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Search Results for: Environmental Health⊂mit=Search

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

SICK EMPLOYEES



BY MONICA DOBIE
EMPLOYEES who go to work when they are sick cost employers far more than absenteeism or disability leave according to a recent study published in the USA’s Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine. Researchers used estimates from a database of approximately 375,000 employees, which included information on insurance claims for medical care and short-term disability over three years and combined it with productivity surveys for 10 health conditions that most commonly affect workers.…

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OLIVE-POMACE OIL



BY KEITH NUTHALL
STATE aid of Euro 30 million has been authorised for the Spanish olive-pomace oil industry, as compensation for expensive manufacturing improvements it has been forced to make in the wake of a 2001 scandal about polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) contamination.…

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TANZ



BY KEITH NUTHALL
Generally the application of geo-spatial technology for sustainable management of Tanzania’s forests and woodlands is still low. Thus, there is a big gap between developed countries and Least Developed Countries (LDCs) in application of space science and technologies.…

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SUDAN SPACE CONFERENCE



BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE NEED to help developing countries acquire the software and technical know-how to interpret space imagery that boosts the environmental management of their territories has been examined at an international conference in the Sudanese capital Khartoum. This regional workshop on the use of space technology for natural resources management, environmental monitoring and disaster management, staged by the United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs, the European Space Agency and the Sudanese government, heard an appeal from Tanzania for assistance.…

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EU FRAUD DIRECTIVE



BY KEITH NUTHALL
AS EUROPEAN Union (EU) member states search for a comprehensive withholding tax solution on preventing tax avoidance via savings accounts, the Council of Ministers has reformed how national tax authorities cooperate to fight fraud. The updated directive allows them to conduct simultaneous control checks on taxpayers operating in several countries of the EU, sharing information obtained.…

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POLAND - EBRD



BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) has drawn up plans to lend Spanish steel group Celsa Euro 40 million to help restructure Polish steel mill Huta Ostrowiec (HO), which was liquidated in Summer 2003 having been placed in receivership.…

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WEEVIL DETECTOR



BY MONICA DOBIE
AMERICAN scientists have developed technology that could help fight a major garden industry pest, detecting and identifying the presence of black vine weevils through the computerised interpretation of their bodily vibrations. James R. Fisher, entomologist from the USA’s Agricultural Research Service (ARS), has developed a wand-like microphone that can be inserted onto a large nail placed at the root in nursery pots.…

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EASTERN EUROPE FEATURE



BY ALAN OSBORN
SEEN in the context of the past decade, the entry of 10 new member states to the European Union (EU) which took place on May 1 has proved nothing like the disaster for the nuclear industry that was once feared.…

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FAO BREEDS DECLINE



BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE UNITED Nations Food & Agricultural Organisation (FAO) has warned that the number of domesticated livestock breeds worldwide is declining sharply, with 1,350 of the roughly 6,300 FAO registered breeds threatened by extinction or already extinct. The problem has been discussed by a special FAO meeting of national coordinators on animal genetic resources, which is developing a global plan to halt their disappearance.…

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OECD ENVIRONMENT MEETING



BY KEITH NUTHALL
ENVIRONMENT ministers of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) have called on the body’s rich country members to redouble their efforts to separate economic growth from ecological degradation or miss established OECD environmental targets for 2010.…

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