Search Results for: America
10 results out of 1848 results found for 'America'.
WTO DEAL MIGHT GIVE PERSONAL CARE PRODUCTS HELPING HAND WITH EXPORTS – ESPECIALLY IN EMERGING MARKETS
A NEW agreement at the World Trade Organisation (WTO) to reduce many of the formalities facing exporters could give fresh impetus to cosmetics companies engaged in world trade, although some business leaders say it was only one of a number of problems they faced.…
ERP SOFTWARE TRENDS
Global technology analysts Gartner Inc is well known for its articulated predictions. An announcement in January 2014 to accompany its report on ‘Predicts 2014: The Rise of the Postmodern ERP and Enterprise Applications World’, highlighted the complex, and at times conflicting scenario facing companies considering moving their enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems to the cloud.…
EUROPEAN COMMISSION GIVES APPROVAL FOR MEAT PRESERVATIVE
The European Commission has approved the use of ethyl lauroyl arginate (E-243) as a preservative in most heat-treated meat products in the 28-country European Union (EU). But the Commission has retained a ban on its use in emulsified sausages, smoked sausages and liver paste.…
LATIN AMERICAN PAINT SECTORS ENCOUNTER CONTRASTING FORTUNES
THE COUNTRIES of Latin America may have strong cultural links, but their politics and economies have always varied and this is still the case with the paint and coatings sector. Whilst the whole region has experienced rising incomes over the past decade, this growth has been far from even and is currently under threat – for instance in Venezuela and Argentina, where interventionist governments have impeded trade.…
RESEARCHERS USE GENETIC MODIFICATION TO MAKE TREES EASIER TO PROCESS
NORTH American researchers have discovered a way to genetically engineer trees to make their wood easier to break down in industrial processing, requiring fewer chemicals and less energy to produce paper and biofuels. The project, a collaboration between researchers at Canada’s University of British Columbia (UBC) and the USA’s University of Wisconsin-Madison and Michigan State University, has potentially significant implications for the commercial use of wood by-products and how they relate to forestry management and the environment.…
CONSUMER WIPES MAJOR NONWOVENS GROWTH AREA
GROWTH in the global nonwoven consumer wipes market is set to slow over the coming years, although a number of trends are encouraging brands and manufacturers in particular product segments such as baby wipes and anti-bacterial surface care products. Meanwhile, a growing range of innovations are emerging focused on producing flushable wipes.…
SANCTIONED RUSSIA COULD DIVERT NON-FERROUS TRADES TO CHINA, BUT AGAINST AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN COMPETITION
Russia is well placed to export more nickel, aluminium, ferro-alloys, lead ores and zinc ores to China, should the US and European Union (EU) impose sanctions because of the Ukraine crisis.
With pro-Russian activists yesterday seizing another police station – in Horlivka, near Donetsk – and the Ukraine military now reacting – retaking the regional airport in Kramatorsk, tensions are rising. …
CHINA READMITS POULTRY AND PORK IMPORTS FROM CHILE
CHINA has announced that it will re-admit pork and poultry imports from Chile, having suspended them last July (2013) over concerns about dioxin contamination.
China’s General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine (AQSIQ) has however posted a statement insisting that importers submit animal health documents and no–doxin-contamination test reports from Chile’s Agricultural and Livestock Service (SAG).…
TECHNOLOGY CAN HELP COMPANIES MAKE SOURCING SHIFTS
Apparel and textile companies must consider a variety of complex factors when looking to switch suppliers, especially to a new manufacturer, such as assessing the risk of delivery delays and receiving products of poor quality.
Software specifically geared towards apparel and textile production can now help companies track these changes, anticipate issues caused by the shift, and help integrate new suppliers within the supply chain, while tracking their progress.…
MUSK OX KNITWEAR DEVELOPS WARM AND LIGHT FIBRE FROM EXOTIC ARCTIC WILDLIFE
ONE of the warmest fibres used in knitwear across the world is also – unsurprisingly – one of the rarest and most expensive, making the manufacturing of ‘qiviuk’ garments from musk ox wool a true art. Harvested from the soft underfur of this High Arctic musk ox, qiviuk fibre is long, does not shrink when washed and lacks the scales that makes sheep wool itchy.…