Search Results for: Environmental health
10 results out of 7460 results found for 'Environmental health'.
DEPLETED URANIUM
BY MARK ROWE
A TEAM of scientists has visited Bosnia and Herzegovina amidst concerns that 12 areas of the country were contaminated with harmful radiation after being targeted by ordnance containing depleted uranium (DU) during the conflict in the former Yugoslavia.…
SWEDEN
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Commission is threatening Sweden with legal action at the European Court of Justice over its failure to pass national rules insisting upon environmental impact assessments (EIA) for the decommissioning of nuclear power stations. Brussels claims that the EU’s EIA directive requires that the dismantling of plants and reactors should be subject to planning consent, following an environmental impact assessment.…
TOBACCO ATLAS
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE WORLD Health Organisation has produced a Tobacco Atlas, produced with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, USA. It provides statistics such as the differences between countries and genders regarding consumption, the conduct of the tobacco companies, investments by tobacco industry, the costs of tobacco use, illicit trade and litigation.…
ARMENIAN COPPER
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) has drawn up plans to lend US$3 million to the Armenian Copper Programme to help this joint stock company improve its production processes and boost profitability, with the final aim of making environmental improvements.…
EEA REPORT
KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Environment Agency has reached a negative conclusion about the environmental impact of aquaculture in European Union (EU) lakes and seas, saying that the “dramatic increase” in the size of the industry since 1970 had created “an increased pressure on water and ecological quality in those waters affected.”…
ZINC SMELTER
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Bank for Reconstruction and Development is lending Russia’s largest zinc smelter US$12 million to help it eliminate mercury emissions and drastically reduce emissions of sulphur oxydes. The six -year loan to the Chelyabinsk zinc smelter, is the bank’s second in two years; it will finance the construction of a mercury recovery plant and a sulphuric acid plant under the second phase of a modernisation scheme.…
SHIP SCRAP
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE INTERNATIONAL Maritime Organisation (IMO) is drawing up detailed guidelines on the recycling of ship scrap, which should be approved at the United Nations (UN) agency’s assembly next year. IMO’s Marine Environment Protection Committee has noted that while the principle of ship recycling may be sound, working practices and environmental standards in yards “often leave much to be desired.”…
CANNED AIR
BY MARK ROWE
A SOUTH Korean firm has begun selling canned “clean air,” tapping into mounting environmental concerns about industrial and car pollution in the capital Seoul and other major cities. Officials at CJ Corp said that it was the first company to market natural air, as opposed to processed oxygen or perfumed air in South Korea.…
ATM AND SUSTAINABILITY
BY MARK ROWE
THE CURRENT air traffic management (ATM) is flawed in many ways; one key problem being the inherent inefficiencies of an airway system relying on ground-based navigational aids and routes set up around 50 years ago.
Air Navigation Services Providers (ANSP’s) have a responsibility to ensure that the environment – in the air and on the ground – is protected as much as possible from wasteful engine emissions of noxious substances.…
EU DATA PROTECTION
BY KEITH NUTHALL
EMPLOYER liability insurance policies will have to take account of changes to national workplace data protection regulations expected across the EU because of a wide-ranging and detailed public consultation launched by the European Commission.
Brussels has already concluded that there is a need to harmonise the widely divergent rules and practices amongst Member States, so legislation will inevitably be tabled.…