Market participants see greater signs of improvement in their outlook for alternative assets in 2025 – Preqin Global Reports 2025

LONDON, Dec. 11, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Today Preqin, the global leader in alternative assets data, tools, and insights, published its Preqin Global Reports 2025. The six reports each delve into an alternative asset class: private equity, venture capital, private debt, hedge funds, real estate, and infrastructure.

All the Global Reports deliver analysis from Preqin subject matter experts covering forecasts on fundraising, fund managers, assets under management (AUM), deals, and performance in addition to investor appetite according to the latest Preqin investor survey conducted in November 2024, with 255 participants.

By combining qualitative and quantitative perspectives, Preqin analysts offer in–depth views on alternative assets’ pivotal trends and activities. Readers can expect a comprehensive understanding of investment dynamics and insights as well as how to navigate upcoming opportunities and challenges.

Cameron Joyce, Senior Vice President, Global Head of Research Insights at Preqin, says, “The macroeconomic backdrop has proved more resilient than anticipated, with limited signs of financial stress witnessed across financial markets. As policy rates begin to ease, market sentiment has become increasingly optimistic regarding the prospects for private capital. Notably, we anticipate a revitalized dealmaking environment in 2025, helping to bolster overall activity.”

Key highlights across all six alternative asset classes:

Investors and fund managers grow more optimistic toward private equity from 2025:

Global private equity raised $482bn with 646 funds by Q3 2024. This fundraising was strengthened by increased interest from certain types of investors, especially non–institutional ones. Recent fund search data from Preqin shows that non–institutional investors, including family offices and wealth managers, are increasingly attracted to private equity funds, alongside insurance companies and asset managers.

Venture capital AUM ($3.1tn) growth slows in 2024, while exit expectations rise for 2025:

Venture capital AUM globally declined slightly to $3.1tn by Q1 2024, the latest data available. Asia–Pacific (APAC) accounted for $1.6tn, followed by North America at $1.1tn, and Europe at $0.2tn*. By Q3 2024, venture capital exits totaled 852 with an aggregate value of $112bn, continuing the downward trend from 2023 when there were 1,969 exits aggregately valued at $270bn.    

Private debt investors shift to a defensive approach in 2024:

While private debt fundraising saw a substantial recovery after a slow Q1 2024, it was not enough to catch up the ground lost during those first three months of the year. This challenging fundraising environment for the asset class saw private debt investors adopt a more defensive approach as well as create a shift in the balance of power between fund managers and investors when it comes to fees.

Hedge funds return 10% globally in 2024 while proving diversification worth:

Preqin’s All Hedge Fund Index returned 10% in 2024 to Q3, or 14% at a compound annualized growth rate (CAGR). $25.5bn in hedge fund inflows in Q3 2024 resulted in $19.2bn in net subscriptions through the first nine months of the year. This single quarter, however, should for now be considered an outlier given net outflows have persisted for most of the last decade.

Global real estate deal market shows early signs of recovery in 2024:

Global real estate aggregate transaction value in North America, Europe and APAC all saw a rebound during the first three quarters of 2024, compared to same period in 2023. Meanwhile, fundraising moderated slightly in 2024, as total capital raised by the same period hit 61% of last year’s total, or $96bn.

Infrastructure dry powder as share of AUM falls to record low of 24% in 2024:

Infrastructure fundraising and deal–making remained soft in 2024 and are weighing on dry powder levels. Infrastructure dry powder, as a proportion of AUM, hit a new historical low in 2024. This AUM figure dropped 3%, or $38.5bn, over the first quarter of 2024** to 24%, compared with 35% at the end of 2020.

For more information, contact Mimi Celeste Taylor at mimiceleste.taylor@preqin.com.  

The 2025 Preqin Global Reports are available for Preqin Insights+ subscribers.

Please get in touch if you are a full–time member of the press and would like to receive a full copy of any of the following reports: private equity, venture capital, private debt, hedge funds, real estate and infrastructure.

Notes to the editors 

* Preqin updated its AUM methodology in September 2024. Please reach out for more information on the update. Funds denominated in Yuan Renminbi are included in these figures, with APAC becoming the largest region by AUM in 2016 following North America leading prior to that.

** The latest data available. Preqin has a six–month lag in its AUM analysis to ensure it has as complete a dataset as possible when calculating values. 

About Preqin 

Preqin, the Home of Alternatives™, empowers financial professionals who invest in or allocate to alternatives with essential data and insight to make confident decisions. It supports them throughout the entire investment lifecycle with critical information and leading analytics solutions. The company has pioneered rigorous methods of collecting private data for over 20 years, enabling more than 200,000 professionals globally to streamline how they raise capital, source deals and investments, understand performance, and stay informed. For more information visit www.preqin.com.


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It’s the Greed, Stupid!

Human activity has degraded over 70% of Earth’s land, with 24 billion tonnes of fertile soil lost annually. It takes up to 1,000 years to produce just 2-3 cm of soil. Credit: Busani Bafana/IPS

Human activity has degraded over 70% of Earth’s land, with 24 billion tonnes of fertile soil lost annually. It takes up to 1,000 years to produce just 2-3 cm of soil. Credit: Busani Bafana/IPS

By Baher Kamal
MADRID, Dec 11 2024 – The available data is self-explanatory: business-prompted human activities have already altered over 70% of the Earth’s lands, with 24 billion tonnes of fertile soil lost due to industrial agriculture, the excessive use of chemicals, overgrazing, deforestation, pollution and other major threats.

Human-caused extreme weather events, such as heavy rains followed by drought, accelerate soil degradation, while deforestation and overgrazing reduce soil quality by compacting it and depleting essential nutrients.

Much so that the United Nations system has identified that more than 40% of all fertile soils are already degraded.

This consequence is alarming enough if you learn that “it can take up to 1.000 years to produce just 2-3 cm of soil,” as explained by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), and other specialised bodies like the UN Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD), and the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

 

The case of Africa

In the specific case of Africa, which is home to 1.3 billion people, this vast continent is responsable for barely 2-3% of global warming, yet falls prey to over 80% of its devastating consequences.

Add to this that African fertile soils are highly ambitioned by the international commercial business of massive food production and trade, which are generated through land grabbing, which leads to loss of fertility and water scarcity.

Consequently, Africa is usually associated with severe droughts, land degradation, hunger and famine, let alone the exploitation of its mineral resources, and dozens of armed conflicts.

 

The five major threats:

According to the UN, these are the five biggest causes and effects of the human-made disastrous situation:

 

1. Drought

Over one-third of the world’s population lives in water-scarce regions, according to the UNCCD’s Global Land Outlook report.

As land degrades, soil loses its ability to retain water, leading to vegetation loss and creating a vicious cycle of drought and erosion.

“This issue, exacerbated by climate change, is particularly severe in Sub-Saharan Africa, contributing to food insecurity and famine.”

Add to this that African fertile soils are highly ambitioned by the international commercial business of massive food production and trade, generated through land grabbing.

 

2. Land degradation

Human activity has altered more than 70% of the Earth’s land, causing widespread degradation of forests, peatlands, and grasslands to name a few ecosystems. This diminishes soil fertility, reduces crop yields and threatens food security.

 

3. Industrial farming

While industrial farming produces large volumes of food, it significantly harms soil health.

The use of heavy machinery, tilling, monocropping, and excessive pesticide and fertilizer use degrades soil quality, pollutes water sources and contributes to biodiversity loss.

Industrial agriculture also accounts for about 22% of global greenhouse gas emissions.

 

4. Chemicals and pollution

Soil pollution, often invisible, harms plant, animal and human health. Industrial processes, mining, poor waste management and unsustainable farming practices introduce chemicals, like synthetic fertilizers, pesticides, and heavy metals, into the soil.

Excessive fertilizer use disrupts nutrient balance, while pesticides harm beneficial soil organisms, like earthworms and fungi. Heavy metals, like lead and mercury, accumulate in the soil, interfering with microbial activity and plant nutrient uptake.

 

5. Diet and nutrition

The world’s current diet and nutritional choices significantly affect soil health through the agricultural practices used to produce food. Diets reliant on staple crops, like wheat, corn and rice, often promote intensive monoculture farming.

This practice depletes soil nutrients, reduces organic matter, and leads to compaction and erosion.

Similarly, diets high in animal products, particularly beef, increase land use for grazing and feed crops. Overgrazing by livestock exacerbates soil compaction and erosion.

With these facts in hand, no wonder that the UN declared the years 2021 through 2030  the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration.

 

Any way out?

There are too many factors to justify the pressing need to act.

“Our planet’s survival depends on the precious link with soil. Over 95 percent of our food comes from soils. Besides, they supply 15 of the 18 naturally occurring chemical elements essential to plants,” the UN reminds.

The world body also reminds that there are solutions through feasible sustainable soil management practices, such as minimum tillage, crop rotation, organic matter addition, and cover cropping, improve soil health, reduce erosion and pollution, and enhance water infiltration and storage.

These practices also preserve soil biodiversity, improve fertility, and contribute to carbon sequestration, playing a crucial role in the fight against climate change.

Up to 58% more food could be produced through sustainable soil management, the UN unveils, and warns that agricultural production will have to increase by 60% to meet the global food demand in 2050.

 

The obscene greed…

Despite all the above, and no matter how many summits are held, greed standing behind such depletion remains unaltered.

In fact, giant industrial corporations – mostly originating in Western countries – seem to have no limits in their practices of making more and more profits, at any cost, including poisoning human, fauna and flora, in short, the whole natural system.

Much so that “big business’ windfall profits rocket to “obscene” $1 trillion a year amid cost-of-living crisis,” according to Oxfam, a global movement of people who are fighting inequality to end poverty and injustice, and ActionAid, a global federation working for a world free from poverty and injustice.

“722 mega-corporations raked in $1 trillion a year in windfall profits each year for the past two years amid soaring prices and interest rates, while billions of people are having to cut back or go hungry,” unveil the two big civil society coalitions.

 

Only business matters?

A small tax on just seven of the world’s biggest oil and gas companies could grow the UN Fund for Responding to Loss and Damage by more than 2000%, as shown in an analysis by environmental organisations Greenpeace International and Stamp Out Poverty.

“Taxing ExxonMobil’s 2023 extraction could pay for half the cost of Hurricane Beryl, which ravaged large parts of the Caribbean, Mexico and the USA…

… Taxing Shell’s 2023 extraction could cover much of Typhoon Carina’s damages, one of the worst that the Philippines experienced this year. Taxing TotalEnergies’ 2023 extraction could cover over 30 times Kenya’s 2024 floods.”

What appears to matter most is that the business of global trade is poised to hit a record 33 trillion USD in 2024, marking a 1 trillion USD increase over 2023, according to the UN trade and development body (UNCTAD)’s Global Trade Update.

 

Once Scattered by Colonialism, Today United in Urgent Pursuit of Climate Justice

Ramatoulaye Ba Faye, ambassador of Senegal in the Netherlands, gives testimony at the ICJ. Credit: Joyce Chimbi/IPS

Ramatoulaye Ba Faye, ambassador of Senegal in the Netherlands, gives testimony at the ICJ. Credit: Joyce Chimbi/IPS

By Joyce Chimbi
THE HAGUE & NAIROBI, Dec 11 2024 – The Seychelles consider the ongoing public hearings at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) both timely and critical “for the people of the small island developing state in the middle of the Indian Ocean,” Flavien Joubert, Minister for Agriculture, Climate Change and Environment of the Seychelles, told the court today.

With a population of only 100,000, a territory that is 99.99 percent ocean and 0.01 percent land. Seychelles was first settled by French colonists and African slaves in the 18th century.

“We are today a proud Creole people, with big aspirations gathered from the five corners of this earth We are considered one of the most successful examples of racial integration, living in one of the most exotic spots in the world, with majestic mountains, green forests, pristine beaches, and a clear blue sea. But we face special vulnerabilities to climate change.”

Joubert made Seychelle’s submissions at the ongoing ICJ public hearings, where climate-vulnerable nations continue to make statements to demonstrate violations of the right to self-determination, human rights and historical polluter States’ legal responsibilities. The public hearings started on December 2, 2024 and will conclude on Friday, December 13.

Unjust, Unfair Consequences of Massive Emissions—Seychelles 

He spoke of what was at stake in the Seychelles, home to 115 islands and two UNESCO World Heritage sites. He said the small island state was significantly impacted by the consequences of the massive anthropogenic emissions of greenhouse gases, despite contributing less than 0.003 percent of the world’s cumulative emissions.

“This is unfair. This is unjust. We ask the Court to consider that the loss of ecosystems within the multiple island states scattered throughout our oceans will irreversibly and negatively impact the entire world’s ecosystem. Seychelles expects that this Court’s advisory opinion will ensure that states are reminded of their obligations and are held accountable for their actions and their inactions,” Joubert said.

“We pray the court to duly confirm that, as already clarified by the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea in relation to the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), States have a legal obligation to take urgent action to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. This is essential for the very survival of small island states like the Seychelles.”

Precautionary Principal Crucial—Senegal

In her submissions today, Ramatoulaye Ba Faye, ambassador of Senegal in the Netherlands, highlighted the precautionary principle that enables decision-makers to adopt precautionary measures when scientific evidence about an environmental or human health hazard is uncertain and the stakes are high.

“It may then lead states to not delay the adoption of measures to mitigate serious or irreversible damage to the environment,” she said, adding that the “principle is upgraded into a legally binding obligation incumbent on all states in a number of international conventions.”

Faye raised concerns that in some international courtrooms, the precautionary principle had not always been seen as a legal obligation.

“However, we feel the scope and urgency of the climate threat should help us overcome this reluctance. We feel we are indeed faced with a textbook example of a need to change the law to adapt to new circumstances fraught with danger.”

Marwan A. M. Khier, Chargé d’affaires, Embassy of the Republic of the Sudan in the Netherlands, told the ICJ that Sudan is among the nations most severely affected by the adverse consequences of climate change. The country had experienced several natural disasters, including unprecedented floods and torrential rains that have caused imminent damage to livelihoods, infrastructure, and lives.

“Date crops vital for local subsistence have been destroyed,” Khier said. He elaborated on the impact on the Nile, Red Sea, and Qasr which had been devastated by unusual flooding, turning parts of these regions into disaster zones with significant loss of lives and livelihoods.

“Furthermore, rising temperatures, droughts, land degradation, and water scarcity have worsened food shortages and forced widespread displacement,” Khier said.

Conflict Driven By Climate Change—Sudan

Stressing that the Darfur crisis in Sudan, which began in 2003, is closely linked to climate change. Prolonged droughts and reduced rainfall have made access to water and arable land increasingly scarce, leading to conflicts among communities competing for limited resources. The resulting food and income shortage has aggravated tensions, exacerbating the conflict. Many people have been forced to leave their homes and endure challenging conditions in camps.

“Aligning with the voice of the African continent and the least developed countries, Sudan calls for the urgent and effective implementation of the Paris Agreement. However, ongoing economic and political sanctions that restrict access to bilateral climate finance—a critical source of funding for climate action in developing nations—have left Sudan increasingly vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. Despite these challenges, Sudan remains actively engaged in global, regional and national efforts to fight climate change,” Khier emphasised.

He said Sudan holds great hope for the success of the Paris Agreement despite the significant challenges it faces and called for the necessary financial support to implement national climate-related projects. Moreover, Sudan has urged developed nations to fulfill their financial commitments and transfer technologies to enhance international cooperation in addressing climate change, particularly for the most vulnerable countries.

“My country co-sponsored General Assembly Resolution No. 77-276 and supported the request for the advisory opinion that led to these proceedings. We believe that the court’s opinion could significantly contribute to the legal perspective on addressing the global issue of climate change,” Khier said.

Cristelle Pratt, Assistant Secretary-General for Environment and Climate Action for the Organization of African Caribbean and Pacific States (OACPS), stressed in a statement that ongoing public hearings should be considered a landmark, as presentations from its members representing some of the world’s most climate-vulnerable countries across African, Caribbean and Pacific regions painted a picture of climate catastrophe and the violation of international laws.

Pratt lauded OACPS members, noting they were relatively new states and with many sharing “colonial histories with the major historical polluters.”

She continued that it was the first time for many to appear before the ICJ to advocate for their rights, with some members making very compelling arguments that this fight for climate justice was a fight “once again for their self-determination.”

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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In Zimbabwe, Women Are Leading the Battle Against Climate Change

Some farmers buying seed at discounted prices during a seed fair in Masvingo, Zimbabwe. Credit: Farai Shawn Matiashe/IPSome of the farmers purchasing seed at discounted prices during a seed fair in Masvingo, Zimbabwe. Credit: Farai Shawn Matiashe/IPS

Some farmers buy seed at discounted prices during a seed fair in Masvingo, Zimbabwe. Credit: Farai Shawn Matiashe/IPS

By Farai Shawn Matiashe
MAFAURE, Zimbabwe, Dec 11 2024 – When Susan Chinyengetere started to focus on farming in her home village in south-eastern Zimbabwe, she wondered if she could earn a living and raise her children.

With climate catastrophes ravaging the country, her hesitation on rain-fed agriculture worsened. But two years later, the 32-year-old mother of two from Mafaure village in Masvingo, about 295 km from the capital Harare, is now a champion in farming.

Armed with early maturity and drought-resistant crop varieties like orange maize, cowpeas and lab-lab for livestock feed, Chinyengetere has a good harvest despite prolonged droughts across Zimbabwe.

“There was a drought last farming season, but I managed to get enough food to feed my family until next season,” she says. “I even sold leftovers to the local market.”

Brutal Drought Ravaging Crops

Zimbabwe, a landlocked country, relies on rain-fed agriculture. But over the years, rain patterns have been erratic, threatening the entire agriculture sector. The Southern African nation has been hit by one climate disaster after another. If there are no violent cyclones, severe floods or devastating droughts are ravaging the country.

From 2023 to 2024, a brutal El Niño drought—the strongest on record—plummeted the entire country.

Mozambique, Malawi and Zambia were also not spared by the same El Niño drought. There was crop failure in more than 80 percent of the country, according to the government.

Some farmers have been left with little or no food, and sources of livelihood in rural areas have been affected. Zimbabwe may be reaching a tipping point for rain-fed agriculture.

Farmers in Masvingo are growing orange maize, which has high vitamins amid climate change. Credit: Farai Shawn Matiashe/IPS

Farmers in Masvingo are growing orange maize, which has high vitamins amid climate change. Credit: Farai Shawn Matiashe/IPS

But woman farmers like Chinyengetere have their little secret as to how they are becoming resilient and adapting to the effects of climate change. She is part of Ukama Ustawi, an Initiative on Diversification in East and Southern Africa by CGIAR, a global research partnership for a food-secure future dedicated to transforming food, land, and water systems in a climate crisis. The farmers are subdivided into small groups of at most 15.

“I use zero tillage when I plant orange maize on my land spanning 40 m by 90 m. The idea is not to disturb the soil,” says Chinyengetere. “I was used to white maize. When I joined this project, I planted yellow maize for the first time.”

Zero tillage is an agricultural technique where farmers sow seeds directly into the soil without disturbing it. It is part of conservation agriculture that is becoming popular in Zimbabwe after it was upscaled across the country by the government. Chinyengetere prefers the technique because it has less labour than tillage farming.

“Even when I am alone and my children are at school, I can still sow the whole field,” she says.

In Masvingo, men are also providing solutions to climate change through the Ukama Ustawi initiative, though women are the majority.

Anton Mutasa from Zindere village in Masvingo says he has been able to feed his family because of climate-smart agriculture. “I grow orange maize, cowpeas, and lab-lab. To conserve water, prevent soil erosion and allow water to infiltrate, I spread some mulch around the plants,” says the 55-year-old father of six.

“This is vital, particularly during the dry season. I also rotate the crops to improve soil fertility. For instance, if I grew cowpeas on this part of land last season, this season I will make sure I grow oranges.”

Climate change affects women differently

Both men and women are affected by climate change. But for women, it hits harder because of the preexisting inequalities. They suffer because of the entrenched societal roles and limited access to resources.

Women are primarily responsible for cooking for the family and fetching water, particularly in rural areas. This places them on the frontlines of climate change because food and water become scarce during extreme weather events like drought.

Another farmer, Tendai Marange, from Machengere village in Masvingo, says less labour farming techniques allow women to continue their role as women. “I am expected to do house chores, but at the same time I want to go to the farm. This technique saves me time,” says the 47-year-old mother of three.

Farmers networking during a seed fair in Masvingo, Zimbabwe. Credit: Farai Shawn Matiashe/IPS

Farmers networking during a seed fair in Masvingo, Zimbabwe. Credit: Farai Shawn Matiashe/IPS

Chinyengetere says she is inspiring other women. “I feel empowered. I am occupied. The fact that I am bringing income and food for the family brings happiness to my marriage,” she says. “I even doubted myself. I thought, as a woman, I am a child-bearing machine.”

Once Chinyengetere and Marange’s projects are successful, they will share what they learned with others in Zimbabwe and beyond the borders.

“I am contributing solutions to climate change. Women are often at the receiving end of climate change. But my case is different; I am leading from the front,” says Chinyengetere.

Over 1 million farmers have been reached with different agriculture initiatives. At least 140,000 use the technologies that were promoted under Ukama Ustawi in Ethiopia, Kenya, Zimbabwe, Malawi and Zambia, according to Christian Thierfelder, a principal cropping systems agronomist at the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT), one of the research centres working with CGIAR.

About 60 percent of those were women. More than 45 percent were youth.

Thierfelder says as part of Ukama Ustawi in Zimbabwe, they work in 30 communities, where they have trials on drought-resistant crops.

He says Ukama Ustawi’s primary aim is to shift farmers’ behavior and perceptions, moving away from conventional maize-only farming systems towards diversified maize-based systems under conservation agriculture principles. “This involves promoting practices like crop rotation, intercropping, and sustainable soil management, all of which are essential for improving resilience to climate variability and boosting long-term productivity,” Thierfelder says.

Many farmers across the country lost their livestock due to lack of feed after grazing lands were depleted and outbreaks of diseases precipitated by the El Niño drought. Ukama Ustawi is working to change this by fostering livestock feeding systems with green manure cover crops and forage grasses.

“I lost my cattle in the previous droughts before joining Ukama Ustawi. I had no feed and diseases worsened the situation. I am now using lab-lab to make feed for my goats,” says Marange.

Networking

Ukama is a Shona word that translates to relationship. Marange says the groups provide networking opportunities. “We are a family. We share tips and ideas on conservation farming,” she says.

Since 2020, CIMMYT has been organizing seed and mechanization fairs where farmers access high-quality seeds and equipment they would otherwise struggle to access. “It is cheap to buy seeds at the fairs. It is usually cheap. We get discounts,” says Marange.

Thierfelder says Ukama Ustawi recognizes the importance of integrating a variety of crops, such as legumes, cowpeas, groundnuts, and small grains, into maize-dominated systems to achieve both ecological and economic sustainability.

“Seed fairs play a pivotal role in advancing this mission by providing farmers access to a diverse range of seeds, including drought-tolerant maize and other complementary crops that support diversification,” he says.

Thierfelder says plans are underway to upscale the Ukama Ustawi initiative to reach approximately more than 20 million farmers around the world with their technologies. “This is meant to be scaled up because those have reached a scaling readiness level and that is very high,” he says.

For Chinyengetere, the dream is to see more women leading the battle against climate change. “It is tough to convince young women to do farming under this extreme weather. Climate change is pushing them away into other dangerous activities like illegal mining,” she says.

Note: This story was produced with support from CGIAR and MESHA.

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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Mavenir und Terrestar erreichen NB-IoT-Meilenstein für nicht-terrestrische Netzwerke mit ersten Live-Datensitzungen

RICHARDSON, Texas, Dec. 11, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Mavenir, der Anbieter von cloudnativer Netzwerkinfrastruktur, der die Zukunft der Netzwerke gestaltet, und Terrastar Solutions Inc. (TSI), Kanadas führender mobiler Satellitenbetreiber, haben mit der erfolgreichen Durchführung der ersten NB–IoT–Live–Datensitzungen über den TSI–Satelliten Echostar T1, ein nicht–terrestrisches Netzwerk (NTN) im geostationären Erdorbit (GEO), einen wichtigen Meilenstein erreicht. Anders als bei Simulationen wurden diese Datensitzungen unter realen Bedingungen durchgeführt, was die Stabilität dieser hochmodernen Technologie beweist.

Die beiden Unternehmen haben in Allan Park, Ontario, Übertragungs–Tests von NB–IoT für NTN durchgeführt und dabei wichtige Funktionen wie Netzwerk–Anbindung, Paging, Ping, Datensitzungen und Non–IP–Datenübertragung (NIDD) getestet. Die Tests umfassten auch eine kontinuierliche 24–Stunden–Konnektivität, wodurch die Leistungsfähigkeit und Stabilität der Lösung von Mavenir unter realen Bedingungen weiter bestätigt wurde. Die erfolgreichen Datensitzungen wurden mit handelsüblichen IoT–Modulen durchgeführt, was zeigt, dass die Technologie für den kommerziellen Einsatz mit 3GPP–standardisierten Produkten verschiedener Anbieter geeignet ist.

Mavenir hat eine kundenspezifische Radio Access Network (RAN)–Schnittstelle entwickelt, um eine nahtlose Integration mit der Satellitenbodenstation von TSI zu ermöglichen und die Infrastruktur von TSI für die Bereitstellung von satellitengestützten NB–IoT–Diensten zu optimieren. Dieser Meilenstein legt die Grundlage für weitere Fortschritte. Mavenir und TSI arbeiten aktiv an erweiterten Funktionen, darunter Sprachdienste und 5G NR, um die Tests auf weitere Standorte in Kanada auszudehnen und schließlich eine vollständige Satellitenabdeckung auch in den entlegensten Gebieten zu erreichen.

Mavenir und Terrestar haben außerdem die Einrichtung eines hochmodernen Labors in Montreal angekündigt, das die NB–IoT–Tests vorantreiben und die nahtlose Integration mit TSI–Partnern erleichtern soll. Ausgestattet mit modernsten RAN– und Core–Lösungen von Mavenir, die auf der öffentlichen Cloud von Amazon Web Services (AWS) laufen, unterstützt das Labor NTN auf NB–IoT. Diese Initiative ist ein entscheidender Schritt zur Beschleunigung der Entwicklung und Einführung satellitengestützter vernetzter Dienste und unterstreicht das Engagement für Innovation und Zusammenarbeit in diesem Bereich.

„Die größte Herausforderung für die Mobilfunkbranche ist seit der Einführung von GSM die flächendeckende Abdeckung, insbesondere in Gebieten, in denen es derzeit keinen wirtschaftlichen Nutzen gibt“, so Pardeep Kohli, Präsident und CEO bei Mavenir. „Nicht–terrestrische Netzwerke bieten eine ideale Lösung für diese Herausforderung, indem sie kosteneffiziente Abdeckung über große Flächen bereitstellen, neue Märkte erschließen und bestehende terrestrische Mobilfunkdienste erweitern. Die heutige Ankündigung mit unseren Partnern von Terrestar unterstreicht unser gemeinsames Engagement, die Konnektivität durch satellitengestützte Technologien voranzubringen.“

„Dieser Erfolg ist ein wichtiger Meilenstein in unserer Zusammenarbeit mit Mavenir, um NB–IoT in der ersten Phase der Dienstentwicklung für Massenmarktdienste kommerziell zu vermarkten.“, so Jacques Leduc, Präsident and CEO bei Terrestar Solutions. „Es entspricht auch unserer Zielsetzung, alle Kanadier überall und mit allem zu verbinden, indem wir unser MSS–Spektrum und unsere standardisierte Technologie zur Ergänzung der MNO–Architekturen einsetzen. Durch die erfolgreichen Tests unserer gemeinsamen NTN–Lösung unter realen Bedingungen haben wir die Leistungsfähigkeit und Zuverlässigkeit dieser Technologie nachgewiesen. Die Einrichtung des Labors in Montreal wird die Tests der Partner weiter beschleunigen und den Weg für großflächige IoT–Einführungen in Kanada ebnen.“

Jacques Leduc, Präsident und CEO bei Terrestar Solutions wird eine Grundsatzrede auf dem Mavenir Global Analyst Event [#MavenirAnalystEvent] am Donnerstag, den 12. Dezember halten.

Hinweise für Redakteure:

  • WEBINAR auf Abruf: Mobile World Live, Mavenir und Terrestar: Bereit für den Start – Satelliten als Antwort auf die wirtschaftlichen Herausforderungen von 5G
  • WHITEPAPER
    Nichtterrestrische 5G–Netzwerke: Bereit für den Start
    Mavenir hat ein detailliertes Whitepaper erstellt, das das transformative Potenzial von nicht–terrestrischen Netzwerken (NTN) bei der Ausweitung der Konnektivität über traditionelle Grenzen hinweg untersucht. Es hebt die strategischen Vorteile der NTN–Lösungen für CSPs hervor, darunter die Kosteneffizienz in unterversorgten Gebieten, die Fortschritte bei den 3GPP–Standards für die nahtlose Satellitenintegration und den hochmodernen, cloudnativen NTN–RAN–Ansatz von Mavenir. Erfahren Sie, wie NTN Konnektivität neu definiert und eine globale, zuverlässige 5G–Abdeckung für eine digital vernetzte Welt ermöglicht.

Über Terrestar Solutions:
Terrestar Solutions Inc. ist der einzige kanadische Mobilfunk–Satellitenbetreiber, der sich dafür einsetzt, Satellitendirektdienste für Smartphones und IoT–Geräte bereitzustellen und die Kommunikation in ganz Kanada zu ermöglichen. Terrestar engagiert sich für ein sich ständig weiterentwickelndes, standardbasiertes und offenes Netzwerk–Ökosystem, das Mobilfunkbetreibern die Bereitstellung allgegenwärtiger Kommunikationsdienste ermöglicht. Dank des Echostar T1–Satelliten, seiner terrestrischen Netzwerkinfrastruktur und des 40–MHz–S–Band–Satelliten–Spektrums verbindet Terrestar mit Strigo, seinem Mobilfunkdienst über Satelliten (MSS), die Kanadier von nahezu jedem Punkt des Landes aus, selbst in den entlegensten Gebieten. Strigo unterstützt auch gemeinnützige Organisationen und First Nations, was das ausgeprägte Verantwortungsbewusstsein des Unternehmens für das Wohlergehen und den Fortschritt von Gemeinschaften unterstreicht. Für weitere Informationen besuchen Sie www.terrestarsolutions.ca oder folgen Sie uns auf LinkedIn.

Für Medienanfragen kontaktieren Sie bitte:
Victoria Ollers
media@terrestarsolutions.ca

Über Mavenir:
Mavenir baut die Zukunft der Netzwerke schon heute mit cloudbasierten, KI–fähigen Lösungen auf, die von Grund auf umweltfreundlich sind und es den Betreibern ermöglichen, die Vorteile von 5G zu nutzen und intelligente, automatisierte und programmierbare Netzwerke zu realisieren. Als Pionier des Open RAN und bewährter Branchenumgestalter sorgen die preisgekrönten Lösungen von Mavenir für Automatisierung und Monetarisierung in Mobilfunknetzen weltweit und beschleunigen die Transformation von Software–Netzwerken für über 300 Kommunikationsdienstanbieter in über 120 Ländern, die mehr als 50 % der weltweiten Abonnenten bedienen. Weitere Informationen finden Sie unter www.mavenir.com

Mavenir – PR–Kontakte:
Emmanuela Spiteri
PR@mavenir.com

Ein Foto zu dieser Mitteilung finden Sie unter https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/935f64fc–6d3c–4482–ac5d–e190c3147cc5/de


GLOBENEWSWIRE (Distribution ID 9317548)

Mavenir e Terrestar Alcançam Marco de Redes Não Terrestres NB-IoT com Primeiras Sessões de Dados ao Vivo

RICHARDSON, Texas, Dec. 11, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — A Mavenir, fornecedora de infraestrutura de rede nativa na nuvem que está criando o futuro das redes, e a Terrestar Solutions Inc. (TSI), a principal operadora de satélites móveis do Canadá, alcançaram um marco importante ao realizar com sucesso as primeiras sessões de dados ao vivo da NB–IoT por meio do satélite TSI Echostar T1, uma Rede Não Terrestre (NTN) de Órbita Terrestre Geoestacionária (Geostationary Earth Orbit, Geostationary Earth Orbit). Ao contrário das simulações, essas sessões foram conduzidas em condições reais, comprovando a robustez dessa tecnologia de ponta.

As duas empresas concluíram testes over–the–air de NB–IoT para a NTN em Allan Park, Ontário, demonstrando funções–chave que abrangem Network Attach, Paging, Ping, sessões de dados e Non–IP Data Delivery (NIDD). Os testes também incluíram conectividade contínua de 24 horas, validando ainda mais a maturidade e a estabilidade da solução da Mavenir em condições reais. As sessões de dados bem–sucedidas foram alcançadas com módulos comerciais de IoT, demostrando o preparo da tecnologia para implantação comercial com produtos padronizados por 3GPP de vários fornecedores.

A Mavenir desenvolveu uma interface personalizada de Rede de Acesso de Rádio (Radio Access Network – RAN) para se integrar perfeitamente com o equipamento da estação terrestre de satélite da TSI, alinhando–se com a infraestrutura da TSI para fornecer serviços de NB–IoT baseados em satélite. Este marco estabelece as bases para futuros avanços, à medida que a Mavenir e a TSI desenvolvem ativamente recursos aprimorados, incluindo serviços de voz e 5G NR, com planos de expansão dos testes em locais adicionais em todo o Canadá, com fornecimento de cobertura de satélite onipresente – mesmo nas regiões mais remotas.

A Mavenir e a Terrestar também anunciaram o lançamento de um laboratório de última geração em Montreal, projetado para avançar os testes de NB–IoT e facilitar a integração perfeita com os parceiros da TSI. Equipado com as soluções RAN e Core de ponta da Mavenir em execução na Nuvem Pública da Amazon Web Services (AWS), o laboratório suporta NTN em NB–IoT. Esta iniciativa marca um passo fundamental para a aceleração do desenvolvimento e da implantação de serviços conectados por satélite, reforçando o compromisso com a inovação e a colaboração no espaço.

“Desde o início do GSM, o maior desafio enfrentado pela indústria móvel continua sendo a cobertura universal, em particular em regiões onde não há um incentivo econômico atual”, disse Pardeep Kohli, Presidente e CEO da Mavenir. “As redes não terrestres oferecem uma solução ideal para este desafio, oferecendo de forma eficiente uma cobertura econômica em áreas amplas, abrindo novos mercados e aumentando os serviços celulares terrestres existentes. O anúncio de hoje com nossos parceiros da Terrestar ressalta nosso compromisso compartilhado com o avanço da conectividade por meio de tecnologias baseadas em satélite.”

“Esta conquista representa um marco importante para a nossa colaboração com a Mavenir para levar a NB–IoT comercial ao mercado como a primeira fase da evolução do serviço para serviços de mercado de massa”, disse Jacques Leduc, Presidente e CEO da Terrestar Solutions. “Também se alinha com a nossa missão de conectar todos os canadenses em todos os lugares a tudo, por meio do nosso espectro MSS e da tecnologia padronizada para complementar a arquitetura MNO.  Com o sucesso do teste da nossa solução conjunta NTN em condições reais, demonstramos a maturidade e a confiabilidade dessa tecnologia. O estabelecimento do Laboratório de Montreal acelerará ainda mais os testes dos parceiros, abrindo caminho para implantações de IoT em larga escala em todo o Canadá.”

O Presidente e CEO Jacques Leduc da Terrestar Solutions fará uma palestra no Global Analyst Event da Mavenir [# MavenirAnalystEvent] na quinta–feira, 12 de dezembro.

Notas aos Editores:

  • WEBINAR on demand: Mobile World Live, Mavenir e Terrestar: Get Ready for Launch – How Satellite can Solve the Economics of 5G
  • WHITEPAPER
    5G Non–Terrestrial Networks: Get Ready for Launch
    A Mavenir produziu um whitepaper detalhado explorando o potencial transformador das Redes Não Terrestres (NTN) na extensão da conectividade para além das fronteiras tradicionais. Ele destaca as vantagens estratégicas das soluções NTN para CSPs, incluindo eficiência de custo em áreas carentes, avanços nos padrões 3GPP para integração perfeita de satélites, e a abordagem NTN RAN de ponta da Mavenir, nativa da nuvem. Descubra como a NTN está redefinindo a conectividade e viabilizando uma cobertura 5G global e confiável para um mundo conectado digitalmente.

Sobre a Terrestar Solutions:
A Terrestar Solutions Inc. é a única operadora de satélites móveis canadense envolvida na corrida para a oferta de serviços de satélite diretamente no dispositivo para smartphones e dispositivos IoT, e tornar a comunicação em qualquer lugar do Canadá uma realidade. A Terrestar está empenhada em estimular o ecossistema de rede em constante evolução, baseado em padrões e aberto, permitindo que as Operadoras de Redes Móveis ofereçam serviços de comunicação onipresentes. Graças ao satélite Echostar T1, sua infraestrutura de rede terrestre e 40 MHz de espectro de satélite móvel de banda S, o Terrestar conecta canadenses de quase qualquer lugar do país, mesmo nas regiões mais remotas do Canadá, por meio do Strigo Mobile–Satellite Service (MSS). O serviço Strigo também apoia organizações sem fins lucrativos e das Primeiras Nações do Canadá, um testemunho do extraordinário senso de responsabilidade da Empresa com o bem–estar e o progresso das comunidades que atende. Para mais informação, visite www.terrestarsolutions.ca, ou siga–nos no LinkedIn.

Para perguntas da mídia, contate:
Victoria Ollers
media@terrestarsolutions.ca

Sobre a Mavenir
A Mavenir está estabelecendo hoje o futuro das redes com soluções nativas da nuvem e habilitadas para IA, que são ecológicas por design, capacitando as operadoras a obter os benefícios do 5G e alcançar redes inteligentes, automatizadas e programáveis. Como pioneira da Open RAN e uma comprovada disruptora revolucionária do setor, as soluções premiadas da Mavenir fornecem automação e monetização em redes móveis em todo o mundo, acelerando a transformação da rede de software para mais de 300 provedores de serviços de comunicações em mais de 120 países, que atendem a mais de 50% dos assinantes de todo o mundo. Para mais informação, visite www.mavenir.com

Contatos de RP da Mavenir:
Emmanuela Spiteri
PR@mavenir.com

Foto deste comunicado disponível em https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/935f64fc–6d3c–4482–ac5d–e190c3147cc5/pt


GLOBENEWSWIRE (Distribution ID 9317548)

CGTN: Tide rising: A new height in Macao's economic diversification

BEIJING, Dec. 11, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Hui Ho–Kit, an undergraduate who just finished his studies in California, returned to his hometown in China's Macao Special Administrative Region (SAR) with a new mission to bring cutting–edge robotics technology from the Chinese mainland to the city. Leveraging the resources and opportunities provided by the Guangdong–Hong Kong–Macao Greater Bay Area (GBA), he was able to establish his business and tap into the region's growing tech ecosystem.

The entrepreneurial environment in the GBA is unique, Hui said. “Each city leverages its own strengths – Macao has resources related to Portugal, Hong Kong is strong in finance, and Shenzhen leads in smart manufacturing. (Them) working together is very close and convenient.”

His story highlights a key shift underway in Macao, where a once gaming–dependent economy is now embracing new industries.

The city has transformed dramatically since its return to China in 1999. Historically known for its casinos and tourism, it has steadily shifted towards economic diversification. The GBA has played a crucial role in this transformation, providing Macao with the tools to develop sectors such as technology, finance, and culture. Today, with its integration into this broader regional framework, Macao is not just a hub for tourism but a center for innovation.

Last November, the Macao SAR government released a development plan for the city's appropriate economic diversification from 2024 to 2028. The document outlines specific planning and arrangements for developing its industries of tourism and leisure, traditional Chinese medicine and big health, modern finance, new and high technologies, conventions and exhibitions, and culture and sports.

The plan coincides with a growing trend that has highlighted the city's role in driving tech innovation. In recent years, the revenue from industry–university–research collaboration and the number of patent projects in Macao's higher education institutions have continued to rise. Last year, the revenue from industry–university–research collaboration reached approximately 475 million patacas (about $59.2 million). Over 340 patents were obtained between 2019 and September 2024. Macao is also becoming more active in aligning with the mainland's broader space exploration ambitions, having launched its first space science satellite at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center last May.

Another key part of Macao's diversification strategy involves promoting large–scale events like the International Fireworks Display Contest, the International Music Festival, and the Grand Prix. These events, which attract millions of tourists each year, are helping to inject fresh energy into Macao's economy and reduce its dependency on traditional pillar industries such as gaming, all strengthening its reputation as an international tourism destination.

Infrastructure development is another driving force behind Macao's evolving economy. The establishment of the Guangdong–Macao Deep Cooperation Zone in Hengqin, a district in south China's Zhuhai City, has greatly improved connectivity between Macao and neighboring cities, such as Zhuhai. From January to October, Gongbei Port, the busiest border crossing between Zhuhai and Macao, saw over 90 million crossings, averaging more than 300,000 per day. This seamless flow of people, goods, and services strengthens Macao's role as a regional hub, benefiting trade, tourism, and cross–border collaborations.

Urban planning has also evolved, with focus on more efficient land use and sustainable development. Around 30 percent of Macao's new land development is now taking place in the Cooperation Zone, fostering cross–border collaboration and optimizing space. This strategic land development, paired with improved infrastructure, is enhancing Macao's overall sustainability and integration within the GBA, thus ensuring the city to continue to grow in a balanced, sustainable way.

For more information, please click:
https://news.cgtn.com/news/2024–12–10/Tide–rising–A–new–height–in–Macao–s–economic–diversification–1zdAA4dTila/p.html


GLOBENEWSWIRE (Distribution ID 9317518)

Nature Can Help Africa Make the Most of COP29 Outcomes

Africa can leapfrog to clean energy, reducing emissions while expanding access to affordable electricity. Credit: Isaiah Esipisu/IPS

Africa can leapfrog to clean energy, reducing emissions while expanding access to affordable electricity. Credit: Isaiah Esipisu/IPS

By Ademola Ajagbe
NAIROBI, Dec 11 2024 – Despite mixed reactions to the outcomes of COP29, Africa has the opportunity to take the lead in harnessing nature to tackle the effects of climate change and secure a resilient future.

As countries craft climate plans for tapping into the secured goal of US$300 billion in carbon finance annually by 2035, nature has to be at the core. Integrating nature-based solutions into national climate strategies will ensure that ecosystems thrive while contributing to economic and social resilience.

Reforestation, restoration of coastal wetlands and mangroves, coral reef protection, clean energy generation and regenerative farming are all pathways for enhancing climate resilience while bolstering food security, water availability, and economic development

This benefits nature and communities, in the continent, and the rest of the world. With its vast natural wealth, the growing appreciation of the intersection of climate change, biodiversity loss, and development grants the continent the mantle.

Nature has the potential to contribute about a third of the cost-effective climate solutions needed to deliver global climate goals.

This will enable the continent that is currently among the most vulnerable to effects of climate change to effectively tackle impacts of climate change and enhance resilience.

From prolonged droughts in the Horn of Africa to catastrophic flooding in Southern Africa, communities are on the frontlines of climate disaster yet often depend on healthy ecosystems for their livelihoods and well-being.

Nature-based solutions can bridge the gap between conserving biodiversity and delivering climate goals. Reforestation, restoration of coastal wetlands and mangroves, coral reef protection, clean energy generation and regenerative farming are all pathways for enhancing climate resilience while bolstering food security, water availability, and economic development.

Africa can leapfrog to clean energy, for instance, reducing emissions while expanding access to affordable electricity. While parts of the continent rely on fossil fuel revenues, the economic and environmental benefits of accelerating adoption of renewables are clear.

It is laudable that several African countries have signed to the goal of tripling renewable energy by 2030, as part of their national climate commitments.

For African nations, financing remains one of the biggest hurdles for scaling these climate actions. Closing the finance gap is essential if we are to attain the ambitious climate targets for substantial allocations to nature-positive projects and developing sustainable infrastructure.

African countries can leverage innovative financial instruments, such as green bonds and blended finance models, to unlock private sector investment in nature-based solutions. By doing so, we can drive economic growth while protecting our natural heritage.

Ademola Ajagbe, Regional Managing Director, Africa at The Nature Conservancy.

Ademola Ajagbe, Regional Managing Director, Africa at The Nature Conservancy.

Carbon markets present a significant opportunity. Without protecting and restoring nature at scale, it is impossible to meet global climate goals.

These natural assets store carbon, provide livelihoods for millions of people, and can channel revenue from global markets into local conservation and development initiatives.

Natural climate solutions, like reforestation, stopping deforestation, and improving management of grasslands, constitute almost 50 per cent of today’s supply of carbon credits, with much room for growth.

The newly secured consensus at COP29 is expected to fully unleash the financial and nature-positive power of well-regulated carbon markets by protecting Africa’s carbon-rich ecosystems.

There is a clear path forward for others to emulate from pioneering efforts like Gabon’s innovative financial transaction, in the form of a blue bond to refinance US$500 million of its national debt and generate up to US$163 million in new funding for ocean conservation.

The continent has the opportunity to make nature a foundational pillar in all climate adaptation and mitigation strategies. Investments in ecosystem restoration and sustainable land use can help safeguard rural communities from extreme weather events, reduce the risks of climate-induced displacement, and protect vital ecosystems that underpin Africa’s economy.

Fundamentally, the goal must be promoting evidence-based solutions that solve real climate challenges while reducing emissions, supporting local organizations and grassroots advocacy, and raising local awareness to create better understanding of sustainability practices.

The future of Africa’s development is tied to how its natural resources are managed in the face of climate change. Given its abundant natural resources, Africa requires the necessary investments in its energy sector easily serving as a template for successful clean energy.

The continent holds the solutions the world needs, from rich biodiversity to vast renewable energy potential. It is time to harness these strengths, ensuring that nature is at the heart of climate strategies. By doing so, we can secure a future where Africa not only survives but thrives.

 

The writer is the Regional Managing Director, Africa at The Nature Conservancy.