International news agency
International News Services archives articles supplied to clients one year or more after initial publication. These articles are protected by a password and not made available to readers without permission from clients. They are used as a background resource by agency journalists. Upon client requests, International News Services will remove such articles from the archive or not upload them in the first place. They are included to demonstrate the breadth of topics undertaken by the agency and also to help promote clients’ coverage.

Search Results for: european union

10 results out of 18004 results found for 'european union'.

EU SAFETY



BY JONATHAN THOMSON
A CARMAKERS’ voluntary agreement on introducing technical changes in designs boosting cyclist and pedestrian safety has been approved by the European Parliament and will now be legally underpinned by a so-called Framework Directive enforcing a range of legal commitments.…

Read more

COCHIN INTERNATIONAL



BY SWINEETHA DIAS WICKRAMANAYAKA
AN ADDITIONAL injection of IND Rupees 220 million, (US$4.5 million), is to be invested into Cochin International Airport Ltd, in Kerala, India, by five directors of the company, raising their stake to 26 per cent. The move is part of a plan by the company to expand its equity base to INDRupees 2,000 million, (US$40.8 million), from the current IND Rupees 900 million, (US$18.3 million), to liquidate high-cost loans that have been eating into its profits.…

Read more

CHINA BAN



BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Union has lifted a ban on Chinese imports of certain fish, (including whole farmed and wild fish, gutted and de-headed fish and fish fillets of Alaska pollack, cod, redfish farmed fish and crustaceans), following tests by the EU Food and Veterinary Office.…

Read more

GERMANY FEED IN



BY KEITH NUTHALL
REVERSING its earlier position, the European Commission has agreed that the German grid feed-in laws on the promotion of electricity from renewable energy sources and from combined heat and power do not constitute state aid, that Brussels could, in theory, ban.…

Read more

GALILEO



Keith Nuthall
THE EUROPEAN Union’s Galileo global positioning project is being further delayed, this time because Member States are competing to inject more money into the satellite system, to lay claim to greater shares of resulting contracts. Until a recent deal over costs, national governments had been arguing about how to control Galileo’s budget.…

Read more

SHORT CHAIN PARAFFINS



BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Union Council of Ministers has formally ordered that short-chain chlorinated paraffins not be sold for use in the fat liquoring of leather, whether as substances, constituents of other substances, or in preparations where concentrations are higher than one per cent.…

Read more

HEMP GRANT



Keith Nuthall
THE EUROPEAN Court of Justice has ruled that by allowing hemp fibre crops to be harvested before its seeds are fully mature, (enabling the them to produce cannabis), the Netherlands government broke European Union subsidy rules, which are strict on the age of hemp that attracts Brussels subsidies.…

Read more

END OF LIFE VEHICLES



BY JONATHAN THOMSON
GERMANY is set to become the first European country to transpose the controversial EU End-of-Life Vehicle Directive (ELV), while Britain appears to be dragging its feet over implementation.

All 15 Member States failed to meet the ELV deadline of April 21, 2002, for introducing laws on the disposal and recycling of vehicles.…

Read more

EU STEEL DEALS



BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Union Council of Ministers has approved the creation of new import quotas for steel products from the Ukraine, which will last until December 31, this year. Imports into the European Union during this year will be limited to 27,414 tonnes of coils, 104,920 tonnes of heavy plate and 8,465 tonnes of other flat steel products; and for long products, quotas have been set at 3,690 tonnes for beams, 52,720 tonnes for wire rod and 66,427 or other long steel products.…

Read more

END OF LIFE VEHICLES



BY JONATHAN THOMSON
FIVE YEARS since it was first proposed, the End-of-Life (ELV) Vehicle Directive has just about made it to the statute books of a handful of EU member states. A directive both controversial and complex, it was maybe surprising, if a little disappointing, that the deadline of April 21, 2002 for transposition went by without a single EU country passing legislation.…

Read more