been seized of a case of enforced disappearance, within the meaning of the definition set out in the Convention.  However, this did not mean there were no issues to discuss.  The Committee hoped to have a constructive dialogue which would allow them to revisit the past. 

    The Equity and Reconciliation Commission aimed to address the weight of the past.  Could Morocco provide clarification on articles 31 and 32 of the Convention regarding individual and inter-State communications? 

    The National Human Rights Council was a fully independent national constitutional institution in the exercise of its mandate to promote and protect human rights and prevent possible violations of human rights.  The members were selected to represent the different regions of the country, Moroccans living abroad, young people, persons with disabilities and children. The Committee recognised that the process was commendable.  Who appointed the members and how was their independence guaranteed?  Did these members have a mandate and what were the terms? 

         

    Which administrative or judicial authority managed the database on missing persons?  Did this information overlap with other databases, such as the registers of persons deprived of their liberty, and were these databases accessible to all interested persons?  The State party had indicated that a revision of the Criminal Code was underway, which included a definition of enforced disappearances, in line with the Convention, which provided for penalties proportionate to the gravity of the offences committed.  Had the bill moved out of the drafting stage?  Was it before Parliament for consideration?  Why had it taken so long – 15 years – to adopt this document?  Was the definition of enforced disappearance as defined in the draft Criminal Code the final version?  Nothing was specified about the nature of the offence.  Was it ensured that enforced disappearance was a crime, not an offence? 

    On the issue of criminal responsibility, how did Morocco reconcile two texts regarding responsibility of enforced disappearance, with the provisions of article 6.2 of the Convention, which stated that “No order or instruction issued by a public authority, civil, military or otherwise, may be invoked to justify a crime of enforced disappearance”?

    JUAN PABLO ALBAN ALENCASTRO, Committee Rapporteur and Country Rapporteur for Morocco, said the Committee would appreciate an explanation on whether there were specific provisions under domestic law that addressed the issue of the application of the statute of limitations to enforced disappearance cases, in line with the Convention?  Could the State explain whether other remedies aside from compensation were available for victims, aside from civil claims? 

    How were domestic law provisions applicable to cases of enforced disappearance, given that enforced disappearance had not been expressly defined as an offence in national law?  What prosecutions were in place for this crime under national law?  What existing legal and administrative measures were in place as vehicles for conducting a preliminary inquiry or investigation to establish the facts?  Given that enforced disappearance had not been expressly defined as an offence in national law, could the Committee clarify whether military courts were competent to investigate or prosecute persons accused of committing crimes of abduction and unlawful detention? 

    How was it ensured in practice that all reported cases of enforced disappearance were investigated? What measures were taken to ensure that a search was immediately initiated when the authorities become aware of a case of enforced disappearance?  Was there a mechanism in place to exclude from investigations into alleged cases of enforced disappearance, any State officials who were suspected of having committed the offence?  Did national law establish that a State official suspected of involvement in an offence of enforced disappearance should be suspended from duty? The Committee would welcome information on the status of the investigations and search efforts concerning the events of 1956–1999, and the disappearance of Sahrawi victims in Western Sahara?  Could the State party provide specific examples on how victims’ family members were protected from reprisals? 

    Worrying information had been received about an event in 2022 regarding migrants who left Morocco trying to reach the Spanish coast and disappeared, and two other recent cases. Had the State party begun investigations into these events?  Had they carried out search operations?  Had relatives of the victims been able to participate in those search processes? 

    Given that enforced disappearance was not established as an offence in the Criminal Code, what measures had been adopted to ensure that it was included as an extraditable crime in all treaties?  Were there any potential obstacles to extradition under national legislation, or extradition treaties or agreements with third countries with regard specifically to enforced disappearance?  The Government had stated that it had not received any requests to provide assistance to victims.  Had measures been planned at the domestic level? 

    When dealing with deceased persons, were there measures to ensure reciprocal action for exhumation and the return of remains?  This was very relevant considering that according to information received, at least in cases involving the disappearance of Sahrawi victims in Western Sahara, there had been explicit requests for assistance which may not have been responded to positively.

    A Committee Expert thanked Morocco for their input in working on the general comment on enforced disappearance and migration.  The general comment was adopted in 2023; how was the State following up its recommendations? The Committee had received information that people were still missing from Sudan and Chad.  What were the findings in this regard?

    Another Expert welcomed the sizable delegation of Morocco which indicated the importance they attached to the Convention. Had the guiding principles adopted by the Committee been broadly disseminated within the bodies responsible for searching for disappeared persons?  Could there be dual incrimination for enforced disappearances, with a view to extradition?     

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said the reform of the Penal Code was a long-term process.  The Equity and Reconciliation Commission had produced recommendations which aimed to reform the Criminal Code.  Following a national dialogue, a partial bill was created which was submitted to Parliament.  The amendments included the criminalisation of enforced disappearance.  The new parliament aimed to comprehensively reform the Criminal Code, which was why the partial bill was withdrawn.  The draft revision now had legal definitions and had raised enforced disappearance to a crime, which was punishable with up to life imprisonment.  Penalties were increased according to aggravated circumstances. 

    The Criminal Code stated that enforced disappearance was a crime against humanity, in line with the Convention. There were 90 bilateral agreements in the areas of extradition and the transfer of convicted criminals.  Since the adoption of the 2011 Constitution, Morocco had not responded to any request from a bilateral partner which would entail a risk to the extradited person.  However, the State did respond positively in cases of criminal proceedings where there were no such risks. 

    Morocco continued to participate in the individual communication mechanisms of the United Nations. The National Human Rights Council was a pluralist and constitutional body which played a key role in the promotion of human rights in the country.  It had been awarded A status.  Eight members of the body were selected from civil society organizations.

    Morocco left no stone unturned to ensure that international human rights instruments were made well known, including their related protocols.  This included the Convention and the Committees’ concluding observations, which were published on various channels, including the Gazette of Morocco, which was freely available to anyone in the country.  Texts of treaties and conventions to which Morocco was a party were also published online, as were studies in key human rights areas.
    Training was provided to law enforcement officials on human rights and human rights instruments.  This was a key part of continuous and ongoing training as well as basic training for law officials. 

    Morocco had shared several observations and comments on the topic of migration and enforced disappearance.  The general comment on this issue was disseminated to all relevant bodies and was part of the training for those who worked in these entities.

    Morocco had duly criminalised enforced disappearance.  The Constitution prohibited enforced disappearance because it was a violation of international humanitarian law and international human rights law.  Legislation had been strengthened to properly cover the crime of enforced disappearance, including human trafficking and torture.  Anyone who had born witness to enforced disappearance was obliged to report what they had witnessed. 

    Tools were in place for reparation, remedy and compensation, which were made available to all victims.  Criminal proceedings could also be pursued before the courts.  Regarding the cases of migrants who disappeared in 2022, investigations included the identification of those who disappeared.  Steps were taken to involve diplomatic missions to identify remains and bodies.  Relatives were involved in these investigations.  Photos were taken and evidence was gathered and sent to laboratories, including fingerprints.  For the 23 bodies which could not be identified, seven had been able to be identified through conferring with the families.  Investigations were ongoing on the other cases. 

    Morocco had an electronic database system, which contained all search notices, including those issued by the judicial police, and those involving other people who had disappeared.  The database was extensive and contained all necessary information on disappeared persons and fugitives.  When no trace of a disappeared person could be found, accelerated measures were applied, and relatives were contacted. 

    Morocco was undergoing a unique experience on transitional justice, and the Equity and Reconciliation Commission had achieved a lot in five years.  Civil society was needed as a key partner. 

    In 1991, after the body was established, it launched a unique initiative, calling for all detention centres under the dictatorship to be closed.  Thanks to this action, 511 persons who had been forcibly disappeared were liberated.  These people served as the living memory of a clandestine system which was not properly documented.  It also helped the State to understand the fate of others who were disappeared. Fifty-five different graves had been uncovered due to ramped up activity, supported by the authorities. Hearings had been held across the country, where victims of violations were interviewed.  They spoke directly and frankly about what they had experienced. 

    For the past few years, Parliament had called for a full reform of the judiciary.  Morocco had worked on adopting the rules of fair trial. A special institute worked on forensic and legal medicine, which helped in cases such as rape, or other matters like inheritance.  DNA was the only way to effectively determine the identity of a person. 

    Questions by Committee Experts

    MATAR DIOP, Committee Vice Chair and Country Rapporteur for Morocco, said the transitional justice process in Morocco was a unique experience, and the existence of the body allowed the State to revisit its past.  This commendable initiative had achieved tangible results. What had happened to the searches carried out as part of the transitional justice process?  Did the State party intend to prosecute the perpetrators of the crimes of enforced disappearances if they knew who they were?  If not, did they intend to find them?  To pay historic debt, it was important to bring perpetrators to justice. 

    Did the State intend to recognise the competence of the Committee so it could receive individual victim complaints or communications?  What was the central body which managed the database? Exoneration for carrying out enforced disappearance, due to acting in hierarchical order, was outlined in the State party’s Constitution, although the Convention did not allow for this.

    JUAN PABLO ALBAN ALENCASTRO, Committee Rapporteur and Country Rapporteur for Morocco, asked what necessary conditions needed to be met so Morocco could recognise the competency of the Committee to receive individual communications? Morocco stated that enforced disappearance was criminalised within the Constitution.  Was article 23 of the Constitution directly applicable in criminal proceedings?  How far had enforced disappearance been criminalised as a stand-alone crime, as well as a crime against humanity?  Today, the delegation had said that a statute of limitations started as of when the situation of a disappeared person was determined.  Could clarification on this be provided?  What had been the outcomes of the search efforts deployed in relation to the almost 70 migrants who had disappeared?  Had the State been able to bring the perpetrators to justice?  How did the authorities decide whether a case was one of enforced disappearance?  How were active extradition proceedings handled? 

    An Expert asked if Morocco received a request for extradition for a Moroccan, where there was an enforced disappearance in a different country, and this was denied because of nationality, on what basis would they be judged? 

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said eight members of the Equity and Reconciliation Commission were victims of flagrant human rights violations.  The Chair regularly gathered victims of human rights violations.  A symposium in 2001 brought together civil society and political parties.  All victims received a document containing details, including name, date of release, and where they were held, as applicable.  The State made it clear to the victim that the Moroccan State took responsibility as the perpetrator of those acts.  The State had a national strategy to ensure the non-recurrence of these atrocities.  It was clear that the judiciary needed to be independent and just. 

    Irrespective of the duration of the enforced disappearance, it was considered to be a crime. Extradition occurred in the legal phase and the administrative phase.  It was up to the judiciary to weigh in on the issue of a dual penalty. There was constant monitoring and oversight of individuals in custody on a daily basis.  There was no definition of enforced disappearance as provided for in the Convention.  Morocco would take steps to align the definition with the Convention.

     

    Regarding the cases of migrants, autopsies of 23 victims had been carried out and it was found that one had died of asphyxiation.  The individuals had clustered together, and some managed to get out while others did not and they died.  There were also hearings with those involved in the operation. Criminal operators had been seeking to push 2,000 people through the crossing point and had used forceful means to try and push them through.  Security forces had sought to respond properly to what was happening.  There was no statute of limitations applied to cases of enforced disappearances.

    Morocco believed that meetings like this would help the State further develop its human rights approach.  It was hoped Morocco would be the gold standard when it came to human rights. The State had duly acknowledged what had happened and had accepted the blame.  It was important these events never happened again.  The State was determined to ensure non-repetition and non-recurrence.  To achieve this, society needed to understand what their rights were. 

    The State had major problems on the issue of illegal migrants; 50,000 residents’ permits had been issued to respond to this crisis.  Female illegal migrants had access to healthcare in hospitals, irrespective of their illegal status.  Addressing the criminal gangs involved in illegal migration was a major challenge for the State.  The State needed to protect the rights of these migrants, some of whom had no identity documents.  Morocco was dealing with a mass wave of illegal migrants of which they knew very little about.  Some of these people, such as Sudanese migrants, could not go home in the current circumstances.  Morocco was close to Europe and many migrants were aiming to reach Europe as their final destination. 

    Often security forces were attacked in the discharge of their duties.  Democracy was the only way to ensure there was no repetition of the crimes of the past.  The State was aware of amendments to legislation which needed to be made, and these conversations were happening.  The State wanted to further develop the country and ensure full respect for all peoples, including Palestinian people. 

    This year, more than 200 trafficking networks had been dismantled and over 48,000 persons involved in illegal migration had been stopped.  In coordination with the International Organization on Migration, voluntary returns were organised.  The State did not use collective extradition and was working on a draft bill on migration. 

    Questions by Committee Experts

    MATAR DIOP, Committee Vice Chair and Country Rapporteur for Morocco, said article 16 of the Convention contained the principle of “non-refoulment.”  What measures was the State party taking to always guarantee strict adherence to the principles of non-refoulment?  Could a decision authorising the return or expulsion of an individual be appealed?  What was the procedure for lodging an appeal?  Who approved appeals?  Which mechanisms ensured each case was reviewed individually before any expulsion or extradition took place?   

    Was the risk of enforced disappearance taken into account when considering the expulsion of a foreign national?  Which authority took the decision to expel an individual?  How was this notified to the concerned parties?  What timeframe did the individual have to lodge an appeal? Were they informed of their right to an appeal?  If one appealed the extradition order, was the expulsion order immediately suspended? How was it ensured that all persons deprived of their liberty were guaranteed their rights from the outset of detention, including the right to contact their lawyer and receive visits? Whatever the place of deprivation of liberty, it was vital that the person was able to receive information concerning their case.  This was vital to prevent secret detentions.

    What sanctions were in place for those who violated rules and norms in places of detention? Where did things currently stand with regard to the project to implement an electronic custody register, to allow for one single central database?  Could an irregular migrant in the country be held in custody prior to their return?

    JUAN PABLO ALBAN ALENCASTRO, Committee Rapporteur and Country Rapporteur for Morocco, said the Committee had noted that under domestic law, a person affected by a crime could institute a civil action.  How did the national legislation define a victim?  How had the definition of a victim been amended in national legislation to ensure it conformed with the Convention?  Was a victim of enforced disappearance obliged to initiate criminal proceedings of any kind?  How was it guaranteed in practice that cases of enforced disappearances were duly investigated?  When a person was disappeared, what measures were taken to ensure a search was immediately initiated and that authorities were made aware of their disappearance?

    Had there been any criminal prosecutions resulting from the transitional justice process? How was it ensured that victims could be involved in these search activities and receive updates, as part of the right to truth?  The Committee acknowledged the State party’s efforts in regard to the Equity and Reconciliation Commission.  Could further information be provided on measures to facilitate access to archives? What steps were taken to preserve these archives?  Who was responsible for their maintenance and integrity? 

    The Committee would welcome information on efforts taken to excavate mass graves.  What measures were taken to ensure criminal investigations into the disappearances which took place between 1956 and 1999? Was there a mechanism for launching an immediate search at a local level whenever disappearances were reported? What mechanisms were in place to guarantee effective collaboration between the authorities involved in the search for and investigations on disappeared persons? 

    The Committee took note of reparations documented by the Equity and Reconciliation Commission, which were welcomed.  What criteria were used to establish the amount of compensation to be paid to each victim?  Could victims lodge their own claims for reparation?  How were reparation rules applied to Sahrawi victims in Western Sahara? The Committee had received information that there were housing projects built on places of burial.  What was being done to preserve these areas?  What institutional reforms had been adopted to ensure that democracy and the rule of law could flourish?  What was being done to try and investigate the death of a disappeared person, despite a death certificate? 

    The Committee acknowledged the information provided by the State on all the different crimes committed against children.  In Fez, allegedly the babies of teenage unmarried mothers were taken away from them and trafficked by gangs.  Civil society organizations had reported that there were thousands of unaccompanied migrant children who had disappeared after landing in Europe, with many being Moroccan.  Could the delegation comment on this?  How many times had DNA been used in cases of enforced disappearances?  How was the principle of non-refoulment respected in extradition proceedings?  How was the right of a detainee to communicate with their family guaranteed? How could a foreign detainee communicate with the consular authority of their country?  How was the right of communication guaranteed for detainees? 

    An Expert asked how the State conducted a proper risk assessment, when considering sending someone back to their country?  The Committee had received information of people being returned from Morocco despite facing risks in their own country. 

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said Morocco was duty bound to protect citizens and everyone in the land.  The State always respected the decisions of the Committee against Torture and would never extradite anyone who was at threat of torture.  On the specific decisions mentioned, Morocco had respected the decisions of the Committee against Torture.  The State was responsible and accountable for acts prior to 1999.  The State did not recruit children, and the abduction of any child was a crime.  If Morocco allowed the abduction of 6,000 children to take place under their noses, were they really a functioning State?  To claim 6,000 children had been abducted in Morocco was shocking. Nothing prevented anyone detained in Morocco from receiving visitors.  Nobody was held in secret detention.  Morocco did not engage in reprisals and did not discriminate against anyone. 

    The Equity and Reconciliation Commission asked what violations had occurred, rather than pushing for proof.  The Commission had learned from the past and worked with national human rights associations. It was important to make a distinction between compensation and reparations.  Women received a 20 per cent bonus on top of any compensation paid to a man.  A larger sum of compensation was also paid to a person who had been held in a secret detention facility.  The State worked with psychologists and psychiatrists to help those affected reintegrate into society.  When all detainees were released by the King, one detainee passed away after being released. The children of those who had died were reintegrated into society by the State.  Enforced disappearance was not subject to the statute of limitations; the State was seeking to close all cases of enforced disappearance. 

    Moroccan law prohibited any form of secret detention.  Detainees were guaranteed contact with their families and legal representation.  Foreigners could contact their consular representatives.  From 2019 to 2023, there were over 16,000 visits to places of detention.  Any person detained had the right to contact a lawyer.  Any person who considered themselves to be a victim could contact the relevant authorities.  The concept of victim also included public benefit organizations or organizations working to combat violence against women. 

    Regarding the disappearance of children, there was a search procedure which aimed to find disappeared children.  The kefala of a child could not be given to a person who had been convicted of a crime relating to morality.  There were many reform workshops which had taken place.  The number of forensic doctors had been increased from 13 to 260. Since adopting genetic digital prints, the State had created a database to collect all the information. Fingerprints and DNA prints from the scene of the crime, or from those accused were collected.  This allowed a biological link to the victim to be established. 

    Morocco had seen huge progress regarding enacting laws and establishing legal systems with a comprehensive, eco-systemic approach.  The State aimed to ensure human rights were a basis and a real doctrine. There was no discrimination within Morocco, and the country was open to the world.  The State did not forget the importance of institutional reform, with regards to the moving of supervision to the Public Prosecutor. 

    The State had independent mechanisms which were not subject to any other authority.  A programme of action had been implemented for continuous training of police, as well as rehabilitation for any kind of detention.  The national commission to combat torture could access all records, as well as the register of persons deprived of liberty. 

    Questions by Committee Experts

    MATAR DIOP, Committee Vice Chair and Country Rapporteur for Morocco, said it was important to get a proper grasp of the refoulment procedure.  Which administrative authority took the decision on expulsion?  How was the decision notified to the interested party?  Did the interested party have a clear timeframe to which they could lodge an appeal against this decision?  Where did the State stand in the reparation and rehabilitation process for victims? Did the National Human Rights Council intend to reopen the compensation files? 

    The Committee had heard reports that former detention centres had fallen entirely into ruin. What was the current status of the community reparation programme?  Mr. Diop thanked the delegation for their willingness to respond to the Committee’s questions. 

    JUAN PABLO ALBAN ALENCASTRO, Committee Rapporteur and Country Rapporteur for Morocco, said he had never mentioned 6,000 children; perhaps there was a mistranslation.  Thousands of children had come to Europe, according to sources, with many being Moroccan. What was the State doing to prevent the disappearance of children?  If the State could explain why these statements were false, this would be highly appreciated.  Had the issue of criminal responsibility been sidelined since the State was striving for lasting reconciliation?  Had people who had been indicated as possible violators of human rights been removed from their jobs?  Who was a victim according to the law and Moroccan jurisprudence?  Could tangible examples be provided of how Morocco accommodated the gender perspective, and the needs of women and children who were close to a disappeared person? 

    A Committee Expert asked if persons who were detained had the right to communicate with those stipulated under their rights, including legal representation?  Could persons held incommunicado still communicate? Were discovered remains returned to relatives in a dignified manner?  What role did the Public Prosecutor play in the search for disappeared persons? 

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said the Equity and Reconciliation Commission had dealt with 25,000 cases and treated them all on an equal footing.  Wherever a death had occurred, the family was notified.  Morocco continued to provide assistance to marginalised communities.  Thirteen regions had benefited from the community reparations programmes. Authorities had been requested to carry out exhumation of remains in burial sites.  After exhumations were carried out, bone analysis was conducted, to understand who the individuals were.  This was one of the key tasks of the Equity and Reconciliation Commission. 

    It was clear that there were many violations which occurred between 1956 and 1999.  Remains of victims found in these mass graves showed excessive use of force was used against them.  Notifying relatives was critical and the State also sought to provide updates through the media.  A funeral had been held in Casablanca for 840 people who had been disappeared.  Their remains were transported in trucks and reburied with more dignity. 

    Enforced return related to migration.  Significant work was done on voluntary repatriation.  Everyone had the right to repeal a refoulment procedure before the court. This was considered an urgent procedure. The law stipulated the need to find alternatives, including a country of origin or a third country which could receive the person.  A foreigner who was pregnant or a minor could not be subject to refoulment.  There were guarantees of protection from ill treatment. Any person affected by a crime could request the protection of their rights, be it civil or criminal.  The person could also receive legal assistance upon request.  There were rules and conditions for custody.  As for the Criminal Code, the reform had led to additional guarantees, especially with regard to confessions before judiciary police, which were now considered null and void.  If a decision was claimed to be illegal, it could be appealed, and action needed to be taken within 24 hours. 

    Morocco received everybody without discrimination.  In Morocco, laws addressed every citizen, never a particular community.  The law relating to prisons applied to all detainees, whether they were Moroccan or foreigners.  There was also a law which enhanced the independence of the judiciary and the Public Prosecutor’s Office.  There was a draft civil law which led to a community discussion amongst the people of Morocco.  Every generation in Morocco had more freedom compared to the previous generation.  The State was always seeking to improve and achieve more. 

    The Public Prosecutor’s Office was in charge of search and investigation.  Judges from the Office supervised these processes. Morocco’s national legislation was fully in line with article 6 of the Convention. 

    Closing Remarks

    ABDELLATIF OUAHBI, Minister of Justice of Morocco and head of the delegation, said there needed to be a link between reparation and the person who was subject to harm.  Decisions and rulings had been handed down and victims had been compensated, because the State was responsible for protecting individuals.  Morocco had compensated the families of two Norwegians who were killed by terrorist attacks in Morocco.  Morocco had a committee which held meetings with counterparts in Europe, asking to provide lists of children, and investigations had been carried out.  Most of the children were foreign children, but some were Moroccan who had been released abroad.  Morocco had come a long way and aspired to the best rule of law.  The State had paid more than 200 million dollars in compensation to ensure human dignity.  Mr. Ouahbi thanked the Committee members for their comments and advice.  When the Committee next reviewed Morocco, it was hoped that the new Penal Code would be completely adopted.  The Minister thanked the delegation and civil society for their support. 

    OLIVIER DE FROUVILLE, Committee Chair, said the dialogue had been an important first step to pursue cooperation.  The Committee would draw up concluding observations which would pay particular attention to the developing situation in the country and the issues raised in the constructive dialogue.  The State party could count on the Committee’s support in its efforts to implement the Convention.

     

    Produced by the United Nations Information Service in Geneva for use of the media; 
    not an official record. English and French versions of our releases are different as they are the product of two separate coverage teams that work independently.

    CED24.008E

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Governor Newsom signs legislation to restrict polluting oil & gas operations near schools, daycares, and across communities

    Source: US State of California 2

    Sep 25, 2024

    What you need to know: New laws will give local communities more authority to protect their neighborhoods from oil and gas operations and drive faster plugging of old oil and gas wells. 

    INGLEWOOD, CA – Governor Gavin Newsom today signed three bills into law allowing communities to restrict oil drilling and help the state address polluting idle wells. The legislation will help protect public health, the environment, and empower local communities to set greater protections around oil and gas activities in their neighborhoods.

    “The health of our communities always comes first. These new laws allow local leaders to limit dangerous oil and gas activities near homes, schools, and other areas as they see fit for their communities, and give the state more tools to make sure that idle and low-producing wells get plugged sooner. This builds off of our all-of-the-above efforts to protect communities from pollution and hold Big Oil accountable.”

    Governor Gavin Newsom

    Empowering local communities to restrict oil and gas operations

    AB 3233 by Assemblymember Dawn Addis (D-Morro Bay) gives cities and counties greater authority to impose restrictions on oil and gas operations, including by limiting or prohibiting new oil and gas developments in their jurisdictions. By providing local jurisdictions with the power to make these decisions, California is taking a major step toward protecting vulnerable communities from the health impacts of industrial operations. The bill overrides recent court decisions that blocked ordinances limiting oil drilling adopted by the voters of Monterey County and the Los Angeles City Council. 

    “The signing of AB 3233 is vital win for communities across the Central Coast, and all of California,” said Assemblymember Dawn Addis (D-Morro Bay). “Putting this bill into law affirms our right to clean air and water, free of oil and gas pollution. I’m thankful to Governor Gavin Newsom for signing this important bill into law, to my colleagues for helping me get it to his desk, and to the many community-members and leaders who have been fighting this battle with me. Today is a huge win for the well-being of all Californians.”

    Addressing the dangers of idle wells in communities

    AB 1866 by Assemblymember Gregg Hart (D-Santa Barbara) addresses the growing problem of idle oil and gas wells across the state. These wells, which are no longer in active use but have not been properly decommissioned, pose a significant risk to both the environment and nearby communities. Under this new law, fees on idle wells are increased and stricter regulations will be enforced to ensure that oil companies are held responsible for maintaining and safely plugging idle wells, preventing leaks and contamination.

    “This is a landmark victory for taxpayers and communities most affected by the harmful health impacts of neighborhood oil drilling,“ said Assemblymember Gregg Hart (D-Santa Barbara). “I am proud of this decisive action we are taking today to hold the oil industry responsible for plugging over 40,000 idle oil wells across California. I want to thank Governor Newsom for recognizing the urgency of solving the idle oil well crisis in the state.”

    Shutting down more oil wells in the Inglewood Oil Field

    AB 2716 by Assemblymember Isaac Bryan (D-Los Angeles) prohibits the operation of low-oil production oil and gas wells located in an oil field within the Baldwin Hills Conservancy (Inglewood Oil Field) and imposes a $10,000 per month penalty on these wells until they are permanently plugged and abandoned. Penalty funds will go to projects like park creation to benefit the community. 

    “The Inglewood Oil Field is the largest urban oil field in our state. Production in recent years has been marginal, but for decades the negative health impacts surrounding it have cost the nearby community with their life expectancy,” said Assemblymember Bryan. “Today, with Governor Newsom’s signature, we will finally shut it down and establish the state’s first repair fund for the frontline communities who have been organizing for years to be seen, heard, and protected.”

    California’s leadership in holding Big Oil accountable

    Together, these laws mark another step forward in California’s ongoing efforts to cut pollution and protect communities. 

    Just last month, Governor Newsom announced a plan to further hold Big Oil accountable for profiting off of Californians while polluting our communities – preventing gas price spikes and saving people money at the pump.

    The state notched a major victory against Big Oil in June, with the industry pulling its referendum to repeal California’s law protecting neighborhoods from the dangerous impacts of drilling. This allowed California’s law requiring setbacks – that oil drilling can’t be within 3,200 feet of sensitive community areas like schools, daycares, and more – to move forward, a crucial protection for public health and safety.  
     
    Last year, California sued Big Oil for more than 50 years of deception, cover-up, and damage that have cost California taxpayers billions of dollars in health and environmental impacts.

    Recent news

    News SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom today announced the following appointments:Steve Juarez, of Truckee, has been appointed to the California State Teachers’ Retirement Board. Juarez served as a Deputy State Treasurer at the California State Treasurer’s Office…

    News What you need to know: Governor Newsom today signed a bipartisan legislative package to further reinforce California’s nation-leading gun laws and prevent traumatic incidents of mass violence. The laws build on California’s successful strategies to address gun…

    News What you need to know: Governor Newsom signed two bills to boost access to affordable housing for California’s farmworkers: AB 2240 and AB 3035. Governor Newsom also signed SB 1105 to help protect the health and safety of farmworkers in states of emergency….

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: German economy: rising to the challenges | Speech delivered at the invitation of the German association of family businesses

    Source: Bundesbank

    Check against delivery.

    1 Introduction

    Ladies and gentlemen,

    I am delighted to be able to speak before you today, as representatives of Hessian family businesses. Family businesses play a significant role for the German economy and German society.

    In cooperation with the audit firm EY, the University of St. Gallen in Switzerland compiles the Global Family Business Index.[1] It lists the 500 largest family businesses in the world. And, last year, 78 businesses on this list – nearly 16% – were located in Germany. This puts Germany in second place behind the United States, which, however, has nearly five times the GDP of Germany. According to EY data, these 78 businesses generated the equivalent of just over €1 trillion in revenues in 2023.[2] Germany’s share of total revenues is therefore just over 10%. And, let it be noted, these are merely the largest and highest-revenue family enterprises.

    However, when we talk about family businesses, it is naturally not just numbers that come to mind. It’s about much more than that, not least about tradition. What I often hear in this context is that “family businesses think in terms of generations, not quarterly reports”. For me, staying power is a good and important quality to have in order to comprehensively rise to challenges and overcome them sustainably. And we are currently facing our share of challenges; of that there is no doubt. I am referring to macroeconomic challenges, which also matter to family businesses.

    Once a year, the Society for the German Language (Gesellschaft für die deutsche Sprache) chooses several terms as “Words of the Year”. Krisenmodus – “crisis mode” – took first place last year.[3] The term Krisenmodus will probably ring a bell if you look back across the past few years: the COVID19 pandemic, disintegrating supply chains, high energy prices. This has also left its mark on economic growth, which, this year, will remain weak as well.

    In my speech, I want to discuss in depth the factors that are still continuing to gnaw away at growth. These factors can be either temporary or also permanent in nature. My focus will be on the permanent factors, as we have to address these structural factors in order to make long-term progress. I will subsequently discuss which economic policy measures can specifically help overcome the current weak growth. However, let me first put the current period of economic weakness into context. How serious is the situation really?

    2 Are Germany’s days as an industrial superpower coming to an end?

    In the first half of 2024, like last year, Germany ranked among the laggards in terms of growth in the euro area. German GDP more or less stagnated in the first six months of the year, whereas the euro area average picked up markedly. Germany does not come off favourably in a global comparison, either. The advanced economies’ collective GDP rose by 0.5% in the spring, and of these, the United States even saw a 0.7% increase.

    Third-quarter economic figures for Germany have likewise remained weak. All the while, the media seem to be trying to outdo each other with horror stories about the German economy. “Germany’s days as an industrial superpower are coming to an end” was, for instance, the title of a Bloomberg article in February on the current economic situation in Germany.[4] We read further on in that story that the “underpinnings of Germany’s industrial machine have fallen like dominoes”.

    Just a cursory look back over the history of our economy shows us this: there is nothing inherently new about such headlines and debates. Germany weathered a pronounced slump around the turn of the millennium. Bloomberg Businessweek titled the cover page of its February 2003 issue “The decline of Germany”.[5] And, at the end of 2004, German author Gabor Steingart published a book titled Deutschland – der Abstieg eines Superstars (Germany – The decline of a superstar).[6] Is that painful crisis threatening to repeat itself? Are we in decline?

    Without wanting to get ahead of myself: we are undoubtedly in a midst of a difficult transformation process. But it’s a process we have the power to shape. And if we shape it right, then my clear response is: No, in my opinion Germany is not in decline! How is today’s situation in Germany different from that at the turn of the millennium? Let’s take a look at the numbers.

    At that time, the unemployment rate as calculated by the International Labour Organization (ILO) stood at over 9% on average; it is now 3.3%, and thus also well below the euro area average of 6.5%. Back then, the most pressing labour market problem was unemployment; now, it is the shortage of skilled workers.

    Moreover, German firms’ profitability and capital base are much better now than they were 25 years ago. As a case in point, the average capital ratio was 23% then, whereas in the 2020 to 2022 period it averaged 30%. The profit margin went up from 3.4% at the time to 4.5% in the 2020 to 2022 period. These data are subject to a major time lag, which is why we do not yet have any numbers for 2023.

    However, what are the reasons for the current feeble growth dynamics? The energy crisis had an outsized impact on Germany, an exporting country where manufacturing has a special status. As, before the outbreak of Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine, dependency on inexpensive Russian energy deliveries was high – too high. Moreover, the fallout from the high inflation weighed on the economy. Many consumers kept their purse strings tight. In addition, the restrictive monetary policy is dampening economic activity. And last but not least, industry continues to be impacted by weak foreign demand, particularly because our euro area trading partners’ imports rose less strongly than world trade. What we know for sure is that some of these factors are only temporary. We therefore assume that Germany’s economy will be able to slowly regain some momentum.

    3 Structural challenges

    Some factors, however, have a longer-term effect. We are facing extensive structural challenges which can likewise dampen growth. To wit, energy costs are set to remain higher than before Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine for quite a while to come. The price of natural gas fell from some €240 per kilowatt hour in August 2022 to €30 in early 2024, before then bouncing back up to around €38 in August of this year, still well above the average price of €13 in the pre-crisis year of 2019.

    But the desired transition to a carbon-free energy supply will be costly as well, at least over a relatively long transition period. Plus there are further challenges such as demographic change, the reduction of unilateral dependence on imports and fragmentation of international trade.

    The transition to a climate-neutral economy, above all, will require massive investment. On this point, a study commissioned by the KfW Group estimated the volume of investment needed to reach Germany’s net-zero targets by mid-century. The result: around €5 trillion. [7] A McKinsey study even puts the figure higher still, at €6 trillion.[8] And just like when you retrofit an old building to improve its energy efficiency, that number includes investment that will be made in any event. But the estimated incremental investment is considerable, too. The KfW study puts this at around €72 billion per year, or just under 2% of German GDP.

    And even though the comprehensive digitalisation process that needs to take place will offer huge opportunities, it, too, will require investment, not to mention training or reconceptualising of processes and business lines. But how is investment faring in Germany at the moment? Let’s take a look at the statistics.

    They show that investment in buildings, machinery and equipment, and other assets in Germany has not grown over the past few years. And declining investment was a key factor behind the slight contraction in economic output in the second quarter. But not just that: in a recent analysis the audit firm EY found that the number of foreign investment projects in Germany has dropped for the past six years in a row.[9] All things considered, despite the aforementioned challenges and the need for investment that they entail, there is currently no indication of an investment boom.

    But what are the reasons for this weak investment propensity? We have investigated this question through our business survey, the Bundesbank Online Panel – Firms. In it, around 7,400 German firms were asked in the third quarter of 2023 about their motives for investment. We published the results in the May edition of our Monthly Report.[10]

    The poor macroeconomic setting was evidently the key reason for declining investment. This was closely followed by high energy and wage costs, a shortage of skilled workers, uncertainty about regulation, and high taxes and public levies. Low public funding, inefficient public administration and poor digital infrastructure played a lesser role. These findings may be a year old, but there is much to suggest that they remain valid.

    4 The tasks of economic policy

    This brings us to the following question: what can economic policy do to remove barriers to investment, or at least mitigate them? One thing it certainly cannot do is directly influence the challenging global setting. For certain other barriers, however, it is very much possible and preferable to tackle them through economic policy. I would like to address three such areas: energy and climate policy, bureaucratic hurdles and the labour market.

    4.1 Energy and climate policy

    The first area primarily concerns planning certainty and reliability in energy and climate policy. The terms planning certainty and reliability were not plucked out of thin air, as shown by the Economic Policy Uncertainty Index. Developed by the economists Scott Baker, Nicholas Bloom and Steven Davis, this index is based on the analysis of pertinent newspaper articles.[11] According to the index, economic policy uncertainty in Germany has risen much more strongly over the past few years than the average for Europe.[12] Deciding to invest in green technologies is mostly tied up with irreversible costs. So where there is uncertainty about future policy, firms understandably hesitate before making such decisions.

    Now, there is no doubt about the basic direction we’re heading in: we have to become carbon neutral if we care even just a little for the welfare of subsequent generations. But when it comes to the details, there is indeed uncertainty. How will the costs of fossil fuels develop? How will the costs of environmentally friendly energy develop and will there be a reliable supply? What will government regulation, taxation, and support look like?

    To reduce these kinds of uncertainties about the energy transition, it is vital that we have a transparent, purposeful and consistent overall framework. This framework includes having sufficient capacity to import and store climate-neutral energy, and back-up power plants for the event that a dunkelflaute – a period with no wind or sunlight – coincides with a period of high energy needs. And, of course, an efficient energy grid. It will therefore be increasingly important, too, to expand power lines connecting Germany from north to south, but also connecting us to our neighbours in Europe.

    The Bundesbank believes that the key instrument to achieve climate objectives should be a price on carbon emissions. This is because carbon pricing ensures that savings and investment are made where it is possible to do so with the lowest costs. However, the crucial thing is to apply carbon pricing as broadly, uniformly and predictably as possible.

    Ambitious carbon pricing not only creates incentives for the use of renewable energy, but also for greater energy efficiency. Our April Monthly Report showed how important advancements in energy efficiency are to not missing climate targets.[13] Increases in energy efficiency reduce aggregate energy intensity and thereby boost aggregate production. They thus counteract the activity-dampening stimuli likely to emanate from a higher carbon price.

    So the production losses or gains that would be associated with achieving climate goals depend not least on energy-saving technological progress. Besides carbon pricing, subsidies for research and development are one conceivable instrument to increase energy efficiency. However, subsidies should be used in a measured and purposeful manner.

    I’m not just concerned about the burden on government finances, which we naturally have to keep an eye on as well. When government interventions become too complex and too extensive, they can significantly distort market incentives. It is possible, for example, that firms keep putting off the necessary investment in the hopes of receiving future subsidies. Some subsidies still in place in the energy and transportation sectors actually run counter to the climate goals. To a certain extent, they therefore act in the same way as a negative carbon price.[14] And last but not least, excessive government intervention ultimately leads to bureaucratic hurdles.

    4.2 Bureaucratic hurdles

    That brings me to the second area where economic policy can improve the investment climate: the burden of bureaucracy. We should make a distinction between two different aspects here. First, there is the extent of requirements placed on firms. For example, there has recently been intense debate about the Supply Chain Act and questions surrounding data protection. In this respect, politicians should make sure they don’t throw the baby out with the bathwater. Even if the objectives are legitimate, the ability to implement measures has to be borne in mind.

    Second, the speed of bureaucracy is important. In Germany, congestion occurs not just on the motorways but also in approval processes. It can sometimes take years for a wind turbine to go into operation, say. When it comes to the pace and efficiency of bureaucracy, especially, we should consider digitalisation as a huge opportunity. Digital technologies can simplify and streamline administrative processes. Incidentally, that is very much in the interest of the administration seeing as it, too, is affected by the shortage of skilled workers. It would appear somewhat logical to bundle more processes when it comes to the digitalisation of administration.

    That means the targeted transferral of responsibilities to central units, which develop harmonised approaches in a cost-effective way. This would open the door to achieving economies of scale, if the relevant costs per process are reduced thanks to a larger area of application, say. What I’m thinking about here is the digitalisation of the tax administration, for instance. It could likely leverage efficiency reserves if certain tasks were delegated to a single unit. A modern form of federalism could also help us to leverage efficiency reserves, specifically when those responsible actually learn from the best practices of others.

    And I’m speaking on this not just as an economist, but also as the president of a large public authority. Dismantling bureaucracy and driving digitalisation often require enormous effort and persistence. But they also present huge opportunities. There’s a reason why the Society for the German Language listed “AI boom” as another “Word of the Year” in 2023, ranking it number eight.

    4.3 Labour market

    The third area where economic policy can play an important role is the labour market. You, as operators of businesses, have been complaining of a shortage of skilled workers for many years now. Quite apart from the current bout of economic weakness, the problem has been increasingly exacerbated by demographic change. And it will become even greater in the future.

    The number of vacancies per unemployed person is often used as an indicator of tightness in the labour market. Up until 2014, there were around three vacancies for every 10 unemployed persons.[15] At the moment, there are roughly six jobs available for every ten unemployed persons. And the number of vacancies has also climbed to an all-time high since the end of the pandemic and is barely coming down. There is a shortage of skilled workers, and a shortage of labour.

    There is a host of conceivable measures to reduce this shortage: open up better employment opportunities for women and older people, make a targeted play for skilled workers from abroad, strengthen vocational and further training, and do a better job of getting the long-term unemployed and immigrants into work.

    Equally, we shouldn’t lose sight of the groups that so far haven’t participated in the labour market – known as the “hidden reserve”. According to the Federal Statistical Office, Germany’s hidden reserve recently came to almost 3.2 million people.[16] Close to 60% of them have a mid to high-level qualification. Looking at the hidden reserve, there are significant differences between the genders. For example, many women state that they cannot work because they care for children or family members. We should make better use of this untapped potential labour force. Expanded care facilities for children or dependants requiring care are an important way to help more people enter the labour market.

    I am certain that many of you have already taken steps at your businesses to make it easier to reconcile work and family life: you operate kindergartens or have spaces reserved at other childcare facilities, offer flexible working time models or the option of working from home – the list of possibilities is long.

    The number of older persons in employment could be increased as well, for example if the statutory retirement age were linked to life expectancy after 2030. This would allow the ratio of retirement to working years to be more or less stabilised. Without this link, the ratio would carry on growing as life expectancy continues to rise. Also, in the short term, it might be worth considering limiting the financial incentives to take early retirement.

    After all, in the interests of preserving a good employment and investment climate, it is important to see to it that the tax burden on labour and capital remains reasonable. Germany, for instance, has a high corporate tax burden in comparison to other countries.[17]

    The Federal Government has the three economic policy areas I have just spoken about on its radar. This can be seen in this year’s growth initiative from 17 July. The bundle of 49 measures is intended – amongst other things – to increase incentives to work, including making it more attractive for older people to remain in work, accelerate the reduction of bureaucracy and secure the further expansion of renewable energy generation. The growth initiative is an important step in the right direction if Germany wants to rise to today’s challenges. Much depends on its implementation, however. And there is still much to be done.

    As an economist myself I must of course not forget what the term “budget constraints” implies: it is not easy to deal with all these challenges when the public purse is light. This being as it is, a critical evaluation of economic policy priorities is almost certainly unavoidable, and that evaluation will remain on the agenda even if the debt brake were to be reformed. The Bundesbank would tolerate a reform if it would continue to guarantee sound government finances. And we have proposed some stability-oriented reforms.

    4.4 More financing via the capital markets union

    I have gone over what politics and politicians can do to improve the investment climate in Germany. But whether or not an investment will pay off over the long term is not the only important factor. Any investment project must also be funded.

    That brings me to the European perspective. Because, all too often, businesses come up against internal European borders in their search for funding. An integrated capital market across the whole of Europe could give European businesses access to more funding for important private investments. But to forge that integrated pan-European capital market, we must make swift progress on both the banking and capital markets unions.

    To demonstrate my point with figures: securitisation markets in the EU saw a volume of around €800 billion in 2020. In the United States, this volume was at around US$3.2 trillion, excluding government-guaranteed products.[18] So that’s a different magnitude altogether, even though the United States and the EU have comparably large economies when measured by purchasing power parity.[19] The European securitisation market fell apart following the financial crisis and has never fully recovered since. The securitisation volume in the United States, on the other hand, has already exceeded pre-crisis levels, with the caveat that American market structures are not perfectly comparable with European ones.

    You may be thinking that securitisation has a bad reputation. And you would be right. After the 2008 financial crisis it was the poster child for “bad financial market innovations” and mainly brought to mind the sale of potentially non-performing loans to unsuspecting investors. As the head of the Bundesbank’s financial crisis management team at the time, I had an unmatched position from which to examine the dynamics of the crisis in detail.

    The financial crisis did indeed lay bare the weaknesses in the securitisation process, which can particularly come to bear in highly complex securitisation transactions. These related to deficits surrounding transparency, risk management and valuation methods. Properly structured and well regulated, though, securitisation vehicles can definitely offer added value to our economy. Securitisation markets complement other sources of long-term financing in the real economy. They give enterprises the opportunity to broaden their funding.

    This particularly applies to small and medium-sized enterprises, because securitisation gives them indirect access to capital market investors. Moreover, securitisation can relieve the pressure on bank balance sheets and open up additional scope for lending to the private sector. Well-regulated and structured securitisation markets could improve the allocation of resources in an economy and ensure a better distribution of risk.[20] This could reduce funding costs and increase economic growth.

    Support for the securitisation market is thus an important element of EU plans for a capital markets union. But there are others. The creation of integrated financial supervisory structures is planned. National insolvency rules, accounting and securities law are to be harmonised. The goal is to create a level playing field for all financial market participants operating at the EU level. And so long as this goal remains abstract, pretty much nobody has a problem with it. As soon as concrete decisions and negotiations enter the picture, however, unity often dissipates. Harmonising national rules is impossible without compromise, after all.

    Happily, more and more European policymakers are coming around to the view that we urgently need a common capital market. There’s been some movement on that front in the last few months. I think, for example, that we have made good progress towards developing a European securitisation market. We need to break down the barriers separating European capital markets one by one!

    5 Conclusion

    Ladies and gentlemen,

    As far as the structural challenges are concerned, we need to set the necessary changes in motion and make them fit for purpose. I am certain we can achieve that. The underpinnings of Germany’s industrial machine are still intact, and Germany’s position as an industrial and investment location is better than its present reputation implies. After recording sluggish growth at the turn of the millennium, Germany ranked as an economic powerhouse in Europe for more than decade.[21] Perhaps that should inspire us to invest shrewdly and sufficiently in our future.

    Economic policymaking can lay a solid foundation for that investment, but it is not all-powerful. It all comes down to enterprises and their employees in the end. Academic studies show that family businesses have greater resilience when in crisis mode than other enterprises.[22] I therefore firmly believe that all of you, as operators of family-owned businesses, continue to play an important role in ensuring the German economy rises to the challenges it faces today. And thus in ensuring that Germany remains ready for what the future holds

    Footnotes:

    1. EY and University of St. Gallen Global Family Business Index.
    2. EY, How the largest family enterprises are outstripping global economic growth, 16 January 2023.
    3. Society for the German Language, GfdS wählt »Krisenmodus« zum Wort des Jahres 2023, press release of 8 December 2023.
    4. Eckl-Dorna et al., Germany’s Days as an Industrial Superpower Are Coming to an End, Bloomberg.com, 10 February 2024.
    5. Ewing, J., The decline of Germany, Bloomberg Businessweek, 16 February 2003.
    6. Steingart, G. (2004), Deutschland – der Abstieg eines Superstars, Munich.
    7. Brand, S., D. Römer and M. Schwarz, Investing EUR 5 trillion to reach climate neutrality – a surmountable challenge, KfW Research No 350
    8. McKinsey & Company (2021), Net-zero Germany: Chances and challenges on the path to climate neutrality by 2045
    9. EY, Ausländische Investitionen in Deutschland sinken im sechsten Jahr in Folge – niedrigster Stand seit 2013, press release of 2 May 2024.
    10. Deutsche Bundesbank, Domestic investment barriers faced by German enterprises, Monthly Report, May 2024.
    11. Baker, S. R., N. Bloom and S. J. Davis (2016), Measuring Economic Policy Uncertainty, The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Vol. 131(4), pp. 1539‑1636.
    12. Economic Policy Uncertainty Index
    13. Deutsche Bundesbank, Energy efficiency improvements: implications for carbon emissions and economic output in Germany, Monthly Report, April 2024.
    14. Plötz et al. (2024), Climate-damaging subsidies correspond to negative CO2 prices, Kopernikus-Projekt Ariadne, Potsdam.
    15. IAB, IABMonitor Arbeitskräftebedarf 1/2024: Die Zahl der offenen Stellen ist im Vergleich zum Vorjahresquartal um rund ein Zehntel gesunken, 25 June 2024.
    16. Federal Statistical Office, Ungenutztes Arbeitskräftepotenzial 2023: Knapp 3,2 Millionen Menschen in „Stiller Reserve“, press release No 192 of 16 May 2024.
    17. See Leibniz Centre for European Economic Research (ZEW), Mannheim Tax Index – Effective Tax Burdens in Country Comparison .
    18. See EBA (2022), Joint Committee advice on the review of the securitisation prudential framework (Banking), p. 24. For comparison purposes, the total volume of the US securitisation market (US$13,131 billion) was adjusted for agency ABSs (75%), while the total volume of the EU securitisation market (€3,058 billion) was adjusted for mortgage CBs (63%) and other CBs (11%).
    19. See Eurostat (2024), Purchasing power parities in Europe and the world – Statistics Explained (europa.eu)
    20. ECB and the Bank of England, The impaired EU securitisation market: causes, roadblocks and how to deal with them, discussion paper, March 2014.
    21. Dustmann et al. (2014), From Sick Man of Europe to Economic Superstar: Germany’s Resurgent Economy, Journal of Economic Perspectives, Vol. 28(1), pp. 167‑188.
    22. Buchner et al. (2021), Resilienz von Familienunternehmen – Eine systematische Literaturanalyse, Betriebswirtschaftliche Forschung und Praxis 73, Vol. 3, pp. 225 f.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Welcome speech | Speech delivered at the Bundesbank´s representative office

    Source: Bundesbank

    Check against delivery.

    1 Welcome

    Ladies and Gentlemen:

    For me, it is always a great pleasure to be here. Especially this year, as we celebrate the 15th anniversary of our trading office. Since its inception in April 2009, the trading office has provided the Bundesbank Executive Board with first-hand knowledge from Wall Street and beyond.

    I know for sure that its success rests on a network of exceptional people, namely you! Therefore, I want to start with a big thank you to all of you, for your cooperation and trust over all these years. But before we move on to the fun part, let us look at what has happened in the markets since we last met in September 2023.

    2 Economic backdrop

    From an economic point of view, the world looked different a year ago. Inflation in the euro area – and in the US too – was significantly higher. Almost a year ago to the day [Sept. 2023], the Eurosystem raised its key interest rates for the last time in the tightening cycle. In September 2023, the deposit facility rate reached 4.0 percent. The tightening has done its part to cool euro area inflation. Today, the Eurosystem is well on the way to meeting its inflation target.

    In the US, we also see positive developments in this regard. Inflation has decreased significantly, thanks to a series of interest rate increases. Although US inflation remains above the Fed’s two percent target, things are heading in the right direction – just like in the euro area. In terms of economic growth, the US remains ahead of the euro area. While euro-area GDP grew by 0.4 percent last year[1], the US economy mustered 2.5 percent growth[2]. As it stands today, the US is poised to outperform the euro-area economy once again this year – despite recent signs of a cooling in the US labour market.

    Against the backdrop of lower inflation, central banks on both sides of the Atlantic have taken steps to pare back the degree of monetary-policy restrictiveness. As expected, the Fed last week [Sept. 18] decided to lower its target range for the federal funds rate for the first time in the current cycle.

    In the euro area, the ECB’s Governing Council lowered the deposit facility rate twice already, in June and September, bringing it to 3.5 percent. The Eurosystem also narrowed the spread between the main refinancing rate and the deposit rate from 50 to 15 basis points. The latter step was no surprise. It had already been announced in the context of our Operational Framework Review in March. While excess liquidity will remain high over the coming years, it will gradually decline as part of our monetary policy normalisation. By reducing the spread between the main financing rate and the deposit facility rate, the Eurosystem aims to limit future swings in money market rates, while maintaining incentives for more market activity. We will continue to closely monitor developments in the money markets and other refinancing markets. 

    3 What else have we achieved?

    The Eurosystem – and the Fed – are continuing to shrink their balance sheets. In the euro area, we stopped reinvesting bond redemptions from the asset purchase programme APP [from July 2023 on]. And the Eurosystem is phasing out the remaining reinvestments of redemptions from the Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme [PEPP] by the end of this year. Furthermore, euro-area banks have repaid the overwhelming share of their long-term crisis loans, the TLTROs. 

    In the US, you are well aware that the Fed had started to reduce its securities holdings approximately a year earlier.

    From a central bank perspective, there are good reasons for this withdrawal of liquidity. With the end of negative [and zero] interest rates, an important reason for large-scale bond purchases has vanished. Furthermore, large balance sheets of central banks can lead to market distortions. They may lead to collateral scarcity or a deterioration of market liquidity. Finally, yet importantly, central banks should only intervene in financial markets to the degree necessary for monetary policy purposes.

    It is encouraging that, so far, the balance sheet reduction has been well received by financial markets. Investors have adapted to a market with fewer central bank purchases and hence less ample liquidity provision. Market functioning remains largely robust.

    4 What challenges lie ahead?

    Ladies and Gentlemen:

    While central banks have made good progress in normalising their monetary policy stance, challenges remain. Let me briefly address three of them.

    First, despite the wave of high inflation nearing its end, we are not there yet. We shouldn’t celebrate prematurely. When it comes to interest rate cuts and their size, we are not flying on autopilot. We must remain vigilant and be wary of the risks on the path back to price stability. That’s our job and that’s what we are committed to delivering. 

    Second, recent market turbulences in early August were brief, but they serve as a warning shot. They show how sensitively markets can react to monetary policy steps – in this case combined with crowded positions in financial markets and macroeconomic triggers. 

    Third, another important factor to watch is China, which faces numerous challenges, including deflationary tendencies in some parts of the economy. Let‘s see how the markets perceive the latest decisions of the PBOC.

    5 Conclusion

    To sum up, markets have coped well with the withdrawal of central bank liquidity. Greater market fluctuations – like those in early August – have so far proven to be limited and temporary. I find this very encouraging. 

    Nevertheless, there is still work to do. We are not completely back to price stability. And central banks will continue to reduce their balance sheets, depending on their individual reduction targets. When it comes to balance sheet size, “less may be more” – as long as liquidity conditions in money markets remain relaxed over-all.

    Footnotes:

    1. Vgl. https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/web/products-euro-indicators/-/2-08032024-ap#:~:text=GDP%20growth%20in%20the%20euro%20area%20and%20the%20EU,-In%20the%20fourth&text=For%20the%20year%202023%20as,the%20third%20quarter%20of%202023). (aufgerufen am 12.09.2024)
    2.  Vgl. https://www.bea.gov/sites/default/files/2024-08/gdp2q24-2nd.pdf
    3. https://www.bea.gov/sites/default/files/2024-08/gdp2q24-2nd.pdf

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI USA: Fourth Annual Women in STEM Conference Gains Traction

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    Women in the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics fields are experiencing a new period of growth, acceptance, and respect in the modern workforce. 

    But when UConn alumna Jeanine Armstrong Gouin studied civil engineering in the 1980s, it was hard to feel welcome in an engineering building that didn’t even have a women’s bathroom. 

    Despite the dreary beginning, Gouin (who graduated in 1987, about four years before the Castleman Building installed women’s restrooms) delivered an inspirational message to an audience of young female STEM students last week.

    A member of the audience asks a question during the Q&A portion of the Career Panel.

    The Women in STEM Frontiers in Research Expo (WiSFiRE) was held on Friday at the UConn Storrs campus. It brought together university undergraduate and graduate students, faculty, staff, alumni, and STEM employees and supporters. 

    WiSFiRE was one of the first conferences in the region to specifically highlight the work of women researchers in STEM. That mission has been solidified through a recent endowment by Gouin.

    Gouin, who is both a UConn Trustee and U.S. division president of environmental consulting firm SLR International Corp., made an undisclosed gift in July to endow the Jeanine Armstrong Gouin Initiative for Women in Leadership at the UConn College of Engineering. 

    The gift will provide financial support for leadership programs and activities that are available to all engineering students, not just women.   

    Part of that endowment will continue to support WiSFiRE.

    Friday’s event included panels, technical talks, and networking opportunities for the men and women leading the STEM fields today. 

    Speakers, panelists and moderators included: Gouin; physics professor Nora Berrah; alumna and University of Kentucky professor Gosia Chwatko; earth sciences professor Ran Feng; animal science professor Sarah Reed; chemical and biomolecular engineering professor Kristina Wagstrom; civil and environmental engineering professor Guiling Wang; electrical and computer engineering professor Zongjie Wang; statistics professor Elizabeth Schifano; biomedical engineering professor Leila Daneshmandi; civil and environmental engineering professor Alexandra Hain; molecular and cell biology professor Kat Milligan-McClellan; biomedical engineering professor Kristin Morgan; civil and environmental engineering professor Fatemeh Fakhrmoosavi; animal science professor Maria Gracia Gervasi; mechanical, aerospace, and manufacturing engineering professor SeungYeon Kang; computing professor Lina Kloub; chemistry professor Priya Shah; pharmacy professor Kristin Waters, and mathematics professor Xiaodong Yan. 

    The expo is co-chaired by UConn Engineering professors Qian Yang and Anna Tarakanova. 

    To the students and budding engineers, UConn faculty advised them to challenge themselves, answer the unanswered questions, get involved, and above all else, be the hard worker they always dreamed of being. 

    “Learn the skills you know you need to learn,” Wagstrom said. “Critically look at everything you’re producing. You are the best judge of your own work.” 

    Tarakanova explained that through Gouin’s support, they hope to build momentum throughout the year, with smaller events and opportunities to gather together between the annual exposition. 

    Jeanine Armstrong Gouin presenting during the fourth annual WiSFiRE.

    “We look to establish more mentor/mentee models through the STEM fields in the university,” Tarakanova said. “While many of us are blessed to have found our ‘home’ of supporters early on in our careers, there are many young women who still need to find their ‘STEM sisters.’” 

    After the event, participants supplied feedback about the days’s offerings. 

    “I personally enjoyed seeing that many amazing women in STEM,” one participant said. “It’s been a long time since the last time I felt welcome in an academic environment, but this event reminded me of who I always wanted to be.” 

    Students enjoyed the opportunities for networking, and the panel speakers. 

    “I enjoyed talking to other people, hearing the inspirational words, and hearing students present research,” one student commented. “I didn’t realize how intimidated I was by research before, and this experience has given me confidence and assurance that I can do it too.” 

    View photos from the event online. 

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Governor Newsom signs legislation to restrict polluting oil & gas operations near schools, daycares, and across communities

    Source: US State of California 2

    Sep 25, 2024

    What you need to know: New laws will give local communities more authority to protect their neighborhoods from oil and gas operations and drive faster plugging of old oil and gas wells. 

    INGLEWOOD, CA – Governor Gavin Newsom today signed three bills into law allowing communities to restrict oil drilling and help the state address polluting idle wells. The legislation will help protect public health, the environment, and empower local communities to set greater protections around oil and gas activities in their neighborhoods.

    “The health of our communities always comes first. These new laws allow local leaders to limit dangerous oil and gas activities near homes, schools, and other areas as they see fit for their communities, and give the state more tools to make sure that idle and low-producing wells get plugged sooner. This builds off of our all-of-the-above efforts to protect communities from pollution and hold Big Oil accountable.”

    Governor Gavin Newsom

    Empowering local communities to restrict oil and gas operations

    AB 3233 by Assemblymember Dawn Addis (D-Morro Bay) gives cities and counties greater authority to impose restrictions on oil and gas operations, including by limiting or prohibiting new oil and gas developments in their jurisdictions. By providing local jurisdictions with the power to make these decisions, California is taking a major step toward protecting vulnerable communities from the health impacts of industrial operations. The bill overrides recent court decisions that blocked ordinances limiting oil drilling adopted by the voters of Monterey County and the Los Angeles City Council. 

    “The signing of AB 3233 is vital win for communities across the Central Coast, and all of California,” said Assemblymember Dawn Addis (D-Morro Bay). “Putting this bill into law affirms our right to clean air and water, free of oil and gas pollution. I’m thankful to Governor Gavin Newsom for signing this important bill into law, to my colleagues for helping me get it to his desk, and to the many community-members and leaders who have been fighting this battle with me. Today is a huge win for the well-being of all Californians.”

    Addressing the dangers of idle wells in communities

    AB 1866 by Assemblymember Gregg Hart (D-Santa Barbara) addresses the growing problem of idle oil and gas wells across the state. These wells, which are no longer in active use but have not been properly decommissioned, pose a significant risk to both the environment and nearby communities. Under this new law, fees on idle wells are increased and stricter regulations will be enforced to ensure that oil companies are held responsible for maintaining and safely plugging idle wells, preventing leaks and contamination.

    “This is a landmark victory for taxpayers and communities most affected by the harmful health impacts of neighborhood oil drilling,“ said Assemblymember Gregg Hart (D-Santa Barbara). “I am proud of this decisive action we are taking today to hold the oil industry responsible for plugging over 40,000 idle oil wells across California. I want to thank Governor Newsom for recognizing the urgency of solving the idle oil well crisis in the state.”

    Shutting down more oil wells in the Inglewood Oil Field

    AB 2716 by Assemblymember Isaac Bryan (D-Los Angeles) prohibits the operation of low-oil production oil and gas wells located in an oil field within the Baldwin Hills Conservancy (Inglewood Oil Field) and imposes a $10,000 per month penalty on these wells until they are permanently plugged and abandoned. Penalty funds will go to projects like park creation to benefit the community. 

    “The Inglewood Oil Field is the largest urban oil field in our state. Production in recent years has been marginal, but for decades the negative health impacts surrounding it have cost the nearby community with their life expectancy,” said Assemblymember Bryan. “Today, with Governor Newsom’s signature, we will finally shut it down and establish the state’s first repair fund for the frontline communities who have been organizing for years to be seen, heard, and protected.”

    California’s leadership in holding Big Oil accountable

    Together, these laws mark another step forward in California’s ongoing efforts to cut pollution and protect communities. 

    Just last month, Governor Newsom announced a plan to further hold Big Oil accountable for profiting off of Californians while polluting our communities – preventing gas price spikes and saving people money at the pump.

    The state notched a major victory against Big Oil in June, with the industry pulling its referendum to repeal California’s law protecting neighborhoods from the dangerous impacts of drilling. This allowed California’s law requiring setbacks – that oil drilling can’t be within 3,200 feet of sensitive community areas like schools, daycares, and more – to move forward, a crucial protection for public health and safety.  
     
    Last year, California sued Big Oil for more than 50 years of deception, cover-up, and damage that have cost California taxpayers billions of dollars in health and environmental impacts.

    Recent news

    News SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom today announced the following appointments:Steve Juarez, of Truckee, has been appointed to the California State Teachers’ Retirement Board. Juarez served as a Deputy State Treasurer at the California State Treasurer’s Office…

    News What you need to know: Governor Newsom today signed a bipartisan legislative package to further reinforce California’s nation-leading gun laws and prevent traumatic incidents of mass violence. The laws build on California’s successful strategies to address gun…

    News What you need to know: Governor Newsom signed two bills to boost access to affordable housing for California’s farmworkers: AB 2240 and AB 3035. Governor Newsom also signed SB 1105 to help protect the health and safety of farmworkers in states of emergency….

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: CFTC Orders Swap Dealer to Pay $1.5 Million Penalty for Position Limit Violations, and Supervision and Position Limit Monitoring Failures

    Source: US Commodity Futures Trading Commission

    — The Commodity Futures Trading Commission today issued an order filing and settling charges against Merrill Lynch Commodities, Inc., based in Houston, for exceeding the federal and ICE Futures U.S. position limits in contracts that reference natural gas futures traded on the New York Mercantile Exchange and for swap dealer supervision and position limit monitoring failures.

    MLCI admits the facts in the order in section II.C.1, Position Limit Violations; acknowledges its conduct in that section violated the Commodity Exchange Act and CFTC regulations; and otherwise, neither admits nor denies the findings of fact.

    “Federal and exchange position limits are important guardrails that help ensure the integrity of our markets and entities must comply,” said Director of Enforcement Ian McGinley. “Additionally, swap dealers must comply with the business conduct standards in the CEA and CFTC regulations, including diligently supervising their employees and agents and monitoring for position limit violations.”

    The order requires MLCI to pay a $1.5 million civil monetary penalty, cease and desist from further violations of the CEA and CFTC regulations as charged, and comply with conditions and undertakings specified in the order. 

    Case Background

    The CFTC established federal speculative position limits for certain physical-delivery referenced contracts, including the NYMEX Henry Hub Natural Gas Futures (NG) contract. The financially settled ICE Henry LD1 Fixed Price Futures (H) contract references the monthly settlement price published by NYMEX for its NG futures contract. The federal speculative position limit for ICE H contracts, as well as the exchange-set limit, is 2,000 NYMEX NG futures equivalents.

    The order finds on certain trading days during March and April 2023, MLCI held positions in the April 2023, and May 2023, ICE H futures contract, respectively, that ranged from more than 200 contracts to nearly 1,000 contracts in excess of both the federal speculative position limit and the exchange speculative position limit, and MLCI’s positions did not meet the requirements for an exemption under CFTC Regulation 150.3. MLCI also had not been granted an exemption applicable to the relevant positions by the exchange in accordance with ICE’s rules during the relevant period.     

    The order also finds MLCI, a swap dealer registered with the CFTC, did not establish and enforce written policies and procedures reasonably designed to monitor for and prevent violations of applicable federal, exchange, or swap execution facility position limits and to monitor for and prevent improper reliance upon any exemptions or exclusions from such position limits. Additionally, the order finds MLCI did not diligently supervise its employees by lacking an early warning system and written policies and procedures reasonably designed to detect and alert its senior management when position limits were in danger of being breached.

    The order acknowledges MLCI’s cooperation and its representations concerning its remediation in connection with this matter.

    The CFTC thanks ICE for its assistance in this matter.

    The Division of Enforcement staff responsible for this matter are Karin N. Roth, Carrie Kennedy, Gates S. Hurand, Lenel Hickson, Jr., and Manal M. Sultan.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Climate and Health Solutions (CHS) India Conclave jointly organized by Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Government of India and Asian Development Bank inaugurated today in Delhi

    Source: Government of India

    Climate and Health Solutions (CHS) India Conclave jointly organized by Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Government of India and Asian Development Bank inaugurated today in Delhi

    Two-day Conclave aims to address twin emergencies of climate change and public health by bringing together policymakers, experts and stakeholders to develop actionable strategies for India’s health sector

    The Ministry is committed to developing robust strategies that protect the health of our citizens while contributing to global climate goals: Shri Apurva Chandra, Secretary, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare

    India’s leadership through G20 Presidency has been instrumental in bringing this issue to the global forefront, and through collaboration with key partners like the Asian Development Bank, we have a unique opportunity to shape resilient and adaptive health systems: Shri Amitabh Kant, G20 Sherpa

    Posted On: 25 SEP 2024 3:41PM by PIB Delhi

    The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW), Government of India, in collaboration with the Asian Development Bank (ADB), inaugurated the Climate and Health Solutions (CHS) India Conclave at Delhi. The two-day conclave aims to address the twin emergencies of climate change and public health by bringing together policymakers, experts, and stakeholders to develop actionable strategies for India’s health sector.

     

    Shri Apurva Chandra, Secretary, MoHFW, in his keynote address highlighted the urgent need for integrating climate considerations into health planning. He said that “The Climate and Health Solutions India Conclave is a testament to our commitment to building a climate-resilient health system that addresses the unique needs of developing nations like ours. India is leading by example, integrating climate considerations into our health policies and emergency response mechanisms.”

     

    Shri Apurva Chandra further added that “we are proud to collaborate with the Asian Development Bank and other global partners to ensure that our health sector is equipped to tackle unforeseen climate impacts and support sustainable development for all. Together, we can achieve the vision of ‘One Health, One Family, One Future.”

    Addressing the gathering, Ms. Punya Salila Srivastava, OSD, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, highlighted the steps taken to integrate climate considerations into health planning. She said India has taken proactive steps in integrating climate change considerations into its public health policies. A pivotal moment in this journey was the creation of the Mission on Climate Change and Health, nearly a decade ago, under the Prime Minister’s Council on Climate Change. In 2019, the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare introduced the National Programme on Climate Change and Human Health (NPCCHH) under the National Health Mission.”

    She further added that India’s National Action Plan on Climate Change and Health has served as a blueprint for nearly all States and Union Territories to develop their respective State Action Plans. The next ambition, for a whole-of-government and whole-of-society approach, is for each district to assess their vulnerability and develop tailored climate change and health action plans.

    Shri Amitabh Kant, G20 Sherpa, Government of India, in the Presidential Address, emphasized the importance of India’s leadership, scale and size in demonstrating the leapfrogging of development pathways at the intersection of climate change and health for India and the world, remarking, As we confront rising temperatures, unpredictable weather patterns, and the growing burden on healthcare systems, it is critical that we design integrated, sustainable solutions that safeguard the health of our people and our planet. India’s leadership through the G20 Presidency has been instrumental in bringing this issue to the global forefront, and through collaboration with key partners like the Asian Development Bank, we have a unique opportunity to shape resilient and adaptive health systems. Together, we can forge a path that ensures the well-being of future generations while addressing the urgent imperatives of climate action.”

    Ms. Leena Nandan, Secretary, Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, discussed India’s progress on sustainable development and the country’s commitments to climate and environmental goals. Underscoring the significance of cross-sectoral collaboration to achieve climate resilience, she stated, “We need macro-planning to address the challenges posed by climate change, particularly in areas like health and resource management. Health system readiness is key to adapting and ensuring a coordinated, complete, and comprehensive approach.”

    Ms. Ayako Inagaki, Senior Director, Human and Social Development Sector Office, Sectors Group, Asian Development Bank stated, “The convergence of climate change and public health presents an urgent challenge that demands collaborative action. India’s vast and diverse landscapes make it a key battleground for addressing climate-induced health risks. Through collective efforts, we can build resilient, sustainable health systems capable of withstanding the evolving impacts of climate change. The Climate and Health Solutions India conclave marks a significant step toward uniting policymakers, experts, and stakeholders in shaping a healthier, climate-resilient future for all.”

    From pledges to implementation, India is leading the climate and health movement from global agenda building to national-level contextualization, and on-ground execution. The conclave, including participation from various government agencies such as the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change (MoEFCC), G20 Secretariat, National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), Indian Meteorological Department (IMD), and National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), aims to foster dialogue on building climate-resilient health systems, infrastructure and supply chains. Leading development partners, private institutions and respective representatives from the state governments and the private sector have been invited to share their experiences and insights.

    During the conclave, participants will engage on in-depth strategic and operational deliberations on eight deep-dive roundtable discussions on topics such as Adapting to Climate Change through Urban Heat Mapping and Management, Climate, Vector-Borne Diseases and One Health, Surveillance and Early Warning Systems, Health Based Action for Clean Air, Addressing Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs), Mental Health and Nutrition, and Climate Resilient and Responsive Health Infrastructure and Systems for Extreme Weather Events.

    The call for action and package of CHS conclave outcomes includes stimulating dialogue on a nuanced understanding of climate and health challenges and tailored policies for different states and stakeholders in the country, co-creating a comprehensive roadmap and implementation plan to formulate robust policies, initiatives and innovations, identifying core climate and health process, product and technology innovations that can be piloted, scaled and mainstreamed in national and sub-national health plans, and to initiate public and private sector engagement in designing and delivering climate resilient healthcare. The CHS India Conclave underscores the dedication of the Government of India and the Asian Development Bank in advancing climate and health solutions in alignment with international and national leadership and commitments of India.

     

     

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    MV/ AKS

    HFW/ CHS India Conclave/25th September 2024/2

    (Release ID: 2058596) Visitor Counter : 46

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Chairman McCaul Speaks on the House Floor Condemning Biden-Harris Admin for Failures During the Afghanistan Withdrawal

    Source: US House Committee on Foreign Affairs

    Media Contact 202-226-8467

    Washington, D.C. – Today, House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Michael McCaul delivered remarks on the House floor in support of his resolution H.Res. 1469, “Ensuring Accountability For Key Officials In The Biden-Harris Administration Responsible For Decisionmaking And Execution Failures Throughout The Withdrawal From Afghanistan.” Chairman McCaul’s resolution condemns 15 Biden-Harris administration officials for their dereliction of duty in the deadly withdrawal from Afghanistan. During his remarks, Chairman McCaul emphasized his resolution is the first step to holding the Biden-Harris administration accountable for one of the worst foreign policy failures in United States history on behalf of U.S. servicemembers, Gold Star families, and the American people.

    WATCH HERE

    – Remarks as Delivered –

    Mr. Speaker, three years ago, the world witnessed one of the most devastating foreign policy disasters in American history. The Biden-Harris administration withdrew all U.S. forces from Afghanistan with no plan, no care, and no remorse.

    As a result, 13 brave U.S. servicemembers and over 170 Afghan civilians were murdered, and 45 U.S. servicemembers and countless others were injured.

    Just this month, National Security Council Spokesperson John Kirby was asked whether there had been any accountability for the administration’s deadly and chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan.

    He responded, ‘We’ve all held ourselves accountable.’

    That answer, Mr. Speaker, is detached from all reality.

    Today, the administration touts that deadly withdrawal as a success, and they have yet to hold a single person accountable for their role in this tragedy.  In fact, many of those responsible for this catastrophe have actually been promoted.

    If the administration refuses to hold itself accountable, then Congress must.

    On April 14, 2021, the president announced the Biden-Harris administration would withdraw all troops from Afghanistan.  No matter the cost or the consequences.

    They ignored the Taliban’s violations of the Doha agreement.

    They ignored objections by our nation’s top military and intelligence experts.

    And they ignored objections by our NATO allies.

    According to the administration’s own admission, the Doha Agreement was, ‘immaterial,’ to that decision.

    Following President Biden’s go-to-zero order, the Taliban captured province after province in Afghanistan and the collapse was all but set in stone.

    Astoundingly, this administration did nothing to plan for an evacuation. Instead, they denied threats to American interests, American citizens, and our decades-long Afghan partners.   

    On August 15, 2021, after months of Taliban advances, Kabul fell. The administration’s utter failure to prepare became painfully clear.

    President Biden claimed the very next day that his administration, ‘had planned for all contingencies.’

    Nothing could be further from the truth.

    At every step, the administration prioritized the optics and politics of the withdrawal over the security of U.S. personnel and diplomats on the ground.

    To protect their partisan aims, they ignored the well-known terrorist threats from ISIS-K and the Taliban to our servicemembers, diplomats, citizens, and allies

    The Biden-Harris administration instead chose to treat the Taliban – the very terrorists we had been fighting for 20 years – as security partners for god sake, security partners, during the evacuation.

    This administration created the very environment that allowed an ISIS-K terrorist to pass through a Taliban checkpoint. Because Mr. Speaker, we put the Taliban in charge of the checkpoint. And guess who let the suicide bomber through, the Taliban.

    The result: the deadliest day for American troops in Afghanistan since 2012.

    And on August 26, 2021, that terrorist detonated a suicide vest, murdering 13 U.S. servicemembers and over 170 Afghan civilians, [and] injuring 45 U.S. servicemembers and countless civilians.

    Rather than admit their failure, this administration continues to this day to celebrate their deadly evacuation. Never once have they said, ‘I am sorry,’ to the Gold Star families it took the Speaker of the House and the Congressional Gold Medal ceremony to say, ‘I am sorry for what your government did to you.’

    Just yesterday, President Biden proclaimed to the world that his withdrawal was, ‘the right decision.’

    I believe that is shameful.

    When I became chairman, I launched an investigation so that we, the Congress, could work to ensure that what happened in Afghanistan never happens again.

    And, as everyone here knows, you cannot fix a problem without first admitting there is a problem. That’s what accountability is all about.

    My 353-page report on this investigation works to provide that accountability.

    So today, we take the first step in fixing the problem by holding those accountable, those leaders who were derelict in their duty and are responsible for this disaster. They are:

    • Joseph Biden, President of the United States.
    • Kamala Harris, Vice President of the United States.
    • Jake Sullivan, National Security Advisor.
    • Jonathan Finer, Assistant to the President and Deputy National Security Advisor.
    • Elizabeth Sherwood-Randall, Assistant to the President for Homeland Security and Deputy National Security Advisor.
    • John Kirby, National Security Council Spokesperson and former Defense Department Spokesperson.
    • Jen Psaki, Former White House Press Secretary.
    • Antony Blinken, U.S. Secretary of State.
    • Brian McKeon, Former Deputy Secretary of State.
    • Ross Wilson, U.S. Ambassador and former Chief of Mission to U.S. Embassy Kabul.
    • Zalmay Khalilzad, U.S. Ambassador and former Special Representative for Afghanistan Reconciliation.
    • Ned Price, Deputy to the U.S. Representative to the United Nations and former State Department Spokesperson.
    • Lloyd Austin, U.S. Secretary of Defense.
    • Derek Chollet, Chief of Staff to Secretary Austin and former Counselor to Secretary Blinken. 
    • And finally, Colin Kahl, Former Under Secretary of Defense for Policy.

    The American people, U.S servicemembers, veterans, and most importantly the Gold Star families deserve this. They deserve transparency and they deserve Mr. Speaker, accountability.

    This measure is the first step towards that, and I urge my colleagues to support it.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Rep. Mike Levin’s Statement Supporting Government Funding Extension

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Sander Levin (9th District of Michigan)

    September 25, 2024

    Bill Prevents Government Shutdown & Avoids Extremist Republican Proposals that Hurt Our Nation’s Veterans & Families

    Washington, D.C. – Rep. Mike Levin (CA-49) today released the following statement regarding his vote in support of the short-term government funding bill to extend current funding levels through December 20, 2024.

    “I voted for the short-term government funding bill because a shutdown would have been harmful to our service members, families, and workers. I’m pleased this bill does not contain the extremist provisions proposed by House Republicans that threaten our democratic voting rights and national security. It represents a bipartisan solution that will keep the government running into December.

    “That said, I’m disappointed we could not reach an agreement that addresses the Veterans Health Administration’s $12 billion budget shortfall. This lack of funding could jeopardize veterans’ medical care and health services. I will continue to advocate for veterans and their benefits in upcoming funding bills that will be negotiated at the end of the year.

    “However, the ongoing budget fights that require us to pass short-term funding bills are emblematic of the ongoing dysfunction and chaos within the House Republican conference. They have been unable to pass a year-long government funding legislation that puts us on a stable fiscal footing.

    “Ultimately, we need to work together to pass year-long government funding every fiscal year in a timely manner to tackle our nation’s challenges. I am committed to doing just that.”

    ##

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Upgrades to Chilkoot Way route in Whitehorse 

    Source: Government of Canada News (2)

    News release

    Whitehorse, Yukon, September 25, 2024 — Every day commuting and travel will be improved on the Chilkoot Way route in Whitehorse after a joint investment of $850,000 from the federal government and the City of Whitehorse.

    Upgrades include the installation of a new two-way protected bicycle lane on the north side of Chilkoot Way, a new pedestrian crossing, signage, crossing markings at high conflict areas and improved lighting. As well, there will be upgrades to traffic lights, an additional advance left turn signal at Chilkoot and Two Mile Hill, and a new cyclist push button for better accessibility. The cycling route will connect residents to downtown schools, the Whitehorse Health Clinic, workplaces and retail destinations along the riverfront, and routes between neighbourhoods.

    Improving the Chilkoot Way route provides a more accessible and safer active transportation connection to the existing Riverfront and Two Mile Hill multi-use paved pathways, and will make travelling easier for those who are walking, cycling or using transit.

    Quotes

    “The improvement of active transportation routes for communities supports healthier ways for people to travel. Upgrades to the Chilkoot Way route in Whitehorse will make transportation infrastructure for cyclists, pedestrians and transit users easier and more accessible as they travel to where they need to go every day.”

    The Honourable Sean Fraser, Minister of Housing, Infrastructure and Communities

    “We are pleased to partner with the federal government to enhance the active transportation network in Whitehorse. The new active transportation route along Chilkoot Way is a game changer for cyclists moving into and out of the downtown core. It also promotes inclusivity, health and connection, catering to everyone, regardless of physical mobility, age or fitness level. This project represents the City’s ongoing commitment to developing a more sustainable and accessible community.”

    Her Worship Laura Cabott, Mayor of Whitehorse

    Quick facts

    • The federal government is investing $588,750 in this project through the Active Transportation Fund (ATF), and the City of Whitehorse is contributing $261,250.

    • Active transportation refers to the movement of people or goods powered by human activity. It includes walking, cycling and the use of human-powered or hybrid mobility aids such as wheelchairs, scooters, e-bikes, rollerblades, snowshoes, cross-country skis, and more.

    • In support of Canada’s National Active Transportation Strategy, the Active Transportation Fund is providing $400 million over five years, starting in 2021, to make travel by active transportation easier, safer, more convenient, and more enjoyable.

    • The National Active Transportation Strategy is the country’s first coast-to-coast-to-coast strategic approach for promoting active transportation and its benefits. The strategy’s aim is to make data-driven and evidence-based investments to build new and expanded active transportation networks, while supporting equitable, healthy, active, and sustainable travel options.

    • Investing in active transportation infrastructure provides many tangible benefits, such as creating employment opportunities, strengthening the economy, promoting healthier lifestyles, ensuring equitable access to services and opportunities, cutting air and noise pollution, and reducing greenhouse gas emissions. 

    • Beginning in 2026-2027, the new Canada Public Transit Fund (CPTF) will provide an average of $3 billion a year of permanent funding to respond to local transit needs by enhancing integrated planning, improving access to public transit and active transportation, and supporting the development of more affordable, sustainable, and inclusive communities. 

    • The CPTF supports transit and active transportation investments in three streams: Metro Region Agreements, Baseline Funding, and Targeted Funding.

    • We are currently accepting Expression of Interest submissions for Metro-Region Agreements and Baseline Funding. Visit the Housing, Infrastructure and Communities Canada website for more information.

    Associated links

    Contacts

    For more information (media only), please contact:

    Sofia Ouslis
    Communications Advisor
    Office of the Minister of Housing, Infrastructure and Communities
    Sofia.ouslis@infc.gc.ca

    Media Relations
    Housing, Infrastructure and Communities Canada
    613-960-9251
    Toll free: 1-877-250-7154
    Email: media-medias@infc.gc.ca
    Follow us on TwitterFacebookInstagram and LinkedIn
    Web: Housing, Infrastructure and Communities Canada

    Matthew Cameron
    Manager, Strategic Communications
    City of Whitehorse
    867-689-0515
    matthew.cameron@whitehorse.ca

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Video: UN Chief: G20 Meeting | United Nations

    Source: United Nations (Video News)

    Opening remarks by the Secretary-General of the UN, António Guterres 2nd Foreign Ministers meeting of G20 Brasil 2024

    “This is a historic first.

    The G20, the United Nations system and the Bretton Woods institutions and other international financial institutions deal with some of the most important challenges of our time: inequality, financing for development, the climate crisis, the impact of new technologies.

    In all these areas, progress is slipping out of reach as our world becomes more unsustainable, unequal and unpredictable.

    Conflicts are raging, the climate crisis is accelerating, inequalities are growing, and new technologies have unprecedented potential for good – and bad.

    Global institutions must work together – not on parallel or conflicting tracks.

    They must cooperate and collaborate for the good of humanity and the Summit of the Future was an essential first step.

    It has created opportunities and possibilities for reform across the board.

    But without implementation, it will be meaningless.

    The work starts today.

    Excellencies,

    The Pact for the Future is about action in the here and now.

    And G20 countries can act in three specific areas.

    First, finance.

    We need ambitious reforms of the international financial architecture to make it fully representative of today’s global economy, so it can provide strong support to implement the Sustainable Development Goals.

    I commend the leadership of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund for making important progress.

    But the resources available are still dwarfed by the size of the needs.

    Many developing countries are being hit by a double whammy of climate chaos and debt.

    To support low- and middle-income developing countries effectively, multilateral development banks must be bigger, bolder and better.

    We need a far more robust financial safety net to shield countries in a world of frequent shocks.

    Voting rights and decision-making rules should reflect the changing global landscape.

    And access to concessional finance should be based on needs and vulnerabilities, not just on income.

    All parts of the global financial system must work together to reduce the cost of finance and the inequalities that blight our world.

    This demands action on debt – starting with an effective mechanism to deal with debt relief and restructuring.

    As a first step, I welcome the commitment by the International Monetary Fund to review the debt architecture – as set out in the Pact for the Future.
    I look to all G20 countries to push for deep reforms so that global financial institutions reflect today’s world and respond to today’s challenges.

    One of those challenges is global hunger. It is shameful that in our world of plenty, around one person in ten regularly goes without food for an entire day or more – known as severe food insecurity.

    I welcome President Lula and Brazil’s focus on global hunger during the G20 presidency and call on all G20 countries – and all UN Member States – to strengthen efforts to end this affront to our common humanity.

    Excellencies,

    The second area for action is climate.

    We are at a critical moment: a battle to prevent temperatures from rising above the agreed limit of 1.5 degrees.

    Today’s decisions and actions will determine the course of our world for decades to come.

    The climate crisis transcends borders and politics. Climate action cannot be a victim of geopolitical competition.

    Under G20 leadership we will be able to have drastic reductions in fossil fuel production and consumption as an essential element for climate action.

    By 2030, global production and consumption of all fossil fuels must decline by at least thirty per cent – and global renewables capacity must triple.

    This requires OECD countries to phase out coal by 2030 and to fully decarbonize power generation systems by 2035.

    And it means non-OECD countries must phase out coal by 2040.

    I have been strongly advocating for no new coal or upstream oil and gas projects for all G20 nations.

    New national climate plans due next year are an opportunity for countries to align energy strategies and development priorities with climate ambition, taking into account the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities.

    They must also show how each country intends to transition away from fossil fuels, in line with the outcome at COP 28.

    Excellencies,

    There has never been a greater global challenge than the climate crisis.

    There has never been more agreement on the solution: a just transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy.

    And renewable technologies have never been better – or cheaper.

    The obstacle to the renewables revolution is not economics, or a lack of solutions.

    It is mindsets, and lack of vision.

    Those that lead the renewables revolution are already reaping the rewards.” [Excerpt].

    Full remarks: https://www.un.org/sg/en/content/sg/statement/2024-09-25/secretary-generals-remarks-meeting-of-g20-foreign-ministers-delivered

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gfbW4_r5_i8

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI Video: Become a Foreign Service Officer with FAS

    Source: United States of America – Federal Government Departments (video statements)

    Mark Petry, the Director General of the Foreign Service at USDA’s Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS), invites you to learn more about exciting overseas careers linking U.S. agriculture to the world.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIw7UTOJy4U

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI USA: Barrasso Introduces Enhanced Energy Recovery Act

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Wyoming John Barrasso

    WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) was joined by U.S. Senators James Lankford (R-Okla.) and Bill Cassidy (R-La.) in introducing legislation to enhance carbon capture incentives and energy production.
    The Enhanced Energy Recovery Act (S. 5212) would create parity under the Section 45Q carbon capture tax credit by giving across-the-board, equal treatment for carbon captured for increased energy production, utilization, and sequestration.
    “For years, Wyoming has proudly led the way on carbon capture projects,” said Sen. Barrasso. “We’ve successfully used this technology to take carbon out of the air and find productive uses for it. One of those uses includes enhanced oil and natural gas recovery – a technique that significantly increases energy production while reducing carbon emissions. Recent changes to Section 45Q have made it harder for American energy producers and manufacturers to use this credit. The Enhanced Energy Recovery Act fixes this policy by ensuring equal treatment for energy production, utilization, and sequestration. This will bolster our nation’s energy security, support Wyoming’s energy workers, and help lower costs for American families.”
    “Building the infrastructure to capture carbon in Louisiana will create tens of thousands of jobs and there will be tens of billions of dollars of investment,” said Dr. Cassidy. “This will help Louisiana continue to lead as an energy and manufacturing state.”
    “Long before carbon storage became national buzzwords, Wyoming’s oil and gas workers were already permanently storing CO2 in enhanced oil recovery projects. For over 30 years CO2 injection has not only sequestered carbon in Wyoming but also helped produce millions of barrels of oil that the United States requires to meet energy demand. Senator Barrasso’s bill recognizes that enhanced oil recovery using CO2 deserves equal treatment to non-productive sequestration not only to create a level playing field in the tax code, but also because it supports high-paying oil and gas careers and pumps revenue into state and federal coffers. We applaud Senator Barrasso and urge speedy passage of the Enhanced Energy Recovery Act.” – Pete Obermueller, President, Petroleum Association of Wyoming
    “At a time where energy demand is soaring, it is more important than ever to ensure that the United States relies on domestic energy sources for our security. Wyoming has long been a leader in carbon management, whether it be using CO2 as a commodity for enhanced oil recovery or paving the way with CCUS technologies. Capturing CO2 and using it to increase our domestic production, keeping energy reliable and affordable for all Americans, is a win for our nation. This bill is a crucial piece of legislation to ensure a level playing field for the growing markets that use CO2. We applaud Senator Barrasso’s continued leadership and efforts to support Wyoming’s energy industry.” – Rob Creager, Executive Director of the Wyoming Energy Authority
    “The Independent Petroleum Association of America (IPAA) supports Senator Barrasso’s Enhanced Energy Recovery Act. Providing parity between carbon sequestration and utilization within the tax code ensures that CO2 is captured and stored in the most economically viable manner possible. The bill further incentivizes companies to continue to use direct air capture technology, fostering ongoing development and deployment of these cutting-edge emissions reduction technologies with the promise of working toward the goals of overall emissions reduction in the United States. IPAA thanks Senator Barrasso for taking a pragmatic, forward looking approach to management of carbon dioxide emissions.” – Jeff Eshelman, President & CEO, Independent Petroleum Association of America
    “We are pleased to express our strong support for Senator Barrasso’s Enhanced Energy Recovery Act, which takes a critical step forward in leveling the playing field for carbon oxide sequestration. This balanced approach provides a powerful incentive for the oil and gas industry to continue its leadership in carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCUS) while also recognizing the role of EOR in safely managing carbon dioxide and extending the productive life of oil fields. Senator Barrasso’s vision for equitable treatment of carbon management technologies aligns with the industry’s commitment to reducing emissions, enhancing energy security, and delivering economic benefits to rural communities.” – Jerry R. Simmons, President & CEO, Domestic Energy Producers Alliance
    Full text of the legislation can be found here.
    Background:
    The Enhanced Energy Recovery Act increases the effective value of the 45Q tax credit for captured carbon used in enhanced oil recovery and utilization to match that of sequestration.
    Currently, the full tax credit incentive for carbon used in enhanced oil recovery (EOR) and utilization is $60/metric ton, while the value for sequestration is $85/metric ton. This bill sets all three values at $85/metric ton for EOR, utilization, and sequestration.
    Additionally, the bill creates equal treatment for carbon captured through Direct Air Capture (DAC). It increases the value of DAC-captured carbon used for EOR and utilization by increasing the incentive from $130/metric ton, up to $180/ton, consistent with the current value of captured carbon used in sequestration.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Lee Introduces the Saving Privacy Act to Protect Americans’ Financial Data

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Utah Mike Lee
     
    WASHINGTON –Senator Mike Lee (R-UT) introduced the Saving Privacy Act, a bill to end government abuse of Americans’ financial information. For years, federal agencies have been overreaching in their surveillance, collecting vast amounts of personal financial data from law-abiding citizens without just cause. Senator Rick Scott (R-FL) is an original co-sponsor of the bill.
    “The federal government has no business surveilling the financial activities of millions of innocent Americans,” said Senator Lee. “The current system erodes the privacy rights of citizens, while doing little to effectively catch true financial criminals. My Saving Privacy Act ensures that Americans’ personal information is protected and that government agencies operate within the bounds of the Constitution.”
    “Big government has no place in law-abiding Americans’ personal finances. It is a massive overreach of the government and a gross violation of their privacy,” said Senator Rick Scott. “That is why I am teaming up with Senator Lee so that we can protect Americans’ personal financials for good. Our Saving Privacy Act will allow federal agencies to go after criminals while also protecting innocent Americans’ data. This is commonsense legislation, and I am urging my colleagues to support its immediate passage.”
    “This kind of reform restores the proper balance—as provided by the Fourth Amendment—between Americans’ privacy rights and law enforcement’s ability to gather evidence to enforce laws. It would protect individuals’ financial privacy and improve federal agencies’ abilities to prosecute criminal activity rather than sift through millions of low-value reports. This kind of reform is long overdue.” – Norbert Michel, Jennifer Schulp, and Nicholas Anthony of the Cato Institute
      “Financial privacy is of paramount importance in the digital age,” said Bryan Bashur, Director of Financial Policy for Americans for Tax Reform. “Lawmakers should support Sen. Lee’s efforts to further preserve financial privacy and prevent the federal government from easily accessing this information. Enacting this legislation will also protect consumers from other existential threats to financial privacy—such as tracking stock trading and electronic payment activity. 
    Government surveillance efforts have been largely ineffective, as demonstrated by the dismal success rate of suspicious activity reports (SARs) submitted to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN). In FY2023, financial institutions submitted 25.4 million SARs and currency transaction reports (CTRs), yet less than 0.3% of these reports resulted in relevant IRS-CI and FBI cases.
    In recent years, FinCEN and the FBI surveilled the financial transactions of individuals and solicited banks for information on purchases related to “Trump,” “MAGA,” firearms, and even religious texts. Meanwhile, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has quietly been constructing a centralized database, the Consolidated Audit Trail (CAT), designed to track every single stock market transaction and the personal information of millions of Americans without any congressional approval.
    Senator Lee’s bill, the Saving Privacy Act, seeks to curb these abuses and restore Fourth Amendment protections for all Americans.
    Key Provisions of the Saving Privacy Act:
     
    Repeals the Bank Secrecy Act’s SAR and CTR reporting requirements while maintaining recordkeeping provisions.
    Repeals the Corporate Transparency Act.
    Strengthens Fourth Amendment protections, bolstering warrant requirements in the Right to Financial Privacy Act of 1978.
    Repeals the SEC’s Consolidated Audit Trail (CAT) database.
    Requires congressional approval for any new databases that collect personally identifiable information of U.S. citizens.
    Prohibits the creation of a Central Bank Digital Currency.
    Requires congressional authorization for financial regulations deemed major rules.
    Institutes penalties for federal employees who illegally seek constitutionally protected financial information.
    Establishes a private right of action for Americans and financial institutions harmed by illicit government activity.
      
    Bill text | One-pager

    MIL OSI USA News