Search Results for: Environmental Health⊂mit=Search
10 results out of 3960 results found for 'Environmental Health⊂mit=Search'.
SRI LANKA HANDS OVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT SECURITY TO MILITARY
BY KEITH NOYAHR, in Colombo
AS hostilities between Sri Lanka military and Tamil Tigers in Sri Lanka’s north and east intensify, the country’s national air force has been entrusted with “overall security” of the Bandaranaike International Airport at Katunayake, near Colombo a top government official has disclosed to Janes Airport Review.…
ISO STANDARDS BOOST ANTI-FRAUD CONTROLS
BY KEITH NUTHALL
FIGHTING fraud is a complex process, especially with increasing trade flows and international transactions. As a result, it is not only important that companies, public sector organisations and consumers have available detailed and comprehensive advice on how to protect themselves against fraud, but that these guidelines do not vary widely from country to country.…
EU SCIENTISTS BREAK THROUGH OVER SALMONELLA RESEARCH
BY KEITH NUTHALL
BRITISH and German scientists have made a breakthrough in developing Europe’s most common food and animal based pathogen – salmonella – which is increasingly resistant to standard antibiotics.
Britain’s Institute of Food Research and the Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology, of Germany, have discovered how salmonella bacteria defends itself in hostile environments (such as stomachs and intestines) by continually inserting outer membrane proteins (OMPs) into its cell walls.…
SERBIA TIGHTENS MONEY LAUNDERING CONTROLS ON PAPER - BUT CASH ECONOMY STILL POSES PROBLEMS
BY ALAN OSBORN
AN odd fact about Serbia today is that hardly anybody in the country seems curious about the way its official government financial figures don’t remotely add up. The authors of a US-sponsored report for the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) published last October – ‘Money Laundering and Predicate Crime in Serbia 2000-2005’ – acknowledge the conventional shortages of staff and computers but say they “hit on a more fundamental void: lack of curiosity.”…
INTERNATIONAL BIODIESEL INDUSTRY REPORT
BY ALAN OSBORN and MARK ROWE
IN the space of some five years, biofuels have grown from almost total insignificance in the European Union (EU) to becoming the only practical alternative to petrol as a fuel for motor vehicles and much else – albeit still at a very low level.…
EUROPEAN COMMISSION LAUNCHES EU ENERGY POLICY PACKAGE
BY ALAN OSBORN
FOLLOWING a year or more of advance razzmatazz, the European Union’s multi-pronged energy strategy was unveiled on January 10 and while history may not see it as the “new industrial revolution” that Brussels proclaimed, there’s enough in it to engage the minds of everybody in the energy industry for perhaps years to come.…
EUROPEAN COMMISSION HAS BITTER CAR EMISSIONS ROW
BY KEITH NUTHALL
AN UNUSUALLY tough political row between European commissioners has stalled plans to control the emission of carbon dioxide from cars, with intense disagreements erupting over whether limits should be voluntary or compulsory.
On one side is environmental Commissioner Stavros Dimas, of Greece, who wants to set compulsory CO2 emissions for European Union carmakers, because they are likely to break 2004 promises to reduce CO2 emissions to an industry average of 140 grammes per km, or 25% of 1995 levels by 2008.…
OECD CHEMICAL SAFETY TESTS WILL AID PAINT, ADHESIVES INDUSTRIES
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE ORGANISATION for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) has made available, for free, its Guidelines for the Testing of Chemicals. They include the most relevant internationally agreed test methods used by government, industry and independent laboratories to determine the safety of chemicals and chemical preparations, including those used in the paint, coatings and adhesives sectors.…
EUROPEAN COMMISSION OPTIMISTIC OVER END OF LIFE VEHICLE GOALS
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Commission has promised in an assessment of the European Union (EU) end-of-life vehicles directive to pump-prime the development of technology that will help the recycling and reuse of cars. Brussels says it will stick with the existing 2015 targets of the legislation: 85% reuse/recycling and 95% reuse/recovery, concluding these “are optimal both in terms of environmental and economic performance.”…
CLIMATE CHANGE BOOSTS WEATHER FORECASTING ROLE FOR OIL AND GAS INDUSTRY
BY MARK ROWE
CLIMATE change is now widely accepted as taking place across the planet, with huge implications for all industries, and the energy sector is no exception. Predictions from expert weather organisations make unsettling reading: the long-range forecast is for extremes of temperatures and more violent weather, more often.…