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: Poland

10 results out of 1024 results found for 'Poland'.

EUROPEAN CO-GENERATION TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENTS



BY MARK ROWE

CO-GENERATION (or combined-heat and power – CHP) plants operate using a variety of technologies: gas turbines, fuel cells, Stirling engines, gas or diesel engines and combined cycle gas turbines. According to the Joint Research Centre (JRC) – the European Union’s (EU) scientific and technical research body – natural gas is currently the preferred fuel across Europe for co-gen, with combined cycle gas turbine (CCGT) and gas turbine plants expected to become the predominant future technology for large-scale units.…

Read more

GOOD COP...ROBO COP? INTERNATIONAL AIRPORTS WANT AUTONOMOUS ROBOTS TO INCREASE SECURITY MEASURES



BY MJ DESCHAMPS

IT might sound like science fiction, but airport managers really are exploring the use of robots to boost security at airports. Partly this is because for some potentially extreme events, it is better to put a robot in harm’s way, rather than humans.…

Read more

BRUSSELS' DOMINANT POSITION PENALTY ON POLISH TELCO COULD OPEN DOOR TO COMPENSATION CLAIMS



BY ANDREW KURETH

POLISH telecommunications specialists predict that the European Commission anti-trust fine levied last week against Poland’s dominant telecom operator, Telekomunikacja Polska S.A. (TPSA), could open the door to compensation claims from competitors.

Brussels hit TPSA with a Euro EU127.5 million penalty, saying it had illegally stymied competitors’ access to its network.…

Read more

CONTROLLED VERSUS FREE MARKETS



BY MARGUERITE-JEANNE DESCHAMPS, MINI PANT ZACHARIAH and WANG FANGQING

All over the world, when, where and what kind of alcohol consumers can purchase varies between each country’s national – and, occasionally, regional – laws. One would understand if alcoholic beverage manufacturers would prefer operating in markets where retailers are free to sell alcohol, versus those were a limited number of agents can make sales.…

Read more

NEW CENTRAL ASIA FATF PUSHES ANTI-MONEYLAUNDERING PROGRESS IN REGION



BY MARK ROWE and KEITH NUTHALL

CENTRAL Asia is often in the news regarding political instability, and the complexity of the region’s borders and ethnicities make for an opacity that can encourage the growth of organised crime. Also, being far from the centres of anti-money laundering activities and standard setting – in Europe, north America and east Asia, the region’s often authoritarian governments have a poor reputation regarding the enforcement of law and judicial probity.…

Read more

BRUSSELS THREATENS FOUR EU COUNTRIES WITH LEGAL ACTION OVER AVIATION EMISSIONS



BY KEITH NUTHALL

THE GOVERNMENTS of Germany, Poland, Cyprus and Estonia have been threatened with legal action at the European Court of Justice over their alleged failure to include aviation pollution in their laws implementing the European emissions trading system. This was supposed to have happened by last February, but the European Commission says these four countries have failed to meet their legal commitments, even though they claim to be trying to set up the necessary controls.…

Read more

EU RESEARCH PROJECT PRODUCES NANO-TEXTILES THAT CAN KILL SUPERBUGS



BY KEITH NUTHALL

A EUROPEAN Union (EU) research team claims to have developed fabric incorporating nano-materials that can kill super-bugs such as methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), without the safety concerns associated with nano-silver. Its migration into the environment has sparked health fears, but the BioElectricSurface consortium involving the universities of Limerick, in Ireland; Wroclaw, in Poland; and Comenius University, in Slovakia; claims to have solved this problem.…

Read more

INTERNATIONAL TOBACCO CRIME FIGHTERS COMBINE THEIR MUSCLE



BY KEITH NUTHALL

International tobacco crime fighters combine their muscle

Criminals make a fortune out of smuggling and counterfeiting tobacco products. The USA and the European Union have specialist crime-fighting bodies charged with fighting this crime. They are increasingly cooperating with each other and using smarter tactics and tougher laws to make a difference.…

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

EU ROUND UP - BRUSSELS WANTS TO BAN PETROL FROM EU CITIES



BY KEITH NUTHALL

THE EUROPEAN Commission has laid down the gauntlet to the fossil fuel sector, releasing a comprehensive long-term strategy that would halve the use of ‘conventionally-fuelled’ cars in urban transport by 2030, phasing them out in cities by 2050.…

Read more