Search Results for: France
10 results out of 2705 results found for 'France'.
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.…
LUCKY STRIKE
BY MARK ROWE
THE BEST selling international brand, Lucky Strike, launched in 1871, is older than BAT and its eye-catching bull’s eye remains one of the oldest trademarks in the world. It is sold in some 90 countries and is BAT’s premier global brand for the key ASU30 segment of the market, particularly with urban smokers.…
TOON ARMY
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE LEGALITY within the European Union of strict alcohol advertising laws such as France’s Loi Evin is in doubt because of an unlikely case at the European Court of Justice involving Newcastle United Football Club. The team is fighting legal action brought by Bacardi-Martini and Cellier des Dauphins, who claim they lost money when Newcastle programmed its revolving touchline hoardings to display their advertisements for swift 1-2 second intervals.…
SPACE CLOTH
KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Space Agency is encouraging the European Union’s textile industry to take advantage of the technological advances that it has been making while developing satellite and rocket missions. Staging a workshop in Lille, France, (July 4-5), the agency said companies should avail themselves of new textiles promoting thermal insulation, bioactive materials, (including those with wearable sensors and computers), and textiles capable of reflecting and withstanding great heat.…
SWINE FEVER LATEST
BY ALAN OSBORN
THE EUROPEAN Commission has extended a ban on the export of all live pigs, together with porcine semen, ova and embryos, to parts of France, Germany and Luxembourg following new outbreaks of classical swine fever. At the same time it has ordered a one-month extension of controls in Spain until 30 June.…
GM CONSUMERS
BY KEITH NUTHALL
A STUDY carried out by France’s Grenoble University shows that European consumers are unlikely to be concerned enough about potential health risks to avoid buying clearly labelled GM foods.…
RUSSIAN TYRES
Keith Nuthall
The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) is to invest US$20 million in a Russian tyre manufacturing plant being built by France’s Michelin group; it is, says the bank, the first western tyre manufacturer to establish a Russia-based production line for the local market.…
AVIATION RECOVERY
BY ALAN OSBORN
IN a further sign of recovery from the fraught conditions of 2001, the Association of European Airlines has reported that air traffic in the European market rose by 2.8 per cent in the week to May 12th. This marked only the third weekly gain since the sharp fall in civil aviation which followed the political and military turbulence of last year.…
TAILOR MADE PACKAGES
BY ALAN OSBORN
THE ASSOCIATION of Travel Agents and Tour Operators in the EU
(ECTAA) is advising its members to seek advice from lawyers over their
potential exposure to claims arising out of so-called tailor-made holidays.
Until now most agents have taken the view that tailor-made holidays are not
covered by EU package holiday legislation but this now has to be revised in
the light of a judgement by the European Court of Justice.…
RITUAL KILLINGS
BY KEITH NUTHALL
SOCIOLOGISTS and police have gathered together at Europol’s headquarters in the Hague, to share intelligence on a number of killings across Europe that appear to have been ritualistic in nature; these include the “Adam” case, where the savagely dismembered torso of a boy about five years old, was found in the Thames last September.…