Search Results for: Russia
10 results out of 1992 results found for 'Russia'.
US TEXTILE AND CLOTHING INDUSTRY CALLS ON RE-ELECTED OBAMA TO PROTECT AGAINST VIETNAM IMPORTS
BY ALAN OSBORN
Significant questions about the re-elected US Administration’s readiness to stand up for American textile interests in the upcoming negotiations for expanding the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade deal are looming in the wake of President Barack Obama’s re-election. Important decisions will be needed soon about the terms for including Vietnam in the TPP and its associated yarn forward rule of origin.…
COACHING GETS INTO THE RUSSIAN BUSINESS PSYCHE
BY LENA SMIRNOVA, IN MOSCOW
BUSINESS coaching classes may not require students to swallow pills, don ear muffs and wiggle in straightjackets, but for some Russian businessmen this is a novel practice that appears similar to a traditional psychological experiment. And it is one they are often hesitant to participate in.…
AMERICAN FRACKING PROMPTS BOOM IN INDIAN GUAR GUM SEED MARKET
BY RAGHAVENDRA VERMA, IN NEW DELHI
IT may seem odd that the development of natural gas and oil fracking in the United States might create wealth for farmers in the arid Indian state of Rajasthan, but it is the case. Seeds of guar or cluster bean (Cyamopsis tetragonoloba), a common vegetable in India, are in demand from America’s growing fracking industry.…
EU AIDS WORKERS SHED BY SWEDISH PHARMA SECTOR
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Union (EU) Council of Ministers has approved paying Euro EUR4.3 million from the European Globalisation Adjustment Fund to help retrain 700 workers made redundant by AstraZeneca in Sweden. This followed an international rationalisation of its research units, with increased investment in China and Russia.…
EU CONFIRMS BEEF EXPORTERS AS LOSERS IN NEW GSP LOW DUTY REGIME
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Commission has confirmed key beef exporters Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay will be excluded from the European Union’s future GSP low import duty regime for emerging markets, as they are now too rich to benefit. Brussels has released a list of countries that will qualify for this special status and the Brazilians, Argentines and Uruguayans are not included, along with middle-income countries such as Venezuela, Belarus, Russia, Kazakhstan, Malaysia and others.…
CHANGE IN EU GSP SYSTEM TO IMPACT EUROPEAN INDUSTRIAL MINERALS
BY CARMEN PAUN IN BRUSSELS
THE EUROPEAN Commission is hoping that the recent overhaul of the European Union’s (EU) Generalised Scheme of Preferences (GSP) will increase the flow of rare earth metals and aluminium oxide into the EU. Concerns persist about supplies of these important industrial minerals.…
CHINA BENEFITING MORE FROM EUROPEAN URBAN MINING THAN EUROPEANS, EUROMETAUX BOSS SAYS
BY CARMEN PAUN IN BRUSSELS
Urban mining being carried out in the European Union (EU) today brings more benefits to Chinese traders than to European metal buyers, Guy Thiran the secretary general of the European association of non-ferrous metals industry Eurometaux has claimed.…
THE DIGITAL AGE IS FOSTERING CONNECTIVITY - BUT ALSO BREEDING CYBERCRIME
BY MJ DESCHAMPS
THE SATURATION of mobile devices, telecommunications and social networking in today’s digital age has created a society of real-time connectivity, where the Internet and its applications are no longer confined to a desktop computer. However, an increasing dependency on digital identity has also generated new risks in terms of cybercrime, where technology users have become more susceptible, depending on the number of devices and applications they use.…
EU LEGISLATION FORCES UK TO SHRINK ITS COAL POWER GENERATING SECTOR
BY ROBERT STOKES
THE SEPTEMBER 2012 announcement by utility RWE npower it would close the 2,000 megawatt (MW) coal-fired Didcot A power station in southern England has highlighted the scale and speed of large coal plant closures in Britain. European Union (EU) environmental laws are being identified as a key culprit behind this trend.…
EU TEXTILE FINISHING CHEMICAL FINSHING IMPORT DUTIES TO RISE
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Union (EU) Council of Ministers has streamlined the EU’s special low duty system for poor exporting countries, which will increase tariffs for some EU textile finishing chemical imports. Ministers backed a new generalised tariff preferences (GSP) system, with special low duties henceforth "concentrated on least developed, low income and lower middle-income countries…"
This means richer emerging market paint exporting countries such as Russia, Malaysia and Brazil will attract higher EU tariffs for their exports from January 2014, with India and China likely to follow suit soon.…