Search Results for: International business
10 results out of 11697 results found for 'International business'.
KOSOVO
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Union is channeling Euro 2 million into a legal aid and reform programme in Kosovo, to build an effective judicial system in this war-torn and UN administered Balkan province. Money will be directed to the Kosovo Chamber of Advocates, which received aid last year to establish a legal aid system for the poor.…
SEABED EXTINCTIONS
BY KEITH NUTHALL
A SPECIALIST United Nations agency has admitted that unless careful precautions are taken, the future exploitation of mineral deposits on the bed of deep oceans could lead to the extinction of species, many of which have yet to be discovered.…
ITALIAN LEATHER - ECJ
BY KEITH NUTHALL
AN ITALIAN leather manufacturer appears to have lost an international legal struggle to prevent a former German company from using a trade name similar to its own to market furniture upholstered with leather bought from alternative suppliers. In a test case at the European Court of Justice, Italian Leather, of Bironto, Italy, has failed to establish that a ruling that it secured at Bari District Court should overrule a decision made earlier at the Regional Court, Koblenz, Germany.…
VANCOUVER AIRPORT
BY MONICA DOBIE, in Montreal
THE VANCOUVER Airport Authority has won an appeal in the British Columbia Court of Appeal in a case involving local residents seeking compensation for effects of aircraft on a new runway, opened in 1996
Larry Berg, CEO of the Vancouver International Airport Authority, said: “The court has recognised the principle in law that all aspects of vital public works for the community at large are deemed authorised by the government that orders them.”…
SIKKIM
BY SWINEETHA DIAS WICKRAMANAYAKA
THE INDIAN government has been asked to designate the Himalayan state of Sikkim’s Bagdogra Airport as an international terminal, taking foreign flights, in a bid to boost the region’s tourist industry. The formal proposal has come from the Sikkim Hotel and Restaurant Association.…
KAZAKHSTAN
Keith Nuthall
THE EUROPEAN Bank for Reconstruction and Development will soon be inviting bids for contracts to improve Kazakhstan’s Atyrau International Airport. It is lending the airport company US$24.5 million, which will pay for the widening and strengthening of the runway, taxiways and apron areas, plus the replacement of airfield lighting, including floodlighting.…
PILOT QUALIFICATIONS
BY ALAN OSBORN
BRITAIN is being brought before the European Court of Justice for its failure to adopt EU legislation insisting on the mutual recognition of professional qualifications of harbour pilots. The European Commission said the UK had failed to put into national law the directive 1999/42/EC and said this was “likely to prove an obstacle to the free movement of workers, freedom of establishment and freedom to provide services in the sectors concerned.”…
SEABED TALKS
BY KEITH NUTHALL
TIME was that the metal industry was barely regulated, even in picture-postcard countryside you could set up a foundry at will, but now regulators have their fingers on everything, they are even thinking about rules for grabbing manganese nodules from the beds of deep oceans, a job that no company is anywhere near being able to undertake.…
FISH FARMING INTERNATIONAL
KEITH NUTHALL
This is based on a feature I wrote for Geographical Magazine a couple of years ago but which I am now focusing solely on Tasmania rather than nationwide.
Tasmanian aquaculture
Matthew Brace, Sydney
Australia is sold to the world as a vast baking continent with quartzite ridges stretching to the horizon like the fossilised carcasses of fallen dinosaurs.…
AMAZON
BY PHILIP FINE
AMAZON – the world’s largest online book retailer – could soon be selling clothes. The New York Times has reported several unnamed retail industry executives being approached by the on-line giant. Retailers Nordstrom, Gap, Banana Republic and Old Navy are expected to be first on board for a launch in the coming months.…