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Search Results for: China

10 results out of 3737 results found for 'China'.

UNECE CONFERENCE



BY ALAN OSBORN
THE “CE” mark, denoting that a product was made in the European Union, is being abused by unscrupulous manufacturers and traders and is giving legitimate companies a bad name according to delegates at a recent international forum on market surveillance.…

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CHINALCO



BY SWINEETHA DIAS WICKRAMANAYAKA
THE CHINESE state-owned Aluminium Corporation of China (Chinalco) has asked the Indian government permission to set up a 12-million tonne aluminium smelter and captive power plant worth INDRupees 17.5 billion (US$360 million). Of this investment, INDRupees 5.25 billion (US$110 million) would be in equity, with a 50 per cent foreign equity element, and the remaining INDRupees 12.25 billion (US$250 million) would be from international investors.…

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AIR TRAFFIC



BY PHILIP FINE, in Montreal, Canada

THE EFFECTS of September 11 have left their mark on the relationship between air traffic control national service providers (ANSPs) and their customers. The economic fall-out from the terrorist attacks now defines much of the dialogue between ANSPs, airlines and airports.…

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COUNTERFEIT SOFTDRINKS



BY ALAN OSBORN, in London, PHILIP FINE, in Montreal, and MATTHEW BRACE, in Sydney

WITH a new crackdown on counterfeiting being prepared by the

European Commission, some industry watchers will be surprised to hear that soft drinks is one the sectors that Brussels thinks needs close attention.…

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INDONESIA RAGS



BY MARK ROWE
INDONESIAN textile producers have warned that their industry faces thousands of job losses as smuggled used garments flood the Indonesian market. The past few months have seen a rise in smuggled goods from China, Japan, Korea, Taiwan, the United States and some European countries.…

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ASIA-PACIFIC ATC



BY MATTHEW BRACE
WHEN IATA’s Director General and CEO, Pierre J Jeanniot, spoke at the opening of his organisation’s 58th AGM and the World Air Transport Summit in Shanghai on June 3, 2002, he lamented the industry’s losses of US$12 billion the previous year.…

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PHILIPPINES



BY MARK ROWE
AN INFLUX of cheap products from China is threatening the city of Marikina’s title as the shoe capital of the Philippines. The cheap goods have pushed the city’s shoe industry, which employs about 14,000 people and was one of the top five shoe exporters in Asia, to the brink of collapse.…

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PHANTOM SHIP LIABILITY



BY MONICA DOBIE
PHANTOM ships may become less common on the high seas because of a Commonwealth-based law dating back to 1906, that was recently invoked for the first time in a Hong Kong court.

Section 44 of the Chinese territory’s Marine Insurance Act (MIA) says that a theft liability risk does not attach to a ship’s cargo if the ship’s managers had no intention from the outset of sailing to an agreed destination; it was used to defeat insurance claims made against mainland-China based and state-owned defendant China Insurance Company Limited by the owner of missing cargo worth US$2.5 million aboard the merchant vessel, the Pacifica.…

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HALAL CONGLOMERATE



BY MARK ROWE
MALAYSIA is to set up a halal food conglomerate with companies from China and the Middle East as part of its campaign to promote the country as a hub for Muslim food, notably meat products. The Malaysian government believes much of the lucrative market for halal food remains relatively untapped; in China alone there are some 50 million Muslims.…

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PHANTOM SHIPS



BY MONICA DOBIE
INSTANCES of Phantom ship fraud may decrease in the future because of a law dating back to 1906 that was recently invoked in a Hong Kong court for the first time.

Section 44 of the Marine Insurance Act (MIA), a law replicated in many Commonwealth countries, was used to defeat the owner of missing palm oil cargo worth US$2.5 million aboard the ship the Pacifica that had gone missing in the high seas.…

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