Search Results for: Environmental health
10 results out of 7460 results found for 'Environmental health'.
OBLIGED ENTITIES SHOULD KEEP REVIEWING AND REFORMING AML SCREENING RED FLAGS, SAY EXPERTS
Anti-money laundering is a detection game, with AML officers (AMLOs) looking for red flags that may indicate crime-tainted transactions, and then digging deeper. But that usually requires automated alerts which need to be managed and tweaked, with algorithms configured according to risk.…
EU/WTO REGULATORY ROUND UP – GLOBAL DEAL ON FOOD TRADE STILL TARGETED AT WTO
Global negotiators continue to chase the dream of an international agreement on trading food and drink products, despite talks having continued, without agreement, since 2001. That was when the World Trade Organisation (WTO) Doha Development Round of talks were launched, with the key goal of revamping the WTO agreement on agriculture, which covers food and drink.…
IMPLEMANTAION OF ESG CRITERIA CAN CONTRIBUTE TO LONG TERM SURVIVAL AND SUCCESS - GCC ARE SUGGESTING TO THEIR BUSINESS
An ACCA co-hosted conference in Dubai has heard how today, Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) bloc companies should not view meeting ESG (environmental, social, governance) standards as an optional add-on, which may help marketing, but as a prerequisite for commercial long-term survival.…
IRELAND’S CAN FILLING SECTORS FACE UP TO MANDATORY RECYCLING REGIMES
A new national mandatory recycling regime announced last November (2022) (1) being introduced by Ireland’s government has local breweries shying away from canned beer formats.
“We wouldn’t consider cans now because the DRS [deposit return scheme] scheme is punitive in its execution,” said Richard Siberry, founder, GM and head brewer of Roscommon-based Black Donkey Brewing, a craft brewer with nationwide sales.…
DEDICATED TEAM NEEDED TO PREPARE FOR CBAM, SAY EU ACCOUNTING EXPERTS
The European Union’s (EU) new Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) regulation (1) will challenge importers of greenhouse gas emissions-intensive goods, who must pay and administer a complex environmental levy. KPMG the Netherlands’ senior tax manager Nicole de Jager and tax lawyer Merijn Betjes told Accounting & Business (A&B), affected companies will have to “create a core team to manage this topic and perform an impact assessment,” to determine strategies.…
MALI BUILDS NEW CENTRAL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY TO AID LEARNING AND PROTECT VALUABLE ISLAMIC TEXTS
A new Central University Library of Mali, serving higher education institutions across this Sahel and Sahara country, will house thousands of ancient Islamic texts, including some removed from Timbuktu in 2013, to save them from destruction at the hands of Islamist militants.…
PHILIPPINE COATINGS AND PAINTS SECTOR ENJOYING MACROECONOMIC TAILWINDS
The Philippines’ demand for coatings and paints is leaving the pandemic behind, with London-based market researcher Euromonitor International reporting that home paint retail sales in the Asian archipelago returned to growth in 2021. That year, they recorded Philippines Peso PHP15.4 billion (USD280 million), up from PHP14 billion in 2020 but still lower than the PHP18 billion in pre-pandemic 2019.…
KENYA PUSHES AHEAD AS EAST AFRICA’S PAINT SECTOR POWERHOUSE
Kenya remains east Africa’s economic powerhouse and its ability to supply and encourage the region’s paint and coatings sector remains strong. Sales in paints, varnishes, pigments and other related coatings are expected to grow by 2.86% annually until 2028, according to insights from Statista (1), a Germany-based provider of market intelligence and business solutions.…
TASMANIA WOOL PRODUCER BUILDS NO-SLAUGHTER WOOL NICHE
An Australian sheep farmer is seeking to demonstrate how additional welfare concern for wool livestock can pay dividends in international clothing and accessory markets where consumers are increasingly concerned about sustainability issues.
This trend has been developing over time – the wool industry has in the past encountered condemnation from animal welfare organisations, such as Peta, whose hard-core campaigns continue and focus on Australia as a major producer country (1).…
MANUFACTURERS AND RESEARCHERS EXPLORE INTEGRATION OF SUPER-MATERIAL GRAPHENE INTO NONWOVENS
The highly versatile material graphene is becoming increasingly popular in a variety of health and safety uses in nonwoven products, despite calls for further research to be conducted to assess its long-term impact on toxicity in humans and the environment.
Demand for graphene’s powerful antimicrobial and filtration qualities grew sharply during the Covid-19 pandemic, especially for incorporation in nonwoven masks.…