Search Results for: Dutch caribbean
10 results out of 1144 results found for 'Dutch caribbean'.
SCIENTIFIC DEVELOPMENT IN EMERGING ECONOMY AND POORER COUNTRIES BECOMES INCREASINGLY UNEVEN
BY KEITH NUTHALL
IT has long been outmoded and inaccurate to split the world into two camps: industrialised developed economies, and largely agricultural developing countries. The growth of the 1990s and the current decade means there is a wide range of social and economic sophistication and wealth amongst the poorer of these two old-fashioned categories.…
INTERNATIONAL ANTI-MONEY LAUNDERING ORGANISATIONS HAVE ELITE CADRE OF SPECIALISTS
BY ALAN OSBORN
IN this year’s Money Laundering Bulletin series of articles on the development of an international profession of anti-money laundering (AML) specialists, we have often examined specialists working at the sharp end. But that is not the whole story of course.…
INDIA'S TOBACCO SECTOR IS STILL A GIANT, DESPITE ATTACKS ON SMOKING BY ITS GOVERNMENT
BY RAGHAVENDRA VERMA
INDIA’S US$12.4 billion annual turnover tobacco industry is passing through a difficult period, with little hope for a better future, despite its continued large size – this estimate coming from the Tobacco Institute of India for sales of all tobacco products, chewing tobacco and beedis.…
TRINIDAD PUSHES ON WITH OIL AND GAS PROCESSING EXPANSION PLANS, DESPITE ECONOMIC GLOOM
BY JAMES FULLER
WHILE the global recession is hitting profits in the oil and gas sector worldwide, the Caribbean’s key producer Trinidad & Tobago remains bullish about the industry bringing it long term financial and economic stability. Indeed, the twin-island country’s minister of energy and energy industries Conrad Enill said this month that both a fifth liquefied natural gas (LNG) train and a new oil refinery are projects which are still firmly on the table for the Caribbean energy powerhouse.…
DUTCH SCIENTISTS TURN BABY FILM INTO COSMETIC CREAM
BY MONICA DOBIE
SCIENTISTS from the University of Leiden in the Netherlands have developed a synthetic version of the natural protective cream found on newborn babies. Its properties will in particular help protect babies born prematurely against temperature changes, dehydration and infection as well as providing adults with relief from skin disease.…
INTRODUCTION - RENEWABLE ENERGIES FORGE AHEAD - BUT FROM A LOW BASE
BY KEITH NUTHALL, LEAH GERMAIN and MONICA DOBIE
MAYBE the best sign that renewable energies have hit the mainstream is that they now have their very own international organisation: the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA). Launched in Bonn, Germany, this January, with the support of 76 countries, including its host nation, Spain, Italy, France and Sweden, the roster of signatory nations has since been swollen by India and Belarus.…
RECESSION PROVOKES INCREASED RELIANCE ON CHINESE MARKETS FOR HONG KONG KNITWEAR PRODUCERS
BY MARK GODFREY
THE EMPTINESS of the Giordano store in the departures terminal at massive Baiyun International Airport outside the southern Chinese megapolis of Guangzhou suggests hard times for Hong Kong’s most vaunted and ambitious apparel retailer. This is the capital of wealthy Guangzhou province after all, the manufacturing base for most of Hong Kong’s garment firms.…
EUROPEAN COMMISSION LAUNCHED CARTEL PROBE INTO LEATHER PROCESSING CHEMICAL
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Commission has launched an investigation into an alleged cartel for heat stabilisers epoxidised soybean oil (ESBO) esters and tin stabilisers, both used in leather production. Brussels has released scant details, referring only to "restrictive business practices", but such cases usually involve alleged price and market share fixing, artificially inflating or protecting prices.…
OIL AND GAS COMPANIES FACE COMPETITION FOR KEY PERSONNEL FROM GROWING GREEN SECTOR
BY ANDREW CAVE
GREEN is the colour for many future oil and gas industry jobs, according to a recent study predicting that environment-friendly energy will not only tackle the world’s energy crisis but also create millions of new jobs worldwide.
Green Jobs, published by the Worldwatch Institute, a Washington DC-based research organisation, says the renewable sector and its supplier industries already employ at least 2.3 million people worldwide, including about 300,000 workers in the wind power industry, 170,000 in solar photovoltaics and 600,000 in the solar thermal industry alone.…
THE NETHERLANDS: Dutch researchers create soothing cream from baby film
By Monica Dobie
The ingredients of this cream was discovered through the Dutch researchers unraveling the ingredients of the protective film called Vernix caseosa (VC) that covers the foetus and newborn babies, helping skin growth before and after birth. It provides waterproofing inside the mother’s womb, allowing skin to grow in wet conditions, while after birth it hydrates and cleanses.…