Search Results for: Greece
10 results out of 934 results found for 'Greece'.
CROATIA AIRPORT EXPANSION OPENS DOOR FOR PASSENGER INFLUX, IN THE FACE OF THE COUNTRY'S EU ACCESSION
BY ZLATKO CONKAS
INCREASING passenger traffic and aircraft movements have required an expansion of Croatia’s Zagreb Airport, which serves the country’s capital, in the form of a new passenger terminal which should be fully operational by 2016.
"Given the imminent entry of Croatia into the European Union [EU] in January 2013, and the existing attractiveness of the capital Zagreb, we need bigger, better, more beautiful and more efficient facilities – which will certainly be achieved with the construction of a new passenger terminal," Tonci Peovic, general manager of Zagreb Airport (Zra?na…
ALL NAMES AND TITLES CHECKED BIG GAP: STUDY SHOWS EU'S PATCHWORK UNI FEES SYSTEM
BY CARMEN PAUN, IN BRUSSELS
UNIVERSITY tuition fees cost more in England than anywhere else in Europe, according to a September 10 report from the European Commission, but the headline figures are not the whole story for students sizing up how to survive.…
SANCTIONS MAKE BUSINESS WITH SYRIA DIFFICULT, BUT NOT IMPOSSIBLE
BY PAUL COCHRANE, IN BEIRUT
The economic sanctions imposed on Syria last year by the United States and Europe to pressure Damascus to end its violent crackdown on protesters has made doing business in Syria difficult, especially financial transactions. But the sanctions are being evaded, with Lebanon a prime conduit for goods and capital outflows.…
EUROPEAN CONFECTIONERY INDUSTRY PONDERS DEVELOPING GREENER PACKAGING
BY MARK ROWE
THERE is consumer demand in Europe for making confectionery packaging more sustainable, but in the European Union (EU) manufacturers are motivated more in going green by EU legislation.
They are developing ways of reducing, reusing and recycling packaging, and changing its composition to help.…
EU ROUND UP - BRUSSELS TO DELAY CARBON PERMIT AUCTIONS
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Commission will postpone auctioning pollution permits sold under its emissions trading scheme (ETS) to potential further price falls, but has not decided how many allowances will be sold later. ETS permit prices are already depressed as Europe’s economic woes left oil and gas users with unused rights to emit carbon.…
ALBANIA TEXTILES REGROUPING FROM ECONOMIC CRISIS
BY MARK ROWE
WITH its location adjacent to Europe’s key fashion centre Italy, a highly skilled labour force and low wages, Albania’s textile industry is repositioning itself amid the unrelenting economic crisis that is gripping Europe. A well-educated workforce and widely spoken Italian, English and Greek add to the appeal, according to Diana Cekhodima Sokolaj, president of the Albanian Fashion Designers Association.…
EU ROUND UP - EU STRIKES DEAL OVER SULPHUR IN SHIPPING FUELS
BY KEITH NUTHALL
A POLITICAL agreement has been struck between the three main European Union (EU) institutions over a new directive on the sulphur content of marine fuels burnt in EU waters. Complying with the International Maritime Organisation’s (IMO) MARPOL Convention, sulphur content for ships in the North Sea, the English Channel and the Baltic Sea will be capped at 1% until December 2014 and 0.1% from January 1, 2015.…
GAZPROM'S SOUTH STREAM: WHAT WILL THE TRANSIT OF THIS GAS PIPELINE MEAN FOR THE BALKANS?
BY ZLATKO CONKAS, IN SERBIA
AS Russian energy giant Gazprom begins construction work on the South Stream pipeline project by the end of this year for an operational launch in 2015, its final route across the Balkans has yet to be decided and governments are jostling for position.…
SÜDZUCKER WELCOMES EU APPROVAL OF ED&F DEAL
BY KEITH NUTHALL
EUROPE’S largest sugar company – Germany’s Südzucker – has "welcomed" the European Commission approving it joining forces with the continent’s second largest sugar player, Britain’s ED&F Man. A spokesperson noted Brussels had "determined that in most European markets the merger will have no adverse impact on competition."…
RARE EARTH ELEMENTS POTENTIAL IN GREECE AND NORDIC COUNTRIES
BY MICHAEL KOSMIDES, IN GREECE AND GERARD O’DWYER, IN HELSINKI
MINERAL experts in Greece and Nordic countries have agreed with the verdict of the European Geosciences Union’s recent annual meeting in Vienna that the European Union (EU) should exploit rare earths reserves in Nordic countries and Greece to improve its supplies.…