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Search Results for: Environmental health

10 results out of 7634 results found for 'Environmental health'.

HE INSTITUTIONS UNDER PRESSURE TO SHIFT CURRICULA AS ‘GREEN’ JOBS GROW IN NUMBER



As the world’s employment markets are shifting towards jobs that promote sustainability, prompted by concerns about limiting potential runaway climate change, higher education institutions are being encouraged to integrate green skills into curricula.
With major corporations within the European Union (EU) already required to submit sustainability reports on their exposure to and their impact on climate change and sustainability, and other jurisdictions to follow suit, demand for so-called ‘green jobs’ is rising.…

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UK DAIRY SECTOR LOOKS FOR EU FOOD SAFETY DEAL TO BOOST CONTINENTAL TRADE



The UK government is poised to launch talks with the European Union (EU) on forging a sanitary and phytosanitary agreement (SPS) that could remove British and EU food health checks that impede the trade in dairy products.

Dairy UK chief executive Dr Judith Bryans told DII: “A new sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) agreement with the EU has the potential to help in reducing trade administration costs for UK dairy exporters.…

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TECHNICAL ROUND UP – EU MEMBER STATES FAIL TO IMPLEMENT MANDATED EUROPEAN SUSTAINABILITY REPORTING



European Union (EU) member states are failing to implement mandatory sustainability reporting rules imposed by the EU’s corporate sustainability reporting directive (CSRD), the European Commission has concluded. It has opened infringement procedures against 17 of the 27 EU countries saying they have failed to properly write the directive into their national legislation: Austria, Belgium, Cyprus, Czechia, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Greece, Latvia, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovenia and Spain.…

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Photo Credit: EU-Austritt_(47521165961) - https://www.flickr.com/photos/foto_db/47521165961/

CHEMICAL REGULATION DILEMMA FOR NEW UK GOVERNMENT

The election of a new Labour government in the UK comes at a critical time for chemical regulation in Great Britain (GB) – and hence textile-finishing materials. Public consultation is currently underway on potential changes to how GB (not Northern Ireland) regulates its chemical industry and market.  

When the UK left the European Union (EU) on 1 January 2021, it also left the EU’s comprehensive REACH chemical control system, which was formally replaced by a UK REACH system. This mirrored EU REACH, grandfathering existing registrations and restrictions to the national system, although GB companies lost access to EU databases run by the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA).…

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DESPITE LATENT CHALLANGES, TANZANIA TOBACCO LEAF PRODUCTION TO EXPAND



Tanzania is now Africa’s second-largest raw tobacco producer after Zimbabwe, according to the country’s agriculture minister Hussein Bashe and plans are underway to increase production and leaf processing capacity by encouraging more small-scale farmers to engage in contractual tobacco commercial farming.…

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SUSTAINABILITY ACADEMICS TELL IAU WEBINAR ENVIRONENTAL ORIENTATION OF H.E. CAN PROTECT THE PLANET



Academics attending an International Association of Universities (IAU) webinar on ‘Rethinking education for a more sustainable world’ have called for more activism in higher education design and operations to orientate its research and learning towards a healthier planet.

Environmental specialist Professor Stephen Sterling, of the UK’s University of Plymouth, criticised the contribution made by HE in promoting sustainability, saying it was too little and too late, arguing that its continued focus on promoting growth caused problems.…

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SOMALIA UNIVERSTIES BEEF UP SECURITY, AS AL-SHABAAB THREAT GROWS



Universities in Somalia are facing heightened alerts as the country’s security situation continues to deteriorate. While Islamist militant group Al-Shabaab has been pushed away from controlling large swathes of Somalia, especially in the country’s south, over the past 12 years, it has recently increased terror attacks.…

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ENTREPRENEURS PANEL SAYS ALLYING TECH INNOVATION WITH TOP TALENT AND HELPFUL REGULATION IS RECIPE FOR GROWTHENTREPRENEURS PANEL SAYS ALLYING TECH INNOVATION WITH TOP TALENT AND HELPFUL REGULATION IS RECIPE FOR GROWTH



The fashion worldwide industry needs to open itself to ideas from a variety of sources to strengthen its position, for instance through automated production efficiency, innovation in sustainability and widening sourcing worldwide, three young entrepreneurs have claimed. Speaking at the Sewn Products Equipment & Suppliers of the Americas (SPESA) conference in Montréal, Canada, this week Michael Mayr, co-founder and COO of Silana, a Vienna, Austria-based manufacturer claiming to have fully automated sewing of soft materials, a tough challenge for robotics, the “last major processing step in fashion production that has not been automated yet,” claims the company.…

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INNOVATIVE COATINGS MITIGATE EFFECTS OF DEEPENING CLIMATE CHANGE



Companies and researchers are increasingly offering innovative coatings to help businesses and governments fight climate change, providing insulation, heat reflection and other energy-saving functionalities. These products also aid compliance with burgeoning legislation targeting net zero emissions by 2050 and meet intensifying consumer concern about the impact of climate change.…

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INDONESIA'S FOOD INDUSTRY URGES DELAY ON NUTRITIONAL LABELLING OVER ECONOMIC CONCERNS



Indonesia’s food and beverage industry is pushing for a delay implementing a new nutritional labelling system, warning that the regulations could have significant economic repercussions if rushed.

The government’s Regulation No. 28/2024 on health includes measures aimed at controlling sugar, salt, and fat content in processed foods as part of efforts to reduce non-communicable diseases such as heart disease, diabetes, and stroke (1).…

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