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How an International Environmental Campaign Intertwines with Local Interests

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How an International Environmental Campaign Intertwines with Local Interests

The project to build the Svydovets” ski resort in Ukraines Zakarpattia region has for several years remained at the center of a public conflict that, at first glance, appears to be a classic confrontation between development and environmental protection.

On one side are arguments about regional economic growth, investment, and job creation. On the other is a large-scale media campaign positioning the project as a threat to the Carpathian forests and water resources.

Are Local Activists Misleading A Major International Environmental Foundation?

A key role in shaping this campaign is played by the Swiss foundation Bruno Manser Fonds (BMF), which has been working on the Svydovets issue since 2018, publishing analytical reports and promoting a corresponding agenda at the international level. The foundation is the author of the most widely cited materials on the project, including The Svydovets Case and The Great Carpathian Land Grab. Given BMFs reputation as an organization that has worked for decades in forest protection, its assessments are perceived as independent environmental expertise. However, a closer examination of the foundations operational model in Ukraine shows that this expertise is formed within a far more complex configuration than it may appear at first glance.

BMF has no legal presence in Ukraine—no office, no representative branch, and no proprietary research infrastructure. All activities are carried out through partner networks, which effectively serve as sources of information, local analytical centers, and communication platforms. The main such partner is the initiative group Free Svydovets Group (https://freesvydovets.org/)—an informal association established in 2017 that has no legal status and, accordingly, is not subject to standard requirements of financial or institutional transparency. This group acts as the primary local source of the Svydovets-related position and participates in the preparation of materials later published by the international foundation.

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The public representative and key contact person is Orest Del Sol (a French national who has lived in Ukraine for over 30 years, since the early 1990s). He provides comments for BMF reports and for the media. Since a structure without legal status cannot directly receive funding, a multi-layered financial model has been formed. Bruno Manser Fonds finances research and information campaigns; the European cooperative Longo maï provides organizational support; and the Ukrainian NGO Zakarpattia Association for Local Development” acts as the formal operator of grants and projects on the ground. Additionally, Fondation de France is involved in this system, channeling funding through the same structures.

Within this configuration, the international foundation shapes the global narrative but relies to a significant extent on information and assessments obtained from local partners.

The central figure of this local network is Orest Del Sol—the public representative of Free Svydovets Group—who regularly appears as a commentator in materials critical of the Svydovets project. He is also a co-founder and participant in structures linked to the Longo maï cooperative, as well as in the Ukrainian NGO through which part of the international funding is distributed.

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At the same time, the activities of Del Sol and his associates are not limited to civic engagement. According to available data, they are involved in the development of farming enterprises, cheesemaking, and local tourism in Zakarpattia. Some real estate and land plots in the region are registered in the name of his wife, who also participates in related organizational structures. Several civic and cooperative initiatives operating in agriculture and production are registered at the same address.

Specifically, since the mid-1990s, the Longo maï cooperative has operated in Ukraine as part of an international network founded in France in 1973. Its local hub is located in the village of Nyzhnie Selyshche (Khust district, Zakarpattia region) and specializes in organic agriculture and cheesemaking; one of its key participants is Orest Del Sol Marino. As established, the institutional center of activity is the NGO Zakarpattia Association for Local Development,” among whose founders is Del Sol, while its head is Petro Pryhara. According to available information, this structure accumulates international grants, funding from foreign foundations (including BMF), and implements projects to support internally displaced persons during 2022–2026, along with related documentation.

At the same time, Del Sol himself is registered in Nyzhnie Selyshche, owns five vehicles, and has no real estate registered in his name; instead, property is concentrated under his wife—Molnar-Del Sol Yolanda, co-founder of the same NGO—who owns two houses and two land plots (cadastral numbers 2125386600:14:001:0071 and 2125386600:14:001:0072). At the same address, the public union Carpathian Taste” is registered, headed by Pavlo Tizesh—an individual connected to a network of agricultural, cooperative, and commercial structures in the region, including the farms Horlytsia-Bif,” agricultural cooperatives Chysta Flora” and Carpathian Honey,” as well as companies such as Tisa Bio,” “Bio Garant,” “Royal Hemp,” “Spelta Bio,” “Elit Bio,” “Uhochan Taste,” and others. According to registry data, Tizesh owns and leases land plots and has at least two residential houses in the village of Botar (Vynohradiv district). It has also been established that the Del Sol family owns the Zelenyi Hai” farm and a cheesemaking facility integrated into a local eco-tourism model.

Large-Scale Tourism vs. Boutique Tourism: What Is Really Behind the Criticism of the Svydovets Project

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Against this backdrop, the active public stance of Orest Del Sol Marino as one of the critics of the Svydovets ski resort construction is notable. Given his involvement in farming and tourism assets within the same region, the potential implementation of a large-scale resort project could pose a direct competitive threat to these interests, indicating a possible economic dimension to his public activity.

Taken together, this creates a situation in which key participants in the campaign against a large tourism project are simultaneously involved in developing an alternative economic model in the same region. A resort on the scale of Svydovets objectively transforms the competitive environment—from the structure of tourist flows to land value and infrastructure. In this context, the position of local actors may align not only with environmental arguments but also with their economic interests.

Another issue concerns the nature of the expertise on which the international campaign is built. The key public speakers representing opposition to Svydovets do not come from academic or scientific backgrounds but from local initiatives and cooperatives linked to economic activity in the region. Open sources do not indicate their systematic involvement in professional environmental research or institutional expertise related to large infrastructure projects.

Nevertheless, it is these individuals who form a significant part of the argumentation later integrated into Bruno Manser Fonds reports and disseminated as a generalized expert position at the international level. In the absence of its own research base in Ukraine, the foundation is forced to rely on partner networks, creating a risk of dependence on sources that are themselves participants in the local economic process.

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Such a model is not unique to international activism, but in the case of Svydovets it produces an effect whereby local discourse—shaped by individuals embedded in the regional business environment—acquires the status of internationally legitimized environmental assessment.

As a result, the Svydovets story appears far more complex than a simple conflict between environmentalists and developers. It is a multi-layered system in which an international foundation, local activists, grant mechanisms, and regional economic interests are intertwined within a single configuration of influence.

Within this system, environmental argumentation plays a key role in shaping the international position on the project. At the same time, the very structure of its formation raises questions about the balance between independent expertise and the interests of those directly involved in the regions economic life.

And it is precisely this question—of sources, motivations, and verification of expert positions—that becomes decisive for understanding what truly stands behind the campaign against the construction of the Svydovets resort.

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Full Dates and How to Buy

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Singer Olivia Rodrigo attends the Billboard Women in Music Awards at YouTube Theater in Inglewood, California, U.S., March 2, 2022.

LOS ANGELES — Olivia Rodrigo announced “The Unraveled Tour” on Thursday, a massive 65-date arena trek across North America and Europe supporting her forthcoming third studio album you seem pretty sad for a girl so in love, due June 12 via Geffen Records. The 23-year-old superstar posted on Instagram that she is “counting down the days” until she can perform the new songs live, sparking immediate frenzy among fans known as Livies.

The tour kicks off Sept. 25 in Hartford, Connecticut, at PeoplesBank Arena with back-to-back nights, then sweeps through major cities including Pittsburgh, Washington D.C., Charlotte, Chicago, Boston, Montreal, Toronto, Philadelphia, Atlanta, Orlando, Nashville, Vancouver, Seattle, Oakland, Sacramento, Las Vegas and multiple nights in Los Angeles before wrapping the North American leg Feb. 16, 2027, in Brooklyn. European dates follow, concluding May 2, 2027, in Barcelona.

Rodrigo’s announcement included a heartfelt message: “I am so so excited to announce The Unraveled Tour!!! I am counting down the days till I get to sing all of the songs from ‘you seem pretty sad for a girl so in love’ with u guys.” The post quickly amassed millions of likes and comments as fans celebrated the return of one of pop’s biggest live acts.

Tickets go on sale to the general public Thursday, May 7, at 12 p.m. local time via Ticketmaster and Live Nation. American Express card members get early access with a presale beginning Tuesday, May 5, at 12 p.m. local time through Wednesday, May 6. Artist and venue presales are also expected.

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A major highlight is the return of Rodrigo’s fan-friendly Silver Star Tickets program. A limited number of $20 tickets (or local currency equivalent, plus taxes and fees) will be made available at a later date. These must be purchased in pairs, with seat locations revealed at the venue box office on the day of the show — a initiative first introduced during the GUTS World Tour to combat high resale prices and improve accessibility.

VIP packages and premium experiences will also be offered, with details expected during the on-sale period. Fans are strongly advised to buy only through official channels to avoid inflated secondary-market prices that often appear immediately after tickets go live.

The tour follows the blockbuster GUTS World Tour, which grossed over $200 million and cemented Rodrigo as a generational arena force known for emotional, high-energy performances blending pop-punk anthems with vulnerable ballads. “The Unraveled Tour” promises an evolved production reflecting the deeper, more introspective tone of her new album, whose lead single “drop dead” has already dominated charts.

Supporting acts include a strong lineup of alt-rock and indie talent: Wolf Alice, The Last Dinner Party, Devon Again, Grace Ives and Die Spitz will rotate across various dates, providing a cohesive bill that matches Rodrigo’s genre-blending style and commitment to uplifting emerging artists.

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At just 23, Rodrigo has already collected three Grammy Awards, multiple MTV VMAs and billions of streams since bursting onto the scene with “drivers license” in 2021. Her tours are celebrated for cathartic sing-alongs, theatrical staging and genuine connection with audiences, often featuring acoustic moments and fan interactions that make massive arenas feel intimate.

The new album, teased through cryptic social media posts and recent intimate performances, is expected to explore themes of heartbreak, growth and resilience. Early buzz suggests a mature evolution of her signature sound, which should translate powerfully in a live setting across the sprawling tour schedule.

Industry experts predict rapid sell-outs, especially in North America where demand for Rodrigo remains sky-high. The 65-date run represents her most ambitious outing yet, reflecting confidence in both her new music and enduring fanbase. Live Nation, the promoter, has emphasized sustainable practices and fan experience improvements learned from previous tours.

For fans wondering exactly where to buy tickets, the primary platform is Ticketmaster.com. Search for “Olivia Rodrigo The Unraveled Tour” once on-sale begins. Additional verified sellers like SeatGeek and official Live Nation sites will also carry inventory. Avoid unofficial resale sites during the initial frenzy to secure face-value prices.

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Rodrigo’s team has stressed accessibility. The Silver Star program, combined with standard pricing tiers starting in the $49.50 range for many seats on previous tours, aims to keep shows reachable for younger fans who form her core demographic. Expect dynamic pricing to be in effect for high-demand dates.

The announcement arrives as Rodrigo prepares for a busy weekend, serving as both host and musical guest on Saturday Night Live. The timing maximizes momentum ahead of the album release and ticket on-sale.

Social media exploded Thursday with fans sharing excitement, planning group trips and speculating on setlists that will blend new tracks with beloved hits from SOUR and GUTS. Many expressed relief at the affordable ticket option, calling it a meaningful gesture in an era of rising concert costs.

As the countdown begins, “The Unraveled Tour” stands poised to be one of 2026-2027’s biggest cultural events. Olivia Rodrigo continues proving she is more than a pop star — she is a voice for a generation, turning personal unraveling into shared celebration on stage night after night.

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Full dates and ticket links will be available on her official website and Ticketmaster. With presale just days away, fans should create accounts, enable notifications and prepare for what promises to be an unforgettable run of shows. The days until Sept. 25 cannot come soon enough.

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Markets underpricing the risk of Middle East AI pullback

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Markets underpricing the risk of Middle East AI pullback
Inside Wealth: Thiel Capital Managing Director Jack Selby on investment opportunities

A potential pullback by Middle East sovereign wealth funds could drain hundreds of billions of dollars from the artificial intelligence boom and threaten key data center projects, according to tech investor Jack Selby.

Middle East investors — including sovereign wealth funds and government entities — account for roughly a quarter of global investments committed to AI over the next five years, said Selby, managing director of Peter Thiel’s family office, Thiel Capital. If the war in Iran drags on, and the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and other countries divert their investments to rebuilding at home, the lost capital could ripple through data centers as well as public and private tech companies, he said.

“I think markets have underappreciated how important the Middle East region is for capex spending as it relates to AI and AI infrastructure,” Selby told CNBC in an interview. “If the Middle East starts taking some of these projects offline or canceling some of these projects, the impact on the market could be much, much, much larger than what they currently suggest.”

Selby’s warning has implications for high-net-worth investors, family offices and funds betting on the AI trade. A Wall Street Journal report this week about missed revenue targets at OpenAI rattled tech and chip stocks. Selby said the Middle East poses another funding risk, as AI companies grew more dependent on the region for capital.

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Oracle, Nvidia and Cisco are part of OpenAI’s campus in the UAE to build out 5 gigawatts of capacity. Microsoft plans to invest $15 billion in the UAE by 2029. The sovereign wealth funds of the UAE and Saudi Arabia have become key investors in private AI companies, with OpenAI reportedly seeking $50 billion from the big funds in the region earlier this year.

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Selby estimates that half of the Middle East’s AI funding is dedicated to data centers located in the region. The other half is allotted to projects and data centers worldwide. Middle East funds and companies have already started canceling various shipping and business contracts by invoking force majeure, he said. The big risk is that they start canceling data centers as well.

“Markets don’t seem to grasp that this is a very real situation,” he said. “It’s very volatile. I hope and I pray that it goes back to some semblance of normalcy soon. But it seems to me that markets are underpricing this volatility and the risk.”

Beyond the war, AI also faces a broader risk of overinvestment and speculation, Selby said. Like the dot-com bubble, he said investors and founders are bidding up values of AI and infrastructure companies indiscriminately. He said the AI boom is consuming far more capital, with the top hyperscalers expected to spend more than $700 billion this year. So the wealth destruction will overshadow the losses of the dot-com bust.

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“AI is a revolutionary technology, don’t get me wrong,” he said. “But it can also be an exceptional bubble. There will be extreme winners and there also be some real losers. And those losers will be orders of magnitude larger than any of the losers that we’ve seen before. The AI bubble, when it busts, will be at least one more zero, probably two and three more zeros than the dot-com bubble. That will be tens, if not hundreds, of billions of dollars.”

He cited Google as an example from the dot-com era. While investors were bidding up the values of Ask Jeeves, Infoseek, AltaVista and other early search functions, Google came along and upended all their business models. He said similar disruptions could happen to today’s AI leaders.

Selby’s AI strategy is to avoid the crowds. With a second fund he’s launching at Copper Sky, his Arizona-based VC fund, Selby is targeting tech firms outside of California, New York and Massachusetts. He said tech firms in those three states — especially the Stanford and MIT clusters — are attracting all the capital and attention. So the best values lie elsewhere, he said.

“Probably 90%-plus of all venture capital investment went to California, New York, Massachusetts, an all-time high,” he said. “The good news is you get outside of those three states and go to the other 47 states, the deals, the investment opportunities are far, far, far less expensive, and that’s what we do.”

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Selby declined to give many details on Thiel’s family office, saying only that Thiel invests in great founders rather than specific industries. Thiel Capital, which ranked on the Inside Wealth Family Office 15 list of most active family office investors, has invested in everything from German drone makers (Stark) and  gene therapy startups (Kriya Therapeutics) to an AI hiring company (Mercor) and space research firm (Varda).

Yet as a family office director and head of a VC fund that raises money from family offices, Selby said the biggest mistake for many family offices today is making their own direct investments. A survey from Citibank last year found that seven out of 10 family offices have made direct investments in private companies, without going through a fund.

Selby said he understands why family offices are striking out on their own, given the dismal performance of private equity and venture capital funds and lack of distributions. He said two-thirds of venture capital firms are “zombie VCs,” that aren’t raising or returning money and should close.

“Family offices are so frustrated with people like ourselves, who have not been returning their capital, so why shouldn’t they try it themselves?” Selby said. “They couldn’t do any worse than a lot of what [VCs] have been doing in terms of making investments, not giving money back, having marks on paper.”

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At the same time, however, he said typical family offices aren’t adequately trained in assessing, valuing and restructuring private companies. Many ultra-wealthy investors are more motivated by status and peer pressure than by disciplined returns.

“When these fancy people go to their cocktail parties in Manhattan, they have to have something interesting to talk about,” he said. “All of their friends are talking about some version of [direct investments]. So they have to have something to add to the conversation. So therefore, they do the same thing. The Greek shipping magnate that lives in Manhattan knows nothing about rocketry. So why is he investing in SpaceX? Because he just wants to have something fun to talk about at the fancy cocktail party.”

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Apocalypse now or later: Experts on whether AI will really take our jobs and whether we’re paying enough for it

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Business Live

DTX Manchester hears debate on the future of work as well as warnings about over-reliance on technology

Pictured at the technology trade event DTX + UCX Manchester at Manchester Central are, from left, Gwyn Slee, Richard Whittle, Caroline Ellis (speaking) and Keeley Crockett.

From left, Gwyn Slee, Richard Whittle, Caroline Ellis (speaking) and Keeley Crockett(Image: Reach plc)

We’ve all heard the apocalyptic predictions that AI is going to take millions of jobs.

That’s hard to hear for those of us with a few years of work under our belts. But it’s really very bleak indeed for young people looking to start their careers, only to read every five minutes that there apparently won’t be any careers to have.

So is it true? And if it is – even only partly – what on earth can we do to make sure young people can start their careers?

The Digital Transformation Expo Manchester, known as DTX, is all about working out what technological change means for businesses and their employees. And so on the main stage, a group of experts gathered to debate the “elephant in the room” – if AI really does eliminate junior and entry roles where people learn on the job, then how can companies develop the next generation of leaders?

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Host Gwyn Slee, chief technology officer and “AI Evangelist” at G-Star Intelligence, said that using AI in the short term might make sense because it’s “faster and cheaper”. But, he asked, is that storing up problems down the line because young skilled people aren’t being hired?

Richard Whittle, professor of artificial intelligence and public policy at the University of Salford, was blunt – our current way of training and way of developing experts, he said, is over.

“There is little point in your organisation hiring as you were 10 or 20 years ago…” he added. Instead of recruiting young graduates as generalists, companies might have to move to “deep specialisation”, hiring people with very specific and often very technical skills.

Keeley Crockett, professor in computational intelligence at Manchester Metropolitan University, said young recruits needed ethical skills and the ability to verify information.

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She said the UK needed to offer hope to its young people as we need a “productive workforce of all ages” with opportunities open to all.

Caroline Ellis, AI & data ethics lead at NatWest Group, agreed firms needed to rethink what “entry level” means, to ensure there are still career opportunities for young people.

She asked bosses: “How is your business going to run in a few years’ time?” If there are no junior or mid-managers, who will run those businesses once existing leaders move on or retire?

The panel later debated how AI should be used in organisations, and what skills were most vital to make it work.

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Keeley said AI could be well used as a tool to “augment” human work, but that it needed to be used by people with the right core knowledge and cognitive skills.

She said: “Unless you know how machine learning models work… how can you possibly verify what that AI comes out with? I’m very worried about complacency down the line.”

Carline agreed companies needed to have the right culture of AI use, ensuring they were using “the right tools in the right place”.

Technology trade event DTX + UCX Manchester at Manchester Central.

Technology trade event DTX + UCX Manchester at Manchester Central(Image: Reach plc)

Host Gwyn added: “AI can be superhuman in some areas… but if you want it to tell you a joke, it’s absolute rubbish.”

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Richard then asked the audience to take a step back and ask why AI is being used, particularly when it can give a worse outcome than human output. “Because,” he said, “it’s really cheap”.

He added: “Why are we doing this? I would argue it’s because of the wider economic forces all our businesses are facing at the moment… This is why we’re seeing an absolute explosion in very poor but very cheap AI output.”

Richard said firms needed to assess where the “humans in the loop” should be, and making realistic cost assessments.

Keeley added that companies needed to stay accountable to all their stakeholders in the age of AI. If businesses lose core skills through job cuts or a lack of recruitment, and then an AI gets something wrong, “where is the liability”?

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One upcoming issue for AI users will be the costs of those services. In the early days of mass AI adoption, those tools have been cheap or even free to use. But in due course, and once AI is embedded in business, that will change.

Gwyn asked what will happen to AI use once that cheap pricing ends. Richard reflected on the way that other tech businesses, such as ride sharing apps, have relied on using cheap prices to grab market share before raising prices.

He says that when AI use prices rise, businesses will need to reflect on how much they are using it.

“We are using AI for weird things we wouldn’t be using it for”, he said, and asked if we would for example still use AI to generate simple emails or social media posts if each use cost more. If people were paying the true cost for those services, he said, then they wouldn’t use them as much.

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So what happens if companies have shed jobs and abandoned graduate training schemes, hoping to save cash, “and then the price goes up 10 or 15 times?” Unless you’ve thought about your organisation’s long-term future and the skills you will need, Richard said, you may end up with a total dependency on AI when “the pricing is outside your control”.

Caroline agreed, saying: “You are paying less than we should and they are going to put the prices up. She added: “If you were paying 12 times (what you pay now), would you still choose to deploy it?”

Richard added that he had “honestly not seen” a long-term financial AI use forecast that was correct because people assume AI will stay free or cheap. So organisations should assess carefully what they need to use AI for and what still needs people.”

Later, he said it would be hard and expensive for firms to develop human expertise inside an organisation once it’s gone. He referenced EM Forster’s prophetic science fiction story The Machine Stops, in which people become dependent on technology, and said: “Part of the answer is – how do we value future expertise now?”

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Keeley said organisations needed to value their people and the skills and deep knowledge they have.

She said: “If you lose that, maybe short term you’ll have a solution, but in three to five years time you won’t.”

And Caroline added: “Plus if AI takes all the jobs, who’s going to buy your products and services?”

Lessons learned from the Post Office scandal

A sobering reminder of what can go wrong when companies rely on tech came later when Bryan Glick, editor of Computer Weekly, spoke about the Post Office scandal, when hundreds of people were wrongly prosecuted for failures of the Horizon IT system.

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For many people the sheer scale of the scandal only became clear in 2024 when TV drama Mr Bates vs The Post Office aired, leading to then Prime Minister Rishi Sunak announcing new measures to compensate the hundreds of subpostmasters and sub-postmistresses who were wrongfully convicted.

But Bryan pointed out this was “a scandal whose roots went back 24 years” and that Computer Weekly had been reporting on it for that time, recognising that the problems at the Post Office had the “noxious whiff” of a serious problem with officials not accepting that there could be any problems with the Horizon system despite mounting evidence of issues.

The 2025 report into the scandal, by Sir Wyn Williams, said the Post Office “maintained the fiction that its data was always accurate”.

He said that the Post Office scandal, and other high-profile scandals involving government, seemed like perfect storms in their own right. It would, he said, be easy to look at each individual scandal and to say that couldn’t happen again. He warned: “I’m here now to say to you, think again”.

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Pictured at the technology trade event DTX + UCX Manchester at Manchester Central are, from left, Bryan Glick and Sharron Gunn

Bryan Glick, left, and Sharron Gunn onstage at Manchester Central(Image: Reach plc)

It will be harder in future to solve any tech crises involving AI, he said, as we often don’t know exactly what is going on inside those models.

The key issue for organisations using AI and other tech suites is accountability. Leaders and employees alike need to know when to ask questions of the technology and of each other, and must not assume technology is infallible.

Bryan was speaking on stage to Sharron Gunn, chief executive of BCS the Chartered Institute for IT. She said that with AI there always needed to be a “human in the loop” with everyone at a company, including board members, needing to know what to ask about technology. All directors, she suggested, should have basic tech training.

Asked about what lessons he thought government and business could take from the Post Office scandal, Bryan said organisations needed to understand that “technology is a tool” and “not a magic solution to all your economic and social problems”.

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And, he said, people were vital to the success of any implementation of technology. “AI can help, he said, “but government needs to listen to the experiences of the people who implement It” – not just to tech firms.

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Trane Technologies plc (TT) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Trane Technologies plc (TT) Q1 2026 Earnings Call April 30, 2026 10:00 AM EDT

Company Participants

Zac Nagle – Vice President of Investor Relations
David Regnery – Chairman of the Board & CEO
Christopher Kuehn – Executive VP & CFO

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Conference Call Participants

Christopher Snyder – Morgan Stanley, Research Division
Julian Mitchell – Barclays Bank PLC, Research Division
Scott Davis – Melius Research LLC
Andrew Kaplowitz – Citigroup Inc., Research Division
Amit Mehrotra – UBS Investment Bank, Research Division
Andrew Obin – BofA Securities, Research Division
Noah Kaye – Oppenheimer & Co. Inc., Research Division
Nigel Coe – Wolfe Research, LLC

Presentation

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Operator

Good morning. Welcome to the Trane Technologies Q1 2026 Earnings Conference Call. My name is Lisa, and I will be your operator for the call. The call will begin in a few moments with the speaker remarks and the Q&A session. [Operator Instructions] I will now turn the call over to Zac Nagle, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.

Zac Nagle
Vice President of Investor Relations

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Thanks, operator. Good morning, and thank you for joining us for Trane Technologies First Quarter 2026 Earnings Conference Call. This call is being webcast on our website at tranetechnologies.com where you’ll find the accompanying presentation. We are also recording and archiving this call on our website.

Please note that statements made today are forward-looking and may differ materially from actual results as detailed in our SEC filings. This presentation also includes non-GAAP measures explained in our news release and presentation appendix. Joining me today are Dave Regnery, Chair and CEO and Chris Kuehn, Executive Vice President and CFO.

With that, I’ll turn the call over to Dave. Dave?

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David Regnery
Chairman of the Board & CEO

Thanks, Zac, and everyone, for joining today’s call. Please turn to Slide #3. I’ll start with a few thoughts on how our purpose-driven strategy continues

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Metals X secures $17m stake in Stellar

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Metals X secures $17m stake in Stellar

Metals X has secured a 16.4 per cent stake in Sydney-based minerals explorer Stellar Resources.

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New mortgage credit scores could help millions, but experts warn of risks

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New mortgage credit scores could help millions, but experts warn of risks

For millions of “invisible” Americans who have paid rent on time for years but lacked a traditional credit score, the door to the American Dream just swung wide open — but one expert warns not to trip on the threshold.

Following a landmark announcement from HUD and the FHFA to accept VantageScore 4.0 and FICO Score 10T, the mortgage industry is bracing for a surge of new applicants. Micah Smith, a leading credit repair influencer, says that while the inclusion of rent and utilities is a landmark shift, borrowers must be wary of the “American drain.”

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“People who were invisible in the system — no cards, no loans, no score — can now potentially show up with a real number,” Smith told Fox News Digital, while also cautioning that the new models are more rigorous than many realize. “People say getting a home is the American Dream. I call it the American drain when you don’t do it properly.”

The acceptance of VantageScore 4.0 represents the first major change to mortgage credit requirements in over three decades, and stems from the 2018 Credit Score Competition Act signed by President Donald Trump during his first administration.

HERE’S WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU DISPUTE A CREDIT CARD CHARGE

Following last week’s announcement, Smith said many of her clients are “freaking out in a good way and a bad way.”

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Home with for sale sign in front yard

Changes are coming to America’s mortgage credit requirements for the first time in 30 years. (Getty Images)

“The narrative the media has been spinning has people all over the place. That is simply people not understanding what is coming down the pipeline and why,” she said. “Everything being put into place right now is to help more people get into homes and to update a system that has not been updated in over 30 years. FICO has been in place since 1989.”

“The Credit Score Competition Act… set something significant in motion. Look at how long it’s taken. It’s now 2026 and it’s finally being implemented,” Smith added. “This was never about destroying FICO. This is about making sure FICO does not monopolize the credit scoring market. This is about updating an antiquated system.”

A key benefit highlighted by FHFA Director Bill Pulte is the ability to account for rent payments, aiming to help creditworthy Americans who may not have traditional credit card debt but who have a perfect history of paying their bills.

“Rent and utilities now count — when reported,” Smith said. “If your clients’ landlord reports to the bureaus, those years of on-time payments now feed the score… But here’s the flip side nobody’s talking about: If your rent is being reported, a late payment potentially can hurt you, too. Reporting cuts both ways. Don’t let clients assume this is all upside.”

Smith also warned that large student loan repayments, auto loans or personal loans can still drag down your credit score and mortgage eligibility, despite the new scoring models. 

“That balance piece is real… High balance equals high score pressure under this model. That’s the nuance people need to hear,” she said.

While a borrower cannot choose which scoring models a lender uses, Smith predicts banks will “probably” lean toward pulling VantageScore 4.0 because FICO traditionally charges $9.99 per credit report pull and VantageScore costs 99 cents.

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“To me, this is starting to look like a race to the bottom,” Smith said, “where VantageScore potentially ends up monopolizing the very market it claimed to open up. Lending as a whole is a multitrillion-dollar industry, and people are in more debt than they have ever been. My concern is this: giving more people access to mortgages who didn’t previously understand credit means they’re probably still coming in at a pretty subpar credit score.”

However, this does not raise any recession-level concerns for Smith. 

“I do not see a repeat of 2008, 2009. Banks now have skin in the game. Back then, there was no real repercussion for lenders selling bad loans off to the secondary market. That guardrail now exists. We are not going to see a crash in that sense,” Smith said.

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“But here’s what I do worry about: more people going into debt unnecessarily because they still don’t understand the credit system,” she continued. “Remember, those who understand interest earn it; those that don’t pay it.”

“Credit is not your identity — but it is your financial reputation. And right now, more eyes are on it than ever before. Use this moment to get it right.”

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Greetings. Welcome to the L3Harris Technologies First Quarter 2026 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this call is being recorded.

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