The impact of implementing energy-efficient technologies at RN-Yuganskneftegaz exceeded 3 billion rubles.

Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

Source: Rosneft – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

RN-Yuganskneftegaz, Rosneft's largest production asset, reduced its electricity consumption by 565 million kWh in 2025 as a result of its energy conservation program, an 11% increase compared to last year. In monetary terms, the reduction exceeded 3 billion rubles.

As a result of a phased retrofit over several years, more than 80% of centrifugal pump units are now equipped with energy-efficient valve and high-voltage electric motors. The implementation of new equipment and technologies at the mechanized production facility resulted in savings of 273 million kWh by 2025. In particular, modern pump units with increased efficiency reduced consumption by over 97 million kWh.

Other effective measures at the mechanized production facility include the installation of electric centrifugal pumps equipped with gas separators that reduce energy consumption, as well as the use of low-loss transformers and the optimization of the submersible cable cross-section.

RN-Yuganskneftegaz's implementation of measures to reduce energy consumption in reservoir pressure maintenance systems, primary oil treatment, and electricity and heat supply systems has saved 9,000 tons of equivalent fuel.

RN-Yuganskneftegaz operates a unified energy management system, which successfully passed a recertification audit in 2025 according to the GOST R ISO 50001-2023 standard.

The company is developing a culture of energy conservation. Over the course of the year, 115 employees completed training in "Energy Conservation and Energy Efficiency," providing feedback and participating in the dissemination of best practices in this area.

Energy efficiency criteria are taken into account when designing, reconstructing or modernizing industrial and social facilities, and purchasing materials.

Improving the efficiency of production assets is a key element of the Rosneft-2030 strategy. The company and its subsidiaries are systematically working to ensure the efficient use of energy resources, reduce energy consumption, and optimize electrical loads and thermal processes.

Reference:

RN-Yuganskneftegaz is Rosneft's key asset, accounting for approximately 30% of the Company's total production. The company conducts geological exploration and development of fields in 40 license blocks covering a total area of over 21,000 square kilometers in the Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug – Yugra.

Department of Information and Advertising of PJSC NK Rosneft February 17, 2026

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

The UN Secretary-General condemned Israel's decision to resume land registration procedures in the West Bank.

Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

Source: People's Republic of China in Russian – People's Republic of China in Russian –

An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

Source: People's Republic of China – State Council News

UNITED NATIONS, Feb. 17 (Xinhua) — UN Secretary-General António Guterres on Monday condemned the Israeli government's decision to resume land registration procedures in Area C of the occupied West Bank, taken by the cabinet in May 2025, his spokesman said in a statement.

The decision, taken Sunday, "could lead to the dispossession of Palestinians of their property and creates the risk of expanding Israeli control over lands in the area," spokesman Stephane Dujarric said in a statement.

Such measures, including Israel's continued presence in the occupied Palestinian territory, "are not only destabilizing but, as the International Court of Justice has said, illegal," he added.

The UN Secretary-General called on the Israeli government to immediately reverse these measures and reiterated his warning that the current situation on the ground undermines the prospects for a two-State solution to the conflict, the statement said.

A. Guterres reiterated that all Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and the regime associated with them have no legal validity and are a flagrant violation of international law and relevant UN resolutions.

“The Secretary-General calls on all parties to preserve the only path to lasting peace—a negotiated settlement in accordance with Security Council resolutions and international law,” the statement said. –0–

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

The Chinese are actively preparing for the Spring Festival.

Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

Source: People's Republic of China in Russian – People's Republic of China in Russian –

An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

Source: People's Republic of China – State Council News

BEIJING, Feb. 16 (Xinhua) — As the Spring Festival (Chinese New Year, or the traditional Chinese Lunar New Year) approaches, which falls on February 17 this year, people across China are busily preparing for the holiday, buying New Year gifts, going to markets to buy food, and participating in various festive events.

BEIJING, Feb. 16 (Xinhua) — As the Spring Festival (Chinese New Year, or the traditional Chinese Lunar New Year) approaches, which falls on February 17 this year, people across China are busily preparing for the holiday, buying New Year gifts, going to markets to buy food, and participating in various festive events.

BEIJING, Feb. 16 (Xinhua) — As the Spring Festival (Chinese New Year, or the traditional Chinese Lunar New Year) approaches, which falls on February 17 this year, people across China are busily preparing for the holiday, buying New Year gifts, going to markets to buy food, and participating in various festive events.

BEIJING, Feb. 16 (Xinhua) — As the Spring Festival (Chinese New Year, or the traditional Chinese Lunar New Year) approaches, which falls on February 17 this year, people across China are busily preparing for the holiday, buying New Year gifts, going to markets to buy food, and participating in various festive events.

BEIJING, Feb. 16 (Xinhua) — As the Spring Festival (Chinese New Year, or the traditional Chinese Lunar New Year) approaches, which falls on February 17 this year, people across China are busily preparing for the holiday, buying New Year gifts, going to markets to buy food, and participating in various festive events.

BEIJING, Feb. 16 (Xinhua) — As the Spring Festival (Chinese New Year, or the traditional Chinese Lunar New Year) approaches, which falls on February 17 this year, people across China are busily preparing for the holiday, buying New Year gifts, going to markets to buy food, and participating in various festive events.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Warm weather is expected in most parts of China over the next three days.

Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

Source: People's Republic of China in Russian – People's Republic of China in Russian –

An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

Source: People's Republic of China – State Council News

BEIJING, February 17 (Xinhua) — Sunny weather is expected in most parts of China over the next three days, with rising temperatures, the National Meteorological Center (NMC) said on Tuesday.

However, light to moderate snowfall or sleet is expected in some areas of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR, northwest China), Gansu Province (northwest China), the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region (northern China), and the central and northern parts of Northeast China. According to the National Meteorological Center, heavy snowfalls or even blizzards are expected in some areas of the aforementioned regions.

Meanwhile, light to moderate rain is expected in southern China, according to weather forecasters.

The National Medical Center recommended that residents dress appropriately for the weather, taking into account temperature fluctuations in the coming days. In regions such as the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region and Inner Mongolia, where snow or rain is expected, all residents, especially drivers, were advised to exercise caution on slippery roads. -0-

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Dialogue between Russia and Mali: Polytechnician Issa Togo at a meeting with the Russian Foreign Ministry in St. Petersburg

Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

Source: Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University –

An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

The representative of the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs in St. Petersburg, Maxim Poletaev, held a protocol meeting with the Honorary Consul of the Republic of Mali in St. Petersburg, and also Ambassador of Russian Education and Science Issoy Togo, from SPbPU. The partners discussed the current state and prospects of Russian-Malian interregional cooperation, the activities of the Honorary Consul in St. Petersburg, including issues of consular services. They also touched on the topic of Malian students studying at Russian universities and their participation in events commemorating memorable dates in Russian history.

They also touched on the joint Russian-Malian project to establish a Polytechnic University in Bamako, modeled on St. Petersburg Polytechnic University, and discussed the prospects for reforming Mali's education system, taking into account Russia's extensive experience. Issa Togo is an associate professor at the Institute of Energy's School of Hydraulic and Power Engineering.

During the meeting, the activities of the Russian-African Network University consortium were also discussed. Touching on prospects for developing interregional ties, the parties discussed the preparation of a memorandum of cooperation between St. Petersburg and Bamako, as well as the need to expand contacts in the Northwestern Federal District.

Particular attention was given to the idea of holding the next round of the "Cross Views" school competition in the following format: students from Russian and Malian schools study the culture and history of their partner countries, after which they write essays about Russia and Mali, respectively. The essays are judged by a jury consisting of representatives from both countries.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Tashkent-66: How a student brigade became a life's work and a friendship that lasted 60 years

Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

Source: Saint Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering –

An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

Nikolai Tarbaev and Mikhail Frolov with the detachment's banner

February 17th marks Russian Student Team Day, a holiday established in 2004 to commemorate the founding of the youth organization "Russian Student Teams." On this day, it's customary to speak about the traditions, continuity, and significance of the student movement for the country. However, behind these words lie real human destinies and stories, one of which is connected to the All-Union Student Team "Druzhba," which included students from the Leningrad Civil Engineering Institute (LISI, as SPbGASU was then known).

In the spring of 1966, Tashkent experienced one of the most devastating earthquakes in its history. The city was only partially rebuilt: the center remained intact, while the adobe neighborhoods on the outskirts were completely destroyed. The entire country rallied to rebuild the capital of the Uzbek SSR—student brigades headed south alongside professional construction workers. Among them was a LISI detachment, dubbed "Tashkent-66."

Sixty years later, detachment members Mikhail Ivanovich Frolov and Nikolai Aleksandrovich Tarbaev returned to their native university to share their memories with current students.

From Leningrad to ruined Tashkent

Initially, the LISI student construction team was formed for a trip to Kazakhstan, but after the Tashkent earthquake, the decision was changed. Through the Komsomol, the team was urgently reoriented to reconstruction work in Central Asia.

"There were forty-three of us: thirty-seven boys and six girls," Nikolai Alexandrovich recalls. "We lived in army tents in the area known as the Bolgar Gardens. There was so much work that at first it was complete chaos."

Two months after the disaster, the students found themselves in a city where the destruction had not yet been fully cleared. In temperatures reaching 40 degrees Celsius, without established logistics or clear management, they were forced to literally rebuild their workflow from scratch.

Five meters by hand

The team's main task was to construct earthquake-resistant foundations for five-story apartment buildings. These involved enormous pits up to five meters deep, initially dug by hand with crowbars and shovels.

"First we dug, then we installed formwork and rebar, and poured concrete layer by layer," says Nikolai Tarbaev. "When the equipment arrived, things became a little easier, but we did the bulk of the work ourselves."

The work was hard, but it brought the team together. The students insisted on changing the work organization system: instead of disjointed "quotas," they proposed assigning permanent teams to specific sites. This proved to be a game-changer: the work became rhythmic, meaningful, and truly productive.

It was thanks to this that, in two months, the "Tashkentites" laid the foundations of a fifty-sixty-apartment building and completed a project that another unit had been unable to complete before them.

Heat, watermelons, and a feeling of a shoulder

Besides the grueling work, another side of that life remains in my memory: evening bonfires, songs, trips to the oriental bazaar, watermelons with which the merchants thanked the students for impromptu concerts.

"It wasn't just a job—it was a sense of celebration, youth, and being needed," says Mikhail Ivanovich. "You knew you were doing something important, and you were doing it with others."

When the mission ended, the team was asked to stay for another two weeks to finish the foundations left behind by their neighbors. They stayed. Then they returned to Leningrad on a special flight, with thanks, banners, and a welcome at the airport that the participants still remember.

The squad that didn't fall apart

But the most important consequence of "Tashkent-66" became apparent later: for many, this trip became a defining moment in their professional lives. The forty-three fighters grew into distinguished builders, heads of major construction organizations, and bridge builders. Entire families of engineers, architects, and designers emerged.

"Tashkent taught us how to work with people and be responsible for a common cause," Nikolai Tarbaev emphasizes. "After such a hard-working summer, you enter the profession no longer as a 'young specialist,' but as someone with life experience."

The detachment didn't disband even after graduation. At first, meetings were infrequent, then became regular. Today, the participants of "Tashkent-66" gather at least twice a year, including every year on May 9th, the anniversary of the detachment's formation. They published their own book of memories and preserved photographs, emblems, and traditions.

Memory that the future needs

The story of "Tashkent-66" isn't just a piece of the past. It's a conversation with current students about choosing a profession, about the path that shapes their entire lives.

"You've chosen the right path," Nikolai Tarbaev tells the students. "I sometimes think: if I were working in a pizzeria somewhere, what would I remember today? But as I drive around the city, I know: these bridges, these roads, these buildings are my work. We've chosen a profession that allows us to leave a mark on the earth."

According to Mikhail Frolov, "Being a builder isn't just a profession, it's a responsibility. It's an opportunity to create something that will outlast you. And university is the first step toward this great endeavor."

Tashkent-66 is more than just a post-earthquake construction project. It's an example of how choosing the right profession, an active student life, and working side by side can shape one's destiny and create lifelong friendships.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Russia, the United States, and Ukraine will hold their Geneva talks behind closed doors, according to the Swiss Foreign Ministry.

Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

Source: People's Republic of China in Russian – People's Republic of China in Russian –

An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

Source: People's Republic of China – State Council News

GENEVA, Feb. 17 (Xinhua) — The Swiss Foreign Ministry said on Monday evening that the upcoming new round of talks between Russia, the United States and Ukraine, scheduled for February 17 in Geneva, will be held behind closed doors.

"Media representatives are not allowed to attend the trilateral talks between Russia, Ukraine, and the United States," the Swiss Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

According to previous reports, delegations from Russia, the United States, and Ukraine will hold a new round of talks in Geneva on February 17 and 18.

Since January of this year, representatives of the three countries have held two rounds of talks in Abu Dhabi. –0–

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

How accountants created writing

Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

Source: Novosibirsk State University –

An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

Professor of the Department of Source Studies, Literature and Ancient Languages Humanitarian Institute NSU lecturer Oleg Donskikh discussed how humanity evolved from simple drawings and pictograms to the invention of the alphabet and fully developed writing, as well as the impact this had on our civilization. His lecture was part of the popular science marathon "Darwin Week", which is traditionally organized by Novosibirsk State University in February. This year, the event was held for the first time at the venue new campus of NSU.

People learned to draw before they invented the alphabet, but the drawings found in caves where ancient humans were stationed cannot be called writing, although they could have had a certain ritual significance.

"Writing is the term used to describe images that, in one way or another, reflect the language spoken by those who use these signs, and Stone Age rock art does not meet this criterion," explained Professor Donskikh.

Writing emerged somewhat later, independently in four centers: Mesopotamia and Egypt, China, and Mesoamerica. All modern writing systems, of which there are currently between one hundred and four hundred, according to various estimates, trace their roots to one of these centers.

The speaker demonstrated in detail how this process took place using the example of the ancient civilizations of the Middle East and Egypt, taking as a basis the hypothesis of the French-American researcher Denise Schmandt-Besser.

Beginning in the late 19th century, archaeologists explored virtually all of Mesopotamia. They unearthed the ruins of numerous settlements and assembled impressive collections of artifacts. Excavations at sites ranging from eastern Turkey to northern India yielded thousands of clay artifacts of unknown purpose. These were small figurines in the shape of cones, cylinders, and spheres, but their purpose remained a mystery for a long time.

Until the young archaeologist Schmandt-Besserat hypothesized in the 1970s that these were tokens for counting. This method of counting had been known since the Stone Age—the so-called one-to-one correspondence, or bijection. It's very simple: count something by comparing it to something else; for example, to count five sheep, you could use five sticks.

In Mesopotamia, clay objects were used to take this primitive method to an unprecedented level of sophistication. The shape and size of each artifact represented the type and quantity of various goods. In the agrarian economy of that era, such a system helped keep track of livestock and harvested crops. Tokens allowed for the calculation of the total inventory budget, served as a means of storing information about their quantities, and were used to verify the delivery of these goods to their destination.

Around 3100 BCE, Uruk, the ancient Sumerian city-state, experienced a qualitative leap: instead of storing clay tokens themselves in special clay "envelopes" imprinted with the tokens contained within, they began using the imprints themselves on clay tablets. Once this system became widespread and an understanding of what each individual image symbolized became universal, a logical question arose: why store clay tokens at all when it was easier to draw the desired symbol with a reed pen? Thus, the ancient system of three-dimensional counting objects evolved into a system of two-dimensional symbols. Consequently, a demand arose for people skilled in recording and processing information about goods in this manner.

"So writing emerged simultaneously with such a remarkable profession as accountant," Oleg Donskikh emphasized. "And, by the way, the first known recorded name, Kushim, belongs to an accountant."

The plaques contained not only information about the goods themselves, but also the names of those who owned them. They were written as follows: the name was divided into syllables, then each syllable was drawn with a symbol representing an object that sounded similar to it, with a note indicating that the reader was referring not to a collection of objects, but to parts of a name.

A major step in the development of writing occurred during the period when people began to build urban settlements, where social stratification increased significantly. Entire groups of people formed who used pictograms to convey information: merchants (traders), scribes (officials), and priests who recorded sacred texts.

To facilitate communication between large groups of people, a common set of symbols was needed. As symbols became more universal, their simplification followed. At the same time, it became clear that tokens were insufficient to convey all the necessary information. Furthermore, they could only describe objects, but not abstract concepts.

To solve this problem, people followed the same approach as when writing the names of the owners of goods on tally tablets, using symbols for monosyllabic objects, supplied with a determinative (a special sign indicating that the sound, not the meaning, is important here).

“Phoneticization is the main tool that ultimately led to the emergence of writing in the sense that we understand it,” the scientist explained.

Thus was born the famous cuneiform script, now considered one of the world's first writing systems. It was quite complex and was taught in specialized scribe schools. As Oleg Donskikh noted, these schools taught not only writing but also other disciplines and skills required by officials.

The teaching of writing itself was based on specialized canonical texts, which can already be considered literary. But literature proper also emerged, most notably the Epic of Gilgamesh, considered one of humanity's first literary works.

A couple of centuries later, writing emerged in Egypt in a similar fashion (for this reason, many researchers don't consider it a separate center of writing, but rather view it in conjunction with Mesopotamia, which influenced the Egyptians). However, the Egyptians did not copy cuneiform, but created their own system, better known today as hieroglyphs, although for everyday purposes they used the simpler demotic script.

Later civilizations that emerged in the Middle East developed their own writing systems based on these two ancient systems, but they also introduced their own innovations. For example, the Phoenicians were the first to invent an alphabet, which in turn gave rise to the Greek alphabet (still well known today), as well as the Aramaic syllabic script, which was widely used in ancient times. It's worth noting that Aramaic was widely spoken in the Middle East and was the language spoken by Jesus Christ.

Some writing systems evolved and gave rise to new ones, while others, conversely, disappeared. Oleg Donskikh cited the Minoan script of Ancient Crete as an example of the latter.

The Minoan culture was renowned for its complex architecture (just think of the famous palace of Knossos), art, and the creation of exquisite objects. But their most enigmatic achievement was Linear A, which remains undeciphered to this day. All that scholars know about it today is that it is a writing system consisting of approximately 75 symbols, each symbol representing a syllable.

"The fact is that this script wasn't widespread; it was used by the kings of Crete for their own purposes, and it was taught to a very limited circle of people in special schools. And when this civilization collapsed after the volcanic eruption on Santorini, which caused a tsunami and ashfall, and the subsequent Achaean invasion, its writing rules vanished into oblivion, along with their elite speakers," explained Oleg Donskikh.

In the final section of his lecture, Professor Oleg Donskikh cited a quote from Plato, who considered writing not a human achievement, but rather a folly or a vice. "Anyone with intelligence will never dare to express in words what is the fruit of their own reflection, especially in such an inflexible form as written symbols," the famous philosopher said, believing that the texts that emerged in his era destroyed the most valuable aspect of the teacher-student bond and imparted valuable knowledge to the ignorant, who were in no way worthy of it and were incapable of understanding it, only distorting it.

Nevertheless, writing continued to develop and became one of the cornerstones of virtually every civilization. And today, few except specialists know that it all began with inventory control in the settlements of the ancient inhabitants of Mesopotamia, the land of the Near East.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Three people were killed and three others were seriously injured in a shooting at an ice rink in Rhode Island, USA.

Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

Source: People's Republic of China in Russian – People's Republic of China in Russian –

An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

Source: People's Republic of China – State Council News

SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 16 (Xinhua) — A shooting at an ice rink in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, left three people dead, including the suspect, and three others critically injured on Monday afternoon, police said.

The shooter died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound after the attack.

Pawtucket Police Chief Tina Gonsalves announced at a press conference that officers responded to reports of a shooting at Dennis M. Lynch Arena, where a hockey game involving students from several schools was taking place. The facility was crowded with students and parents at the time of the incident.

Preliminary findings indicate the shooter may have targeted members of his own family. One of the victims was a girl. Three others sustained gunshot wounds and are in critical condition in the hospital.

School officials said all students are safe and authorities are monitoring the situation and coordinating plans to safely reunite them with their families.

Rhode Island Governor Dan McKee stated on the social media platform X that state police are cooperating with local law enforcement. "My prayers are with Pawtucket and everyone involved in this tragedy," he wrote.

This shooting is the latest instance of gun violence that has sparked widespread concern in the state. In December, a shooting at Brown University left several people dead and wounded. Gun violence in public spaces continues to raise public safety concerns across the U.S.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Tatyana Golikova: RSOs are shaping the future trajectory for millions of young people.

Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

Source: Government of the Russian Federation – Government of the Russian Federation –

An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

Deputy Prime Minister Tatyana Golikova took part in a conference on the role of Russian student brigades in training personnel for the country's economy. The conference was held on February 16 in the State Duma.

"I congratulate everyone on the upcoming Russian Student Brigades Day and the movement's 67th anniversary! You don't just work—you shape the future trajectory for millions of young people. Now, with an additional 1.7 million young people aged 15–19 expected to enter the labor market by 2030, and the economy requiring 12 million new specialists by 2032, the role of RSO mentors is crucial. It's gratifying that the most in-demand sectors of the economy, such as manufacturing, transportation, and construction, align with the brigades' core activities. Thanks in part to your career guidance efforts, we've already reduced youth unemployment to 8.3%, but we must do even more. The most important quality of an RSO fighter, as Mikhail Kiselev rightly told me, is love for the Motherland. Be guided by this and build!" Tatyana Golikova addressed the conference participants.

Over its nearly 70-year history, the Russian Student Teams movement has experienced significant growth and has become a true social lift, enabling schoolchildren to take their first steps into a career, students to gain practical experience and additional qualifications, and graduates to confidently enter the working world.

Ahead of RSO Day, Tatyana Golikova and First Deputy Speaker of the State Duma Alexander Zhukov met with the movement's most prominent representatives, competition winners, and heads of regional RSO branches. The participants discussed the areas in which young people are actively developing today, shared their experiences participating in RSO international work projects, and implementing humanitarian missions through student brigades.

"I always enjoy meeting with members of the student brigade movement. In the 1980s, when I was a student at Moscow State University, I was fortunate to travel with student brigades three times. I always remember those years with warmth. Working with student brigades is a very interesting and rewarding experience for a young person. Today, as in our time, students work better than anyone. When the Olympic construction began, there were many doubts about the advisability of involving students in the construction of Olympic venues, but I was confident that the guys would succeed. And so it turned out: the students worked efficiently and harmoniously, and this became an important step in reviving the student brigade movement. Today, RSOs are increasingly participating in projects that are crucial for the state. It's great that the movement is growing. It's important to focus on the most promising specialties early on and gain experience in these niches. Thank you very much for your participation! I wish you success," said Alexander Zhukov.

Thanks to the youth routing and career guidance project within the national "Personnel" project, starting this academic year, a system of interaction between employment agencies, schools, colleges, universities, and employers is being established in each region to help the younger generation choose a career. More than 4.3 million schoolchildren from nearly 30,000 schools across the country have already joined the project. The main goal is to ensure that by the time they complete their studies, schoolchildren have a clear understanding of their desired profession, and university or college graduates know where they will find work.

"Today, on the eve of the national holiday—Russian Student Team Day—we are holding a truly significant event in the State Duma. It unites the legislative and executive branches around the country's main labor movement, confirming that support for student teams is currently at the highest level. That's why measures to support Russian Student Teams were included in the United Russia party's popular program. And these represent hundreds of thousands of young people who choose creative work every year. These represent 170,000 people who have received free vocational training. These represent tens of thousands of young people who have found their dream jobs through our movement. When the President sets the goal of developing human resources, it is the RSO that becomes the bridge between students and employers," emphasized Mikhail Kiselyov, First Deputy Chairman of the State Duma Committee on Youth Policy, Chairman of the RSO Supervisory Board, and member of the Supreme Council of United Russia.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.