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Search Results for: Climate change

10 results out of 4041 results found for 'Climate change'.

SIDEBAR - ICAO TRIES GLOBAL APPROACH TO REDUCE CARBON EMISSIONS



BY MARK ROWE and KEITH NUTHALL

WITH carbon emissions being a global problem, there is obvious good sense in trying to tackle the issue on a worldwide basis, and the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) has a wide-raging programme to achieve this aim.…

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KIKKOMAN GROWS STEADILY, EVEN WHILE JAPAN'S ECONOMY STAGNATES



BY JULIAN RYALL

THERE is no single secret to creating the best soy sauce in the world, according to the head of the Japanese company that first produced the seasoning as far back as the 17th century. Rather, the secret is a combination of three things, Yuzaburo Mogi, honorary CEO and chairman of the board of directors of Kikkoman Corp.,…

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REJECTED EU HEALTH CLAIMS TO BE RETURNED TO EFSA FOR RE-EVALUATION



BY PETER DA COSTA and KEITH NUTHALL

THE EUROPEAN Food Safety Authority (EFSA) is expecting to be asked to re-evaluate up to 200 food health claims that it rejected in the past three years as being based on insufficient information, just-food can reveal.…

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ANTI-FRAUD COMMISSIONER BLAMES MEMBER STATES FOR FAULTY ACCOUNTS - PO 433702



BY KEITH NUTHALL

THE EUROPEAN Union’s (EU) anti-fraud Commissioner has blamed member states for the EU accounts again being declared faulty by the Court of Auditors, the union’s financial watchdog. The court concluded in its assessment of the 2010 accounts that while they "present fairly the financial position of the European Union…the payments underlying these accounts were still affected by material error, with an estimated error rate of 3.7% for the EUR122.2 billion of EU spending."…

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UPRISINGS CUT BOTH WAYS FOR LEBANESE PRINTERS



BY PAUL COCHRANE

UPRISINGS in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) this year have hit demand for printers in Lebanon, which has long been the printing hub of the region. Lebanese printers canvassed privately for Print Week MEA report that the upheavals have seen demand from Egypt and Syria decline, while transportation has been marginally affected from Lebanon due to the situation in neighbouring Syria.…

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EU-ETS SCHEME PROMPTS US AND CHINESE OPPOSITION



BY MARK GODFREY and MJ DESCHAMPS

THE EXTENSION of the European Union’s (EU) emission trading scheme to the civil aviation sector might have been welcomed by environmentalists, but it has upset politicians and industry leaders abroad notably in the United States and China.…

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ANTI-MONEY LAUNDERING AND TERROR FINANCE RULES ARE MUCH TOUGHER, 10 YEARS AFTER 9/11 ATTACKS



BY PAUL COCHRANE

THE SEPTEMBER 11, 2001, terrorist attacks thrust anti-money laundering (AML) and counter terrorist financing (CTF) initiatives into the spotlight as the United States embarked on its ‘war on terror’. A decade later, tremendous progress has been made in tracking and seizing dirty money.…

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CHINA'S COOKING OIL CONSUMERS DEMAND DIVERSITY



BY WANG FANGQING

WHILE soybean oil still remains the main cooking oil of choice used in China, the country’s manufacturers have recently been experiencing a shift – with a growing demand for diversity in terms of cooking products in large and small cities.…

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WORLD'S LIGHTEST METAL TO LEND ITSELF TO AEROSPACE AND AUTOMOTIVE INNOVATION



BY MJ DESCHAMPS and LEAH GERMAIN

A NEW metal structure 100 times lighter than Styrofoam and poised to revolutionise the aerospace and automotive industries has been developed in the US by a team of researchers from the California Institute of Technology, HRL Laboratories and the University of California Irvine.…

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WILL CROATIA'S ASCENSION TO THE EU HAMPER THE COUNTRY'S TOBACCO INDUSTRY?



BY ZLATKO CONKAS

Will Croatia’s ascension to the EU hamper the country’s tobacco industry?

Croatia’s strong tobacco sector stands to benefit from selling into the European Union once the country joins the EU. However it could lose trade in neighbouring states because of duty changes.…

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