Search Results for: International law
10 results out of 11774 results found for 'International law'.
HONEY CARE AFRICA
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE GOOD practice of an innovative honey company has been highlighted through its winning a United Nations Development Programme prize for promoting small-scale honey production in Kenya. Honey Care Africa, supported by the World Bank’s International Finance Corporation, has won the US$30,000 Equator Prize.…
BULGARIA - SOFIA
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE KOZLODUY International Decommissioning Support Fund has set aside Euro 20 million to help fund energy efficiency improvements to the district heating system of Bulgaria’s capital Sofia and is expected to earmark another Euro 10 million later this year.…
PADDY CLAY
BY SWINEETHA DIAS WICKRAMANAYAKA and KEITH NUTHALL
CERAMIC manufacturers in Sri Lanka are seeking changes in national laws restricting the quarrying of paddy lands, because they contain premium deposits of kaolin. The country’s Ceramics Industry Task Force has asked its national government to revoke certain provisions of the Agrarian Development Act, which ban the mining of paddy lands, even if they are not being used for agriculture or have ceased to be viable for food production.…
EU ROUND UP
KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Commission has taken an important step towards giving EU water legislation more teeth, by moving against Belgium’s system of “tacit approvals” of pollution. Belgian law allows companies to assume that they have a right to pollute if they make an application to regulators and then receive no reply.…
PHANTOM SHIPS
BY MONICA DOBIE
UNDERWRITERS in Hong Kong have set a precedent by invoking a law for the first time that dates back to 1906, to avoid paying a claim on cargo that disappeared in the high seas aboard a phantom ship.…
ICELAND LIBERALISATION
BY SIGRÚN DAVÍDSDOTTIR
THE ICELAND parliament, the Althing, is struggling to pass a bill based on the EU electricity liberalisation directive, which tries to boost competition the sector. The government is set on passing it, but the bill is meeting a strong opposition in wide circles, claiming it is inappropriate for Iceland.…
LENDING RIGHTS
BY KEITH NUTHALL
MANY European Union Member States fail to give writers and publishers the royalty rights that they are due under EU law through their national public lending rights rules, the European Commission is claiming. In a report that could lead it to take legal action at the European Court of Justice, Brussels says that France, Greece and Luxembourg fail to give right-holders any remuneration for books lent from public libraries; in Sweden royalties are only paid to national or resident authors; and in Denmark and Finland, payments are only made for books in the local national language.…
ICELAND LIBERALISATION
BY SIGRÚN DAVÍDSDOTTIR
THE ICELAND parliament, the Althing, is struggling to pass a bill based on the EU electricity liberalisation directive, which tries to boost competition the sector. The government is set on passing it, but the bill is meeting a strong opposition in wide circles, claiming it is inappropriate for Iceland.…
MAHINDRA - INDIA
BY KEITH NUTHALL
AN INDIAN hire-purchase company has been lent IND Rupees 840, (US$17 million), by the World Bank’s International Finance Corporation, so it can widen the financial services it offers India’s rural and semi-urban communities, notably to sell insurance policies.…
SEABED AGAIN
BY KEITH NUTHALL
UNDETERRED by the scientific world’s comprehensive ignorance of the deep-sea environment, the United Nations’ International Seabed Authority is pressing ahead with research projects that will help it estimate the effect of submarine mining on species that have yet to be discovered.…