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Search Results for: Australia

10 results out of 1414 results found for 'Australia'.

INDONESIAN SMOKERS



BY MATTHEW BRACE
THE day I met Kadek he was sitting on the well-worn black saddle of his 50cc Yamaha, shades perched on his nose and obligatory Djarum smouldering on his bottom lip. “Transport?” he asked; the signature call of Kuta Boys who earn pin money from scooting tourists, frugal businessmen and journalists through the traffic-clogged streets of this fabled Bali beach resort.…

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BSE RISKS



BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE RISK that American cattle are infected with BSE is high, the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) has concluded, and without changes to US rendering or feeding practice, “the probability of cattle to be (pre-clinically or clinically) infected with BSE persistently increases”.…

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US SUGAR QUOTAS



BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE DOMINICAN Republic heads the list of countries granted low rate tariff quotas by the USA for sugar and sugar-containing product imports made in 2004-5. It has been allocated a 185,335 tonne quota, followed by Brazil with 152,691 tonnes and Philippines, 142,160.…

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LEGUME FEED



BY KEITH NUTHALL
SCIENTISTS from 17 European countries and Australia are cooperating in a research project using the latest genetic knowledge to improve the quality of vegetable-based animal feed. The Grain Legumes project will focus on peas, beans, lentils and others to create protein-rich alternatives to meat-based feed, which carries health risks, such as BSE.…

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UN UNDERSEA REPORT - EXPLORATION



BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE FEEDING of rare and exotic marine species off deep ocean mineral deposits that may become a target for metal mining companies could create a conflict between international mineral extraction and environmental conventions, a United Nations report has warned.…

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UN UNDERSEA REPORT



BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE FEEDING of rare and exotic marine species off deep ocean mineral deposits that may become a target for mining companies could create a conflict between international mineral extraction and environmental conventions, a United Nations report has warned.…

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FROG FUNGUS



BY MONICA DOBIE
AMERICAN scientists believe that a fungus is to blame for the accelerated decline and, in some cases, extinction of frogs and toads in north and central America and Australia James P. Collins, an ecologist and evolutionary biologist at Arizona State University told the Los Angeles Times that 32 strains of the emerging pathogen called batrachochytrium dendrobatidis have been linked to three-fourths of frogs species in decline in Costa Rica and Panama.…

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QANTAS LANDING SYSTEM



BY MATTHEW BRACE
THE AUSTRALIAN airline Qantas is trialling a new landing system that allows air traffic controllers to beam data directly to an aircraft flight computer.

The system is designed to eliminate the need for multiple vocal exchanges between controllers and pilots, and could lead to reduced aircraft noise and emissions.…

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ADS-B ICAO MEETING



BY KEITH NUTHALL
CHINA will this year begin a trial of automatic dependent surveillance-broadcast (ADS-B) technology at three airports in the west of the country, it has told an Asia-Pacific region ADS-B meeting staged by the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO).…

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MUIS INTERVIEW



BY DAVID HAWORTH, in Brussels
THE EUROPEAN Commission’s much-heralded financial reforms will not be fully realised for at least another five years, possibly later, according to Jules Muis, the Commission’s former chief internal auditor.

“Although progress has been made, the Commission has a long way to go before it can present an image of being a world class administrative machine,” he told Accountancy Age during a brief return to the Belgian capital.…

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