International news agency
International News Services archives articles supplied to clients one year or more after initial publication. These articles are protected by a password and not made available to readers without permission from clients. They are used as a background resource by agency journalists. Upon client requests, International News Services will remove such articles from the archive or not upload them in the first place. They are included to demonstrate the breadth of topics undertaken by the agency and also to help promote clients’ coverage.

Search Results for: Germany

10 results out of 3221 results found for 'Germany'.

EU AND CANADA PLOT UPGRADE OF NUCLEAR COOPERATION DEAL



BY KEITH NUTHALL

THE EUROPEAN Union (EU) and Canada are about to embark on detailed negotiations to upgrade their existing long-standing nuclear cooperation agreement. A key aim of the talks, European Commission and Canadian officials told World Nuclear News, was the authorisation of widespread nuclear technology transfers between the EU and Canada, which are currently tightly restricted.…

Read more

RAPEX UNVEILS CONSUMER HEALTH PROBLEMS IN WESTERN EUROPE COSMETICS



BY KEITH NUTHALL

EUROPEAN Union (EU) consumer safety alert service RAPEX has released warnings about western Europe-made cosmetics products. In July, it reported a Dutch market withdrawal of France-made Bio Claire lightening body cream over illegal glucocorticosteroid and clobetasolpropionate content. There was a Germany recall of German-made Siriderma skin cream, over silver chloride/titanium dioxide content – which should not be used near eyes under the EU cosmetics directive.…

Read more

NORDIC FOOD MARKETS MOVE TOWARDS FUNCTIONAL HEALTH AND ORGANIC FOODS, BUT OBESITY IS STILL ON THE RISE



BY GERARD O’DWYER

FOR those seduced by the idea that Nordic countries are full of healthy statuesque blond super-beings eating perfect diets and exercising regularly, it may come as something of a surprise to learn that obesity is on the rise in the region.…

Read more

EU SCIENTISTS SHOW HOW NANOPARTICLES TOUCH CELL NUCLEI



BY KEITH NUTHALL

EUROPEAN Union (EU)-funded scientists have tracked how nanoparticles pass through the body and into cells, showing they could aid the targeted delivery of medicines. In a study showing how far they can penetrate living tissue, the Euro 2.8 million MAGSELECTOFECTION study showed once nanoparticles enter a cell, they move randomly until collected by proteins, which take them to the cell nucleus.…

Read more

CHINA'S INTEGRATED WASTE MANAGEMENT APPROACH SHOWS NEW KEENNESS FOR GREENER DISPOSAL METHODS



BY MARK GODFREY

COMMUNIST Party cadres from around China are being bussed out to Asuwei landfill in Beijing’s Changping suburb to view a showcase for how China wants to manage waste in the future. As China urbanises, its solid waste output has been climbing by 9% a year, said Rasmus Reinvag, co-author of a recent China environmental sector report by the WWF conservation group and Norwegian-government owned development group Innovation Norway.…

Read more

UK CAR SCRAPPAGE SCHEME MAY NOT WORK



BY KEITH NUTHALL

A COMPREHENSIVE report from a European Union (EU) think-tank has indicated that Britain’s new Pounds 2,000 old car scrappage scheme may not work, because of high levels of UK personal indebtedness.

The paper ‘Recent restructuring trends and policies in the automotive sector’ by the Dublin-based European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions has shown how Germany’s scrappage scheme has been markedly successful – in contrast to those in other EU member states, such as France and Italy.…

Read more

PAINT AND COATINGS SECTOR WATCHES BRUSSELS NERVOUSLY FOR NEW EU INDOOR POLLUTION RULES



BY DEIRDRE MASON

THE POTENTIALLY tough issue of regulations on indoor air pollution and all the potential problems this could cause the paint and coatings industry just refuses to go away in Europe. This is despite the fact that 10 months after the groundbreaking EnVIE conference on indoor air quality, held in Brussels last September, there is still no sign of any new Green Paper that might mean a tough new regime for the paint industry.…

Read more

COPENHAGEN SUMMIT OFFERS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER OPPORTUNITIES FOR POWER PRODUCERS



BY KEITH NUTHALL

THERE is a sense, in the rivers of documents pouring from international talks to replace the Kyoto Protocol with a new global warming treaty in Copenhagen this December that the chickens are really coming home to roost.

For the first time – at July’s G8 summit in Italy – there was a common near-universal declaration that humankind has been messing up the climate and has to stop filling the atmosphere with carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases.…

Read more

INNOVATION ABOUNDS IN DEVELOPING SECOND GENERATION BIOFUELS



BY MARK ROWE and GAVIN BLAIR

THE ANSWER to the world’s future fuel needs may be literally all around us, and freely available in abundance, thanks to the throw-away society of the 21st century. Bioenergy, produced from all matter of waste products, from wood chips, to agricultural husks and slurry, has been steadily elevated up the list of potential sources of energy that will be required in a low-carbon world.…

Read more

EU ROUND UP - UKRAINE SEEKS GAS FINANCE



BY KEITH NUTHALL

INTERNATIONAL talks are underway to secure Ukraine funding to pay Russia for natural gas to ensure deliveries to Europe can be guaranteed this winter.

The European Commission, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank, the European Investment Bank (EIB) and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) have been meeting with Russian and Ukraine officials to head off a repeat of last winter’s supply crisis.…

Read more