Search Results for: Latvia
10 results out of 449 results found for 'Latvia'.
EU MINISTERS PLOT RUSSIA/BELARUS ELECTRICITY DEAL FOR BALTIC STATES
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Union (EU) Council of Ministers is seeking an agreement with Russia and Belarus that would better coordinate the operation of their electricity systems with those of the three Baltic States: Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. The council’s working party on energy is drafting a proposal for EU ministers that – if approved – would "authorise the [European] Commission to negotiate an agreement between the Russian Federation, the Republic of Belarus and the European Union on electricity system operation of the Baltic States."…
BRUSSELS PLOTS LEGAL ACTION OVER LAYING HEN WELFARE ABUSES
BY LEAH GERMAIN
THE EUROPEAN Commission is taking legal action against 14 European Union (EU) member states, it thinks are failing to protect egg laying hens against animal welfare abuses. According to the Commission, the countries have failed to comply with EU legislation that prohibits farmers from keeping egg-laying hens in confined, tiny cages smaller than 750 square centimetres.…
EASTERN EUROPE IS GROWING ITS BIOFUEL FEEDSTOCK CAPACITY
BY ZLATKO CONKAS, BLAKE BERRY, MONIKA HANLEY, MARK ROWE and KEITH NUTHALL
EASTERN Europe is often regarded as developing in the slipstream of richer western Europe – and so far the model seems to be fitting with biofuels. That said, significant biodiesel manufacturing capacity is in place in the region, according to the European Biodiesel Board.…
THE COGENERATION MARKET
BY MONIKA HANLEY, LEE ADENDORFF, MARK ROWE, ALAN OSBORN, MINDY RAN, GERARD O’DWYER and MARTINA MARECKOVA
FOR an industry that generates energy, heat and maybe cooling, the European cogeneration sector has been operating on a decidedly low output in recent years.…
BRITAIN IS SECOND SAFEST COUNTRY IN EU FOR ROAD DEATHS
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE NUMBER of road deaths in Britain fell 47% from 2001 to 2010, making its roads the second safest in the European Union (EU) after Sweden, according to the latest comparative European Commission figures. There was a marked recent improvement too, with UK road deaths falling 18% between 2009 and 2010.…
EUROPEAN COMISSION URGES LATVIA TO COMPLY WITH EU LAW ON MINING WASTE
BY MJ DESCHAMPS
LATVIA could face serious fines courtesy of the European Court of Justice (ECJ) if it fails to promise compliance with European Union (EU) legislation on mining waste over the next two months.
The European Commission has sent a final legal warning (called a ‘reasoned opinion’) to Latvia, asking the country to ensure that extractive waste is treated in specific facilities in line with EU requirements, to avoid endangering human health and the environment.…
ECJ BACKS INEOS OVER TRADEMARKING OF ITS 'ALPHAREN' BRAND
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Court of Justice’s general court has overturned a ban on Britain’s Ineos Healthcare Ltd from using its trademark ALPHAREN to sell certain medicines in Hungary, Latvia and Lithuania. This dispute centres on Ineos medicines containing magnesium iron hydroxy carbonate or hydrotalcite or derivatives; used in renal dialysis and treating renal diseases and kidney ailments; and phosphate binders for treating hyperphosphataemia.…
CAP PROPOSALS SO UNPOPULAR - BEGS QUESTION: SHOULD THE EU BE RESPONSIBLE FOR FARM SUBSIDIES
BY KEITH NUTHALL
The reform package for the European Union’s (EU) Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) released today has been so unpopular, it begs the question – is Europe really the best level of government to control food production subsidies?
The CAP has always been at the heart of the EU – part of the grand bargain that underpinned its launch in the 1950s between Germany and France.…
EU BEEFS UP CYBER-CRIME DEFENCES
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Union (EU) has been alarmed by coordinated ‘bot-net’ attacks on computer networks in Britain, Estonia, Georgia, France, and elsewhere, and is beefing up its cyber-defences. Keith Nuthall reports.
IT takes a lot to spark the lumbering bureaucratic behemoth known as the European Union (EU) into hasty action.…
UN PUSH ON SOAP USAGE IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
BY KEITH NUTHALL
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A UNITED Nations campaign could – if successful – significantly increase worldwide demand for soap. Its Global Handwashing Day has highlighted how diarrhoeal and acute respiratory diseases kill 3.5 million children aged under five annually, and that washing their hands after using toilets and before handling food can reduce such deaths by 40% and 23% respectively.…