(Adnkronos) - U-Space: importante accelerare la gestione del traffico droni in vista del Giubileo e delle Olimpiadi 2026; Pmi, digitalizzazione ed efficienza al centro del ciclo di seminari lanciato da Ibc; Heineken, 50 anni in Italia: il futuro della birra è green; Vent’anni di Fondazione Housing Sociale, si è fatto tanto è c’è tanto da fare; Giornate FAI, Groupama partner dell'iniziativa all'insegna della sostenibilità;
Infrastructure Academy: trasformare le sfide attuali in opportunità di crescita sostenibile; Rachel Cusk è la vincitrice della 27ma edizione del Premio Malaparte; A Mirabilandia al via l’halloween più grande d’Italia; Pollo arrosto day 2024: il pollo batte le polpette. Lo dice un’indagine AstraRicerche.
Infrastructure Academy: trasformare le sfide attuali in opportunità di crescita sostenibile; Rachel Cusk è la vincitrice della 27ma edizione del Premio Malaparte; A Mirabilandia al via l’halloween più grande d’Italia; Pollo arrosto day 2024: il pollo batte le polpette. Lo dice un’indagine AstraRicerche.
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00:00In this video we are going to show you how to manage the drone traffic in the Olympics and Jubilee.
00:15USPACE, important to accelerate the management of drone traffic in view of the Jubilee and the Olympics of 2026.
00:22PMI, digitization and efficiency at the center of the seminar cycle, launched by IBC.
00:28Heineken, 50 years in Italy, the future of beer is green.
00:3420 years of foundation and social housing, a lot has been done and there is a lot to do.
00:40Giornata Fai, Groupama, initiative partner in the teaching of sustainability.
00:46Infrastructure Academy, transform current challenges into opportunities for sustainable growth.
00:53Rachel Kask is the winner of the 27th edition of the Malaparte Award.
00:59Amira Bilandia, Alvia, the biggest Halloween in Italy.
01:03Paul Rossodei, 2024.
01:05The chicken beats the meatballs, says an astro-research investigation.
01:14Italy has called to accelerate the implementation of the USPACE,
01:17an advanced system for the management of low-cost drone traffic,
01:20especially in view of major events such as the Jubilee 2025 and the Winter Olympics Milan-Cortina 2026.
01:28This is the appeal launched during the USPACE workshop held in Rome,
01:32where experts and institutional representatives discussed the challenges related to security
01:37and the integration of drones into aerospace.
01:40The low-cost airspace is fundamental for the entire national strategy on advanced air mobility,
01:46which will not only allow electric drones to carry people
01:51and drastically change everything that is air mobility,
01:56but will also allow drones to make deliveries,
01:59especially important deliveries that can be of medical goods,
02:03tumoral medicines or even defibrillators.
02:07The USPACE system, regulated by the European Union,
02:11allows monitoring and rigorous control of drones,
02:14avoiding illicit use, which would be a threat to national security.
02:19During the event, the importance of a system structured for the management of the growing number of operating drones,
02:26which in Italy has already exceeded 100,000,
02:29with a particular focus on the need for investment in training for industry professionals.
02:34This is an important event for ENAV,
02:37because it is an opportunity to focus on the relationship
02:40between conventional flight management and low-cost flight management.
02:45So it is an opportunity to focus on the state of the art
02:49in the relationship between ENAV, which is the mother company,
02:52and D-Flight, which is a controlled company
02:55that specializes in remote-controlled flying vehicles.
03:01The collaboration between companies such as Strada AI,
03:04specialized in drone flight management and institutional realities,
03:08is crucial to face future challenges.
03:11It is important to be able to count on the transport of the drone continuously,
03:18that is, every day, several times a day,
03:20to connect our hospital to other hospitals
03:25or to other places where our staff works
03:29and needs small equipment, drugs or biological material,
03:35for assistance or for the treatment of patients.
03:39The workshop also highlighted the central role of advanced air mobility,
03:44a rapidly evolving sector that could transform urban and interurban transport,
03:49contributing to economic development and the security of the country.
03:55It opened with a meeting in Milan,
03:57the cycle of seminars on small and medium-sized businesses,
04:00organized by IBC, Industry and Consumer Goods Association,
04:04with the sponsorship of ASSO Lombarda,
04:06in collaboration with GS1 Italy and Deloitte.
04:09At the center of the initiative,
04:11the themes of digitalization and logistical efficiency,
04:14a lever of growth for PMAs.
04:16Seminars are among the initiatives of the three-year plan,
04:20prepared by IBC to support the more than 35,000 associated companies
04:24spread throughout the national territory.
04:27There are already enabling tools,
04:30regarding the digitalization and modernization of the entire logistics apparatus,
04:38which can be easily put at their disposal.
04:42These meetings are aimed at giving these tools,
04:47this information to companies that do not have it,
04:51to help them find solutions that they can implement the next day.
04:55This is the primary goal we set for ourselves.
04:58It will not be just this, we will do more.
05:00We also have a program to hold a meeting like this in Verona and Bologna,
05:05because the intention we have is to get closer to the geographies of our associates,
05:11and not always wait for the associate to come and find us in Milan.
05:15This is a modality that should allow them to steal little time from their activities
05:21and still obtain this type of result.
05:24From the meeting emerged the need to measure
05:27the problems related to technological innovation.
05:30In this sense, I believe that some places like GS1,
05:35where production and distribution meet to address these issues,
05:39to have a strategic vision and to build projects,
05:43are places of great importance and great value.
05:48In this sense, they are considered pre-competitive places,
05:53where industry and distribution meet.
05:56We believe that they become more and more elements
05:59to build preconditions to be efficient in this area.
06:04To recover competitiveness, small and medium-sized enterprises
06:07must face the challenge of digital transformation.
06:11When we talk about small and medium-sized enterprises,
06:13we are talking about about 90% of the Italian entrepreneurial fabric,
06:16so the backbone in all sectors of our economy.
06:20This challenge, which goes from skills to investments,
06:24which goes from long-term plans to medium-long-term plans,
06:26is essential to guarantee competitiveness and openness to new markets.
06:32More and more versatile and sustainable,
06:34protagonist of a new society and new consumption opportunities.
06:38This is the beer trend, according to the Aineken Italia Future Concept Lab,
06:42presented in Milan during the meeting between History and Vision of the Future,
06:46during the 50th anniversary celebrations of Aineken's production in Italy.
06:51The secret is the passion and the ability to produce excellent beers
06:56and to tell them in the best way.
06:59Aineken has impacted the country's beer culture
07:03on two very large areas, one of beer and food,
07:07contributing to make beer part of the country's food culture
07:10and the other of socialization.
07:12With the great events of many years ago,
07:15the Aineken Gemini Festival, the Trofeo Birra Moretti sul Calcio,
07:18and so it has participated in the evolution of the beer market in Italy.
07:22The last phase, the most important, is that of variety,
07:26of recipes, of proposed beers and of investments on Italian brands,
07:30including Birra Moretti and Birra Messina, on all.
07:35Today a bottle of beer out of three drunk in Italy is produced by Aineken,
07:38which with almost 7 million liters is the first producer in the country
07:42with the brands Birra Moretti, Ignusa and Birra Messina.
07:46Birra Moretti, for example, has gone from about 500,000
07:49to more than 2.7 million liters produced
07:52and has become today, for 47% of connoisseurs,
07:55the most representative beer brand of Italianness.
07:59The innovation of the product and the evolution of the production processes
08:02will be central in the future to make beer more and more sustainable.
08:05Aineken, in fact, aims to reach zero net emissions in production by 2030
08:10and to reach carbon neutrality on the value chain by 2040.
08:15Sustainability, but also responsibility,
08:18with the campaigns that have become iconic on responsible consumption.
08:22Aineken Italy is the company that did the first campaign
08:25dedicated to responsible consumption 20 years ago
08:29and has carried out a program that is very nourished by campaigns and messages
08:35with unequivocal, aspirational messages,
08:38because we are talking about responsibility and moderation,
08:41but there is also an alternative and it is the alcoholic beers,
08:44which today, unlike in the past, are much, much, much better.
08:47There is a great rush towards what we call the crucial and sustainable,
08:52that is, a widespread sustainability,
08:55in which beer becomes the protagonist,
08:57because it can intervene both in terms of responsibility,
09:01and therefore a real responsibility,
09:03but also in terms of quality, quality of life.
09:06People want, in some way,
09:08beers that have a taste that is recognizable
09:11and that can function both as a great element of conviviality
09:15and at the same time, however, have a moment and an experience
09:19that is of quality in which beer represents a daily companion.
09:26Twenty years ago, Fondazione Cariplo,
09:28with the participation of Regione Lombardia and Anci Lombardia,
09:31gave life to Fondazione Housing Sociale,
09:34a non-profit foundation with a precise mission
09:38to develop the housing social project
09:41and promote the development and strengthening of the sector.
09:44With the aim of social solidarity
09:46and pursuing the intention to contribute to solving the housing problem,
09:50with particular regard to economic and social disadvantage situations,
09:54Fondazione Cariplo is now turning off 20 candles
09:57and, for the occasion, has presented a series of research
10:00that investigates the problems, state of the art and development prospects
10:04of social housing in Italy.
10:07For Fondazione Cariplo, the theme of the case is a fundamental one,
10:10because it is a fundamental right of people,
10:13and the presence, the possibility of having an accommodation at acceptable prices
10:17greatly influences the quality of life.
10:19We are working on two different levels,
10:21an emergency level, with the most fragile populations
10:24to find functional accommodation to their characteristics.
10:28In the last 20 years,
10:30more than 6,000 accommodation places have been made
10:33in the territories where Fondazione Cariplo operates,
10:36and then through social housing,
10:38which allows to give an answer to that group of population
10:42that is not able to buy a house on the market,
10:45but has a higher income than what allows access to popular houses.
10:50Social housing is full of challenges
10:52that Fondazione Cariplo has to face with the same commitment as always.
10:57The difficulties that new social housing projects face today
11:01are the difficulties of the market,
11:03so construction costs are getting higher and higher,
11:06cost of the areas or buildings to be demolished and rebuilt is very high,
11:10and also the cost of capital is much higher
11:13than what we faced 20 years ago when this experience started.
11:17I think that the Fondazione can help the discussion
11:21between the public and private parties of the third sector
11:24to create the conditions that help to face these problems.
11:2820 years after its birth,
11:30Fondazione Housing Social is a resource
11:33for the whole system of social residential buildings,
11:36not only for the world of foundations.
11:38Our experience has expanded,
11:41it has expanded to other activities,
11:44and it has expanded to many subjects
11:46that ask us to participate in projects.
11:49So we also feel this institutional role,
11:53because a part of the time of our work is dedicated to this.
11:57We have the possibility to do it,
11:59because in a sense we have a part of the resources that allow it,
12:03and therefore we have the possibility to disseminate knowledge
12:07and to talk with institutions,
12:09because they carry out programs in this sense.
12:15Saturday 12 and Sunday 13 October 2024
12:18return for the thirteenth edition of the Fai d'Autunno Days,
12:22one of the most important events
12:24dedicated to the cultural and landscape heritage of our country,
12:28organized by the Foundation for the Italian Environment.
12:31There will be 700 places in all of Italy,
12:33unknown or unusual and curious,
12:36some of which are usually inaccessible,
12:39such as historical palaces, gardens and villages,
12:41that will open to the public.
12:43The Fai Days are the most important meeting of the Foundation.
12:48They take place both in spring and in autumn.
12:51They are moments of great celebration,
12:54because we offer Italians the opportunity to visit unprecedented places.
13:00In this edition there are 700 unprecedented places
13:03that the Fai will open thanks to its volunteers.
13:06It is a day of celebration.
13:10We ask those who will visit our assets to register,
13:13because registration can help the Foundation's institutional mission.
13:18Groupama is one of the partners of the initiative,
13:21the French insurance company operating in Italy,
13:24which, for the second consecutive year,
13:27continues its journey alongside the Fai.
13:30The renewed collaboration,
13:32in addition to re-installing the historic sodalicio
13:34that Groupama has seen as the Fai's corporate golden donor for several years,
13:38adds to the longest and widest path
13:40that the company has taken on the front of sustainability.
13:44This attention to sustainability, to the development of the territory,
13:47is native.
13:50It manifests itself through national operations,
13:55if I may say so, that are less territorial and local.
13:58First of all, of course, the Fai program,
14:00which has a particular relevance for us,
14:03as well as the work we do together with the Feltrinelli Foundation,
14:07which will give birth, in October,
14:11to the Transition Day,
14:13to which we will participate as a partner.
14:16It also manifests itself through training in first aid,
14:20through the Life Savers Program,
14:22which has been launched in several cities in the territory,
14:26also supported by our employees and agents.
14:29It manifests itself through the training operations
14:32that we do in schools for children,
14:35on education and the culture of risk.
14:38It is a program that was born really experimentally,
14:43which we call, let's say, in advance,
14:46which was an absolutely fantastic success.
14:49And finally, it also manifests itself through a truly ecological support,
14:54through the tree planting program that we have together with Tridom.
14:58So it is very varied in all dimensions of the environment.
15:02We are there.
15:06Digitalization, innovation and sustainability.
15:09These are the main themes of the latest edition of Infrastructure Academy,
15:13the event organized by ILTI Italy in collaboration with ICE.
15:17It is a key moment to discuss the future of infrastructures,
15:20in which all players in the sector
15:22stop to reflect on the path taken and share the vision of the future.
15:27The importance of today is because infrastructures are often associated
15:30with the PNRR project in itself.
15:32Today we want to go beyond the project,
15:34so beyond the construction site,
15:35to have a slightly more end-to-end vision,
15:37so from planning to design to construction site,
15:41with a focus that will be sustainability today.
15:44The goal is to clarify that it is important to have this more holistic vision,
15:48so that all the elements that we consider,
15:50digitization and above all sustainability,
15:53must start in the planning and then design phase.
15:57Infrastructures are a fundamental element
15:59to guarantee the economic growth of the country.
16:02For this reason, they must be designed and built according to guidelines
16:05that focus on aspects of sustainability, innovation, functionality and safety.
16:10It is very important today to think in a way of life cycle,
16:17therefore a work must be conceived with the help of the community.
16:23So first of all it is important the stakeholder engagement,
16:27therefore to understand what the needs of the community are,
16:31how to best use the resources of the territory.
16:34Then there is the design phase, there is the realization phase,
16:38also on this ICE has made a position paper on the sustainable construction site
16:42and then we must not forget the management and maintenance part of the works.
16:47The construction market in Italy is experiencing a phase of transition,
16:51marked by challenges and opportunities related to the end of the Superbonus
16:54and the implementation of the PNRR.
16:56According to the 36th report of Cresme,
16:59the sector has recorded a contraction in the last two quarters of 2024,
17:04but the future seems promising, especially for public works,
17:07which by 2026 could exceed for the first time
17:10investments in residential re-qualifications.
17:13We are already introducing protocols already in the design phase,
17:18protocols such as Envision, which allow us to quantify
17:24the benefits of an infrastructure project on the territory.
17:29Also regarding the realization phase,
17:32we are implementing methodologies to realize the roads,
17:39which, for example, significantly reduce the emissions of greenhouse gases.
17:47The ACADEMY infrastructure therefore represents a strategic appointment
17:50to transform current challenges into sustainable growth opportunities,
17:54with the aim of guiding the construction sector
17:57towards a more innovative and respectful future of the environment.
18:15The Malaparte Prize,
18:16one of the most prestigious awards in the Italian literary scene,
18:20was celebrated on the first weekend of October
18:22in the subsequent Cornice di Capri by Rachel Kask,
18:25British author and essayist,
18:27known for her innovative approach to narrative and essay.
18:33The award, received at the 27th edition,
18:36born on the initiative of Graziella Lonardi-Bontempo and Alberto Moravia,
18:40has found a new life thanks to the determination of Gabriella Bontempo,
18:44who, taking up a family tradition,
18:46thanks also to the support of Ferrarelli and the Benefit Society,
18:49has restored the historical identity of Polo della Cultura to the island of Capri.
18:53I practically grew up with this award.
18:56At the beginning, when Graziella organized it,
19:00who was the promoter together with Moravia,
19:04my aunt Graziella Lonardi-Bontempo,
19:07together with Alberto Moravia and Capria and all the other friends involved,
19:11I was the little mascot.
19:13I grew up with the award.
19:15Then I had a forced stop,
19:17when Graziella, unfortunately, was not very well,
19:20then the same Moravia was missing,
19:22so those things that stop for a moment.
19:26Then, thanks to an energy found by me,
19:29and also of the presence of the Ponte Corvo family,
19:33of the Ferrarelli Benefit Society
19:35and of many other friends involved
19:39who supported us in this idea,
19:42first of all the presence of Capri,
19:45which unfortunately left us some time ago,
19:49we returned to the scene,
19:53thanks also to the same city of Capri.
19:56For 13 years, with Gabriella Bontempo,
19:58Ferrarelli and the Benefit Society have decided to support it,
20:01precisely because our purpose as a territory company
20:05is to preserve our territory,
20:08helping and restoring value
20:10also in the form of culture, of support for art.
20:13So this is the reason why for many years,
20:16with great conviction, we continue to support the Malaparte Award
20:19and other activities of culture and art,
20:22of beauty and environment for our regional territory.
20:25This year we have reached the Casco,
20:27a European award,
20:29and it is certainly a moment for Europe not very simple,
20:32and therefore also an opportunity to create a small stage,
20:35and it is important the visibility that the press and the media give us,
20:39because thanks to this we can get these positive ideas out of Capri,
20:44hoping to leave not only on the island,
20:46but in all public opinion and in the culture of the country, a little sign.
20:50The event attracted a wide audience,
20:52composed of literary enthusiasts, critics and writers,
20:55all united by the desire to honor
20:57an innovative and deep voice in the world of contemporary narrative,
21:01with which they faced each other in a public debate.
21:04When this name came out,
21:06we were, let's say,
21:09aware of the writer's skill,
21:14because it's all there,
21:16that is, it must never be something artificial,
21:19created to give an award,
21:21it must be something that you really like,
21:23beyond any use you want to make.
21:27In the beautiful setting of the Certosa di San Giacomo di Capri,
21:35awarding the English author,
21:37the jury wanted to celebrate her entire journey,
21:40started in 1993,
21:42which today consists of nine novels,
21:44three collections of essays and a play,
21:46in which the English writer explores themes of identity,
21:49the experience of motherhood, relationships and the search for truth.
21:54Sometimes it may seem
21:56that it is almost below literature,
21:59let's say, writing,
22:01facing such brutal themes of life in writing,
22:05and it can be difficult at times,
22:07but receiving the award,
22:09but the part makes me feel
22:11that it was the right thing to do.
22:23ZOMBIES
22:31Zombies, terrifying creatures,
22:33horror tunnels, but also magic,
22:35colors, sweets and jokes.
22:37Returns Halloween and Mirabilandia
22:39to the largest amusement park in Italy,
22:41changes face to offer the long-awaited
22:43horror atmospheres and fantasy settings
22:45suitable for the whole family.
22:47For the little ones, news, two baby tunnels,
22:49the mini zombie academy
22:51and the chamber of wonders,
22:53which have been entirely created and re-themed for them,
22:55and then there is clearly
22:57all the horror part of Mirabilandia.
22:59Suburbia, which is the largest horror area in Italy,
23:01installed in a theme park,
23:03was launched last year,
23:05inaugurated last year,
23:07this year will see the development
23:09of two new areas,
23:11the cemetery and the barracks of the queen of vampires.
23:13Not only these news,
23:15but there is also a new horror tunnel,
23:17which is Hypnotic Circus,
23:19which is next to the other tunnels
23:21already existing in the park.
23:23Lots of shows,
23:25a new musical called Dracula,
23:27and then we have Jacky Don Call Me Clown,
23:29which is a musical that we launched
23:31last year for the first time,
23:33this year it was entirely revisited,
23:35and after that we could not miss
23:37the umpteenth collaboration
23:39also with Antonio Casanova,
23:41who made for us an exclusive show
23:43called Ghosts.
23:45Halloween is also the time to track
23:47the city of Romagna,
23:49strongly affected by exceptional bad weather.
23:51We were upset by the atmospheric events
23:53that happened to us,
23:55but absolutely the park
23:57is always a living park,
23:59a land that can be raised at any time,
24:01so we are absolutely satisfied
24:03with how the summer season went,
24:05but a great Halloween is waiting for us.
24:07And for 2025,
24:09very anticipated news,
24:11with a themed area.
24:13An investment of about 20 million euros
24:15for 25,000 square meters of area
24:17entirely themed
24:19with a very famous bread,
24:21very well known by children,
24:23which is Nickelodeon.
24:25In fact, for the first time in Italy,
24:27Nickelodeon Land will emerge as an exclusive,
24:29an area dedicated to smaller children,
24:31but not only,
24:33because the highlight of the area
24:35will also be a new coaster,
24:37not adrenaline,
24:39but a very important coaster
24:41for families with children.
24:43If roast chicken and meatballs
24:45could challenge each other
24:47at the last bite on the ring of Italian tables,
24:49it would be roast chicken,
24:51even better if with abundant potatoes
24:53and a lot of rosemary.
24:55This is revealed by an investigation
24:57of Astra Research carried out
24:59in view of the Roast Chicken Day 2024,
25:01the great social marathon organized
25:03by Una Italia,
25:05the national association of white meat producers.
25:07And the most interesting fact
25:09is certainly that 94% of Italians
25:11remember that their grandmother cooked,
25:13or still cooks, roast chicken.
25:15And this is something that is strongly copied
25:17by our compatriots,
25:19since one in three is inspired
25:21by the grandmother's recipe
25:23to make roast chicken today.
25:25And this is interesting for those
25:27who even eat meatballs.
25:29Also this year, the most beloved meat
25:31among the symbols of the Italian gastronomic tradition
25:33is celebrated on October 2,
25:35the day of the Grandparents' Day.
25:37Roast chicken is perfectly linked
25:39to the memories of the family,
25:41to the tradition, to the Sundays
25:43at the grandparents' house.
25:45White meat is confirmed
25:47as the favorite of Italians,
25:49they are the only ones to have
25:51a trend that emerges
25:53in light but constant consumption.
25:55This year we are around 21 kg per capita
25:57and white meat also remains
25:59one of the favorites
26:01in the Italian shopping cart
26:03with domestic purchases
26:05that account for around 35%.
26:07It is also an aromatic and tasty recipe.
26:09Chicken is family.
26:11When you put a chicken on the table,
26:13you always serve it
26:15at the center of the table,
26:17or cut it whole.
26:19It is nice to serve them
26:21and it is a convivial thing.
26:23I always prefer to eat it whole,
26:25to the spirit to do it whole
26:27and then put it in the center
26:29and tear it with your hands
26:31because the aromas,
26:33the herbs, the salt we put on the skin,
26:35when you take it with your hands
26:37it sticks with the fat
26:39close to the fingers
26:41and when you eat it, it is very tasty.
26:43All this is lost when you use the forks.
26:45My career as a restaurant owner,
26:47as a chef,
26:49as a cook
26:51was born by making chicken
26:53on the spit and roast.
26:55This is a very important,
26:57deep memory that continues
26:59to be in my family.
27:01The theme of the eighth edition
27:03of Chicken on the Spit Day
27:05is a masterclass
27:07at the Gambero Rosso Academy
27:09with the star of social media,
27:11Grandma Marghe,
27:13to learn how to cook chicken on the spit
27:15as Grandma commands.
27:17Beautiful memories as a child
27:19and I send them to my daughters,
27:21to my nieces,
27:23and almost every Sunday
27:25we make chicken on the spit.
27:33Chicken on the Spit
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