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: Hungarian

10 results out of 144 results found for 'Hungarian'.

EUROPE'S EMISSION TRADING SCHEME HITS CHOPPY WATERS - BUT OTHER NATIONAL SCHEMES SHOW MORE PROMISE



BY MARK ROWE

WHEN the European Union (EU) set up the world’s first carbon trading market in 2001, the Emissions Trading System (ETS), advocates heralded a new dawn: carbon pollution could be brought under control in a way that benefited the environment while not damaging industrial interests.…

Read more

EASTERN EUROPE'S COSMETICS MARKET RECOVERS, BUT STILL TOUGH FOR SMALLER PLAYERS



BY MARK ROWE, IN LONDON; ZLATKO CONKAS, IN NOVI SAD, SERBIA; MIKE STEIN, IN PRAGUE; AND BLAKE BERRY, IN WARSAW

DURING the spring of 2011, the prevailing view throughout eastern Europe’s personal care and toiletries market was that while business was not exactly buoyant, the worst of the recession was over – then came the credit crises and the faltering Euro.…

Read more

INTERNATIONAL ROUND UP - EU SUGAR QUOTAS TO GO



BY KEITH NUTHALL

THE EUROPEAN Commission has confirmed it is scrapping sugar production quotas across the European Union (EU) in 2015 when proposing a comprehensive reform of the EU’s Common Agricultural Policy (CAP). There have been calls from some member states and MEPs for the quota regime to be renewed, but the Commission has stuck to its guns and will continue with abolition.…

Read more

INTERNATIONAL CONFECTIONERY NEWS ROUND-UP - EFSA COMPLETES HEALTH CLAIM ASSESSMENTS



BY KEITH NUTHALL

THE EUROPEAN Food Safety Authority (EFSA) is staging a re-evaluation of the sweetener aspartame after it agreed to bring forward from 2020 a scheduled inquiry, despite recent scientific assessments failing to reveal fresh concerns about the sweetener.

Indeed, EFSA reviewed the latest studies on aspartame only in April, but accepted a European Commission request for a new study.…

Read more

EU MULLS INTEGRATING WATER SECTOR REFORMS WITH INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY



BY KEITH NUTHALL

THE EUROPEAN Union (EU) could target its multi-billion Euro international aid budget at more overseas water utility development projects if the EU’s current Hungarian presidency gets its way. A meeting of the EU Council of Ministers for foreign affairs on Tuesday (24-5) debated a detailed plan drafted by Budapest.…

Read more

NEW HUNGARY ENGINE PLANT TO FUEL GM GROWTH IN SOUTH-EAST EUROPE



BY ZLATKO ?ONKA?

GENERAL Motors (GM) Europe unit Opel/Vauxhall is constructing a new engine plant in the western Hungarian city of Szentgotthárd, aiming to boost the company’s growing share of the south-east Europe market. Opel managers have said they want this Euro EUR500 million investment (US dollar USD713.780 million) to help the company grow its 5.5% market share (in 2010 – 35,456 cars) of the regional market, making it the sixth most popular marque (up from eighth in 2009).…

Read more

MAJOR RETAILERS DELIGHTED WITH SPANISH HYPERMARKET PLANNING RULING



BY ALAN OSBORN

Big European food retailers have been delighted with a new ruling by the European Court of Justice (ECJ) slapping down regulations imposed by the Spanish government to restrict the location and operations of hypermarkets in Catalonia. The court, whose decisions are legal precedents throughout every country and region in the European Union (EU), said Spain had failed to fulfill obligations imposed by the "freedom of establishment" provision of the EU treaties.…

Read more

HUNGARY PUSHES FORWARD ON AML CONTROLS AFTER EMERGING FROM CHAOTIC 1990s



BY MARK ROWE and KEITH NUTHALL

HUNGARY’S strategic location in central Europe, a cash-based economy, and a well-developed financial services industry, makes it important to both pan-European anti-money laundering enforcement, and indeed, to criminals themselves.

Generally, the nature of money laundering that goes on in Hungary can be serious but stops short of funnelling funds to terrorist organisations.…

Read more

WEST AFRICAN AIRPORTS IN UN DRUG SEIZURE INITIATIVE



BY KEITH NUTHALL

37.40

INTELLIGENCE advice teams are to be posted at international airports in seven west African countries, to boost the number and effectiveness of illicit drugs seizures at their terminals. This ‘Aircop’ initiative has been organised by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), the World Customs Organisation (WCO) and Interpol.…

Read more

EU ROUND UP - BRUSSELS UNVEILS GAS INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT PRIORITIES



BY KEITH NUTHALL

THE EUROPEAN Commission has unveiled its gas infrastructure investment priorities for the next 20 years. They are pipeline and other transit projects delivering gas directly from the Caspian Sea to Europe; integrating the Baltic gas market, connecting it to central and southeast Europe; and boosting north-south infrastructure in western Europe to remove internal bottlenecks.…

Read more