International news agency
International News Services archives articles supplied to clients one year or more after initial publication. These articles are protected by a password and not made available to readers without permission from clients. They are used as a background resource by agency journalists. Upon client requests, International News Services will remove such articles from the archive or not upload them in the first place. They are included to demonstrate the breadth of topics undertaken by the agency and also to help promote clients’ coverage.

Search Results for: Netherlands

10 results out of 1606 results found for 'Netherlands'.

GLOBAL AGREEMENT ON RUNWAY SAFETY STRUCK



BY KEITH NUTHALL

A GLOBAL agreement on improving runway safety has been secured at an International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) meeting. A multi-strand programme was backed at the world’s first global runway safety symposium, staged at ICAO’s Montreal headquarters. It included bodies such as Airports Council International (ACI), the Civil Air Navigation Services Organisation (CANSO), the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA), Eurocontrol, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), the International Federation of Air Traffic Controllers’ Associations (IFATCA), and others.…

Read more

US BIOMETRICS POLICIES TO ENHANCE SECURITY, SPEED UP TRAVEL



BY KARRYN MILLER

WITH the heightened threat of terrorism post-9/11, America has undertaken a number of measures to tighten its current airport security operations. However, these increasingly strict measures have often come at the expense of passengers’ time and patience, with lengthy queues and – what some believe to be – invasion of privacy turning people off air travel.…

Read more

DUTCH ENVIRONMENTALISTS FAIL TO LINK NATIONAL EMISSIONS LIMITS TO EU POLLUTION PREVENTION AND CONTROL DIRECTIVE



BY KEITH NUTHALL

DUTCH environmental campaigners have failed in court to link two European Union (EU) directives in a way that would force pollution permits for coal-fired power stations to respect national emissions limits imposed by EU law. The two directives in question are the 2008 integrated pollution prevention and control (IPPC) directive and the 2001 directive on national emission ceilings for certain atmospheric pollutants (NEC).…

Read more

ILLICIT TOBACCO PROBLEM IS REBORN IN HIGH TAX SPAIN



BY ALYSSA MCMURTRY

Illicit tobacco problem is reborn in high tax Spain

In the 1990’s Spain was a by-word for smuggled tobacco, but then the country successfully stifled the black market. Now, with higher taxes, contraband tobacco is back in Spain, and legitimate traders are worried.…

Read more

BRUSSELS PLOTS MAJOR WATER SCARCITY INITIATIVE



BY KEITH NUTHALL

THE EUROPEAN Commission is undertaking a series of detailed studies on water scarcity, which will feed into a major policy initiative planned for 2012, almost certainly including legislative reform. The work follows growing concern that Europe is doing too little to conserve its drinking water resources, and that a firm hand from Brussels may be needed to secure future supplies.…

Read more

NANO-TEXTILES THAT CAN KILL SUPERBUGS, WITHOUT HEALTH PROBLEMS



BY KEITH NUTHALL

POP science reports have been raving about how towels, clothes and sheets impregnated with tiny nanoparticles can kill germs and wipe out body odour. A good example is nano-socks, containing nano-silver, which apparently stop feet smelling, no matter how sweaty.…

Read more

SCIENTISTS DEVELOP NANO-MEDICINE TO FIGHT ALZHEIMERS



BY KEITH NUTHALL

SCIENTISTS from a Euro EUR14.6 million research project are to unveil progress at a June 1-3 nanotechnology conference in Budapest on their goal of using nano-medicine to fight Alzheimer’s disease. Researchers in the NAD Project have tried to make a virtue out of the environmental concern that nano-particles can breach the blood-brain-barrier.…

Read more

MAJOR RETAILERS DELIGHTED WITH SPANISH HYPERMARKET PLANNING RULING



BY ALAN OSBORN

Big European food retailers have been delighted with a new ruling by the European Court of Justice (ECJ) slapping down regulations imposed by the Spanish government to restrict the location and operations of hypermarkets in Catalonia. The court, whose decisions are legal precedents throughout every country and region in the European Union (EU), said Spain had failed to fulfill obligations imposed by the "freedom of establishment" provision of the EU treaties.…

Read more

SARAJEVO AIRPORT FACES MAJOR UPGRADE AS TRAFFIC GROWS STEADILY



BY ZLATKO ?ONKA?

IF one European country exists that demonstrates the need for the European Bank for Reconstruction & Development (EBRD), it is surely Bosnia & Herzegovina (BiH), whose political and economic recovery from war has been halting. The EBRD has worked with the Bosnian government and its Serb and Bosniak/Croat sub-national entities for 15 years and its latest project could be the jewel in the crown of this cooperation – the revamping of Sarajevo International Airport.…

Read more

EU ADMITS FAILINGS IN ORGANISED CRIME FIGHT



BY DAVID HAWORTH

HUNGARY, which currently holds the European Union’s (EU’s) rotating presidency, made a little noticed promise in January to put organised crime well and truly on the EU agenda. Commercial Crime International attended a Brussels conference where senior figures admitted the EU’s response has been far too weak.…

Read more