Search Results for: Canada
10 results out of 2111 results found for 'Canada'.
LEGO LOSES EU TRADEMARK RIGHTS TO ITS PLASTIC BRICK IMAGE
BY KEITH NUTHALL
DANISH plastic toymaker Lego has lost a legal bid to secure EU trademark rights to a three-dimensional image of one of its plastic red bricks. European Court of Justice (ECJ) judges have ruled the image was too generic and commonplace, so other companies would be unfairly restricted from using pictures of plastic bricks in their marketing.…
CANADIAN URANIUM MINERS STRUGGLE TO SECURE REGULATORY APPROVAL FOR EXTRACTION
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE GLOBAL market for uranium is booming as climate change gives the nuclear power sector a new lease of life, but given this element’s intrinsic environmental health difficulties, regulatory obstacles for mining companies can be tough.
Maybe nowhere is this more apparent than in the world’s largest uranium producer, Canada: uranium miners’ safety measures have to be doubly secure, lest public opinion prevents work starting in the first place.…
DRINKS PRODUCTION AND MARKETING RULES SEEK TO BALANCE PROTECTING EXCELLENCE WITH LIBERATING COMMERCE
BY ALAN OSBORN
INTRODUCTION
About 10 years ago the American distiller JB Wagoner decided to market a fiery liquor made from the cactus-like agave plants growing in the hills on his estate at Temecula in California. He called it "temequila." It soon became known as "the American tequila," proving indistinguishable in taste, texture and effect from the well-known Mexican drink.…
CANADIAN URANIUM MINERS STRUGGLE TO SECURE REGULATORY APPROVAL FOR EXTRACTION
BY KEITH NUTHALL
WITHOUT uranium mining we would not have nuclear energy, and with the industry experiencing a renaissance because of global warming, demand and prices for uranium is only likely to increase in the medium term. But of course uranium is not the most stable of substances, and digging it out of the ground is never going to be overwhelming popular amongst communities near mine sites.…
NEW ELECTRICAL HEATING OIL EXTRACTION PROCESS DEVELOPED IN ALBERTA
BY MONICA DOBIE
RESEARCHERS from the University of Alberta’s School of Mining and Petroleum Engineering, Canada, have developed an electrical heating process to help draw oil from untapped deposits that are small or difficult to reach. The scientists say this is more economically and environmentally sound than current extraction processes using steam assisted gravity drainage.…
JAPAN: Asia commercial crime university experts command valuable expertise
By Gavin Blair
Though the number of academic specialists in commercial crime in the Asia-Pacific region may be fewer than in the US or Europe, many of the leading figures are both willing to work with corporate clients and have a great deal of experience outside the ivory towers.…
UNIVERSITIES OFFER ELITE ANTI-MONEY LAUNDERING ADVICE TO ORGANISATIONS COMPLYING WITH AML LAWS
BY ALAN OSBORN
THE WORLD is not over-full of specialist academic experts at universities and colleges teaching anti-money laundering methods. This is partly because the subject is often subsumed into financial crime generally and partly because genuine AML skills can command a useful premium to banks and other major financial institutions better able to support lavish salaries and back-up systems.…
ZIMBABWE'S NURSES COPE WITH EQUIPMENT AND FINDING SHORTAGES, WHILE MANY ABANDON THE COUNTRY
BY CLEMENCE MANYUKWE
SHYLETTE Chifamba, 38, works for 12 hours each day at Harare’s Baines Avenues Clinic, one of the country’s elite private hospitals. Mrs Chifamba has worked for 13 years as an operating theatre nurse, five of which were at the government-run Harare Central Hospital, where she was also trained.…
GLOBAL AGREEMENT ON IMPROVING AIRPORT AND AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL EFFICIENCY AND COSTS STRUCK AT ICAO
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE WORLD’S civil aviation industry has approved guidelines on airport charging that tries to square the circle of additional flexibility and avoiding discriminatory punishing fees, as the industry faces twin challenges of higher costs and ongoing privatisation. A conference staged in Montreal, Canada, by the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) agreed changes to the UN body’s policy guidance on charges, especially improving policy guidance regarding the commercialisation and privatisation of airports and air navigation service providers.…
EU ROUND UP - EUROPEAN ENERGY NEGOTIATIONS WITH RUSSIA FROZEN OVER GEORGIA CONFLICT
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Union (EU) has frozen its partnership and cooperation negotiations with Russia over the Georgia conflict, just three months after the talks were launched following long delays. An emergency meeting of the EU Council of Ministers has ordered no meetings will take place with Moscow on the agreement until its "troops have withdrawn to the positions held prior to 7 August", prior to its short war with Georgia.…