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Search Results for: Environmental Health⊂mit=Search

10 results out of 3960 results found for 'Environmental Health⊂mit=Search'.

EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT CALLS FOR PAN-EUROPEAN PUBLIC SMOKING BAN



BY KEITH NUTHALL

THE EUROPEAN Parliament has called for the European Commission to put a legislative gun to the heads of European Union (EU) member states and propose a law protecting workers from second-hand smoke, if national public place smoking bans are not introduced.…

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EU MINISTERS ORDER RUM DUTY REDUCTION FOR FRENCH CARIBBEAN PRODUCERS



BY KEITH NUTHALL

RUM producers from French overseas departments (counties) have been given a 50% tax break on excise duty charged on sales within mainland France, which will stretch until December 2012. The European Union (EU) Council of Ministers has approved this as a derogation from standard EU excise rules, after French government claims that these rum manufacturers are vulnerable commercially.…

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SOUTH KOREAN SEAFOOD INDUSTRY FIGHTS TO BOOST EXPORTS AS SUPPLY PROBLEMS LOOM



BY KARRYN CARTELLE

THE SIGNING of a bilateral Free Trade Agreement (FTA) between South Korea and the United States is expected to fuel an already booming seafood trade. And with the Koreans having a host of other FTAs in the works, it appears this seafood-producing nation will use free trade agreements to push its seafood products to every continent.…

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EU MINISTERS ORDER RUM DUTY REDUCTION FOR FRENCH CARIBBEAN PRODUCERS



BY KEITH NUTHALL

RUM producers from French overseas departments (counties) have been given a 50% tax break on excise duty charged on sales within mainland France, stretching until December 2012. The European Union (EU) Council of Ministers has approved the derogation from standard EU excise rules, after French government claims that these rum manufacturers are vulnerable commercially.…

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EUREKA DEVELOPS ANTIBACTERIAL FIBRE IMPANTS FOR SPORTS PROTECTIVE CLOTHING



BY KEITH NUTHALL

EUROPEAN Union (EU) research network Eureka has developed inorganic antibacterial chemical additives that can be incorporated into polypropylene fibres, to improve the hygiene and comfort of people wearing artificial textiles. The invention has particularly been designed to help manufacturers of sports and protective clothing, and could also be used in textiles that are a mix of natural and polypropylene fibres.…

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MEMBER STATES ACCEPT THE PRINCIPLE OF NATIONAL BUDGETS ON WINE MARKET SPENDING



BY KEITH NUTHALL

PROGRESS has been made in debates over the European Commission’s proposed reforms of the European Union (EU) wine market, with member states accepting special national aid budgets for the industry, called ‘envelopes’. Minutes from a Council of Ministers meeting held Monday and yesterday show "most delegations" accepted these, and that their money could be used for restructuring and converting vineyards; promoting new production techniques; sales pushes within and outside the EU; plus environmental improvements, including ‘green harvesting’.…

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ROAD HAULIERS FACE NEW THEFT RISK - STEALING LORRIES FOR SCRAP VALUE



BY MARK ROWE

LORRIES are increasingly being stolen for their value as scrap and recycled materials, UK authorities have warned the road haulage industry. The rise in thefts of lorries has been blamed partly on the high prices now paid for scrap metal on the international markets – driven in part by China’s insatiable demand for metal – and on thieves who have realized that almost any part of a lorry, from wheel hubs to side panels, axles, catalytic converters, a plastic chair or the gold in the wiring looms has a recyclable value.…

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EU ROUND UP - EU AND RUSSIA CONSIDER REPAIRING STRAINED ENERGY RELATIONS



BY KEITH NUTHALL

A CHINK of light has emerged in the perennially taut energy relations between the European Union (EU) and Russia: both sides have agreed to establish a committee to examine how a system of gas unbundling ‘reciprocity’ might work.…

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OIL COMPANIES WORLDWIDE LOOK FOR WAYS TO DOVETAIL BIOFUEL REFINING AND DISTRIBUTION WITH MINERAL OIL NETWORKS



BY LUCY JONES, in Dallas, Texas, ALAN OSBORN, in London, and PAUL COCHRANE, in Beirut.

AS American gas prices once again edge closer to the US$3 a gallon mark – the point at which an all-pervading quiet panic besets the US retail market – staff at the country’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory’s hotline know busy times are ahead.…

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BRUSSELS APPOINTS TROUBLE-SHOOTERS TO COMPLETE TOUGH CROSS-BORDER INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS



BY ALAN OSBORN

THE EUROPEAN Commission’s decision to appoint ‘project co-ordinators’ to try to spark movement in four long-stalled cross-border energy projects in the European Union (EU) has drawn widespread cynicism from many in the industry. However, here and there, there is an admission that these high-level trouble-shooters might just get results where so many others have failed.…

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