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10 results out of 5871 results found for 'Global Warming⊂mit=Search'.

AVIATION SECURITY FEATURE



BY KEITH NUTHALL AND PHILIP FINE

IN the aftermath of the September 11 tragedy, the shocking images of two planes slamming into two of the most famous buildings in the world fuelled a strong desire tighten up security systems around the world, especially in civil aviation.…

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SOUTH-EAST ASIA



BY MARK ROWE
MONEY launderers looking to process their criminal gains look favourably upon south-east Asia. Authorities in the region are under-funded and overworked, while cash-transactions are a cultural norm, making it easy to ensure that money you would prefer not to be traced can simply disappear, with little likelihood that anyone will have the time to investigate the transaction.…

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AUTOMAKERS



BY PHILIP FINE

US automakers have hit a setback in their attempt to stave off soaring

legal

costs over thousands of asbestos-related lawsuits.

An appeals court in Philadelphia has thrown

out a request by several companies to be named as ‘related parties’

in the bankruptcy of auto-parts maker Federal-Mogul Global Inc.…

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RULES OF ORIGIN



BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE WORLD Trade Organisation’s general council has been asked to approve global trading laws stating that dyes or inks can turn unbleached or pre-bleached fabrics into new products under global rules of origin legislation, so long as they are subject to at least two preparatory or finishing operations.…

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ILLICIT TOBACCO TRADING



BY KEITH NUTHALL
GOVERNMENTS and international organisations have highlighted tobacco smuggling as one of the largest illegal drains on their tax revenues. An international conference has brought law enforcement professionals together with health officials to fight this problem. Keith Nuthall reports.…

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RULES OF ORIGIN



Keith Nuthall
THE WORLD Trade Organisation’s general council has been asked to approve global trading rules stating that instant coffee should generally be considered a product of the country where its coffee beans are grown, not where it is processed. The exception would be for blends where the dominant ingredient is less than 85 per cent of the whole, when the product would be considered from the country of manufacture.…

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RULES OF ORIGIN



BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE WORLD Trade Organisation’s general council has been asked to approve global trading laws stating that unbleached or pre-bleached fabrics must be subject to permanent dying or printing, with at least two preparatory or finishing operations, to be considered a new product under global rules of origin legislation.…

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STEM CELLS



BY MATTHEW BRACE
A PIONEERING Australian stem cell company is teaming up with an international Japanese biopharmaceutical firm to build Japan’s first dedicated embryonic stem cell company. The expansion into Japan is part of Melbourne-based Stem Cell Sciences’ strategy to create a global cell therapy company.…

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US FARM BILL



BY KEITH NUTHALL, ALAN OSBORN, MONICA DOBIE AND PHILIP FINE

IF there is one striking characteristic about Washington’s Bush Administration, it must be its almost unprecedented ability to infuriate the entire world with its unilateralism, especially its self-serving trade policies.

For years, the US government has actually played Mary Poppins on food production subsidies, claiming that its handouts do not encourage farmers to overproduce when prices are low.…

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TENS DECISION



BY ALAN OSBORN
MINISTERS of the 15 European Union countries have reached agreement on the Trans-European Energy Networks directive. The ministers have essentially supported the Commission proposal of last year and Brussels officials predicted that the European Parliament will do likewise later this year.…

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