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Search Results for: Research

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

MOROCCO OYSTER DISEASE OIE



KEITH NUTHALL
THE OFFICE International des Épizooties (OIE), the world animal health organisation, has reported an outbreak of Bonamia Ostreae amongst 580 oysters in Morocco. The OIE said that the oysters were destroyed at Khnifiss lagoon, Laayoune province, in the contested Western Sahara region.…

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TAILORED RISK ASSESSMENTS



BY MARK ROWE
WEATHER forecasting at sea has evolved beyond the age-old fisherman’s approach of licking a finger and holding it up to the prevailing wind, and the oil and gas industries have been reaping the benefits. Improvements in numerical models, faster computers, and access to more and better data (from, for example, buoys and satellites) mean that forecasts are more accurate today than 10 years ago.…

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BRITAIN WHO PATIENT SAFETY FUNDING



BY KEITH NUTHALL

THE BRITISH government is donating GB Pounds 25 million (US$43 million) to support World Health Organisation (WHO) efforts to improve patient safety. The WHO will use the money for research into the issue and developing practical advice for health professionals and patients, whose role in protecting themselves when receiving medical treatment has been overlooked, said the UN agency.…

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LOCAL AUTHORITY BROADBAND PROMOTION - EUROPEAN COMMISSION



BY KEITH NUTHALL

THE PROMOTORS of a European Commission-supported research project encouraging municipalities across Europe to establish local broadband services say their four trials have proved a success. The scheme is especially designed to help local authorities seed new comms tech investment in zones deemed too remote by commercial service providers for investing in infrastructure.…

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CARS 21 ASSESSMENT EU ACADEMICS - EU CAR INDUSTRY FUTURE PLAN



BY DEIRDRE MASON, in London

THE EUROPEAN car industry is putting itself in a strong position to tackle competition from rising economies, a leading UK automotive industry expert told wardsauto.com.

Speaking after the European Union (EU) launched its CARS 21 roadmap for a competitive automobile industry, Professor Garel Rhys, director of the Centre for Automotive Industry Research at Cardiff University, Wales, said: "Our product has renewed itself.…

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GM FOOD SOUTHERN AFRICA FEATURE - MONSANTO SYNGENTA



BY STEVEN SWINDELLS in Johannesburg

DROUGHT-HIT and AIDS-ravaged southern Africa is faced with a looming humanitarian crisis with almost 12 million people in need of food aid. But genetically modified (GM) crops remain off the menu for most African governments who remain reluctant to allow their farmers to do business with GM giants Monsanto and Syngenta.…

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CARS 21 ASSESSMENT EU ACADEMICS - EU CAR INDUSTRY FUTURE PLAN



BY DEIRDRE MASON, in London

THE EUROPEAN car industry is putting itself in a strong position to tackle competition from rising economies, a leading UK automotive industry expert told wardsauto.com.
Speaking after the European Union (EU) launched its CARS 21 roadmap for a competitive automobile industry, Professor Garel Rhys, director of the Centre for Automotive Industry Research at Cardiff University, Wales, said: “Our product has renewed itself.…

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CHINA MUSEUMS FEATURE - BEIJING OLYMPICS GAMES -CURATING TRAINING DEMAND



BY TAMARA VANTROYEN, in Hong Kong

BEIJING’S museums have been hit by Olympic fever. China’s capital currently has 118 museums and by 2008 that figure is expected to have increased to 150. A total of US$854 million is expected to be spent on the building and renovating of museums prior to the Olympic Games.…

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DIGITAL PRESERVATION - MUSEUM ARCHIVES - TECHNICAL HARMONISATION -BRITAIN



BY MARK ROWE

IT is a sign of how pressing the issue of converting archive material into digital format has become that, not only does a British national award exist for digital preservation, but that last year (2005) the prize was awarded for a guide on how to create and use digital materials.…

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IRELAND PAINT INDUSTRY FEATURE



BY DEIRDRE MASON

IRELAND’S Celtic Tiger economy may have lost a little of its bounce recently, with double-digit annual growth figures no longer predicted. However, the beast is still in fine fettle, as a recent Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) observer report notes: “The economy has bounced back.…

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