Search Results for: France
10 results out of 2834 results found for 'France'.
EMSA PLAYS INCREASING ROLE IN SECURING EUROPEAN OIL TANKER SAFETY AND FIGHTING OIL SPILL POLLUTION
BY KEITH NUTHALL
HUMAN nature’s tendency to let sleeping dogs lie means that international initiatives to deal with chronic problems often only come to fruition after a major disaster. And such was the case with the formation of the European Maritime Safety Agency (EMSA).…
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.…
VENEZUELA UNDERTAKES PARTIAL REFINERY NATIONALISATION - INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION EXPECTED
BY RACHEL JONES, in Caracas
VENEZUELA’S Orinoco Belt-which follows the line of the Orinoco River in the south of the country’s Guárico, Anzoátegui and Monagas states-is home to some of the biggest reserves of crude oil in the world: 77.2 billion barrels of conventional proved reserves, and about 270 billion barrels of recoverable heavy oil.…
EU BAR ASSOCIATIONS STILL FIGHTING TO PROTECT CLIENT CONFIDENTIALITY IN MONEY LAUNDERING CASES
BY ALAN OSBORN
THE EUROPEAN Union (EU) legal profession suffered a significant reversal in June this year when the European Court of Justice (ECJ) ruled that reporting obligations imposed on lawyers participating in financial transactions with no link to judicial proceedings did not breach the right to a fair trial.…
FRENCH FLOCK TO BUY FRENCH-LANGUAGE VERSION OF LAST HARRY POTTER NOVEL
BY PHILIPPA JONES, in Paris
NINE weeks after the seventh and final Harry Potter book hit the shelves in the UK, Francophones have snatched up 1.15 million French language copies of the book – 50% of the initial print run – in 48 hours, according to publishing house Gallimard.…
BELGIUM: European Commission fumes at failures to launch researcher visa fast-track system
BY KEITH NUTHALL
European Commission officials are deciding whether to launch legal action against 22 member states of the European Union (EU) who have failed to implement key legislation allowing researchers to move between EU universities. Because non-EU researchers have faced burdensome immigration procedures when undertaking research projects involving working at different European universities, the EU approved a ‘researchers’ visa’ directive in 2005, ordering member states to introduce a fast-track immigration system.…
EUROPEAN COMMISSION SHARPENS EU RESPONSE TO BLUETONGUE OUTBREAKS
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Commission has secured approval for new European Union (EU) legislation that will force EU member states to improve their surveillance, monitoring and publicity regarding cases of bluetongue. With the disease rampaging across northwestern Europe, the EU’s Standing Committee on the Food Chain and Animal Health have agreed to make monitoring compulsory in all infected countries, while bluetongue-free member states must undertake "surveillance proportionate to the risk".…
EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT PUSHES FOR TOUGH RULES ON PESTICIDES
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Parliament has toughened proposed European Union (EU) legislation on the production of pesticides, but has pulled away from backing some major restrictions on the use of these chemicals. In a first reading of an EU directive and regulation on the issue, MEPs backed amendments saying potentially immunotoxic or neurotoxic substances should never be part of pesticides used in the EU.…
EBRD BACKS DEVELOPMENT OF ROMANIAN BEER MALTING INDUSTRY
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) is investing Euro 20 million into boosting the size of Romania’s beer malting industry. The money will go to Soufflet Malt Romania SA, the country’s second largest malt producer and majority-owned by Compagnie Internationale de Maltieres SA, of France.…
EUROPEAN AND ASIAN RESEARCHERS HARNESS 40,000 COMPUTERS TO FIGHT BIRD FLU
BY KEITH NUTHALL
A TEAM of European and Asian researchers has linked more than 40,000 computers across 45 countries to speed studies into developing an anti-viral drug that can defeat bird flu. Funded by the European Union’s (EU) Enabling Grids for E-sciencE (EGEE) project, the computing grid is analysing more than 500,000 drug-like molecules.…