Search Results for: Poland
10 results out of 1024 results found for 'Poland'.
EU RESEARCHERS DEVELOPING FRUIT AND VEGETABLE QUALITY ADVICE
BY KEITH NUTHALL
INNOVATIVE recommendations are being developed for fruit and vegetable producers by a Euro 13.8 million European Union (EU) research project to increase consumption of their products. The ISAFRUIT scheme wants more Europeans to eat their recommended minimum five portions of fresh fruits and vegetables.…
EU RESEARCHERS DEVELOPING FRUIT AND VEGETABLE QUALITY ADVICE
BY KEITH NUTHALL
INNOVATIVE recommendations are being developed to boost fruit and vegetable consumption by Euro 13.8 million European Union research project ISAFRUIT. It says consumers in Greece, Spain, Italy and the Netherlands, eat the most fruit in Europe (70- 100 kg per person), followed by Germany, Poland and Britain at 40-60 kg, but that consumption is not rising.…
New Kyoto Protocol talks will be key 2009 focus
By Eric Lyman, in Poznan, Poland, for ISN Security Watch
As countries battle to come up with a plan to limit greenhouse gas emissions in 2009, attention will almost surely begin to focus on two main players that hold the fate of the international process in their hands: the US and China.
December’s United Nations negotiations on climate change in Poznan, Poland, concluded with relatively little progress. Delegates voted to activate a fund to help poor countries adapt to the changing climate, for example, but they did not approve a mechanism to put cash in the fund.…
ENERGY SPECIALISTS TO DECIDE WHETHER CARBON CAPTURE AND STORAGE SHOULD HAVE SPECIAL STATUS WITHIN REVISED KYOTO PROTOCOL
BY ERIC LYMAN
THE OIL and gas industry worldwide will closely follow a technical debate to be staged throughout 2009 over whether or not to include carbon capture and storage technologies in the Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism (CDM). The issue was tabled at December’s 14th Conference of the Parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP-14) in Poznan, Poland, and may not be resolved until January 2010.…
EFSA FUNDS STUDY INTO COLONY COLLAPSE THREAT TO EUROPEAN HONEY PRODUCTION
BY KEITH NUTHALL
A EURO 100,000 European food Safety Authority (EFSA) grant has been awarded to a consortium of European Union (EU) science consortia to investigate the impact of the so-called bee ‘colony collapse disorder’ on honey production.
Since 2003, there have been reports of serious losses of bees from beehives in Europe, with the cause being unknown, although possible factors include starvation, viruses, mites, pesticide exposure and climate change.…
EU ROUND UP - BRUSSELS UNVEILS MAJOR GAS INTERCONNECTOR INVESTMENT PLAN
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Commission has announced it wants Euro 3.5 billion of the general European Union (EU) economic recovery plan it announced in November spent on energy investment. It has proposed spending Euro 1.75 billion on gas and electricity interconnection projects; Euro 500 million on offshore wind power; and Euro 1.25 billion on carbon capture and storage.…
EIB PLANS GDANSK AIRPORT CASH INJECTION
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Investment Bank (EIB) is planning to inject Euro 66 million into developing Gdansk airport, which serves northern Poland. The money would meet just under half the cost of a planned Euro 132.47 million expansion involving the construction of a new passenger terminal building; extending its apron; a new parallel taxiway; a de-icing platform; a new drainage system and other associated airside infrastructure.…
TOUGH TIMES LOOM FOR SCANDINAVIAN TRUCKERS
BY LARS RUGAARD
CASH shortages, competition from abroad and cost rises threaten to remove one of every three of Denmark’s roughly 35,000 lorry drivers from their trade this year, haulage experts are warning. Speaking to Commercial Motor, a Danish truck driver sitting on the bunk of his Volvo truck sums up his industry’s gloom in one sentence: "Earlier things were better".…
ENERGY SECURITY TALKS WILL DOMINATE THE CZECH EU AGENDA
BY CRISTINA MUNTEAN
THE SECURITY of energy supply, including oil and gas storage capacity, dominates the current energy agenda of the Czech Republic, which took over the six-month rotating presidency of the European Union (EU) from January 1, 2009.
This is no surprise: on July 10, 2008, Russian oil pipeline operator Transnieft cut monthly contracted oil deliveries by almost half from 500,000 tonnes to 300,000 tonnes via the Druzhba pipeline.…
INTERNATIONAL ORGANISATION ROUND-UP - ARCTIC FISHERIES INITIATIVE
BY KEITH NUTHALL
A CONTROLLED opening of Arctic fisheries made more accessible because of the steady retreat of polar ice through climate change has been called for in a European Commission policy paper.
It wants "a regulatory framework for [those] Arctic high seas not yet covered by an international conservation and management regime before new fishing opportunities arise," saying no fisheries should be opened for any country until such controls are established.…