Latest news with #ISR


Business Recorder
an hour ago
- Business
- Business Recorder
WB rates ‘Punjab Green Development Programme' as ‘moderately satisfactory'
ISLAMABAD: The World Bank has rated the overall implementation progress of 'Punjab Green Development Programme' worth $200 million 'moderately satisfactory' which envisaged strengthening environmental governance and promoting green investments in the province. The bank in its Implementation Status and Results Report (ISR) also termed the progress towards achievement of project development objective moderately satisfactory. The project was approved in May 2018 with the development objective to strengthen environmental governance and promote green investments in Punjab. The original closing date of the project was 30 June 2023. Official documents revealed that the programme has been restructured for the third time and the revised closure date is November 30th, 2025. The original cost of the project was $200 million which was revised to $182.89 million, of which, $134.69 million i.e. 71.61 percent was disbursed so far. The targets set under the 'Promoting Green Investments' are yet to be achieved. New target is more realistic and is expected to be achieved before the new closing date, it added. Copyright Business Recorder, 2025


See - Sada Elbalad
7 hours ago
- Sport
- See - Sada Elbalad
Basketball Champions League Season X Draw Completed in Lausanne
Mohamed Mandour The Basketball Champions League (BCL) officially completed the draw for its 10th season during a ceremony at the Olympic Museum in Lausanne, Switzerland, setting the stage for a highly anticipated competition that will feature 32 teams from across Europe. A total of 29 teams have been placed into Regular Season groups, while 24 others learned their paths through the Qualification Round Tournaments, which will be held in late September using a single-game elimination format. The winners of the three qualifying tournaments will secure the final spots in the Regular Season. Qualification Round Tournaments Overview In Qualification Round Tournament 1, Patrioti Levice (SVK) will face Petrolina AEK Larnaca (CYP), while Kalev/Cramo (EST) takes on Rilski Sportist (BUL). Other matchups include Bakken Bears (DEN) vs. Kutaisi 2010 (GEO), and Heroes Den Bosch (NED) vs. Trepca (KOS). Tournament 2 will see PAOK mateco (GRE) meet SC Derby (MNE), alongside clashes such as Bursaspor (TUR) vs. Lowen Braunschweig (GER), and Pallacanestro Reggiana (ITA) vs. Pelister Bitola (MKD). In Tournament 3, UCAM Murcia (ESP) will play PGE Start Lublin (POL), and Falco Szombathely (HUN) will battle FC Porto (POR), among other matchups. Regular Season Format The Regular Season will follow the same structure as in past years, with 32 teams divided into eight groups of four. Group winners will advance directly to the Round of 16, while second- and third-place teams will compete in best-of-three Play-Ins scheduled for January. Group Highlights Group A features Rytas Vilnius (LTU), Promitheas Patras (GRE), Legia Warszawa (POL), and MLP Academics Heidelberg (GER). Group B includes ALBA BERLIN (GER), ERA Nymburk (CZE), Sabah BC (AZE), and the winner of Qualification Round Tournament 3. Group C sees Joventut Badalona (ESP) alongside Hapoel Netanel Holon (ISR), Cholet Basket (FRA), and the winner of Tournament 2. Group D is headlined by La Laguna Tenerife (ESP), Tofas Bursa (TUR), Bnei Herzliya (ISR), and Trapani Shark (ITA). Other notable participants include Galatasaray, AEK Betsson BC, Unicaja, and reigning champions Dreamland Gran Canaria. read more Japan Stun Spain 2-1 to Qualify for World Cup Last 16 World Cup 2022: Get to Know Confirmed Line-ups of Japan and Spain Group E Decider Saudi Arabia Bid Farewell to World Cup after 2-1 Loss to Mexico Tunisia Achieve Historic Win over France but Fail to Qualify Tunisia to Clash against France in World Cup Sports Get to Know Squad of Group D Teams in World Cup Sports Al Ahly Gift EGP 70,000 to Players After Claiming Egyptian Super Cup Title Sports Bencharki Hits First 2 Goals with Al Jazira Since Leaving Zamalek Sports Arsenal Possible Line-up for Nottingham Forest News China Launches Largest Ever Aircraft Carrier Sports Former Al Zamalek Player Ibrahim Shika Passes away after Long Battle with Cancer Videos & Features Tragedy Overshadows MC Alger Championship Celebration: One Fan Dead, 11 Injured After Stadium Fall Lifestyle Get to Know 2025 Eid Al Adha Prayer Times in Egypt Business Fear & Greed Index Plummets to Lowest Level Ever Recorded amid Global Trade War News Flights suspended at Port Sudan Airport after Drone Attacks Videos & Features Video: Trending Lifestyle TikToker Valeria Márquez Shot Dead during Live Stream News Shell Unveils Cost-Cutting, LNG Growth Plan Technology 50-Year Soviet Spacecraft 'Kosmos 482' Crashes into Indian Ocean News "Tensions Escalate: Iran Probes Allegations of Indian Tech Collaboration with Israeli Intelligence"

The Australian
a day ago
- Business
- The Australian
Long Shortz: Brazilian Critical Minerals
Tylah Tully chats with Brazilian Critical Minerals (ASX:BCM) managing director Andrew Reid following promising ISR field trial results at the Ema project, a key step toward commercialisation and de-risking. The results confirm strong percolation with minimal solution loss, reinforcing the viability of ISR as a low-impact rare earth extraction method. With the company's latest $4 million oversubscribed placement, BCM is well placed to advance the Ema project through to its Bankable Feasibility Study. Watch the video to learn more. This video was developed in collaboration with Brazilian Critical Minerals, a Stockhead advertiser at the time of publishing. The interviews and discussions in this video are opinions only and not financial or investment advice. Viewers should obtain independent advice based on their own circumstances before making any financial decisions.


Time of India
3 days ago
- Business
- Time of India
Operation Sindoor triggers India's space shield push with 52 defence satellites by 2029
Defence satellites : India is accelerating its space-based surveillance capabilities with the ₹26,968-crore Space-Based Surveillance (SBS) programme, aiming to launch 52 dedicated defence satellites by 2029, potentially sooner. This initiative, spurred by Operation Sindoor, seeks to enhance surveillance over China, Pakistan, and the Indian Ocean Region. The IAF is also pursuing high-altitude platform system (HAPS) aircraft for extended ISR missions. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads India is set to fast-track the launch of 52 dedicated defence satellites following Operation Sindoor , which underlined the importance of 'deep' and 'persistent' surveillance over enemy territory, ToI reported. A comprehensive military space doctrine is also being finalised to support this expanded ₹26,968-crore Phase 3 of the Space-Based Surveillance (SBS) programme, which was cleared by the Prime Minister-led Cabinet Committee on Security in October last year, includes the launch of 52 satellites — 21 to be built and launched by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) and 31 by three private Indian companies. The Defence Space Agency (DSA), which functions under the Integrated Defence Staff (IDS) of the Ministry of Defence, is leading the first satellite under this phase is expected to be launched by April next year, and the entire constellation is scheduled to be deployed before the end of 2029. A source told TOI that work is underway to 'compress these timelines' to launch the satellites faster into both low Earth orbit (LEO) and geostationary orbit. 'The three private companies that have got the contracts have been told to speed up building of the satellites,' the source said.'The aim of SBS-3 is to cover much larger areas of China and Pakistan, as well as the Indian Ocean Region, with shorter revisit times (interval between two consecutive surveillance sweeps of the same location) and much better resolution. The space doctrine is also being fine-tuned,' the source this space initiative, the Indian Air Force is pushing for three high-altitude platform system (HAPS) aircraft. These unmanned aerial vehicles, or 'pseudo-satellites', can operate in the stratosphere for extended periods, conducting intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) missions. The pursuit of HAPS by the IAF had previously been reported by Operation Sindoor, which saw high-intensity conflict with Pakistan from May 7 to 10, India relied on domestic satellites like Cartosat and also used commercial foreign satellites to track enemy military movement. 'We need to shorten our OODA (observe, orient, decide and act) loop. The faster India gets the 52-satellite constellation up in space the better,' another source told satellite ambitions also have a defensive dimension. China is rapidly building up anti-space capabilities. These include direct ascent anti-satellite missiles, co-orbital satellites, electronic warfare systems and high-powered directed energy weapons such as lasers that could deny or degrade another country's access to comparison to China's military space progress, the scale is stark. China's military satellite fleet has grown from just 36 in 2010 to over 1,000 in 2024, including 360 satellites dedicated to ISR at a seminar earlier this month, IDS chief Air Marshal Ashutosh Dixit said there was an urgent need to expand India's 'surveillance envelope' and highlighted how critical 'real-time situational awareness' is during military operations. 'We must detect, identify and track potential threats not when they approach our borders, but when they are still in their staging areas, airfields and bases, deep within an adversary's territory,' he also pointed to China's decision in April 2023 to create a PLA Aerospace Force, calling it a sign of Beijing's recognition of space as the 'ultimate high ground' in modern warfare. 'Their satellites have recently demonstrated sophisticated 'dogfighting' manoeuvres in LEO, practising tactics designed to track and potentially disable adversary space assets. They have evolved from a 'kill chain' to a 'kill mesh' — an integrated network that seamlessly interweaves ISR satellites with weapon systems,' said Air Marshal Dixit.


Time of India
3 days ago
- Business
- Time of India
Post Op Sindoor, India to fast-track launch of 52 defence surveillance satellites
NEW DELHI: With the need for 'deep' as well as 'persistent' surveillance of enemy territory being reinforced by Operation Sindoor , India plans to fast-track the launch of 52 dedicated satellites for the armed forces. It is also in the process of finalising a comprehensive military space doctrine. Phase 3 of Space-Based Surveillance (SBS) programme, which was approved by the PM-led cabinet committee on security in Oct last year at a cost of Rs 26,968 crore, involves the construction and launch of 21 satellites by Isro and 31 by three private companies. The first of these satellites is to be launched by April next year, with all 52 to be deployed before 2029-end, as part of the project being spearheaded by Defence Space Agency (DSA) under the Integrated Defence Staff (IDS) of defence ministry. 'Work is underway to compress these timelines to launch the satellites faster into the low earth orbit (LEO) and geostationary orbit. The three private companies that have got the contracts have been told to speed up building of the satellites,' a source told TOI. 'The aim of SBS-3 is to cover much larger areas of China and Pakistan, as well as the Indian Ocean Region, with shorter revisit times (interval between two consecutive surveillance sweeps of the same location) and much better resolution. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like These Are The Most Beautiful Women In The World Undo The space doctrine is also being fine-tuned,' he added. Parallelly, IAF is pursuing the case for three high-altitude platform system (HAPS) aircraft, which are basically unmanned aerial vehicles or 'pseudo-satellites' that operate in the stratosphere for long durations on ISR (intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance) missions, as reported by TOI earlier. During Operation Sindoor, which saw intense hostilities with Pakistan from May 7 to 10, India used domestic satellites like Cartosat, as well as foreign commercial ones, for tracking military movements in Pakistan. 'We need to shorten our OODA (observe, orient, decide and act) loop. The faster India gets the 52-satellite constellation up in space the better,' another source said. India also needs to put in place its satellite shield since China is developing weapons like direct ascent anti-satellite missiles, co-orbital satellites, electronic warfare equipment, and directed energy weapons like high-powered lasers to contest or deny other nations access to the space domain. China's military space programme has expanded from operating just 36 satellites in 2010 to over 1,000 by 2024, with 360 of them dedicated to ISR missions. At a seminar earlier this month, IDS chief Air Marshal Ashutosh Dixit had stressed the need to extend India's 'surveillance envelope' while underlining the critical role of 'real-time situational awareness' in conflicts. 'We must detect, identify and track potential threats not when they approach our borders, but when they are still in their staging areas, airfields and bases, deep within an adversary's territory,' he said. China's creation of PLA Aerospace Force in April last year underlined its recognition of space as the 'ultimate high ground' in modern warfare. 'Their satellites have recently demonstrated sophisticated 'dogfighting' manoeuvres in LEO, practising tactics designed to track and potentially disable adversary space assets. They have evolved from a 'kill chain' to a 'kill mesh' — an integrated network that seamlessly interweaves ISR satellites with weapon systems,' Air Marshal Dixit said.