Search Results for: South Africa
10 results out of 4361 results found for 'South Africa'.
WORLD BANK GAS FLARE INITIATIVE
STORIES BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE WORLD Bank ‘global gas flaring reduction partnership’ (GGFR) says more than 150 billion cubic meters (bcm) of natural gas is flared and vented annually worldwide, with the 40 bcm of gas flared in Africa equalling half the continent’s power consumption.…
MIDDLE EAST FEATURE - IRAN SAUDI ARABIA EGYPT UAE LEBANON
BY PAUL COCHRANE, in Beirut
THE COSMETICS and toiletries market in the Middle East is booming with 12% growth expected this year in a US$2.1 billion sector. Market trends differ from country to country, but the general trend is rising demand for European cosmetics over local products in the wealthier Arab countries, largely due to aggressive marketing campaigns by the major brands, and high demand for unregistered, fake brand name perfumes in countries with sizeable low-income populaces, such as Egypt, Lebanon and Syria.…
INDONESIA PAINT INDUSTRY FEATURE
BY MATTHEW BRACE
INDONESIA’S paint and coatings industry continues to develop, with growth in sectors being led by increases in exports of furniture, and the introduction of new coatings products and systems.
Overall increased domestic demand for paints and coatings in Indonesia has led some companies to expand.…
BRITISH FARMERS ABROAD FEATURE - NEW ZEALAND
BY SYMON ROSS, in Christchurch, New Zealand,
THE DAVEY family swapped arable faming on the Lincolnshire Wolds for mixed farming on New Zealand’s South Island five years ago and say they haven’t looked back since.
Bill and Lynda Davey had felt the future of family farming in England was in serious jeopardy and made a life changing decision to look overseas.…
WALES OYSTERS DISEASE OIE
BY KEITH NUTHALL
BRITISH fish health inspectors have launched an investigation into how a deadly disease struck at an harvested natural oyster bed at Burton Beach, River Cleddau, in south west Wales. Movements of oysters in the areas have been blocked to prevent the spread of the dreaded bonamia ostreae.…
EU MICRONESIA FISHING DEAL, SPAIN ECJ FISHING RIGHTS FAILURE, CAVIARE QUOTAS IRAN
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Union (EU) has taken another step towards securing valuable fishing rights for its fleets in the Pacific, with the EU Council of Ministers approving an access agreement with Micronesia. For nine years, Spanish and Portuguese longliners along with Spanish and French freezer seiners will be able to fish the archipelago’s rich tuna fishing grounds north of Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands.…
NEW ZEALAND PACIFIC MONEY LAUNDERING ORGANISED CRIME RISK
BY SYMON ROSS, in Auckland
INTERNATIONAL law enforcement agencies acknowledge that the laundering of criminal proceeds generated by transnational crime remains a problem in the Pacific region despite increased legislation designed to curb the cleaning of dirty money.
With no Pacific countries now on the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) blacklist of uncooperative territories, international monitors could be forgiven for focusing their attentions elsewhere.…
OSCE WALES OYSTERS DISEASE OIE
STORIES BY KEITH NUTHALL
FISH health inspectors have launched an investigation into how a deadly disease struck at an harvested natural oyster bed at Burton Beach, River Cleddau, in south west Wales. Movements of oysters in the areas have been blocked to prevent the spread of bonamia ostreae, an illness dreaded by oyster farmers, because the parasite spreads rapidly amongst this shellfish.…
AFRICA GM TEXTILES FEATURE - MALI, SOUTH AFRICA, EGYPT
BY STEVEN SWINDELLS, in Johannesburg
SUB-SAHARAN Africa’s biggest cotton producer Mali is mulling GM cotton trials, a development which could open up cheap cotton supplies for the textile and clothing trade.
But resistance from local farmers to high seed costs and tough times for existing GM cotton growers in South Africa – the only African country where GM is commercially grown – may mean that Africa’s potential as a key supplier is still some way off.…
TRADITIONAL MEDICINES FEATURE TAIWAN SOUTHERN AFRICA
BY STEVEN SWINDELLS, in Johannesburg, South Africa and DAVID HAWORTH, in Taiwan
TRADITIONAL health care systems do not always get a good press, being accused of incorporating superstition and poor medical practice. To some western public health advocates, they are akin to bringing back the leach.…