Search Results for: Climate change
10 results out of 4041 results found for 'Climate change'.
BOOMING ALGERIA OFFERS PAINT INDUSTRY LONG-TERM PROSPECTS, FUELLED BY CONTINUING LIBERALISATION REFORMS
BY PAUL COCHRANE, in Beirut
ALGERIA’S paint sector has been experiencing healthy growth in recent years on the back of a petro-dollar fuelled construction boom, yet should the country’s initiatives at modernising and expanding its economy continue at the same pace as over the last decade, there is potential for significantly greater expansion in the paint and coatings market.…
SOUTH AFRICA COSMETICS COMPANIES MAKING STEADY PROGRESS IN BLACK EMPOWERMENT PROGRAMMES
BY STEVEN SWINDELLS, in Johannesburg
THE PROPORTION of cosmetics and personal care product companies in South Africa under black South African management is gradually increasing, following the introduction of BEE [black economic empowerment] Codes of Good Practice in February 2007.
This well-publicised government policy was designed to deepen black ownership within an economy which until the country’s first democratic election in 1994 was essentially white dominated.…
WORLDWIDE EFFORTS TO MAKE TANKERS LESS POLLUTING ARE MAKING PROGRESS
BY DEIRDRE MASON, in London; LUCY JONES, in Dallas; JULIAN RYALL, in Tokyo; and KEITH NUTHALL
GIVEN the spate of oil tanker accidents in recent years involving substantial pollution of seas and coastlines around the world, it is no surprise that international organisations have weighed in with regulatory controls and guidelines on shipping standards.…
AUSTRALIA PUSHES AHEAD WITH COMPREHENSIVE ANTI-MONEY LAUNDERING REFORMS
BY KARRYN CARTELLE
AUSTRALIA is currently ranked as the eighth largest market in the world – third largest within the Asia-Pacific region after Japan and Hong Kong – in terms of its total stock market capitalisation of AUD$1.63 trillion (USD$1.53 trillion) in 2007 (World Federation of Exchanges figures).…
USA - Drugs divided into nanoparticles shrink tumours faster than conventional medicines
Monica Dobie
Drugs divided into nanoparticles are more effective at shrinking tumours than conventionally structured medicines, according to researchers from the Washington University School of Medicine in St Louis, Missouri, USA.
Researchers used fumagillin coated nanoparticles – a naturally occurring antibiotic that inhibits cell proliferation – and focused the drug directly on tumours in rabbits.…
DELEK BREAKS THE MONOPOLY IN ISRAEL'S ENERGY MARKET BY BECOMING A DOMINANT IMPORTER
BY HELENA FLUSFEDER, in Jerusalem
FOR the fledgling state of Israel in 1951, being dependent on two foreign companies for its supply of petrol was hardly ideal, especially at a time of war when the companies had reduced their activities in the country.…
EU ROUND UP - AGREEMENT FORGED OVER UNBUNDLING OF EU GAS AND ELECTRICITY NETWORKS
BY KEITH NUTHALL
A DEAL has been struck at the European Union (EU) Council of Ministers over unbundling of gas (and electricity) networks, which will allow formal ownership of production and distribution operations.
However, this compromise option will insist on transmission systems being managed by an independent operator.…
SOUTH ASIAN KNITWEAR INDUSTRY HAVING MIXED FORTUNES AS GLOBALISATION INTENSIFIES
BY RAGHAVENDRA VERMA, in New Delhi; SAEED AKHTAR BALOCH, in Lahore; and KEITH NOYAHR, in Colombo
THE SOUTH Asian knitwear industry is experienced mixed fortunes at present, with the impact of China’s production boom and the global liberalisation of the textile sector still changing sub-continental fortunes.…
NEW TECHNOLOGY WILL NOT LET UTILITIES OFF THE HOOK IN REDUCING GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS
BY ANDREW CAVE
SCARCELY a week goes by without volumes of newsprint or prime broadcasting slots being devoted to new and ingenious ways of mitigating climate change.
Global warming is now widely regarded the single most important issue the world faces, so it is no surprise that it is exercising the minds of the world’s most creative scientists.…
SMALLER EASTERN EUROPE COUNTRIES PREPARED TO CLUB TOGETHER TO ASSURE THEIR NUCLEAR FUTURES
BY MARK ROWE
NUCLEAR energy production costs a lot of money and so it makes some economic sense for smaller countries interested in this climate-change friendly power supply to combine forces on major projects. So it is in eastern Europe, where in February 2007, Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania, and Poland provisionally agreed to build a new nuclear plant at Lithuania’s existing Ignalina site, initially with 3,200 MWe.…