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Search Results for: Research

10 results out of 5818 results found for 'Research'.

BRUSSELS ANNOUNCES MAJOR MEAT AND LIVESTOCK SECTOR RESEARCH PROJECTS



THE EUROPEAN Commission has announced funding for three major research projects designed to promote innovation in the meat and livestock sector. They will be launched on Wednesday (Nov 6) and funded by the EU’s outgoing Seventh Framework Programme for Research and Technological Development (FP7), which ends next month (December 31).…

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EUROPEAN COMMISSION EYES PARTIAL COUNTRY-OF-ORIGIN LABELLING



THE EUROPEAN Commission is planning to recommend only partial country-of-origin labelling for products containing processed meats in a report set to be released by the end of October, globalmeatnews has been told.

The report, which is still to be finalised, is expected to recommend that such labelling would only mention the country where a source animal was finished and slaughtered.…

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SPORTSWEAR INNOVATORS SEEK HIGH PERFORMANCE ERGONOMIC DESIGNS THAT STAY WITHIN THE RULES



HIGH tech innovators in sportswear and outdoor equipment are developing fabrics and garments that do more and perform better, from health monitoring to slowing the effects of aging. Many inventions spring from unlikely source materials, for instance waste milk. And for sports, manufacturers have to be especially clever – ensuring their innovations avoid creating uncompetitive advantages that break sporting rules.…

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JAPANESE TECHNICAL TEXTILES INDUSTRY CATCHING UP, FOCUSING ON NICHE MARKETS



In the 1950s, Japanese companies’ technical and industrial expertise put them at the forefront of the textile innovation, leading the move from the ‘rayon era’ to the polyester, nylon and acrylic of the ‘synthetic fibre era’. While the industry is a lot smaller than it was, it is now focused on specialist products and quality over quantity.…

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OLAF REPORT REVEALS HUGE PUBLIC PROCUREMENT LOSSES TO CORRUPTION



THE EUROPEAN Union’s (EU) anti-fraud office OLAF has unveiled a study that signals huge losses directly caused by corruption in public procurement. It identified how in 2010, between Euro EUR1.4 and 2.2 billion was lost in tenders within just five sectors in eight EU member states.…

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EU CONSIDERS TIGHTENING FOOD FRAUD CONTROLS – BUT HOW FAR SHOULD IT GO?



EUROPEAN Union (EU) regulators are tangling with the difficulty of tightening rules-of-origin for meat products, given the potentially significant number of manufacturing stages required. The European Commission and European Parliament have been considering their response to the horse meat labelling scandal.…

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COAL HOLDS ITS OWN – SHOULD OUTLAST OIL AND GAS



COAL might be regarded as the oldest energy source going, but it is still currently the world’s largest long-term source of electricity. It fuels around 40% of global electricity production, according to the UK-based World Energy Council, a United Nations (UN) accredited body representing some 3,000 private and public-sector member organisations across 90 nations.…

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QUEENSLAND RESEARCH LAYS FOUNDATION FOR ‘SUPER SUNSCREENS’ DEVELOPMENT



RESULTS from a study by researchers at the Queensland University of Technology’s AusSun research lab in Australia may help develop ‘super sunscreens’ to repair sun-damaged skin. The study, funded by advocacy organisation Cancer Council Queensland, exposed 57 participants to mild ultra-violet spot burning.…

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OLAF REPORT REVEALS HUGE PUBLIC PROCUREMENT LOSSES TO CORRUPTION



IT has been regarded as a hidden commercial crime – the losses to governments caused by corruption in public procurement. An OLAF report suggests its scale in Europe could be huge. Keith Nuthall reports.

 

THERE is no sugar coating these numbers: the European Union’s (EU) anti-fraud office OLAF has unveiled a study that claimed in 2010 alone, between Euro EUR1.4 and 2.7 billion was lost to corruption in public procurement tenders within just five sectors in eight EU member states.…

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INTERNATIONAL BUYERS BUOY LIBER 2013



DIGITAL innovation and exports dominated discussion at the 31st edition of Liber 2013, Spain’s leading book fair, which ended on Sunday (October 6) in Madrid after drawing 10,000 visitors, compared with 6,000 last year in Barcelona.

And while 450 exhibitors and 300-plus international buyers almost universally framed their comments in terms of recession, robust overseas sales and advances in e-publishing made for a slightly more positive mood than last year.…

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